summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authornfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-01-23 15:38:48 -0800
committernfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-01-23 15:38:48 -0800
commit53b1246df55188f8afdb2e15d73811552b013c5e (patch)
tree9c8e2ef6749557922ed7b547c926f5c0857fb814
parent8c9ead69534e32602cf1ebf186afddb61718274a (diff)
NormalizeHEADmain
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes4
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
-rw-r--r--old/64252-0.txt7766
-rw-r--r--old/64252-0.zipbin149630 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/64252-h.zipbin221096 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/64252-h/64252-h.htm12565
-rw-r--r--old/64252-h/images/img-cover.jpgbin65708 -> 0 bytes
8 files changed, 17 insertions, 20331 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d7b82bc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,4 @@
+*.txt text eol=lf
+*.htm text eol=lf
+*.html text eol=lf
+*.md text eol=lf
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+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.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..bd267a7
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #64252 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/64252)
diff --git a/old/64252-0.txt b/old/64252-0.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index 0017ad8..0000000
--- a/old/64252-0.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,7766 +0,0 @@
-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Only an Ensign, Volume 1 (of 3), by James
-Grant
-
-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
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Only an Ensign, Volume 1 (of 3)
- A Tale of the Retreat from Cabul
-
-Author: James Grant
-
-Release Date: January 10, 2021 [eBook #64252]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: Al Haines
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ONLY AN ENSIGN, VOLUME 1 (OF
-3) ***
-
-
-
-
- ONLY AN ENSIGN
-
- A Tale of the Retreat from Cabul.
-
-
- BY JAMES GRANT,
-
- AUTHOR OF "THE ROMANCE OF WAR," "FIRST LOVE AND LAST LOVE,"
- "LADY WEDDERBURN'S WISH," ETC.
-
-
-
- IN THREE VOLUMES.
-
- VOL. I.
-
-
-
- "Come what come may,
- Time and the Hour runs through the roughest day."--_Macbeth._
-
-
-
- LONDON:
- TINSLEY BROTHERS, 18, CATHERINE ST., STRAND.
- 1871.
- [_All Rights Reserved._]
-
-
-
-
- LONDON:
- BRADBURY, EVANS, AND CO., PRINTERS, WHITEFRIARS.
-
-
-
-
-PKEFACE.
-
-To have entered, more fully than I have done, into the events and
-fighting prior to the Retreat from Cabul, would have proved
-unsuitable for the purpose of my story, and for these events I must
-refer the reader to history or the newspapers of the time.
-
-An officer of the Queen's 44th Regiment escaped death in the Khyber
-Pass in the mode narrated in its place, by wrapping the regimental
-colour round him; and strange and varied as the adventures of Captain
-Waller may appear, after the last fatal stand was made by our troops,
-some such incidents actually occurred to a Havildar of the Shah's
-Ghoorka Regiment, after its complete destruction in Afghanistan, so
-there is much that is real woven up with my story.
-
-Fiction, according to Sir Francis Bacon, infuses in literature that
-which history denies, and in some measure satisfies the mind with
-shadows, when it cannot enjoy the substance--the shadows of an ideal
-world. "Art is long and life is short, so we do wisely to live in as
-many worlds as we can."
-
- 25, TAVISTOCK ROAD, WESTBOURNE PARK,
- _August_, 1871.
-
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS.
-
- CHAP.
-
- I.--THE TIME WILL COME
- II.--RHOSCADZHEL
- III.--THE ALARM BELL
- IV.--POWDERED WITH TEARS
- V.--PORTHELLICK VILLA
- VI.--RICHARD'S MYSTERY
- VII.--LADY LAMORNA
- VIII.--THE BROKEN CIRCLE
- IX.--FOREBODINGS
- X.--THE LONELY TARN
- XI.--CONCERNING FLIRTATION
- XII.--THE PIXIES' HOLE
- XIII.--THE TIDE IN!
- XIV.--LOST
- XV.--THE SEARCH
- XVI.--INTELLIGENCE AT LAST
- XVII.--THE TRECARRELS
- XVIII.--HE LOVES ME TRULY
- XIX.--THE GREATER SORROW
- XX.--A FAMILY GROUP
- XXI.--HUMILIATION
- XXII.--"MRS. GRUNDY"
- XXIII.--A LEGAL "FRIEND"
- XXIV.--THE DOCTRINE OF CHANCES
- XXV.--MISCONCEPTION
- XXVI.--REVERSES
- XXVII.--ALONE!
-
-
-
-
-ONLY AN ENSIGN.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-THE TIME WILL COME.
-
-"_Le jour viendra_--it is the motto of our family--given to us by
-Henry VI. 'The day will come,'" said old Lord Lamorna, proudly, as
-he lay back in his easy chair, with his elbows resting on the arms
-thereof, and the tips of his upraised fingers placed together, as if
-he was about to pray; "and most applicable is that motto to you,
-nephew Richard, for I am sure that when you are my age you will
-regret not having taken my advice."
-
-Richard Trevelyan smiled, but looked somewhat uneasily at his younger
-brother Downie.
-
-"You are too rich to throw yourself away, and too well-born even for
-the most highly accomplished daughter of a cotton-lord, or knighted
-mill-owner," resumed his stately old uncle, sententiously; "a fellow
-knighted too probably for dirty ministerial work; but assume a virtue
-if you have it not, and let us see you----"
-
-"Excuse me, my lord--excuse me, my dear uncle. I have no desire
-to--to marry; why you--yourself----"
-
-"Don't cite me, Richard. You are only forty-three, if so much" (and
-here, for the information of our young lady readers, we may mention
-that Richard is not the hero of these pages). "I am past seventy,
-yet I may marry yet, and do you all out of the title," added Lamorna,
-with a laugh like a cackle.
-
-"My brother Dick is certainly the most listless of men," said Downie,
-as he selected some grapes with the embossed scissors, and filled his
-glass with chateau d'Yquem.
-
-"I don't think that I am so," retorted Richard.
-
-"Downie is right," said Lord Lamorna. "Why do you not go into
-Parliament?--I have two snug pocket boroughs here in Cornwall--and on
-one hand attack routine and red-tapeism like a Radical; on the other
-hand, denounce retrenchment and cowardly peace-at-any-price, like a
-Tory of the old school. You would certainly be popular with both
-parties by that _rôle_, and do good to the country at large."
-
-"I have no turn for politics, uncle."
-
-"Diplomacy then--many of our family have figured as diplomats; I was
-ambassador to Russia, after Waterloo, and in the olden time more than
-one of our family have been so to the Courts of Scotland, France, and
-Brandenburg; and I trust we all refuted the axiom of Sir Henry
-Wotton, 'that an ambassador was an honest man sent abroad to lie for
-the good of his country.'"
-
-"I have no taste for diplomacy."
-
-"What the devil _have_ you a taste for?" asked his uncle, testily;
-"not domestic life, as I can't get you to marry, like Downie here;
-and you soon left the army, or tired of Her Majesty's service."
-
-Richard flushed for a moment, and held his full wine glass between
-him and the light, as if to test the colour and purity of its
-contents.
-
-"I know what bachelor London life is--another style of thing, of
-course, from yours, Downie--that which someone calls the hard-working
-life, which begins at two P.M. one day, and ends at four A.M. next
-morning. There are the parks; the club, with its bow-window;
-flirtations at balls and assemblies; the opera, and parties to
-Greenwich; and then there is the darker picture of doing business
-with old Messrs. Bill Stamp and Cent.-per-Cent., in some dingy little
-den off the Strand. A bad style of thing it is to meddle with the
-long-nosed fellows in the discounting line; just as bad as--and often
-the sequence to--running after actresses or opera-singers. You may
-love them if you like; but, great Heavens! never stoop to the madness
-of committing matrimony with any of them, or for a moment forget the
-family to which you belong, and the ancient title that is your
-inheritance."
-
-All this was said with undisguised point and pomposity; the cold grey
-eyes of Downie Trevelyan had a strange, sour smile in them; and
-Richard's face grew more flushed than ever now.
-
-Dinner was over in the stately dining-room of Rhoscadzhel; Mr. Jasper
-Funnel, the portly, florid, and white-haired butler, had placed the
-glittering crystal decanters before his master, who, with two
-nephews, Richard and Downie Trevelyan, were lingering over their
-wine; while in the western light of a September evening, through the
-tall plate-glass windows that reached from the richly-carpeted floor
-to the painted and gilded ceiling, the Isles of Scilly--the
-Casserites of the Greeks, the rocks consecrated by the pagan Cornavi
-to the Sun--could be seen at the far horizon, literally cradled in
-the golden blaze of his setting in the sea; for the house of
-Rhoscadzhel, in which our story opens, stands near the Land's End, in
-the brave old Duchy of Cornwall.
-
-Audley Trevelyan, tenth Lord Lamorna, took his title from that little
-bay or cove which was one of the most romantic spots on the bluff
-Cornish coast, until it was unfortunately selected by certain
-utilitarian speculators as a site for granite works; and near it is a
-place called the Trewoofe, a triple entrenchment having a
-subterranean passage, wherein Launcelot Lord Lamorna, with some other
-Cornish cavaliers, hid themselves in time of defeat from the troopers
-of Fairfax, as the tourist may find duly recorded in his "John
-Murray."
-
-He was in his seventieth year; pale in face and thin in figure, and
-with his accurate evening costume, for his valet always dressed him
-for dinner even when alone, the old peer in every gesture and tone
-displayed the easy bearing of a polished man of the world, and of the
-highest bearing--keen but cold, calm and unimpressionable.
-
-He had yet much of the wasted beau about his appearance; he wore
-rosettes on his shoes and still adhered to a frilled shirt front and
-black watered silk ribbon for his gold eye-glass, with a coat having
-something of the high collar and cut peculiar to the days when George
-IV. was king. His features were fine and delicately modelled; his
-nose a perfect aquiline, with nostrils arched and thin, his
-snow-white hair was all brushed back to conceal the bald places and
-to display more fully a forehead of which he had been vain in youth
-from a fancied resemblance to that of Lord Byron. In short the
-Apollo of many a ball-room was now indeed a lean and slippered
-pantaloon, but still careful to a degree in costume and all the
-niceties of cuffs and studs and rings.
-
-Calm and self-possessed as he appeared, when now lying back in his
-down easy-chair, sipping his iced wine and playing with the diamond
-that glittered on his wasted hand, and which had been a farewell gift
-from the Empress of Russia, he had been much of a _roué_ in his
-youth, and consequently was not disposed to enquire too closely into
-the affairs of his nephew.
-
-Downie Trevelyan was already married, nearly to his uncle's
-satisfaction, his wife being the daughter of a poor but noble family;
-and as for Richard, he might run away with as many humble girls as he
-chose, provided he did not marry any of them, or make that which his
-haughty uncle and monetary patron would never forgive--a
-_mésalliance_; for Lord Lamorna was a man full of strong aristocratic
-prejudices, and a master in all the tactics of society, and of his
-somewhat exclusive, and occasionally selfish class.
-
-His lordship's false teeth--a magnificent Parisian set that had cost
-him some fifty guineas--would have chattered at the idea of any
-member of his family making a mistake in matrimony. He had heard
-ugly whispers about Richard, but never could discover aught that was
-tangible. If it existed, Heavens! how were Burke, Debrett and Co. to
-record it when the time came that it could no longer be concealed?
-
-Should any _mésalliance_ be the case, he had vowed often that the
-barren title should go without one acre of land to his eldest nephew;
-and he would have willed that past him too had it been in his power
-to do so; but though a sordid Scottish Earl of Caithness once sold
-his title to a Highland Chieftain, and caused one of the last
-clan-battles to be fought in Scotland, such things cannot be done now.
-
-The old man had one ever present, ever prevailing idea--the honour
-and dignity of the family--the Cornish Trevelyans of Rhoscadzhel and
-Lamorna.
-
-His two nephews were men in the prime of life, but Downie was three
-years younger than his brother.
-
-Richard Pencarrow Trevelyan, the elder and prime favourite with their
-uncle, was a remarkably handsome man, with fine regular features that
-closely resembled those of the old peer; but Richard had been reared
-at Sandhurst, been in the army and seen much of a rougher life than
-his uncle. He had a free bold bearing, an ample chest, an athletic
-form and muscular limbs, which riding, shooting and handling the bat
-and the oar had all developed to the full, and which his simple
-costume,--for he was fresh with his gun and his game-bag, from the
-bleak Cornish moors and mountain sides--advantageously displayed.
-
-His dark blue eyes that were almost black, and seemed so by night,
-had a keen but open expression, his mouth suggested good humour, his
-white and regular teeth, perfect health, and his voice had in it a
-chord that rendered it most pleasant to the ear. Dark eyebrows and a
-heavy moustache imparted much of character to his face.
-
-His brother, Downie Trevelyan, had never been an idler like Richard.
-Educated at Rugby and Corpus Christi, Oxford, he had been duly called
-to the bar by the Honourable Society of Lincoln's Inn, and was now in
-good practice as a Barrister in London. He had all the air and
-bearing of a gentleman of good style; but he was less handsome than
-Richard; had less candour of expression in eye and manner; indeed,
-his eyes were like cold grey steel, and were quick, restless, and at
-times furtive in their glances; and they never smiled, even when his
-mouth seemed to do so.
-
-Unlike Richard, he was closely shaven, all save a pair of very short
-and legal looking whiskers. To please his uncle was one of the
-unwearying tasks of his life; and even now, with this view, he was in
-the most accurate evening dress, thus affording a complete contrast
-to the rough and unceremonious tweed-suit worn by his brother--his
-coat broadly lapelled with black silk _moiré_, his vest with three
-buttons, _en suite_ with his shirt studs, which were encrusted with
-brilliants. His cold formality of manner rendered his periodical
-visits to Rhoscadzhel somewhat dull to Lord Lamorna, for somehow few
-people cared much for Mr. Downie Trevelyan. He had married
-judiciously and early in life, and had now several children; and
-thus, while joining his uncle in reprehending or rallying Richard on
-his supposed anti-matrimonial views, his cold, pale eyes, were
-wandering over the appurtenances, the comforts and splendour of that
-magnificent apartment, in which he was mentally appraising
-everything, from the steel fire-irons, to the gold and silver plate
-that glittered on the carved walnut wood side-board, whereon were
-displayed many beautiful cups, groups and statuettes (race-trophies
-of Ascot, Epsom and other courses) which had been won in Lamorna's
-younger days, when his stud was second to none in England, and
-certainly equal to that of Lord Eglinton in Scotland; yet he had
-never been a gambler, or a "horsey man," being too highly principled
-in one instance, and too highly bred in the other; and so we say,
-while the legal eyes of Downie appraised all, he thought of his
-eldest son, Audley Trevelyan, then a subaltern in a dashing Hussar
-Regiment, and marvelled in his heart, if he should ever reign as Lord
-of Rhoscadzhel, manor and chace, with all its moors and tin-mines.
-
-"You were right to marry young, Downie," said the old lord, resuming
-the theme of their conversation after a pause, adding, as if he
-almost divined the thoughts of his younger nephew, "your boy Audley
-is, I hear from General Trecarrel, a handsome fellow."
-
-"He is a perfect Trevelyan, my lord," replied Downie, who was
-studious in always according the title to his relative, "and then my
-daughter, Gartha, bids fair to equal her mother, who was one of the
-handsomest women in London."
-
-"To see your family rising about you thus, must afford you intense
-pleasure, Downie; but I cannot understand our friend Dick here at
-all. My years may not be many now, and I do not wish my hereditary
-estate to change hands often, or my lands to be scattered even after
-I am done with them."
-
-"I do not comprehend your fears, my dear uncle," said Richard,
-smiling; "your estates can never lack heirs while God spares me--and
-then there is Downie----"
-
-"And his son Audley the Hussar--you would say?"
-
-"Exactly," replied Richard, but in a strange faint voice, and as he
-spoke he felt that the keen grey eyes of Downie were regarding him
-attentively by the waxen lights of the chandelier, which Mr. Jasper
-Funnel and two tall footmen had just illuminated, at the same time
-drawing the heavy curtains of crimson damask over the last flash of
-the setting sun, and the ruddy sea whose waves were rolling in blue
-and gold, between the bluffs of Land's End and the rocky Isles of
-Scilly.
-
-"You cannot be a woman-hater, Dick?"
-
-"No--far from it," replied Richard, as a soft expression stole over
-his manly face; "there can be no such thing in nature."
-
-"The truth is--but take your wine--I strongly fear, that during your
-military peregrinations, you have got yourself entangled now--and
-unworthily perhaps."
-
-"My lord--you are mistaken," replied Richard firmly--almost sternly;
-"but what causes you to think so?"
-
-"Your so decidedly declining an introduction to General Trecarrel and
-his two daughters--the most beautiful girls in the duchy of Cornwall.
-They come of a good family too; and as the couplet has it:--
-
- "'By Tre, Pol, and Pen,
- Ye may know the Cornish men.'"
-
-
-"The General resides somewhere near Porthellick, does he not?" asked
-Downie, who saw that his brother was changing colour, or rather
-losing it fast.
-
-"Some one told me, Dick, that it was rumoured you got into a scrape
-in Edinburgh, 'that village somewhere in the North,' as one of our
-humourists calls it; it was to the effect that your landlady had
-fallen over head and ears in love with her handsome lodger, who was
-ditto ditto in her debt, and had to soothe her ruffled feelings and
-settle her bill, by matrimony at sight."
-
-"An utter scandal!" said Richard, now laughing. "Your allowance to
-me, ever since I left the Cornish Light Infantry, has been too
-generous for such a catastrophe ever to occur."
-
-"And next came a story, that when you were at Montreal with the
-regiment, you made a precious mess of it with some pretty girl,
-and--to use Downie's phraseology--parted as heart-broken lovers, to
-figure as plaintiff and defendant at the bar."
-
-"Worse still and as false, my lord!" exclaimed Richard, now pale with
-suppressed passion.
-
-"Don't look so darkly, Richard," said Lord Lamorna, who saw the flash
-in his nephew's dark blue eyes; "I have had a pretty little box at
-Chertsey, and a villa at St. John's Wood in my day, when my friends,
-raven-tressed, or golden-haired as the case might be, were amiable
-and tenderly attached--but deuced expensive; so I must not be severe
-upon you," added the old man, with his dry cackling laugh. "It is
-not these kind of little arrangements I fear, but a _mésalliance_;
-and there are scandals even in London--yes, even in the mighty world
-of London, though there they soon die; they don't live and take root,
-as in the so-called purer air of the country."
-
-"I cannot understand all those vague hints, tales and rumours, or who
-sets them afloat," replied Richard, making an effort to preserve his
-calmness.
-
-Downie saw the veins rise in his brother's forehead while their uncle
-had been speaking; and he smiled a quiet smile, as he bent curiously
-over his glass.
-
- "Full many a shaft at random sent,
- Finds mark the archer never meant;"
-
-and he could see that some of the random remarks in the present
-conversation, rankled deeply in Richard's breast; and that this
-conversation had verged, more than once, on somewhat dangerous ground.
-
-"Well, it is a marvel to me, Richard, how a handsome fellow like you
-can have escaped so long, known as you are to be the heir to my title
-and estates," continued the old lord, still harping on the same
-topic: "for the girls now go in for winning in matrimony, as we used
-to do at Ascot and Epsom."
-
-"How, my lord?" asked Downie, as if he had never heard the joke
-before.
-
-"By a neck--a bare neck and bosom added; witness the beautiful and
-aristocratic demi-mondes at the Opera! Elizabeth was the first
-English-woman who, to excite admiration, exposed her person thus.
-The virgin queen wore a huge ruff certainly; but it stuck up _behind_
-her, she was _décolletée_ enough in front."
-
-"I prefer her Scottish rival--collared to her pretty neck, and
-sleeved to the slender wrist," said Richard Trevelyan; "by Jove, I
-should not have cared for flirting with a woman who carried a fan in
-one hand and a hatchet in the other."
-
-"Our ancestor, Henry Lord Lamorna, was governor of Rougemont Castle,
-in Devonshire, under Queen Elizabeth," said the peer pompously; "but
-having married the daughter of a simple knight in Surrey, he lost Her
-Majesty's favour at Court, and had to live in retirement here at
-Rhoscadzhel. Let that mistake be a warning to you, Richard."
-
-"It happened pretty long ago," replied Richard, laughing; "and at
-forty years of age I am surely unlikely to commit an act of folly----"
-
-"If it be not committed already?"
-
---"And lose your favour, even by marrying, 'the daughter of a simple
-knight.'"
-
-"With my favour you would lose this fine estate. But give me your
-hand, Dick, I know you will never do aught unworthy of our good old
-Cornish name of Trevelyan!"
-
-With a grand old-fashioned air--yet one full of kindness--the proud
-old man presented his thin white hand to his nephew, who pressed it
-affectionately, and then rose to withdraw.
-
-"Whither go you, Dick, so soon?"
-
-"Oh--anywhere, uncle," replied the other, wearily.
-
-"How, sir?"
-
-"Merely into the lawn to enjoy a post-prandial cigar," replied
-Richard, whose face wore an evident expression of annoyance, as he
-bowed and quitted the room.
-
-"We have worried him, I fear," said Downie, with a self-satisfied
-smile.
-
-"Don't use slang--it is bad in tone," replied his uncle; "but I
-cannot make your brother out--I hope he is not deceiving us all.
-Gad, if I thought so--if that Montreal story should prove true----"
-the peer paused, and his keen blue eyes flashed with anger at the
-vague thoughts that occurred to him.
-
-"Oh, do not fear, my lord," said Downie Trevelyan, in a suave and
-soothing manner; "though sham diamonds often do duty for real ones."
-
-"What do you mean?" asked his uncle, haughtily.
-
-Downie only smiled, and bent over his glass of Burgundy again.
-
-"_Neb na gare y gwayn call restona,_" said Lord Lamorna,
-significantly; "I hate proverbs: but this is a good old Cornish one;
-'he that heeds not gain, must expect _loss_.' When do you expect
-your oldest boy home from India?"
-
-"He may arrive next week, perhaps, my lord, and he will at once
-dutifully hasten to present himself to you."
-
-"He must be well up among the Lieutenants of the Hussars now?"
-
-"Yet he means to exchange into the Infantry."
-
-"Why?"
-
-"It is a matter of expedience and expense, my lord; even with forage,
-batta, tentage, and so forth, he finds his regiment a very
-extravagant one."
-
-"I shall give him a cheque on Coutts and Co., for I must not forget
-that you did me the honour to name him after me."
-
-"But you did us the greater honour in being his sponsor--and in
-bestowing upon him a gold sponsorial mug."
-
-"With the _Koithgath_ of the Trevelyans for a handle, and another
-perched on the lid; well, well--he may be my successor here--who
-knows, who knows," mumbled the old man, as he prepared to take
-his-after dinner nap, by spreading a cambric handkerchief over his
-face, and Downie glided noiselessly away to the library, with a
-strange and unfathomable smile on his colourless face, and he
-muttered,--
-
-"I too may say--'the time will come!'"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-RHOSCADZHEL.
-
-On the smooth lawn his brother was walking to and fro, with a cigar
-between his firm white teeth, with his heart a prey to bitter and
-exciting thoughts; and though Richard Trevelyan is not, as we have
-said, the hero of these pages, to the lawn we shall accompany him.
-
-"What the deuce can be the secret spring of all this intrusive
-solicitude upon my uncle's part about having me married, as if I were
-a young girl in her third season?" he muttered; "I have often feared
-that Downie suspected me--as a lawyer, it is natural he should
-suspect every one of something more than he sees or knows; and yet--I
-have been so wary, so careful! My poor Constance--still
-concealment--still dissimulation for the present, and doubts of our
-future! No hope for us, save in the death of that old man, ever so
-good and kind to me. Did he really but know Constance, how sweet and
-gentle she is! A curse be on this silly pride of birth and
-fortuitous position which is our bane--this boasting of pedigree old
-as the days of Bran ap Llyr, the ancestor of King Arthur. By Jove,
-it is too absurd!" and he laughed angrily as he tossed away his cigar
-and then sighed, as he surveyed the façade of the stately mansion,
-and cast his eyes round the spacious lawn that stretched far away in
-starlight and obscurity. "And yet must I stoop to this senile
-folly," he added, half aloud; "for 'twere hard to see all these broad
-acres go to Downie's boy, the Hussar, past me and mine!"
-
-The seats of the Cornish aristocracy have usually little to boast of
-in architecture; but the mansion of Rhoscadzhel* was an exception,
-being a rare specimen of a fine old Tudor dwelling, which had
-suffered more from the rude hand of civil war, than from "time's
-effacing fingers," and was built, tradition avers, from the famous
-quarry of Pencarrow, and of good Cornish freestone.
-
-
-* Cadzhel, Cornish for castle.
-
-
-A massive iron gate, between carved pillars, each surmounted by a
-koithgath, or wild cat, rampant--a crest of which Lord Lamorna was as
-vain as ever was old Bradwardine of his heraldic bears--gave access
-to the avenue, a long and leafy tunnel that lay between the house and
-the highway leading to the Land's End. The branches of the stately
-old elms were interlaced overhead, like the groined arches of a
-Gothic cathedral and a delightful promenade their shade afforded in
-the hot days of summer, when only a patch of blue sky, or the golden
-rays falling aslant, could be seen at times through their foliage.
-
-Engrafted in the later Tudor times upon the ruins of Rhoscadzhel, of
-which there is still remaining the fragment of a loopholed tower and
-ponderous granite arch shrouded in ivy, with its modern
-_porte-cochère_ and vestibule floored with marble, its mullioned
-windows filled in with plate glass in lieu of little lozenge-panes,
-its dining hall and drawing rooms lighted with gas when such was the
-wish of its proprietor, the mansion, though retaining all the
-characteristics of the days when Queen Bess held her court at
-Greenwich and danced before the Scottish ambassador, had nevertheless
-all the comforts, appliances and splendour, with which the taste and
-wealth of the present age could invest it.
-
-The great dining-hall had remained almost unchanged since the days of
-the first Charles. Its vast chimney-piece, which rose nearly to the
-ceiling, was covered with marvellous scrolls and legends, and
-innumerable wild cats' heads among them, over all being the arms of
-Trevelyan of Lamorna; _gules_, a demi-horse _argent_ issuing from the
-sea, adapted from the circumstance of one of the family swimming on
-horseback from the Seven Stones to the Land's End, when they were
-suddenly separated from the continent by a terrible inundation of the
-ocean, and as this dangerous reef is no less than nine miles from
-Scilly, where a light-ship points it out to the mariner, the feat was
-well worthy of being recorded, at least in heraldry.
-
-The furniture here was quaint and old, massive and richly carved, and
-though the vast stone-flagged chamber, where many a Cornish cavalier
-has whilom drunk "confusion to Cromwell and the Rump," and where
-still stands the great dining table with its daïs, where of old "the
-carles of low degree" had sat below the salt, is sombre and gloomy,
-somewhat of lightness is imparted by the splendid modern conservatory
-that opens off it, with marble floor and shelves of iron fret-work
-laden with rare and exotic plants.
-
-It boasts of a chamber known as "the Queen's," wherein Henrietta
-Maria had slept one night before she fled to France, and since then
-no one has ever occupied the ancient bed that, like a huge
-catafalque, stands upon three steps in the centre of the wainscoted
-room which like several others in Rhoscadzhel, has hangings of faded
-green tapestry, that are lifted to give entrance; and where the
-hearths, intended for wood alone, have grotesque andirons in the form
-of the inevitable koithgath on its hind legs. And on the walls of
-these old chambers hung many a trophy of the past, and many a weapon
-of the present day, from the great two-handed sword wielded by Henry
-Lord Lamorna at the Battle of Pinkey down to the yeomanry sabre worn
-by the present peer at the coronation of George IV., a peer of whose
-effeminacy the said Lord Henry would have been sorely ashamed.
-
-And many a Vandyke, Kneller, and Lely were there, with portraits of
-the Trevelyans of past times, who now lay under their marble tombs in
-yonder little church upon the hill, where among dust and cobwebs hung
-their helmets, spurs, and gauntlets, and the iron mace of one
-Launcelot Trevelyan, who was a man of vast stature; and it is as
-great a source of wonder to the village children as the rickety ruin
-of a gilded coach which at certain times is drawn forth to the lawn
-and aired carefully, being that in which the grandfather of the
-present peer brought home his bride in patches and powder, and it is
-supposed to be the first vehicle of the kind ever seen in the duchy
-of Cornwall. Thus, as Richard Pencarrow Trevelyan thought over all
-these possessions with their traditional and family interests, of
-which, by one ill-natured stroke of the pen, his proud uncle might
-deprive him and his heirs for ever, a bitter sigh escaped him.
-
-Beyond the quaint façade of the ancient house, from the mullioned
-windows of which, half hidden by ivy and wild roses, there streamed
-out many a light into the darkness, his eyes wandered to the fertile
-fields, all bare stubble now, to the wide open moor overlooked by
-many a wooded tor, and to the beautiful lawn, in the centre of which
-stands one of those wonderful _logan-stones_, so peculiar to Cornwall
-and Brittany, a ponderous, spheroidal mass of granite, so exquisitely
-balanced that it may be oscillated by the touch even of a woman's
-hand; and as he turned away to indulge in deeper reverie by the shore
-of the adjacent sea, he raised his right hand and his glistening eyes
-to the stars, as if some vow, as yet unuttered, was quivering on his
-tongue.
-
-"Yes?" he exclaimed, "please God and pray God, the time will come;
-but not as my good uncle, and not, as the careful Downie, anticipate.
-Marriage! how little do they know how, in the great lottery of life,
-my kismet--as we used to say in India--has been fixed--irrevocably
-fixed!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-THE ALARM BELL.
-
-The season was autumn now, and on the succeeding day--the last he
-meant to spend at Rhoscadzhel for some time at least--Richard
-Trevelyan appeared in the breakfast parlour again in shooting
-costume, with a scarlet shirt having an open collar, and with a brown
-leather shot-belt over his shoulder; while his uncle, who, even when
-at his slender morning repast, in his elaborately flowered
-dressing-gown, wore accurately fitting pale kid gloves on his
-shrivelled hands, for such things were a necessity of the old lord's
-existence; thus he glanced again with an air of annoyance at the
-dress worn by his eldest nephew, as he considered it a solecism,
-decidedly in bad taste, and that something more was due to his own
-presence.
-
-Downie's costume, a fashionable morning coat came more near his
-lordship's ideas of propriety.
-
-Mr. Jasper Funnel, in accurate black, was at the side-table, to slice
-down the cold meat, pour out the coffee from its silver urn into the
-beautiful Wedgewood cups, and to carve the grouse and other pies; for
-Cornwall is peculiarly the land of that species of viand, as there
-the denizens make pies of everything eatable, squab-pies,
-pilchard-pies, muggetty-pies, and so forth.
-
-"I heard last evening the new chime of bells you have put up in
-Lamorna Church," said Richard, as he seated himself and attacked a
-plate of grouse, the recent spoil of his own gun; "how pleasantly
-they sound. Who rings them?"
-
-"I cannot say--never inquired," replied the old peer, testily; "I can
-only tell you one thing, Richard."
-
-"And that is----"
-
-"They were wrung out of my pocket by the vestry."
-
-At this little quip, Downie obsequiously and applaudingly laughed as
-loudly as he was ever known to do, and just as if he had never heard
-it before.
-
-"However, I need not grudge the poor people their chime of bells; I
-am rich enough to afford them more than that, and occupying as we do
-a good slice of this _Land of Tin_, for so the Phoenicians named this
-Cornish peninsula of ours as early as the days of Solomon, we have
-its credit to maintain; but bring us home a well-born and handsome
-bird, Dick, and I shall have the bells rung till they fly to
-pieces--by Jove I will! Only, as I hinted last night, let her be
-worthy to represent those who lie under their marble tombs in that
-old church of Lamorna; for there are bones there that would shrink in
-their leaden coffins if aught plebeian were laid beside them."
-
-Richard shrugged his shoulders, and glanced round him with impatience.
-
-"Let us look forward, my dear uncle," said he; "in this age of
-progress all men do; and of what account or avail can a dead ancestry
-be?"
-
-Downie smiled faintly, and Lord Lamorna frowned in the act of
-decapitating an egg, for to his ears this sounded as rank heresy or
-treason against the state.
-
-"By heavens! nephew Richard, you talk like a Red Republican. With
-these socialistic views of equality, and so forth, I fear you will
-never shine in the Upper House."
-
-"I have no desire to do so; you see how simple my tastes are----"
-
-"In dress decidedly too much so."
-
-"And how happy and content I am to lead the life of a quiet country
-gentleman; and have done so ever since I left the Cornish Light
-Infantry."
-
-"Your demands upon my pocket are certainly so moderate, that I cannot
-think you are playing me false, Dick," said the peer, with a pleasant
-smile; "egad, if I thought you were doing so, I'd have you before the
-Mayor of Halgaver, as our Cornish folks say!"
-
-"Trust me, my good uncle," replied Richard Trevelyan, with a
-glistening eye, and laying a hand caressingly on the old man's
-shoulder, as he rose and adjusted his shot-belt; "and now I go to
-have a farewell shot on the moors."
-
-"Why a farewell shot? you have been here barely a fortnight."
-
-"Nevertheless, I must leave Rhoscadzhel tomorrow."
-
-"Positively?"
-
-"Yes, uncle."
-
-"Pardon me," continued Lamorna, drily; "but may we inquire for where?"
-
-"Oxford--and then town after, perhaps."
-
-"Oxford--and town too," replied his uncle, testily; "the last time
-you left this for London, if General Trecarrel was right, you were
-seen for a month after in his neighbourhood; and, if his story were
-true--and I dare not doubt it--you did not get beyond the border of
-Cornwall--and were certainly not so far as Devonshire."
-
-"Trecarrel was, I hope, mistaken," urged Richard.
-
-"I hope so, too."
-
-Richard's face was pale, and to conceal his emotion, he stooped and
-caressed his favourite pointer, which had bounded in when the butler
-opened the door; and soon recovering from his little
-agitation--whatever its secret source might be--he politely and
-affectionately bade his uncle "good-bye for the present," nodded to
-the silent and observant Downie, took a double-barrelled
-breech-loader from the gun-room and sallied forth, unattended by
-game-keepers, desiring quite as much to indulge in reverie and enjoy
-a solitary ramble, as to have a shot at a passing bird.
-
-To Richard it seemed that he had read a strangely keen, weird and
-unfathomable expression in his uncle's eyes, as they followed his
-departing steps on this particular morning--an expression which,
-somehow, haunted him.
-
-The season, we have said, was now autumn, and a tender, mellow tone
-rested over all the landscape; Richard Trevelyan was fond of the
-strange, wild district--the land of old tradition, of bold and varied
-scenery--amid which his youth and so much of his manhood had been
-passed, and he looked around him from time to time with admiring eyes
-and an enthusiastic heart.
-
-A soft warm shower had fallen that morning early, refreshing the
-fading September leaves in the belts of coppice that girt the upland
-slopes, and in the orchards, where the ripe golden apples were
-dropping amid the thick sward below. Above the purple, and often
-desolate moors which are so characteristic of Cornish scenery, and
-where the small breed of horses, the little black cattle and
-sharp-nosed sheep of the province were grazing, the wooded _tors_ or
-hills stood boldly up in the distance, their foliage in most
-instances presenting many varied tints. There were the brown madder,
-the crisped chesnut, and the fading beech, the more faded green of
-the old Cornish elm, and the russet fern below, from amid which at
-every step he took the birds whirred up in coveys; while Richard,
-lost in reverie--the result of his uncle's remarks of late--never
-emptied a barrel at them, but walked slowly on looking round him from
-time to time, and filled with thoughts that were all his own as yet.
-
-The place where he loitered was very lonely: here and there a gray
-lichen-spotted druidical monolith stood grimly up amid the silent
-waste; in the distance might be seen the gray expanse of the ocean,
-or some bleak looking houses slated with blue, as they usually are in
-Devon and Cornwall, or perhaps some of those poorer huts, which, like
-wigwams, have cob-walls; _i.e._ are built of earth, mud, and straw,
-beaten and pounded together, just as they might have been in the days
-of Bran the son of Llyr, or when Arthur dwelt in Tintagel.
-
-Richard Trevelyan threw himself upon a grassy bank, and his pointer,
-doubtless surprised by his neglect of all sport, lay beside him with
-eyes of wonder and tongue out-lolled. In the distance, about a mile
-or so away, Trevelyan could see Rhoscadzhel House shining in the
-morning sunlight; and again, as on the preceding evening, he looked
-around with a bitter smile upon tor and moorland, and on the wondrous
-druid monoliths that stand up here and there on the bleak hill sides,
-each and all of them having their own quaint name and grim old legend.
-
-How came each to be there? "Without patent rollers; nay, without the
-simplest mechanical contrivances of modern times, how was so huge a
-mass transported to yonder desolate and wind-swept height? How many
-yoke of oxen, how many straining scores of men must it have taken to
-erect the least of them! What submission to authority, what servile
-or superstitious fear must have animated the workers! No drover's
-whip would have urged to such a task; no richest guerdon could have
-repaid the toil; yet there the wonder stands!"
-
-And some such thoughts as these floated through the mind of Richard,
-as his eyes wandered from a cromlech or slab that rested on three
-great stones, to a vast _maen_ or rock-pillar, that might be coeval
-with the days when Jacob set up such a stone to witness his covenant
-with Laban.
-
-"Shall I ever wander here with Constance--and if so, when," thought
-he; "assuredly not while my uncle lives; but his death--how can I
-contemplate it, when he is so good, so kind, so tender, and so true
-to me? Oh, let me not anticipate that."
-
-How often in autumn, in the gloomy mornings of November, had he
-pursued the fox over these desolate moors, often breakfasting by
-candle-light in his red coat on a hunting morning, to the great
-boredom of old Jasper Funnel?
-
-What joy it would be to gallop over that breezy wind-swept moor, with
-Constance by his side! To walk with her through yonder dense old
-thicket, and tell her that every tree and twig therein were her own;
-to drive by yonder cliff, Tol Pedn Penwith, the western boundary of a
-beautiful bay, and where in the summer evening, the forty Isles of
-Scilly seemed to be cradled in the glory of the western sun; to show
-her all these places with which he was so familiar, and perhaps to
-tell their children in the years to come--for all Richard's habits
-and tastes were alike gentle and domestic--the old Cornish legends of
-Arthur's castle at Tintagel, of the magic well of St. Keyne, and of
-Tregeagle the giant--the bugbear of all Cornish little people; the
-melancholy monster or fiend, who according to traditions still
-believed in, haunts the Dozmare Pool, from whence he hurled the vast
-granite blocks, known as his "quoits," upon the coast westward of
-Penzance Head; the deep dark Pool, his dwelling place, is said to be
-unfathomable and the resort of other evil spirits.
-
-Desolate and begirt by arid and dreary hills, it presents an aspect
-of gloomy horror; and then when the winter storms sweep the moorland
-wastes, and the miners at the Land's End, deep, deep down in mines
-below the sea, hear the enormous boulders dashed by it on the flinty
-shore overhead, above all can be heard the howling of Tregeagle! For
-ages he has been condemned to the task of emptying the Dozrnare Pool
-by a tiny limpet-shell, and his cries are uttered in despair of the
-hopelessness of the drudgery assigned him by the devil, who in
-moments of impatience, hunts him round the tarn, till he flies to the
-Roche Rocks fifteen miles distant, and finds respite by placing his
-hideous head through the painted window of a ruined chapel, as a
-bumpkin might through a horse-collar; for these, and a thousand such
-stories as these, are believed in Cornwall, nor can even the whistle
-of the railway from Plymouth to Penzance scare them away.
-
-Richard Trevelyan was smiling when he remembered how often he and
-Downie, when loving little brothers and playfellows, had been scared
-in their cribs at night by stories of Tregeagle; and of that other
-mighty giant who lies buried beneath Carn Brea, where his clenched
-skeleton hand, now converted into a block of granite (having five
-distinct parts, like a thumb and fingers) protrudes through the turf.
-
-He could recall the dark hours, when as fair-haired children, they
-had cowered together in one of the tapestried rooms of Rhoscadzhel,
-and clasped each other's hands and necks in fear of those
-hob-goblins, which people the very rock and cavern, and even the very
-air of Cornwall. Downie was a man now, legal in bearing, and
-cold-blooded in heart. Richard had painful doubts of him, and
-remembered, that, strangely enough his hand _alone_, had always
-failed to rock the logan-stone in the lawn before Rhoscadzhel, and
-such monuments of antiquity, have, according to Mason, the properties
-of an ordeal--the test of truth and probity:
-
- "Behold yon huge
- And unhewn sphere of living adamant,
- Which, poised by magic, rests its central weight
- On yonder pointed rock: firm as it seems,
- Such is its strange and virtuous property,
- It moves obsequious to the gentlest touch
- Of him whose heart is pure; but to a traitor,
- Tho' e'en a giant's prowess nerv'd his arm,
- It stands as fixed as Snowdon!"
-
-Even the childish hands of his little daughter Gartha, could rock the
-logan-stone, when Downie's failed to do so. Why was this? Was there
-indeed any truth in the ancient test of integrity and purity of
-heart; or was it but an engine of religious imposition? And now amid
-these unpleasant speculations, there came to the loiterer's ear, the
-tolling of a distant bell.
-
-He started up, and listened.
-
-It was, beyond a doubt, the house-bell of Rhoscadzhel, and was being
-rung violently and continuously, for the breeze brought the notes
-distinctly over the furzy waste.
-
-What could have happened? Fire--or was he wanted in haste? Was his
-uncle indisposed; were his fears, his hopes and wishes, though
-blended with sorrow, to be realised at last?
-
-His breath came thick and painfully, and he remembered with something
-of foreboding--for his Cornish breeding rendered him superstitious
-and impressionable--that as he had passed Larnorna church that
-morning, he had seen, on the rough lichstones at the entrance to the
-sequestered church-yard, a coffin rested prior to interment, while
-the soft sad psalmody of those who had borne it thither--a band of
-hardy miners--floated through the still and ambient air; for the
-custom of bearing the dead to their last resting place with holy
-songs--a usage in the East, as old as the fourth century--is still
-observed in Cornwall, that land of quaint traditions and picturesque
-old memories.
-
-Springing to his feet, Richard Trevelyan discharged both barrels of
-his gun into the air, and hurried in the direction of the manor house.
-
-As he drew nearer, the sonorous clangour of the great bell, which was
-now rung at intervals, but with great vigour, continued to increase,
-adding to the surprise and tumult of his heart, and the perturbation
-of his spirit.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-POWDERED WITH TEARS.
-
-A mounted footman, who approached him at full speed, pulled up for a
-moment and respectfully touched his hat, for he was one of the
-Lamorna household.
-
-"What is the matter?" asked Richard.
-
-"Oh, sir--oh, Mr. Richard--my lord is taken very ill."
-
-"Ill--my uncle?"
-
-"He is quite senseless, and Mr. Downie Trevelyan has sent me for the
-doctor."
-
-"Then ride on and lose no time," replied Richard, as he hastened to
-the house, where he found confusion and dismay predominant, the
-servants hovering in the vestibule, conversing in whispers and
-listening at the library door, while Jasper Funnel and Mrs.
-Duntreath, the old housekeeper (a lineal descendant of the Dolly
-Duntreath, so well-known in Cornwall), were mingling their sighs and
-regrets for the loss of so good a master.
-
-"Where is my uncle?" asked Richard, impetuously.
-
-"In the lib--lib--library," sobbed the housekeeper, with her black
-silk apron at her eyes, and as Richard advanced, Jasper Funnel softly
-opened the door. The favourite nephew entered the long spacious and
-splendid apartment, which occupied nearly the entire length of one of
-the wings of Rhoscadzhel, its shelves of dark wainscot filled by
-books in rare and magnificent bindings, with white marble busts of
-the great and learned men of classical antiquity looking calmly down
-on what was passing below.
-
-The fire-place wras deep and old; but a seacoal fire was burning
-cheerily in the bright steel modern grate; and as if he was in a
-dream, seeing the far stretching lawn, with its tufts of waving fern
-and stately lines of elm and oak, as he passed the tall windows
-noiselessly on the soft Turkey carpet, Richard drew hastily near the
-great arm-chair, in which his uncle was seated, dead--stone-dead,
-with Downie, somewhat pale and disordered in aspect, bending over him!
-
-The old man had suddenly passed away--disease of the heart, as it
-proved eventually, had assailed him while seated at his writing-table.
-
-On Richard's entrance and approach, Downie hurriedly took from the
-table and thrust into his pocket, a document which looked most
-legally and suspiciously like a "last will and testament;" but quick
-though the action, Richard could perceive that the document, whatever
-it was, had no signatures of any kind.
-
-Richard knelt by his uncle's side; he felt his pulses; they had
-ceased to beat; his heart was cold and still, and there came no sign
-of breath upon the polished surface of the mirror he held before the
-fallen jaw; with something of remorse Richard thought,--
-
-"No later than this morning I deceived him--and he loved me so--was
-ever my friend and second father!--I thought," he added aloud, to
-Downie, "that his eyes wore an unusual expression this morning--a
-weird, keen, farseeing kind of look, such as I never read in them
-before."
-
-"I fancied that I perceived some such expression myself, and
-consequently, at his years, was the less alarmed, or shall I say
-shocked, when in the very act of speaking to me, a sudden spasm came
-over his features--a deep sigh, almost a faint cry escaped him, and
-he sank back in his chair, when just about to write. See, there is
-the pen on the floor, exactly where it fell from his relaxed fingers."
-
-Richard's honest eyes were filled with tears, and mechanically he
-picked up the pen and laid it on the desk.
-
-"Writing, say you, Downie; and what was he writing?"
-
-"Oh, I cannot say--a letter to his steward, I believe."
-
-"But--I see no letter."
-
-"He was just about to commence it," replied Downie, whose usually
-pale face coloured a little.
-
-"And that paper you pocketed in such haste, Downie, what was it?"
-
-"Nothing, Richard, that can concern you (by-the-by, you are Lord
-Lamorna now!) or that fair one whose portrait you exhibit so
-ostentatiously just now."
-
-Richard started, alike at the title so suddenly accorded to him by
-his brother, and at the reference to the portrait, for in the
-confusion or haste, as he bent over his dead uncle, a little
-miniature, which he wore at a ribbon round his neck, depicting a very
-beautiful dark-eyed woman, had slipped from his vest, and with an
-exclamation of annoyance, he hastened to conceal it.
-
-"_Who_ is the lady, Richard?" asked Downie.
-
-"As yet, that must remain my secret," replied Richard; "a little
-time, my dear fellow, and we shall have no mysteries among us."
-
-Downie, secretly, was not ill-pleased by this diversion, in which
-Richard forgot the subject of the paper.
-
-The doctor soon came--a village practitioner--fussy and full of
-importance; but nevertheless skilful; and he decided that disease of
-the heart--a malady under which, though ignorant of its existence,
-the deceased had long laboured--had proved the immediate cause of
-death. The poor shrivelled remains of the proud old lord were
-conveyed to the principal bed-room of the mansion, and there laid in
-a species of state, upon a four-posted bed, that rose from a daïs,
-and was all draped with black. His coronet and Order of the Bath,
-together with that of St. Anne, which he received when ambassador in
-Russia, were deposited at his feet upon a crimson velvet cushion,
-that was tasseled with gold; while two tall footmen in complete
-livery with long canes draped with crape, mounted guard beside the
-coffin day and night, to their own great disgust and annoyance, till
-the time of the funeral, of which Richard took the entire charge; and
-which, in a spirit of affection and good taste, he resolved should be
-in all respects exactly what the deceased peer would have wished it
-to be.
-
-The features of the latter became, for a time, young and beautiful in
-their manliness and perfect regularity, while all the lines engraven
-there by Time were smoothed out, if not completely effaced.
-
-"How like our father, as I can remember him, he looks!" whispered
-Downie, more softened than usual, by the hallowing presence of death.
-
-But Richard was thinking of another face whom the dead man
-resembled--a young and beloved face to him.
-
-"Denzil did you say?" he stammered.
-
-"I said our father," replied Downie, sharply.
-
-"True, he died young," was the confused reply.
-
-"Your mind wanders, surely?" said Downie, with a dark and
-inexplicable expression in his now averted face; but Richard saw it
-not, he was simply taking a farewell glance of one who had loved him
-so well; his manly heart was soft, and his dark-blue eyes were full
-with the tears of honest affection and gratitude.
-
-So Audley Lord Lamorna was dead, and all now turned to Richard as
-their new and future master; all the blinds in Rhoscadzhel were drawn
-down by order of Mrs. Duntreath, and all went about on tiptoe or
-spoke in subdued voices, especially Downie, who in his heart thought
-that Richard was spending "far too much in ostrich feathers, crimson
-coffins, and other mummery," among undertakers, and heraldic
-painters, too; but he was more politic than to say so--even to his
-wife, who, with her daughter Gartha, a pretty girl in her teens, had
-been on a visit to General Trecarrel, and now duly arrived to act as
-mistress of the mansion, _pro tem._, during the solemnities of which
-it was to be the scene.
-
-She was warmly welcomed by Richard Trevelyan; she was his only
-brother's wife, and he had none of his own to take her place
-there--as yet.
-
-A peevish and foolish woman of fashion, who had once possessed
-undoubted beauty, Mrs. Downie Trevelyan was generally treated as a
-kind of cypher now by her husband; but nevertheless he consulted her
-at times, on certain matters of common interest. She still clung
-tenaciously to the tradition of her former beauty, and sought to
-retain it by the aid of pearl powder, the faintest indication of
-rouge perhaps, and by the prettiest of matronly headdresses made of
-the costliest lace. She was always languid, somewhat dreary, and
-spent most of her time with a novel in one hand, and a magnificent
-little bottle of ether, or some strong perfume, in the other. To
-Richard her society was decidedly a bore; but at this crisis he was
-full of business, and occupied by a depth of thought that was
-apparent to all.
-
-Six tall servants in mourning scarfs, and in the livery of the
-Trevelyans, bore upon their shoulders the crimson velvet coffin
-containing the remains of the late lord, to the vault where his
-forefathers lay, and where many of them had been interred by
-torchlight, in times long past.
-
-There was something feudal, stately, and solemn in the aspect of the
-procession, when between two lines of all the tenantry, standing
-bare-headed, it wound down the old avenue, where the leaves were
-almost as thick, the sun as bright, and the birds singing as merrily
-as they might have been when Lord Launcelot rode there by the Queen's
-bridle, or when he and his cavaliers fled from Fairfax to seek
-shelter in Trewoofe; and so his descendant Audley was laid at last,
-where so many of his predecessors lie side by side, "ranged in
-mournful order and in a kind of silent pomp," each coffin bearing the
-names, titles and arms of its mouldering occupant.
-
-Pondering on who might stand here when his turn came to be lowered
-down there, Richard, the new lord, stood at the head of the tomb,
-pale, and with more emotion than met the eye; Downie stood on his
-right hand, and the heir of the latter, well bronzed by the sun of
-India, on his left, three of his younger brothers, held with a
-ribbon. Their old friend, General Trecarrel, stood grimly and erect
-at the foot. The vault was closed, and the body of Audley, tenth
-Lord Lamorna, that frail tenement, which he had petted and pampered,
-of which he had been so careful and so vain, for some seventy years,
-was left to the worms at last!
-
-The assemblage dispersed, and the world went on as usual.
-
-The bell of the village church, which had all morning tolled minute
-strokes, ceased; and after a time the new chimes rang out a merry
-peal in honour of his successor. It was in Cornwall as at St. Cloud;
-_le Roi est mort--vive le Roi!_
-
-The old general, who had no fancy for a mansion of gloom, departed,
-and took back with him Downie's son Audley, a jolly young subaltern,
-whom we shall soon meet elsewhere.
-
-But prior to this departure, there had been the reading of the will,
-an affair of great solemnity, in the library, the same apartment
-where the late lord died; and his solicitors, Messrs. Gorbelly and
-Culverhole, a fat and a lean pair of lawyers, felt all their vulgar
-importance on the occasion.
-
-There were a few handsome presents to old and faithful servants,
-including Jasper Funnel and Mrs. Duntreath (whose sobs became
-somewhat intrusive), and Richard found himself Lord of Rhoscadzhel
-and Lamorna, with an unfettered fortune of thirty thousand per annum;
-while Downie had a bequest of less than the third of that sum,
-together with some jewelry, including the Russian diamond ring for
-his wife and daughter Gartha.
-
-So whatever had been the object or the tenor of that document which
-the astute barrister had so evidently prepared, and which he had
-thrust into his pocket so hastily and awkwardly on that eventful
-morning, Richard was as safely installed in the estates as in his
-hereditary title; and the moment he found himself alone, he became
-immersed in letter-writing.
-
-Opening the crimson morocco blotting pad which his uncle had last
-used, and which had his coronet and crest, the wild-cat, stamped in
-gold thereon, he saw some words written in his brother's hand, and
-these, on investigation proved to be, "This is the last will and
-testament of me, L----" (doubtless Lord Lamorna); further on, as if
-at the bottom of the page, he could detect the name of "Porthellick,"
-and a dark flush of passion crimsoned the face of Richard. He
-thought again of the document he had seen in Downie's hand; their
-uncle could certainly never have signed it, but some painful
-doubts--added to intense sorrow for their existence--grew strong in
-Richard's heart, which was a true and generous one.
-
-"My dear Constance--my long suffering darling!" he muttered, almost
-aloud; "the day is now near when all your doubts and my dissimulation
-to the world shall end. Thank God, the time has almost come."
-
-And he rode forth, to post with his own hand a letter he had written.
-
-He was barely gone ere Downie, who had been quietly observing his
-motions, also made an investigation of the blotting pad which Richard
-had just closed, and therein he saw what seemed to be the address of
-a recent letter. He held the pink sheet between his eyes and the
-light, and read clearly enough, "Mrs. Devereaux, Porthellick Cottage."
-
-And the lawyer smiled sourly, but with great uneasiness,
-nevertheless, and he muttered aloud,
-
-"I had but vague suspicions before--and now all my knowledge has come
-too late--too late!"
-
-"I am so sorry to hear you say so, dear," said his graceful little
-wife, the rustle of whose fashionable mourning suit he had been too
-much preoccupied to hear, as she glided into the library, in search
-of one of the many uncut novels that now littered the tables; "sorry
-chiefly for the sake of our dear Audley, and Gartha, and the other
-little ones."
-
-"Your know to what I refer--the succession; it may not be so hopeless
-or irreparable as we think."
-
-"But your uncle died with his will unchanged."
-
-"True; I pressed upon him lately my belief that Richard had formed
-that--of which he had a horror so great--a _mésalliance_--in fact, a
-low or improper attachment for one beneath us in rank and name. My
-uncle's fury became great, and to take advantage of the time, I
-placed before him a will, leaving all his estates, as he had a
-hundred times threatened to do, to me and mine. I had the document
-ready written, and placed it before him; but as fate would have it,
-in his pride, fury, and resentment, a spasm seized the old man, and
-he fell back dying, actually with the pen in his hand, after I had
-dipped it in that silver inkstand and placed it between his fingers."
-
-"How extremely unfortunate!" said Mrs. Downie Trevelyan, placing her
-scent-bottle languidly to her little pink nostrils.
-
-"Unfortunate? It was a narrow chance by which to lose thirty
-thousand a year!" said Downie, grinding his teeth, while his eyes
-gleamed like two bits of grey glass in moonlight. "There is some
-mystery about Richard's life; moreover, he wears a woman's miniature
-at his neck."
-
-"Young--is she?"
-
-"Well--yes--she seems so."
-
-"And pretty?" added Mrs. Downie, glancing at herself in a mirror.
-
-"Very."
-
-"His intended, perhaps?"
-
-"I hope she is not more than that; but time must soon show now."
-
-And over the porte-cochère of Rhoscadzhel there now hung a vast
-lozenge-shaped hatchment or funeral escutcheon, the sight of which
-would have delighted him, whose memory it was meant to honour, being
-the achievement of a bachelor peer, representing the arms of Lamorna
-in a shield complete--the demi-horse _argent_ of the Trevelyans
-rising from the sea; over all, the baron's coronet, crest, motto, and
-mantling, collared by the Orders of the Bath and St. Anne; and after
-some old fashion, retained still only in Germany, Scotland, and
-France, the herald-painter had depicted at each corner a death-head,
-while all the black interstices were _powdered with tears_.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-PORTHELLICK VILLA.
-
-More than forty miles distant from Rhoscadzhel, on that part of the
-Cornish coast which is washed by the waves of the Bristol Channel, at
-a place named Porthellick, or the Cove of Willows, was a beautiful
-white-walled villa, built in the Greek style of architecture, with an
-Ionic portico of six carved and painted wooden pillars. Its windows
-opened in the French fashion, and descended to the floor; luxuriant
-creepers, jasmines, and sweet brier, were trained on green
-trellis-work around it, and rare plants of gorgeous colours grew in
-stone vases, which were placed in a double row along the smooth
-gravelled terrace, from which the basement of the cottage rose--for
-the villa was a cottage in character, being but a one storeyed
-dwelling, though spacious and handsome, and having a noble
-conservatory and coach-house and stabling, and an approach of half a
-mile in length, bordered by a double line of those magnificent
-willows from which the place took its name, and affording, from the
-principal windows in front, an ample view of the sea, with ever and
-anon, a white sail lingering in the dim blue distance, or a passing
-steamer, with its pennant of smoke, streaming astern, as it sped
-towards Ireland or the Isle of Man.
-
-On the evening of that day when Lord Lamorna died so suddenly, a lady
-was standing under the portico of this house, looking anxiously, not
-seaward, but inland, towards the willow avenue, by which her
-residence was approached from the road that leads by Stratton, among
-the hills, towards Camelford and Wadebridge, near the rocky valley of
-Hanter-Gantick.
-
-The lady looked repeatedly at her watch, consulted a railway
-time-table, and entered the house, only to return to her post, and
-bend her eyes in anxious gaze along the avenue.
-
-Mrs. Devereaux, for it was she, was young-looking--marvellously so
-for her years; she seemed to be quite a girl still; yet she was fully
-four-and-thirty, and the mother of two children. This youthful
-appearance doubtless arose from her very petite and slender figure;
-her strictly fashionable style of dress, and the piquante beauty that
-shone in the minute features of her charming little face. Her eyes
-were dark, yet full of light and sparkle, though their long lashes
-imparted a great softness of expression. Her eyebrows were very dark
-and well-defined--some might have deemed them too much so; but they
-imparted great character to her face. Her mouth and chin were
-perfect; her teeth like those of a child; and over all, her face,
-figure, and bearing, even to every motion of her hands and feet, Mrs.
-Devereaux was exquisitely lady-like.
-
-"At last--at last they come!" she exclaimed; "and yonder is my dear,
-dear Denzil, whom I have not seen for so many, many months," she
-added, as her eyes filled with tears, and her soft cheek flushed with
-all a mother's joy.
-
-As she uttered her thoughts aloud, a little basket-phaeton, drawn by
-two lovely cream-coloured Shetland ponies, was seen bowling down the
-avenue of pale green willows; a young lady was handling the ribbons
-of these Lilliputian steeds in a very masterly style; and beside her
-sat a young man, attired in fashionable travelling costume, who was
-alternately waving his cap and a newspaper, which he flourished so
-vigorously, that the sleek, brindled cattle grazing in the clover
-meadows close by, lifted their great brown eyes as if inquiringly,
-while the little drag, with its varnished wheels flashing, dashed
-along towards the villa, the walls of which shone white as snow in
-the evening sunlight.
-
-The phaeton was reined up before the portico, when a handsome lad of
-eighteen, with fine regular features, dark blue--almost black--eyes,
-and short fair curly hair, sprang out, and was instantly clasped to
-his mother's breast.
-
-"Oh, mamma--we have such news for you!" exclaimed the young lady, who
-seemed an exact reproduction of Mrs. Devereaux in height and face,
-though barely seventeen, with dark eyes and hair; "oh, such news!"
-she added, in high, girlish excitement, as she tossed her whip and
-reins to a groom who came promptly from the stable-yard, Derrick
-Braddon, once a soldier in Richard's regiment--
-
-"Surely mamma knows all," said the youth; "have you not seen the
-_Gazette_?"
-
-"_Gazette_?" repeated Mrs. Devereaux, growing very pale, as she led
-her son caressingly into the little morning-room, where a hasty
-repast had been prepared for him and his sister, and which opened off
-a handsome little vestibule, hung with fox-brushes crossed, the
-trophies of many a hunting day, brought home by his father, "Captain
-Devereaux."
-
-"Denzil is now an officer, mamma," said the young girl, throwing off
-her hat and looking admiringly at her brother; "I was just in time to
-meet him at the train."
-
-"Yes, mamma--I was yesterday gazetted to an ensigncy in the Cornish
-Light Infantry,--got leave from Sandhurst, and at once came right
-slick down here. Oh, how proud papa will be--is he not here?"
-
-"No," replied Mrs. Devereaux, faintly; "and how does your name appear
-in the _Gazette_?"
-
-"Here it is, mamma, dear," replied the youth, pointing to the paper
-he had been flourishing, and feeling proud to see his name, for the
-first time, in print. "'Cornish Light Infantry; Lieutenant Audley
-Trevelyan, from the 14th Hussars, to be lieutenant, vice Gascoigne,
-killed in action. Denzil Devereaux, gentleman cadet, from the Royal
-Military College, Sandhurst, to be ensign, vice Foster, deceased.'
-And now, mamma, I am done at last with all the boredom of Euclid and
-fortification, Trigonometry, and all the rest of it."
-
-"And you will soon be done with poor mamma, too!"
-
-"Nay, mamma, dear; that can never, never be!" replied the lad, as he
-threw his arms round her neck and kissed away the tears that were
-already oozing from her long and beautiful eyelashes; "but I do so
-wish papa were at home--I have so much to tell, and so much to ask
-him!"
-
-"Denzil--Devereaux?" said the mother, ponderingly, and as if to
-herself.
-
-"Yes, mamma; and few fellows at Sandhurst had more marks opposite
-their names than Denzil Devereaux, for I worked hard that I might
-choose my own regiment; so I chose the 32nd because I am a kind of
-Cornish man, and because it was papa's old corps. Oh, how pleased he
-will be!"
-
-"And where is the regiment stationed now?" asked Mrs. Devereaux, in a
-low voice.
-
-"In India."
-
-"India?" she repeated, mechanically, as if that separation, which is
-but as a living death, had already begun.
-
-"I wonder who the Audley Trevelyan figuring along with me in the
-_Gazette_, may be. It is a pure Cornish name."
-
-His mother was weeping now, and Sybil, who had hitherto been silent,
-began to do so from sympathy; for already, so we have said, the pang
-of the coming parting was felt, and the maternal heart was wrung at
-the thought of a long and doubtful separation from her only son--her
-Denzil--whom she deemed beautiful as Apollo, and clever as the
-admirable Crichton; for the Overland Route had not been opened, there
-was no electric cable to India, and its nearest point was distant a
-six months' journey by sea round the Cape; and so, full of aching
-thoughts that her children could not share--thoughts that must be all
-her own till her husband returned--poor Mrs. Devereaux could only
-fold her son to her breast and weep, till the young man's military
-and boyish enthusiasm became dulled, and his naturally warm and
-affectionate heart grew full with a perplexity that was akin to
-remorse, for seeking to leave her side and push his way in the world
-as a soldier. Yet that was the only career his father had ever
-indicated to him.
-
-"A letter from papa--our dear papa!" exclaimed Sybil, glad to cause
-some diversion from the gathering gloom, as she caught the missive
-from the hand of the village postman, who appeared outside the open
-window.
-
-"I wonder if he has heard of my appointment," surmised Denzil, his
-thoughts reverting to their old channel.
-
-"It is sealed and edged with black!" exclaimed Sybil; "and--how
-singular--it bears the Penzance postmark!"
-
-"How is this, mamma--I thought papa was in London?" asked Denzil.
-
-Mrs. Devereaux trembled violently, as she tore open the letter, and
-muttering an excuse hastily left the room with it.
-
-"What's up," said the ex-cadet, as he applied himself to the sherry
-decanter; "by Jove, Sybil, this is a strange way of receiving papa's
-letter. Who is dead, I wonder--I hope there is nothing wrong with
-him, anyway!"
-
-"Oh, can he have met with an accident?"
-
-"Scarcely, as the letter is written by himself; but to be at Penzance
-when we all thought he was in town--very odd, isn't it?"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-RICHARD'S MYSTERY.
-
-To explain much that the reader may have begun to suspect or
-misjudge, we must now go back a few years, into the private life of
-Richard Trevelyan.
-
-When stationed with his regiment in Montreal he had made, at some
-public assembly, the acquaintance of Constance Devereaux, then a girl
-fresh from school. He was fascinated by her rare beauty, and a
-certain _espieglerie_ of manner, which the thoughts and cares of
-future years eventually crushed out of her; and she, on her part, was
-dazzled by the attentions of a handsome and wealthy young officer;
-for Richard being his uncle's favourite nephew and heir, received
-from him a handsome yearly allowance, in addition to that which he
-inherited from his father.
-
-Unfortunately Constance Devereaux, with all her beauty and
-accomplishments, was the daughter of one who would have been deemed
-of very humble caste indeed, if judged by the standard applied to
-such matters at Rhoscadzhel. The girl loved him passionately and
-blindly, and little foreseeing all such a step would cost her in the
-end, she consented to a private marriage; so they were united in
-secret by Père Latour, the catholic curé of the chapel of St. Mary,
-near Montreal; an acolyte of the chapel and Richard's servant, a
-soldier named Derrick Braddon, being the only witnesses.
-
-The marriage was duly registered in the books of the little church,
-and an attested copy was lodged with the curé who performed the
-ceremony; but as the regiment was ordered soon after to another
-colony, it was left in his hands for the time.
-
-Richard obtained leave of absence, and soon after, much to his
-uncle's surprise, left the army by selling out, and led a kind of
-wandering life on the Continent, taking his wife's name of Devereaux,
-the better to conceal from the proud, and as yet unsuspecting old
-lord, the _mésalliance_ he had formed--a union, however; of which he
-had never cause to repent, for his wife was gentle and tender, and
-possessed many brilliant mental qualities; but well did Richard know
-that if that union were discovered, the immense fortune, which was at
-Lord Lamorna's entire disposal, would be left, if not altogether to
-Downie, to others, and past himself and the heirs of his line; and
-that such a calamity should not occur he became more anxious and more
-solicitous after the birth of two children, a son whom he named
-Denzil, after his own father, and a daughter, Sybil, born to them
-since their wanderings in Italy.
-
-Many difficulties attended the course of this secret matrimonial
-life! Even in their continental travels, when seeking the most
-secluded places, stray English tourists would come suddenly upon them
-if they ventured near a table d'hôte; once or twice an old brother
-officer, or other people who knew or recognised in the so-called
-Captain Devereaux, Richard Trevelyan; and then mysterious nods or
-knowing smiles were exchanged, and odd whispers went abroad in the
-clubs of London and elsewhere--innuendoes that would have withered up
-the heart of Constance had she heard them.
-
-She knew all that might be suspected, and felt that the positions of
-herself and her children, were alike false and liable to
-misconstruction; that malignant scandal might be busy with the names
-of them all. But the die was cast now, and she had but to suffer and
-endure; to pray and to wait the death of the poor old man who was so
-kind to her husband, and who loved him so well--yet not well enough
-to forgive--had he ever discovered it--the deception which had been
-practised upon him and upon society.
-
-Repining in secret, sorrowing for the falsehood of her position,
-knowing that her husband, the father of her children, passed in the
-world as an eligible bachelor, the object of many a designing mother,
-open to the attentions, the coquetries and captivations of their
-daughters, aware that he resided with her only by stealth and under
-another name than his own, Constance had indeed much to endure,
-though rewarded in some degree therefor, to see her children growing
-up in health and beauty, each a reproduction of their parents, for
-Denzil had all the personal attributes of his father, with much
-higher mental qualities, while the soft-eyed Sybil possessed all the
-dark beauty, the petite figure and lady-like grace of Constance
-herself.
-
-The latter, we have said, was but the daughter of a Canadian trader;
-yet amid all the ease and luxury with which her husband's ample means
-and tender love supplied her, there were times, when she could not
-but murmur in her heart at the anomaly of her situation, so different
-from the honest security of her father's humble home, and her native
-pride revolted against it; and with this pride there grew a species
-of shame, which she felt to be totally unmerited, and then she felt
-an utter loathing for the very name of Lord Lamorna, (though it
-should one day be borne by her own husband) as being the cause of all
-her secret suffering, her dread of the present and doubt of the
-future.
-
-On the education of their children, Richard, who doted on them, had
-spared nothing. Both were highly accomplished, and wherever they had
-wandered they had the most talented masters that wealth could
-procure. Now Denzil had taken the highest prizes at Sandhurst and
-was gazetted to a Regiment of the Line, and was going forth into the
-world under the false name of Devereaux!
-
-How was this to be altered--how explained and rectified?
-
-A necessity for being much about Rhoscadzhel, as being the heir to
-the estates and as his uncle's years increased, had compelled Richard
-Trevelyan to be more often present in his native county than he had
-hitherto been; hence, he had settled his secret ties in the pretty
-little villa of Porthellick, at what he conceived to be a safe
-distance of some forty miles or so from the residence of Lord Lamorna.
-
-In and about that villa he was simply known as "Captain Devereaux,"
-and as he had almost entirely relinquished hunting and field
-sports--save an occasional shot at a bird--and when there lived a
-retired and secluded life; and as his wife and children seemed to
-live for themselves and him only, making friends with few save the
-poor and ailing, time glided by, and the mystery of Richard's career
-was never fully laid bare.
-
-For those there are in this world (and his uncle was one) who would
-have pardoned Richard making Constance Devereaux his mistress, and
-yet would mockingly have resented his making her a wedded wife!
-
-Lamorna's friend General Trecarrel--the representative of one of the
-oldest families in Cornwall--who lived near Porthellick, had met
-Richard on horseback more than once in the vicinity of that place,
-when he was supposed to be in London, Paris, or elsewhere, and the
-mention of these circumstances caused Mr. Downie Trevelyan, who, as
-we have shown, had a keen personal interest in the matter, to
-prosecute certain inquiries in that part of the duchy, and the result
-led him to believe that the Captain Devereaux who occasionally
-resided at the Grecian Villa in the Willow Cove, and his
-irreproachable brother Richard, were one and the same person!
-
-If it were so, the character of the lady must be--he
-supposed--somewhat questionable; and Downie knew right well that
-their uncle might forgive a liaison, but never a marriage with one of
-an inferior grade. The conduct and bearing of the lady at the villa
-seemed unimpeachable; so Downie had long felt doubtful how to act,
-and only indulged in vague hints to his brother's prejudice.
-
-The pride and anger even these had kindled in the heart of the old
-lord, who was now gone, and the threats in which he had indulged,
-afforded Richard Trevelyan a fair specimen of what would assuredly be
-the result were his marriage ever known at Rhoscadzhel; and when
-pressed on the subject pretty pointedly, he had assured his
-uncle--while his cheek flushed and his heart burned with shame--that
-he was still unwedded and free; and even as he made the false avowal,
-the soft pleading eyes of Constance, his own true wife, and the
-voices of their children, came vividly and upbraidingly to memory!
-
-Now the foolish old man had passed away, the barrier was removed, and
-all should be made light that had hitherto been darkness, as her
-husband's hastily written letter informed her.
-
-Yet she thought, with honest indignation, how hard it was that she
-had been for all these eighteen years and more kept out of her proper
-sphere as the wedded wife of Richard Trevelyan, often taking almost
-flight from _this_ town and _that_ hotel, lest he should be
-recognised; consigned hence to a life of secresy and seclusion; a
-life that might yet cast doubts upon the very name and birth of her
-children, through the whim, the old-fashioned pride and folly of an
-absurd and antiquated peer, whose ideas went back, even far beyond
-the days of his youth, when people travelled in stage-coaches, used
-sand and sealing-wax for letters; when steam and telegraphy were
-unknown, when papers were published weekly at sixpence; and was one
-who deemed that railways, electricity, penny-dailies, and what is
-generally known as progress, are sending all the world to ruin.
-
-Her husband's letter filled her with joy. He playfully added, "I
-fear I have drunk of the well of St. Keyne before you," alluding to
-the well-known spring near Liskeard, a draught from which the Cornish
-folks suppose will ensure ascendancy in domestic affairs, and the
-letter was signed for the first time "Your loving husband, LAMORNA."
-
-How strange to her eye the new signature looked. She felt somehow
-that she preferred his old one of "Richard." But they were one and
-the same now, and a little time should see her in her place, as
-mistress of that stately dwelling, Rhoscadzhel, which she had only
-seen once from a distance, and felt then, with an emotion of
-unmerited humiliation, that she could not, and dared not, enter.
-
-Like all its predecessors, this letter, that contained so much in a
-few lines, was addressed to her as "Mrs. Devereaux," and she felt a
-momentary pang, but remembered that to have addressed her by the
-title, which was now so justly hers, might have sorely perplexed the
-rural postman of her neighbourhood.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-LADY LAMORNA.
-
-It was a difficult task for Constance Devereaux to conceal her
-undeniable joy from her affectionate and observant son and daughter;
-and her heart would sometimes upbraid her that she should feel thus
-happy on an occasion which must cause them all to wear mourning, the
-external livery of at least conventional woe.
-
-Denzil and his sister attributed her alternate fits of radiance and
-silence to pleasure at the anticipated return of their father, who on
-this occasion had necessarily been longer absent than usual from the
-Villa at Porthellick.
-
-The equivocation and anxiety of years--years the happiness of which
-had in it so much of alloy--were about to be removed now! She was at
-last Constance Lady Lamorna of Rhoscadzhel--the wife of him who
-represented one of the oldest, and perhaps, most noble families in
-the duchy; but one passage in her husband's letter troubled and
-perplexed her, though it caused neither fear nor doubt--of one kind
-at least--in her loving and trusting heart.
-
-"Our marriage must still be kept a secret for a _little time_; when
-we meet, I shall tell you _why_."
-
-After so much had been endured, and now when the barrier had been
-swept away by death, why should there be more secresy still--at a
-time so critical for their Denzil, too?
-
-For a week she tortured herself with endless surmises which might
-have grown into actual fears but for the arrival of her husband,
-looking so well and so handsome, and though grave (for he had loved
-his generous old uncle--his second father, as he termed him), so
-evidently pleased and happy; and Constance thought it fortunate that
-their son and daughter were both absent, she had so much to say and
-to hear.
-
-Denzil had taken his rod and gone forth to fish in some lonely tarn
-amid the moors, while Sybil had driven away in the pony phaeton to
-visit some friend at a distance.
-
-"Here's his lord---- the master himself, ma'am!" said Derrick
-Braddon, who was the only human being in England that shared their
-mystery, and who was now "dying," as the phrase is, for permission to
-share with others the great secret the faithful fellow had kept so
-long and so well; and now Dick's weather-beaten visage was radiant
-with pride and pleasure as he ushered Richard into the pretty little
-drawing-room, when, with a girlish bound, Constance sprang into his
-open arms.
-
-"Well, dearest Materfamilias," said he, kissing her tenderly on the
-proffered lips and radiant eyes; "you are looking as young and as
-charming as ever--ay, even as on that eventful morning in St. Mary's,
-at Montreal, a morning we may remember now without fear, my own one!"
-
-"So the poor old man is gone at last, and our days of dissimulation
-are over," she replied, sobbing amid the smiles that beamed on her
-up-turned face.
-
-"And you have acted wisely in not adopting deep mourning yet."
-
-"Why--wisely?" she asked, while perceiving that her husband must have
-doffed his black costume somewhere on the way to Porthellick, for he
-was as usual attired in a shooting-suit and brown-leather gaiters;
-and she felt an unpleasant emotion by this circumstance, for whence
-this continued caution, she thought; this care, this hateful
-continuation of an alias, as it seemed, this playing of a double
-character, if all were right and clear? and now the passage in his
-letter flashed upon her memory.
-
-"I said 'wisely,' dearest Constance; because we have still a part to
-play."
-
-"Still?" she queried, mournfully, and her eyelids drooped.
-
-"Tell me--the children know nothing of this change in our fortunes, I
-hope?"
-
-"No--and dear Denzil, you are aware, has been--gazetted."
-
-"To my old corps--so I saw; God bless the boy?" exclaimed Richard
-Trevelyan; "yes, but what I mean is, that I must bring you all before
-the world--you as the wife, and them as the children, of Lord
-Lamorna, with judicious care and a strength of _conviction_ that none
-can doubt or challenge."
-
-"Oh, Richard," said she, trembling, "I do not understand you."
-
-"Here, I am still known as Captain Devereaux; but the world, which
-deems me a bachelor, must be convinced that we were married to each
-other in _faciæ ecclesiæ_, as those lawyer-fellows have it; and the
-proofs of that circumstance must be forthcoming."
-
-"Proofs?" she repeated, faintly, as she seated herself, and grew
-very, very pale, for it seemed to her over-sensitive mind, as if his
-manner had become hard and sententious, even while he stooped over,
-and tenderly and caressingly held in his, her little hand whereon was
-the wedding ring that Père Latour had consecrated; and now there
-ensued a brief pause, for in his knowledge of her extreme
-sensibility, and the amount of his own loving nature, he feared the
-explanation of all he meant might wound.
-
-Though some might have deemed the secresy to which he had condemned
-her for years (lest they might lose the large fortune now theirs)
-selfish; Richard Trevelyan had ever been nervously jealous of her
-honour, and the honour of their innocent children; and at times, he
-had accused himself of moral cowardice in his submission to the
-caprice of his uncle. In his heart he had always cursed the
-duplicity to which they had been compelled to resort, and the false
-position in which that duplicity had placed them all for such a
-length of time. All this was to be atoned for now; but he felt that
-it must be done wisely, warily and surely, or, as he had said, with
-_strength_, lest the world in which he had hitherto moved as a
-bachelor--that selfish and suspicious bugbear called "Society" might
-shrug its shoulders, and ask, "Can all this story be true?"
-
-He had some difficulty in explaining all this to Constance, but,
-fortunately, what he lacked in tact, he made up for in tenderness;
-yet, after a minute of silence and tears, she exclaimed with
-uncontrollable bitterness,
-
-"I alone am to blame! I ought to have foreseen the difficulties with
-which I should encumber you; but I was a simple, a trusting and a
-heedless girl!----"
-
-"Nor has the trust of your girlhood been misplaced, Constance," he
-urged.
-
-"What Eden is without its serpent--what house without its skeleton?
-and I am yours!"
-
-"My darling Constance, do not speak thus, and do not weep; think if
-Denzil or Sybil were to return and see you thus agitated--see what
-they never saw before, tears in your eyes; at least, tears so bitter
-as these," urged her husband, as he caressed her tenderly. "You
-know, my own love, that solid proofs of our marriage, beyond mere
-assertion, _must_ be forthcoming; and until these proofs are in our
-hands, we must appear to the world as Captain and Mrs. Devereaux; we
-must act wisely and warily, I repeat, for the sake of our dear
-children."
-
-The face of Constance became ghastly, and a dangerous gleam, such as
-Richard had never seen before, was in her dark eyes, while she said,
-huskily,
-
-"Honest Derrick Braddon witnessed our marriage, Richard."
-
-"True; but I am now a peer of the realm, and I wish the full proof of
-it all. You know that during the past year I have thrice written to
-the Père Latour for the certificate of our marriage, but wrote in
-vain, he has left my letters unanswered. I might employ those
-lawyers, Gorbelly and Culverhole to sift the matter, but to use their
-aid, might set abroad a scandal at once; hence I now propose to start
-by the first steamer for America to get the necessary documents in
-person, and Derrick Braddon shall accompany me."
-
-"And may not I?" she pleaded, softly.
-
-"No, darling Constance, I shall be gone for more than a month--for
-two, perhaps, and you have to get Denzil fitted out for his
-regiment--my poor Denzil, I shall grudge those two months' loss of
-his society fearfully, as you may suppose."
-
-"Pardon my momentary bitterness, dearest Richard, but after so much
-endurance, after such long concealment--" her voice failed her, and
-wreathing her soft arms round his neck, she nestled her little head
-on his breast, and whispered with a sigh, as if her heart would
-burst, "is it irrevocable--and must I too, be separated from my boy?"
-
-"It is but for a time, Conny--no young fellow should be idle; and a
-year or so in the army----"
-
-"And he will return, Richard----"
-
-"As the son and heir of Lord Lamorna!"
-
-"But oh, how I shall miss him!"
-
-"You will have Sybil and me!"
-
-"But you, too, I am about to lose."
-
-"For a time only; and do not speak so forbodingly, dear Constance."
-
-"I felt such disappointment that Denzil should appear at Sandhurst,
-and even in the Gazette, not as a Trevelyan, but as a Devereaux!"
-
-"And a Devereaux he deems himself, and must continue to do so, till I
-return from Montreal. Old Trecarrel is going in command to India,
-and when matters are all squared here, I'll get Denzil on his Staff
-with ease. We have been the victims of circumstances; have I not a
-thousand times said, that if my uncle had discovered our marriage, we
-should have lost all? He is gone at last; but you know, Conny
-darling, that his ideas were simply absurd--in some respects suited
-only to the middle-ages--the middle ages do I say? By Jove, to those
-when the Anglo-Saxons wore coats of paint, and dyed their yellow hair
-blue. But are things arranged in this world wisely, think you,
-Constance?'
-
-"I dare not impugn the plans of a beneficent Providence."
-
-"But Providence never meant the conditions of life to turn out as
-they too often do."
-
-"How, Richard," she, asked gently; "I don't quite understand you?"
-
-"That the greatest number of the rich, the powerful and the most
-successful--by flukes, perhaps--are fools or knaves."
-
-"Ah, but if riches brought talent--the wealthy and powerful would be
-too happy, and Fate or Providence do not make them so."
-
-"I cannot express to you how my heart was wrung with jealous envy,
-and even with shame, when I saw Downie's family stand around my
-uncle's grave, and enjoying all the freedom and hospitality of
-Rhoscadzhel--even his cold-blooded, fashionable wife, too--and
-thought how my own three tender loves were debarred----"
-
-"And unknown--"
-
-"Yes----d--m it, unknown, and must be for a few weeks still, but time
-cures all evils, and it will cure this. Yet is not the gazetting of
-the two cousins, Denzil and the oldest of Downie's four boys, in one
-paragraph, and to my old corps, too a remarkable coincidence--all the
-more so, that they are ignorant of each other's existence?"
-
-"My poor Denzil--he is so bright and clever!"
-
-"Ay, more clever than ever I was. In my time, when I met you so
-happily in pleasant Montreal, one could be a fair average soldier
-without all the polyglot accomplishments so necessary now, when he
-who quits Sandhurst as a candidate for a commission direct, with five
-shillings and threepence per diem to further his extravagance, might
-quite as well come out for the Church or Bar, with the chance of a
-safer and better paid berth in either."
-
-"And he joins his regiment as a Devereaux--my poor boy!"
-
-"Still harping on that string!" said Richard, a little impatiently.
-"On my return when matters are all sorted and made clear by the legal
-documents, Denzil and Sybil must be simply told, that my succession
-to estates and a title have necessitated a change of name."
-
-"But our Denzil is no longer a boy--and I shall almost blush for my
-past duplicity, before my own girl!"
-
-"Come, come, Conny, this is foolish; what is done cannot be undone,
-and it is useless to cry over spilt milk."
-
-"And how to explain this absence, for perhaps two months, you say,
-when they have been longing every hour for your return from London,
-where they believed you to be?"
-
-"I know not yet, Constance; but a little time will make all things
-clear. We had no marriage contract--a love-sick subaltern and a
-schoolgirl were not likely to think of such a thing--we had only the
-brief certificate deposited with Père Latour; but a will executed by
-me, in favour of you and the children shall make all right and
-secure; and now my little wife, for a biscuit and glass of dry
-sherry, as I have ridden this morning all the way from beyond
-Launceston."
-
-Constance retired for a minute to bathe her eyes, to smooth her hair,
-and came back to look composed and smiling; for she had still to act
-a part.
-
-The hour for which she had so pined and yearned--especially since her
-son Denzil first saw the light in a lonely village among the
-Apennines--the time when she should take her place as the wife of
-Richard Trevelyan, (not that she cared for the wealth that place
-might bring her) had come; and yet there were fresh delays to be
-endured by her, and now it might be dangers dared by him she loved so
-well; but he strove in his honest, manly, and affectionate way to
-cheer her; and as he filled his glass with the sparkling golden
-sherry, he kissed her once more as if they were lovers still and said
-merrily,
-
-"I drink to your speedy welcome home, my dear little Lady Lamorna!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-THE BROKEN CIRCLE.
-
-Sybil who was clever with her pencil, made up quite a collection of
-sketches from her portfolio, a pleasant labour of love, for Denzil to
-take with him, as a souvenir of herself and their beloved Cornwall,
-and skilfully the girl's able hand and artistic eye had reproduced
-the wondrous stone avenues of Dartmoor and Merivale, the Stone Pillar
-of St. Colomb, the Cliff Castles of Treryn, Tintagel and elsewhere,
-with many a pretty and peaceful cottage scene.
-
-Preparations for her husband's journey, and more than all, the Indian
-outfit of Denzil, luckily occupied the attention of Constance for a
-time; thus her hands and those of Sybil were fully employed, and the
-minds of both had no leisure to brood over the coming separation.
-
-Weary of the monotony of life at the villa, great was the delight of
-old weather-beaten Dick Braddon, to "be off" as he said, "to see the
-world once more with the master," whom he loved only second perhaps
-to Denzil, whose free frank bearing charmed the veteran, who averred
-that he was exactly like what his father was, when he joined the
-Cornish Light Infantry, a cherry-cheeked ensign, long ago in America.
-
-But the hour of separation drew near, when both father and son were
-to leave Porthellick, and depart each upon their long watery
-journey;--the former to America, and the latter to what seemed the
-other end of the world--India; and the heart of Constance began to
-sink in spite of herself.
-
-"Oh, Richard," she whispered once, with her soft face nestling in her
-husband's neck, while his protecting arm went kindly round her; "the
-greatest joy on earth is to possess a child--the greatest woe to lose
-it! The loss of our parents we may, and must, in the course of time
-anticipate; but the loss of our children--never!"
-
-"But Denzil will return, Conny--you would not have the boy tied to
-your apron-strings, like Sybil?" urged Richard, laughing to cheer and
-rouse her; but, nevertheless, the rank, title and fair fortune now
-before them all, the mother's anxious heart foreboded sorrow in the
-future; and now came the last night her boy was to sleep under his
-father's roof, ere he was to go forth into the world--forth like a
-branch torn from its parent stem.
-
-When all were in slumber that night, poor Constance stole in to watch
-her Denzil as he slept. The feeble rays of the night-lamp played on
-the features of her boy, and on the glitter of a laced scarlet-coat
-and gold epaulettes that hung on the pier glass. With the vanity
-natural to youth, he had been contemplating himself in his Regimental
-finery ere he went to repose, and his bullock-trunk and overland,
-lettered for "India," were among the first things that caught her
-eye, bringing more home to her heart the fact of his departure.
-
-He was still hers!
-
-To-morrow he should be far away from her, out on the great and
-stirring highway of life--her petted boy no longer; and smiles, like
-ripples upon shining water, seemed to spread over the smooth face of
-the sleeping lad, even as the tears gathered in the eyes, and prayer
-in the heart of the mother who watched him for a time, with her hands
-clasped, and stole away with many a backward glance, thinking how
-lonely she should be when that hour on the morrow came.
-
-And this tall and handsome lad--this young soldier going forth to
-carry the Queen's colours in the distant East, was once her "baby
-boy," the child she had borne, nursed and nurtured. She had a sweet
-and sad, yet proud and joyous consciousness in this. Had he been
-weakly, deformed or crippled, she should have loved him all the same;
-but then, thank God! her Denzil was so handsome.
-
-Often in far-away lands, on weary marches, in comfortless tents and
-rickety bungalows, on the banks of the Sutlej, or amid hostile Sikhs
-and Afghans, would he dream of the soft and loving face that had been
-bent in silence over his--the face he never more might see, save in
-those kind visions that God sends in sleep, to soothe--it may be, to
-sadden and to warn us.
-
-"No child can ever know how dearly its parents love it--how they
-suffer in its illness, loss or departure," whispered Constance to
-herself; "still," she thought upbraidingly, "I left my poor father to
-sorrow in his humble home at Montreal--but then it was with a
-husband, so dear and true!"
-
-The child that is ill or absent, is always valued the most; so poor
-Sybil was almost forgotten by her mother for the time. A few hours
-more, and both husband and son had left her in tears, to separate in
-London, each to pursue his own journey.
-
-Of Richard's ultimate intentions, Denzil and Sybil were to be left in
-ignorance, and also of the object and purport of his absence. So
-Constance was left with her daughter only by her side.
-
-The poor mother's heart felt as if thrust back upon herself now, for
-she was the mistress of a great family secret, which, as yet, she
-could not share even with Sybil.
-
-So the long dreaded "to-morrow," had come, and other morrows
-followed, and Constance began to feel herself most sadly alone.
-Often she stole into the well-known room to kiss the pillow on which
-her Denzil's cheek had rested; to weep over the bed as if a death had
-been there, and not the departure of a gallant boy full of hope and
-life; and on each occasion as she lingered there, she strove to
-pourtray in fancy his face, as she last saw him, sleeping all
-unconscious that she hovered near; and with a wild but loving
-presentiment and hope that he would again occupy it some day, she
-kept his room intact, exactly as he had left it; his books, his
-fencing foils on those particular shelves, his old hat stuck round
-with fishing flies, on that particular peg where he was wont to hang
-it; his rods and guns, in yonder corner; though every detail, such as
-these, reminded her of him more vividly, fed her grief and roused the
-intense longing for his presence and return to her arms again.
-
-"India--India?" she would say half aloud when communing with herself;
-"it may be ten years of separation. Ten years! Oh--no, never,
-surely! With my Richard's great influence as a peer of the realm,
-that must never be permitted. In ten years what changes must
-inevitably happen; who may be alive then, and who dead? Sybil should
-then be seven-and-twenty--married perhaps--and to whom?--with
-children it may be--my poor innocent Sybil! Oh no; three years at
-the utmost, and Denzil shall be again by his mamma's side!"
-
-So the lonely Constance pondered, hoped and lovingly spun out like a
-web, her desires or mental view of the future, striving to gather
-happiness therefrom; while Sybil sought in vain to cheer her with
-music, to lure her out for a walk in the willowed dell, or a drive
-along the coast road, in their pretty pony phaeton.
-
-The month was October now. With a sullen wail the autumnal blasts
-swept from the wooded hollows of Moorwinstow to the cavernous
-headland of Tintagel, cresting before their breath the waves of the
-Bristol Channel. There came gusts of rain too, that beat dolefully
-on the window panes, with an angry and impatient patter, adding to
-the dreariness of heart experienced by those in the Villa of
-Porthellick. The season was bleak, and nowhere could it seem more so
-than among the barren moors, the sea-beat bluffs, and resounding
-caverns, the wind swept pasture lands and promontories of Cornwall.
-
-The woods were almost bare; the few remaining leaves, fluttered brown
-and crisp on the bared twigs; the stackyards were full, and the
-produce of the potato fields was consigned to long brown pits of
-fresh earth and straw, for the coming winter; the uplands were
-covered with decaying stubble, or being ploughed, while, gorged with
-worms, the great crows sat sleepily in the shining furrows. Thick as
-gnats in summer, the dingy coloured sparrows twittered in the
-hedgerows, which were being lopped and trimmed; and the axes of the
-woodmen were heard in thicket and copse; while the smoke of the
-steam-engine that worked and drained the adjacent copper-mine, hung
-low in the frowsy air, adding at times to the gloom of the landscape.
-
-Richard Trevelyan had sailed, and Denzil too; and Constance was aware
-that each of them had to traverse a wintry sea, the former before he
-returned and the latter before he reached his destination.
-
-The public prints had duly announced that "the Right Hon. Lord
-Lamorna and suite (_i.e._ old Derrick Braddon) had gone for a tour in
-America;" and Denzil if his eyes ever saw the announcement--which is
-doubtful--could little have dreamed how nearly it concerned him, and
-the mother on whom he doted, and whom he still knew only as "Mrs.
-Devereaux."
-
-The latter had to make many an excuse, even to Sybil, to account for
-her husband's protracted absence from the villa; and Downie
-Trevelyan, when he read the above announcement in the "Morning Post,"
-wiped his gold eye-glass and read it again with much perplexity and
-secret annoyance, while surmising "what the deuce could take Richard
-so suddenly to America at this season of the year!"
-
-The new task and anxiety of watching the shipping intelligence next
-occupied the attention of Constance. The steamer in which Richard
-sailed, had been seen, signalled and spoken with in sundry Atlantic
-latitudes and longitudes; and some seventeen days or so saw her
-safely at the end of her voyage; but the transport, a great Indiaman
-with Denzil on board, was seldom heard of, some at long dates; and at
-longer dates too, came his hastily written letters from St. Helena,
-and from Ascension, or by homeward-bound ships; few men, even of the
-most wealthy, thought then of proceeding to India by the scarcely
-developed overland route; and how fondly those letters were read over
-and over again, the last thing at night, and the first in the
-morning, the mother, situated as Constance was then, may imagine; for
-the loving little family circle was broken now.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-FOREBODINGS.
-
-If ever Constance left the villa, she sought the direction of the
-coast, and when there never wearied of watching the wide expanse of
-the Bristol Channel with its passing ships and steamers; for the
-changing ocean was the path by which her loved ones were to return to
-her; Richard, within a month perhaps, now; but their son Denzil--oh,
-years must elapse, her heart foreboded and knew, ere she should see
-him again.
-
-And now as the season advanced, and storms and wrecks among the
-Scilly Isles and about the Land's End were not unfrequent, her soul
-became a prey to nervous fears, that were fed and fostered in spite
-of herself by Derrick's sister, Winny Braddon, a superstitious old
-Cornish woman, who had been Sybil's nurse.
-
-Winny, a devout believer in dreams, visions, the virtues of
-miraculous wells and so forth, was wont to declare that when all
-specifics failed she had been cured of rheumatism by crawling through
-the famous Men-an-tol, or Holed Stone near Lanyon; and now she shook
-her grey head ominously when the wind blew a gale and rolled a heavy
-surf upon the shore, and averred that she could hear the wreck-bells
-booming under the sea at Boscastle.
-
-So Constance, though naturally free from all idle fancies save that
-which we may term the affectionate superstition of the heart, could
-not listen to the croaking of this old woman without vague and
-growing fear; for though Winny knew nothing of the interest that
-"Mrs. Devereaux" had in the family of Lamorna, or her connection
-therewith (Derrick having kept his secret well) those sounds amid the
-deep at Boscastle were supposed by Cornish tradition to bode evil to
-the line of Trevelyan.
-
-For it would appear, as Winny Braddon related, that long ago the
-villagers of Boscastle were very envious of the melodious and musical
-bells that were rung in the church of Tintagel, to which they were a
-gift from its superior the Abbot of Fontevrault in Normandy. So De
-Bottreaux who was lord of the manor, and the site of whose castle is
-now marked by a green mound only, to gratify those villagers who were
-his vassals, ordered from London a merry peal for the spire of
-Boscastle church; and those bells were duly shipped on board a vessel
-named the _Koithgath_ caravel, for her captain, Launcelot Trevelyan,
-was a younger son of the family of Lamorna. He had been a wild
-fellow, of whose future career evil had been predicted by a _Pyrdrak
-Brâz_ (old Cornish for a great-witch) who dwelt in the Zawn Reeth, a
-granite cavern at Nans Isal, on the western side of the bay so
-named--a wild and savage place surrounded by masses of scattered rock.
-
-So Master Launcelot ran off to sea, and served under Drake and
-Hawkins in many a dark and desperate day's work among the Spaniards
-in Brazil, Madeira, and the Cape de Verde; and had once been round
-the Cape of Storms as far as the realms of that mysterious personage
-then known as Prester John.
-
-Thus in due time, steered by Paul Poindester, a famous pilot from the
-Scilly Isles, the _Koithgath_, with the bells on board, arrived in
-the offing and in sight of Boscastle, with all its furzy hollows,
-above which rose the castle of Bottreaux, with the standard of its
-owner flying--a great banner, bearing three toads and a griffin.
-
-As the ship drew in shore, the bells of Tintagel church, that towers
-still on a bleak, exposed, and lofty cliff to the westward of King
-Arthur's castle, rang out a taunting and a joyous peal that mingled
-with the booming of the ocean as it rolled on the bluffs below, or
-far up the sandy bay of Trebarreth Strand.
-
-Then, according to the story, Launcelot Trevelyan swore an exulting
-oath as he surveyed the stupendous scenery of his native shore,
-adding,
-
-"I am here again--thank my good ship and her canvas!"
-
-"Nay," said the old pilot Poindester, as he reverently lifted his
-hat, "rather thank God and St. Michael of Cornwall."
-
-"By Heaven," rejoined Trevelyan, "I thank myself and the fair wind
-only."
-
-Poindester though fearless, for he was a native of those dangerous
-Isles where for one who dies a natural death nine are drowned,
-rebuked this irreverence, on which the wild Trevelyan stormed and
-blasphemed, and forgetting to heed his compass or steerage, permitted
-his caravel to be dashed ashore, just as a sudden storm came on, and
-the waves of the Bristol Channel hurled her on the cliffs of the
-Black Pit, where every soul on board perished, save old Paul
-Poindester. From the high gilded poop of his caravel, Launcelot
-Trevelyan, with a fierce malediction, cast into the sea, before it
-swallowed him up, the silver whistle and chain, his badge of naval
-authority, the gift of Sir Francis Drake, lest it should become some
-wrecker's prey; and as the timbers parted, and the ship went down
-into the angry sea, the clangour of the bells resounded in her hold;
-and there to this day they are heard by people loitering on the
-shore, when storms are nigh--or when aught is about to happen to the
-family of Lamorna, add the superstitious folks of Cornwall.
-
-"Oh, why did this absurd old woman relate such a boding story to me?"
-thought Constance, for situated as she was, she had become somewhat
-of a prey to gloomy and grotesque fancies; hence, often in the night
-she would dream of wrecks, and seem to hear the sound of alarm-bells
-in her ear, and starting from bed, would draw up the window-blind and
-look forth to see if a storm was raving without, forgetting then,
-even though it were so, all might be calm and peaceful elsewhere.
-
-Then when she saw the autumnal moon in all its unclouded glory
-flooding her chamber and her white night-dress with silver lustre;
-that all was calm and still, the diamond-like stars sparkling above
-the dark willows in the glen, or the darker woodland in the distance;
-and that no noises came to her listening ear, but perhaps the bark of
-a house-dog, or such as may be aptly termed the sounds of night and
-silence, she would go back to her lonely pillow with a prayer on her
-lips for those who were absent, and for all who were on the sea.
-
-A letter from Richard, made her supremely happy!
-
-He had reached Montreal in safety. The poor old curé of the secluded
-little chapel of St. Mary--the good Père Latour--was dead, and had
-been so for some time; hence the reason that her husband's letters
-had remained unanswered. Even the little acolyte, the other witness
-of their marriage, had gone to his last home; and now in memory,
-Constance could recall the thin, spare figure of the old clergyman,
-with his white hair brushed behind his ears, his peculiar shovel hat,
-long black soutane, cape and gaiters to the knee--for he had been a
-man of the old school of French colonial priests.
-
-"His little chapel and vestry, both built of wood, as you will
-remember, Conny, were burned down three years after our regiment left
-the city," continued Richard's letter; "and all the Records there
-perished in the flames; among other things, the volume of the
-Register in which our marriage was entered. But, most
-providentially, the successor of Latour in the poor incumbency, found
-among some of his papers, the signed copy--or rather I should say,
-the original of our marriage lines or certificate--which we had never
-received. _It is now in my possession_, and I have folded it inside
-a will which I prepared on the voyage out--a will, dearest Conny, in
-which, to make all certain for the future--as there are those at
-home, whom I doubt--I leave all I have in the world to you for life,
-and to Denzil and Sybil after you, absolutely. Your poor father and
-mother are interred not far from the grave of Père Latour, and I have
-ordered white marble crosses to be erected to the memory of the
-three. I shall sail for England a fortnight hence, in the steamer
-_Admiral_, and till then, shall renew in sweet fancy the days of our
-loverhood, by many a ramble about Montreal; by Hochlega, the
-picturesque site of the old Indian village, now its eastern suburb;
-the nine aisles of the great Cathedral; the gardens of the Convent of
-Notre Dame, and among the mountains close by--in many a shady walk
-and lane; and Heaven and myself alone can know how I miss you and our
-dearest Sybil, and how I am longing to return." It was signed
-"_Lamorna_."
-
-"My dear, dear Richard!" sobbed the wife, while her tears of joy fell
-fast.
-
-"All the places I mention, you must remember well," he added in a
-postscript; "and you may imagine how sad it is for me to wander alone
-where once we were so happy together."
-
-"He was to sail in a fortnight from the date of his letter," thought
-Constance, with a glow of pleasure in her heart; "he must now be on
-the sea! and in a fortnight from this, I shall see him again--my
-dear, dear husband--so kind, so good, so true and thoughtful, even to
-mark, unasked by me, the last resting-place of poor mamma and
-papa--and even of the good Père Latour. The latter act, is in
-itself, a compliment to me."
-
-Then an emotion of terror seized her, as she perused the letter again.
-
-What if the attested copy of those important "lines," their
-certificate of marriage, _had perished_ in the same fire which
-consumed the wooden chapel, the vestry, and its registers! What then
-would have been her fate, and more than all, by sequence, the fate
-and position of the children she idolised--her proud boy Denzil, and
-the beautiful Sybil, now budding on the verge of womanhood?
-
-A stigma--a stain--she could never remove, might have been on them,
-to the end of their lives; and her soul seemed to die within her as
-she thought of the peril--the narrow escape, they had all made!
-
-She thanked Heaven with fervour in her heart, and again and again, it
-swelled with gratitude to her husband, and with love for him and
-confidence in him; with joy, too, that he would so soon hear all this
-from her own loving lips--for in a few days now, the _Admiral_ would
-be due in the Thames!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-THE LONELY TARN.
-
-While Constance Trevelyan--or Lady Lamorna, for so we ought to name
-her, though still known only as Mrs. Devereaux--was counting the
-hours of her husband's absence, and looking forward fondly to his
-return, Sybil, unnoticed, was absent from home more often and for
-longer periods than had been her wont; and the mother, preoccupied by
-her own secret thoughts, and anxiety for those who were far distant,
-failed to remark the circumstance till it was incidentally mentioned
-by Winny Braddon.
-
-When questioned, Constance remarked with concern, that Sybil blushed
-deeply, and hastened to show her sketch-book, now nearly full, as an
-evidence of her artistic industry, and the progress she had made; she
-did not add with whom, or that she had a lover. She who never before
-had a secret from her mamma, was beginning to have one now; and had
-the latter looked more closely at the sketch-book, she might have
-found traces and touches of a bolder and more masterly pencil than
-Sybil's; and it all came to pass thus.
-
-A mile or two from the Villa of Porthellick, there lies a lake, which
-had been a favourite resort of her brother Denzil when fishing for
-pike; and of this place, and a great old Druidical stone that stands
-thereby, Sybil wished to make a sketch, and on a suitable day
-proceeded thither with all her apparatus, as she was anxious to have
-her production finished before her papa's return.
-
-It was a lonely tarn, deep and dark, yet there the bright green
-leaves and snowy flowers of the water lilies floated, and the
-voracious pike which rose at times to snap a fly or so, went plunging
-to the oozy bottom at the sight of aught so unusual as a human being
-invading the solitude.
-
-There were within its circuit, three tiny willow-tufted isles, where
-the water-ducks built their nests amid the osiers, and near which an
-occasional wild swan flapped defiance with its wings among the
-floating lilies that impeded its stately progress.
-
-On the hill slopes the varied tints of autumn were in all their
-beauty; the ripened apples and pears were dropping among the long
-grass of many an orchard; green yet lingered amid the foliage of the
-old Cornish elms; but the beeches were almost blood red, and the oaks
-were crisped and brown. In the calm depth of the tarn was reflected
-the shadow of the giant stone pillar, around which the storms, the
-winds and rain of perhaps three thousand years had swept; yet there
-it stood, solid, silent, grim and monstrous. Could that stone have
-spoken, what a tale it might have told of savage rites and human
-sacrifice; what a history unfolded of races long since passed away or
-merged in others--the men of days before even the galleys of the
-Phoenicians cast anchor in Bude Bay, when their crews came to barter
-for tin with the wild aborigines of Cornwall.
-
-Sybil, seated on a little camp-stool, was so intent upon her work,
-that some time elapsed before she perceived that another
-artist--whether professional or, like herself an amateur, she could
-not determine--was similarly occupied not far from her; and
-insensibly her eye wandered, from time to time, in the direction of
-this stranger.
-
-He was decidedly a handsome young man, whose grey tweed suit and
-round hat of grey felt, encircled by a narrow crape band, failed to
-conceal a very distinguished air. His features were good and well
-bronzed by a foreign sun, apparently. He was without whiskers, or
-was closely shaven; but a smart mustache and dark eyebrows gave
-character to his face. He was seated on a fragment of rock, and in
-intervals between the progress of his work and the whiffs of a cigar,
-spoke caressingly to a large dog that lay near him on the grass.
-
-The latter, a magnificent Thibet mastiff, with heavy jowl and pendant
-flap-like ears, suddenly rose and came slowly, leisurely and steadily
-forward to Sybil, and after a glance of survey, eyed her with what
-was almost a smile--if a _dog_ can be said to smile. He then sniffed
-her skirts, and pawed them with his enormous paw. Sybil evinced no
-fear; she patted the clog's huge rough head; but was somewhat
-surprised, when he lay down on her skirts with the utmost composure,
-and showed no disposition to release her.
-
-The young man, whose eyes had followed, with some interest, the
-motions of his dog, now whistled to him; but the mastiff did not stir.
-
-"Rajah--Rajah--you impudent rascal, come here!" he cried.
-
-But Rajah made no other response, than by whipping the turf with his
-long tail.
-
-Upon this his master came round the margin of the tarn, and
-approaching Sybil, threw aside his cigar, lifted his hat and
-apologized, adding,--
-
-"I trust that my dog has not alarmed you?"
-
-"Oh no--not in the least," replied Sybil, who began to feel somewhat
-embarrassed now.
-
-"I assure you that he is very gentle; but he is permitting himself to
-be too free, and very few young ladies would, like you, have seen
-such an animal approach them without betraying signs of alarm, and
-all that sort of thing. Get up sir!"
-
-"Oh, please don't," said Sybil holding out an ungloved and very
-pretty hand, deprecatingly, between the dog and the young man's
-uplifted cane; "all dogs, and even cats, like me."
-
-"Thereby acknowledging your power--eh?" responded the stranger,
-looking down admiringly into the soft, bright, earnest face, and
-clear dark eyes that were turned upward to his own.
-
-"I don't know what you mean by my power," said Sybil, with
-simplicity; "but, as most people like me, why should not
-dogs--and--and this is such a splendid fellow!'
-
-"I have brought him from a very distant country--he was the farewell
-gift of a friend who died, otherwise," he added, gallantly, "I should
-beg your acceptance of him."
-
-Sybil now coloured more deeply, and became uneasy; but the stranger
-resumed in his most suave tone,--
-
-"And you have been sketching this pretty little lake--like me? Our
-tastes and occupation are quite similar!"
-
-Sybil had closed her book of sketches.
-
-"Will you not do me the favour to----"
-
-"Show you my poor production--do you mean, sir?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"But you may be an artist, and a well-skilled one."
-
-"And what then?"
-
-"I should blush for my work."
-
-"Nay. Well, then, I am not an artist, but merely an amateur--an
-officer on leave; yet I am fond of using my pencil, and have the
-regimental reputation of doing so with pretty good success."
-
-Sybil thought of her brother Denzil--he too was an officer; poor
-Denzil, now so far, far away--and she gave her new acquaintance a
-half shy and half doubtful glance, that served to charm him very
-much, and then showed her sketch, which he praised warmly, as by good
-breeding and in duty bound.
-
-It was doubtless cleverly done, but his eye wandered to the rare and
-delicate beauty of the little hand that had achieved it. Her sketch,
-however, was inferior to his own, which he now produced, with Sybil's
-own figure seated on the camp-stool introduced in the middle
-distance, so as to give the exact proportion of the great rock-pillar.
-
-"Oh, sir," she exclaimed, "you have me in your sketch, as well as the
-big stone."
-
-"Could I omit the most pleasing feature in my little landscape?"
-
-Sybil coloured again, for her education, and the peculiar mode in
-which she had been reared, made her, at times, shy and reserved; she
-knew not why, for to be so was not her natural character, which was
-rather candid, frank, and free; so, to change the subject from
-herself, she hastened to turn over the leaves of the stranger's
-sketch-book, wherein were many drawings full of spirit and interest.
-
-"That wooden cross," said he, "marks the grave of poor Jack Delamere,
-who gave me Rajah, through whom I have had the pleasure of making
-your acquaintance to-day. He died when we were on the march up
-country to Allahabad, and I buried him in a grove of date palms."
-
-"And he lies there alone?" said Sybil, her eyes involuntarily
-wandering to the great dog which lay near them on the grass.
-
-"Quite alone--poor Jack! he was the soul of the mess-bungalow."
-
-"And what is this Hall with the wonderful pillars?"
-
-"Oh! that is a Buddhist Temple--all hewn out of the living rock. I
-sketched it at Ellora. Those caves are masses of carving, and are
-among the most wonderful things in India, as they often consist of
-many apartments or halls of vast height, decorated, as you see, with
-elaborate columns and monstrous statues. My next sketch is a Hindoo
-water-girl. I gave her a rupee to stand for me at Arcot; but, as her
-clothing is somewhat scanty, we shall skip to the next. Ah--that is
-a mango tree, and here are the palace of Mysore and the town and fort
-of Agra."
-
-"How much you have seen of the world!" said Sybil, her dark eyes
-dilating as she glanced for a moment at the stranger's young and
-handsome face; "I wonder if Denzil will ever look upon those places.
-Heavens, how poor and mean do my Cornish sketches of ruins, rocks,
-and engines look, after yours!"
-
-"Nay, do not say so," replied the other, smiling, as he surveyed with
-growing interest the soft bright face of the speaker, under its
-piquant little hat and veil; "hideous as the edifices are in reality,
-some of our mining engine-houses, with all their chains and pulleys,
-wheels and timber, blocks and gearing, their heaps of rubbish and
-debris, they make somewhat picturesque sketches."
-
-"True; but I prefer those great solemn stones of unknown antiquity,
-and I never tire of drawing them."
-
-"But they are so deucedly alike," replied the young officer; "and now
-for your book--ah, do permit me," he added, turning the leaves.
-
-"That is the Lake of Como, where we passed several months," said
-Sybil, tremulous with hesitation, for what she deemed alike the
-boldness of the attempt and the poverty of her execution. "I now
-wonder how I dared to think of depicting such a scene, with all its
-white villas and green groves of orange and flowering arbutas; its
-cliffs and crags, and, over all, the snow-clad peaks of the Alps, and
-the mountains of the Brianza covered with pine-forests!"
-
-"Perhaps each sketch is the souvenir of some past or tender
-happiness? And this stately palace, with the terrace before it?"
-
-"Is one where papa and mamma resided when I was very young."
-
-"You are not very old yet," was the laughing rejoinder.
-
-"It is on the Arno. But how often have I wished for power to depict
-the lovely Lake of Como, as we could see it by night from the windows
-of our villa--the shore all dark, or dotted only by the lights in
-many a palace and dwelling, the snowy summits of the Splugen Alps
-rising against the starlit sky, and the oars of the gondoliers
-flashing as their little vessels shot across the sheet of silent
-water."
-
-"You are quite an enthusiast!" said the officer, smiling; and at that
-moment, with her sparkling eyes and flushed cheeks, the usually pale
-girl looked radiantly beautiful; but her dark eyes drooped, and she
-replied--
-
-"I did so love Como and our pleasant picnics to Bellaggio and other
-places, where the orange-trees overhang the water so closely that the
-golden fruit dipped in it from time to time, when the laden branches
-were stirred by the passing wind."
-
-"Now you will surely agree with me, that when contrasted with such
-scenery as you describe, our Cornish rock-pillars and mines are but
-stupid affairs?"
-
-"Ah, no--I cannot assent to that; there is Bottalick Mine, for
-example, where the gloomy precipices of slate are hewn into such
-fantastic shapes, and the great engine, perched on the ledge of a
-terrible cliff, enables the miner to work below the sea. Oh, think
-of that, to be quarrying for copper and tin in damp grottoes and
-cells four hundred and eighty feet below the ocean, and to hear its
-waves--the same waves that dash against Cape Cornwall--rolling the
-mighty boulders in thunder on the bluffs overhead!"
-
-"Have _you_ been down and heard all that?"
-
-"No," replied Sybil, blushing for her own energy and enthusiasm.
-
-"How then----"
-
-"Denzil has been down often."
-
-"Denzil again," said the stranger with a smile, and perhaps the
-faintest tone of pique; "you are surely very fond of this Denzil."
-
-"Fond--I love him dearly!"
-
-"A candid admission."
-
-"He is my only brother."
-
-"I am so glad to hear that he is a brother, and not--not----"
-
-"What?"
-
-"A cousin or--friend."
-
-Sybil felt that the conversation was wandering from the picturesque,
-and now said, a little hastily,
-
-"I must bid you good morning--my way lies there," she added, pointing
-westward.
-
-"And mine also; so far, at least, as the high road--allow me to have
-the pleasure of carrying your camp-stool."
-
-"Many thanks."
-
-"Do you reside in this neighbourhood?" he asked, after a pause.
-
-"Yes--a little way from this," she replied, evasively.
-
-"_I_ am on a visit to an old Indian friend--General Trecarrel," said
-the stranger, in a tone and manner calculated to invite confidence;
-but Sybil instantly became reserved. Her absent parent, she knew not
-why, had ever most sedulously avoided the General and all his family,
-and her mamma had apparently acquiesced in this, for they knew that
-the General would at once, in the spurious "Captain Devereaux,"
-recognise Richard Trevelyan. "You, perhaps, know the Trecarrels?"
-added her companion.
-
-"I have not the pleasure--though I have heard of them, of course,"
-replied Sybil, adjusting her veil tightly over her face, with an air
-of annoyance.
-
-The gentleman said no more; but in silence carried her sketch-book
-and camp-stool until they reached the high road, where, aware that to
-remain longer with her might appear intrusive, he lifted his hat, and
-with studious politeness bade her adieu.
-
-Sybil hastened homeward, nor dared to look back, though perfectly
-conscious that the eyes of the stranger, whose voice seemed to linger
-in her ear, would be looking after her more than once. She had all a
-young girl's perfect conviction of this.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-CONCERNING FLIRTATION.
-
-The next noon proved a lovely autumnal one, and Sybil repaired once
-more to the tarn for the purpose of giving a few finishing touches to
-her sketch. She would have blushed with annoyance, and indignantly
-repudiated the idea that a chance of the stranger being there,
-perhaps, for the same purpose, led her to go at precisely the same
-hour as on the preceding day. And yet, though a disappointment, it
-was somewhat of a relief to her, that neither he nor his great dog
-were in sight; the floating swans and the huge rock-pillar alone met
-her eye in the solitude; and seating herself, she spread out her
-skirts, threw up her veil, and assumed her pencil; but in the midst
-of her work, her tiny white hand grew tremulous, every pulse
-quickened, and a thrill passed through her when she heard steps among
-the long rank grass; the great nose of the Thibet mastiff was placed
-upon her knee, and she perceived her new friend again approaching,
-but on horseback.
-
-_He_ had not made even the pretence of coming to sketch as on the
-preceding morning; he was without the materials for doing so, and
-hence must have come deliberately in search of her, for he dismounted.
-
-"I am indeed fortunate in meeting you here again," said he, "but I
-shall not intrude, as I fear I did yesterday; I am merely rambling
-towards the sea-shore, to enjoy the breeze and a cigar till some
-friends join me."
-
-Sybil, who felt that she was painfully pale, bowed to her new
-acquaintance, who manifested no haste to prosecute his "ramble," but
-seemed perfectly confident and disposed to be politely familiar.
-Still Sybil had no emotion of alarm at this; she had never in her
-life been insulted, and felt that there was no real cause to repulse
-him, save that he was a visitor of the Trecarrels.
-
-He, on the other hand, while gazing from time to time into her
-upturned face, was struck more by the calm, honest, and innocent
-expression of her radiant features than by their beauty, which was
-less that of form than of character, for though small and exquisitely
-feminine, her face, like that of her mother, was strongly marked, by
-the darkness of her eyes, their brows and long lashes. Her mouth
-certainly was beautifully formed, with a soft smile ever playing
-about it, for she was naturally of an arch and highly impressionable
-nature.
-
-He did not permit the conversation to flag, but hovered near her,
-venturing to look over her shoulder from time to time, and giving
-little suggestions concerning her drawing, while in reality he was
-admiring the ladylike contour of her head, the delicacy of her
-slender neck, and the gloss of a single thick dark ringlet that
-strayed so captivatingly behind.
-
-The first flush of emotion passed away in Sybil's breast, and
-insensibly she found herself lured into an easy interchange of
-opinion on various subjects; for in the topics of foreign travel, the
-galleries, habits, tastes, and amusements of other lands, they had
-ample matter for conversation, and found themselves sliding into the
-position of friends, and talking of things and themes that seldom
-occupy the thoughts of a young girl.
-
-Now, as each knew not the name of the other, and could not ask it,
-there was a decided awkwardness in this; and as they continued to
-talk with animation, the huge Thibet mastiff, who had been their
-_introducteur_, rolled his great dark eyes from one to the other, and
-lashed the grass with his tail, as if quite satisfied with the result.
-
-"After the colourless Indo-Britons and yellow Bengallees, how lovely
-seems the complexion of this fresh young English girl!" was the
-ever-recurring thought of the young officer, as he surveyed her
-critically, from her smart hat and feather to her foot that peeped
-from under her dress; and a lovely little foot it was--tiny enough to
-have entered the famous slipper of Cinderella.
-
-That the solitary girl was a lady was evident to him; her carriage
-and bearing were full of graceful ease, and she had an attraction of
-manner and gesture peculiarly her own; but _who_ was she, that she,
-at her early years, had seen so much of the world, and could speak of
-Spain and Rome, of Athens and Sicily, and seemed to know every second
-village among the wilds of the Apennines and the Abruzzi?
-
-The sketching of this day was somewhat protracted, and Sybil became
-aware that their eyes sought each other with an interest she had
-never felt before in those of a stranger, and that each time they so
-met, her pulses quickened and her cheek flushed or grew pale. Whence
-was this emotion? she whispered in her heart.
-
-"I shall often think of this moorland tarn, when I am far away," said
-the officer.
-
-"You leave this soon, then?" she remarked.
-
-"Yes; I am, ere long, going back to India."
-
-"My brother Denzil has gone there to join his regiment."
-
-Had the stranger asked the almost inevitable military question, "What
-regiment?" a little discovery might have been made; but he was full
-of the girl's beauty, and thought of that only. Something of
-admiration or of ardour in his eyes inspired her with confusion, and
-abruptly closing her book as on the preceding day, she rose from the
-bank on which she had been seated, and said, with a little
-trepidation,
-
-"I am going now, and--and here our sketching and meetings must end."
-
-"Ah! why?"
-
-"I fear," she stammered as she spoke, aware that her speech was full
-of awkwardness--"I fear that I have done wrong in--in----"
-
-"What?"
-
-"Engaging in quite a flirtation with a total stranger."
-
-"You cannot flirt--you are too sensible and artless; neither could
-I--with you, at least."
-
-"Have you never flirted?" asked Sybil, laughing to cover what she
-felt to be a second mistake.
-
-"Often."
-
-"Then why not with me?" she asked naïvely and archly.
-
-"First, tell me what is flirtation?"
-
-"I know what it is; but cannot define or describe it."
-
-"Shall I make the attempt?"
-
-"Do, please," said Sybil, now laughing outright.
-
-"It is neither coquetry nor exactly playing at courtship. It is one
-of those things most difficult indeed of description and of
-definition. It depends so much upon the time and place, the tone and
-tenor of those who attempt it, and on the mood of the moment, whether
-it be sad or gay. It is perilous work among the young and beautiful,
-as it is often so much mere nonsense, and yet is so much more
-dangerous to one's peace of mind than any nonsense could ever be. It
-is not so earnest or solemn as deliberate love-making, and yet it is
-not quite a mockery of it. It is a sharp weapon in the hands of the
-wary; but a dangerous pastime for those who have had no experience in
-_affaires du coeur_. It is a kind of lovemaking that commits one to
-no promise, and yet may raise the proudest and wildest anticipations
-in the breast, and elicit the most unwary confidence. Thus it is
-difficult to find where flirtation exactly begins, and still more to
-say where it may end--perhaps in real love and marriage. I fear I
-have read you quite a dissertation on the subject, a most hazardous
-one while looking into your bright eyes; and now tell me," added the
-officer, his tone and manner becoming more soft and earnest, "have
-you not done injustice to yourself and to me, for in all we have
-talked over so pleasantly both yesterday and to-day has anything of
-this vague kind been attempted?"
-
-"Most certainly not," replied Sybil, laughing again.
-
-"With you it would indeed be perilous for me," said the officer,
-taking her hand caressingly between his own; "for I could not feign,
-where I would rather feel."
-
-His eyes were dark and deep, their colour a kind of blue, difficult
-to define, but unfathomable in expression, though very soft just
-then; and now Sybil grew pale, for if the speaker was not flirting,
-he had suddenly slid into downright love-making; so she said, with an
-effort--
-
-"We have been here more than an hour; am I not detaining you from
-your friends?"
-
-"Perhaps," said he, with an air of pique; "pardon me for looking at
-my watch. Two o'clock, by Jove! and I promised to meet the Trecarrel
-girls on the Camelford road half-an-hour ago. I shall catch it from
-little Rose for this! And now good morning--pardon me again if I
-have seemed intrusive, but I do not despair of our meeting again."
-
-He had mounted while speaking, and, lifting his hat with studious
-politeness, cantered off, while Rajah went bounding and barking
-before him.
-
-"What a bright little fairy it is--and so clever with her pencil! who
-the deuce can she be?" he was thinking, while Sybil, with a vague
-sense of disappointment and doubt, looked after him, half fearing
-that she had been too pointed in her hint that he should leave her;
-and yet how were they to continue such meetings as strangers.
-
-In her lonely life, at least latterly, since they had settled at
-Porthellick, she had met but few persons, and with none so pleasing
-as this young officer.
-
-She hoped to meet him again on a more recognisable footing, for she
-felt that though stolen interviews might be very sweet, they could
-not be without some peril; and to the young girl's mind, it seemed
-that the formation of the acquaintance--the whole adventure--was
-quite like some of the episodes to be read of in novels; for a box
-from "Mudie's," came regularly to Porthellick Villa, and perhaps, by
-the laws of such literature, her strange friend might prove a peer of
-the realm--a prince it might be, incog.; who could say?
-
-Sybil lingered long by the lonely tarn, watching the white swans
-floating among the broad-leaved water-lilies, thinking over all the
-stranger had said, recalling the pleasantly modulated tones of his
-voice and the expression of his dark blue eyes (if blue they were),
-till the sound of hoofs on the distant highway drew her attention in
-that direction, and with something perhaps of jealousy and pique, she
-saw him gallop past with two ladies, both well mounted on bright bay
-horses. They were the Trecarrels, dashing and handsome girls, and
-the sound of their merry voices and ringing laughter came clearly
-over the moor as they rode at a scamper towards Lanteglos, on the
-roof of the old parish church of which the arms of the Trelawneys and
-Trecarrels have been carved for centuries.
-
-"And these girls have him with them always," thought she, as she
-turned homeward. "What matter is it to me--the acquaintance of a
-couple of days? why should the idea of him affect me so?"
-
-After this day she sought the vicinity of the rock-pillar and the
-tarn no more.
-
-She was too open and candid in all her actions, and loved her mamma
-too well to conceal ultimately from her the pleasant interviews she
-had by the moorland tarn "with such a delightful young man;" but
-there her confidence ended; she did not give the additional
-information that on three successive Sundays, when mamma was too ill
-to attend church, he had lingered or walked by the side of her
-basket-phaeton, to the manifest annoyance of the Misses Trecarrel, or
-that she had faintly promised, _some_ day, to make with him a joint
-sketch of certain rocks upon the sea-shore; still less did she
-whisper, that in her secret heart she liked him well, or trusted to
-time or chance for the establishment of an interchange of thought as
-yet concealed, "as though the bridge between them was yet too frail
-to cross;" and Constance, occupied solely by solicitude concerning
-the now-protracted absence of her husband, did not at first make any
-inquiries.
-
-Sybil found the stranger's image, his tones and words recurring
-perpetually to her mind in spite of herself, and she blushed at the
-conviction. She had few male friends--beyond the burly rector and
-old village doctor, perhaps none--and certainly none that she had met
-elsewhere proved so graceful and winning as this unknown admirer. To
-her partial eyes, he seemed the beau-ideal of manly beauty, while to
-those of others--even the Trecarrel girls--he was simply a passably
-handsome fellow.
-
-"Why do I think of him at all?" she would ask of herself: "though so
-young, he may be married--or engaged--engaged perhaps to that Rose
-Trecarrel of whom he seemed so much afraid the other day. Yet he may
-surmise the same of me--I, Sybil Devereaux, married!" and then she
-laughed at her own conceit.
-
-"There is a depth in the human heart which, once stirred, is long,
-long, ere its waters again subside," and this depth he had contrived
-to stir in the heart of Sybil. She who had seemed as bright as the
-day, and happy as the blackbird that sang on the adjacent rose-trees,
-became silent and thoughtful and apt to indulge in dreamy moods.
-
-Old Winny Braddon was the first to detect this; and so she set
-herself to watch, and hence the hints she gave to Constance--hints
-which caused the production of the sketch-book, with some confusion
-on Sybil's part, as recorded in our tenth chapter, and she took her
-young favourite to task in the usual mode of old nurses, by
-commenting upon the enormity of thinking of love or marriage at her
-years.
-
-Now Sybil, like every young girl of her age, had her day-dreams of a
-lover, just such a lover as this, but she had not, as yet, thought of
-marriage. Such a catastrophe--such a separation from "dearest
-mamma"--had not quite entered her mind; but now, by Winny Braddon's
-remarks, it seemed to be thrust upon her consideration. She blushed
-and felt abashed, as if the modesty of her nature had been assailed,
-and her girlish mind was filled with a vague sense of dread and awe,
-she knew not of what or of whom.
-
-However, it chanced that on the last day he had lingered by the side
-of her pony-phaeton for a few minutes, resting his arms on the side
-thereof in such a way that she could not, without positive rudeness,
-have driven off, she had been resolving, but not without a struggle
-in her heart, that she would place herself in his way no more.
-
-"This must end," had been her thought; "it is most unfair to poor
-mamma, and is unwise for my own peace of mind;" and it was while she
-thus determined, he came to her smiling, and leaning on the side of
-the little phaeton, when the Trecarrels were conversing with the
-rector's family, said in his pleasant voice,
-
-"Shall we ever resume the little discussion we had so merrily on that
-delightful day beside the old rock-pillar?"
-
-"Discussion--on what?" asked Sybil, timidly.
-
-"Flirtation--Miss Devereaux."
-
-"What! you know my name?"
-
-"Yes; I am happy to say I do now, Sybil Devereaux."
-
-"How came this to pass?"
-
-"Simply enough: the Trecarrel girls told me."
-
-"But I do not know them," said Sybil, with a tone of pique.
-
-"May I have the pleasure of introducing----"
-
-"Excuse me, please, but not just now," said she, hastily, remembering
-how her father had ever avoided the family of the General.
-
-"And now I must tell you my name--Audley Trevelyan, late of the 14th
-Hussars."
-
-"I have surely heard it before," said Sybil, pondering, "but where I
-know not now."
-
-It was in the _Gazette_ together with that of Denzil, but she had
-forgotten the circumstance, and he said, smiling still,
-
-"You may easily have heard it--the name is peculiar to Cornwall, and
-my uncle is Lord Lamorna."
-
-"Indeed! all Cornwall has heard that the late lord was a very, very
-proud man.
-
-"Absurdly so; but I must bid you adieu. Rose Trecarrel is impatient."
-
-"We are going, Mr. Trevelyan," said that young lady, with some
-asperity of tone, from the window of the carriage in which she and
-her sister were seated; and lifting his hat, Audley hastened to join
-them. The footman threw up the carriage-steps, fussily closed the
-door, and they departed. So, as doubtless the reader has foreseen,
-Sybil's admirer was her own cousin; yet neither knew of the
-relationship.
-
-She drove off in a somewhat dubious state of mind, amid which, as she
-permitted the reins to drop listlessly on the backs of her two little
-ponies and allowed them to go at their own pace, she gave way to the
-current of thought, and ended in a quiet shower of tears, which,
-however, calmed and soothed her. She had an undefined emotion of
-pique alike at this stranger, Mr. Trevelyan, and Rose Trecarrel; and
-as she had been learning to love the former, she resented his extreme
-intimacy with the latter, and she knew all the perils of propinquity
-with a girl so lovely as Rose undoubtedly was.
-
-Hence, more than ever did she resolve to avoid him, and even sought
-to nurse herself into emotions of anger by fancying there was
-something that savoured of forwardness in the mode in which he had
-recently addressed her. The moment she reached home and tossed the
-reins to the groom, she hastened to the side of Constance.
-
-"Oh, mamma," she exclaimed, in a tumult of excitement, "I have
-discovered the name of the gentleman about whom you spoke to me
-lately!"
-
-"The hero of the sketch-book, and it is--what?"
-
-"Mr. Audley Trevelyan; don't you think it so pretty?"
-
-Constance was silent for nearly a minute. Then foreseeing much
-trouble and danger if this intimacy were permitted to ripen before
-her husband's return, and the full recognition of herself, her son
-and daughter, in their proper place, and in society in
-general--society, "that Star Chamber of the well-bred world,"--she
-said, with grave energy, while taking Sybil's flushed face between
-her soft white hands,--
-
-"Promise to me, darling, that you will meet him no more--at least
-until advised by your papa."
-
-"I give you my promise, dearest mamma."
-
-"Remember that he is the friend, the guest, of those Trecarrels whom
-your papa has ever avoided for reasons best known to himself, though
-they seem people of the best style; and you owe this obedience to him
-in his absence."
-
-"Have no fear for me, mamma; I shall ever obey you," replied Sybil,
-as she threw her arms round her mother's neck and kissed her to
-conceal the tears that were welling up in her fine dark eyes.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-THE PIXIES' HOLE.
-
-On the following evening Sybil had set forth on an errand of charity
-to one of the many poor who blessed the bounteous hand of her
-mother--the widow of a fisherman who had perished during the pilchard
-season in the past summer--and she meant to return, as she stated, by
-the sea-shore.
-
-Sybil had much cause for thought, and was somewhat disposed to linger
-on the way. The ample means enjoyed by her parents on the one hand,
-with the general seclusion of their lives on the other, and their
-studied avoidance of society when in England, had now given the girl
-much reason for reflection.
-
-Her papa's mysterious absence too, and her mamma's nervous anxiety
-about American letters, were not without singularity; and why had
-both so sedulously abstained from all introduction to the family of
-the Trecarrels, who were greatly esteemed in the neighbourhood, and
-who were undoubtedly people of the best style? By the system of
-which this seemed merely a portion, she was even now debarred from
-having properly presented to her this Mr. Audley Trevelyan, who
-seemed so well disposed to admire--perhaps, to love her.
-
-"We have made but few acquaintances and, of course, still fewer
-friends at Porthellick," said Sybil, half aloud; "now why is it
-thus--to have means in plenty and so few to love us? What can be the
-reason? Mamma has some _secret_; but what can that secret be? Poor
-mamma--she looks so sweet always, and yet so sad at times!"
-
-She would write to Denzil, she thought, on the subject of these
-mysteries; but Denzil was yet at sea, and it would be long, long,
-before she might receive his answer; and, then, there would be an
-awkwardness in their parents' reading, as they would certainly wish
-to do, his letters and perceiving the doubts she had suggested--the
-secrets she wished to probe. Perhaps when her papa, whose especial
-pet she wras, returned, she might venture to give some hints, to make
-some inquiries; and as she saw the white sails of the shipping and
-the smoke of many a passing steamer, she lifted her eyes to heaven
-with an unuttered prayer in her heart, that she might soon again hear
-his voice and cast herself into his arms.
-
-By one of those lanes peculiar to Cornwall, where the old road is
-sunk so deep in the ground and the bordering walls are so high that
-the surrounding scenery is sometimes hidden, lanes where in summer
-the elms cast their leafy shadows, and the fragrant wild rose and
-honeysuckle mingle with the long tangles of the bramble, Sybil
-reached the shore and descended to the very margin of the sea.
-
-It was one of those evenings which, even in the last days of autumn,
-come to the rocky and rugged duchy, when the atmosphere is so mild
-and balmy that one might think it was in the early weeks of spring,
-when the grey cliffs and purple moorland glisten in the yellow rays
-as the sunlight falls softly between the flying clouds, on land and
-sea; and the sparkling stream, that rolls from rock to rock on its
-passage to the shore, makes music in its plash as it falls from the
-cascade into the pool below, where the brown trout lurks in safety
-and unseen; and Sybil, as she wandered on, felt, she knew not why, an
-emotion of calm and contentment growing in her heart.
-
-But in its serenity and beauty the evening was deceptive, and old
-fishermen on the heights, and other weather-beaten salts who
-lingered, telescope in hand, on many a rude pier that jutted into the
-Bristol Channel, when looking seaward detected that which the
-landsman saw not--the tokens of a coming storm; for seamen have
-strange instincts peculiarly their own, and can read the sky like the
-pages of a mighty book.
-
-Across the sea the sun, now setting, poured a steady stream of golden
-radiance, like a broad and glittering pathway from the far horizon to
-the very shore, by the margin of which Sybil was now lingering; and
-it tinted with warm light the flinty brow of many a storm-beaten
-headland, and those fantastic piles of grey granite which cap the
-hills in Cornwall, and are there called _carns_.
-
-Seated on a fragment of rock, lulled by the regular and monotonous
-rolling of the surge, Sybil was immersed in thoughts of her absent
-father and brother, each now traversing the same sea, and yet so far
-apart upon its waters; she thought of Audley Trevelyan. Should she
-ever meet him in society as she wished to do? A little time and it
-might be too late, for Rose Trecarrel was so lovely, and already
-seemed to consider him as her own property; for it was by her side he
-sat in church, where they used the same books, and it was she that he
-usually shawled or cloaked first for the carriage; so if they were
-not already engaged, they might very soon be so.
-
-Amid this reverie she was startled by a distant voice holloing, and
-apparently to her. She looked up, and on the summit of a cliff that
-overhung the shore, some two hundred feet or so above where she was
-seated, a man was gesticulating violently and beckoning to her.
-
-Was he mad or tipsy? was her mamma ill; or what did this person mean?
-She listened intently and thought she heard her own name; he was
-evidently addressing her, and pointing to the sea. At last his voice
-distinctly reached her ear.
-
-"Look out, Miss Devereaux,--the tide is coming in!"
-
-She glanced hastily round her, and a chill struck upon her heart, for
-the fragment of granite on which she sat was almost environed by the
-encroaching sea, and the stripe of yellow sand, by which she had been
-walking at the base of the cliffs, was nearly covered by the surf,
-which was already chafing white and angrily about the rocky headlands
-which formed the horns of a little bay.
-
-Heedless of wetting her feet, Sybil gathered her skirts in her hand
-and rushed shoreward, when a greater terror smote her heart as she
-looked around her. The man on the cliff had disappeared; no aid
-seemed nigh, and no living thing was visible save a solitary chough
-or red-legged crow, which was perched on a fragment of rock, from
-whence he eyed her in quiet security.
-
-She was at a part of the coast where the land receded and the sea
-advanced between two headlands of granite, precipitous and sheer, but
-crowned by groves of ancient trees. The water, as yet, was smooth as
-a mill-pond within the bay, and reflected in its glassy depths the
-coast that towered above it; while no sound came along the vast
-expanse of shore, save the hollow gurgle of the flowing tide, as it
-sought the recesses of the many caverns and fissures in the lower
-rocks. In the offing, however, the rising waves were edged with
-white, and this sign, together with the lowering sky and gathering
-clouds, showed that the coming night would be a rough one.
-
-From the stripe of sandy beach, now nearly covered by the incoming
-sea, the only path lay round a little moss-grown slope at the base of
-an enormous rock, from whence it wound upward to the verge of a steep
-precipice and led to the deep old lane, already described. Over this
-mossy and angular ledge the angry tide had already rolled its spray,
-consequently it was too slippery for the footsteps of the affrighted
-girl, who, after thrice approaching it, finally shrunk back, and ran,
-with wetted feet, towards the centre of the bay, keeping close to the
-sheer cliffs, against which the flowing sea was rising fast, and
-beginning to surge and boom, throwing masses of foam and froth over
-her whole person, while the scared seagulls and puffins whirled in
-flights around her.
-
-Once or twice a wild shriek escaped Sybil; then her voice began to
-fail her, and she could only utter prayers that were earnest, deep,
-and piteous.
-
-Wildly and despairingly she looked upward to the summits of the
-cliffs; they were impending and inaccessible, by their gloomy outline
-fully illustrating the influence and fury of what is called "the
-Atlantic drift," which is especially turned into the Bristol Channel,
-where the rocks, by the waves for ever heaving and rolling in mighty
-undulations, are worn into concave fronts, and form thus a hopeless
-barrier to the shipwrecked, and to all who might seek to ascend them.
-
-She turned seaward with haggard eyes and wrung her poor little hands;
-not a boat was near, and nothing now was visible between the horns of
-the bay save the smoke of some distant steamer, hull-down below the
-horizon line, as she sped on her way to the coast of Ireland. The
-flowing tide was above Sybil's ankles now; she knew that at high
-water it would mount to several feet, and that ere long her drowned
-corse should be dashed and battered, at the sport of the waves,
-against those very rocks at which she glanced so despairingly!
-
-The man who had seen from their summit and warned her--where was he
-now, and who was he? He knew her name, and yet had he abandoned her
-to her fate in that terrible place, with the sea and the darkness
-closing fast around her; for the sun had set and dun clouds were
-piled in stormy masses now, where so lately all was golden sheen.
-
-Suddenly she bethought her of a cavern in the rocks known as the
-Pixies' Hole, which her brother Denzil had often explored--a gloomy
-place, the haunt at times of the seal and of the _zart_, as old
-Cornish folks called the sea-urchin. It was one of those great
-caverns in which, in the barbarous times of old, the Cornish men took
-shelter from the Romans and Saxons, just as the children of Israel
-did from the Midianites in the dens of the mountains; and there, by
-local superstition, still abode, unscared by the whistle of the
-adjacent railway, certain little beings known as the Pixies, who came
-hither from Devonshire on dark nights, mounted on the farmers'
-horses, and were heard to sing in its recesses while pounding their
-cider.
-
-Gathering her skirts again, the poor girl dashed through the water,
-and ere long reaching the mouth of the cavern, clambered in
-breathlessly, falling, the while, more than once on her tender hands,
-when her feet slipped, on the glassy surface of the sea-weedy rocks
-and stones, which covered all the ascent to this gaunt and gloomy
-place of refuge.
-
-She knew that it penetrated far inland, and hoped that there for a
-time she should be safe; but there would be hours of darkness, cold,
-and captivity to endure, ere the ebb of the tide would permit her to
-escape, and by that time what must be the terror of her poor mamma!
-
-When fairly within this place her courage rose a little, for she saw
-that it closely resembled a grotto she had frequently visited and
-sketched--the Cave of Porthmellin. The floor of this great fissure
-in the rocks ascended at an angle from the shore, mid as the tide
-advanced, Sybil found herself compelled to retire further and further
-still, inward and upward amid its dreary uncertainties, while the
-rising tide, now rolling into the bay with the full force of a west
-wind, began to surge with a sound as of thunder, about the mouth by
-which she had entered, and that orifice seemed to lessen rapidly as
-the water rose within it.
-
-The roar of the sea woke a hundred weird echoes amid the impenetrable
-gloom beyond her; while the view outward from the point now attained
-by the breathless and affrighted girl, for a time proved strange and,
-to her artistic eye, full of wonderful effects. The walls of rock
-were dark, and yet so polished by time and the seas of ages as to
-emit reflected light, and to reveal little pools of crystal water
-lying still and motionless in fissures and crevices, where star-fish,
-shells, and hermit-crabs had been left by the last ebb-tide.
-
-With growing terror Sybil could perceive that by each successive wave
-the mouth of her refuge grew smaller, and it was evident that ere
-long it would be covered by the sea, while she should be shut within!
-
-A cry escaped her with this awful conviction; but she uttered no
-more, for the echoes of her voice came back to her strangely and with
-melancholy variations, as if from vast distances. If the cavern
-mouth were totally submerged, should she be suffocated; or if not,
-might she otherwise too surely die of cold, and lie there till some
-holiday explorer, or some boy in search of puffins' nests, found her
-remains? A cold current of air that swept past her from within the
-cavern warned her that it had an outlet somewhere; but it filled her
-soul with greater terror, for she remembered to have heard Denzil,
-old Derrick Braddon, and others say, that the Pixies' Hole terminated
-in the shaft of an old and long unused mine, down which she might
-fall and be dashed to a very pulp, if she ventured one foot further;
-for all was gloomy horror round her now; and as her knees yielded
-under her, and she sank upon them to pray, she felt the still rising
-tide flow over them as it had rolled completely above the rocky arch
-of the cave and submerged it!
-
-Feeling the ground with her hands outspread, the unhappy girl
-continued to creep a few yards further in, and then she paused, for
-all that she knew to the contrary, on the very verge of the fatal
-mine!
-
-One little while she was full of pious resignation to die, for she
-had lived an innocent and guiltless life. She drew from her bosom a
-locket and fervently kissed it, as it contained the hair of her
-parents and Denzil--all she loved on earth. She knelt with her bowed
-head between her hands to shut out the horrid booming and sucking
-sounds of the sea in the lower part of the cave, and closing her
-eyes, as if the more to concentrate her thoughts, burst into
-passionate and vehement prayer.
-
-Then anon the horror of death--and especially of such a death, amid
-gloom and darkness, unseen, unpitied, and unknown, would draw from
-her a piteous wail, that was lost amid the bellowing of the sea, for
-a storm of wind had now risen in the channel.
-
-Of that newly-found admirer whom she had been learning to love,
-Audley Trevelyan, she had totally ceased to think; her heart was
-wholly occupied by thoughts of her papa, her mamma, her brother
-Denzil--all of whom she might never, never see more!
-
-Dread of falling headlong down the shaft of the ancient mine, more
-than a thousand feet, perhaps, made her, we have said, pause
-breathlessly, and lie on the sloping floor of rock, listening to her
-watery death coming nearer and nearer with a gurgling sound, that, to
-her nervous and excited imagination, seemed like the chuckle of a
-destroying fiend! The dark unspeakable himself was alleged by the
-peasantry to frequent the oozy recess of the Pixies' Hole, and the
-bottom of the old shaft was said, by the same veracious authorities,
-to be haunted by the unquiet spirits of ancient miners, who had
-perished there in the time of old.
-
-Rapidly, yet terribly, through the mind of Sybil, then, as she fully
-believed herself to be, hovering on the verge of death, came back the
-eighteen years of her past life; at Como, in the old palace by the
-Arno; among the Apennines and the wild Abruzzi; Rome, Athens, and
-elsewhere, all passed before her like a rapid phantasmagoria--days
-and hours of happiness and pleasure. The faces and voices of her
-parents and her brother so beloved, came vividly amid those memories
-of their strange and aimless wandering in foreign lands. The secret
-of her mother--whatever it was--she should never learn now; but
-gleams of hope and the desire to live, mingled with the blackness of
-her despair, for existence seemed sweet, and she felt so young to
-die, when a long life should be before her.
-
-At Porthellick she must long since have been missed, and her fancy
-pictured the agony of her lonely and tender mother; the wild, noisy
-grief of Winny Braddon, and the honest anxiety of those who might be
-fruitlessly seeking for her along the cliffs or through the bay by
-boats; seeking for her alive or dead.
-
-All their search would be vain, for the tide was still rising, and
-now where she stood, not daring to go further, the water flowed above
-her knees. A little time, a very little time more, and she should be
-lying drowned, the sport of the waves within the Pixies' Hole, or
-borne by them in their reflux, into the mighty waste of sea that
-washes the rugged shore of Cornwall.
-
-A shrill cry escaped her as the water flowed to her waist; and
-gaspingly she felt with her hands for a little ledge of rock, up
-which she clambered, being in her terror endued by unnatural
-strength; and then, dripping and despairing, she felt a numbness come
-over all her faculties, which prevented her responding to certain
-strange sounds, somewhat like those of human voices mingled with the
-barking of a dog, now coming out of the inner gloom, while again a
-superstitious dread, the result of Winny Braddon's teaching, began to
-mingle with her more solid fears and sufferings.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-THE TIDE IN!
-
-For a little space we shall return to the pretty villa of
-Porthellick, and to the anxious life of her who dwelt there; her
-thoughts ever with her absent son and husband. In this instance we
-put Denzil before his father, for the return of Richard Lord Lamorna,
-was looked for daily, but that of his son might be the event of years
-to come; so Denzil's last fond glance ere he left her, and his calm
-aspect as he lay asleep and all unconscious that she hovered near his
-pillow, were deeply impressed on his poor mother's heart; and now an
-eternity of waters rolled between them, for his ship, she knew, must
-be ploughing the wide Indian Ocean.
-
-To the wayfarer along the coast-road towards the quaint village of
-Endellion (with its weather-beaten church, and the ivied ruins of
-Rhoscarrock), that white-walled villa with its rose covered peristyle
-buried among the pale-green drooping willows from which the locality
-takes its Cornish name, no better example of peace, content and quiet
-could be given.
-
-Yet the place was fated to be one of anxiety and sorrow.
-
-Seated at a little buhl escritoire in her drawing-room, Constance was
-lingering over the last letter from her husband, after the removal of
-the tea equipage, and long after Sybil had set out on her charitable
-mission to the fisherman's widow.
-
-"Richard is very long of returning, surely!" was her prevailing
-thought, as she sat with her graceful head resting on a white and
-dimpled hand, quite unconscious that the sun had set beyond the sea,
-and that the shades of evening were deepening around her.
-
-No upbraiding thought of that absent husband entered the gentle heart
-of Constance; yet with all that heart's gentleness, she could not but
-think somewhat bitterly of the late Lord Lamorna, whose unreasonable
-prejudices and pride of birth and station, though only the result,
-the growth and maturity of centuries of time, and many generations of
-Trevelyans, had cost her years of anxiety, of unmerited seclusion and
-wandering in foreign lands under a name which was not that of her
-children's father, and thus keeping them in ignorance of their real
-family, its claims and rank--for the mystery had been continued, even
-to the gazetting of Denzil, under the name of Devereaux!
-
-The rising wind as a sudden gust swept through the grove of willows,
-roused her from these thoughts, and she found old Winny Braddon,
-hard-featured and keen-eyed, lingering near, with anxiety depicted in
-her face.
-
-"The winter is setting in early, surely," said Constance; "we are not
-out of autumn yet, Winny, and see how dark the evening has become!"
-
-"_En hâv perkou gwâv_, my mother used to say, old Cornish for 'in
-summer, remember winter,'" replied Winny. "A sad night it will be
-for the poor fellows on board ship, ma'am, I fear."
-
-"Do not say so, Winny!"
-
-"The waves are rolling in fast, and breaking white as snow upon
-Tintagel Head, and all along Trebarreth Strand."
-
-"And where is Miss Devereaux?"
-
-"I know not, ma'am--only she has not returned."
-
-"And she was to come by the shore!" exclaimed Constance, starting
-from her seat.
-
-"The shore! do you mean the bit of sand that lies near the Pixies'
-Hole?"
-
-"Yes--yes."
-
-"The tide has long since been in--my God! oh mistress, our poor
-_chealveen_ may be lost!" exclaimed Winny, using the old endearing
-local word for 'child.'
-
-Constance closed her escritoire with trembling hands, and went, in
-alarm, to the windows which faced the sea. The sun, we have said,
-had long since set, and athwart the dim and black and stormy clouds
-that now hid the point of his departure, a torrent of rain was
-falling aslant upon the dark and foam-flecked sea, and would ere long
-be drenching all the rocky shore. A little time and all should be
-darkness, and where was the absent Sybil?
-
-Close-hauled, and running fast before the blast for shelter in
-Portquin Bay, a large boat, the last, perhaps, of the autumn pilchard
-fishers, careening wildly over amid the foam, was seen to vanish
-round a promontory.
-
-A sudden access of terror now seized the heart of Constance.
-Instantly a mounted servant was dispatched to the hut of the widow,
-and the man soon came galloping back, with a scared visage and the
-tidings that Miss Devereaux had left her more than three hours ago,
-and had certainly descended to the beach, as she had been seen to do
-so. By this time, darkness had fairly set in; rain was falling fast
-upon the bleak coast, and "sowing wide the pathless main," while a
-heavy gale from thence was dashing a flood tide upon the shore, and
-the soul of Constance grew sick with apprehension.
-
-"The tide in! oh my God--in what can I have offended Thee to be
-punished thus? My Sybil--my Sybil--is the cup of my bitterness to be
-filled to overflowing!" she exclaimed, in a low voice as she sank
-upon a sofa, while Winny Braddon wrung her hands, and in the noisy
-grief peculiar to her class, lamented, as already said, "the darling
-_chealveen_" she had nursed in her bosom.
-
-Constance would have gone forth in person to search, bleak and rainy
-though the night; but she was too feeble and delicate to face the
-storm, nor would Nurse Braddon permit her. She sent all her
-servants, male and female, in search of the tidings she was terrified
-to hear; and ever and anon she rushed to the front portico and looked
-out upon the gloomy night, to where away beyond the willow groves
-that grew around the villa, the bleak high road wound seaward over a
-bare Cornish moor, towards those clumps of old trees that crowned the
-rocks which overlooked the fatal Pixies' Hole.
-
-Slowly, as if each were an eternity of time, hour after hour passed
-now--periods filled up by agony and the pulsations of her heart; and
-ere long her watch told her that midnight was nigh.
-
-Midnight, and her child still absent--her Sybil, the mistress of a
-thousand pretty, winning and affectionate ways!
-
-Higher and more high rose the blustering wind, sweeping before its
-angry breath the last brown leaves of autumn; wildly the willows
-seemed to lash the stormy air, as their supple branches were tossed
-on the stormy blast; and from a distance up the valley came the
-roaring of the sea, whose waves at the horizon were brightened
-occasionally by a ghastly glare of lightning. Between the scudding
-clouds, the moon's pale crescent was visible for a time, above the
-ruins of King Arthur's castle on steep Tintagel Head, a tremendous
-bluff (which is cleft by a chasm from the mainland) adding thus to
-the weird and wild aspect of the night; and what served to increase
-the distraction of the wretched mother, was the strange circumstance
-that of the several messengers she sent forth, not one had yet
-returned with tidings of any kind. Suspense thus became as it were,
-a bodily agony; she was led to anticipate the worst; and Winny
-Braddon though her heart was a prey to the keenest alarm and anxiety,
-had to use almost affectionate force to prevent her mistress, a weak
-and delicate little woman as she was, from sallying forth in her
-despair to prosecute the search in person.
-
-Winny had but slender hope, she knew every foot of her native shore,
-and was old enough to remember many a dark and terrible story of the
-Cornish wreckers, and when many a keg of French brandy, and many a
-bale of good tobacco were brought from the Scilly Isles, and without
-the knowledge of the Coast Guard, landed slyly in some quiet nook and
-cavern, where those to whom they were consigned knew well when to
-find them; she knew many who had perished in those secret places,
-when seeking for the hidden wares; and it was for being engaged in
-some of these little affairs, that her brother Derrick, had to
-"levant" from the duchy, and become a soldier in "the master's
-regiment"--the Cornish Light Infantry.
-
-Alternately Constance lay in a species of stupor on a sofa, or
-started to the front door, where she listened with eager ears, the
-rain falling on her pale face, and the wind blowing about her hair,
-while she could see the lanterns of the searchers, glimmering like
-distant _ignes fatui_, as they proceeded to and fro along the heights
-that overhung the sea.
-
-Denzil, she thought, was gone on life's highway, and might never
-return; their daughter drowned--their only child now it would seem,
-reft from them suddenly and cruelly! What would Richard say on his
-return, and how was she to meet his eye? What account was she to
-give of her maternal solicitude and of her stewardship? Yet in what
-way was she to blame?
-
-Yes! she did accuse herself. The warnings and hints of Winny Braddon
-came to memory. She had been remiss; she had permitted Sybil to
-wander too much abroad with her sketch-book, and this was the end of
-it; yet who, without some divine prescience, could have foreseen a
-catastrophe so terrible? How often had Denzil filled her mind with
-fear and anxiety by his exploits among those very rocks, and by his
-explorations of that horrible Pixies Hole, where, too probably, his
-sister had perished miserably; yet her bold and handsome Denzil,
-always came back in safety to kiss and laugh away her fears and
-upbraidings.
-
-"Oh why is this terrible calamity put upon me?" she moaned, as she
-lay with her face covered by her hands, and her damp dishevelled
-hair; "is it but the forerunner of a greater--if a _greater_ there
-can be? Can I have loved my husband and our children so much that I
-have forgotten to love my God!"
-
-And for a moment or two, she actually turned over in her mind this
-strange idea--the first proposition of the Mystics, which was, that
-the love of the Supreme Being must be pure and disinterested; that
-is, exempt from all views of interest, all care of those we love on
-earth, and all hope of reward--tenets defended by Madame de Guyon,
-and advocated by the eloquent Fénélon.
-
-A sudden knocking at the front door, and a violent pealing of the
-house-bell, caused her to start as if with an electric shock.
-
-Tidings had come at last--tidings that might fill her soul with joy,
-or cause it to die within her.
-
-"General Trecarrel, would speak with you ma'am," said Winny Braddon,
-hurrying in with fresh excitement in her tone and manner.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
-LOST.
-
-The stranger who had called to Sybil by name, and who had recognised
-her from the summit of the cliff, was no other than General
-Trecarrel, the same whom her parents had so studiously avoided; but
-who nevertheless knew her well by sight, having seen her on many
-occasions when riding abroad, and on Sundays at church, whither she
-always drove in her little pony phaeton, and he had always admired
-her beauty greatly.
-
-The General was not a very old man; he was still looking for another
-command in India, and though in affluent circumstances was yet an
-enthusiastic soldier, who believed that military rank and stars and
-ribbons, were the only things in this world worth living for. He was
-nearly six feet in height--erect as a pike, and well built; his
-features were handsome, his eyes dark and keen; his complexion was
-well bronzed and dark, his short shorn hair was becoming grey and
-grizzled, and his manner, by force of habit, and the air to command,
-was brief and authoritative.
-
-He knew in a moment the great peril of the girl on the beach below
-him; he saw that already the tide was chafing in white surf at each
-horn of the bay, round either of which she could alone escape from
-the watery trap that enclosed her, unless taken off the shore by a
-boat. The General was on foot; that part of the coast was very
-lonely and no house or hut was, near; but intent upon her rescue, he
-hurried away as fast as a limp in a wounded leg (he had received a
-ball at Ghuznee) would permit him, from place to place, in search of
-a boat; but neither boat nor fisherman could be found in time to take
-her off that perilous beach, ere the tide covered it.
-
-The evening darkened quickly, and the stormy wind brought faster in
-the stormy sea. Near the gate-lodge of his own residence, he met
-Audley Trevelyan strolling leisurely in the avenue with his hands in
-his pockets, accompanied by his huge dog, and enjoying a cigar before
-the bell should ring to dress for dinner; but the havannah fairly
-dropped from his lips in his surprise on beholding the excited state
-of the usually calm and collected General Trecarrel.
-
-"What's the row, General--what the deuce is the matter?" he asked.
-
-"A dreadful thing will occur--if it has not already occurred--a poor
-girl on a solitary part of the beach yonder, has been cut off by the
-tide, and unless we can save her in ten minutes at farthest, all will
-be over--yes, in ten minutes!" added Trecarrel, looking at his gold
-watch--the gift of Sir John Keane, with whom he had served in the
-conquest of Cabul.
-
-"Good Heavens, let us get a boat at once!"
-
-"There is not one to be had--the pilchard fishers hereabout are all
-at sea!"
-
-"Lower someone over the cliffs by a rope; I have gone myself, thus,
-for a chough's egg, more than once."
-
-"The rocks are nearly two hundred feet in height in some places, and
-the poor girl----"
-
-"Is she a lady, General?"
-
-"Yes, and a handsome one, too."
-
-"You know her then--she is not a stranger?"
-
-"To me only--a Miss Devereaux, who resides at Porthellick."
-
-"_Who_ do you say?" shouted Audley; "Sybil Devereaux?"
-
-"The same."
-
-"Merciful Heavens, let us do something at once!"
-
-"True, but without a boat what can be done?"
-
-"She cannot, she must not, she _shall not_ be left to perish thus, if
-I can save her!" exclaimed Audley Trevelyan, with all the impetuosity
-of youth, and with sudden emotions of terror, pity, and tenderness
-combined. He, usually so calm, quiet, and apparently
-unimpressionable, to the surprise of the General, now rushed to the
-stable-yard, and loudly, even fiercely summoned grooms, gardeners,
-and lodge-keepers, and with these carrying poles and stable-lanterns,
-hurried towards the seashore, while two messengers were despatched to
-the hut of a fisherman, who lived about a mile distant, to get his
-boat, or at least a coil of stout ropes, and they succeeded in
-securing the latter; but his boat was at sea, and was the same which
-Constance had seen running round the headland for shelter at Portquin.
-
-The alarm spread rapidly, and soon a dozen of men at least were
-searching along the verge of the cliffs in the dusk. The sea was
-seen rolling its waves round all the little bay now, and the base of
-the cliffs was marked by a curling line of snow-white foam alone.
-Every vestige of sandy beach had disappeared, and so had all trace of
-the poor loiterer whom the General had last seen there!
-
-Many a "halloo" was uttered, but vainly, for no response came upwards
-from below.
-
-Audley Trevelyan was very pale, and very silent, though deeply
-excited. He was not wont to indulge in self-examination, and
-consequently he never knew until now how dear this girl was to
-him--in fact, how much he had begun to love her.
-
-The dusk deepened into darkness, and a weird effect was given to the
-wild rock scenery by the fitful gleams of the lanterns carried along
-the edges of those perilous cliffs by the searchers, who felt that
-they were literally doing nothing, yet in the spirit of humanity were
-loth to relinquish their task, in which they were now joined by the
-terrified and excited servants from the villa. The wind was rising
-fast, and its mournful voice, as it swept through the bare branches
-of the old groves above the bay, mingled with the booming of the
-waves upon the rocks below.
-
-Audley felt almost thankful for the gloom, as it hid the workings of
-his features, and like a thorough Englishman, he detested alike a
-scene and to be a subject for speculation; but now the deep baying of
-his Thibet dog among a clump of bushes and gorse, attracted the
-marked attention of the searchers.
-
-"The dog has found some track or trace; he never barks thus, save for
-some cogent reason!" exclaimed Audley, as he hastened to the spot.
-
-"Plaise sur, the dog do hear or see summat," added Michael Treherne,
-an old and decrepit miner, who in his earlier years had been an
-"underground captain" in Botallack mine, and one of the best
-wrestlers in the duchy, and who had hobbled forth, staff in hand, to
-assist in the search; "if the dog be on the right road, we be on the
-wrang. But take 'ee care, surs; there's the shaft of a main old mine
-hereabouts; and out of it, in its time, there have come many a keenly
-lode o' tin and goodly bunch of copper."
-
-"I know the place, Michael," cried Audley; "Heavens above! she must
-be in the Pixies' Hole, which, as you are all likely aware, opens
-into the shaft."
-
-"Just so, Mr. Trevelyan; through that same hole, the water was pumped
-into the sea in my grandfeyther's time--and that warn't yesterday,
-sur."
-
-"How old are you, Michael?" asked the General, lending the old man
-his hand.
-
-"Seventy past; few miners live to my time, and 'tis ten years since I
-was underground," replied Treherne with a sigh; "I can mind o' 'ee a
-small booy, General, robbin' my garden o' apples."
-
-Proceeding cautiously about a hundred yards back from the verge of
-the cliffs to the place where the dog was baying, they found amid the
-tangled gorse bushes, the mound of slag and other debris, now covered
-with rank grass and weeds, in the centre of which yawned the round
-mouth of the ancient mine; and as they drew near the dog continued to
-bay the louder, with its forefeet outstretched, and its nose in the
-air. Then it began to fawn and leap upon its master, with such
-ponderous gambols, that more than once he was nearly thrown to the
-ground.
-
-"Down, Rajah--down, sir! keep quiet, dog," he exclaimed, and while he
-spoke, something like the cry of a female came to his ear; "oh,
-General, I see it all now! She has been driven by the tide into the
-Pixies' hole, and is even now on the verge of this shaft; should she
-be ignorant of its existence, she may fall into the mine and be dead
-ere she reaches the bottom!"
-
-"It must all be over with the poor lass, Mr. Trevelyan," said the old
-miner, shaking his head; "hear ye _that_."
-
-And, as they listened, they could hear above the moaning of the wind
-and the surging of the sea, the sound of water pouring within the
-shaft of the mine, and falling apparently to a vast depth below. A
-sense of the deep profundity that yawned before them, made all save
-Audley and the old miner, Treherne, shrink, with faces that seemed
-pale in the fitful gleams of the lanterns, and now the latter spoke
-again.
-
-"Aw dear, aw dear! dost hear, sur? The tide has risen to upper mouth
-o' the Pixies' Hole, and is now pouring down into the lower level o'
-the mine, so if the poor lady beant drowned in one place, she will be
-at the bottom o' tother."
-
-There seemed to be some probability of such being the case; and
-though Audley was horror-struck with the suggestion, he said with
-apparent calmness, the result of a great effort,--
-
-"The upper mouth you speak of, Michael, is about fifty feet below
-where we stand; surely, the tide could never reach it, even at full
-flood?"
-
-"But who will venture down to see?" asked Treherne, almost with a
-grin on his hard old visage.
-
-"I shall!"
-
-"You, Mr. Trevelyan--you, sur?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Dare you go down, Trevelyan, with that terrible sound in your ears?"
-asked the General, and all present murmured the same thing, save
-Sybil's servants, who moaned and wrung their hands.
-
-"Dare I go down?" repeated Audley, "when a woman is in the case--a
-lady--Sybil Devereaux! To whom are you talking, General? Have I not
-for a joke taken a letter to the Devil's Post Office, and will I
-shrink for this?" he asked, referring to the deep and dangerous chasm
-at Kinance Cove, where the sea bellows for ever with a thundering
-sound, and from time to time hurls a column of water furiously
-through an aperture, when those who are adventurous enough to descend
-in the dark and deliver a letter, as if to the presiding Genius of
-the place, will find it rudely torn from their fingers by an inward
-current of air, accompanying the reflux of the sea. "We have blocks
-and tackle with us," continued Audley; "rig them to poles laid across
-the shaft, and by Jove, I'll go down with a lantern; quick, my lads,
-for God's sake lose no time!"
-
-"Are you not afraid of gas--or foul air, Trevelyan?" asked the
-General.
-
-"I don't mean to go to the bottom."
-
-"Of course not; but if the rope should break?"
-
-"In that case, it won't matter what I meet with," was the grimly
-significant reply; "but be careful, my good fellows, for I trust my
-life to you in this instance."
-
-"If the tackle did break, thee'd soon be in jowds" (_i.e._, pieces),
-said Treherne, with a saturnine smile.
-
-An oar and a stout pole, which two of the party carried, were laid
-across the mouth of the shaft.
-
-A double-sheaved block was securely lashed to them; a strong rope was
-rove through the sheaves, and a species of cradle was formed for the
-adventurous Audley Trevelyan.
-
-Long familiar with his native rocks, the latter when a bold boy, had
-clambered by Bodrigan's Leap at Portmellin,* when seeking for
-puffins' nests, and could look without shrinking from the steeps of
-Gurnard's Head, Tol Pedn Penwith, and the fantastic cliffs of
-Tintagel. He had been doted on by the miners, with whom he had often
-descended the deepest shafts, clad like themselves in flannel shirt
-and trousers. Thus attired, he had explored the vast levels and
-silent galleries by the dim light of a feeble candle, while, as Sybil
-told of Denzil, he could hear the roar of the Atlantic over his head,
-and the boulders dashed by its force on the bluffs of the Land's End;
-and thence beyond, in levels half a mile out at sea, where the
-passing ships glided like silent phantoms many a fathom far above
-where he wandered.
-
-
-* So called from Sir Henry Bodrigan, who in the reign of Henry VII.
-sprang down the cliff, when flying from his neighbours Trevannion and
-Edgecumbe, who sought to capture or slay him. He was so little
-injured by the fall, that he reached a vessel sailing near the shore,
-and escaped to France. A mound, called the Castle Hill, and a
-farm-house, once part of a splendid mansion, are all that now remain
-of the abode of this fine old Cornish family.
-
-
-Fearlessly he tied himself to the cradle which old Michael Treherne
-prepared for him; a lantern was hung at his neck, leaving his arms
-free, and now a dozen of strong and careful hands were laid on the
-ropes.
-
-"Lower away, my lads," cried he, almost gaily; and with something
-like a gasp of anxiety in his throat, the General saw his young
-friend's face disappear as they lowered him into that awful orifice,
-the mouth of a shaft that went down a thousand feet and more.
-
-"Steady, my booys!" cried old Treherne, in a species of glee.
-
-Those who witnessed this descent were none of them, perhaps, very
-impressionable men; yet even to them, there was a gloomy horror in
-the idea of the vast profundity of the deserted mine, over which
-Trevelyan swung; and the wildness of the night, the storm at sea, the
-whistling and howling of the wind as it swept the rocky promontories,
-and rolled the waves in foam against them, were not without their due
-effects upon the mind.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-
-THE SEARCH.
-
-"He's a braave booy, sartainly!" said old Michael Treherne,
-admiringly, in his queer Cornish accent, "it is like him and like his
-family--the Trevelyans of Rhoscadzhel.
-
- By Tre, Pol and Pen,
- We know the Cornish men.
-
-He'd face Tregeagle himself--lower away gently, lads. His ancestors
-existed hundreds of years ago; and for the matter o' that, I spose so
-did mine; we be all old Cornish _keth_."*
-
-
-* People.
-
-
-Audley Trevelyan would freely have risked his life to save anyone--of
-course a woman more than all; but how glorious was this! The peril
-he risked--for no ordinary amount of nerve was requisite for him who
-swung thus over the profundity of the ancient mine--was for his
-lovely little friend of the sketch-book; the Naiad of the moorland
-tarn--she who seemed not indisposed to love him, and whose heart he
-might yet make his own.
-
-"But Heaven!" thought he; "that impulsive little heart may
-be--alas--still enough by this time!"
-
-And even as this disastrous fear occurred to him, the roar of the
-falling water was heard on the lower level of the empty mine, more
-than a thousand feet below him, while the lantern he carried cast
-strange gleams on the damp, slimy, and discoloured masonry of the
-shaft, after he left behind, or rather above him, the fringe of weeds
-and gorse, that grew about the mouth; yet in less than a minute he
-was assured that the water he heard falling, proceeded, not from the
-flow of the tide, as he and his companions foreboded, but from some
-subterranean spring falling into the shaft, far below the upper
-entrance of the Pixies' Hole; and anything more weird, dreary, and
-ghastly than that cavernous fissure which now opened off it on one
-side, and which he was preparing cautiously to explore, it would be
-difficult to conceive.
-
-From its rocky and ragged mouth, which was covered with white and
-pendant stalactites and hideous fungi, on which the light of his
-lantern fell with fitful rays, its interior receded away into dark
-and gloomy blackness and uncertainty.
-
-"Good Heaven!" muttered Audley, "the poor girl cannot be here.
-Should she have fallen down the shaft!"--was his next terrible
-thought.
-
-"Are ee saafe, sur?" cried Treherne, peering down from above.
-
-"All right, old fellow--stop lowering and make fast the rope; I am
-just at the place, and a horrid one it is."
-
-Ere he entered it, and cast off the cradle by which he had descended,
-he could hear in the obscurity beyond the surging or gurgling sound
-of the tide, at the lower end; and a nervous chill that he might find
-Sybil drowned, came over his heart.
-
-"Well, by Jove!" he muttered; "of all the places in this world, to
-search for a young lady, who would think of this--down the shaft of a
-devilish old copper mine! I have seen some queer things in India,
-but this out-herods them all!"
-
-Carrying the lantern so that its light should precede and guide his
-steps, he had barely gone twenty paces, when he discerned something
-white amid the dense gloom. Within but a few feet of the still
-encroaching water, a female figure was lying on a shelf of rock, from
-which she started into a half sitting posture, and gazed upward at
-him, with a wild and startled expression, in which hope and fear, joy
-and wonder, were singularly mingled.
-
-She was that Sybil Devereaux of whom he was in search; her dress, a
-white pique, all soiled, bedrabbled and wet, her fine dark hair
-dishevelled and sodden, her hat and veil gone, and her whole aspect
-forlorn and pitiable.
-
-"I am saved!" she exclaimed in a wailing and excited voice; "I thank
-Heaven--I thank kind God that you are come to me; but how--and who
-are you that have had the courage----"
-
-"Audley--Audley Trevelyan--don't you know me, Miss Devereaux?" said
-he, as he placed the lantern on a rock, and raised her tenderly in
-his arms.
-
-"Oh Audley!" she exclaimed, and her head fell upon his shoulder, for
-she was weak as a child and past all exertion. She had never called
-him by his Christian name before, and while he felt his heart swell
-with a new emotion of pleasure, he ventured tenderly to kiss her
-cheek, and then he became aware how cold and chill it was. She
-seemed scarcely conscious of the act, though she said in a broken
-voice,
-
-"Mamma--my poor mamma shall thank you, sir--I cannot speak my own
-thoughts--they are too terrible and my gratitude is too deep for
-words."
-
-"From my soul, I thank Heaven, that I came in time to save you! A
-little longer here, my dearest girl, and you must have perished of
-cold!" said he as he perceived with genuine anxiety how pale she was
-and how the whole of her delicate frame shivered, but his words or
-manner seemed to recall her energies, for she tried to smile and said,
-
-"I shall have a strange story to write of to Denzil, and tell my papa
-when he returns."
-
-"Have ee found her zur--is the young lady saafe?" cried a voice there
-was no mistaking, down the shaft.
-
-"Safe and sound, Treherne," replied Trevelyan, whose voice made
-strange echoes in the cavernous recesses of the place; "we shall come
-up together, so take care my friends, for there will be a heavier
-strain on the rope--a double weight now. Permit me to lead you, Miss
-Devereaux--or, may I not call you Sybil?" he added, as his voice
-trembled a little.
-
-"You may call me what you please," replied Sybil with something of
-her usual frankness, "I owe my life to you," she added feebly, while
-clinging to his arm.
-
-"To me, after Rajah who guided us here, no doubt on hearing you cry
-for aid--so with the permission you accord, I shall call you
-Sybil--yes dearest Sybil, permit me to blindfold you."
-
-"Why?"
-
-"You may become giddy--terrified."
-
-"I submit myself to you," she answered, and he tied his handkerchief
-over her eyes, and while doing so, to resist touching her lovely
-little lips with his own, was impossible.
-
-"Pardon me for this, Sybil," said he, as the action brought a little
-colour to her pale cheek, "but I love you, love you dearly.
-Elsewhere, we shall talk of this--come, allow me to be your guide."
-
-"Shall we not wait till the tide ebbs, and escape by the sands?" she
-asked, and shrinking as his arm encircled her.
-
-"Dearest girl, you would die of cold ere that took place."
-
-Thus from terror and despair on Sybil's part, and from a proud and
-joyous sense of exultation, on that of Trevelyan, there came about
-abruptly, a _dénouement_ which might have been long of developing
-itself, even with those who were so young and enthusiastic, a
-declaration of love upon one hand, and a tacit acceptance of it on
-the other, for gratitude mastered the regard already formed in the
-heart of the girl.
-
-Audley was now in that delightful state of the tender passion, when
-to see even the skirt, to hear the voice or to breathe the same
-atmosphere, with its object, had a charm; then how much greater was
-the joy of having her all to himself, and to feel that too probably,
-she owed her life to him!
-
-"You do not--do not--love--" she faltered and paused.
-
-"Whom?"
-
-"Rose Trecarrel?"
-
-"I love but you, and I bless God for the opportunity given me for
-testifying that love, by serving and saving you--Sybil--dear Sybil
-for so let me call you now and for ever."
-
-"What the deuce _are_ you about, Trevelyan? Do you mean to stay down
-there all night--or is the lady ill? That dreary hole can be neither
-romantic nor pleasant, I should fancy."
-
-It was the voice of the General hailing him now.
-
-"Here we come, sir," replied Audley, as he fastened the rope cradle
-securely round his body and courageously took Sybil in his arms. It
-was no doubt delightful to hold her in an embrace so close, and to
-feel her clinging to him, but a thrill of intense anxiety passed over
-all his nerves, and it seemed as if the hair of his head bristled up,
-when he found himself swinging at the end of a rope over that
-dreadful abyss, down which the lantern, as it chanced to fall from
-his hand, vanished as if into the bowels of the earth, for the lower
-level of that old mine, was far below the sea. As for poor Sybil,
-she felt only a terror that amounted to a species of torpor--a
-numbness of all sense.
-
-"Now pull together, my booys!" cried the cheerful voice of Michael
-Treherne, "one, two--one, two--_ho_ and here they come out of the
-_knacked bal_!" for so the Cornish miners designate an abandoned
-mine, as it is among his class, and in the mines, that words of the
-old language linger.
-
-And in less than a minute, Audley and Sybil were at the surface and
-in the grasp of strong hands that placed them safely on terra firma,
-when, overcome by all she had endured, the former immediately fainted.
-
-"The poor child is as wet as a _quilquin_" (a frog), said Treherne
-with commiseration.
-
-"She requires instant attention," said the General kindly; "let her
-own servants take her at once to your cottage, Treherne, as it is the
-nearest place in this stormy night. See to this, Audley, while I
-hurry down to Porthellick and relieve the anxiety of her mother.
-Give orders to have the carriage sent there for her. By the way,
-Audley, is not this the girl that Rose chaffs you about?"
-
-"The same, sir," replied Trevelyan, whose heightened colour was
-unseen in the dark.
-
-"How strange! Rose is such a quiz, you will never hear the end of
-this."
-
-"She is the daughter of an officer--a Captain Devereaux."
-
-"I have never met him--of what corps?"
-
-"I don't know."
-
-"To Mike's cottage with her, and lose no time. Here my lads, all of
-you go to Trevanion's Tavern, and score to me what you drink. The
-night is rough and wet."
-
-"Thank'ee sir," replied Treherne, while the others all bowed and
-scraped and pulled their forelocks; "my old woman 'll keep the young
-lady safe, till her pony-kittereen or your carriage comes for her;
-and we'll drink your health, and Mr. Trevelyan's too--aye, and the
-old Cornish toast of 'Fish, tin, and copper,' in summat better than
-Devonshire cider."
-
-So, while Sybil in Audley's care was taken to the cottage of the old
-miner, and the latter with those who had joined in the search
-departed to enjoy the bounty of the General, the latter limped off to
-visit Constance and relate the story of her daughter's escape and
-safety.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI.
-
-INTELLIGENCE AT LAST.
-
-On seeing Constance without her bonnet, and with her dark hair
-somewhat in disorder, the first impression of the General was, how
-extremely like her daughter she proved, and how very youthful too;
-for her figure, as we have elsewhere said, was petite; her features
-were minute, beautiful and full of animation at all times, but never
-more so than now, when she started forward on the entrance of the
-visitor, with her delicate hands uplifted, her fine eyes sparkling
-through their tears, full of hope and inquiry, and her lips parted,
-showing the whiteness and faultless regularity of her teeth.
-
-"You have news for me, General?" she faltered.
-
-"Happily, good news, madam," said he, bowing low; "your daughter is
-safe and well."
-
-"Oh, sir--oh, General Trecarrel, how can I thank you?"
-
-"By composing yourself, my dear madam," he replied, leading her to a
-chair; but Constance became almost hysterical; she clasped his hand
-in hers, and almost sought to kiss it, in expression of her deep
-gratitude, greatly to the confusion of the old soldier, who was
-Englishman enough to dislike a "scene."
-
-"Under the circumstances, no apology is necessary for the abruptness
-of my visit," said he; "we are pretty near neighbours, and I hope
-shall ultimately be friends, though, singular to say, I have never
-had the pleasure of meeting Captain Devereaux."
-
-These words recalled Constance to a sense--the ever-bitter sense--of
-the awkwardness of her position, and she faltered out--
-
-"Captain Devereaux is absent at present--abroad indeed--but I hope he
-shall soon be home now. And our dear daughter--she escaped the
-rising tide----"
-
-"By fortunately being able to find shelter in the Pixies' Hole, from
-which she was promptly rescued by a young friend--a brother-officer
-of mine."
-
-"Oh, how I shall bless him and ever treasure his name."
-
-"He is Mr. Audley Trevelyan, and has conveyed her, in the first
-place, to old Mike Treherne's cottage. She was drenched by rain and
-spray, suffering from chill, and overcome with terror."
-
-"My poor little Sybil!"
-
-The General did not add to the mother's alarm by adding that he had
-left Sybil insensible, but only said--
-
-"She should not return till to-morrow, when perhaps the rain may
-cease, and the storm abate; but I have ordered my carriage, and she
-shall have the use of it with pleasure. It must be here in a few
-minutes now."
-
-Constance could only murmur her heartfelt thanks; but now, more than
-ever, she felt the peculiarity of her position--its extreme
-awkwardness, and its doubtful aspect. It was but a few weeks since
-her husband, now known as Lord Lamorna, had stood by the General's
-side at the late lord's grave, amid a crowd of bareheaded tenantry,
-and here they were talking of him as "Captain Devereaux!"
-
-Sybil's cousin-german had saved and protected her, thus cementing the
-acquaintance begun by chance at the little lake upon the moor, and
-was with her now too, probably; he was her husband's nephew, and
-while that husband was absent, with her own rank, name, and his
-concealed, she dared not avow the relationship that existed among
-them all! Poor Constance felt her cheek grow paler, with the sickly
-thoughts that oppressed her heart, as she muttered under her breath--
-
-"Patience yet a while, and, with God's help, dear Richard shall see
-me through all this!"
-
-In a few words the General, with military brevity, related the whole
-affair of the evening; the providential discovery of her daughter in
-the chasm, by her voice, as it was rightly conjectured, having
-reached the ears of Audley's Thibet mastiff; but for which
-circumstance she must have perished of cold and exhaustion, or
-perhaps fallen down the shaft of the old mine and never been heard of
-again, her fate remaining a mystery to all--contingencies, the
-contemplation of which appalled the heart of the poor mother, who
-said in a very faint voice--
-
-"My daughter is long in returning to me. Oh, sir, can it be that you
-are kindly concealing something from me?"
-
-"Nay, madam, the tempestuous state of the weather and the feeble
-condition of the young lady herself require----"
-
-"Ah, that is it! my daughter is ill--dying perhaps, while I am idly
-talking here. Winny--Winny Braddon, my bonnet and cloak; I shall set
-forth this instant for Treherne's cottage!"
-
-"I assure you, madame, that my carriage was at her disposal, and it
-shall bring your daughter home."
-
-"Oh, General, the gratitude of my heart----"
-
-"There--there, please don't thank me for a little common humanity,"
-continued the kind old soldier, "but give my compliments--General
-Trecarrel's compliments--to Captain Devereaux when he returns, and
-say that I think he ought, in etiquette, to have waited upon me as
-his senior officer; for such was the fashion in my young days, when
-two brethren of the sword took up their quarters in a district so
-secluded as this; and I should like my girls to know your daughter."
-
-"I have a son, too, General--my dear Denzil--who left us but lately
-to join his Regiment."
-
-"Ah--indeed--you quite interest me. Where is it stationed?"
-
-"In India--far, far from me."
-
-"Of course, you could not have him always at your apron-strings.
-What, or which, is his corps?"
-
-"The Cornish Light Infantry."
-
-"My own Regiment! I am the full colonel of it: why did he not leave
-a card with me on appointment?--he must have known of my whereabouts."
-
-A cloud came over the fair open countenance of Trecarrel, and
-Constance felt that, in the further prosecution of their systematic
-incognito, a breach of military etiquette and punctilio had taken
-place.
-
-"My young friend Trevelyan is in the same corps," said the General,
-after a pause.
-
-Constance knew that too, and that it had been the Regiment of her
-husband during their happiest days at Montreal; but when with it he
-had borne his family surname, and _not_ that of Devereaux.
-
- "Oh, what a tangled web we weave,
- "When first we practise to deceive!"
-
-So thought Constance, and who could not quite foresee the end of the
-web. Her present perplexities were increasing, and her usually pale
-cheeks began to blush scarlet.
-
-But now, to her intense relief, the sound of wheels and hoofs at the
-door, followed by quick steps in the entrance, announced an arrival,
-and in a moment more mother and daughter were weeping joyfully in
-each other's arms.
-
-"Dearest mamma--darling mamma! Oh the joy of being safe with you
-again! An age seems to have elapsed since I left you this evening!"
-
-And old Winny Braddon came in for her share of caresses, while the
-General and Trevelyan, though they now began to feel themselves
-rather _de trop_, looked on with smiles of pleasure. So full of joy
-was Constance at the restoration of Sybil, that she never noticed the
-quaint and coarse (though comfortably dry) costume which the careful
-wife of Treherne had substituted for her wet and sodden habiliments.
-
-Audley's quick and practised eye saw that Constance was a woman
-possessing more than an ordinary share of beauty and refinement. He
-took in the whole details of the drawing-room, and perceived by a
-glance that the occupants of this secluded villa "in the
-willow-glen--those peculiar Devereaux," as the Trecarrel girls called
-them, were evidently people of the best and most cultivated taste,
-for the buhl or marquetterie tables, consoles, and cabinets exhibited
-selections from the most chaste productions of Dresden and Sèvres;
-delicate Venetian bronzes, quaint Majolica vases and groups, some
-relics from Herculaneum; and other objects (more familiar to him)
-from India and Burmah were there--four-armed gods and other idols in
-silver or ivory.
-
-Pausing for a moment in her caresses, Constance turned towards Audley
-Trevelyan with a pleading glance of irresolution, yet one of
-wonderful sweetness.
-
-"My young friend, Mr. Trevelyan," said the General; "allow me to
-introduce him, Mrs. Devereaux."
-
-"Oh, sir, to you I owe the gratitude of a lifetime?" she exclaimed in
-an accent of touching tenderness.
-
-He seemed so like her absent Denzil, that all her heart yearned to
-him, and in a genuine transport of gratitude she embraced him with
-such _empressement_, that in a woman so young apparently for her
-maternal character, and so very handsome too, rather perplexed
-Trevelyan, who said,
-
-"You owe me no thanks--indeed, indeed, you do not. I did but my
-duty--I obeyed only the dictates of humanity; and I assure you that
-you are quite as much indebted to Rajah as to me, Mrs. Devereaux."
-
-The name he used recalled her to herself, and the peculiarity of her
-position as regarded him--the secret she could not yet reveal; and
-turning away as an expression of confusion come over her face, she
-stooped, and casting her arms round the great Thibet mastiff,
-caressed it with a grace and playfulness that partook of girlish glee.
-
-By this time Sybil was reclining wearily, and with an air of utter
-exhaustion and languor, on a sofa. Her face was very pale, save when
-a kind of hectic flush passed over it, and her eyes seemed
-unnaturally bright. Even to the unpractised observation of the two
-gentlemen it was evident that they had better retire, and, after
-exchanging a glance suggestive of this, they both rose, hat in hand.
-
-"You will, I hope, permit me to call to-morrow and make inquiries?"
-said Audley Trevelyan.
-
-Constance bowed, and her tongue trembled: what she said she scarcely
-knew, but it was a muttered wish of some kind, with many thanks and
-reference to her husband's return, all oddly combined. That she
-laboured under some species of hidden restraint was quite apparent to
-the perception of him she addressed, and also to the General; and so,
-after the usual well-bred wishes that both ladies should soon recover
-from the effects of their recent terror, they withdrew together; and
-as the sound of their carriage wheels died away in the willow avenue,
-all other sounds, and the light too, seemed to pass away from Sybil,
-as she sank gradually back, became insensible, and was conveyed to
-bed by Winny Braddon and her startled mother, who summoned medical
-aid without delay.
-
-The next day found her in a species of nervous fever. She had
-undergone too much of mental fear and bodily suffering for a nature
-so delicate as hers, and remained for a time unconscious of all
-around her. Slowly and gradually, like water filtering through a
-rock--as some one describes the struggles of returning
-sensibility--she became aware that she was in her own bed, with her
-mother on one side and Winny Braddon on the other in watchful
-attendance; then, with a shudder, she would recall the horrors she
-had escaped, and clasp her hands as she had done ten years before,
-when a little child in prayer.
-
-Then exhaustion would bring sleep, but a sleep haunted by dreams,
-and, at times, visions wild as those of an opium-eater; thus, for
-many a night, long after this period, the episodes of that eventful
-evening would come back to memory with all their harrowing details:
-the advancing tide rolling against the impending cliffs and
-thundering in the Pixies' Hole, after it had swallowed the drenched
-sand; her retreating step by step fearfully and breathlessly before
-it, in terror of being drowned on one hand and of falling down the
-mine on the other!
-
-Anon, she would imagine herself swung up that terrible shaft through
-darkness and space, and that the rope was just on the eve of
-_parting_, when she would wake with a half-stifled scream to find
-that she was in the arms of her mamma, who was soothing and caressing
-her.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII.
-
-THE TRECARRELS.
-
-Duly next day, at a proper visiting-hour, the handsome and
-well-appointed carriage of General Trecarrel, occupied only by his
-two daughters and Audley Trevelyan, was seen bowling down the avenue
-of the villa at Porthellick, with Rajah bounding before it in as much
-glee as if at home in Thibet, "the northern land of snow," where many
-a time he had scoured along the slopes of the Himalaya range and the
-Dwalaghiri in pursuit of the Cashmere goat and the Tartarian yak;
-but, as the event proved, the visit was in vain: the two ladies could
-only leave their cards, as they were informed that both Mrs. and Miss
-Devereaux were too much indisposed after the events of yesterday to
-receive visitors.
-
-"It will be a case which warm drinks and cosseting will soon cure, I
-hope," said Rose, shrugging her pretty shoulders.
-
-"Where to, Miss Trecarrel?" asked the footman, touching his hat ere
-he sprang to his place behind.
-
-"To Bodmin," replied the elder sister: "we have shopping to do, Mr.
-Trevelyan;" and after a pause she added, "I have told you that they
-were odd people, those Devereaux; we were fools to come--don't you
-think so, Rose?"
-
-"Perhaps, Mab."
-
-"Do not judge so harshly," urged Audley. "What may be more probable
-than that both should feel excited after the last night's terror
-and--and----"
-
-"Chivalry," suggested Rose Trecarrel, a little malice glittering in
-her fine eyes; but Audley remained silent.
-
-Mabel and Rose Trecarrel were both eminently handsome girls. The
-elder was tall and showy, having dark grey eyes that filled, at
-times, with unusual lustre and had a wonderful variety of expression,
-but her chief beauties were perhaps her purity of complexion and the
-quantity and magnificence of her rich brown hair.
-
-Rose was somewhat her counterpart--a large but very graceful girl,
-with clear, sparkling, hazel eyes, and hair much of the same hue,
-though her lashes and eyebrows were dark and well defined. Without
-attempting to describe her nose, we shall simply say it was a very
-pretty one, that seemed exactly to suit the expression of her eyes
-and the full-lipped yet little and alluring mouth below. Both girls
-were always dressed rather in the extreme of the mode, and were sure
-to be prime favourites at all balls, races, or meets to see the
-hounds throw off; and no entertainment in that part of the duchy was
-deemed complete without "the Trecarrels." No friend had ever accused
-them of being flirts, though fair enemies had frequently done so.
-
-The General was very proud of his two daughters, and felt certain
-that both would make most eligible and wealthy marriages, when he
-took them to India, where he was in expectation daily of obtaining an
-important command.
-
-For the time Audley Trevelyan was, what others had been, and others
-yet might be, a kind of privileged dangler in attendance on both
-sisters, and seemed to share their smiles and return attention to
-both in a pretty equal manner; thus both were somewhat disposed to
-resent the new and sudden interest he manifested in Sybil Devereaux.
-
-Both were eminently dashing girls. Mabel, the elder, was perhaps the
-statelier of the two, but the beauty and manner of Rose were more
-sparkling and dazzling. Both sisters were highly accomplished, and
-both had that affected indifference to their own attractions, which
-is perhaps an indication of the strongest and most ineradicable
-vanity--for of those attractions they knew the full power and value.
-
-"But who are those Devereaux?" asked Mabel, as a turn of the road hid
-the villa, during a pause filled up only by the subdued noise of the
-carriage wheels in their patent axle-boxes.
-
-"You should know by this time, Trevelyan," added Rose, looking at him
-from under the long fringes of her eyes and her parasol, as she lay
-well back indolently yet gracefully among the soft cushions of the
-carriage.
-
-"Nay; how should I, when you, who are neighbours, know nothing? Her
-father was a captain in some Line Regiment."
-
-"_Her_ father--of whom were we speaking?" asked Rose.
-
-Trevelyan coloured perceptibly, and Mabel laughed.
-
-"Oh, she occupies his thoughts already, Mab! He was of some Line
-Regiment, that is pretty vague, and scarcely suits our Cornish
-standard of such things as family and so forth--least of all the
-standard formed by your uncle, the late Lord Lamorna."
-
-"Oh, he was an absurd old goose--mad with pride, in fact."
-
-"And barely remembered you in his will?"
-
-"Precisely so," replied Audley, half amused and half provoked.
-
-"They visit no one, and they make no acquaintances," said Rose,
-resuming the theme.
-
-"They settled here without an introduction, I have heard, and gave it
-to be understood that they declined all acquaintance save with the
-Rector and Doctor."
-
-"Neither of whom, Mab, are particular to a shade. I should not
-wonder, Audley, if your 'captain' were some returned convict or
-retired housebreaker in easy circumstances."
-
-"Rose, you are too severe," urged Trevelyan; "Mrs. Devereaux is a
-kind of idol among the poor people here."
-
-"We must all admit that she excels in chicken broth, is knowing in
-coals and tea, and great in corduroys, tobacco, and blankets; but
-fasten my bracelet, please," and she held forth coquettishly a
-slender wrist and a well-shaped hand, tightly cased in the finest of
-straw-coloured kid; and every movement of Rose Trecarrel, however
-quick and unstudied, was full of the poetry of action. "Thanks. If
-you will not admit that the mother of your fair friend is odd, you
-must that her father is so--or at least is ignorant of military
-etiquette, if he is a military man."
-
-"How?"
-
-"He has never left his card upon papa, which, in a solitary place
-like this, papa thinks he ought to have done, as it is the fashion in
-the service--going out I am aware--for the junior officer to wait
-upon the senior, though uninvited."
-
-"Though a bore at times, it was a good old custom, I admit, but like
-many other fashions is as much gone out as square letter-paper,
-sand-boxes and sealing wax, stage coaches and queues."
-
-"Then his son," she continued in an aggrieved tone, "on being
-appointed to papa's own Regiment, never had the politeness to leave a
-card upon us either!"
-
-"Rose, you are quite a _Code Militaire_," said Trevelyan, laughing
-again. "Those Devereaux are thought handsome--I mean the mother and
-daughter."
-
-"I have no wish to disparage the taste of the Cornish gentlemen----"
-
-"None could afford to treat their taste with more indifference than
-you and Miss Trecarrel, who are both----"
-
-"Both what?" asked Mabel, quickly.
-
-"Above all comparison."
-
-"Oh, we did not leave all our gallantry in the old coal-mine!"
-
-"Excuse me, Rose," said Trevelyan, "it was originally a tin-mine."
-
-"Pity it was not brass--eh, Audley?" replied Rose, laughing with a
-voice like a silver bell.
-
-"Come, come, Rose," said Mabel, "you and Trevelyan are usually such
-good friends that I shall not have you to spar thus."
-
-"We don't spar, it is only 'barrack-room chaff,' in which, as you may
-perceive, Mr. Trevelyan excels," retorted the piqued belle.
-
-The truth was rather apparent to Audley, that the pretty--nay, the
-beautiful and hazel-eyed Rose was nettled, and seriously so.
-Hitherto she had considered the handsome ex-Lieutenant of Hussars,
-and now of the Cornish Light Infantry, as her own peculiar
-property--even more than her sister. He was to be her papa's
-Aide-de-camp in India--she had settled this, _nem. con._; and while
-on leave at home, he was to be her dangler, secret slave, and open
-adorer--husband in the end perhaps, if nothing better "turned up;"
-for Audley's expectations from his father, the barrister, as one of a
-family of five, were slender enough; and here he was too probably
-smitten with a little chit-faced interloper whom no one knew anything
-about!
-
-There was a pause in the conversation, during which the carriage had
-passed St. Teath and St. Kew, with their quaint churches, and that of
-Egloshayle, on the right bank of the Camel, where it peeped up among
-the trees, when Rose returned to the charge.
-
-"And you actually swung together at the end of a rope."
-
-"At the end of a rope, as you say."
-
-"How romantic!--how charming!"
-
-"At least in one sense; yet I was glad enough when it was all over in
-safety."
-
-"What! though doubtless, as Byron says,
-
- 'The situation had its charm.'"
-
-
-"Fie, Rose--you quote _Don Juan_!" exclaimed Mabel.
-
-"And why should not I, Mab, if the passage seems so familiar to you?"
-
-"Rose, you are incorrigible!"
-
-"Well, Audley, your fellow-soldiers must be proud of you when they
-hear of this feat of arms."
-
-"We say _brother_-soldiers in the service," replied Trevelyan.
-
-"I submit to the correction; it is like one from papa, who deems all
-civilians stupid fellows. And so you think she is a paragon of
-loveliness?" continued Rose Trecarrel, so bent on the game of
-tormenting him, that she cared little for showing her hand.
-
-"I did not say so--do you, Rose?"
-
-"Call me _Miss_ Rose, if you please," said she, with a charming air
-of pique on her lovely little lip.
-
-"Well--where were we?"
-
-"About the beauty of the girl you rescued--were slung in a rope with.
-How funny!" said Mabel.
-
-"Of her beauty you can judge for yourselves; I have nothing to do
-with it," replied he wearily.
-
-"Fortunate for you," laughed Rose, "as the girl's position in society
-seems so dubious, Audley."
-
-"Call me Mr. Trevelyan, please, as we are to be on distant terms."
-
-"Let us only have you in India, where we shall be ere long," said
-she, shaking her parasol threateningly, "and I shall have papa to put
-you under arrest."
-
-"For what?"
-
-"Conduct unbecoming an officer and a gentleman."
-
-"As how, my fair friend?'
-
-"Behaving rudely, petulantly, and insolently."
-
-"To a pretty girl?"
-
-"Yes--moreover, a daughter of the general on whose staff he is
-serving."
-
-"And the sentence of the court will be, dismissal from her presence
-for ever."
-
-"Have some mercy on him," said Mabel.
-
-"You seem to know the duties of an aide-de-camp," said Audley, not
-ill-pleased to find himself an object of interest to two such
-handsome girls.
-
-"Of papa's at least," said Rose: "to revise the dinner and visiting
-lists; to see Mab and me to and from all balls, kettle-drums,
-reviews, durbars, and so forth; to arrange picnics; to do all the
-squiring and shawling business, and to dance with us whenever we feel
-bored by some slow griff who can't keep time; to make bets of gloves,
-fans, and bouquets, and to lose them so nicely and so opportunely,
-that the payment thereof appears a veritable glory; to see us through
-the crush of the supper, and procure ices, creams, chicken,
-champagne, and crackers, no matter how the thermometer may stand, or
-how weary the punkahwallah may be--all of which are among the duties
-of an accomplished staff-officer."
-
-"Oh, Rose, how your tongue runs on!" said Mabel.
-
-"Poor fellow, I must spare him, for his heart seems divided between
-the mother and daughter; so I hope that this Captain Devereaux may
-soon be home, lest evil happen. But here we are at Bodmin!" she
-added, as the carriage, after quitting the highlands of granite and
-dreary moorland which extend to within four miles of the ancient
-assize town, rolled through its centre street.
-
-"And now, if you choose," said Mabel, "Trevelyan, you may enjoy the
-indispensable cigar while we investigate the industrial treasures of
-a country draper's shop. We have but one hour to spare, and then
-homeward."
-
-"Or we shall have papa consulting that remarkable watch, which he got
-from Sir John Keane after the storming of Ghuznee," added Rose, as
-disdaining Audley's proffered hand, she sprang lightly from the
-carriage steps.
-
-So, for a time he was left to "do" the lions of Bodmin, the handsome
-old Norman church, the few pointed arches and dilapidated walls of
-the Leper Hospital, and so forth; and to his own reflections and
-thoughts, which, heedless of the sharp banter he had undergone, were
-all of Sybil--at that very moment struggling back into perfect
-consciousness from feverish delirium, and stealing from Winny Braddon
-the visiting-card he had recently left, that she might conceal it
-under her pillow.
-
-To her, he was fast becoming the realisation of all her
-day-dreams--"the one moving spirit that animated the whole world of
-her united romances." He was,
-
- "her first and passionate love, that all
- Which Eve hath left her daughters since her fall."
-
-
-To Rose and to Mabel Trecarrel, he was simply one among the many
-"nice fellows" they had met with in society, and should meet again in
-plenty.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII.
-
-HE LOVES ME, TRULY!
-
-To Audley's mind there was a freshness and innocence about Sybil,
-that made her image dwell in his heart prominently, and more vividly
-than the dashing and showy Mabel and Rose Trecarrel could have
-conceived to be possible. Moreover, there was, to him, something
-glorious in the conviction that for the sake of this lovely young
-girl he had confronted a manifest peril; that by doing so he had
-saved her and established--as he hoped--a tie of no ordinary strength
-and peculiarity between them, linking, in the future, their histories
-if not their lives together; for to him she owned now, most probably,
-the fact that she existed at all.
-
-Such were the kind of thoughts to which Trevelyan, hitherto a
-heedless and pleasure-loving young subaltern of Hussars, indulged in
-many a dreamy hour, even when half flirting or "chaffing" with the
-Trecarrels, riding or driving abroad with them, turning the leaves at
-the piano while Rose displayed the perfection of her white shoulders
-and taper arms after dinner, and dawdled languidly over the airs of
-Verdi and Balfe; and to which he fully abandoned himself, when he
-strolled forth alone, to enjoy a cigar in the lawn or in some
-secluded lane.
-
-Sybil on her part deemed it equally delightful, to think that she
-owed her life to him; for had not Audley and others said (and she
-felt the truth of it) that, ere the ebb of the tide should have left
-the lower end of the cavern open and free, she must have perished of
-cold or terror, or both.
-
-She had read the contents of many a box from "Mudie's," but no
-episode in any of the three volumes octavo therein seemed exactly to
-resemble hers in the Pixies' Hole. It was very romantic and strange,
-no doubt; but to Constance it appeared that the still concealed part
-of their relationship was the most strange and romantic feature in
-the affair.
-
-Like most, if not all, young girls, she had read all about love in
-novels and romances; she had talked about love to school-companions,
-some of them enthusiastic Italian girls at Como, by the Arno, and
-elsewhere; and now a lover had actually come, one who on three
-successive days had left cards, with earnest inquiries concerning her
-health and that of her mamma.
-
-She remembered the endearment of his manner when he saved her, but
-feared, at times, that such might only have been caused by the
-peculiarity of their situation; and then she would blush with
-annoyance at herself, as she recalled the somewhat too pointed way in
-which she questioned him about Rose Trecarrel, to whom she was still
-a stranger, and of whom she had thus evinced a jealousy--actually a
-jealousy, as if thereby assuming a right to question his actions!
-
-But had he not called her Sybil, and said that he loved her, and her
-only?
-
-The afternoon of the fourth day saw Audley Trevelyan--always careful
-of his costume, on this occasion unusually so--passing slowly down
-the willow avenue towards the villa; and as he approached the latter,
-the beating of his heart quickened on perceiving the light figure of
-Sybil pass from the pillared portico into a conservatory that
-adjoined the house. So she was convalescent--had recovered at last;
-and now he would speak with her alone, and might resume perhaps the
-thread of that hurried but delightful topic, which was so suddenly
-cut short on the evening he saved her, by the voice of the impatient
-General.
-
-He approached the glass door of the conservatory, which she had left
-invitingly open, his footsteps being completely muffled by the soft
-and close-clipped turf of the little lawn.
-
-The conservatory was handsome, lofty, and spacious, floored with
-brilliantly coloured encaustic tiles, and constructed of iron, like a
-kiosk; its shelves were laden with delicate ferns, with cacti and
-gorgeous exotics in full bloom, though the season was in the last
-days of autumn, and over all drooped, almost from the roof to the
-ground, the far-stretching and slender green sprays of a graceful
-acacia. Under this stood Sybil, clad in a simple white dress,
-decorated by trimmings of rose-coloured satin ribbon, and having a
-dainty little lace collar round her slender neck; and Trevelyan
-watched her in silence and with admiration for half a minute ere he
-entered.
-
-It was the freshness and girlish purity of Sybil that charmed him
-quite as much as the delicacy of her beauty. During his few years of
-military life, in London, at Bath, Brighton, and Canterbury, even at
-Calcutta, he had met many such girls as the Trecarrels--brilliant in
-flirtation and knowing in all manner of arts and graces; but none
-that resembled Sybil.
-
-She had plucked a dwarf rose, and was about to place it in the breast
-of her dress. Suddenly she seemed to pause and change her intention;
-for a bright and fond smile spread over her soft little face, and
-while speaking to herself, leaf by leaf, she began to pluck the
-flower slowly to pieces.
-
-She spoke aloud, but her voice was so low that it failed to reach the
-ears of Trevelyan, till after a time, when, as the leaves lessened in
-number, she began to raise her tones, and her occupation became plain
-to him. She was acting to herself--repeating the little part of
-Goethe's Marguerite in the garden, but in a fashion of her own.
-
-"He loves me a little--tenderly--truly--he loves me not!"
-
-With each pause in this floral formula, the old German mode of
-divination in love affairs, a pink leaf floated away or fell on her
-white dress; and when but seven remained round the calyx, she paused
-for a moment; her face brightened as the charm seemed to work
-satisfactorily; she resumed her plucking, and as the seventh or last
-leaf was twitched from the stem, she clasped her hands and exclaimed
-with joy--
-
-"Truly--Audley loves me _truly_!"
-
-Her colour deepened, and there was almost a divine expression about
-her eyes and lips; but she became covered with intense confusion when
-Trevelyan approached her suddenly, and said with a tender and
-pleasantly modulated voice--
-
-"Your floral spell has worked to admiration, for Audley does love you
-truly and fondly, dearest Sybil!"
-
-"Oh, Mr. Trevelyan--and you have overheard my folly!" was all she
-could falter out, as he captured her hands in his own, and she
-stooped her face aside.
-
-"_Mr._ Trevelyan? Why, a moment ago you called me plain Audley, and
-it did sound so delightful! Pray do not let us go back in our
-relations. And you have quite recovered, I hope, from the effects of
-that frightful affair?" he added, while smiling with fondness into
-the clear bright eyes that drooped beneath his gaze.
-
-"It seems as nothing, now--save when I dream; you make too much of
-it--indeed you do," blundered Sybil.
-
-"Can I do so of aught in which you have a part?"
-
-"Poor mamma is still in a weak and nervous state; so, I am sorry to
-say, she will be unable to see you."
-
-As it was not "mamma" he had come exactly to visit, Audley could only
-murmur some well-bred expression of regret.
-
-"How very remarkable that you should have been there to save me!"
-said Sybil, after a pause.
-
-"The coldly treated stranger by the moorland tarn, eh?"
-
-"You forget that we had not been introduced, or how came it all to
-pass?" she asked, with growing confusion.
-
-"As all things in this life do, dearest Sybil."
-
-"But how?"
-
-"It was fate--destiny."
-
-"What--are you a fatalist?"
-
-"I hope not; and yet it were sweet to think that--that----"
-
-"What?" murmured Sybil, her long lashes drooping beneath the ardour
-of his glance, while his clasp seemed to tighten on her slender
-fingers.
-
-Much more passed that has been said, over and over again, under the
-same circumstances, by every pair of lovers since roses grew in Eden
-(and, unluckily, apples too); and there were long pauses, that were
-only pauses of the tongue, and which beatings of the heart filled up,
-with many a sigh "the deeper for suppression." There grew between
-these two a sudden sense of great trust which increased the
-tenderness of their sentiments, while deep gratitude was mingled now
-with Sybil's former budding love. It did seem to her, as if Fate had
-deliberately cast each in the path of the other; and doubtless it was
-so, for "out of these chance-affinities grow sometimes the passion of
-a life, and sometimes the disappointments that embitter existence."
-
-"Oh, Audley, without mamma's consent, dare I accept so lovely a
-ring?" said Sybil, in a low voice, as she lingered at the
-conservatory door and contemplated a jewel which Trevelyan had just
-slipped upon her engaged finger.
-
-"You will surely wear it for my sake, till--till--" he paused, and
-scarcely knew what to say, for he now began to reflect that he was
-only a subaltern, and had been "going the pace," in his love-making,
-with a vengeance! To fall in love and engage oneself were easy
-enough; but, as yet, he did not quite see the end of the affair.
-Sybil was, moreover, the daughter of an officer whose temper,
-perhaps, might not brook trifling.
-
-"Oh, it is an exquisite diamond!" resumed the girl, the pause
-unnoticed, and its cause, to her, unknown.
-
-"It formed one of the eyes of Vishnu, a Hindoo idol, in a temple near
-Agra. One of the Cornish Light Infantry--old Mike Treherne, the
-miner's son--poked out both with his bayonet. Jack Delamere bought
-one; I the other, and had it set thus in a ring by a Parsee jeweller
-in the Chandney Choke, at a time when I little thought of having in
-mine so dear a hand to place it on. Has not our acquaintance ripened
-with wonderful rapidity, darling??
-
-"Under such terrible circumstances, I don't wonder at it," said she,
-smiling tenderly as she toyed with the ring, which was now enhanced
-in value--priceless in her eyes, for it was a love-token.
-
-A love-token! and what might be its future history, and what their
-fate? "Customs alter, and fashions change," says a writer; "but
-love-gifts never grow old-fashioned or out of date,--they are always
-fresh from the golden age. Old people die, and desks and drawers are
-ransacked by their heirs. Oh, take up tenderly the withered petals,
-the lock of hair, the quaint ring hidden away in some secret recess;
-for hearts have once thrilled and eyes moistened at their touch.
-Precious gems and rare objects there may be in casket and cabinet;
-but none preserved with such jealous care as _these_, for they were
-the gifts of love."
-
-Sybil was a thoughtful girl, and even in that happy hour a sadness
-stole through her heart, as some such ideas occurred to her; but the
-young officer thought only of the present time, of its joy and of her
-beauty.
-
-He pressed her to name a day when she and her mamma, as by courtesy
-bound, would return the visit of the Trecarrels; but, ere that could
-be accomplished, there came to pass that "greater sorrow" which the
-heart of Constance had foreboded, and which must be duly recorded in
-its place; so the hoped-for visit was never paid.
-
-On this evening, Audley lingered long with Sybil. Each had so much
-to say to the other, and so many questions to ask, and so many fond
-plans for the future, that parting was a difficult task, even with
-the knowledge that they were to meet again on the morrow.
-
-It came; and noon saw him again at the villa, where he was received
-in the drawing-room by Constance alone; and to her he began to speak
-of Sybil after a time, and to express his admiration and regard for
-her.
-
-This Constance had fully foreseen and expected; but she was
-outwardly, to all appearance, collected and calm, till the secret
-that oppressed her became too much for her nervous system. Thus, the
-tenor of her bearing, which before had been all kindness and
-gratitude, suddenly changed. She became cold and constrained,
-perplexed and even awkward; so that a chill fell upon the heart of
-Audley, whose nature, all unlike that of his father, was frank and
-generous to a fault. She curtly but gently told him, that until the
-return of her husband she could afford no permission for her daughter
-to receive addresses; and soon after, full of deep mortification, and
-dreading he knew not what, Audley Trevelyan took his leave; and
-Constance, as she watched his figure pass out of the avenue, burst
-into tears.
-
-Sybil, as her youngest-born, she had ever looked upon as a species of
-child--called "_the_ baby," when long past babyhood; and now Sybil
-had a lover! Awakened to the reality of this, the poor lonely mother
-regarded this new phase of her daughter's existence with a species of
-alarm that bordered on terror.
-
-"Would that Richard were home!" was her first thought; "even Denzil's
-advice would be something to me now, poor boy!"
-
-Audley had barely entered the Trecarrels' drawing-room, when Rose,
-who was reclining on a fauteuil, with her rich brown hair beautifully
-dressed by the hands of her Ayah, and who fancied herself immersed in
-a novel, tossed it aside, for her clear hazel eyes speedily detected
-the disturbed expression of his face, and proceeded forthwith to quiz
-him as usual about "the Devereaux girl," and his intentions in that
-quarter; while Mabel, who was seated at the piano, sang laughingly a
-verse of "Wanted, a Wife," then a popular song, altering certain
-words "to suit the occasion," as Rose said--
-
- "As to fortune--of course, I have but my pay,
- A sub with seven-and-sixpence a day,
- And a pension beside--rather small, 'tis confest,
- For a leg shot away in the action 'off Brest;'
- For the loss of three fingers in fighting a chase,
- And a terrible cut from a sword in my face.
- But with all these defects, my nerves I must string,
- To propose for Miss Devereaux--delicate thing!"
-
-
-Audley felt almost inclined to quarrel with his fair friends.
-
-"Don't tease a fellow so, Rose," said he, wearily; "I have no
-money--at least, little beyond my pay; and have as much idea of
-marrying as--as----"
-
-"I have, perhaps."
-
-"I cannot say that."
-
-"You could ask this Sybil Devereaux?"
-
-"Of course--it would be easy as cribbage."
-
-"And what would she say, think you?"
-
-"As a sensible girl such as she seems to be--'wait.'"
-
-"Which means, that she would take you in time to come?"
-
-"Perhaps."
-
-"Unless something better turned up."
-
-"Don't judge of her by yourself, Rose," he retorted, laughing, to
-conceal his annoyance, which was greatly increased when the General's
-butler, just as Audley was ascending to his own room to dress for
-dinner, handed him a letter on a silver salver.
-
-It was from his father; written in his usual clear and precise hand.
-Audley for a time left it on the toilette table; then he tore it
-open, with an air of irritation, as these paternal missives were
-rarely pleasant ones, being always filled with advice, varied by
-reprehension.
-
-"Fathers have flinty hearts--and, by Jove, here is one!" muttered
-Audley, while his brows contracted.
-
-"I have seen in the public prints," ran the letter, "all about your
-adventure with the daughter of those strange people who live at
-Porthellick. The woman Devereaux is, as her name imports, too
-probably some designing French adventuress. Mabel Trecarrel has
-written to your sister Gartha, that you are quite smitten with the
-daughter; but I give you my distinct advice and notice to take heed
-of what you are about, and to join us in London without delay. You
-left the Hussars, even in India, because of the expense of the corps,
-neither tentage nor loot" (loot! the governor means batta) "being
-sufficient to maintain you. Disobey me in the matter of this girl
-Devereaux, and _I shall cut off_ even the slender allowance I
-promised you, for the Cornish Light Infantry."
-
-Audley crushed up the letter in his hand, for it came, at that
-particular moment, like a sentence of death.
-
-And Downie Trevelyan could write thus of the loving and amiable
-little family circle at the villa, knowing all he did, and suspecting
-more!
-
-To fear, or to find that his brother Richard, so long deemed an
-eccentric bachelor, had a family ready made and at hand to succeed
-him in the honours of Rhoscadzhel and Lamorna was bad enough. These
-interlopers who came between his own family and the line of Trevelyan
-might (perhaps) be set aside; but to find that his eldest son had
-become entangled with one of those so-called Devereaux, proved too
-much for the equanimity of the far-seeing lawyer.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX.
-
-THE GREATER SORROW.
-
-At the very time when Mabel Trecarrel was singing to tease Audley,
-Sybil was beginning a song of a very different character and calibre
-to soothe or amuse her mamma. It was a grand old Hungarian ballad,
-with an accompaniment like a crash of trumpets at times; and was one
-she had picked up during their wanderings on the banks of the Danube;
-but she had only got the length of the first two verses, when her
-mother's tears arrested her.
-
- "Was it the vine with clusters bright
- That clung round Buda's stateliest tower?
- No, 'twas a lady fair and white,
- Who hung around an armed knight;
- It was their sad, their parting hour.
-
- "They had been wedded in their youth,
- Together they had spent life's bloom;
- That hearts so long entwined by truth
- Asunder should be torn in ruth--
- It was a cruel and boding doom!"
-
-
-"Oh cease, Sybil," said Constance; "cease; it was your papa's
-favourite."
-
-"Then why cease, mamma?"
-
-"He is not here, and I feel I know not what--a foreboding--a
-superstition of the heart."
-
-So Sybil closed her piano, and it was long, long ere she opened it
-again.
-
-Three weeks had now elapsed since the Montreal steamer _Admiral_ (his
-anticipated departure by which Richard Trevelyan fully notified to
-Constance) had been due at Blackwall, and yet there were no tidings
-of her, so insurances went up, and underwriters looked grave. No
-Atlantic cables had been laid as yet between Britain and America,
-though such things were talked of as being barely possible. The next
-steamer announced that the _Admiral_ had duly sailed at her stated
-time; so, save the letter which contained the pleasant odds and ends
-concerning Montreal and their early lover days, poor Constance saw
-her husband's writing no more.
-
-Her surmises were endless, and the worthy rector lent his inventive
-aid to add to them. Might not the ship have met with some accident
-to her engines, and put back slowly under canvas to Montreal, the
-Azores, or elsewhere?
-
-Lost--was the word that hovered on her lips and trembled in her
-heart--LOST! Oh, that was not to be thought of. Yet if it were so,
-some must have survived to tell the terrible story; some might have
-been picked up, famished and weary, by a passing ship, and taken
-perhaps to a distant region, Heaven alone knew where. Such events
-happened every day on the mighty world of waters; so as week
-succeeded week, the familiarity with suspense, sorrow and horror
-seemed to become greater; till ideas began to confirm themselves, and
-probabilities to be steadily faced, that she would have shrunk from
-in utter woe but a month before!
-
-Then came those cruel and shadowy rumours, by which the public are
-usually tantalised, and the relatives of the missing are
-tortured--stories of wrecks passed, steamers abandoned--the masts
-gone, funnel standing, and so forth, in this, that or the other
-latitude; but all vague and never verified. How many stately ships
-have perished at sea, of which such stories have been told! In those
-days, it was the _President_, the great, "the lost Atlantic steamer,"
-on the fate of which at least one novel and several dramas and songs
-have been written; and but lately it was the turret ship _Captain_,
-with her five hundred picked British seamen, that went down into the
-deep, a few loose spars alone remaining to tell of their sorrowful
-fate.
-
-Constance and her daughter were inspired by successive hope that he
-might have survived, and fear that he had perished--too surely
-perished; and these alternations were agony, for "the promises of
-Hope are sweeter than roses in the bud, and far more flattering to
-expectation; but the threatenings of Fear are a terror to the heart."
-
-At last there came a fatal day, when a passage cut from a London
-newspaper was enclosed to Constance by Audley Trevelyan, who had been
-constrained to visit and remain in town with his family.
-
-It contained distinct details of the total wreck of the _Admiral_,
-which had foundered in a gale. She had been heavily pooped by
-successive seas, and had gone down with all on board, save the watch
-on deck, who had effected their escape in one of the quarter-boats,
-and been picked up in a most exhausted state, by one of Her Majesty's
-ships. All the passengers had been drowned in their cabins, and to
-this account a list of their names was appended.
-
-"It is very remarkable, my dear madam," wrote the unconscious Audley,
-"that I do not find the name of Captain Devereaux borne in this list;
-though we have all the sorrow to see that of my uncle Richard, Lord
-Lamorna, whose American trip has been to us all a source of mystery."
-
-Constance read the printed list with staring stony eyes, and a heart
-that stood still!
-
-Mr. Downie Trevelyan had perused it carefully too, with the aid of
-his gold double-eye-glass, and an unfathomable smile had spread over
-his sleek legal visage while he did so.
-
-"Oh, my husband--my Richard--so innocent and true! Gone--gone, and
-your children and I are left--doomed to shame and
-sorrow--doomed--doomed!" wailed Constance in a piercing voice, as
-with her fingers interlaced across her face she cast herself upon a
-sofa in despair.
-
-"Mamma," urged the terrified Sybil, "what _do_ you mean? Does not
-dear Audley write that papa's name is _not_ in the list; so he cannot
-have sailed in that unhappy ship."
-
-"My poor child, you know not what you say," moaned Constance, without
-looking or altering her position, for dark and bitter was the
-desolation of the heart which fell on her.
-
-In vain did poor Sybil caress and hang over her in utter
-bewilderment, and read and re-read Audley's letter without being able
-to comprehend the agitation of her mother, who answered nothing. For
-the time she was overwhelmed by the immensity of their calamity--by
-gloom and speechless sorrow.
-
-But one thought was ever present--there was a face she should never
-more behold--a voice she never more should hear; the great ship going
-down in the dark; "the passengers drowned in their cabins," by the
-furious midnight sea; and he who loved her so well, who had crossed
-the Atlantic to bring back the full and legal proofs of their
-nuptials, was now in the shadowy land--the Promised Land--where there
-are neither marriages nor giving in marriage; and where there can be
-no graves either in the soil or in the sea.
-
-With this calamity must many others come!
-
-Richard's means died with him; the proofs of her marriage and of her
-children's position had perished with him too. Even the newspapers
-in their notices of the event, were careful to record that "as Lord
-Lamorna (who had so lately succeeded to that ancient title) died a
-bachelor, he would be heired by his brother, the eminent barrister,
-Mr. Downie Trevelyan, now twelfth Lord Lamorna of Rhoscadzhel, in the
-duchy of Cornwall."
-
-There was the usual obituary notice in a popular illustrated paper,
-with a wood-cut of the late lord's arms, the demi-horse _argent_
-issuing from the sea, the coronet, the wild cat, and the motto _Le
-jour viendra_.
-
-Even Derrick Braddon's name was recorded as among the list of the
-drowned; so the sole surviving witness of the hasty and secret
-marriage had perished with his master.
-
-Sybil had answered Audley's letter--Constance was quite incapable of
-doing so--urging him piteously, for the love he bore her, to make
-what other inquiries he could at Lloyd's, the shipping offices and
-elsewhere, as her mamma seemed to be distracted; and promptly a reply
-came, but not in Audley's handwriting, though it bore the London
-post-mark. It was addressed to her mamma, who in a weak and
-breathless voice desired her to read it; and great were the terror
-and perplexity of the girl, when she perused the following
-sentence--for one contained the whole matter.
-
-
-"CHAMBERS, TEMPLE.
-
-"MADAM,
-
-"A letter written by your daughter and bearing the Porthellick
-postmark, has just fallen into my hands; so I hereby beg to intimate
-to you that my eldest son and heir, the Hon. Mr. Audley Trevelyan,
-can hold no such intercourse as that document would seem to import,
-or be on such terms of intimacy with a young woman who is destitute
-of position, who has not a shilling in the world, and whose
-parentage, family, and so forth--you cannot fail to understand
-me--are matters of such extreme uncertainty, not to say worse; thus
-you must endeavour to control her actions, as I shall those of my
-son, who goes at once to join his regiment in India.
-
- "I am yours, &c.
- "LAMORNA.
-
-"A copy kept."
-
-
-"How dare this Lord Lamorna write to you thus, mamma?" asked Sybil,
-her dark eyes flashing with unusual light; but the pale mother
-answered only with her tears, and recalling now certain broken
-sentences which had escaped her--sentences that seemed somewhat to
-correspond painfully with the insulting tenor of the letter. Sybil,
-after the first hours of excessive grief were past, said in a
-composed voice, yet with tremulous lips,
-
-"What does Lord Lamorna mean? Who are we, mamma? and what are we?"
-
-Constance was silent, though each pulsation of her heart was a
-veritable pang.
-
-"Are we not Devereaux?"
-
-"No."
-
-"Who then?" urged Sybil, her pallor increasing while the silence or
-pause that ensued was painful to both; to none more than the innocent
-mother, the guarded secret of whose blameless life was now about to
-be laid bare before her own child--a secret that seemed now to assume
-the magnitude of a crime! All the care, doubt, anxiety, and mystery
-of the past years had gone for nothing, and the sacrifice she had
-made of herself, was now likely to recoil fearfully upon her, and
-more than all upon her children.
-
-In broken accents, with her aching head reclined on Sybil's breast,
-she told all that the reader already knows; the insane pride of birth
-and family which inspired the old lord, his suspicions and threats,
-the long necessity for consequent secrecy; and Sybil heard all this
-strange story with intense bewilderment.
-
-Could she realise it--take it all into her comprehension? Her mother
-was a lady of title--her brother Denzil was the real Lord Lamorna,
-she herself was not a Devereaux, but a Trevelyan like Audley--and he,
-Audley, who loved her so, was her own cousin!
-
-This revelation then explained all to Sybil; all of their wanderings
-in strange places, and sudden departures from them, when unwelcome
-tourists who might have recognised Richard Trevelyan came, their
-secluded life at Porthellick, their marked avoidance of the
-Trecarrels and others, and on the whole poor Sybil felt cut to the
-heart, and inspired by not an atom of pride; yet she tenderly and
-fondly embraced her mother with greater fervour than ever, for more
-than ever did she feel that she must love her now.
-
-"My poor papa drowned--drowned, unburied in the sea--passing away
-from us without even the name by which we have known and loved him!"
-exclaimed Sybil. "Oh why is God so cruel to us?"
-
-"Alas, Sybil, we can but adore the decrees of Heaven, without seeking
-to know more of them. This stroke is hard to bear, child--all the
-harder that I have reason to fear--to dread, oh, my God, that more
-than your papa's life has perished with him."
-
-"More mamma; what can be more?"
-
-"That which was dearer to him than life; the succession of
-Denzil--the honour of us all!"
-
-After a long pause, with a vague expression in her eyes, as if her
-thoughts were travelling back into the years of the past, Sybil said,
-
-"I had begun to suspect there was some unpleasant mystery about us."
-
-"But affection and delicacy----"
-
-"Both, dearest mamma sealed my lips and I was silent; but oh, to what
-good end or purpose has it all been? By this, too surely is Audley
-also lost to me."
-
-"My poor child, he was your lover, and through me you think you lose
-him. Oh pardon me, Sybil, darling, for I, your hapless mother, am
-the cause of all this! Had your papa never seen, or known, or loved
-me----"
-
-"Do not say so, mamma dear," whispered Sybil as her mother's
-tremulous lips were pressed on her throbbing brow.
-
-"It was a plan your papa formed to save his inheritance for you and
-Denzil, and already his brother claims all."
-
-"It was a false plan, and see how it may fail us--nay already, to all
-appearance has failed us."
-
-"He is in his grave--if indeed the ocean can be called a grave."
-
-"True, my darling papa--and I must not upbraid him, even in thought."
-
-"If it is the will of God that I should suffer, His will be done!
-But my children--my children!" cried the widow wildly, and she raised
-her hands and her dark and beautiful but bloodshot eyes to Heaven;
-"my brave and handsome Denzil, and my soft sweet Sybil, of what have
-they been guilty, that shame and ruin, should fall on them?"
-
-"Mamma," whispered Sybil, embracing her closely, "we must learn to
-bear with resignation the woes we cannot help. But oh," added the
-girl in her heart, "how am I to write to Denzil of all this sorrow,
-and probably worse than sorrow and poverty?"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX.
-
-A FAMILY GROUP.
-
-And so he was gone--this tender husband, who had loved her so dearly,
-and whose secret she had shared so unavailingly for years; and apart
-from the horror of the doubt that hung over the future of her
-children, whose means and honour, like her own, had too probably
-perished with him, a despair grew in the heart of Constance when she
-surveyed the familiar objects, the little household gods of their
-once happy home, and thought upon the days that could never, never
-come again.
-
-There were times when she could not believe that she had lost him;
-that her sorrow was a painful dream from which she must awake. She
-perpetually found herself softly whispering his name, especially in
-the waking hours of the night. Thus too, from overtension of the
-nervous system, she would start at the fancied sound of her own name,
-uttered as if by his voice at a vast distance.
-
-In the delicacy and tenderness of Constance, there was an amount of
-keenness and intensity possessed by few, and thus her heart bled for
-her daughter, rather than for her own dubious position, the fact of
-which had been so coarsely thrust upon her by the insolent letter of
-Downie Trevelyan, who was now formally spoken of and everywhere
-announced and received as "Lord Lamorna."
-
-That Sybil had given all the wealth of her young heart to this man's
-son, was but too evident to her anxious mother's observation; but how
-would matters tend now, and could that misplaced love have a
-successful termination?
-
-Days were passing in sorrow now; no letters from Audley came to
-either. Sybil looked delicate and grew pale and thin, for a double
-grief was consuming her, and Constance began to marvel in her heart,
-was she meant to live in suffering and penury, perhaps to die early,
-this child--her dead father's idol, so loved and petted by him.
-
-Sybil felt secretly pleased with the idea that there existed between
-her and Audley a tie--the tie of blood--which even the antagonism of
-his crafty father could not break. "The idea of cousinly intimacy to
-girls is undoubtedly pleasant," says Anthony Trollope; "and I do not
-know whether it is not the fact, that the better and the purer the
-girl, the sweeter and the pleasanter is the idea."
-
-How often had Constance asked of herself--but never of him who was
-gone--"How long is this deception to be carried on? How long am I to
-wait before I take my place in the world as the wife of Richard
-Trevelyan, and cease to figure as a sham Devereaux, and how long are
-our children to be thus under a cloud?" All obstacles were removed
-now, but the sham was becoming a reality, and the cloud was growing
-darker than ever.
-
-And was her poor Denzil, then so far away from her, to be tamely
-robbed of his noble inheritance after all?
-
-The necessity for action in some way, even before acquainting him
-with his father's death and real rank, compelled Constance to bestir
-herself. She knew no one whom she felt tempted to consult with
-confidence, and was totally ignorant of the line of action to adopt,
-but on hearing, before a week had passed, that the whole family of
-the Trevelyans had come from town and taken up their residence at
-Rhoscadzhel, she resolved to lose no time in confronting the usurper
-personalty, attended only by her daughter. She could--she feared
-not--fully prove the identity of "Captain Devereaux" with Captain
-Trevelyan the late lord, and her husband's miniature, which she wore,
-and his letters, especially the last from Montreal, would prove still
-further the fact of her marriage, and his intentions as regarded his
-will, though they were all addressed to her as Mrs. Devereaux, and
-simply bore his signature as "Richard," save one already mentioned,
-to which he appended his title.
-
-So she thought and flattered herself while, clad in the deepest
-mourning, she and Sybil traversed, by the Cornwall Railway, the forty
-odd miles that lay between Porthellick and Rhoscadzhel, followed by
-the prayers and blessings of old Winny Braddon.
-
-"That which we fancy must break our hearts, we can bear patiently,
-and what is more, so learn to conform to, that after a few years of
-life, we can wonder that we thought them hardships," says a writer
-with much truth. So did Constance think her heart would break, when
-all the reality of her desolate condition was brought home to her, by
-her mirror reflecting her face--the face that Richard loved so
-well--encircled by a widow's cap--that odious ruche of tulle; but she
-already felt the conviction strongly, that whatever happened now, she
-would not have many years of life before her.
-
-Mother and daughter sat silent and sad while the train swept on,
-Lostwithiel with its antique octagon spire and the ruins of
-Restormal, with their moat full of sweet-briars; St. Blazey, to whose
-shrine the woolcombers made their pilgrimages in the days of old (the
-saint having been tortured or curried to death with wool-combs, by
-the Cornish men who declined to be converted from Druidism), with
-many a spacious lawn and bare autumnal wood and many a purple moor,
-were speedily left behind; and now it was past Grampound with its
-market-house and ancient granite cross, the train went screaming and
-clanking. Redruth next, in a dreary and barren district whose wealth
-lies far below the soil, which is literally honeycombed by the shafts
-and levels of mines; and then came Hayle, the houses of which are all
-built of scoria or slag, the debris of ancient mines; and then the
-travellers hired at the "White Hart," a carriage for Rhoscadzhel.
-
-To Constance, the scenery there had its chief interest in the
-circumstance that in youth and manhood her husband must have been
-familiar with every feature of it, and must have shot and hunted over
-it all. Noon was past now; but the sun shed a rich golden light upon
-a calm sea, of which they had lovely glimpses at times between the
-grey granite _carns_ and clumps of oak and elm. Sometimes the
-carriage rolled past wildernesses of rock and morass, where wild
-tarns reflected in their glassy depths the blue sky above, and where
-valleys opened westward to the Bristol Channel, whose waves were
-buttressed out by precipices of bold and striking outline, and the
-heart of Constance began to beat painfully as each revolution of the
-wheels drew her nearer and nearer to the house, that long ere this
-should have been her home.
-
-She felt, or thought, that now she was about to face, confront, and
-grapple with her fate, and to know the best or worst! The secret
-burden so long intolerable, would now be cast aside, and the adoption
-of any line of action, in lieu of the existence she had led since her
-loss was confirmed--the dumb mechanical life of one too paralysed
-even to think--was a relief. Yet moments there were when she half
-repented of her journey.
-
-Her husband, her sole protector, was gone, and the proofs of their
-marriage, and of his intentions by will, too, were gone also! If her
-arguments were repelled, her assertions denied, what must be her
-fate, and how terribly should she and those he loved so well be
-exposed to the sneers and heartlessness of a world that knew nothing
-of their good qualities, or of the cause for that concealment which
-might now prove the cause of their destruction.
-
-What if even now, at the eleventh hour, as it were, she turned
-prudently back, and concealed the fact that she was the true Lady
-Lamorna--that her son was a peer of the realm--and let him and Sybil
-pass through life as humble Devereaux, content to earn their bread as
-best they could? But to see Downie Trevelyan, the author of that
-harsh and most insulting letter, occupying the place of her
-Denzil--no--no! a thousand times no!
-
-Some such fears had been occurring to Sybil, who now said, in a low
-voice, as they drew near the stately gate of Rhoscadzhel,
-
-"I doubt, dearest mamma, whether this is a wise proceeding on our
-part; if we have the legal right to call ourselves Trevelyans, that
-right should be placed for proof in legal hands."
-
-"If we have--" began Constance, impetuously, and then became silent,
-for she felt that the views of her daughter were, perhaps, the most
-correct.
-
-The elaborate iron gate, and its tall granite pillars, each
-supporting a grotesque _Koithgath_, surmounted by a coronet, were
-left behind, and they proceeded along the stately avenue by which we
-have so lately seen Richard passing as chief mourner at the funeral
-of the old lord; and now, as the porte-cochère (which bore a double
-hatchment) was approached, came a new perplexity to the mind of
-Constance. How was she to announce herself?
-
-As "Lady Lamorna," where there was already one who called herself so;
-simply as "Mrs. Devereaux," or as "a lady wishing an interview with
-Lord Lamorna"? But from the utterance of his name in this instance
-she shrunk.
-
-The pampered servants, on seeing that the approaching vehicle was
-only a carriage hired from the neighbouring inn, and not an equipage
-having coats of arms and showy liveries, were somewhat slow in
-answering the summons at the bell; but as the hall door stood open,
-and, luckily for the perplexed Constance, Mr. Jasper Funnel, the
-solemn, portly, and intensely respectable-looking butler, was
-lingering there, she asked if she could "see his master."
-
-Now this was a mode to which Mr. Jasper Funnel was all unused, and he
-might have been disposed to summon "Jeames" or "Chawles" to attend to
-her; but there was now a hauteur in the bearing of Constance that
-thoroughly bewildered, if it failed to awe him.
-
-"Master, mum?" he stammered; "his lordship is at home, but engaged
-with General Trecarrel--I can take in your card, however."
-
-"I have not my card-case with me."
-
-"What name, then?"
-
-"It matters not--just say----"
-
-"Perhaps, mum, relations of the family?" suggested Funnel, perceiving
-the depth of mourning worn by the two ladies.
-
-"Yes--near relations, indeed," replied Constance, restraining her
-tears with difficulty.
-
-The man of bins and vintages, who thought he knew the branches of the
-Trevelyan family through all their ramifications, looked still more
-perplexed; however, he said, with a still lower bow,
-
-"This way, mum--please to follow me," and desiring their driver to
-await them, Constance and Sybil entered the mansion of Rhoscadzhel.
-
-As if to tantalise them by a display of all they were perhaps to
-lose, or had already lost for ever, a valet, to whose care Mr. Funnel
-now consigned them, conducted them by a somewhat circuitous route, as
-all the suites of rooms were not in order, the family having arrived
-unexpectedly from town.
-
-Passing through the marble vestibule, an arch on one side of which
-opened to a gay aviary, and one on the other to the beautiful
-conservatory, they entered a long and lofty corridor, where the soft
-carpet muffled every foot-fall, and where were the objects of
-_vertu_, accumulated by several generations of Trevelyans; a
-veritable museum it seemed, of glass cases filled with quaintly
-illuminated vellum MSS., in fine old Roman bindings, red-edged and
-clasped; old laces of Malines and Bruges; Chinese ivory carvings,
-delicate as gossamer webs; Burmese idols; Japanese cabinets, covered
-with flaming dragons; Majolica vases, where rosy cupids, grotesque
-tritons, nude nymphs, and shining dolphins, were all grouped
-together; Delft hardware of odd designs; Etruscan cups,
-cream-coloured or crimson, with slender black demoniac figures
-thereon; mediæval suits of armour; family portraits of dames in ruffs
-and farthingales, and of past Trevelyans, all well-wigged, cuirassed,
-and armed: some with Bardolph noses and paunches of comely curve,
-suggestive of sack and venison; the chiefs of these being Lord Henry,
-who was Governor of Rougemont Castle for Queen Elizabeth, and
-Launcelot, the cavalier-lord, who sought shelter in Trewoofe from the
-victorious Roundheads.
-
-The refined and cultivated taste of Constance could well appreciate
-all these objects; but now, as one in a dream, her eyes wandered over
-those walls where many a gem of art was hanging; the soft-eyed and
-white-skinned girls of Greuze; the bearded and doubleted nobles of
-Vandyke; cattle, fat and lazy-looking, by Cuyp; hazy sea-pieces by
-Turner, and more than one lovely Raphael; but then her every thought
-was turned inward; and as if to support herself, she retained Sybil's
-tremulous little hand, on which her clasp tightened, as the servant,
-who was clad in mourning livery, with a black cord aiguilette on each
-shoulder, opened noiselessly the half of a folding-door, and ushered
-them into that splendid library where her husband had found his proud
-old uncle dead at the writing-table, and Downie (with the unsigned
-deed) hanging over him, with confusion and disappointment on his
-usually stolid visage.
-
-"Visitors, my lord," said the servant.
-
-And to add to the perplexity of Constance, she found herself face to
-face with the whole family group--the whole, at least, save one, her
-nephew Audley.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI.
-
-HUMILIATION.
-
-The statements made to Audley Trevelyan by his father as to the
-dubious position of the two ladies at Porthellick--artful statements
-which seemed, without collusion, to corroborate so much that Mabel
-and Rose Trecarrel hinted or openly advanced--had seriously grieved
-and perplexed him. Thus, while loving Sybil and longing for her
-society on one hand, with the selfishness or vacillation peculiar to
-many young men, on the other, he began to wish that he had not gone
-quite so far--that he had been less precipitate in his love-making;
-but his perplexity increased to utter bewilderment, not unmixed with
-indignation, when his usually languid mother, with considerable scorn
-and irritation of manner, informed him that "the person calling
-herself Mrs. Devereaux" was but an _intriguante_, who had sought to
-lure his foolish uncle Richard into marriage; and his father admitted
-that he and others had long suspected his brother of having some low
-and illicit entanglement.
-
-Now Audley knew that this "_intriguante_" had a son, whose existence
-might endanger his own succession to a title.
-
-Was this fair, slender and delicate girl, whose gentle image had
-wound itself about the heart of Audley, and on whose "engagement
-finger" he had so recently slipped a ring, actually a cousin; but one
-whom he could not acknowledge--a person whom he dared not marry, in
-dread of that trumpet-tongued bugbear called "Society"?
-
-He had ceased for some days to write to her. In this he accused
-himself of gross selfishness; but his father's open threats of
-withdrawing every shilling of his allowance, of turning his back upon
-him for ever, and so forth, if he dared to countenance the Devereaux
-in any way; and his total inability to live anywhere on his
-subaltern's pay alone, together with the dread of compromising his
-cold, proud, and intensely aristocratic mother and sister--in fact,
-it would seem, his whole family too--made him strive to crush in his
-heart the young love it was so sweet to brood upon; but Audley strove
-in vain, and began to think that the sooner he was back to India the
-better for all.
-
-He had been nervous, irritable, and "out of sorts" since he had
-returned to Rhoscadzhel, and obtaining a passing glimpse of the
-little white villa as the train passed it, en route, had made him
-worse. He had procured Champagne and various other vintages too
-freely from Jasper Funnel; he had broken the knees of a favourite
-horse; ripped up the green cloth of the new billiard table when
-practising alone, and more than once had angrily laid his whip across
-the back of unoffending Rajah.
-
-On the afternoon of the visit which closes the preceding chapter, his
-mother who was seated languidly in a deep easy chair near the library
-fire, playing with a feather fan, while her daintily slippered little
-feet rested on a velvet tabourette, said in her soft and monotonous
-voice,--
-
-"I do wish, Audley, that odious dog of yours was dead--shot or lost."
-
-"Why, mother, it was poor Jack Delamere's dying legacy."
-
-"It is such a shaggy, self-willed, huge and savage animal--always
-about one's skirts or in one's way."
-
-"You are unusually energetic in your adjectives this evening, my lady
-mother," replied Audley; "poor Rajah is as gentle as a lamb, and I
-might have found a kind owner for him ere this, however," he added,
-as he thought sadly of the winning Sybil on whose skirts his splendid
-pet had been permitted to nestle unrebuked.
-
-"Visitors, mamma!" exclaimed Gartha Trevelyan, a fair-haired and
-languid edition of her mother, and already, in her sixteenth year,
-the imitator of all her tones and ways; "who can they be--in a hired
-carriage, too?"
-
-"Ladies in deep mourning," said General Trecarrel, glancing uneasily
-at Audley.
-
-"By Jove!" muttered the latter, growing quite pale, as he recognised
-them from a bay window, and at once quitting the library, descended
-by a private staircase to where his horse and groom happened to be
-awaiting him.
-
-"My cousin--he is my own cousin; this was the secret sympathy--the
-tie of blood that drew us to each other," Sybil was thinking softly,
-in her timid heart, to keep her courage up, at the very time when he
-who, without flinching, would have faced a Sikh gun-battery, or a
-horde of Afghans, was avoiding her, and galloping ingloriously away
-from what he deemed "a scene--a deuced family row," with a blush on
-his cheek, shame, pity, and anger mingling in his soul, with the
-half-formed wish that he had never met and never known her!
-
-Advancing into the room, the mother and daughter bowed, and then
-stood irresolute. The former had expected to have seen Downie alone;
-but finding him thus, amid his family, and the General present too,
-all her pre-arranged and carefully considered explanations and
-remarks completely fled her memory, and her mind became blank as a
-sheet of unwritten paper, as Downie, after a rapid whisper to his
-wife, over whose colourless face there flashed a look of angry scorn,
-took the initiative.
-
-His wife, with her everlasting smelling-bottle or vinaigrette and
-lace handkerchief; her newly-cut novel close by; her pale, dull eyes
-and unmeaning smile; her "company manners;" her soft white hands,
-smooth and unwrinkled as her forehead, yet cold and puerile as her
-heart, was always a kind of bore; but now her _tout-ensemble_ had all
-the impress of insipidity, animated by insolence; for weak though the
-lawyer's wife was in character, she felt that she was mistress of the
-situation; and at least _pro tem._, if not for life, Lady Lamorna.
-
-She regarded the widow with a cold and supercilious stare, to which
-the former replied by a steady gaze, and each seemed to draw her
-conclusions of the other in an instant, for "to women alone pertains
-that marvellous freemasonry, which sees the character at a glance,
-and investigates the sincerity of a disposition or the value of a
-lace flounce with the same practised facility."
-
-Downie, too, had his own peculiar acuteness and instincts, sharp and
-keen, wherever he went; he saw everything in a moment; whoever he
-met, he read their faces like a book, he marked all their features,
-deduced their personal characters, just as if he had been intimate
-with them for a life-time; and a very useful power this had proved to
-him, in the course of his legal career; and now, in his mourning
-suit, he looked like "one of those great crows that are to be seen,
-apparently asleep, in a meadow in autumn; but which, nevertheless,
-see everything that is going on around them." The gentle aspect, the
-forlorn bearing, and uncommon beauty of Constance and her daughter,
-would have softened any other heart than Downie's; but his was like
-Cornish granite--the oldest and stoniest of all stones.
-
-General Trecarrel--somewhat nervously it must be owned--shook hands
-with the intruders, for as such they felt themselves viewed; but the
-dog, Rajah, alone gave them a welcome by fawning round Sybil, who
-trembled excessively, and could scarcely restrain her tears, while
-the dog's recognition of her did not escape the wife of Downie, who
-drew certain conclusions therefrom.
-
-"Mrs. Devereaux, I believe?" said Downie Trevelyan, calmly, and with
-his professional smile, as he looked up from the table, which was
-literally heaped up with letters, many of them being unopened; "to
-what do I owe the pleasure of this visit?"
-
-"You owe it to my sorrow, sir," replied Constance, gathering courage,
-as her eye caught a portrait of Richard Trevelyan, in his uniform,
-painted years ago, ere he went to America, and looking just as she
-had seen him in the early days of their happy loverhood; and now the
-pictured face seemed to smile upon her out of the past; "to the death
-of my husband--your brother, as you know, by drowning," she added.
-
-He gave her a stare of cold enquiry, over, and finally, through his
-double gold eye-glass, which he specially wiped for the occasion, and
-then turning to his wife, said,--
-
-"Gartha, my dear, take your namesake and the boys with you--retire,
-please, for we may have much to say that must not be said before you."
-
-"Perhaps I--I too, am _de trop_?" said General Trecarrel, a little
-nervously, assuming his hat and malacca cane.
-
-"Not at all--pray be seated," replied Downie.
-
-"If--Mrs.--Mrs.----"
-
-"Oh, yes; Mrs. Devereaux will excuse you, General, I am sure,"
-answered Downie, as his wife, with her four younger children, sailed
-haughtily from the room, drawing in her skirts as she passed
-Constance, whose pretty lip only quivered a little with disdain.
-
-To do him justice, the barrister looked on the widow with something
-of interest, mingling, momentarily, with his fear and anger--but
-momentarily only. She was slenderly and so beautifully formed, small
-featured, and dark haired, with much that was intense and
-unfathomable in her pleading eyes--pleading for her children's honour
-and her own: and there was Sybil, too, clad in the deepest mourning,
-her high black dress, with its pretty cuffs, and a small white collar
-round her delicate neck, made her fair skin seem fairer still, and
-appeared to become the darkness of her hair and eyes better than any
-other style of dress would have done; but, then, Sybil looked
-charming in everything!
-
-The little interest died, and Downie regarded them with intense
-hostility, for he had all "that sublime philosophy which teaches us
-to bear with tranquillity the woes of others."
-
-"Oh--ah--yes," he said, after a most harassing pause; "you are the
-lady who lives--in fact, who has lived for some time past, in a villa
-near Porthellick?"
-
-"The same, sir."
-
-Downie knit his brows, for she accorded him no title, and he was
-somewhat jealous on the point.
-
-"It was a bold act of my brother to bring you here to Cornwall--a
-secluded place--almost under the eyes of his own family too!"
-
-"Circumstanced as we were by the eccentricity of his late uncle, it
-was, perhaps, unwise," she replied, gently.
-
-"I am glad that you admit so much: a little villa near St. John's
-Wood, or some such place, had been more appropriate for persons so
-situated."
-
-The eyes of Constance began to flash dangerously.
-
-"My son is Lord Lamorna!" she exclaimed; "and even on his
-cold-blooded uncle may punish this cruel insult to his mother!"
-
-The General, to whom all this revelation was new and startling, began
-to feel uncomfortable, and to look quite perplexed; but Downie only
-smiled a crafty smile, as he said--
-
-"Pooh, my good woman, you are out of your senses; what can be the
-object of this visit? I am busy--does your carriage wait?"
-
-"Before scandals go forth in our name, I beseech you to consider
-well, and to read this letter, which will show you who I am and what
-I am, and why for years we have all borne the name of Devereaux,"
-said Constance, making a prodigious effort to control her great grief
-and just indignation, as she held the document before Downie; "it is
-the last my dear, dear husband wrote me."
-
-"Husband--absurd! This is the wildest of wild assertions," said
-Downie Trevelyan, as he took the letter from her hand, nevertheless;
-and as he did so, the words of her dead husband came back to her
-memory, when he said "that proofs of their marriage, beyond mere
-assertion, must be forthcoming;" and now those proofs were buried in
-the sea.
-
-"You must recognise the handwriting," said Constance, in a tremulous
-tone; "and oh, sir," she added, as she eyed him doubtfully and
-wistfully, "you will restore it to me, and not destroy it?"
-
-"Destroy!" said he, sternly; "what are you talking about? I hope I
-am too much of a lawyer to destroy any document."
-
-"Before witnesses, at least," was the awkward addendum of the General.
-
-Downie's legal eye quickly took in the situation, as detailed by his
-brother Richard in that letter, which stated that the little chapel
-of St. Mary, at Montreal, had been burned down three years after the
-regiment had left the city; that the Père Latour and the acolyte were
-both dead; that though the Registers had all perished in the flames,
-the signed copy of the marriage certificate was preserved by Latour's
-successor, and "is now in my possession," added the letter, the
-signature to which, "Lamorna," made the reader's eyes to gleam with
-secret rage; but he merely said,
-
-"Suppose this letter were written by my brother--a supposition of
-which I do not admit the truth,--who are 'those at home' whom he
-doubts?"
-
-"You, most probably," said the General, with soldierly candour.
-
-"Absurd, my dear sir," replied Downie, tossing the letter
-contemptuously to Constance. "This is a fabrication, written to suit
-the occasion: the church burned; the Register destroyed; the
-witnesses dead, too! It is a strange story, and strange chapter of
-accidents. You lived with him long enough, I doubt not, madam, to
-learn how to feign my brother's handwriting. This document has not
-even an envelope--so where are the postal marks?"
-
-"I lost it----"
-
-"Bah! I thought so."
-
-There was a peculiar basilisk flicker in the pale eyes of Downie
-Trevelyan, and he surveyed the shrinking widow of his brother
-pitilessly, with a glance of hate--a glance beyond all the eloquence
-of fury or wrath, for he felt in his heart--or what passed for
-such--that she spoke truth in all this matter, but a truth she would
-have difficulty in proving.
-
-"Oh mamma--mamma, let us go," implored Sybil.
-
-"And this Dick Braddon who accompanied my brother--the other
-witness--a worthless old Chelsea pensioner, and so he too is gone?"
-
-"Gone with my husband," replied Constance, clasping her hands and
-looking upward.
-
-"As my poor brother never yet, to my knowledge at least, prior to his
-luckless American tour, appended his name to any document as
-_Lamorna_, we have no means of testing or comparing the signature to
-your production, were such test necessary--which it is not."
-
-Gathering courage, Constance was about to make some proud response,
-when Downie, in his (external) character pure and unspotted as his
-shirt front, said while turning to the General--
-
-"My brother Richard picked up, of course, some of those dissipated
-habits which are peculiar to the army, and----"
-
-"Oh, pardon me, my lord," began the General, in a deprecatory tone,
-while inserting his right hand in the breast of his closely buttoned
-surtout.
-
-"It is true, Trecarrel; you redcoats are a sad set, and here we see
-the result of an unlucky liaison."
-
-"Richard--Richard," wailed Constance, "how hard is all this to bear!"
-
-"Yes, madam," said Downie; "but the way of transgressors is always
-hard."
-
-"Transgressors, sir?"
-
-"Against the laws of morality and society, madam. Do not
-misunderstand me, madam."
-
-"Oh no--oh no," replied Constance, in a choking voice; "I quite
-understand you."
-
-The General was deeply moved; he advanced a pace or two towards her,
-and lifted his hand with an air of entreaty; but Downie was pitiless,
-and added--
-
-"Yes, madam, and not content with seeking to entrap my brother, there
-has actually been an attempt made, too, to entrap and delude my son!"
-
-"Sir," said Constance, moving towards the door of the library, "I
-came in hope--I must own, half-desperate hope--of having an
-explanation from, or a compromise with you--perhaps a recognition of
-our just claims. Assertion, even backed by such a letter as this,
-is, I must own, but slender evidence; so a court of law shall prove
-the rest."
-
-"As you please, madam," replied Downie, rising and ringing a
-hand-bell deliberately. "Show this--_lady_ out. So much for Mrs.
-Devereaux!" he added furiously, for he was greatly disturbed and
-ruffled.
-
-A mist seemed before the eyes of both mother and daughter, as they
-quitted the stately room mechanically, to seek their vehicle at the
-porte-cochère. Constance kept her proud little head erect, however,
-so long as she was under observation; for though her heart was wrung
-with agony as she thought of her children, there was something of a
-Spartan matron in the outward bearing she affected, and in her
-perfect power of self-mastery then.
-
-Stared at in the corridor by the wondering and mocking eyes of all
-the younger children of Downie, who had taken their cue from the
-manner in which their mamma had gathered her skirts in the library,
-as if to avoid pollution; stared at too in the vestibule and portal
-by Mr. Funnel the solemn Butler, by Boxer the rubicund coachman, and
-by a group of whiskered valets, who all saw that something, they knew
-not what, "was hup," they reached the hired carriage that was to take
-them back to Hayle; and Jeames in powder, wearing "the uniform" of
-the noble family, remarked to Chawles, a brother of the plush and
-shoulder-knot, quite audibly, that "they both seemed the lady, quite;
-but he feared they was only a couple of guv'nesses or companions out
-of place--a lot as miserable as curates and tutors, and all that sort
-o' thing."
-
-Constance shivered as if with ague when she drew up the glasses of
-the carriage, and they took their departure from Rhoscadzhel.
-
-Open war alone could save or sink them now!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII.
-
-"MRS. GRUNDY."
-
-General Trecarrel, who was an amiable and well-disposed man, felt the
-utmost regret in having been present at an interview so painful,
-unseemly, and perplexing. Notwithstanding the calmness, dignity, and
-confidence with which Constance asserted her claims to wifehood and
-nobility, he had his secret doubts--which Downie had not--as to the
-legality of the ties that had subsisted between her and his late
-friend, Richard Trevelyan. Yet he could not but think of her kindly,
-humanely, and with interest; she seemed so perfectly ladylike, was so
-gentle and so beautiful.
-
-In short, the old soldier, little given to study character or matters
-not military, felt sorely bewildered by the strange story so suddenly
-unfolded by his fair neighbour, and withdrew to think over it and to
-dress for dinner.
-
-"So that odious woman and the cunning minx, her daughter, are gone at
-last?" said Mrs. Downie--the acknowledged Lady Lamorna--entering the
-carpeted library, softly and noiselessly, in her usual languid and
-wearied way.
-
-"Yes, Gartha--at last," replied her husband, who was still seated at
-the writing-table with his head resting on his left hand, for he was
-full of thoughts that oppressed him.
-
-"You look disturbed, Downie dear?" she lisped, as she sank into her
-easy chair and resumed the feather fan or hand screen.
-
-"That idiot Audley has complicated matters by forming an attachment
-for the woman's daughter; but Trecarrel, who goes soon to India now,
-shall take him off there at once."
-
-"And what was the object of her visit, pray?"
-
-"Oh, she came here to try the favourite Whig scheme--conciliation at
-any price, no matter how humiliating; and exhibited a letter she had
-manufactured, as from my brother; but it won't pass with me--no, no!"
-
-"You are right to repel such attempts as this; and I agree with you
-that Audley had better relinquish what remains of his leave and quit
-England," she replied, yet not without a sigh, for her son had been
-but a short time at home, and India was so far away. But anything
-was better than that he should entangle himself with a girl like
-this--her son Audley, when she had almost registered a vow "never to
-syllable a name unchronicled by Debrett;" the idea was absurd,
-horrible in the extreme!
-
-"Perhaps, Downie dear," said she, after a little consideration, "we
-are too fearful. I have read somewhere that 'boy and girl cousins
-never fraternise.'"
-
-"Don't they, by Jove!" growled Downie; "especially when they come to
-the age of puberty, without having known each other previously. Then
-the Scots have a proverb about 'blood being thicker than water,'
-though I can't see it in that way myself. The girl is remarkably
-handsome, and Audley's affair with her must have made considerable
-progress ere her letter came into my possession in London."
-
-"Handsome? dear, dear! do you really think so? I thought her very
-saucy in expression, and a positive dowdy, in a dress made, no doubt,
-by some Penzance milliner," replied the lady, while contemplating
-complacently her own magnificent black _moire_, for she did not
-entertain more charitable opinions respecting the daughter than the
-mother.
-
-Though more advanced in life than Constance (for she had been married
-some years before her), the wife of Downie had still considerable
-remains of beauty, and, despite time and dimples turning fast to
-wrinkles, she was bent upon being gay, young, and beautiful still.
-She had an air that decidedly denoted high breeding, with much of
-languor and indifference to all that passed around her. She had
-completely attained that bearing of placidity, utter vacuity or
-unimpressionability, so sedulously affected or adopted by many among
-the upper class of English society, and even by their middle-class
-imitators. However, all the little spirit or energy she ever
-possessed fired up now, in the conviction that she was the Right
-Honourable Lady Lamorna, that Audley was one of "England's Honourable
-Misters," and that Gartha should find a husband among the tufts and
-strawberry leaves at least.
-
-Downie had not her ambition even in these matters, but had naturally
-avarice; and his profession had, of course, taught him trickery.
-"Despair of no man," it has been said: "there are touches of kindness
-in natures the very roughest, that redeem whole lives of harshness;"
-but to have sought for charity or kindness at the hands of Downie
-were a task as easy as taking a bone from a famished tiger.
-
-That day, at the dinner-table, after the ladies had withdrawn, and
-Downie, the General, and Audley were lingering over their wine (or
-wines rather), the conversation naturally turned to the recent visit
-of Constance and her daughter; and a painful theme it proved to the
-young officer.
-
-From General Trecarrel he had previously obtained a narrative of all
-that had passed, and though he thanked Heaven that he had been
-absent, his heart was preyed upon by many keen and conflicting
-emotions. He loved Sybil tenderly, he acknowledged to himself; but
-could he think of marriage with her, when she was the daughter of a
-woman in a position as dubious as that of Constance was now openly
-declared to be--one, moreover, whose claims were so startling, and
-whose allegations were, as his father called them, so daring as to
-merit criminal prosecution,--for so had the lawyer said in his wrath
-and the strength of his own position!
-
-Intense pity for the girl mingled with his passion for her, and added
-to his great perplexity; and thus, while his cheek alternately
-flushed and grew pale, he sat with half-averted face, and the fingers
-of one hand buried among his thick brown hair, irritated by the
-conviction that his father's cold, keen, and scrutinising eyes were
-bent loweringly upon him, while in silence he heard the General
-bluntly urging him "if he had any tender views in that quarter, to
-get rid of them as soon as possible, and be off to join his
-regiment;" for to Trecarrel military service seemed a cure for every
-human ill.
-
-"But the letter she showed you?" pled Audley.
-
-"That letter, sir, I have already denounced as a most daring
-forgery!" replied Downie, with as much energy as his usually quiet
-manner permitted.
-
-"Could she--one so eminently like a lady--be guilty of such a crime?"
-
-"Your uncle's mistress would be, of course, familiar with his
-handwriting."
-
-Audley felt his heart vibrate painfully at this injurious but, as the
-circumstances seemed to stand, not inapplicable term. Compassion and
-tenderness pleaded for the dove-eyed Sybil; but policy, society, or
-the promptings of "Mrs. Grundy" urged that he should, nay must,
-relinquish all thought of her for ever; so while sitting there,
-sipping his golden-tinted château yquem, and playing with the
-embossed grape scissors, to all appearance very calm and quiet, a
-storm of doubt and shame was struggling in his heart with love; "for
-this passion," says Lord Bacon, "hath its floods in the very times of
-weakness, which are great prosperity and great adversity, both which
-times kindle love and make it more fervent." And now Sybil was in an
-adversity of which he knew not the actual depth.
-
-"To me it seems that you are somewhat severe in this whole affair,
-General," said he, after a pause.
-
-"God forgive me if I am so!" replied Trecarrel, earnestly.
-
-"Suppose this girl's position to be all you advance, if we love
-because we like and admire each other, are we to be censured?"
-
-"Then who the devil should be censured?" said his father, with
-asperity.
-
-"Destiny."
-
-"Pshaw!" said Downie; "this is mere romance--mooning!"
-
-"And deuced unlike one of the 14th Hussars," added Trecarrel.
-
-"The very rubbish of which dramas are made."
-
-"You are right, Downie; but, till now, I always thought this young
-fellow of yours was rather fond of my girl Rose."
-
-Audley coloured deeply, and assisted himself to wine, as he said--
-
-"I greatly admire both Miss Trecarrel and her sister Miss Rose; but I
-have not the honour to stand higher in their favour than that of
-others."
-
-"But this girl Devereaux----" his father was beginning passionately.
-
-"Excuse me, dear sir," interrupted Audley, "if I beg that you will
-cease to taunt me on this painful subject. The tenor of the letter
-she wrote to me--the letter which you found on my desk, and which in
-all fairness you should not have read--a Lieutenant of the Line not
-being exactly a schoolboy--sufficiently evinced that we were on terms
-of affection and intimacy. I knew not then who she was, or who her
-people were. I had saved her life, as the General knows, at
-considerable peril, and so there grew a tender tie between us; but
-all shall be ended now," he continued in a tone of emotion. "I see
-that it must be so, sir. I see also the necessity for not
-compromising your just title to the rank and place you hold by
-attaching myself in any way to the fortunes of the Devereaux. So I
-implore you to let the matter cease, or I shall quit the room--yes,
-even the house itself, so surely as I shall ere long quit England,
-perhaps never to return!"
-
-"I thank you for this promise, Audley," said Downie emphatically;
-"and when once with your regiment, you shall find your allowance most
-amply increased."
-
-"For that I thank you, sir," said Audley, sighing.
-
-"I am richer now than when you were in the Hussars."
-
-"And out of that wealth, Downie--I beg pardon, I mean my Lord
-Lamorna--I trust you will do something handsome now for poor Dick's
-widow and orphan?" blundered the General.
-
-"Widow and orphan!" repeated Downie, with growing anger.
-
-"Well, widow in one sense."
-
-"In what sense?"
-
-"A widow of the heart," persisted Trecarrel, reddening to the roots
-of his grizzled hair. "She and her pretty daughter have suffered a
-fearful stroke of fortune--and even poverty may not be the most
-severe trial before them."
-
-"I shall settle a small sum on the mother, perhaps," said Downie,
-reluctantly; "and get the girl, if you wish it, a situation as
-companion at a distance from this."
-
-"Companion? That is a kind of upper servant who must wash the
-spaniel, and feed the parrot," said the General, testily; "supervise
-the maid that dresses her mistress's hair, read novels aloud, and
-sermons on Sunday; write invitations, and answer them; pay all bills,
-and stand all manner of vapours and ill-humours, for thirty pounds
-per annum and a _quiet home_! Come, come, Downie, d--n it," added
-Trecarrel, "you might do something more handsome than that for a
-daughter of Richard Trevelyan."
-
-"Sir," replied the other, becoming slightly ruffled by the old
-officer's perfect bluntness, "when certain people in this world
-cannot get white bread and wine, they should content them with brown
-bread and water; they must also work, if they would not beg. I think
-that I shall have done enough if I do what I propose for the
-daughter; and as for the mother, through my humble endeavours, a
-housekeeper's place or the matronage of a lunatic asylum may be
-procured for her, if she is in poverty, and if her want of previous
-character could be tided over with the Board of Guardians. By her
-daring claim, she has certainly striven to injure me and all my
-innocent family," added Downie loftily; "yet I do not wish evil to
-happen to her."
-
-"Whether we wish it or wish it not, neither will come according to
-our mere human desire," retorted the General; "so pass the Madeira,
-please, Audley, for here comes Funnel with the coffee--a hint that we
-are to join the ladies in the drawing-room."
-
-Downie Trevelyan had always had his secret fears of the family in the
-villa at Porthellick, and he knew not exactly how strong their claims
-upon his dead brother might be. However, he had lost no time in
-having himself fully served heir to the late lord, on the loss of the
-steamer "Admiral" becoming an ascertained fact; and, though a lawyer
-by profession, he now literally loathed the sight of the circulars
-and letters that poured in upon him on his accession to rank and
-fortune. There were legal details to be filled up, dry formalities
-to be gone through with perplexing repetitions and minuteness; there
-were entreaties from tradesmen that "his Lordship would not change
-the family custom," and applications of a similar nature from town
-and country agents to retain their agencies, &c., &c. Then there was
-"the suit of those Devereaux," as he called a bulky and menacing
-document which a shabby-looking fellow deposited at Rhoscadzhel one
-morning, with lists of the vexatious papers required for the
-defence--all the preparation of "some hedge-lawyer--some low legal
-desperado," as Downie styled him; for he now himself felt, in the
-tone and tenour of these legal letters and documents, the pointed
-stings he had for years past so pitilessly planted in others.
-
-The legal document had the effect of completing all the silent
-arguments of Mrs. Grundy in the mind of Audley. But a few days ago,
-he was so happy in the conviction that he loved Sybil and was beloved
-again; and now he saw the necessity for action and resolution, and
-alike quitting her and England.
-
-He seated himself at his desk one evening for the purpose of writing
-an explanatory or, if he could achieve it, an exculpatory and
-farewell letter to Sybil; but, after various attempts, he had got no
-further than the date, when Mr. Jasper Funnel entered the room, with
-a little sealed packet on a silver salver.
-
-It had just come in the household despatch-box from Hayle, and bore
-the Porthellick postmark, so he tore it open with trembling hands.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII.
-
-A LEGAL "FRIEND."
-
-Constance never smiled again; yet in the presence of Sybil she never
-gave way to the paroxysms of passionate grief that came over her when
-she was alone or in the seclusion of her own chamber. Wealth and
-title, so long looked forward to in the years that were gone, seemed
-alike most worthless now, save that with the loss of these her
-children lost their position in life, and herself her name and
-honour! Ever present was the idea, Oh that her husband could look up
-from his grave, and see the impending ruin and desolation of their
-once-happy home! for, as we have already said, their means of
-subsistence died with him.
-
-And now, how were they to live? The present time was agony; the
-future dark and gloomy.
-
-Paragraphs, the tenour of which proved intensely annoying to Downie
-Trevelyan and all his family, and which were painful and degrading to
-Constance and Sybil (for such they felt them to be), began to find
-their way into the local and even the London papers, under exciting
-titles or headings, such as "Singular Case of Presumption," or
-"Insanity," "The Cornish Widow again," "The Lamorna Peerage," and so
-forth; and Messrs. Gorbelly and Culverhole, as "his Lordship's
-solicitors," in writing answers or contradictions to some of these
-effusions, were but too happy, by such legal advertisements, to mix
-their somewhat obscure and vulgar names with the affair.
-
-Audley read those insulting notices, assertions, and contradictions
-with infinite sorrow and pain, for then Sybil's pleading and
-upbraiding eyes would come before him. Through such uncourted
-publicity, however, the mother and daughter began to find themselves
-coldly viewed by neighbours now. The rector ceased to come near the
-villa; the village doctor whipped up his horse as he passed the end
-of the willow avenue; and even the usually friendly Trecarrels left
-for town--rumour said correctly, for India--without paying another
-visit, though perhaps, as theirs had never been returned, they could
-not do otherwise.
-
-All the charity and good they had performed, in all the necessities
-relieved, all the ailments alleviated, all the countless little
-kindnesses done, went for nothing now; for the world is a malevolent
-and censorious one; and that devilish maxim of Rochefoucauld, that
-people feel a strange satisfaction in the misfortunes of their best
-friends, was fully exemplified. Constance's new and startling
-assertion of rank and position, however meekly done, formed excellent
-food for the tongues of the malicious and vulgar, who exist
-everywhere. She had to bear unjustly the contempt of many, the
-ridicule of all; so that her pretty villa became daily less and less
-a home.
-
-From the tenour of that horrible interview at Rhoscadzhel, where
-every word that passed seemed as if burned into her heart with
-letters of fire, Sybil felt a sure conviction that all must and
-should be at an end between herself and Audley Trevelyan. The
-treatment of her mother, of her absent brother's claims, of her own,
-and of her dead father's memory, his will and wishes, all required
-this sacrifice at her hands; so resolutely and calmly--though a few
-tears rolled silently down her cheek the while--she drew his diamond
-ring from her "engaged" finger--an engaged one now no longer--and
-making it up in a packet, together with a few letters he had written
-to her, she despatched it, addressed by her own trembling hand, and
-without a word of comment, to Rhoscadzhel; and this packet it was
-which we have just seen Jasper Funnel place in the hands of his
-excited young master.
-
-Her mother's embraces, tenderness, and kisses were her sole but best
-reward for acting thus; yet poor Sybil seemed the very impersonation
-of beauty, grief, and girlhood bordering on womanhood. The buoyancy
-of the former was gone; a change had come over her soft and once
-bright face, which wore a sad and settled expression now. It was
-that white woe which someone styles "the deepest mourning features
-can put on."
-
-Her pencil and her piano, each so much the solace of her lonely
-hours, were, of course, relinquished now; and it seemed as if she
-should never take to them again. She looked ill, and appeared to be
-pining: but, sooth to say, it was less the loss of Audley than her
-mother's grief that affected her. The doctor, when summoned,
-pocketed his guinea, but did nothing more; so Winny Braddon urged
-Constance, but in vain, that "their poor chealveen" should be taken
-to the nearest _Mean-tol_ (or Holed Stone) so that she might try the
-sovereign old Cornish cure for all mysterious ailments, by creeping
-through the orifice thereof; for in the ancient duchy, as in some
-parts of Ireland and the remote Scottish Isles, where such natural or
-artificial perforations were used of old by the Druids to initiate
-and dedicate their children to the offices of rock-worship, they are
-still regarded with superstition, as possessing the gift of effecting
-miraculous cures.
-
-Constance, too, was ill, and in the excess of her grief and lowness
-of heart, she fancied herself worse than she really was; and ever
-present was the thought, how perilous the lonely path of life would
-be to a girl so beautiful as Sybil, if she--her mother--were taken
-away by the hand of death before another and fitting protector were
-provided. Morbid at times by sorrow, this reflection made the breast
-of Constance a prey to the most craving and clamorous anxiety.
-
-But a short time before, and their worldly prospects had all been so
-different--so brilliant and happy. Now all was dark indeed! When
-she thought over all the baronial splendours of Rhoscadzhel, and the
-many mementoes of her husband which must be there, something of
-hatred for the invaders of her children's patrimony and her own
-marital rights began to mingle with her dull despair of ever proving
-that she had the latter; and with all her constitutional gentleness,
-when she recalled the glance bestowed upon her by Mr. Trevelyan on
-quitting the library, and the insinuations uttered by Downie against
-her, in presence of General Trecarrel, too, her blood boiled up
-within her.
-
-"Oh, Sybil!" she exclaimed one day, after sitting long buried in
-thought, "some author says, 'there are wild beasts in the human
-race;' and truly your uncle Downie is one of these. Can it be
-possible that they had the same parents--he and your frank, generous,
-and open-hearted papa?--that they share the same blood, were nursed
-at the same breast, and nestled together, as I have heard, in the
-same little cot?"
-
-Sybil was silent; she had, in this view of the matter, but one secret
-and reclaiming thought. Downie was Audley's father, and she would be
-merciful.
-
-But it was when inspired by one of those gusts of indignation that
-Constance received, perhaps unfortunately, a visitor--an attorney
-from a neighbouring town--who stated that he had heard her strange
-and painful story, and had come to make a "friendly" offer of his
-legal services.
-
-Now Mr. Sharkley--for such was his name--was exactly, in many
-respects, what Downie, in his rage, called him, and was an excellent
-specimen of perhaps the most dangerous character in society--a needy
-and unscrupulous lawyer. He was attired in rusty black garments,
-that seemed to have been made for a much taller man. The collar of
-his swallow-tailed coat rose above the nape of his neck, while the
-cuffs nearly reached to the points of his fingers, and the legs of
-his trousers flapped loosely over his instep. He had a low
-projecting forehead and keen eyes, the expression of which varied
-only between intense cunning and the lowest suspicion. His ears were
-enormous, set high upon his head; and the right one, from being long
-used as a pen-holder, projected from his skull more than the left.
-His features would have shocked Lavater, while Gall and Spurzheim
-would have augured the worst of his character by the development of
-his head.
-
-His legal practice--though Constance was in blessed ignorance of the
-circumstance--was of the lowest kind, and had seldom proved
-beneficial in a monetary or any other sense to those for whom he
-unluckily acted as agent; but the fellow could be, when it suited
-him, suave, artful, and plausible when he had a purpose to serve, and
-a relentless bully when it was achieved; thus, seeing that though
-little or nothing could be made of the present case with the hope of
-success, much might be made of it in the way of money, perhaps, of
-notoriety certainly, and that in the end he might betray all he knew
-to Downie Trevelyan for a consideration--with these amiable views, he
-sought to worm himself as a friend and legal volunteer into the
-confidence of the otherwise friendless Constance.
-
-Mr. Sharkley heard her story attentively, and committed it all to
-writing. That her marriage had been duly celebrated in a chapel at
-Montreal he doubted not, nor the reason for keeping it so secret--the
-absurd pride of old Lord Lamorna, whose aristocratic prejudices were
-a local proverb and hence her having, so unfortunately for her own
-honour, passed so long under her maiden name of Devereaux with her
-son and daughter.
-
-But how was all this to be proved?
-
-Père Latour was dead; the records of his chapel had been burned in
-one of the many conflagrations incident to the city; the certified
-extract from them had perished in the sea with her husband. Dick
-Braddon too had been drowned, and the acolyte, the other witness in
-the little French chapel, had been long since laid under a wooden
-cross in the little burial-ground that adjoined it. A few letters
-alone were not sufficient proof to upset in England--whatever they
-might have done in Scotland--the title and succession of a wealthy
-peer already in possession; yet nevertheless Mr. Sharkley talked
-about the instant institution of legal proceedings, having the matter
-brought before a select committee of privileges in the House of
-Lords, and so forth, quite as confidently and as pompously as if he
-was a Q.C. and high-class parliamentary lawyer; and poor Constance
-felt a glow of hope for her children's future rising in her heart,
-while he compiled a narrative, took away the letters of her husband,
-and, receiving in advance a handsome sum for certain imaginary fees
-and expenses, departed with nearly all the ready money she possessed.
-
-He really attempted, however, to get up a case against "Lord
-Lamorna," and hence the bulky and presumptuous document which
-exasperated Downie; but from the weakness of her cause and the
-character of her legal adviser it speedily fell to the ground, only
-to fix a deeper stigma on the hapless and innocent Constance.
-
-Rumours of misfortune and mystery brought all their creditors, now
-pretty numerous (for during her husband's lifetime they had lived in
-good style at the villa), down upon her in a pitiless horde.
-
-Denzil, she knew, would now lose the liberal allowance his father had
-promised him after leaving Sandhurst on appointment; but with
-tentage, batta, and other allowance, a subaltern can live on his pay
-in India, when he might starve elsewhere. In her misery Constance
-gathered some comfort from this knowledge, though ruin and penury--or
-work for which they were both unfitted--were all that remained to her
-and Sybil now.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV.
-
-THE DOCTRINE OF CHANCES.
-
-And what of Audley, the lover, all this time?
-
-He had written from Rhoscadzhel to Constance, imploring her
-permission in moving terms to see Sybil once again, and have some
-farewell explanation with her, ere he departed to India, too probably
-for years; for, with the usual inconsistency of the human heart, no
-sooner did he find himself repelled, than he felt the attraction
-towards her redoubled. This letter had been addressed to Constance
-as "Mrs. Devereaux;" and, without reflecting that he could not bestow
-upon her a title already borne by his own mother, she felt fresh
-anger at the circumstance. Without showing the missive to Sybil, who
-conceived it might be on some legal business, she cast it in the
-fire, and replied by an emphatic refusal, adding that if he came near
-the villa, which they were soon about to leave, her servant, Winny
-Braddon (she had but one domestic now) had received orders not to
-admit him.
-
-Undeterred, he next wrote to Sybil, but this effort proved equally
-unavailing. Resolved not to add to her mother's distress by any
-disobedience or duplicity on her part, she showed her the letter
-unopened; and it was at once re-addressed to Rhoscadzhel, with the
-envelope unbroken, and Audley flushed to the temples when it was
-placed in his hand.
-
-He felt himself to be still solemnly engaged to Sybil, yet hopelessly
-separated from her, through no fault of his own--separated without
-even a lovers' quarrel. He wondered now at the selfish thoughts
-which more than once had occurred to him, particularly on that day
-when he quitted the library, and even the house, in such haste to
-avoid her, and times there were when he blushed at the memory of it.
-Relations they were unquestionably by blood, whether there had been a
-marriage or no marriage; and this made Audley reflect all the more
-deeply and tenderly on the subject of his severed ties with Sybil.
-
-He wished to restore the ring to her in person, to replace it on her
-finger as a memento of himself; for the repossession of it made him
-restless and uneasy, as the crazed Halfheller with his bottle-imp;
-and if he was to do this, there was no time to be lost, as he had but
-one day to spend in Cornwall now.
-
-The wild longing or craving to see her once again, to have an
-explanation of some kind--he knew not what--but beyond anything a
-letter could contain (even were she permitted to receive it), still
-inspired him, though prudence might have suggested the utter
-inexpediency of further interviews between them, circumstanced as
-they were. Audley, however, was not of an age, neither was he of the
-temperament, of one to play the part of casuist.
-
-"Why may I not baffle them all--this strange mother, who can be so
-winning and yet is so repellant, my cold and calculating father
-too--and carry off the dear girl in defiance of all and everything?
-This very night I might do it," he pondered: "the train in an hour or
-so would set me down close by her; and if we make allowance for human
-frailty and the 'doctrine of chances,' why the deuce should I not
-succeed, for I know that she loves me?"
-
-He started from a deep and easy library-chair, in which he had been
-seated, enjoying a pipe of cavendish, as this idea, or chain of
-ideas, occurred to him; but then calmer reflection suggested a view
-of the future--his father's rage, his proud mother's disgust, his
-allowance cut off, and no home for his bride in India, but barrack
-accommodation or a subaltern's bungalow.
-
-"No--no--by Jove, _that_ would never do!" he muttered, and reseated
-himself. Yet he was resolved to see her, if he could. Perhaps old
-Winny Braddon might not have a heart so flinty as her mistress; and
-even if she had, it might not be inaccessible to temptation; so that
-night, when dusk was closing over land and sea, saw Audley Trevelyan
-speeding along the Cornwall Railway, with no very defined idea, save
-a desire to see, to speak with Sybil, and to hold once again her
-little hand in his, ere he left the country, it might be for ever.
-
-The train had been unaccountably delayed; so the hour was late,
-almost close on ten, when he passed down the avenue, and found
-himself near the villa. To hope to see Sybil at that unwonted hour
-was absurd; but, after having come so far, he could not deny himself
-the pleasure of hovering near the place which, from its association
-with her presence, had for him so great a charm.
-
-Thus it was with much of tender interest he surveyed the façade of
-the little villa, the walls and rose-bound portico of which glimmered
-white in the light of the stars; for, as yet, the moon had not risen,
-but he could not fail to observe with genuine concern that the
-stables, as he passed them, and the coach-house too, seemed empty and
-deserted; for the little phaeton and its pretty ponies, so long the
-pets of Sybil, had been sold, with many other things, to furnish fees
-for the grasping Mr. Sharkley: moreover, the villa was ticketed to
-let.
-
-There might be company, guests, or visitors at the villa; if so, even
-at that hour, he might perhaps see at least her figure. But no; as
-he drew nearer, all seemed dark and silent,--on the entrance floor at
-least; and now the barking of a watch-dog from its kennel near the
-house made him pause and consider how strange it was that he should
-be prowling thus, like a housebreaker in the night, when he might,
-under happier auspices, have been an honoured and welcome guest.
-
-Constance and her daughter had evidently retired for the night,
-lights being visible in their bedrooms only. That of Sybil, he had
-chanced to know, was in the north wing of the house, and faced the
-garden, through the iron gate of which he could see a ray of light
-from her window falling on the trees, parterres, and shrubbery.
-
-The iron gate was locked; could he but reach her window, he might
-leave a message for her pencilled on a calling-card,--for to write by
-post was hopeless; yet he should like her to know in the morning that
-he had been lingering so near her. Through the iron bars he looked
-most wistfully at the lighted window, where once or twice the candles
-cast a flitting shadow on the blind. Could he but attract her
-attention, make her aware of his presence, and exchange a word or
-two; perhaps he might have an interview with her, though that would
-be unseemly, and what she would not probably consent to; and yet,
-after relinquishing the handful of gravel he was about to toss
-against the window, he suddenly resorted to a plan, which, if
-discovered, would prove more awkward still.
-
-The locked gate barred all entrance to the garden; but he perceived
-that a great espalier had its branches trained over all the wall,
-forming a solid and veritable ladder from the ground to its summit.
-The place was sequestered; the hour lonely, and every moment of delay
-might be perilous, for if she had begun to disrobe, he would be
-compelled to retire, so Audley proceeded at once to scale the
-barrier, that he might descend on the other side.
-
-This proceeding was bold, rash, and rude, perhaps; but he had no
-other resource if he would see her ere he left Cornwall, which he
-must certainly do, by an early train on the morrow. With the speed
-of lightning, his thoughts reverted to their brief but pleasant past,
-and to every passage of their acquaintance; their first meeting
-beside the moorland tarn; her rescue from the Pixies' Hole; their
-solitary walks, and that one delightful hour in yonder conservatory,
-and he felt assured that she, at least, would forgive his present
-temerity.
-
-Other ideas flashed through his mind, as he clambered from branch to
-branch, feeling them yielding the while under his feet as he tore or
-wrenched them from the masonry. He felt that his real object might
-be doubted; that his position was anomalous and improper, and might
-compromise the girl he loved. What would the mess of the Hussar
-regiment he had left, or that of the Light Infantry corps he was
-about to join, think if they saw him now? What would his
-cold-hearted, legal "papa"--his proud, aristocratic, and
-unimpressible mamma have thought of such an adventure; and in fancy
-he saw the stern grimace of the former, and the latter using her
-vinaigrette and fan with unwonted vigour, at the idea of her son
-visiting any lady thus--more than all, the daughter of "Mrs.
-Devereaux!"
-
-Then fears occurred to him that some change might have taken place in
-the internal arrangements at the villa, and that the window before
-which he found himself, after dropping noiselessly into the garden,
-might open to the room, not of Sybil, but her mother, or old Winny
-Braddon!
-
-Trusting to his doctrine of chances, he hoped this might prove a
-lucky one.
-
-The blind of the window (which opened in the French fashion down to a
-flight of steps) was not completely closed; thus he could see the
-whole interior of a spacious and handsome bedroom, nearly in the
-centre of which stood a dressing-table and mirror festooned
-gracefully with white lace, and before it was seated Sybil in her
-dark mourning dress, with her chin resting in the hollow of one hand,
-the elbow being placed upon the table. Her other arm hung by her
-side, and she seemed lost in thought, for her eyes instead of gazing
-into the large oval mirror, wherein, by the light of two tall wax
-candles in ormolu holders, her own loveliness was reflected, were
-bent upon vacancy, or the floor.
-
-Sybil's usually pale and always pure complexion, was paler now; thus
-her eyes, their brows and lashes, and the masses of her hair seemed
-by contrast to be very dark indeed; and the latter in rich profusion
-fell over her shoulders and back below her waist. In the background
-of this pretty picture, stood forth the white and elegant draperies
-of her bed, the festooned muslin of which hung in vapour-like folds,
-over curtains of rose-coloured silk, looped up by white cords and
-tassels of the same material.
-
-A glance enabled Audley to take in all these details, and his
-breathing became a series of sighs as he regarded Sybil, who sat
-quite motionless and sunk in reverie. He flattered himself that she
-was thinking of him; but it was not so; she had just concluded a
-sorrowful letter to Denzil, her only brother, and her thoughts were
-far away with him, or with her mamma and all their coming troubles;
-for all those luxuries by which the wealth and taste, and more than
-all, the love of her dead father had surrounded them, were about to
-be relinquished now, and ere long grim poverty would be staring them
-gauntly in the face.
-
-At times her nether lip quivered; the tears began to roll over her
-cheeks, and as a sigh escaped her, the heaving movement of her neck
-and shoulders made more apparent their graceful character and
-undulating curve. Then suddenly, as with her quick white fingers she
-was proceeding to coil up the tresses of her hair for the night, a
-sound seemed to startle her, she paused, and her eyes flashed and
-dilated with surprise.
-
-"There it is again--good heavens--what can it be?" she exclaimed half
-aloud, and rising from her seat, as Audley tapped very audibly on the
-window panes for a second time.
-
-"The deuce!" thought he, "I hope she won't scream--for that would
-spoil all."
-
-With a candle in her hand, she paused midway between the window and
-her dressing-table, when he said distinctly,--
-
-"It is I, dearest Sybil--Audley Trevelyan--open the window, and speak
-with me--but for a moment."
-
-"Audley--you--you--here at this hour!" replied Sybil, with intense
-astonishment, bordering on fear.
-
-She replaced the candle on the table, clasped her hands, and shrunk
-back irresolutely, for though she fully recognised the voice that
-thrilled her heart's core, it was somewhat bewildering to hear it
-there and at such a time; but summoning courage she drew up the
-blind, and beheld Audley's whole figure on the upper step, which
-formed the sill of her window.
-
-"Oh, Audley--Audley--what has happened--what brings you here again?"
-she asked imploringly.
-
-"The love I bear you," said he, humbly.
-
-"You cannot think of entering here!"
-
-"Far from it, dearest Sybil--I have no such thought; but pardon me
-for alarming you--pardon me for intruding on you thus."
-
-"I do pardon you, but require you to explain--"
-
-"The object of such a visit at such a time," said he, lowering his
-voice lest he should be overheard in the stillness of the night.
-
-"Most certainly," said she, weeping.
-
-"Have you indeed discarded me--withdrawn your heart from me, and for
-ever, Sybil?"
-
-"What would you have me to do, Audley?"
-
-"There is an arbour in the garden--throw a shawl over you, and grant
-me but a minute to say a few farewell words."
-
-"The moment you first asked for has become a minute--so would the
-minute soon become an hour."
-
-"In pity to me, Sybil," urged Audley, with clasped hands.
-
-After a little indecision, seeming to listen and perceive that all
-was still, she threw a shawl over her head, unbolted the French sash,
-and stepped forth into the garden, where now the light of an uprisen
-moon fell in a bright flood upon the grass plots, the shining
-evergreens, and tipped all the leafless trees with liquid silver.
-There seemed a divine peace over all the earth and sky; but the
-hearts of these two young people were sad and aching, while Audley
-pressed a long and silent kiss upon her upturned face, as he led her
-towards the bower in question.
-
-"I leave this to-morrow, Sybil," said he, as he seated himself by her
-side, and took her hands caressingly in his own, "and I could not
-resist the craving, the desire to see you once again, and explain
-much that my returned letters were meant to elucidate to you and your
-mamma--that I have no share in the spirit of
-animosity--hostility--how shall I term it?--cherished by my family
-against you and yours. With this family quarrel, for so shall I
-style it, I have nothing to do, and you, dear Sybil, have nothing to
-do. The employment of a legal wretch like Sharkley was, of course, a
-fatal mistake, making much public that need never have been so, and
-tending greatly to complicate and embitter our affairs."
-
-"My poor mamma had none to advise her," urged Sybil, not heeding a
-slight tone of reprehension in what Audley said.
-
-"How fortunate has been the chance that led me to you to-night!" he
-whispered in her ear.
-
-"But to what end or purpose do we meet at all?"
-
-"Fettered as I am--most true!"
-
-Audley could only sigh deeply and press her to his breast.
-
-"Then you--you love me still?" said Sybil, as her slender fingers
-strayed among his hair, the action in itself a mute caress.
-
-"My darling--I have never ceased to love you!" he exclaimed, gazing
-tenderly on the pure pale face whose features he could see
-distinctly, even amid the obscurity of the bower. Her head drooped
-on his shoulder, and they sat for some minutes quite silent, and full
-of thoughts that were beyond utterance; yet Audley's delight was not
-without alloy. He felt that he loved her dearly, and yet, with all
-the joy of the time, there mingled a selfish regret that he had won
-her so completely, as their love could never be a successful one.
-
-"And you leave this to-morrow?"
-
-"To-morrow."
-
-Her voice was broken and tremulous. Audley became deeply moved as he
-heard her weep; and he began to think, as better impulses inspired
-him, was it possible that he could relinquish or sacrifice a girl so
-soft and tender, so loving and true, for "Mrs. Grundy and Society?"
-and had he actually at one time--young-officer-like--felt a little
-glow of satisfaction when she returned the eye of Vishnu, and he felt
-himself once more _free_!
-
-In his vacillation there was every prospect of the proposal to elope
-being made, but prudence made him pause, and an observation of
-Sybil's changed the current of his ideas.
-
-"Your father has acted most cruelly to poor mamma," said Sybil; "and
-most unjustly to his own brother's memory."
-
-"My father is a--"
-
-"Oh hush, Audley," said Sybil.
-
-What epithet or adjective he was about to use in irritation at the
-chances of his allowance being cut off, we are unable to record, for
-Sybil's quick little hand intercepted it on his lips.
-
-"And now we must separate--you will find the key inside the garden
-gate, so no more escalading; oh, leave me," she urged, "for if you
-were discovered--"
-
-"One kiss more--one promise to remember me when I am gone."
-
-"Oh, Audley, could I ever forget you?"
-
-They were lingering now midway between the bower and the house, and
-the full splendour of the moonlight fell around them.
-
-"And you will take back your ring," he whispered; and once more the
-eye of Vishnu glittered on the hand of Sybil. "Keep it as the
-memento of a poor fellow who loves you well--and you must do
-something more for me."
-
-"In what way, Audley?" asked Sybil, pausing on the upper step, and
-near the still open window of her room.
-
-"Keep poor Rajah for me; my lady mother won't abide the dog, and I
-can't take him back all the way to India, as I am perhaps going
-overland by the desert; and now my beloved girl--dear, dear Sybil--I
-must leave you, perhaps never to see you again."
-
-A desperate calm seemed to come over Sybil, as she replied,--
-
-"Situated as we are; related as we are, and enemies as my mamma and
-your parents must ever be, it is indeed better that we should meet no
-more--yet part as friends."
-
-"As friends--oh, Sybil--as friends!" murmured Audley, becoming more
-excited as she grew calm.
-
-"Yes--this meeting and parting will form a pleasant memory to look
-back upon, in years to come, when we are far apart."
-
-Often in after times did these words come back to the heart of Audley
-Trevelyan.
-
-"And you will always wear my ring?"
-
-"For life--dear cousin Audley--farewell."
-
-She was about to close the casement, her hands trembling and her
-cheeks ghastly pale, when he urged,--
-
-"I must write to you--under cover to some one--permit me--oh, permit
-me?"
-
-"I cannot--I cannot," she replied, with a torrent of tears.
-
-"I must--pardon my importunity, darling."
-
-"Go--go, I entreat you--good-bye--farewell."
-
-She was about to shut the French sash, when a voice startled her, by
-exclaiming,--
-
-"Oh, my God--what is this I see?" and as Sybil started back, Audley
-found himself confronted by Constance, in her dressing-gown, for she
-had entered the room, candle in hand, having been roused by the sound
-of their voices at the open window.
-
-This _dénouement_, so unexpected, was very awkward, and liable to the
-most serious misconstruction; so Audley's doctrine of chances proved
-a failure here.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV.
-
-MISCONCEPTION.
-
-Little could Sybil or Audley have foreseen how fatal was to be the
-ultimate termination of this night's adventure.
-
-The usually sweet and placid little face of Constance was now
-inflamed with rage and distorted by grief. Her colour came and went,
-like her breath, rapidly; and through their tears, her dark eyes were
-sparkling with fire.
-
-A painful silence was maintained by the three for a few moments.
-
-Sybil scarcely understood the cause of her mother's terrible
-excitement, while Audley, who knew more of life and the world's ways,
-was filled with genuine shame and mortification on finding that his
-presence there was misunderstood, and the perfect purity of his
-intentions misconceived or entirely doubted.
-
-Constance, on the other hand, was full of indignation against him for
-taking what she not unnaturally believed to be a most unwarrantable
-and unfair advantage of their now false position, their growing
-monetary troubles and disgrace, to insult her helpless daughter; she
-was furious, therefore, as a tigress about to be robbed of her young,
-and though fiery in her wrath, yet stately and proud in her bearing
-as a little tragedy queen.
-
-"How, sir, have you dared to come hither after being forbidden my
-house?" she exclaimed, in the full belief that Audley, when
-entreating only that he might write to Sybil, had been forcing a
-passage into her chamber; "and why at such an untimeous hour as this?
-Oh shame, sir! shame! Have you neither honour nor compassion? Could
-you forget that the poor girl you pretended to love was your own
-cousin?" Then changing suddenly from upbraiding to scorn, she added,
-"Truly the legal snake Downie Trevelyan is well represented by his
-son, who would break into my daughter's room like a thief in the
-night, and seek perhaps to steal her honour, after having stolen her
-patrimony! Begone, sir, instantly, ere I summon aid and have you
-exposed--it may be, arrested."
-
-"Oh, madam, do permit me to explain all this," urged Audley almost
-piteously; but Constance, in the full tide of her indignation would
-listen to nothing. She showered upon him reproaches, and, summoning
-Winny Braddon, ordered her to ring the long disused house-bell, cast
-loose the watch-dog, and bring assistance. Never had the terrified
-Sybil seen her constitutionally gentle, placid, and ladylike mother
-in so wild a gust of passion; and with clasped hands and colourless
-face, she turned her weeping eyes alternately, with imploring
-glances, from her to Audley, who seemed to feel acutely that his
-position was absurd, dangerous, and pitiful; so he was filled by an
-emotion of shame till it took the phase of irritation.
-
-"Leave us, Audley, I entreat you--see, mamma is seriously ill!" said
-Sybil, on perceiving Constance press her hands upon her temples,
-displaying, as she did so, the snowy whiteness of her taper arms,
-while tottering into a chair. Audley gave the scared girl a glance
-full of agony in expression, and said:--
-
-"I shall write and explain all, and she will do me justice when
-calmer; to-night, any attempts at elucidation were utterly vain. I
-am to blame for my rashness and selfishness in compromising you thus;
-but not so much to blame as she thinks, however. Your heart at least
-will excuse and plead for me; and now, dearest Sybil, a long,
-long--farewell!"
-
-He was gone!
-
-Sybil stayed not to listen to his departing steps, but sprang to the
-side of her mother, who, weakened by past sorrow and emotion, had
-felt this episode in all its real and imaginary details, too much for
-the nervous system. She had fainted, and now lay back in her chair
-whiter than a lily.
-
-Full of humiliation and anger, Audley retired, not as he had come, by
-scaling the wall, but by the garden-gate, which he unlocked, and then
-quitted the place, resolving to write to Constance fully on the
-morrow. Irresolute and infirm of purpose, he continued to linger
-near the villa, as the chill hours of the morning succeeded each
-other, and it was far advanced ere he thought of seeking the vicinity
-of the train that was to take him home. He saw the day-dawn spread
-over the sea, and the shadows of the land, with its rocks and
-precipices cast, by the level sunlight, far across its brightening
-waters. He saw the gray mist rising from the valleys and rolling up
-the brown mountain sides, as it did so revealing new ravines and
-hollows it had hitherto concealed. He saw the red rays light up the
-mighty headland known as Willapark Point; all the barren ridge of
-Resparvell Down, and all the rocks and foam, and broken shore about
-Tintagel and Trevana tinted with marvellous beauty, and varied light
-and shadow, by the morning sun; and inland, Little Minster church,
-secluded in its nook among the hills; and from an eminence which he
-ascended, he could see amid the dun-coloured moorland, the lonely
-tarn and huge rock pillar where he had first met Sybil Devereaux; and
-with these all her presence, and the nameless magnetic charm she
-possessed in her own person, came vividly home to his heart. When
-the hedgerows that intersected the landscape would be green and those
-enclosures of stone coped with turf in the Cornish fashion, would be
-covered with wild violets, daisies, and kingcups; and when yonder
-groves of sycamore, ash, and elm, and the cherry orchards should be
-covered with the bloom of summer, half the world would be lying
-between him and Sybil!
-
-He stifled the emotions that were rising within him, hurried to the
-railway, and throwing himself into a well-cushioned first-class
-carriage (after "tipping" the guard, that he might be free from
-intrusion), overcome and weary with the excitement and events of the
-past night, he sank into a profound slumber, and reached home in time
-to have a refresher of iced brandy and soda from Jasper Funnel before
-that stolid functionary rung the breakfast-bell, and before his
-somewhat unusual absence had been discovered by any one save his
-valet.
-
-From Rhoscadzhel he wrote immediately to Constance, explaining that
-the sole object of his visit to Sybil was to bid her farewell, and
-entreating her pardon for the misconception and annoyance he had
-caused. To enable her to reply, he delayed his departure two days,
-but in vain. However, the circumstance of his humble and contrite
-letter being returned, not to himself, but under cover and unopened
-to his father (whom she addressed as "D. Trevelyan, Esq.,
-Barrister-at-Law"), thereby causing a fresh family explosion,
-completed the full measure of his chagrin; and the young officer felt
-deeply stung by the contemptuous manner in which it was tossed to him
-across the breakfast-table.
-
-"There, sir," said Downie, bitterly; "there is your precious
-production; and remember that a fool should never post his letters
-till twenty-four hours after they are written. I suppose we shall
-next have notice of an action filed against you, for breach of
-promise by that scoundrel Sharkley--Devereaux versus Trevelyan!"
-
-That evening saw Audley depart from Rhoscadzhel.
-
-He repaired at once to the depôt of his regiment, then lying in
-Tilbury Barracks, that quaint old tumble-down fort, whose handsome
-gateway, like a stately Temple Bar, has faced the river for nearly
-three centuries; and there he strove to forget Cornwall and all the
-trouble he had encountered, amid the dissipation and amusements
-afforded by English garrison life to every wealthy young man.
-
-Thus, when off duty, his days were consumed in tandem-driving,
-pigeon, cricket, or rowing matches; _déjeûners_, an occasional
-steeple-chase in Essex or Kent (or a day's leave in London to see the
-Trecarrels); while his nights were devoted to dining out, dancing,
-and drinking, billiards, and garrison balls, private theatricals,
-and, consequently, a fierce flirtation with an occasional pretty
-actress, despite rouge and pearl-powder.
-
-It has been said that "at no time is a man so prone to fall in love
-as immediately after his being jilted;" but many a fair one tried her
-blandishments on Audley in vain; for he had been separated by adverse
-fortune from, and not jilted by, the object of his attachment. A
-long journey was before him, and he doubted not that he would get
-over the memory of Sybil in time.
-
-So passed the weeks till he would have to go to India in the spring
-of the year; and thus he strove to forget her, who was yet to
-exercise a wondrous influence on his future life; with the
-recollection of those kisses that had thrilled his heart to the core,
-and those soft dark eyes whose beauty made even silence eloquent.
-
-And did he achieve this complete forgetfulness?
-
-Time and our story will show.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI.
-
-REVERSES.
-
-Meanwhile how fared it with poor Sybil, who knew not whether he was
-at home or abroad, or had already forgotten her, and married perhaps
-the more sparkling and showy Rose Trecarrel?
-
-Re-addressing Audley's letter was fated to be the last action the
-right hand of Constance was to perform in this world.
-
-For the two days subsequent to the episode just related she remained
-in bed, exhausted apparently, sadder and lower in spirit than usual;
-and on the morning of the third, Sybil, when drawing back the
-curtains to see if she were asleep or awake, to receive her daily
-kiss and join in prayer, was inexpressibly shocked and terrified to
-perceive a peculiar fixity in one eye, and that a corner of her still
-beautiful mouth was strangely drawn down on one side.
-
-Paralysis had supervened, and poor Constance had totally lost the use
-of one half of her body!
-
-Summoned in hot haste, the village doctor came, with his stereotyped
-professional expression of sympathy. He felt her pulse, repeater in
-hand, and ominously shook his head.
-
-"Oh, sir, do you think there is danger?" asked Sybil, in intense
-agitation.
-
-"Hush, child--come this way," said he, and led her from the room.
-
-"God help me, sir--you have something terrible to tell me?"
-
-"I have, indeed; but nerve yourself, for she has none to depend upon
-now but you."
-
-"None, indeed, save One who is in Heaven."
-
-Her disease, he said, was embalism; it came from the region of the
-heart, and had been gradually but rapidly forming in her system for
-some time past; anxiety and sorrow had doubtless induced it. and
-some recent excitement--that night affair, of which the doctor knew
-not--had brought it to a head. A second shock, he added, must
-inevitably prove fatal!
-
-With dilated eyes and clasped hands, the unhappy girl listened to
-this sentence of death, for such it sounded in her overstrained ear
-and to her aching heart, as the doctor spoke it in an impressive and
-never-to-be-forgotten whisper, in a room adjoining that in which the
-sufferer lay. He then paused, and gazed with much of genuine
-sympathy into the pale face of the startled listener; perhaps he was
-mentally speculating upon the probable future of this lovely girl,
-with whose sad family history he was quite familiar now.
-
-And what was embalism, she asked, in a low and intensely agitated
-voice.
-
-A species of weed, or little fungus, that grew in the upper region of
-the heart, from whence it passed, by minute fibres, fine as a
-gossamer thread, through the blood-vessels, till, by choking the
-passage of one of them, there ensued the dire effect they had seen.
-And was it curable? No; yet the patient might linger for months;
-and, he added, that Sybil must control her grief, nor let the
-sufferer see by it that danger was apprehended.
-
-The doctor was gone; but he was to come again, and for some minutes
-Sybil sat like one transformed to stone, unable even to weep, or
-reply to the excited questions, showered upon her by Winny Braddon,
-so stunning was the sense of this sudden and unrealisable calamity.
-She was, perhaps, on the very eve of losing her mamma--her sole
-relative and friend--that beautiful, and gentle, and loving mamma, to
-whom she had been quite as much like a sister and companion as a
-daughter; for, though a parent, Constance was still so young in
-appearance and manner, and, till their late calamities had come to
-pass, naturally so gay, happy, and buoyant in spirit, despite the
-secret of her wedded life.
-
-She rushed to the bedroom, and clasped the sufferer in her arms,
-pillowing her head upon her bosom, and so for hours she hung about
-her, that she might have the melancholy joy of her society while yet
-spared to her; and for a time she almost forgot the grave warning
-given so recently, to control her emotions, nor excite the now
-passive and helpless Constance, who, ignorant alike of her own
-condition and danger, and propped up by cushions, could but gaze at
-her wistfully, and make efforts to speak that were intensely painful
-to the hearer.
-
-The doctor had assured her, that "to expect an ultimate recovery was
-vain; that her mother's life was but a thing of time now--as it is
-with us all," he added; yet, hoping against hope and these sad words,
-Sybil was unremitting in her attentions to her parent. Days there
-were when she rallied a little, and could even move her right hand,
-but only to become worse subsequently, and to find her breathing more
-laborious and painful.
-
-The doctor was an honest though not brilliant man, and did his best
-for the patient, without thinking of fee or reward. Sybil, in her
-intense anxiety, doubted his skill: but how was she to procure that
-of others? There were, she knew, great physicians in London and
-elsewhere, but she was destitute of the means for employing them.
-Times there were, when, in her desperation, she thought of writing to
-Audley; but she knew that her mother would never have approved of
-such a proceeding; and their parting had been so strange, that she
-shrunk from the idea as suddenly as it had been conceived, and she
-thought, as she whispered in her heart the words of a once familiar
-song, that hers was--
-
- "A love that took an early root,
- And had an early doom,
- Like trees that never come to fruit,
- And early shed their bloom--
- Of vanished hopes and sunny smiles,
- All lost for evermore;
- Like ships that sailed for sunny isles
- But never saw their shore."
-
-
-She thought, too of the fatherly old soldier, General Trecarrel, and
-then as quickly remembered that he had been present during that
-humiliating interview at Rhoscadzhel; but any idea of writing to him
-for advice was crushed finally, when a stray newspaper announced one
-day, that the General "and his family" had sailed in the _Netley_
-transport for India, his extra aide-de-camp, the Honourable Mr.
-Audley Trevelyan, having proceeded overland, to serve on his staff in
-the new campaign against the Afghans.
-
-Something of secret satisfaction mingled with the sorrow and fear of
-the lonely girl, as she read this paragraph--which she did a great
-many times--satisfaction that Audley had not gone in the same vessel
-with these gay Trecarrels, which he could easily have done, if so
-disposed; sorrow, that they were so completely and hopelessly
-separated now, and fear for the events of the coming campaign in
-which he was to serve, and more than probably her brother Denzil,
-too. Sybil could little suppose that it was purposely to avoid being
-quizzed by the Trecarrels about herself, and to avoid the imputation,
-or too probable danger, consequent to a long voyage with two such
-handsome and enterprising flirts as Mabel and Rose were known to be,
-that he had, with a few brother officers, started for the East
-overland, a less easy and luxurious journey then than it is now.
-
-But Sybil was soon compelled by the exigencies of their situation to
-exert herself beyond her years and experience, for creditors, we have
-said, had become clamorous. Everything that could be spared was to
-be turned into money, and they were to seek another and more humble
-home. All the beautiful art-treasures collected by the taste of her
-parents in their continental wanderings, the oak and marqueterie
-cabinets, the chaste china of Dresden and Sèvres, the quaint Majolica
-vases, and alabaster groups, with all the most valued household gods,
-were despatched to the nearest market town in charge of the useful
-Mr. Sharkly, and disposed of with a ruinous commission to that
-somewhat "seedy" personage! and a little time after saw the pretty
-villa, so long the abode of so much peaceful and sequestered
-happiness, in the possession of strangers, while Sybil and her mamma
-were content to locate them in a small cottage which they rented from
-old Michael Treherne, the miner, and furnished in the plainest
-manner; but all their debts were cleared, and even Denzil's Indian
-outfit paid.
-
-To Constance all places were pretty much alike now, for she had
-become listless and indifferent to external objects; but times there
-were when much of exasperation mingled with Sybil's grief, at the
-thought that her mamma--she so gently bred and nurtured, and so
-petted by her drowned father--she, who should then be in Rhoscadzhel,
-surrounded by every appliance that wealth, luxury, skill, and rank
-could furnish, was now in her desolate widowhood, and sore extremity,
-the inmate of a poor and sordid cottage.
-
-Thus day succeeded day, and weeks rolled on without any change, at
-least for the better--weeks which seemed so long, heavy and
-monotonous, that to Sybil the world and time appeared to stand still.
-No letters came from Denzil now, for he had marched up-country
-somewhere, and India was not then what it has been since the Great
-Mutiny of the Sepoys, intersected by railways and telegraph wires;
-but Denzil's last epistle was full of unusual interest to Sybil and
-her mamma.
-
-He had, of course, been duly acquainted by the former of all that had
-occurred at home, with the startling revelations consequent to his
-father's journey to Montreal, and his death at sea; and now he should
-probably meet, ere long, this cousin of his, this Audley Trevelyan,
-for they belonged to the same regiment, and it was, perhaps, to form
-a portion of Trecarrel's brigade. And _how_ were they to meet--as
-friends and brother officers, as relations or enemies?--for Audley's
-father occupied _his_ (Denzil's) place in the world or in society, at
-least.
-
-Relations--pshaw!--could they ever be aught but foes? was the young
-man's immediate thought, and his sister's boding fear. And so his
-father was gone--his good, kind father, his friend, companion, and
-preceptor in many a manly sport. How often had they rode and
-rambled, shot and fished together in Calabria, the Abruzzi, and
-Switzerland, and at home in sturdy Cornwall, so many thousand miles
-away! Only those who are so far from home--so far away as India,
-with all its strange external influences and objects--can know how
-keen, and strong, and tender, to the young at least, are the ties of
-home and kindred, especially as the home-ties decrease in number by
-distance, change, and death.
-
-Dead--his father dead! The "governor," as he had styled him, like
-"other fellows" at Sandhurst, his "dear old dad," as he called him in
-the home that was a broken home now; and as the pleasant face, that
-he never more would look upon, with years of past affection, came
-back to memory, the lad had covered his face with his hands, and wept.
-
-"It is only when we have been long at sea and have lost sight of
-Europe," wrote Denzil, "ay, dearest Sybil, even of Europe, which
-seems all one country and one home to us, that the Anglo-Indian feels
-his banishment has fairly begun, and he is to be, henceforth, as some
-fellow has it, 'among the dusky people of Ind, with whom we have no
-traditions, no religious, few domestic, and scarcely any moral
-sentiments in common, and whose very costume (want of it, sometimes,
-I should say) is only characteristic of a much greater difference of
-inward nature.' And so I am actually by birth a lord--a lord! I
-have thought, and many visions of future greatness have floated
-through my mind--and dear mamma is a lady---Dowager Lady Lamorna.
-How odd it sounds. Are we all losing our identity; and how is all
-this to be proved? The past mystery nearly cost me my life when I
-first joined, and in this fashion:--
-
-"Bob Waller, one of ours, a pleasant but sometimes supercilious
-fellow, asked me one evening in the mess bungalow, if 'my people were
-from the Channel Islands?'
-
-"'No,' replied I, colouring, for I always felt that some mystery
-existed about us; 'but why do you ask?'
-
-"'The name sounds like a French one,' replied Waller.
-
-"'We are connected somehow with Montreal.'
-
-"'Oh, that explains it,' rejoined Waller.
-
-"'There is nothing to explain,' said I, angrily.
-
-"'Think not?--well--have a cigar?'
-
-"I roughly, perhaps, declined it, so Waller returned to the charge by
-saying--
-
-"'Your father was once in the Cornish Light Infantry, you say?'
-
-"'Yes--a captain--some twenty years ago.'
-
-"'Strange. I have looked all through the Army Lists, and can find no
-such name in the corps.'
-
-"This assertion exasperated me (I afterwards found it correct), and I
-challenged him to meet me the next morning in a grove of peepul
-trees, outside the cantonments; but duelling days are over--the
-affair got wind, and each of us was placed under arrest within his
-own compound till we exchanged mutual promises. Bob Waller and I are
-excellent friends now, and at the moment I am writing, he is sitting
-opposite me in his shirt and drawers, for we are having a glass of
-brandy-pawnee--the alcohol with water--and a couple of Chinsworah
-cheroots together; and I must close now, to catch the dauk-boat--as
-we call the mail."
-
-This was Denzil's last letter, and after its arrival the weeks
-continued to roll monotonously on, and still found Sybil watching,
-with unwearied and unrepining zeal, by what she knew to be a bed of
-death.
-
-Constance could speak but little, and then only to murmur her fears
-and prayers for the future of her daughter.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII.
-
-ALONE!
-
-At last there came an evening which Sybil was never to forget.
-
-She had been, for the tenth and last time, at the nearest
-market-town, where, in the shop windows of a druggist, who combined
-the dispensing of medicines with groceries, and the cares of a
-circulating library with those of a post office, she had been fain to
-display some of her sketches for sale, that she might procure certain
-little comforts for her ailing mother in their penury. All had been
-offered to the local public in succession, even to that one which
-pourtrayed the lonely tarn and rock-pillar, where she had first met
-Audley, when he came to apologise for his dog's intrusion (why keep
-such a souvenir now?), and all had been offered in vain. Pleased
-with the girl's beauty and sweetness of manner, the shopman willingly
-enough displayed her productions (as decorations, perhaps) in his
-windows; and there they had grown yellow, blistered, and fly-blown,
-till they were completely spoiled. Each market-day she had hoped
-that some enterprising Hobnail or Chawbacon might fancy one of her
-sketches of some well-known locality, to ornament his dwelling, but
-only to be disappointed, for art seemed to be sorely at a discount in
-the land of Tre, Pol, and Pen.
-
-On the evening of the day in question, Sybil was returning from the
-town to their new home with a heavy heart. Not a sketch had been
-sold, and her purse was almost empty; the rain was falling heavily,
-and a cold, keen blast from the Bristol Channel swept over the
-desolate and open moorland she had to traverse; and her tears were
-mingling with the large drops that plashed on her delicate face and
-sodden hair. She had resolved that on the morrow--come what
-might--she should take means to dispose of Audley's farewell gift,
-the returned engagement ring; the diamond, she knew, was a valuable
-one, too much so to find a purchaser in their now humble
-neighbourhood; but the doctor, or the friendly druggist, who had her
-luckless sketches, would perhaps advise her in the matter; and with a
-sigh, in which sorrow mingled with relief and hope, she hastened
-onward.
-
-The aspect of the district by which she had to pass to reach their
-present abode, was but ill-calculated to raise her spirit on a wet,
-stormy, and gloomy evening. In the distance rose the rough granite
-summits of the Row Tor and Bron Welli, each nearly some fourteen
-hundred feet in height, the sides of the former all covered by
-enormous blocks, the mightiest in Cornwall, piled over each other a
-very wilderness of spheroidal masses--
-
- "Confusedly hurled,
- The fragments of a former world."
-
-
-Over these mountain summits, the descending evening mists, cold and
-grey, had replaced the farewell rays of the red sun as he sunk beyond
-the sea; the appearance of the former, made Sybil quicken her steps,
-lest she should be overtaken on the moor, for then she should be able
-to see but a few yards before her, so sudden and dense are those
-floating vapours in Cornwall; and the bogholes were perilous. On
-either side of the way--a mere cart track--stood those lines of
-upright stones, which are ranged along it at regular distances, and
-extend all the way from Watergate, over the moor, having been erected
-at some remote period to mark the path in misty weather; and with a
-new but not unaccountable foreboding in her heart, for like Constance
-she was of a delicate organisation and had keen perceptions, Sybil
-hastened on, till she experienced a kind of sad relief on seeing the
-light that shone from the window of the little room where now her
-ailing mother lay, and where kind old Winny Braddon sat and watched.
-
-Pausing at the threshold, she threw aside her drenched cloak and hat,
-and strove to smooth her wetted hair, ere she stealthily opened the
-door.
-
-"How is dear mamma now, Winny?" she whispered.
-
-"She sleeps still."
-
-"Still?"
-
-"Yes--the poor darling; but in her sleep she has been muttering much
-of the past--dreaming, I suppose; oh, my poor _chealveen_, you're
-wet, and cold, and weary too."
-
-"Please don't mind me, Winny; but tell me all about mamma."
-
-"What more have I to tell you?" asked the old woman, mournfully; "but
-you--you must have tea, or something warm; you will kill yourself at
-this rate, and then I shall have two to nurse instead of one."
-
-"No, no, I want nothing; let me but change these wet things, and then
-I shall take your place beside mamma's bed."
-
-Sad, sad indeed, was Sybil's heart on this night, for it was a
-melancholy one in many ways. As she sat by the plain unornamented
-bed wherein Constance lay, and surveyed, by the light of a single
-candle, the humble little room, destitute of cornice and all
-decoration, with its scanty furniture, she doubted at times her own
-identity, or whether this was not all a dream, from which she must
-awake to find herself at home in the villa--at home, in that pretty
-room where Audley saw her last, and where the windows opened to a
-beautiful flower garden.
-
-And was this poor, wan and wasted invalid, so helpless and so passive
-now, her once merry and handsome mamma, whose hands had so loved to
-stray among her hair; who had hung over her little cot in infancy,
-and whose nightly and morning kisses would never come again; whose
-companionship she had shared like a younger sister, and with whom she
-had spent so many happy years?
-
-All was very still in that sick room.
-
-In the hall, a great old-fashioned Dutch clock tick-tacked slowly and
-monotonously; without, the night was wild, and prolonged and angry
-blasts of wind swept over the desolate moor with a bellowing sound,
-that made the sleeper stir uneasily; and lost in thought, the pale
-girl sat there listening to the blast, the rain, and the clock,
-sounds that repeated themselves over and over again in dreary
-uniformity.
-
-On this night she thought much of her absent brother. She had
-written to him that very morning, imploring him, if he met with
-Audley, to be friendly with him, as their secret claims to the name
-of Trevelyan and the Lamorna peerage, could never be established now;
-and thus she hoped and begged that he, like herself, would retain
-their mother's name of Devereaux, as they had always been known by it
-and by no other.
-
-Sybil must have dropped asleep, for she started to find the old clock
-wheezing and whirring as it struck the hour of three; and shivered,
-for she was stiff and chilled; the candle had nearly burned down, and
-what Winny Braddon would have called "a shroud" had guttered over the
-side of it; and Sybil felt fully how cheerless and depressing is the
-slow approach of morning in a sickroom--more than all, of a morning
-so hopeless as each successive one proved now.
-
-The rain and the wind were over; the clouds were divided in heaven,
-and the stars shone out brightly; the weather was calm, and no sound
-came to Sybil's ear save the tick-tack of the old clock, and the
-breathing of the sufferer, which seemed laborious and irregular.
-
-Shading the light with her hand, Sybil stole a glance at her mother's
-face, and an alteration in its expression filled her with such
-terror, that a cry almost escaped her. The mouth was more distorted,
-and the eyes--for Constance was quite awake--were regarding her with
-a strange, keen, sad and weird expression. At that moment, however,
-Winny, hearing her young mistress stir, appeared at the door of the
-room.
-
-"Oh Winny!" whispered Sybil in an agony of alarm, "there is a change
-come over mamma; go--go at once for the doctor, ere it is perhaps
-too--too late! No, no; you are old and frail, and the moor is wet,"
-she suddenly added; "get me my hat and cloak--I, myself, shall fly
-for him."
-
-"No, no, darling; stay by her side--she may not be long spared to
-you, and I shall go. Past three in the morning, and dark as
-midnight. I'll take a lantern and be off."
-
-"Oh, thank you, Winny, thank you!" said the girl, kissing the old
-woman's shrivelled cheek, and with hasty and trembling fingers
-assisting to muffle her in a cloak, and to light a lantern; and then
-seeing her issue forth upon her errand with all the speed her love
-and charity inspired, and her old limbs could exert; and with clasped
-hands, and a prayer upon her lips, Sybil at the door for a little
-space watched the lantern (Winny's figure was soon lost amid the
-gloom), as its fitful light fell in succession upon the grey, upright
-blocks of the stone avenue that marked the desolate moorland road,
-till at last it diminished to a spark, like an _ignis-fatuus_, and
-then she stole back once more to her mother's side.
-
-The left arm of the latter was outside the coverlet now, and her
-hand, so snowy in its whiteness, rested on the edge of the bed. With
-her eyes full of tears, and her heart full of earnest prayer, Sybil
-knelt reverently down to kiss it, taking the hand between her own
-caressingly.
-
-How _heavy_ that little hand felt now!
-
-Cold, too--its touch startled her. She threw back the curtain; her
-mother lay motionless with jaw somewhat relaxed, her eyes still, and
-staring upward. Death was too surely there, but Sybil had never
-looked upon it, and only felt wildly startled and terrified. She
-tried to raise the head, but felt powerless.
-
-"Oh mamma--dear mamma, do not leave me! Come back to me, mamma--come
-back to me!" she exclaimed, in a voice the tones of which seemed
-discordant and shrill to her own ear. "Is this sleep or death? oh,
-no! no, not death--NOT death!"
-
-But it was so, and how terribly pale, serene and still, how calm and
-peacefully she lay, with something of a smile gathering on her lips,
-like one "who had ended the business of life before death, and who,
-when the hour cometh, hath nothing to do but to die."
-
-Bewildered and awe-struck, with a wild beating in her heart and in
-her brain, Sybil drew back; then she stood still and listened.
-
-There was no sound save the pulsations in her own breast, and the
-odious ticking of the old wooden clock, which now seemed to have
-become unnaturally loud. Then emotions which appeared to be stifling
-came over her, and a craven terror which she could not describe, and
-of which she was afterwards ashamed, as if it had been a sin or
-crime, possessed her, and she fled from the room, and from the house
-itself, for she could not remain alone with the dead; and so,
-crouching down on the wet, damp soil near the entrance door, she
-muffled her head in her shawl.
-
-A ray of light was streaming out into the darkness, but she could not
-look upon it, for it came where the dead was lying, and where the
-light of life had passed away.
-
-"Heaven help me--heaven help me! I am now alone; most utterly
-alone!" she moaned, and bent her head between her hands, as if the
-dark waves of thought were flowing over it.
-
-Alas! how much may be condensed--how much felt, and yet never
-expressed by that one little word--_alone_!
-
-Sybil, however, fainted from excess of emotion, for she was
-discovered there crouching in a heap by the doctor and Winny, when
-they arrived together, more than one hour after, when the distant
-horizon was grey with the coming dawn, and the white fog was rolling
-along the sides of the Kow Tor and Bron Welli; and thus, in
-insensibility, had she found, for a time, oblivion to all her sorrows.
-
-
-
-END OF VOL. I.
-
-
-
-BRADBURY, EVANS, AND CO., PRINTERS, WHITEFRIARS.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ONLY AN ENSIGN, VOLUME 1 (OF 3) ***
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the
-United States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for an eBook, except by following
-the terms of the trademark license, including paying royalties for use
-of the Project Gutenberg trademark. If you do not charge anything for
-copies of this eBook, complying with the trademark license is very
-easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose such as creation
-of derivative works, reports, performances and research. Project
-Gutenberg eBooks may be modified and printed and given away--you may
-do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks not protected
-by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the trademark
-license, especially commercial redistribution.
-
-START: FULL LICENSE
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
-person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
-1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
-Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country other than the United States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
-on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-
- 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 will have to check the laws of the country where
- you are located before using this eBook.
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
-other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
-Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-provided that:
-
-* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
- works.
-
-* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
-
-* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the manager of
-the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the Foundation as set
-forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
-www.gutenberg.org
-
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non-profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's business office is located at 809 North 1500 West,
-Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up
-to date contact information can be found at the Foundation's web site
-and official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without
-widespread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine-readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
-state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-
-Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search
-facility: www.gutenberg.org
-
-This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/old/64252-0.zip b/old/64252-0.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index fc9c053..0000000
--- a/old/64252-0.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/64252-h.zip b/old/64252-h.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index ff4c188..0000000
--- a/old/64252-h.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/64252-h/64252-h.htm b/old/64252-h/64252-h.htm
deleted file mode 100644
index dc15a16..0000000
--- a/old/64252-h/64252-h.htm
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,12565 +0,0 @@
-<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.1//EN"
- "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml11/DTD/xhtml11.dtd">
-
-<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en">
-
-<head>
-
-<link rel="coverpage" href="images/img-cover.jpg" />
-
-<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8" />
-
-<title>
-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Only an Ensign, Volume 1,
-by James Grant
-</title>
-
-<style type="text/css">
-body { color: black;
- background: white;
- margin-right: 10%;
- margin-left: 10%;
- font-family: "Times New Roman", serif;
- text-align: justify }
-
-p {text-indent: 4% }
-
-p.noindent {text-indent: 0% }
-
-p.t1 {text-indent: 0% ;
- font-size: 200%;
- text-align: center }
-
-p.t2 {text-indent: 0% ;
- font-size: 150%;
- text-align: center }
-
-p.t2b {text-indent: 0% ;
- font-size: 150%;
- font-weight: bold;
- text-align: center }
-
-p.t3 {text-indent: 0% ;
- font-size: 100%;
- text-align: center }
-
-p.t3b {text-indent: 0% ;
- font-size: 100%;
- font-weight: bold;
- text-align: center }
-
-p.t4 {text-indent: 0% ;
- font-size: 80%;
- text-align: center }
-
-p.t4b {text-indent: 0% ;
- font-size: 80%;
- font-weight: bold;
- text-align: center }
-
-p.t5 {text-indent: 0% ;
- font-size: 60%;
- text-align: center }
-
-h1 { text-align: center }
-h2 { text-align: center }
-h3 { text-align: center }
-h4 { text-align: center }
-h5 { text-align: center }
-
-p.poem {text-indent: 0%;
- font-size: 80% ;
- margin-left: 10%; }
-
-p.thought {text-indent: 0% ;
- letter-spacing: 4em ;
- text-align: center }
-
-p.letter {text-indent: 0%;
- margin-left: 10% ;
- margin-right: 10% }
-
-p.footnote {text-indent: 0% ;
- font-size: 80%;
- margin-left: 10% ;
- margin-right: 10% }
-
-.smcap { font-variant: small-caps }
-
-p.transnote {text-indent: 0% ;
- margin-left: 10% ;
- margin-right: 10% }
-
-p.intro {font-size: 90% ;
- text-indent: -5% ;
- margin-left: 5% ;
- margin-right: 0% }
-
-p.quote {text-indent: 4% ;
- margin-left: 0% ;
- margin-right: 0% }
-
-p.finis { font-size: larger ;
- text-align: center ;
- text-indent: 0% ;
- margin-left: 0% ;
- margin-right: 0% }
-
-</style>
-
-</head>
-
-<body>
-
-<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Only an Ensign, Volume 1 (of 3), by James Grant</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-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 <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<table>
- <tr><td>Title:</td><td>Only an Ensign, Volume 1 (of 3)</td></tr>
- <tr><td></td><td>A Tale of the Retreat from Cabul</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: James Grant</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: January 10, 2021 [eBook #64252]</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: Al Haines</div>
-
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ONLY AN ENSIGN, VOLUME 1 (OF 3) ***</div>
-
-<h1>
-<br /><br />
- ONLY AN ENSIGN<br />
-</h1>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- A Tale of the Retreat from Cabul.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t2">
- BY JAMES GRANT,<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t4">
- AUTHOR OF "THE ROMANCE OF WAR," "FIRST LOVE AND LAST LOVE,"<br />
- "LADY WEDDERBURN'S WISH," ETC.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- IN THREE VOLUMES.<br />
-<br />
- VOL. I.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t4">
- "Come what come may,<br />
- Time and the Hour runs through the roughest day."&mdash;<i>Macbeth.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- LONDON:<br />
- TINSLEY BROTHERS, 18, CATHERINE ST., STRAND.<br />
- 1871.<br />
- [<i>All Rights Reserved.</i>]<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t4">
- LONDON:<br />
- BRADBURY, EVANS, AND CO., PRINTERS, WHITEFRIARS.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
-PREFACE.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To have entered, more fully than I have done,
-into the events and fighting prior to the Retreat
-from Cabul, would have proved unsuitable for the
-purpose of my story, and for these events I must
-refer the reader to history or the newspapers of the
-time.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-An officer of the Queen's 44th Regiment escaped
-death in the Khyber Pass in the mode narrated in
-its place, by wrapping the regimental colour round
-him; and strange and varied as the adventures of
-Captain Waller may appear, after the last fatal stand
-was made by our troops, some such incidents actually
-occurred to a Havildar of the Shah's Ghoorka
-Regiment, after its complete destruction in Afghanistan,
-so there is much that is real woven up with
-my story.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Fiction, according to Sir Francis Bacon, infuses
-in literature that which history denies, and in some
-measure satisfies the mind with shadows, when it
-cannot enjoy the substance&mdash;the shadows of an ideal
-world. "Art is long and life is short, so we do
-wisely to live in as many worlds as we can."
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- 25, TAVISTOCK ROAD, WESTBOURNE PARK,<br />
- <i>August</i>, 1871.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
-CONTENTS.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-CHAP.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-I.&mdash;<a href="#chap01">THE TIME WILL COME</a><br />
-II.&mdash;<a href="#chap02">RHOSCADZHEL</a><br />
-III.&mdash;<a href="#chap03">THE ALARM BELL</a><br />
-IV.&mdash;<a href="#chap04">POWDERED WITH TEARS</a><br />
-V.&mdash;<a href="#chap05">PORTHELLICK VILLA</a><br />
-VI.&mdash;<a href="#chap06">RICHARD'S MYSTERY</a><br />
-VII.&mdash;<a href="#chap07">LADY LAMORNA</a><br />
-VIII.&mdash;<a href="#chap08">THE BROKEN CIRCLE</a><br />
-IX.&mdash;<a href="#chap09">FOREBODINGS</a><br />
-X.&mdash;<a href="#chap10">THE LONELY TARN</a><br />
-XI.&mdash;<a href="#chap11">CONCERNING FLIRTATION</a><br />
-XII.&mdash;<a href="#chap12">THE PIXIES' HOLE</a><br />
-XIII.&mdash;<a href="#chap13">THE TIDE IN!</a><br />
-XIV.&mdash;<a href="#chap14">LOST</a><br />
-XV.&mdash;<a href="#chap15">THE SEARCH</a><br />
-XVI.&mdash;<a href="#chap16">INTELLIGENCE AT LAST</a><br />
-XVII.&mdash;<a href="#chap17">THE TRECARRELS</a><br />
-XVIII.&mdash;<a href="#chap18">HE LOVES ME TRULY</a><br />
-XIX.&mdash;<a href="#chap19">THE GREATER SORROW</a><br />
-XX.&mdash;<a href="#chap20">A FAMILY GROUP</a><br />
-XXI.&mdash;<a href="#chap21">HUMILIATION</a><br />
-XXII.&mdash;<a href="#chap22">"MRS. GRUNDY"</a><br />
-XXIII.&mdash;<a href="#chap23">A LEGAL "FRIEND"</a><br />
-XXIV.&mdash;<a href="#chap24">THE DOCTRINE OF CHANCES</a><br />
-XXV.&mdash;<a href="#chap25">MISCONCEPTION</a><br />
-XXVI.&mdash;<a href="#chap26">REVERSES</a><br />
-XXVII.&mdash;<a href="#chap27">ALONE!</a><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap01"></a></p>
-
-<p class="t2">
-ONLY AN ENSIGN.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER I.
-<br /><br />
-THE TIME WILL COME.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-"<i>Le jour viendra</i>&mdash;it is the motto of our
-family&mdash;given to us by Henry VI. 'The day will come,'"
-said old Lord Lamorna, proudly, as he lay back in
-his easy chair, with his elbows resting on the arms
-thereof, and the tips of his upraised fingers placed
-together, as if he was about to pray; "and most
-applicable is that motto to you, nephew Richard,
-for I am sure that when you are my age you will
-regret not having taken my advice."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Richard Trevelyan smiled, but looked somewhat
-uneasily at his younger brother Downie.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You are too rich to throw yourself away, and
-too well-born even for the most highly accomplished
-daughter of a cotton-lord, or knighted mill-owner,"
-resumed his stately old uncle, sententiously; "a
-fellow knighted too probably for dirty ministerial
-work; but assume a virtue if you have it not, and
-let us see you&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Excuse me, my lord&mdash;excuse me, my dear uncle.
-I have no desire to&mdash;to marry; why you&mdash;yourself&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Don't cite me, Richard. You are only forty-three,
-if so much" (and here, for the information
-of our young lady readers, we may mention that
-Richard is not the hero of these pages). "I am
-past seventy, yet I may marry yet, and do you all
-out of the title," added Lamorna, with a laugh like
-a cackle.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My brother Dick is certainly the most listless of
-men," said Downie, as he selected some grapes with
-the embossed scissors, and filled his glass with
-chateau d'Yquem.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I don't think that I am so," retorted Richard.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Downie is right," said Lord Lamorna. "Why
-do you not go into Parliament?&mdash;I have two snug
-pocket boroughs here in Cornwall&mdash;and on one
-hand attack routine and red-tapeism like a Radical;
-on the other hand, denounce retrenchment and
-cowardly peace-at-any-price, like a Tory of the old
-school. You would certainly be popular with both
-parties by that <i>rôle</i>, and do good to the country at
-large."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I have no turn for politics, uncle."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Diplomacy then&mdash;many of our family have
-figured as diplomats; I was ambassador to Russia,
-after Waterloo, and in the olden time more than
-one of our family have been so to the Courts of
-Scotland, France, and Brandenburg; and I trust
-we all refuted the axiom of Sir Henry Wotton,
-'that an ambassador was an honest man sent abroad
-to lie for the good of his country.'"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I have no taste for diplomacy."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What the devil <i>have</i> you a taste for?" asked
-his uncle, testily; "not domestic life, as I can't get
-you to marry, like Downie here; and you soon left
-the army, or tired of Her Majesty's service."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Richard flushed for a moment, and held his full
-wine glass between him and the light, as if to test
-the colour and purity of its contents.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I know what bachelor London life is&mdash;another
-style of thing, of course, from yours, Downie&mdash;that
-which someone calls the hard-working life, which
-begins at two P.M. one day, and ends at four
-A.M. next morning. There are the parks; the club, with
-its bow-window; flirtations at balls and assemblies;
-the opera, and parties to Greenwich; and then there
-is the darker picture of doing business with old
-Messrs. Bill Stamp and Cent.-per-Cent., in some
-dingy little den off the Strand. A bad style of
-thing it is to meddle with the long-nosed fellows
-in the discounting line; just as bad as&mdash;and often
-the sequence to&mdash;running after actresses or
-opera-singers. You may love them if you like; but, great
-Heavens! never stoop to the madness of committing
-matrimony with any of them, or for a moment forget
-the family to which you belong, and the ancient title
-that is your inheritance."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All this was said with undisguised point and
-pomposity; the cold grey eyes of Downie Trevelyan
-had a strange, sour smile in them; and Richard's
-face grew more flushed than ever now.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Dinner was over in the stately dining-room of
-Rhoscadzhel; Mr. Jasper Funnel, the portly, florid,
-and white-haired butler, had placed the glittering
-crystal decanters before his master, who, with two
-nephews, Richard and Downie Trevelyan, were
-lingering over their wine; while in the western
-light of a September evening, through the tall
-plate-glass windows that reached from the richly-carpeted
-floor to the painted and gilded ceiling, the Isles of
-Scilly&mdash;the Casserites of the Greeks, the rocks
-consecrated by the pagan Cornavi to the Sun&mdash;could
-be seen at the far horizon, literally cradled in
-the golden blaze of his setting in the sea; for the
-house of Rhoscadzhel, in which our story opens,
-stands near the Land's End, in the brave old
-Duchy of Cornwall.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Audley Trevelyan, tenth Lord Lamorna, took his
-title from that little bay or cove which was one of
-the most romantic spots on the bluff Cornish coast,
-until it was unfortunately selected by certain
-utilitarian speculators as a site for granite works;
-and near it is a place called the Trewoofe, a triple
-entrenchment having a subterranean passage, wherein
-Launcelot Lord Lamorna, with some other Cornish
-cavaliers, hid themselves in time of defeat from the
-troopers of Fairfax, as the tourist may find duly
-recorded in his "John Murray."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was in his seventieth year; pale in face and
-thin in figure, and with his accurate evening
-costume, for his valet always dressed him for dinner
-even when alone, the old peer in every gesture and
-tone displayed the easy bearing of a polished man
-of the world, and of the highest bearing&mdash;keen but
-cold, calm and unimpressionable.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had yet much of the wasted beau about his
-appearance; he wore rosettes on his shoes and
-still adhered to a frilled shirt front and black
-watered silk ribbon for his gold eye-glass, with a
-coat having something of the high collar and cut
-peculiar to the days when George IV. was king. His
-features were fine and delicately modelled; his nose
-a perfect aquiline, with nostrils arched and thin,
-his snow-white hair was all brushed back to conceal
-the bald places and to display more fully a forehead
-of which he had been vain in youth from a fancied
-resemblance to that of Lord Byron. In short the
-Apollo of many a ball-room was now indeed a lean
-and slippered pantaloon, but still careful to a degree
-in costume and all the niceties of cuffs and studs
-and rings.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Calm and self-possessed as he appeared, when now
-lying back in his down easy-chair, sipping his iced
-wine and playing with the diamond that glittered on
-his wasted hand, and which had been a farewell gift
-from the Empress of Russia, he had been much of
-a <i>roué</i> in his youth, and consequently was not
-disposed to enquire too closely into the affairs of his
-nephew.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Downie Trevelyan was already married, nearly
-to his uncle's satisfaction, his wife being the
-daughter of a poor but noble family; and as for
-Richard, he might run away with as many humble
-girls as he chose, provided he did not marry any of
-them, or make that which his haughty uncle and
-monetary patron would never forgive&mdash;a <i>mésalliance</i>;
-for Lord Lamorna was a man full of strong
-aristocratic prejudices, and a master in all the
-tactics of society, and of his somewhat exclusive, and
-occasionally selfish class.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His lordship's false teeth&mdash;a magnificent Parisian
-set that had cost him some fifty guineas&mdash;would
-have chattered at the idea of any member of his
-family making a mistake in matrimony. He had
-heard ugly whispers about Richard, but never could
-discover aught that was tangible. If it existed,
-Heavens! how were Burke, Debrett and Co. to
-record it when the time came that it could no
-longer be concealed?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Should any <i>mésalliance</i> be the case, he had
-vowed often that the barren title should go
-without one acre of land to his eldest nephew; and
-he would have willed that past him too had it been
-in his power to do so; but though a sordid Scottish
-Earl of Caithness once sold his title to a Highland
-Chieftain, and caused one of the last clan-battles to
-be fought in Scotland, such things cannot be done
-now.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The old man had one ever present, ever prevailing
-idea&mdash;the honour and dignity of the family&mdash;the
-Cornish Trevelyans of Rhoscadzhel and Lamorna.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His two nephews were men in the prime of life,
-but Downie was three years younger than his
-brother.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Richard Pencarrow Trevelyan, the elder and
-prime favourite with their uncle, was a remarkably
-handsome man, with fine regular features that
-closely resembled those of the old peer; but
-Richard had been reared at Sandhurst, been in the
-army and seen much of a rougher life than his
-uncle. He had a free bold bearing, an ample chest,
-an athletic form and muscular limbs, which riding,
-shooting and handling the bat and the oar had all
-developed to the full, and which his simple
-costume,&mdash;for he was fresh with his gun and his game-bag,
-from the bleak Cornish moors and mountain
-sides&mdash;advantageously displayed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His dark blue eyes that were almost black, and
-seemed so by night, had a keen but open expression,
-his mouth suggested good humour, his white and
-regular teeth, perfect health, and his voice had in it
-a chord that rendered it most pleasant to the ear.
-Dark eyebrows and a heavy moustache imparted
-much of character to his face.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His brother, Downie Trevelyan, had never been an
-idler like Richard. Educated at Rugby and Corpus
-Christi, Oxford, he had been duly called to the bar
-by the Honourable Society of Lincoln's Inn, and
-was now in good practice as a Barrister in London.
-He had all the air and bearing of a gentleman of
-good style; but he was less handsome than Richard;
-had less candour of expression in eye and manner;
-indeed, his eyes were like cold grey steel, and were
-quick, restless, and at times furtive in their glances;
-and they never smiled, even when his mouth seemed
-to do so.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Unlike Richard, he was closely shaven, all save a
-pair of very short and legal looking whiskers. To
-please his uncle was one of the unwearying tasks of
-his life; and even now, with this view, he was in the
-most accurate evening dress, thus affording a
-complete contrast to the rough and unceremonious
-tweed-suit worn by his brother&mdash;his coat broadly
-lapelled with black silk <i>moiré</i>, his vest with three
-buttons, <i>en suite</i> with his shirt studs, which were
-encrusted with brilliants. His cold formality of
-manner rendered his periodical visits to Rhoscadzhel
-somewhat dull to Lord Lamorna, for somehow
-few people cared much for Mr. Downie Trevelyan.
-He had married judiciously and early in life,
-and had now several children; and thus, while
-joining his uncle in reprehending or rallying Richard
-on his supposed anti-matrimonial views, his cold,
-pale eyes, were wandering over the appurtenances,
-the comforts and splendour of that magnificent
-apartment, in which he was mentally appraising
-everything, from the steel fire-irons, to the gold and
-silver plate that glittered on the carved walnut wood
-side-board, whereon were displayed many beautiful
-cups, groups and statuettes (race-trophies of Ascot,
-Epsom and other courses) which had been won in
-Lamorna's younger days, when his stud was second to
-none in England, and certainly equal to that of Lord
-Eglinton in Scotland; yet he had never been a
-gambler, or a "horsey man," being too highly
-principled in one instance, and too highly bred in
-the other; and so we say, while the legal eyes of
-Downie appraised all, he thought of his eldest son,
-Audley Trevelyan, then a subaltern in a dashing
-Hussar Regiment, and marvelled in his heart, if he
-should ever reign as Lord of Rhoscadzhel, manor
-and chace, with all its moors and tin-mines.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You were right to marry young, Downie," said
-the old lord, resuming the theme of their conversation
-after a pause, adding, as if he almost divined
-the thoughts of his younger nephew, "your boy
-Audley is, I hear from General Trecarrel, a
-handsome fellow."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He is a perfect Trevelyan, my lord," replied
-Downie, who was studious in always according the
-title to his relative, "and then my daughter, Gartha,
-bids fair to equal her mother, who was one of the
-handsomest women in London."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"To see your family rising about you thus, must
-afford you intense pleasure, Downie; but I cannot
-understand our friend Dick here at all. My years
-may not be many now, and I do not wish my hereditary
-estate to change hands often, or my lands to be
-scattered even after I am done with them."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I do not comprehend your fears, my dear
-uncle," said Richard, smiling; "your estates can
-never lack heirs while God spares me&mdash;and then
-there is Downie&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And his son Audley the Hussar&mdash;you would say?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Exactly," replied Richard, but in a strange faint
-voice, and as he spoke he felt that the keen grey
-eyes of Downie were regarding him attentively by
-the waxen lights of the chandelier, which Mr. Jasper
-Funnel and two tall footmen had just illuminated,
-at the same time drawing the heavy curtains of
-crimson damask over the last flash of the setting
-sun, and the ruddy sea whose waves were rolling in
-blue and gold, between the bluffs of Land's End and
-the rocky Isles of Scilly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You cannot be a woman-hater, Dick?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No&mdash;far from it," replied Richard, as a soft
-expression stole over his manly face; "there can be
-no such thing in nature."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The truth is&mdash;but take your wine&mdash;I strongly
-fear, that during your military peregrinations, you
-have got yourself entangled now&mdash;and unworthily
-perhaps."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My lord&mdash;you are mistaken," replied Richard
-firmly&mdash;almost sternly; "but what causes you to
-think so?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Your so decidedly declining an introduction to
-General Trecarrel and his two daughters&mdash;the most
-beautiful girls in the duchy of Cornwall. They
-come of a good family too; and as the couplet has
-it:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- "'By Tre, Pol, and Pen,<br />
- Ye may know the Cornish men.'"<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-"The General resides somewhere near
-Porthellick, does he not?" asked Downie, who saw
-that his brother was changing colour, or rather
-losing it fast.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Some one told me, Dick, that it was rumoured
-you got into a scrape in Edinburgh, 'that village
-somewhere in the North,' as one of our humourists
-calls it; it was to the effect that your landlady had
-fallen over head and ears in love with her handsome
-lodger, who was ditto ditto in her debt, and had to
-soothe her ruffled feelings and settle her bill, by
-matrimony at sight."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"An utter scandal!" said Richard, now laughing.
-"Your allowance to me, ever since I left the Cornish
-Light Infantry, has been too generous for such a
-catastrophe ever to occur."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And next came a story, that when you were at
-Montreal with the regiment, you made a precious
-mess of it with some pretty girl, and&mdash;to use
-Downie's phraseology&mdash;parted as heart-broken
-lovers, to figure as plaintiff and defendant at the
-bar."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Worse still and as false, my lord!" exclaimed
-Richard, now pale with suppressed passion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Don't look so darkly, Richard," said Lord
-Lamorna, who saw the flash in his nephew's dark
-blue eyes; "I have had a pretty little box at
-Chertsey, and a villa at St. John's Wood in my day,
-when my friends, raven-tressed, or golden-haired as
-the case might be, were amiable and tenderly
-attached&mdash;but deuced expensive; so I must not be
-severe upon you," added the old man, with his dry
-cackling laugh. "It is not these kind of little
-arrangements I fear, but a <i>mésalliance</i>; and there
-are scandals even in London&mdash;yes, even in the
-mighty world of London, though there they soon
-die; they don't live and take root, as in the
-so-called purer air of the country."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I cannot understand all those vague hints, tales
-and rumours, or who sets them afloat," replied
-Richard, making an effort to preserve his calmness.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Downie saw the veins rise in his brother's
-forehead while their uncle had been speaking; and he
-smiled a quiet smile, as he bent curiously over his
-glass.
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- "Full many a shaft at random sent,<br />
- Finds mark the archer never meant;"<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-and he could see that some of the random remarks
-in the present conversation, rankled deeply in
-Richard's breast; and that this conversation had
-verged, more than once, on somewhat dangerous
-ground.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well, it is a marvel to me, Richard, how a
-handsome fellow like you can have escaped so long,
-known as you are to be the heir to my title and
-estates," continued the old lord, still harping on the
-same topic: "for the girls now go in for winning in
-matrimony, as we used to do at Ascot and
-Epsom."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How, my lord?" asked Downie, as if he had
-never heard the joke before.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"By a neck&mdash;a bare neck and bosom added;
-witness the beautiful and aristocratic demi-mondes
-at the Opera! Elizabeth was the first English-woman
-who, to excite admiration, exposed her
-person thus. The virgin queen wore a huge ruff
-certainly; but it stuck up <i>behind</i> her, she was
-<i>décolletée</i> enough in front."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I prefer her Scottish rival&mdash;collared to her
-pretty neck, and sleeved to the slender wrist," said
-Richard Trevelyan; "by Jove, I should not have
-cared for flirting with a woman who carried a fan in
-one hand and a hatchet in the other."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Our ancestor, Henry Lord Lamorna, was
-governor of Rougemont Castle, in Devonshire,
-under Queen Elizabeth," said the peer pompously;
-"but having married the daughter of a simple
-knight in Surrey, he lost Her Majesty's favour
-at Court, and had to live in retirement here at
-Rhoscadzhel. Let that mistake be a warning to
-you, Richard."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It happened pretty long ago," replied Richard,
-laughing; "and at forty years of age I am surely
-unlikely to commit an act of folly&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"If it be not committed already?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-&mdash;"And lose your favour, even by marrying, 'the
-daughter of a simple knight.'"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"With my favour you would lose this fine estate.
-But give me your hand, Dick, I know you will never
-do aught unworthy of our good old Cornish name of
-Trevelyan!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With a grand old-fashioned air&mdash;yet one full of
-kindness&mdash;the proud old man presented his thin
-white hand to his nephew, who pressed it
-affectionately, and then rose to withdraw.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Whither go you, Dick, so soon?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh&mdash;anywhere, uncle," replied the other,
-wearily.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How, sir?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Merely into the lawn to enjoy a post-prandial
-cigar," replied Richard, whose face wore an evident
-expression of annoyance, as he bowed and quitted
-the room.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"We have worried him, I fear," said Downie,
-with a self-satisfied smile.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Don't use slang&mdash;it is bad in tone," replied his
-uncle; "but I cannot make your brother out&mdash;I
-hope he is not deceiving us all. Gad, if I thought
-so&mdash;if that Montreal story should prove true&mdash;&mdash;"
-the peer paused, and his keen blue eyes flashed
-with anger at the vague thoughts that occurred to
-him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, do not fear, my lord," said Downie
-Trevelyan, in a suave and soothing manner; "though
-sham diamonds often do duty for real ones."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What do you mean?" asked his uncle, haughtily.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Downie only smiled, and bent over his glass of
-Burgundy again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"<i>Neb na gare y gwayn call restona,</i>" said Lord
-Lamorna, significantly; "I hate proverbs: but this
-is a good old Cornish one; 'he that heeds not gain,
-must expect <i>loss</i>.' When do you expect your oldest
-boy home from India?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He may arrive next week, perhaps, my lord, and
-he will at once dutifully hasten to present himself
-to you."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He must be well up among the Lieutenants of
-the Hussars now?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yet he means to exchange into the Infantry."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Why?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It is a matter of expedience and expense, my
-lord; even with forage, batta, tentage, and so forth,
-he finds his regiment a very extravagant one."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I shall give him a cheque on Coutts and Co.,
-for I must not forget that you did me the honour to
-name him after me."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But you did us the greater honour in being his
-sponsor&mdash;and in bestowing upon him a gold
-sponsorial mug."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"With the <i>Koithgath</i> of the Trevelyans for a
-handle, and another perched on the lid; well,
-well&mdash;he may be my successor here&mdash;who knows, who
-knows," mumbled the old man, as he prepared to
-take his-after dinner nap, by spreading a cambric
-handkerchief over his face, and Downie glided
-noiselessly away to the library, with a strange and
-unfathomable smile on his colourless face, and he
-muttered,&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I too may say&mdash;'the time will come!'"
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap02"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER II.
-<br /><br />
-RHOSCADZHEL.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-On the smooth lawn his brother was walking to
-and fro, with a cigar between his firm white teeth,
-with his heart a prey to bitter and exciting thoughts;
-and though Richard Trevelyan is not, as we have
-said, the hero of these pages, to the lawn we shall
-accompany him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What the deuce can be the secret spring of all
-this intrusive solicitude upon my uncle's part about
-having me married, as if I were a young girl in her
-third season?" he muttered; "I have often feared
-that Downie suspected me&mdash;as a lawyer, it is natural
-he should suspect every one of something more than
-he sees or knows; and yet&mdash;I have been so wary,
-so careful! My poor Constance&mdash;still concealment&mdash;still
-dissimulation for the present, and doubts of
-our future! No hope for us, save in the death of
-that old man, ever so good and kind to me. Did
-he really but know Constance, how sweet and
-gentle she is! A curse be on this silly pride of
-birth and fortuitous position which is our
-bane&mdash;this boasting of pedigree old as the days of Bran ap
-Llyr, the ancestor of King Arthur. By Jove, it is too
-absurd!" and he laughed angrily as he tossed away
-his cigar and then sighed, as he surveyed the façade
-of the stately mansion, and cast his eyes round the
-spacious lawn that stretched far away in starlight
-and obscurity. "And yet must I stoop to this senile
-folly," he added, half aloud; "for 'twere hard
-to see all these broad acres go to Downie's boy, the
-Hussar, past me and mine!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The seats of the Cornish aristocracy have usually
-little to boast of in architecture; but the mansion
-of Rhoscadzhel* was an exception, being a rare
-specimen of a fine old Tudor dwelling, which had
-suffered more from the rude hand of civil war, than
-from "time's effacing fingers," and was built,
-tradition avers, from the famous quarry of Pencarrow,
-and of good Cornish freestone.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="footnote">
-* Cadzhel, Cornish for castle.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-A massive iron gate, between carved pillars, each
-surmounted by a koithgath, or wild cat, rampant&mdash;a
-crest of which Lord Lamorna was as vain as ever
-was old Bradwardine of his heraldic bears&mdash;gave
-access to the avenue, a long and leafy tunnel that
-lay between the house and the highway leading to
-the Land's End. The branches of the stately old
-elms were interlaced overhead, like the groined
-arches of a Gothic cathedral and a delightful
-promenade their shade afforded in the hot days of
-summer, when only a patch of blue sky, or the
-golden rays falling aslant, could be seen at times
-through their foliage.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Engrafted in the later Tudor times upon the
-ruins of Rhoscadzhel, of which there is still
-remaining the fragment of a loopholed tower and
-ponderous granite arch shrouded in ivy, with its
-modern <i>porte-cochère</i> and vestibule floored with
-marble, its mullioned windows filled in with plate
-glass in lieu of little lozenge-panes, its dining hall
-and drawing rooms lighted with gas when such
-was the wish of its proprietor, the mansion, though
-retaining all the characteristics of the days when
-Queen Bess held her court at Greenwich and
-danced before the Scottish ambassador, had nevertheless
-all the comforts, appliances and splendour,
-with which the taste and wealth of the present age
-could invest it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The great dining-hall had remained almost
-unchanged since the days of the first Charles. Its
-vast chimney-piece, which rose nearly to the ceiling,
-was covered with marvellous scrolls and legends,
-and innumerable wild cats' heads among them, over
-all being the arms of Trevelyan of Lamorna; <i>gules</i>,
-a demi-horse <i>argent</i> issuing from the sea, adapted
-from the circumstance of one of the family
-swimming on horseback from the Seven Stones to the
-Land's End, when they were suddenly separated
-from the continent by a terrible inundation of the
-ocean, and as this dangerous reef is no less than
-nine miles from Scilly, where a light-ship points
-it out to the mariner, the feat was well worthy of
-being recorded, at least in heraldry.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The furniture here was quaint and old, massive
-and richly carved, and though the vast
-stone-flagged chamber, where many a Cornish cavalier
-has whilom drunk "confusion to Cromwell and the
-Rump," and where still stands the great dining
-table with its daïs, where of old "the carles of
-low degree" had sat below the salt, is sombre and
-gloomy, somewhat of lightness is imparted by the
-splendid modern conservatory that opens off it,
-with marble floor and shelves of iron fret-work
-laden with rare and exotic plants.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It boasts of a chamber known as "the Queen's,"
-wherein Henrietta Maria had slept one night before
-she fled to France, and since then no one has ever
-occupied the ancient bed that, like a huge catafalque,
-stands upon three steps in the centre of the wainscoted
-room which like several others in Rhoscadzhel,
-has hangings of faded green tapestry, that are lifted
-to give entrance; and where the hearths, intended for
-wood alone, have grotesque andirons in the form
-of the inevitable koithgath on its hind legs. And
-on the walls of these old chambers hung many a
-trophy of the past, and many a weapon of the
-present day, from the great two-handed sword
-wielded by Henry Lord Lamorna at the Battle
-of Pinkey down to the yeomanry sabre worn by
-the present peer at the coronation of George IV.,
-a peer of whose effeminacy the said Lord Henry
-would have been sorely ashamed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And many a Vandyke, Kneller, and Lely were
-there, with portraits of the Trevelyans of past times,
-who now lay under their marble tombs in yonder
-little church upon the hill, where among dust and
-cobwebs hung their helmets, spurs, and gauntlets,
-and the iron mace of one Launcelot Trevelyan,
-who was a man of vast stature; and it is as great
-a source of wonder to the village children as the
-rickety ruin of a gilded coach which at certain
-times is drawn forth to the lawn and aired
-carefully, being that in which the grandfather of
-the present peer brought home his bride in patches
-and powder, and it is supposed to be the first
-vehicle of the kind ever seen in the duchy of
-Cornwall. Thus, as Richard Pencarrow Trevelyan
-thought over all these possessions with their
-traditional and family interests, of which, by one
-ill-natured stroke of the pen, his proud uncle
-might deprive him and his heirs for ever, a bitter
-sigh escaped him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Beyond the quaint façade of the ancient house,
-from the mullioned windows of which, half hidden
-by ivy and wild roses, there streamed out many
-a light into the darkness, his eyes wandered to
-the fertile fields, all bare stubble now, to the wide
-open moor overlooked by many a wooded tor, and
-to the beautiful lawn, in the centre of which stands
-one of those wonderful <i>logan-stones</i>, so peculiar to
-Cornwall and Brittany, a ponderous, spheroidal
-mass of granite, so exquisitely balanced that it may
-be oscillated by the touch even of a woman's hand;
-and as he turned away to indulge in deeper reverie
-by the shore of the adjacent sea, he raised his right
-hand and his glistening eyes to the stars, as if some
-vow, as yet unuttered, was quivering on his tongue.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes?" he exclaimed, "please God and pray
-God, the time will come; but not as my good uncle,
-and not, as the careful Downie, anticipate.
-Marriage! how little do they know how, in the great
-lottery of life, my kismet&mdash;as we used to say in
-India&mdash;has been fixed&mdash;irrevocably fixed!"
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap03"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER III.
-<br /><br />
-THE ALARM BELL.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-The season was autumn now, and on the
-succeeding day&mdash;the last he meant to spend at
-Rhoscadzhel for some time at least&mdash;Richard Trevelyan
-appeared in the breakfast parlour again in shooting
-costume, with a scarlet shirt having an open collar,
-and with a brown leather shot-belt over his shoulder;
-while his uncle, who, even when at his slender
-morning repast, in his elaborately flowered dressing-gown,
-wore accurately fitting pale kid gloves on his
-shrivelled hands, for such things were a necessity
-of the old lord's existence; thus he glanced again
-with an air of annoyance at the dress worn by his
-eldest nephew, as he considered it a solecism,
-decidedly in bad taste, and that something more
-was due to his own presence.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Downie's costume, a fashionable morning coat
-came more near his lordship's ideas of propriety.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Mr. Jasper Funnel, in accurate black, was at the
-side-table, to slice down the cold meat, pour out the
-coffee from its silver urn into the beautiful Wedgewood
-cups, and to carve the grouse and other pies;
-for Cornwall is peculiarly the land of that species of
-viand, as there the denizens make pies of everything
-eatable, squab-pies, pilchard-pies, muggetty-pies, and
-so forth.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I heard last evening the new chime of bells you
-have put up in Lamorna Church," said Richard, as
-he seated himself and attacked a plate of grouse, the
-recent spoil of his own gun; "how pleasantly they
-sound. Who rings them?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I cannot say&mdash;never inquired," replied the old
-peer, testily; "I can only tell you one thing,
-Richard."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And that is&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"They were wrung out of my pocket by the vestry."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At this little quip, Downie obsequiously and
-applaudingly laughed as loudly as he was ever known
-to do, and just as if he had never heard it before.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"However, I need not grudge the poor people
-their chime of bells; I am rich enough to afford
-them more than that, and occupying as we do a
-good slice of this <i>Land of Tin</i>, for so the Phoenicians
-named this Cornish peninsula of ours as early as
-the days of Solomon, we have its credit to maintain;
-but bring us home a well-born and handsome bird,
-Dick, and I shall have the bells rung till they fly to
-pieces&mdash;by Jove I will! Only, as I hinted last
-night, let her be worthy to represent those who lie
-under their marble tombs in that old church of
-Lamorna; for there are bones there that would
-shrink in their leaden coffins if aught plebeian were
-laid beside them."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Richard shrugged his shoulders, and glanced round
-him with impatience.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Let us look forward, my dear uncle," said he;
-"in this age of progress all men do; and of what
-account or avail can a dead ancestry be?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Downie smiled faintly, and Lord Lamorna frowned
-in the act of decapitating an egg, for to his ears
-this sounded as rank heresy or treason against the
-state.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"By heavens! nephew Richard, you talk like a
-Red Republican. With these socialistic views of
-equality, and so forth, I fear you will never shine in
-the Upper House."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I have no desire to do so; you see how simple
-my tastes are&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"In dress decidedly too much so."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And how happy and content I am to lead the
-life of a quiet country gentleman; and have done
-so ever since I left the Cornish Light Infantry."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Your demands upon my pocket are certainly so
-moderate, that I cannot think you are playing me
-false, Dick," said the peer, with a pleasant smile;
-"egad, if I thought you were doing so, I'd have you
-before the Mayor of Halgaver, as our Cornish folks
-say!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Trust me, my good uncle," replied Richard
-Trevelyan, with a glistening eye, and laying a hand
-caressingly on the old man's shoulder, as he rose
-and adjusted his shot-belt; "and now I go to have
-a farewell shot on the moors."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Why a farewell shot? you have been here barely
-a fortnight."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Nevertheless, I must leave Rhoscadzhel tomorrow."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Positively?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes, uncle."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Pardon me," continued Lamorna, drily; "but
-may we inquire for where?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oxford&mdash;and then town after, perhaps."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oxford&mdash;and town too," replied his uncle,
-testily; "the last time you left this for London,
-if General Trecarrel was right, you were seen for a
-month after in his neighbourhood; and, if his story
-were true&mdash;and I dare not doubt it&mdash;you did not
-get beyond the border of Cornwall&mdash;and were
-certainly not so far as Devonshire."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Trecarrel was, I hope, mistaken," urged Richard.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I hope so, too."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Richard's face was pale, and to conceal his emotion,
-he stooped and caressed his favourite pointer, which
-had bounded in when the butler opened the door;
-and soon recovering from his little agitation&mdash;whatever
-its secret source might be&mdash;he politely and
-affectionately bade his uncle "good-bye for the
-present," nodded to the silent and observant Downie,
-took a double-barrelled breech-loader from the
-gun-room and sallied forth, unattended by game-keepers,
-desiring quite as much to indulge in reverie
-and enjoy a solitary ramble, as to have a shot at a
-passing bird.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To Richard it seemed that he had read a strangely
-keen, weird and unfathomable expression in his
-uncle's eyes, as they followed his departing steps
-on this particular morning&mdash;an expression which,
-somehow, haunted him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The season, we have said, was now autumn, and
-a tender, mellow tone rested over all the landscape;
-Richard Trevelyan was fond of the strange, wild
-district&mdash;the land of old tradition, of bold and varied
-scenery&mdash;amid which his youth and so much of his
-manhood had been passed, and he looked around
-him from time to time with admiring eyes and
-an enthusiastic heart.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A soft warm shower had fallen that morning
-early, refreshing the fading September leaves in the
-belts of coppice that girt the upland slopes, and in
-the orchards, where the ripe golden apples were
-dropping amid the thick sward below. Above the
-purple, and often desolate moors which are so
-characteristic of Cornish scenery, and where the
-small breed of horses, the little black cattle and
-sharp-nosed sheep of the province were grazing,
-the wooded <i>tors</i> or hills stood boldly up in the
-distance, their foliage in most instances presenting
-many varied tints. There were the brown madder,
-the crisped chesnut, and the fading beech, the more
-faded green of the old Cornish elm, and the russet
-fern below, from amid which at every step he took
-the birds whirred up in coveys; while Richard, lost
-in reverie&mdash;the result of his uncle's remarks of
-late&mdash;never emptied a barrel at them, but walked slowly
-on looking round him from time to time, and filled
-with thoughts that were all his own as yet.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The place where he loitered was very lonely:
-here and there a gray lichen-spotted druidical
-monolith stood grimly up amid the silent waste;
-in the distance might be seen the gray expanse of
-the ocean, or some bleak looking houses slated with
-blue, as they usually are in Devon and Cornwall,
-or perhaps some of those poorer huts, which, like
-wigwams, have cob-walls; <i>i.e.</i> are built of earth, mud,
-and straw, beaten and pounded together, just as
-they might have been in the days of Bran the son
-of Llyr, or when Arthur dwelt in Tintagel.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Richard Trevelyan threw himself upon a grassy
-bank, and his pointer, doubtless surprised by his
-neglect of all sport, lay beside him with eyes of
-wonder and tongue out-lolled. In the distance,
-about a mile or so away, Trevelyan could see
-Rhoscadzhel House shining in the morning sunlight;
-and again, as on the preceding evening, he
-looked around with a bitter smile upon tor and
-moorland, and on the wondrous druid monoliths
-that stand up here and there on the bleak hill sides,
-each and all of them having their own quaint name
-and grim old legend.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How came each to be there? "Without patent
-rollers; nay, without the simplest mechanical
-contrivances of modern times, how was so huge a mass
-transported to yonder desolate and wind-swept
-height? How many yoke of oxen, how many
-straining scores of men must it have taken to erect
-the least of them! What submission to authority,
-what servile or superstitious fear must have
-animated the workers! No drover's whip would have
-urged to such a task; no richest guerdon could
-have repaid the toil; yet there the wonder stands!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And some such thoughts as these floated through
-the mind of Richard, as his eyes wandered from a
-cromlech or slab that rested on three great stones,
-to a vast <i>maen</i> or rock-pillar, that might be coeval
-with the days when Jacob set up such a stone to
-witness his covenant with Laban.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Shall I ever wander here with Constance&mdash;and
-if so, when," thought he; "assuredly not while my
-uncle lives; but his death&mdash;how can I contemplate
-it, when he is so good, so kind, so tender, and so
-true to me? Oh, let me not anticipate that."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How often in autumn, in the gloomy mornings
-of November, had he pursued the fox over these
-desolate moors, often breakfasting by candle-light
-in his red coat on a hunting morning, to the great
-boredom of old Jasper Funnel?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-What joy it would be to gallop over that breezy
-wind-swept moor, with Constance by his side! To
-walk with her through yonder dense old thicket,
-and tell her that every tree and twig therein were
-her own; to drive by yonder cliff, Tol Pedn Penwith,
-the western boundary of a beautiful bay, and
-where in the summer evening, the forty Isles of
-Scilly seemed to be cradled in the glory of the
-western sun; to show her all these places with
-which he was so familiar, and perhaps to tell their
-children in the years to come&mdash;for all Richard's
-habits and tastes were alike gentle and domestic&mdash;the
-old Cornish legends of Arthur's castle at Tintagel,
-of the magic well of St. Keyne, and of Tregeagle
-the giant&mdash;the bugbear of all Cornish little
-people; the melancholy monster or fiend, who
-according to traditions still believed in, haunts the
-Dozmare Pool, from whence he hurled the vast
-granite blocks, known as his "quoits," upon the
-coast westward of Penzance Head; the deep dark
-Pool, his dwelling place, is said to be unfathomable
-and the resort of other evil spirits.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Desolate and begirt by arid and dreary hills, it
-presents an aspect of gloomy horror; and then when
-the winter storms sweep the moorland wastes, and
-the miners at the Land's End, deep, deep down in
-mines below the sea, hear the enormous boulders
-dashed by it on the flinty shore overhead, above all
-can be heard the howling of Tregeagle! For ages
-he has been condemned to the task of emptying the
-Dozrnare Pool by a tiny limpet-shell, and his cries
-are uttered in despair of the hopelessness of the
-drudgery assigned him by the devil, who in moments
-of impatience, hunts him round the tarn, till he flies
-to the Roche Rocks fifteen miles distant, and finds
-respite by placing his hideous head through the
-painted window of a ruined chapel, as a bumpkin
-might through a horse-collar; for these, and a
-thousand such stories as these, are believed in
-Cornwall, nor can even the whistle of the railway
-from Plymouth to Penzance scare them away.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Richard Trevelyan was smiling when he remembered
-how often he and Downie, when loving little
-brothers and playfellows, had been scared in their
-cribs at night by stories of Tregeagle; and of that
-other mighty giant who lies buried beneath Carn
-Brea, where his clenched skeleton hand, now
-converted into a block of granite (having five
-distinct parts, like a thumb and fingers) protrudes
-through the turf.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He could recall the dark hours, when as fair-haired
-children, they had cowered together in one of the
-tapestried rooms of Rhoscadzhel, and clasped
-each other's hands and necks in fear of those
-hob-goblins, which people the very rock and cavern, and
-even the very air of Cornwall. Downie was a man
-now, legal in bearing, and cold-blooded in heart.
-Richard had painful doubts of him, and remembered,
-that, strangely enough his hand <i>alone</i>, had always
-failed to rock the logan-stone in the lawn before
-Rhoscadzhel, and such monuments of antiquity,
-have, according to Mason, the properties of an
-ordeal&mdash;the test of truth and probity:
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"Behold yon huge<br />
- And unhewn sphere of living adamant,<br />
- Which, poised by magic, rests its central weight<br />
- On yonder pointed rock: firm as it seems,<br />
- Such is its strange and virtuous property,<br />
- It moves obsequious to the gentlest touch<br />
- Of him whose heart is pure; but to a traitor,<br />
- Tho' e'en a giant's prowess nerv'd his arm,<br />
- It stands as fixed as Snowdon!"<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-Even the childish hands of his little daughter
-Gartha, could rock the logan-stone, when Downie's
-failed to do so. Why was this? Was there indeed
-any truth in the ancient test of integrity and purity
-of heart; or was it but an engine of religious
-imposition? And now amid these unpleasant
-speculations, there came to the loiterer's ear, the
-tolling of a distant bell.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He started up, and listened.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was, beyond a doubt, the house-bell of Rhoscadzhel,
-and was being rung violently and continuously,
-for the breeze brought the notes distinctly
-over the furzy waste.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-What could have happened? Fire&mdash;or was he
-wanted in haste? Was his uncle indisposed; were
-his fears, his hopes and wishes, though blended with
-sorrow, to be realised at last?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His breath came thick and painfully, and he
-remembered with something of foreboding&mdash;for his
-Cornish breeding rendered him superstitious and
-impressionable&mdash;that as he had passed Larnorna
-church that morning, he had seen, on the rough
-lichstones at the entrance to the sequestered
-church-yard, a coffin rested prior to interment, while the
-soft sad psalmody of those who had borne it thither&mdash;a
-band of hardy miners&mdash;floated through the still
-and ambient air; for the custom of bearing the dead
-to their last resting place with holy songs&mdash;a usage
-in the East, as old as the fourth century&mdash;is still
-observed in Cornwall, that land of quaint traditions
-and picturesque old memories.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Springing to his feet, Richard Trevelyan discharged
-both barrels of his gun into the air, and
-hurried in the direction of the manor house.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As he drew nearer, the sonorous clangour of the
-great bell, which was now rung at intervals, but with
-great vigour, continued to increase, adding to the
-surprise and tumult of his heart, and the perturbation
-of his spirit.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap04"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER IV.
-<br /><br />
-POWDERED WITH TEARS.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-A mounted footman, who approached him at full
-speed, pulled up for a moment and respectfully
-touched his hat, for he was one of the Lamorna
-household.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What is the matter?" asked Richard.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, sir&mdash;oh, Mr. Richard&mdash;my lord is taken
-very ill."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ill&mdash;my uncle?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He is quite senseless, and Mr. Downie Trevelyan
-has sent me for the doctor."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Then ride on and lose no time," replied Richard,
-as he hastened to the house, where he found
-confusion and dismay predominant, the servants
-hovering in the vestibule, conversing in whispers and
-listening at the library door, while Jasper Funnel
-and Mrs. Duntreath, the old housekeeper (a lineal
-descendant of the Dolly Duntreath, so well-known
-in Cornwall), were mingling their sighs and regrets
-for the loss of so good a master.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Where is my uncle?" asked Richard, impetuously.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"In the lib&mdash;lib&mdash;library," sobbed the housekeeper,
-with her black silk apron at her eyes, and as
-Richard advanced, Jasper Funnel softly opened the
-door. The favourite nephew entered the long
-spacious and splendid apartment, which occupied
-nearly the entire length of one of the wings of
-Rhoscadzhel, its shelves of dark wainscot filled by
-books in rare and magnificent bindings, with white
-marble busts of the great and learned men of
-classical antiquity looking calmly down on what was
-passing below.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The fire-place wras deep and old; but a seacoal
-fire was burning cheerily in the bright steel modern
-grate; and as if he was in a dream, seeing the far
-stretching lawn, with its tufts of waving fern and
-stately lines of elm and oak, as he passed the tall
-windows noiselessly on the soft Turkey carpet,
-Richard drew hastily near the great arm-chair, in
-which his uncle was seated, dead&mdash;stone-dead, with
-Downie, somewhat pale and disordered in aspect,
-bending over him!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The old man had suddenly passed away&mdash;disease
-of the heart, as it proved eventually, had assailed
-him while seated at his writing-table.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On Richard's entrance and approach, Downie
-hurriedly took from the table and thrust into his
-pocket, a document which looked most legally and
-suspiciously like a "last will and testament;" but
-quick though the action, Richard could perceive that
-the document, whatever it was, had no signatures of
-any kind.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Richard knelt by his uncle's side; he felt his
-pulses; they had ceased to beat; his heart was cold
-and still, and there came no sign of breath upon the
-polished surface of the mirror he held before the
-fallen jaw; with something of remorse Richard
-thought,&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No later than this morning I deceived him&mdash;and
-he loved me so&mdash;was ever my friend and second
-father!&mdash;I thought," he added aloud, to Downie,
-"that his eyes wore an unusual expression this
-morning&mdash;a weird, keen, farseeing kind of look,
-such as I never read in them before."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I fancied that I perceived some such expression
-myself, and consequently, at his years, was the less
-alarmed, or shall I say shocked, when in the very
-act of speaking to me, a sudden spasm came over
-his features&mdash;a deep sigh, almost a faint cry escaped
-him, and he sank back in his chair, when just about
-to write. See, there is the pen on the floor, exactly
-where it fell from his relaxed fingers."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Richard's honest eyes were filled with tears, and
-mechanically he picked up the pen and laid it on the
-desk.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Writing, say you, Downie; and what was he
-writing?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, I cannot say&mdash;a letter to his steward, I
-believe."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But&mdash;I see no letter."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He was just about to commence it," replied
-Downie, whose usually pale face coloured a little.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And that paper you pocketed in such haste,
-Downie, what was it?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Nothing, Richard, that can concern you
-(by-the-by, you are Lord Lamorna now!) or that
-fair one whose portrait you exhibit so ostentatiously
-just now."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Richard started, alike at the title so suddenly
-accorded to him by his brother, and at the reference
-to the portrait, for in the confusion or haste, as he
-bent over his dead uncle, a little miniature, which
-he wore at a ribbon round his neck, depicting a very
-beautiful dark-eyed woman, had slipped from his
-vest, and with an exclamation of annoyance, he
-hastened to conceal it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"<i>Who</i> is the lady, Richard?" asked Downie.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"As yet, that must remain my secret," replied
-Richard; "a little time, my dear fellow, and we
-shall have no mysteries among us."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Downie, secretly, was not ill-pleased by this
-diversion, in which Richard forgot the subject of
-the paper.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The doctor soon came&mdash;a village practitioner&mdash;fussy
-and full of importance; but nevertheless
-skilful; and he decided that disease of the
-heart&mdash;a malady under which, though ignorant of its
-existence, the deceased had long laboured&mdash;had
-proved the immediate cause of death. The poor
-shrivelled remains of the proud old lord were conveyed
-to the principal bed-room of the mansion, and there
-laid in a species of state, upon a four-posted bed,
-that rose from a daïs, and was all draped with black.
-His coronet and Order of the Bath, together with
-that of St. Anne, which he received when ambassador
-in Russia, were deposited at his feet upon a crimson
-velvet cushion, that was tasseled with gold; while
-two tall footmen in complete livery with long canes
-draped with crape, mounted guard beside the coffin
-day and night, to their own great disgust and annoyance,
-till the time of the funeral, of which Richard
-took the entire charge; and which, in a spirit of
-affection and good taste, he resolved should be in all
-respects exactly what the deceased peer would have
-wished it to be.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The features of the latter became, for a time,
-young and beautiful in their manliness and perfect
-regularity, while all the lines engraven there by Time
-were smoothed out, if not completely effaced.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How like our father, as I can remember him, he
-looks!" whispered Downie, more softened than usual,
-by the hallowing presence of death.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But Richard was thinking of another face whom
-the dead man resembled&mdash;a young and beloved face
-to him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Denzil did you say?" he stammered.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I said our father," replied Downie, sharply.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"True, he died young," was the confused
-reply.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Your mind wanders, surely?" said Downie, with
-a dark and inexplicable expression in his now
-averted face; but Richard saw it not, he was simply
-taking a farewell glance of one who had loved him
-so well; his manly heart was soft, and his dark-blue
-eyes were full with the tears of honest affection
-and gratitude.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So Audley Lord Lamorna was dead, and all now
-turned to Richard as their new and future master;
-all the blinds in Rhoscadzhel were drawn down by
-order of Mrs. Duntreath, and all went about on
-tiptoe or spoke in subdued voices, especially Downie,
-who in his heart thought that Richard was spending
-"far too much in ostrich feathers, crimson coffins,
-and other mummery," among undertakers, and
-heraldic painters, too; but he was more politic than
-to say so&mdash;even to his wife, who, with her daughter
-Gartha, a pretty girl in her teens, had been on a
-visit to General Trecarrel, and now duly arrived to
-act as mistress of the mansion, <i>pro tem.</i>, during the
-solemnities of which it was to be the scene.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She was warmly welcomed by Richard Trevelyan;
-she was his only brother's wife, and he had none of
-his own to take her place there&mdash;as yet.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A peevish and foolish woman of fashion, who
-had once possessed undoubted beauty, Mrs. Downie
-Trevelyan was generally treated as a kind of cypher
-now by her husband; but nevertheless he consulted
-her at times, on certain matters of common interest.
-She still clung tenaciously to the tradition of her
-former beauty, and sought to retain it by the aid
-of pearl powder, the faintest indication of rouge
-perhaps, and by the prettiest of matronly headdresses
-made of the costliest lace. She was always
-languid, somewhat dreary, and spent most of her
-time with a novel in one hand, and a magnificent
-little bottle of ether, or some strong perfume, in
-the other. To Richard her society was decidedly a
-bore; but at this crisis he was full of business, and
-occupied by a depth of thought that was apparent
-to all.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Six tall servants in mourning scarfs, and in the
-livery of the Trevelyans, bore upon their shoulders
-the crimson velvet coffin containing the remains of
-the late lord, to the vault where his forefathers lay,
-and where many of them had been interred by
-torchlight, in times long past.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was something feudal, stately, and solemn
-in the aspect of the procession, when between two
-lines of all the tenantry, standing bare-headed, it
-wound down the old avenue, where the leaves were
-almost as thick, the sun as bright, and the birds
-singing as merrily as they might have been when
-Lord Launcelot rode there by the Queen's bridle,
-or when he and his cavaliers fled from Fairfax to
-seek shelter in Trewoofe; and so his descendant
-Audley was laid at last, where so many of his
-predecessors lie side by side, "ranged in mournful
-order and in a kind of silent pomp," each coffin
-bearing the names, titles and arms of its mouldering
-occupant.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Pondering on who might stand here when his
-turn came to be lowered down there, Richard, the
-new lord, stood at the head of the tomb, pale, and
-with more emotion than met the eye; Downie stood
-on his right hand, and the heir of the latter, well
-bronzed by the sun of India, on his left, three of his
-younger brothers, held with a ribbon. Their old
-friend, General Trecarrel, stood grimly and erect at
-the foot. The vault was closed, and the body of
-Audley, tenth Lord Lamorna, that frail tenement,
-which he had petted and pampered, of which he
-had been so careful and so vain, for some seventy
-years, was left to the worms at last!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The assemblage dispersed, and the world went on
-as usual.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The bell of the village church, which had all
-morning tolled minute strokes, ceased; and after a
-time the new chimes rang out a merry peal in
-honour of his successor. It was in Cornwall as
-at St. Cloud; <i>le Roi est mort&mdash;vive le Roi!</i>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The old general, who had no fancy for a mansion
-of gloom, departed, and took back with him
-Downie's son Audley, a jolly young subaltern,
-whom we shall soon meet elsewhere.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But prior to this departure, there had been the
-reading of the will, an affair of great solemnity, in
-the library, the same apartment where the late lord
-died; and his solicitors, Messrs. Gorbelly and
-Culverhole, a fat and a lean pair of lawyers, felt
-all their vulgar importance on the occasion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There were a few handsome presents to old and
-faithful servants, including Jasper Funnel and
-Mrs. Duntreath (whose sobs became somewhat intrusive),
-and Richard found himself Lord of Rhoscadzhel
-and Lamorna, with an unfettered fortune of thirty
-thousand per annum; while Downie had a bequest
-of less than the third of that sum, together with some
-jewelry, including the Russian diamond ring for his
-wife and daughter Gartha.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So whatever had been the object or the tenor of
-that document which the astute barrister had so
-evidently prepared, and which he had thrust into
-his pocket so hastily and awkwardly on that eventful
-morning, Richard was as safely installed in the
-estates as in his hereditary title; and the moment
-he found himself alone, he became immersed in
-letter-writing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Opening the crimson morocco blotting pad which
-his uncle had last used, and which had his coronet
-and crest, the wild-cat, stamped in gold thereon,
-he saw some words written in his brother's hand,
-and these, on investigation proved to be, "This is
-the last will and testament of me, L&mdash;&mdash;" (doubtless
-Lord Lamorna); further on, as if at the bottom
-of the page, he could detect the name of "Porthellick,"
-and a dark flush of passion crimsoned the
-face of Richard. He thought again of the
-document he had seen in Downie's hand; their uncle
-could certainly never have signed it, but some
-painful doubts&mdash;added to intense sorrow for their
-existence&mdash;grew strong in Richard's heart, which
-was a true and generous one.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My dear Constance&mdash;my long suffering darling!"
-he muttered, almost aloud; "the day is now near when
-all your doubts and my dissimulation to the world
-shall end. Thank God, the time has almost come."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And he rode forth, to post with his own hand a
-letter he had written.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was barely gone ere Downie, who had been
-quietly observing his motions, also made an
-investigation of the blotting pad which Richard had just
-closed, and therein he saw what seemed to be the
-address of a recent letter. He held the pink sheet
-between his eyes and the light, and read clearly
-enough, "Mrs. Devereaux, Porthellick Cottage."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And the lawyer smiled sourly, but with great
-uneasiness, nevertheless, and he muttered aloud,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I had but vague suspicions before&mdash;and now all
-my knowledge has come too late&mdash;too late!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I am so sorry to hear you say so, dear," said
-his graceful little wife, the rustle of whose
-fashionable mourning suit he had been too much
-preoccupied to hear, as she glided into the library, in
-search of one of the many uncut novels that now
-littered the tables; "sorry chiefly for the sake of
-our dear Audley, and Gartha, and the other little
-ones."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Your know to what I refer&mdash;the succession; it
-may not be so hopeless or irreparable as we
-think."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But your uncle died with his will unchanged."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"True; I pressed upon him lately my belief that
-Richard had formed that&mdash;of which he had a horror
-so great&mdash;a <i>mésalliance</i>&mdash;in fact, a low or improper
-attachment for one beneath us in rank and name.
-My uncle's fury became great, and to take advantage
-of the time, I placed before him a will, leaving all
-his estates, as he had a hundred times threatened
-to do, to me and mine. I had the document ready
-written, and placed it before him; but as fate
-would have it, in his pride, fury, and resentment, a
-spasm seized the old man, and he fell back dying,
-actually with the pen in his hand, after I had dipped
-it in that silver inkstand and placed it between his
-fingers."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How extremely unfortunate!" said Mrs. Downie
-Trevelyan, placing her scent-bottle languidly to her
-little pink nostrils.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Unfortunate? It was a narrow chance by which
-to lose thirty thousand a year!" said Downie, grinding
-his teeth, while his eyes gleamed like two bits of
-grey glass in moonlight. "There is some mystery
-about Richard's life; moreover, he wears a woman's
-miniature at his neck."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Young&mdash;is she?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well&mdash;yes&mdash;she seems so."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And pretty?" added Mrs. Downie, glancing at
-herself in a mirror.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Very."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"His intended, perhaps?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I hope she is not more than that; but time
-must soon show now."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And over the porte-cochère of Rhoscadzhel there
-now hung a vast lozenge-shaped hatchment or
-funeral escutcheon, the sight of which would have
-delighted him, whose memory it was meant to
-honour, being the achievement of a bachelor peer,
-representing the arms of Lamorna in a shield
-complete&mdash;the demi-horse <i>argent</i> of the Trevelyans
-rising from the sea; over all, the baron's coronet,
-crest, motto, and mantling, collared by the Orders
-of the Bath and St. Anne; and after some old
-fashion, retained still only in Germany, Scotland,
-and France, the herald-painter had depicted at
-each corner a death-head, while all the black
-interstices were <i>powdered with tears</i>.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap05"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER V.
-<br /><br />
-PORTHELLICK VILLA.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-More than forty miles distant from Rhoscadzhel,
-on that part of the Cornish coast which is washed
-by the waves of the Bristol Channel, at a place
-named Porthellick, or the Cove of Willows, was a
-beautiful white-walled villa, built in the Greek style
-of architecture, with an Ionic portico of six carved
-and painted wooden pillars. Its windows opened
-in the French fashion, and descended to the floor;
-luxuriant creepers, jasmines, and sweet brier, were
-trained on green trellis-work around it, and rare
-plants of gorgeous colours grew in stone vases,
-which were placed in a double row along the smooth
-gravelled terrace, from which the basement of the
-cottage rose&mdash;for the villa was a cottage in
-character, being but a one storeyed dwelling, though
-spacious and handsome, and having a noble
-conservatory and coach-house and stabling, and an
-approach of half a mile in length, bordered by
-a double line of those magnificent willows from
-which the place took its name, and affording,
-from the principal windows in front, an ample
-view of the sea, with ever and anon, a white sail
-lingering in the dim blue distance, or a passing
-steamer, with its pennant of smoke, streaming
-astern, as it sped towards Ireland or the Isle
-of Man.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the evening of that day when Lord Lamorna
-died so suddenly, a lady was standing under the
-portico of this house, looking anxiously, not
-seaward, but inland, towards the willow avenue, by
-which her residence was approached from the road
-that leads by Stratton, among the hills, towards
-Camelford and Wadebridge, near the rocky valley of
-Hanter-Gantick.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The lady looked repeatedly at her watch, consulted
-a railway time-table, and entered the house,
-only to return to her post, and bend her eyes in
-anxious gaze along the avenue.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Mrs. Devereaux, for it was she, was
-young-looking&mdash;marvellously so for her years; she seemed to be
-quite a girl still; yet she was fully four-and-thirty,
-and the mother of two children. This youthful
-appearance doubtless arose from her very petite
-and slender figure; her strictly fashionable style
-of dress, and the piquante beauty that shone in
-the minute features of her charming little face.
-Her eyes were dark, yet full of light and sparkle,
-though their long lashes imparted a great softness
-of expression. Her eyebrows were very dark and
-well-defined&mdash;some might have deemed them too
-much so; but they imparted great character to
-her face. Her mouth and chin were perfect; her
-teeth like those of a child; and over all, her
-face, figure, and bearing, even to every motion of
-her hands and feet, Mrs. Devereaux was exquisitely
-lady-like.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"At last&mdash;at last they come!" she exclaimed;
-"and yonder is my dear, dear Denzil, whom I have
-not seen for so many, many months," she added, as
-her eyes filled with tears, and her soft cheek flushed
-with all a mother's joy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As she uttered her thoughts aloud, a little
-basket-phaeton, drawn by two lovely cream-coloured
-Shetland ponies, was seen bowling down the avenue of
-pale green willows; a young lady was handling the
-ribbons of these Lilliputian steeds in a very masterly
-style; and beside her sat a young man, attired in
-fashionable travelling costume, who was alternately
-waving his cap and a newspaper, which he flourished
-so vigorously, that the sleek, brindled cattle grazing
-in the clover meadows close by, lifted their great
-brown eyes as if inquiringly, while the little drag,
-with its varnished wheels flashing, dashed along
-towards the villa, the walls of which shone white
-as snow in the evening sunlight.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The phaeton was reined up before the portico,
-when a handsome lad of eighteen, with fine regular
-features, dark blue&mdash;almost black&mdash;eyes, and short
-fair curly hair, sprang out, and was instantly clasped
-to his mother's breast.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, mamma&mdash;we have such news for you!"
-exclaimed the young lady, who seemed an exact
-reproduction of Mrs. Devereaux in height and face,
-though barely seventeen, with dark eyes and hair;
-"oh, such news!" she added, in high, girlish
-excitement, as she tossed her whip and reins to a
-groom who came promptly from the stable-yard,
-Derrick Braddon, once a soldier in Richard's regiment&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Surely mamma knows all," said the youth;
-"have you not seen the <i>Gazette</i>?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"<i>Gazette</i>?" repeated Mrs. Devereaux, growing
-very pale, as she led her son caressingly into the
-little morning-room, where a hasty repast had
-been prepared for him and his sister, and
-which opened off a handsome little vestibule,
-hung with fox-brushes crossed, the trophies of
-many a hunting day, brought home by his father,
-"Captain Devereaux."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Denzil is now an officer, mamma," said the
-young girl, throwing off her hat and looking
-admiringly at her brother; "I was just in time to
-meet him at the train."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes, mamma&mdash;I was yesterday gazetted to an
-ensigncy in the Cornish Light Infantry,&mdash;got leave
-from Sandhurst, and at once came right slick down
-here. Oh, how proud papa will be&mdash;is he not
-here?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No," replied Mrs. Devereaux, faintly; "and how
-does your name appear in the <i>Gazette</i>?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Here it is, mamma, dear," replied the youth,
-pointing to the paper he had been flourishing, and
-feeling proud to see his name, for the first time, in
-print. "'Cornish Light Infantry; Lieutenant
-Audley Trevelyan, from the 14th Hussars, to be
-lieutenant, vice Gascoigne, killed in action. Denzil
-Devereaux, gentleman cadet, from the Royal Military
-College, Sandhurst, to be ensign, vice Foster,
-deceased.' And now, mamma, I am done at last
-with all the boredom of Euclid and fortification,
-Trigonometry, and all the rest of it."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And you will soon be done with poor mamma, too!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Nay, mamma, dear; that can never, never be!"
-replied the lad, as he threw his arms round her neck
-and kissed away the tears that were already oozing
-from her long and beautiful eyelashes; "but I do
-so wish papa were at home&mdash;I have so much to tell,
-and so much to ask him!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Denzil&mdash;Devereaux?" said the mother, ponderingly,
-and as if to herself.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes, mamma; and few fellows at Sandhurst had
-more marks opposite their names than Denzil
-Devereaux, for I worked hard that I might choose
-my own regiment; so I chose the 32nd because I am
-a kind of Cornish man, and because it was papa's old
-corps. Oh, how pleased he will be!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And where is the regiment stationed now?"
-asked Mrs. Devereaux, in a low voice.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"In India."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"India?" she repeated, mechanically, as if that
-separation, which is but as a living death, had
-already begun.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I wonder who the Audley Trevelyan figuring
-along with me in the <i>Gazette</i>, may be. It is a pure
-Cornish name."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His mother was weeping now, and Sybil, who had
-hitherto been silent, began to do so from sympathy;
-for already, so we have said, the pang of the coming
-parting was felt, and the maternal heart was wrung
-at the thought of a long and doubtful separation
-from her only son&mdash;her Denzil&mdash;whom she deemed
-beautiful as Apollo, and clever as the admirable
-Crichton; for the Overland Route had not been
-opened, there was no electric cable to India, and its
-nearest point was distant a six months' journey by sea
-round the Cape; and so, full of aching thoughts that
-her children could not share&mdash;thoughts that must be
-all her own till her husband returned&mdash;poor
-Mrs. Devereaux could only fold her son to her breast and
-weep, till the young man's military and boyish
-enthusiasm became dulled, and his naturally warm and
-affectionate heart grew full with a perplexity that was
-akin to remorse, for seeking to leave her side and
-push his way in the world as a soldier. Yet that
-was the only career his father had ever indicated to
-him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A letter from papa&mdash;our dear papa!" exclaimed
-Sybil, glad to cause some diversion from the gathering
-gloom, as she caught the missive from the hand
-of the village postman, who appeared outside the
-open window.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I wonder if he has heard of my appointment,"
-surmised Denzil, his thoughts reverting to their old
-channel.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It is sealed and edged with black!" exclaimed
-Sybil; "and&mdash;how singular&mdash;it bears the Penzance
-postmark!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How is this, mamma&mdash;I thought papa was in
-London?" asked Denzil.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Mrs. Devereaux trembled violently, as she tore
-open the letter, and muttering an excuse hastily left
-the room with it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What's up," said the ex-cadet, as he applied himself
-to the sherry decanter; "by Jove, Sybil, this is a
-strange way of receiving papa's letter. Who is dead,
-I wonder&mdash;I hope there is nothing wrong with him,
-anyway!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, can he have met with an accident?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Scarcely, as the letter is written by himself; but
-to be at Penzance when we all thought he was in
-town&mdash;very odd, isn't it?"
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap06"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER VI.
-<br /><br />
-RICHARD'S MYSTERY.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-To explain much that the reader may have
-begun to suspect or misjudge, we must now go
-back a few years, into the private life of Richard
-Trevelyan.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When stationed with his regiment in Montreal he
-had made, at some public assembly, the acquaintance
-of Constance Devereaux, then a girl fresh from
-school. He was fascinated by her rare beauty, and
-a certain <i>espieglerie</i> of manner, which the thoughts
-and cares of future years eventually crushed out of
-her; and she, on her part, was dazzled by the
-attentions of a handsome and wealthy young officer; for
-Richard being his uncle's favourite nephew and heir,
-received from him a handsome yearly allowance, in
-addition to that which he inherited from his father.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Unfortunately Constance Devereaux, with all her
-beauty and accomplishments, was the daughter of
-one who would have been deemed of very humble
-caste indeed, if judged by the standard applied to
-such matters at Rhoscadzhel. The girl loved him
-passionately and blindly, and little foreseeing all such
-a step would cost her in the end, she consented to a
-private marriage; so they were united in secret by
-Père Latour, the catholic curé of the chapel of
-St. Mary, near Montreal; an acolyte of the chapel and
-Richard's servant, a soldier named Derrick Braddon,
-being the only witnesses.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The marriage was duly registered in the books of
-the little church, and an attested copy was lodged
-with the curé who performed the ceremony; but as
-the regiment was ordered soon after to another
-colony, it was left in his hands for the time.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Richard obtained leave of absence, and soon after,
-much to his uncle's surprise, left the army by selling
-out, and led a kind of wandering life on the
-Continent, taking his wife's name of Devereaux, the
-better to conceal from the proud, and as yet
-unsuspecting old lord, the <i>mésalliance</i> he had
-formed&mdash;a union, however; of which he had never cause to
-repent, for his wife was gentle and tender, and
-possessed many brilliant mental qualities; but well
-did Richard know that if that union were discovered,
-the immense fortune, which was at Lord Lamorna's
-entire disposal, would be left, if not altogether to
-Downie, to others, and past himself and the heirs of
-his line; and that such a calamity should not occur
-he became more anxious and more solicitous after
-the birth of two children, a son whom he named
-Denzil, after his own father, and a daughter, Sybil,
-born to them since their wanderings in Italy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Many difficulties attended the course of this secret
-matrimonial life! Even in their continental travels,
-when seeking the most secluded places, stray
-English tourists would come suddenly upon them if
-they ventured near a table d'hôte; once or twice an
-old brother officer, or other people who knew or
-recognised in the so-called Captain Devereaux,
-Richard Trevelyan; and then mysterious nods or
-knowing smiles were exchanged, and odd whispers
-went abroad in the clubs of London and
-elsewhere&mdash;innuendoes that would have withered up the heart
-of Constance had she heard them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She knew all that might be suspected, and felt
-that the positions of herself and her children, were
-alike false and liable to misconstruction; that
-malignant scandal might be busy with the names of
-them all. But the die was cast now, and she had
-but to suffer and endure; to pray and to wait the
-death of the poor old man who was so kind to her
-husband, and who loved him so well&mdash;yet not well
-enough to forgive&mdash;had he ever discovered it&mdash;the
-deception which had been practised upon him and
-upon society.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Repining in secret, sorrowing for the falsehood of
-her position, knowing that her husband, the father of
-her children, passed in the world as an eligible
-bachelor, the object of many a designing mother,
-open to the attentions, the coquetries and captivations
-of their daughters, aware that he resided with
-her only by stealth and under another name than his
-own, Constance had indeed much to endure, though
-rewarded in some degree therefor, to see her
-children growing up in health and beauty, each a
-reproduction of their parents, for Denzil had all the
-personal attributes of his father, with much higher
-mental qualities, while the soft-eyed Sybil possessed
-all the dark beauty, the petite figure and lady-like
-grace of Constance herself.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The latter, we have said, was but the daughter of
-a Canadian trader; yet amid all the ease and luxury
-with which her husband's ample means and tender
-love supplied her, there were times, when she could
-not but murmur in her heart at the anomaly of
-her situation, so different from the honest security
-of her father's humble home, and her native pride
-revolted against it; and with this pride there grew a
-species of shame, which she felt to be totally
-unmerited, and then she felt an utter loathing for
-the very name of Lord Lamorna, (though it should
-one day be borne by her own husband) as being the
-cause of all her secret suffering, her dread of the
-present and doubt of the future.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the education of their children, Richard, who
-doted on them, had spared nothing. Both were
-highly accomplished, and wherever they had
-wandered they had the most talented masters that
-wealth could procure. Now Denzil had taken the
-highest prizes at Sandhurst and was gazetted to a
-Regiment of the Line, and was going forth into
-the world under the false name of Devereaux!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How was this to be altered&mdash;how explained and
-rectified?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A necessity for being much about Rhoscadzhel,
-as being the heir to the estates and as his uncle's
-years increased, had compelled Richard Trevelyan
-to be more often present in his native county than
-he had hitherto been; hence, he had settled his
-secret ties in the pretty little villa of Porthellick, at
-what he conceived to be a safe distance of some
-forty miles or so from the residence of Lord
-Lamorna.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In and about that villa he was simply known as
-"Captain Devereaux," and as he had almost entirely
-relinquished hunting and field sports&mdash;save an occasional
-shot at a bird&mdash;and when there lived a retired
-and secluded life; and as his wife and children
-seemed to live for themselves and him only, making
-friends with few save the poor and ailing, time
-glided by, and the mystery of Richard's career was
-never fully laid bare.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For those there are in this world (and his uncle
-was one) who would have pardoned Richard making
-Constance Devereaux his mistress, and yet would
-mockingly have resented his making her a wedded
-wife!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lamorna's friend General Trecarrel&mdash;the representative
-of one of the oldest families in Cornwall&mdash;who
-lived near Porthellick, had met Richard on
-horseback more than once in the vicinity of that
-place, when he was supposed to be in London,
-Paris, or elsewhere, and the mention of these
-circumstances caused Mr. Downie Trevelyan, who, as
-we have shown, had a keen personal interest in the
-matter, to prosecute certain inquiries in that part
-of the duchy, and the result led him to believe that
-the Captain Devereaux who occasionally resided at
-the Grecian Villa in the Willow Cove, and his
-irreproachable brother Richard, were one and the same
-person!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-If it were so, the character of the lady must
-be&mdash;he supposed&mdash;somewhat questionable; and
-Downie knew right well that their uncle might
-forgive a liaison, but never a marriage with one of an
-inferior grade. The conduct and bearing of the
-lady at the villa seemed unimpeachable; so Downie
-had long felt doubtful how to act, and only indulged
-in vague hints to his brother's prejudice.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The pride and anger even these had kindled in
-the heart of the old lord, who was now gone, and
-the threats in which he had indulged, afforded
-Richard Trevelyan a fair specimen of what would
-assuredly be the result were his marriage ever
-known at Rhoscadzhel; and when pressed on the
-subject pretty pointedly, he had assured his
-uncle&mdash;while his cheek flushed and his heart burned with
-shame&mdash;that he was still unwedded and free; and
-even as he made the false avowal, the soft pleading
-eyes of Constance, his own true wife, and the voices
-of their children, came vividly and upbraidingly to
-memory!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now the foolish old man had passed away, the
-barrier was removed, and all should be made light
-that had hitherto been darkness, as her husband's
-hastily written letter informed her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yet she thought, with honest indignation, how
-hard it was that she had been for all these eighteen
-years and more kept out of her proper sphere as
-the wedded wife of Richard Trevelyan, often taking
-almost flight from <i>this</i> town and <i>that</i> hotel, lest he
-should be recognised; consigned hence to a life of
-secresy and seclusion; a life that might yet cast
-doubts upon the very name and birth of her
-children, through the whim, the old-fashioned pride
-and folly of an absurd and antiquated peer, whose
-ideas went back, even far beyond the days of his
-youth, when people travelled in stage-coaches, used
-sand and sealing-wax for letters; when steam and
-telegraphy were unknown, when papers were
-published weekly at sixpence; and was one who deemed
-that railways, electricity, penny-dailies, and what is
-generally known as progress, are sending all the
-world to ruin.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her husband's letter filled her with joy. He
-playfully added, "I fear I have drunk of the well of
-St. Keyne before you," alluding to the well-known
-spring near Liskeard, a draught from which the
-Cornish folks suppose will ensure ascendancy in
-domestic affairs, and the letter was signed for the
-first time "Your loving husband, LAMORNA."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How strange to her eye the new signature looked.
-She felt somehow that she preferred his old one of
-"Richard." But they were one and the same now,
-and a little time should see her in her place, as
-mistress of that stately dwelling, Rhoscadzhel, which
-she had only seen once from a distance, and felt
-then, with an emotion of unmerited humiliation,
-that she could not, and dared not, enter.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Like all its predecessors, this letter, that
-contained so much in a few lines, was addressed to her
-as "Mrs. Devereaux," and she felt a momentary
-pang, but remembered that to have addressed her
-by the title, which was now so justly hers, might
-have sorely perplexed the rural postman of her
-neighbourhood.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap07"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER VII.
-<br /><br />
-LADY LAMORNA.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-It was a difficult task for Constance Devereaux
-to conceal her undeniable joy from her affectionate
-and observant son and daughter; and her heart
-would sometimes upbraid her that she should feel
-thus happy on an occasion which must cause them
-all to wear mourning, the external livery of at least
-conventional woe.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Denzil and his sister attributed her alternate fits
-of radiance and silence to pleasure at the anticipated
-return of their father, who on this occasion had
-necessarily been longer absent than usual from the
-Villa at Porthellick.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The equivocation and anxiety of years&mdash;years the
-happiness of which had in it so much of alloy&mdash;were
-about to be removed now! She was at last
-Constance Lady Lamorna of Rhoscadzhel&mdash;the
-wife of him who represented one of the oldest, and
-perhaps, most noble families in the duchy; but one
-passage in her husband's letter troubled and
-perplexed her, though it caused neither fear nor
-doubt&mdash;of one kind at least&mdash;in her loving and trusting
-heart.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Our marriage must still be kept a secret for a
-<i>little time</i>; when we meet, I shall tell you <i>why</i>."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After so much had been endured, and now when
-the barrier had been swept away by death, why
-should there be more secresy still&mdash;at a time so
-critical for their Denzil, too?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For a week she tortured herself with endless
-surmises which might have grown into actual fears
-but for the arrival of her husband, looking so well
-and so handsome, and though grave (for he had
-loved his generous old uncle&mdash;his second father, as
-he termed him), so evidently pleased and happy;
-and Constance thought it fortunate that their son
-and daughter were both absent, she had so much to
-say and to hear.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Denzil had taken his rod and gone forth to fish
-in some lonely tarn amid the moors, while Sybil
-had driven away in the pony phaeton to visit some
-friend at a distance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Here's his lord&mdash;&mdash; the master himself, ma'am!"
-said Derrick Braddon, who was the only human
-being in England that shared their mystery, and
-who was now "dying," as the phrase is, for
-permission to share with others the great secret the
-faithful fellow had kept so long and so well; and
-now Dick's weather-beaten visage was radiant with
-pride and pleasure as he ushered Richard into the
-pretty little drawing-room, when, with a girlish
-bound, Constance sprang into his open arms.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well, dearest Materfamilias," said he, kissing
-her tenderly on the proffered lips and radiant eyes;
-"you are looking as young and as charming as
-ever&mdash;ay, even as on that eventful morning in
-St. Mary's, at Montreal, a morning we may remember
-now without fear, my own one!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"So the poor old man is gone at last, and our
-days of dissimulation are over," she replied,
-sobbing amid the smiles that beamed on her up-turned
-face.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And you have acted wisely in not adopting deep
-mourning yet."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Why&mdash;wisely?" she asked, while perceiving
-that her husband must have doffed his black
-costume somewhere on the way to Porthellick, for
-he was as usual attired in a shooting-suit and
-brown-leather gaiters; and she felt an unpleasant
-emotion by this circumstance, for whence this
-continued caution, she thought; this care, this hateful
-continuation of an alias, as it seemed, this playing
-of a double character, if all were right and clear? and
-now the passage in his letter flashed upon her
-memory.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I said 'wisely,' dearest Constance; because we
-have still a part to play."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Still?" she queried, mournfully, and her eyelids
-drooped.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Tell me&mdash;the children know nothing of this
-change in our fortunes, I hope?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No&mdash;and dear Denzil, you are aware, has
-been&mdash;gazetted."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"To my old corps&mdash;so I saw; God bless the
-boy?" exclaimed Richard Trevelyan; "yes, but
-what I mean is, that I must bring you all before the
-world&mdash;you as the wife, and them as the children, of
-Lord Lamorna, with judicious care and a strength
-of <i>conviction</i> that none can doubt or challenge."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, Richard," said she, trembling, "I do not
-understand you."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Here, I am still known as Captain Devereaux;
-but the world, which deems me a bachelor, must
-be convinced that we were married to each other
-in <i>faciæ ecclesiæ</i>, as those lawyer-fellows have
-it; and the proofs of that circumstance must be
-forthcoming."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Proofs?" she repeated, faintly, as she seated
-herself, and grew very, very pale, for it seemed to
-her over-sensitive mind, as if his manner had
-become hard and sententious, even while he stooped
-over, and tenderly and caressingly held in his, her
-little hand whereon was the wedding ring that Père
-Latour had consecrated; and now there ensued a
-brief pause, for in his knowledge of her extreme
-sensibility, and the amount of his own loving
-nature, he feared the explanation of all he meant
-might wound.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though some might have deemed the secresy to
-which he had condemned her for years (lest they
-might lose the large fortune now theirs) selfish;
-Richard Trevelyan had ever been nervously jealous
-of her honour, and the honour of their innocent
-children; and at times, he had accused himself of
-moral cowardice in his submission to the caprice of
-his uncle. In his heart he had always cursed the
-duplicity to which they had been compelled to
-resort, and the false position in which that duplicity
-had placed them all for such a length of time. All
-this was to be atoned for now; but he felt that it
-must be done wisely, warily and surely, or, as he
-had said, with <i>strength</i>, lest the world in which he
-had hitherto moved as a bachelor&mdash;that selfish and
-suspicious bugbear called "Society" might shrug
-its shoulders, and ask, "Can all this story be true?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had some difficulty in explaining all this to
-Constance, but, fortunately, what he lacked in tact,
-he made up for in tenderness; yet, after a minute of
-silence and tears, she exclaimed with uncontrollable
-bitterness,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I alone am to blame! I ought to have foreseen
-the difficulties with which I should encumber you;
-but I was a simple, a trusting and a heedless
-girl!&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Nor has the trust of your girlhood been
-misplaced, Constance," he urged.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What Eden is without its serpent&mdash;what house
-without its skeleton? and I am yours!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My darling Constance, do not speak thus, and
-do not weep; think if Denzil or Sybil were to
-return and see you thus agitated&mdash;see what they
-never saw before, tears in your eyes; at least, tears
-so bitter as these," urged her husband, as he caressed
-her tenderly. "You know, my own love, that solid
-proofs of our marriage, beyond mere assertion,
-<i>must</i> be forthcoming; and until these proofs are in
-our hands, we must appear to the world as Captain
-and Mrs. Devereaux; we must act wisely and warily,
-I repeat, for the sake of our dear children."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The face of Constance became ghastly, and a
-dangerous gleam, such as Richard had never seen
-before, was in her dark eyes, while she said,
-huskily,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Honest Derrick Braddon witnessed our marriage, Richard."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"True; but I am now a peer of the realm, and I
-wish the full proof of it all. You know that during
-the past year I have thrice written to the Père
-Latour for the certificate of our marriage, but wrote
-in vain, he has left my letters unanswered. I might
-employ those lawyers, Gorbelly and Culverhole to
-sift the matter, but to use their aid, might set
-abroad a scandal at once; hence I now propose to
-start by the first steamer for America to get the
-necessary documents in person, and Derrick
-Braddon shall accompany me."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And may not I?" she pleaded, softly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No, darling Constance, I shall be gone for more
-than a month&mdash;for two, perhaps, and you have to
-get Denzil fitted out for his regiment&mdash;my poor
-Denzil, I shall grudge those two months' loss of his
-society fearfully, as you may suppose."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Pardon my momentary bitterness, dearest
-Richard, but after so much endurance, after such
-long concealment&mdash;" her voice failed her, and
-wreathing her soft arms round his neck, she nestled
-her little head on his breast, and whispered with a
-sigh, as if her heart would burst, "is it
-irrevocable&mdash;and must I too, be separated from my boy?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It is but for a time, Conny&mdash;no young fellow
-should be idle; and a year or so in the army&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And he will return, Richard&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"As the son and heir of Lord Lamorna!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But oh, how I shall miss him!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You will have Sybil and me!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But you, too, I am about to lose."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"For a time only; and do not speak so
-forbodingly, dear Constance."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I felt such disappointment that Denzil should
-appear at Sandhurst, and even in the Gazette, not
-as a Trevelyan, but as a Devereaux!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And a Devereaux he deems himself, and must
-continue to do so, till I return from Montreal.
-Old Trecarrel is going in command to India, and
-when matters are all squared here, I'll get Denzil
-on his Staff with ease. We have been the victims
-of circumstances; have I not a thousand times said,
-that if my uncle had discovered our marriage, we
-should have lost all? He is gone at last; but you
-know, Conny darling, that his ideas were simply
-absurd&mdash;in some respects suited only to the
-middle-ages&mdash;the middle ages do I say? By Jove, to those
-when the Anglo-Saxons wore coats of paint, and
-dyed their yellow hair blue. But are things
-arranged in this world wisely, think you, Constance?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I dare not impugn the plans of a beneficent
-Providence."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But Providence never meant the conditions of
-life to turn out as they too often do."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How, Richard," she, asked gently; "I don't
-quite understand you?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"That the greatest number of the rich, the powerful
-and the most successful&mdash;by flukes, perhaps&mdash;are
-fools or knaves."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ah, but if riches brought talent&mdash;the wealthy
-and powerful would be too happy, and Fate or
-Providence do not make them so."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I cannot express to you how my heart was wrung
-with jealous envy, and even with shame, when I
-saw Downie's family stand around my uncle's grave,
-and enjoying all the freedom and hospitality of
-Rhoscadzhel&mdash;even his cold-blooded, fashionable
-wife, too&mdash;and thought how my own three tender
-loves were debarred&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And unknown&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes&mdash;&mdash;d&mdash;m it, unknown, and must be for a few
-weeks still, but time cures all evils, and it will cure
-this. Yet is not the gazetting of the two cousins,
-Denzil and the oldest of Downie's four boys, in one
-paragraph, and to my old corps, too a remarkable
-coincidence&mdash;all the more so, that they are ignorant
-of each other's existence?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My poor Denzil&mdash;he is so bright and clever!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ay, more clever than ever I was. In my time,
-when I met you so happily in pleasant Montreal,
-one could be a fair average soldier without all the
-polyglot accomplishments so necessary now, when
-he who quits Sandhurst as a candidate for a
-commission direct, with five shillings and threepence
-per diem to further his extravagance, might quite
-as well come out for the Church or Bar, with
-the chance of a safer and better paid berth in
-either."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And he joins his regiment as a Devereaux&mdash;my
-poor boy!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Still harping on that string!" said Richard, a
-little impatiently. "On my return when matters
-are all sorted and made clear by the legal documents,
-Denzil and Sybil must be simply told, that
-my succession to estates and a title have necessitated
-a change of name."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But our Denzil is no longer a boy&mdash;and I shall
-almost blush for my past duplicity, before my own girl!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Come, come, Conny, this is foolish; what is
-done cannot be undone, and it is useless to cry over
-spilt milk."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And how to explain this absence, for perhaps
-two months, you say, when they have been longing
-every hour for your return from London, where they
-believed you to be?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I know not yet, Constance; but a little time
-will make all things clear. We had no marriage
-contract&mdash;a love-sick subaltern and a schoolgirl
-were not likely to think of such a thing&mdash;we had
-only the brief certificate deposited with Père Latour;
-but a will executed by me, in favour of you and the
-children shall make all right and secure; and now
-my little wife, for a biscuit and glass of dry sherry,
-as I have ridden this morning all the way from
-beyond Launceston."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Constance retired for a minute to bathe her eyes,
-to smooth her hair, and came back to look composed
-and smiling; for she had still to act a part.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The hour for which she had so pined and yearned&mdash;especially
-since her son Denzil first saw the light
-in a lonely village among the Apennines&mdash;the time
-when she should take her place as the wife of
-Richard Trevelyan, (not that she cared for the
-wealth that place might bring her) had come; and
-yet there were fresh delays to be endured by her,
-and now it might be dangers dared by him she
-loved so well; but he strove in his honest, manly,
-and affectionate way to cheer her; and as he filled
-his glass with the sparkling golden sherry, he kissed
-her once more as if they were lovers still and said merrily,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I drink to your speedy welcome home, my dear
-little Lady Lamorna!"
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap08"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER VIII.
-<br /><br />
-THE BROKEN CIRCLE.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Sybil who was clever with her pencil, made up
-quite a collection of sketches from her portfolio, a
-pleasant labour of love, for Denzil to take with him,
-as a souvenir of herself and their beloved Cornwall,
-and skilfully the girl's able hand and artistic eye
-had reproduced the wondrous stone avenues of
-Dartmoor and Merivale, the Stone Pillar of St. Colomb,
-the Cliff Castles of Treryn, Tintagel and elsewhere,
-with many a pretty and peaceful cottage scene.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Preparations for her husband's journey, and more
-than all, the Indian outfit of Denzil, luckily occupied
-the attention of Constance for a time; thus her
-hands and those of Sybil were fully employed, and
-the minds of both had no leisure to brood over the
-coming separation.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Weary of the monotony of life at the villa, great
-was the delight of old weather-beaten Dick Braddon,
-to "be off" as he said, "to see the world once more
-with the master," whom he loved only second
-perhaps to Denzil, whose free frank bearing charmed
-the veteran, who averred that he was exactly like
-what his father was, when he joined the Cornish
-Light Infantry, a cherry-cheeked ensign, long ago in
-America.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But the hour of separation drew near, when both
-father and son were to leave Porthellick, and depart
-each upon their long watery journey;&mdash;the former
-to America, and the latter to what seemed the other
-end of the world&mdash;India; and the heart of Constance
-began to sink in spite of herself.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, Richard," she whispered once, with her soft
-face nestling in her husband's neck, while his
-protecting arm went kindly round her; "the greatest
-joy on earth is to possess a child&mdash;the greatest woe
-to lose it! The loss of our parents we may, and
-must, in the course of time anticipate; but the loss
-of our children&mdash;never!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But Denzil will return, Conny&mdash;you would not
-have the boy tied to your apron-strings, like Sybil?"
-urged Richard, laughing to cheer and rouse her;
-but, nevertheless, the rank, title and fair fortune
-now before them all, the mother's anxious heart
-foreboded sorrow in the future; and now came the
-last night her boy was to sleep under his father's
-roof, ere he was to go forth into the world&mdash;forth
-like a branch torn from its parent stem.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When all were in slumber that night, poor Constance
-stole in to watch her Denzil as he slept. The
-feeble rays of the night-lamp played on the features
-of her boy, and on the glitter of a laced scarlet-coat
-and gold epaulettes that hung on the pier glass. With
-the vanity natural to youth, he had been contemplating
-himself in his Regimental finery ere he
-went to repose, and his bullock-trunk and overland,
-lettered for "India," were among the first things
-that caught her eye, bringing more home to her
-heart the fact of his departure.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was still hers!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To-morrow he should be far away from her, out
-on the great and stirring highway of life&mdash;her petted
-boy no longer; and smiles, like ripples upon shining
-water, seemed to spread over the smooth face of the
-sleeping lad, even as the tears gathered in the eyes,
-and prayer in the heart of the mother who watched
-him for a time, with her hands clasped, and stole
-away with many a backward glance, thinking how
-lonely she should be when that hour on the morrow
-came.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And this tall and handsome lad&mdash;this young
-soldier going forth to carry the Queen's colours in
-the distant East, was once her "baby boy," the
-child she had borne, nursed and nurtured. She had
-a sweet and sad, yet proud and joyous consciousness
-in this. Had he been weakly, deformed or crippled,
-she should have loved him all the same; but then,
-thank God! her Denzil was so handsome.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Often in far-away lands, on weary marches, in
-comfortless tents and rickety bungalows, on the
-banks of the Sutlej, or amid hostile Sikhs and
-Afghans, would he dream of the soft and loving
-face that had been bent in silence over his&mdash;the face
-he never more might see, save in those kind visions
-that God sends in sleep, to soothe&mdash;it may be, to
-sadden and to warn us.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No child can ever know how dearly its parents
-love it&mdash;how they suffer in its illness, loss or
-departure," whispered Constance to herself; "still," she
-thought upbraidingly, "I left my poor father to
-sorrow in his humble home at Montreal&mdash;but then
-it was with a husband, so dear and true!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The child that is ill or absent, is always valued
-the most; so poor Sybil was almost forgotten by
-her mother for the time. A few hours more, and
-both husband and son had left her in tears, to
-separate in London, each to pursue his own journey.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Of Richard's ultimate intentions, Denzil and
-Sybil were to be left in ignorance, and also of the
-object and purport of his absence. So Constance
-was left with her daughter only by her side.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The poor mother's heart felt as if thrust back
-upon herself now, for she was the mistress of a
-great family secret, which, as yet, she could not
-share even with Sybil.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So the long dreaded "to-morrow," had come, and
-other morrows followed, and Constance began to
-feel herself most sadly alone. Often she stole into
-the well-known room to kiss the pillow on which
-her Denzil's cheek had rested; to weep over the
-bed as if a death had been there, and not the
-departure of a gallant boy full of hope and life;
-and on each occasion as she lingered there, she
-strove to pourtray in fancy his face, as she last saw
-him, sleeping all unconscious that she hovered
-near; and with a wild but loving presentiment and
-hope that he would again occupy it some day, she
-kept his room intact, exactly as he had left it; his
-books, his fencing foils on those particular shelves,
-his old hat stuck round with fishing flies, on that
-particular peg where he was wont to hang it; his
-rods and guns, in yonder corner; though every
-detail, such as these, reminded her of him more
-vividly, fed her grief and roused the intense
-longing for his presence and return to her arms again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"India&mdash;India?" she would say half aloud when
-communing with herself; "it may be ten years of
-separation. Ten years! Oh&mdash;no, never, surely!
-With my Richard's great influence as a peer of the
-realm, that must never be permitted. In ten years
-what changes must inevitably happen; who may be
-alive then, and who dead? Sybil should then be
-seven-and-twenty&mdash;married perhaps&mdash;and to
-whom?&mdash;with children it may be&mdash;my poor innocent
-Sybil! Oh no; three years at the utmost, and
-Denzil shall be again by his mamma's side!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So the lonely Constance pondered, hoped and
-lovingly spun out like a web, her desires or mental
-view of the future, striving to gather happiness
-therefrom; while Sybil sought in vain to cheer her
-with music, to lure her out for a walk in the
-willowed dell, or a drive along the coast road, in their
-pretty pony phaeton.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The month was October now. With a sullen
-wail the autumnal blasts swept from the wooded
-hollows of Moorwinstow to the cavernous headland
-of Tintagel, cresting before their breath the
-waves of the Bristol Channel. There came gusts of
-rain too, that beat dolefully on the window panes,
-with an angry and impatient patter, adding to the
-dreariness of heart experienced by those in the
-Villa of Porthellick. The season was bleak, and
-nowhere could it seem more so than among the barren
-moors, the sea-beat bluffs, and resounding caverns,
-the wind swept pasture lands and promontories of
-Cornwall.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The woods were almost bare; the few remaining
-leaves, fluttered brown and crisp on the bared twigs;
-the stackyards were full, and the produce of the
-potato fields was consigned to long brown pits of
-fresh earth and straw, for the coming winter; the
-uplands were covered with decaying stubble, or
-being ploughed, while, gorged with worms, the great
-crows sat sleepily in the shining furrows. Thick as
-gnats in summer, the dingy coloured sparrows
-twittered in the hedgerows, which were being lopped
-and trimmed; and the axes of the woodmen were
-heard in thicket and copse; while the smoke of the
-steam-engine that worked and drained the adjacent
-copper-mine, hung low in the frowsy air, adding
-at times to the gloom of the landscape.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Richard Trevelyan had sailed, and Denzil too;
-and Constance was aware that each of them had to
-traverse a wintry sea, the former before he returned
-and the latter before he reached his destination.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The public prints had duly announced that "the
-Right Hon. Lord Lamorna and suite (<i>i.e.</i> old Derrick
-Braddon) had gone for a tour in America;" and
-Denzil if his eyes ever saw the announcement&mdash;which
-is doubtful&mdash;could little have dreamed how
-nearly it concerned him, and the mother on whom
-he doted, and whom he still knew only as
-"Mrs. Devereaux."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The latter had to make many an excuse, even to
-Sybil, to account for her husband's protracted
-absence from the villa; and Downie Trevelyan,
-when he read the above announcement in the
-"Morning Post," wiped his gold eye-glass and read
-it again with much perplexity and secret annoyance,
-while surmising "what the deuce could take
-Richard so suddenly to America at this season of
-the year!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The new task and anxiety of watching the shipping
-intelligence next occupied the attention of
-Constance. The steamer in which Richard sailed,
-had been seen, signalled and spoken with in
-sundry Atlantic latitudes and longitudes; and some
-seventeen days or so saw her safely at the end of
-her voyage; but the transport, a great Indiaman
-with Denzil on board, was seldom heard of, some at
-long dates; and at longer dates too, came his
-hastily written letters from St. Helena, and from
-Ascension, or by homeward-bound ships; few men,
-even of the most wealthy, thought then of proceeding
-to India by the scarcely developed overland
-route; and how fondly those letters were read over
-and over again, the last thing at night, and the first
-in the morning, the mother, situated as Constance
-was then, may imagine; for the loving little family
-circle was broken now.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap09"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER IX.
-<br /><br />
-FOREBODINGS.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-If ever Constance left the villa, she sought the
-direction of the coast, and when there never wearied
-of watching the wide expanse of the Bristol
-Channel with its passing ships and steamers; for the
-changing ocean was the path by which her loved
-ones were to return to her; Richard, within a month
-perhaps, now; but their son Denzil&mdash;oh, years must
-elapse, her heart foreboded and knew, ere she should
-see him again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And now as the season advanced, and storms and
-wrecks among the Scilly Isles and about the Land's
-End were not unfrequent, her soul became a prey
-to nervous fears, that were fed and fostered in spite
-of herself by Derrick's sister, Winny Braddon, a
-superstitious old Cornish woman, who had been
-Sybil's nurse.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Winny, a devout believer in dreams, visions, the
-virtues of miraculous wells and so forth, was wont
-to declare that when all specifics failed she had
-been cured of rheumatism by crawling through the
-famous Men-an-tol, or Holed Stone near Lanyon;
-and now she shook her grey head ominously when
-the wind blew a gale and rolled a heavy surf upon
-the shore, and averred that she could hear the
-wreck-bells booming under the sea at Boscastle.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So Constance, though naturally free from all idle
-fancies save that which we may term the affectionate
-superstition of the heart, could not listen to the
-croaking of this old woman without vague and
-growing fear; for though Winny knew nothing of the
-interest that "Mrs. Devereaux" had in the family
-of Lamorna, or her connection therewith (Derrick
-having kept his secret well) those sounds amid the
-deep at Boscastle were supposed by Cornish tradition
-to bode evil to the line of Trevelyan.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For it would appear, as Winny Braddon related,
-that long ago the villagers of Boscastle were very
-envious of the melodious and musical bells that
-were rung in the church of Tintagel, to which they
-were a gift from its superior the Abbot of
-Fontevrault in Normandy. So De Bottreaux who was
-lord of the manor, and the site of whose castle is
-now marked by a green mound only, to gratify
-those villagers who were his vassals, ordered from
-London a merry peal for the spire of Boscastle
-church; and those bells were duly shipped on board
-a vessel named the <i>Koithgath</i> caravel, for her
-captain, Launcelot Trevelyan, was a younger son of
-the family of Lamorna. He had been a wild
-fellow, of whose future career evil had been
-predicted by a <i>Pyrdrak Brâz</i> (old Cornish for a
-great-witch) who dwelt in the Zawn Reeth, a granite
-cavern at Nans Isal, on the western side of the bay
-so named&mdash;a wild and savage place surrounded by
-masses of scattered rock.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So Master Launcelot ran off to sea, and served
-under Drake and Hawkins in many a dark and
-desperate day's work among the Spaniards in
-Brazil, Madeira, and the Cape de Verde; and had
-once been round the Cape of Storms as far as the
-realms of that mysterious personage then known as
-Prester John.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thus in due time, steered by Paul Poindester, a
-famous pilot from the Scilly Isles, the <i>Koithgath</i>,
-with the bells on board, arrived in the offing and in
-sight of Boscastle, with all its furzy hollows, above
-which rose the castle of Bottreaux, with the
-standard of its owner flying&mdash;a great banner,
-bearing three toads and a griffin.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As the ship drew in shore, the bells of Tintagel
-church, that towers still on a bleak, exposed, and
-lofty cliff to the westward of King Arthur's castle,
-rang out a taunting and a joyous peal that mingled
-with the booming of the ocean as it rolled on the
-bluffs below, or far up the sandy bay of Trebarreth
-Strand.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then, according to the story, Launcelot Trevelyan
-swore an exulting oath as he surveyed the
-stupendous scenery of his native shore, adding,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I am here again&mdash;thank my good ship and her
-canvas!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Nay," said the old pilot Poindester, as he
-reverently lifted his hat, "rather thank God and
-St. Michael of Cornwall."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"By Heaven," rejoined Trevelyan, "I thank
-myself and the fair wind only."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Poindester though fearless, for he was a native of
-those dangerous Isles where for one who dies a
-natural death nine are drowned, rebuked this
-irreverence, on which the wild Trevelyan stormed
-and blasphemed, and forgetting to heed his compass
-or steerage, permitted his caravel to be dashed
-ashore, just as a sudden storm came on, and the
-waves of the Bristol Channel hurled her on the
-cliffs of the Black Pit, where every soul on board
-perished, save old Paul Poindester. From the high
-gilded poop of his caravel, Launcelot Trevelyan,
-with a fierce malediction, cast into the sea, before
-it swallowed him up, the silver whistle and chain,
-his badge of naval authority, the gift of Sir Francis
-Drake, lest it should become some wrecker's prey;
-and as the timbers parted, and the ship went down
-into the angry sea, the clangour of the bells
-resounded in her hold; and there to this day they
-are heard by people loitering on the shore, when
-storms are nigh&mdash;or when aught is about to happen
-to the family of Lamorna, add the superstitious
-folks of Cornwall.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, why did this absurd old woman relate such
-a boding story to me?" thought Constance, for
-situated as she was, she had become somewhat of a
-prey to gloomy and grotesque fancies; hence, often
-in the night she would dream of wrecks, and seem
-to hear the sound of alarm-bells in her ear, and
-starting from bed, would draw up the window-blind
-and look forth to see if a storm was raving without,
-forgetting then, even though it were so, all might be
-calm and peaceful elsewhere.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then when she saw the autumnal moon in all its
-unclouded glory flooding her chamber and her white
-night-dress with silver lustre; that all was calm and
-still, the diamond-like stars sparkling above the
-dark willows in the glen, or the darker woodland
-in the distance; and that no noises came to her
-listening ear, but perhaps the bark of a house-dog,
-or such as may be aptly termed the sounds of night
-and silence, she would go back to her lonely pillow
-with a prayer on her lips for those who were absent,
-and for all who were on the sea.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A letter from Richard, made her supremely happy!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had reached Montreal in safety. The poor
-old curé of the secluded little chapel of St. Mary&mdash;the
-good Père Latour&mdash;was dead, and had been so
-for some time; hence the reason that her husband's
-letters had remained unanswered. Even the little
-acolyte, the other witness of their marriage, had
-gone to his last home; and now in memory,
-Constance could recall the thin, spare figure of the
-old clergyman, with his white hair brushed behind
-his ears, his peculiar shovel hat, long black soutane,
-cape and gaiters to the knee&mdash;for he had been a
-man of the old school of French colonial priests.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"His little chapel and vestry, both built of wood,
-as you will remember, Conny, were burned down
-three years after our regiment left the city,"
-continued Richard's letter; "and all the Records
-there perished in the flames; among other things,
-the volume of the Register in which our marriage
-was entered. But, most providentially, the
-successor of Latour in the poor incumbency, found
-among some of his papers, the signed copy&mdash;or
-rather I should say, the original of our marriage
-lines or certificate&mdash;which we had never received.
-<i>It is now in my possession</i>, and I have folded it
-inside a will which I prepared on the voyage out&mdash;a
-will, dearest Conny, in which, to make all certain
-for the future&mdash;as there are those at home, whom
-I doubt&mdash;I leave all I have in the world to you
-for life, and to Denzil and Sybil after you,
-absolutely. Your poor father and mother are
-interred not far from the grave of Père Latour,
-and I have ordered white marble crosses to be
-erected to the memory of the three. I shall sail
-for England a fortnight hence, in the steamer
-<i>Admiral</i>, and till then, shall renew in sweet
-fancy the days of our loverhood, by many a ramble
-about Montreal; by Hochlega, the picturesque site
-of the old Indian village, now its eastern suburb;
-the nine aisles of the great Cathedral; the gardens
-of the Convent of Notre Dame, and among the
-mountains close by&mdash;in many a shady walk and
-lane; and Heaven and myself alone can know how
-I miss you and our dearest Sybil, and how I am
-longing to return." It was signed "<i>Lamorna</i>."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My dear, dear Richard!" sobbed the wife, while
-her tears of joy fell fast.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"All the places I mention, you must remember
-well," he added in a postscript; "and you may
-imagine how sad it is for me to wander alone where
-once we were so happy together."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He was to sail in a fortnight from the date of
-his letter," thought Constance, with a glow of
-pleasure in her heart; "he must now be on the sea! and
-in a fortnight from this, I shall see him again&mdash;my
-dear, dear husband&mdash;so kind, so good, so true
-and thoughtful, even to mark, unasked by me, the
-last resting-place of poor mamma and papa&mdash;and
-even of the good Père Latour. The latter act, is in
-itself, a compliment to me."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then an emotion of terror seized her, as she
-perused the letter again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-What if the attested copy of those important
-"lines," their certificate of marriage, <i>had perished</i>
-in the same fire which consumed the wooden chapel,
-the vestry, and its registers! What then would
-have been her fate, and more than all, by sequence,
-the fate and position of the children she idolised&mdash;her
-proud boy Denzil, and the beautiful Sybil, now
-budding on the verge of womanhood?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A stigma&mdash;a stain&mdash;she could never remove,
-might have been on them, to the end of their
-lives; and her soul seemed to die within her as
-she thought of the peril&mdash;the narrow escape, they
-had all made!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She thanked Heaven with fervour in her heart,
-and again and again, it swelled with gratitude to her
-husband, and with love for him and confidence in
-him; with joy, too, that he would so soon hear all
-this from her own loving lips&mdash;for in a few days
-now, the <i>Admiral</i> would be due in the Thames!
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap10"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER X.
-<br /><br />
-THE LONELY TARN.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-While Constance Trevelyan&mdash;or Lady Lamorna,
-for so we ought to name her, though still known
-only as Mrs. Devereaux&mdash;was counting the hours
-of her husband's absence, and looking forward
-fondly to his return, Sybil, unnoticed, was absent
-from home more often and for longer periods than
-had been her wont; and the mother, preoccupied
-by her own secret thoughts, and anxiety for those
-who were far distant, failed to remark the circumstance
-till it was incidentally mentioned by Winny Braddon.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When questioned, Constance remarked with
-concern, that Sybil blushed deeply, and hastened to
-show her sketch-book, now nearly full, as an
-evidence of her artistic industry, and the progress
-she had made; she did not add with whom, or
-that she had a lover. She who never before had
-a secret from her mamma, was beginning to have
-one now; and had the latter looked more closely at
-the sketch-book, she might have found traces and
-touches of a bolder and more masterly pencil than
-Sybil's; and it all came to pass thus.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A mile or two from the Villa of Porthellick, there
-lies a lake, which had been a favourite resort of her
-brother Denzil when fishing for pike; and of this
-place, and a great old Druidical stone that stands
-thereby, Sybil wished to make a sketch, and on a
-suitable day proceeded thither with all her
-apparatus, as she was anxious to have her production
-finished before her papa's return.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was a lonely tarn, deep and dark, yet there the
-bright green leaves and snowy flowers of the water
-lilies floated, and the voracious pike which rose at
-times to snap a fly or so, went plunging to the oozy
-bottom at the sight of aught so unusual as a human
-being invading the solitude.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There were within its circuit, three tiny
-willow-tufted isles, where the water-ducks built their
-nests amid the osiers, and near which an occasional
-wild swan flapped defiance with its wings
-among the floating lilies that impeded its stately
-progress.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the hill slopes the varied tints of autumn
-were in all their beauty; the ripened apples and
-pears were dropping among the long grass of many
-an orchard; green yet lingered amid the foliage of
-the old Cornish elms; but the beeches were almost
-blood red, and the oaks were crisped and brown.
-In the calm depth of the tarn was reflected the
-shadow of the giant stone pillar, around which the
-storms, the winds and rain of perhaps three
-thousand years had swept; yet there it stood, solid,
-silent, grim and monstrous. Could that stone have
-spoken, what a tale it might have told of savage
-rites and human sacrifice; what a history unfolded
-of races long since passed away or merged in
-others&mdash;the men of days before even the galleys of the
-Phoenicians cast anchor in Bude Bay, when their
-crews came to barter for tin with the wild
-aborigines of Cornwall.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sybil, seated on a little camp-stool, was so intent
-upon her work, that some time elapsed before she
-perceived that another artist&mdash;whether professional
-or, like herself an amateur, she could not
-determine&mdash;was similarly occupied not far from her; and
-insensibly her eye wandered, from time to time, in
-the direction of this stranger.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was decidedly a handsome young man, whose
-grey tweed suit and round hat of grey felt,
-encircled by a narrow crape band, failed to conceal
-a very distinguished air. His features were good
-and well bronzed by a foreign sun, apparently. He
-was without whiskers, or was closely shaven; but
-a smart mustache and dark eyebrows gave character
-to his face. He was seated on a fragment
-of rock, and in intervals between the progress of
-his work and the whiffs of a cigar, spoke caressingly
-to a large dog that lay near him on the
-grass.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The latter, a magnificent Thibet mastiff, with
-heavy jowl and pendant flap-like ears, suddenly
-rose and came slowly, leisurely and steadily forward
-to Sybil, and after a glance of survey, eyed her with
-what was almost a smile&mdash;if a <i>dog</i> can be said to
-smile. He then sniffed her skirts, and pawed them
-with his enormous paw. Sybil evinced no fear; she
-patted the clog's huge rough head; but was
-somewhat surprised, when he lay down on her skirts
-with the utmost composure, and showed no
-disposition to release her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The young man, whose eyes had followed, with
-some interest, the motions of his dog, now whistled
-to him; but the mastiff did not stir.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Rajah&mdash;Rajah&mdash;you impudent rascal, come
-here!" he cried.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But Rajah made no other response, than by
-whipping the turf with his long tail.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Upon this his master came round the margin of
-the tarn, and approaching Sybil, threw aside his
-cigar, lifted his hat and apologized, adding,&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I trust that my dog has not alarmed you?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh no&mdash;not in the least," replied Sybil, who
-began to feel somewhat embarrassed now.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I assure you that he is very gentle; but he is
-permitting himself to be too free, and very few
-young ladies would, like you, have seen such an
-animal approach them without betraying signs of
-alarm, and all that sort of thing. Get up sir!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, please don't," said Sybil holding out an
-ungloved and very pretty hand, deprecatingly,
-between the dog and the young man's uplifted
-cane; "all dogs, and even cats, like me."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Thereby acknowledging your power&mdash;eh?"
-responded the stranger, looking down admiringly
-into the soft, bright, earnest face, and clear dark
-eyes that were turned upward to his own.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I don't know what you mean by my power,"
-said Sybil, with simplicity; "but, as most people
-like me, why should not dogs&mdash;and&mdash;and this is
-such a splendid fellow!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I have brought him from a very distant country&mdash;he
-was the farewell gift of a friend who died,
-otherwise," he added, gallantly, "I should beg your
-acceptance of him."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sybil now coloured more deeply, and became
-uneasy; but the stranger resumed in his most
-suave tone,&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And you have been sketching this pretty little
-lake&mdash;like me? Our tastes and occupation are
-quite similar!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sybil had closed her book of sketches.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Will you not do me the favour to&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Show you my poor production&mdash;do you mean, sir?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But you may be an artist, and a well-skilled one."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And what then?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I should blush for my work."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Nay. Well, then, I am not an artist, but merely
-an amateur&mdash;an officer on leave; yet I am fond of
-using my pencil, and have the regimental reputation
-of doing so with pretty good success."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sybil thought of her brother Denzil&mdash;he too was
-an officer; poor Denzil, now so far, far away&mdash;and
-she gave her new acquaintance a half shy and half
-doubtful glance, that served to charm him very
-much, and then showed her sketch, which he
-praised warmly, as by good breeding and in duty
-bound.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was doubtless cleverly done, but his eye
-wandered to the rare and delicate beauty of the
-little hand that had achieved it. Her sketch,
-however, was inferior to his own, which he now
-produced, with Sybil's own figure seated on the
-camp-stool introduced in the middle distance, so
-as to give the exact proportion of the great
-rock-pillar.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, sir," she exclaimed, "you have me in your
-sketch, as well as the big stone."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Could I omit the most pleasing feature in my
-little landscape?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sybil coloured again, for her education, and the
-peculiar mode in which she had been reared, made
-her, at times, shy and reserved; she knew not why,
-for to be so was not her natural character, which
-was rather candid, frank, and free; so, to change
-the subject from herself, she hastened to turn over
-the leaves of the stranger's sketch-book, wherein
-were many drawings full of spirit and interest.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"That wooden cross," said he, "marks the grave
-of poor Jack Delamere, who gave me Rajah,
-through whom I have had the pleasure of making
-your acquaintance to-day. He died when we were
-on the march up country to Allahabad, and I
-buried him in a grove of date palms."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And he lies there alone?" said Sybil, her eyes
-involuntarily wandering to the great dog which lay
-near them on the grass.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Quite alone&mdash;poor Jack! he was the soul of the
-mess-bungalow."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And what is this Hall with the wonderful
-pillars?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh! that is a Buddhist Temple&mdash;all hewn out
-of the living rock. I sketched it at Ellora. Those
-caves are masses of carving, and are among the most
-wonderful things in India, as they often consist of
-many apartments or halls of vast height, decorated,
-as you see, with elaborate columns and monstrous
-statues. My next sketch is a Hindoo water-girl. I
-gave her a rupee to stand for me at Arcot; but, as
-her clothing is somewhat scanty, we shall skip to
-the next. Ah&mdash;that is a mango tree, and here are
-the palace of Mysore and the town and fort of
-Agra."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How much you have seen of the world!" said
-Sybil, her dark eyes dilating as she glanced for a
-moment at the stranger's young and handsome face;
-"I wonder if Denzil will ever look upon those
-places. Heavens, how poor and mean do my Cornish
-sketches of ruins, rocks, and engines look, after
-yours!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Nay, do not say so," replied the other, smiling,
-as he surveyed with growing interest the soft bright
-face of the speaker, under its piquant little hat and
-veil; "hideous as the edifices are in reality, some
-of our mining engine-houses, with all their chains
-and pulleys, wheels and timber, blocks and gearing,
-their heaps of rubbish and debris, they make
-somewhat picturesque sketches."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"True; but I prefer those great solemn stones
-of unknown antiquity, and I never tire of drawing
-them."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But they are so deucedly alike," replied the
-young officer; "and now for your book&mdash;ah, do
-permit me," he added, turning the leaves.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"That is the Lake of Como, where we passed
-several months," said Sybil, tremulous with hesitation,
-for what she deemed alike the boldness of the
-attempt and the poverty of her execution. "I now
-wonder how I dared to think of depicting such a
-scene, with all its white villas and green groves of
-orange and flowering arbutas; its cliffs and crags,
-and, over all, the snow-clad peaks of the Alps, and
-the mountains of the Brianza covered with pine-forests!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Perhaps each sketch is the souvenir of some
-past or tender happiness? And this stately palace,
-with the terrace before it?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Is one where papa and mamma resided when I
-was very young."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You are not very old yet," was the laughing
-rejoinder.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It is on the Arno. But how often have I wished
-for power to depict the lovely Lake of Como, as we
-could see it by night from the windows of our villa&mdash;the
-shore all dark, or dotted only by the lights in
-many a palace and dwelling, the snowy summits of
-the Splugen Alps rising against the starlit sky, and
-the oars of the gondoliers flashing as their little
-vessels shot across the sheet of silent water."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You are quite an enthusiast!" said the officer,
-smiling; and at that moment, with her sparkling
-eyes and flushed cheeks, the usually pale girl looked
-radiantly beautiful; but her dark eyes drooped, and
-she replied&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I did so love Como and our pleasant picnics to
-Bellaggio and other places, where the orange-trees
-overhang the water so closely that the golden fruit
-dipped in it from time to time, when the laden
-branches were stirred by the passing wind."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Now you will surely agree with me, that when
-contrasted with such scenery as you describe, our
-Cornish rock-pillars and mines are but stupid
-affairs?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ah, no&mdash;I cannot assent to that; there is Bottalick
-Mine, for example, where the gloomy precipices
-of slate are hewn into such fantastic shapes,
-and the great engine, perched on the ledge of a
-terrible cliff, enables the miner to work below the
-sea. Oh, think of that, to be quarrying for copper
-and tin in damp grottoes and cells four hundred and
-eighty feet below the ocean, and to hear its waves&mdash;the
-same waves that dash against Cape Cornwall&mdash;rolling
-the mighty boulders in thunder on the bluffs
-overhead!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Have <i>you</i> been down and heard all that?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No," replied Sybil, blushing for her own energy
-and enthusiasm.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How then&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Denzil has been down often."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Denzil again," said the stranger with a smile,
-and perhaps the faintest tone of pique; "you are
-surely very fond of this Denzil."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Fond&mdash;I love him dearly!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A candid admission."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He is my only brother."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I am so glad to hear that he is a brother, and
-not&mdash;not&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A cousin or&mdash;friend."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sybil felt that the conversation was wandering
-from the picturesque, and now said, a little hastily,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I must bid you good morning&mdash;my way lies
-there," she added, pointing westward.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And mine also; so far, at least, as the high
-road&mdash;allow me to have the pleasure of carrying
-your camp-stool."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Many thanks."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Do you reside in this neighbourhood?" he
-asked, after a pause.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes&mdash;a little way from this," she replied, evasively.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"<i>I</i> am on a visit to an old Indian friend&mdash;General
-Trecarrel," said the stranger, in a tone and manner
-calculated to invite confidence; but Sybil instantly
-became reserved. Her absent parent, she knew not
-why, had ever most sedulously avoided the General
-and all his family, and her mamma had apparently
-acquiesced in this, for they knew that the General
-would at once, in the spurious "Captain Devereaux,"
-recognise Richard Trevelyan. "You, perhaps, know
-the Trecarrels?" added her companion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I have not the pleasure&mdash;though I have heard
-of them, of course," replied Sybil, adjusting her veil
-tightly over her face, with an air of annoyance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The gentleman said no more; but in silence
-carried her sketch-book and camp-stool until they
-reached the high road, where, aware that to remain
-longer with her might appear intrusive, he lifted his
-hat, and with studious politeness bade her adieu.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sybil hastened homeward, nor dared to look back,
-though perfectly conscious that the eyes of the
-stranger, whose voice seemed to linger in her ear,
-would be looking after her more than once. She
-had all a young girl's perfect conviction of this.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap11"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XI.
-<br /><br />
-CONCERNING FLIRTATION.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-The next noon proved a lovely autumnal one, and
-Sybil repaired once more to the tarn for the purpose
-of giving a few finishing touches to her sketch.
-She would have blushed with annoyance, and
-indignantly repudiated the idea that a chance of the
-stranger being there, perhaps, for the same purpose,
-led her to go at precisely the same hour as on the
-preceding day. And yet, though a disappointment,
-it was somewhat of a relief to her, that neither he
-nor his great dog were in sight; the floating swans
-and the huge rock-pillar alone met her eye in the
-solitude; and seating herself, she spread out her
-skirts, threw up her veil, and assumed her pencil;
-but in the midst of her work, her tiny white hand
-grew tremulous, every pulse quickened, and a thrill
-passed through her when she heard steps among the
-long rank grass; the great nose of the Thibet mastiff
-was placed upon her knee, and she perceived her
-new friend again approaching, but on horseback.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<i>He</i> had not made even the pretence of coming to
-sketch as on the preceding morning; he was without
-the materials for doing so, and hence must have
-come deliberately in search of her, for he dismounted.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I am indeed fortunate in meeting you here
-again," said he, "but I shall not intrude, as I fear I
-did yesterday; I am merely rambling towards the
-sea-shore, to enjoy the breeze and a cigar till some
-friends join me."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sybil, who felt that she was painfully pale, bowed
-to her new acquaintance, who manifested no haste
-to prosecute his "ramble," but seemed perfectly
-confident and disposed to be politely familiar. Still
-Sybil had no emotion of alarm at this; she had
-never in her life been insulted, and felt that there
-was no real cause to repulse him, save that he was a
-visitor of the Trecarrels.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He, on the other hand, while gazing from time to
-time into her upturned face, was struck more by the
-calm, honest, and innocent expression of her radiant
-features than by their beauty, which was less that
-of form than of character, for though small and
-exquisitely feminine, her face, like that of her
-mother, was strongly marked, by the darkness of
-her eyes, their brows and long lashes. Her mouth
-certainly was beautifully formed, with a soft smile
-ever playing about it, for she was naturally of an
-arch and highly impressionable nature.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He did not permit the conversation to flag, but
-hovered near her, venturing to look over her shoulder
-from time to time, and giving little suggestions
-concerning her drawing, while in reality he was
-admiring the ladylike contour of her head, the
-delicacy of her slender neck, and the gloss of a
-single thick dark ringlet that strayed so captivatingly
-behind.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The first flush of emotion passed away in Sybil's
-breast, and insensibly she found herself lured into
-an easy interchange of opinion on various subjects;
-for in the topics of foreign travel, the galleries,
-habits, tastes, and amusements of other lands, they
-had ample matter for conversation, and found themselves
-sliding into the position of friends, and talking
-of things and themes that seldom occupy the
-thoughts of a young girl.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now, as each knew not the name of the other,
-and could not ask it, there was a decided awkwardness
-in this; and as they continued to talk with
-animation, the huge Thibet mastiff, who had been
-their <i>introducteur</i>, rolled his great dark eyes from
-one to the other, and lashed the grass with his tail,
-as if quite satisfied with the result.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"After the colourless Indo-Britons and yellow
-Bengallees, how lovely seems the complexion of this
-fresh young English girl!" was the ever-recurring
-thought of the young officer, as he surveyed her
-critically, from her smart hat and feather to her foot
-that peeped from under her dress; and a lovely
-little foot it was&mdash;tiny enough to have entered the
-famous slipper of Cinderella.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-That the solitary girl was a lady was evident to
-him; her carriage and bearing were full of graceful
-ease, and she had an attraction of manner and
-gesture peculiarly her own; but <i>who</i> was she, that
-she, at her early years, had seen so much of the
-world, and could speak of Spain and Rome, of
-Athens and Sicily, and seemed to know every second
-village among the wilds of the Apennines and the
-Abruzzi?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The sketching of this day was somewhat protracted,
-and Sybil became aware that their eyes
-sought each other with an interest she had never
-felt before in those of a stranger, and that each time
-they so met, her pulses quickened and her cheek
-flushed or grew pale. Whence was this emotion? she
-whispered in her heart.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I shall often think of this moorland tarn, when I
-am far away," said the officer.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You leave this soon, then?" she remarked.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes; I am, ere long, going back to India."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My brother Denzil has gone there to join his
-regiment."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Had the stranger asked the almost inevitable
-military question, "What regiment?" a little
-discovery might have been made; but he was full of
-the girl's beauty, and thought of that only. Something
-of admiration or of ardour in his eyes inspired
-her with confusion, and abruptly closing her book
-as on the preceding day, she rose from the bank on
-which she had been seated, and said, with a little
-trepidation,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I am going now, and&mdash;and here our sketching
-and meetings must end."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ah! why?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I fear," she stammered as she spoke, aware that
-her speech was full of awkwardness&mdash;"I fear that I
-have done wrong in&mdash;in&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Engaging in quite a flirtation with a total
-stranger."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You cannot flirt&mdash;you are too sensible and
-artless; neither could I&mdash;with you, at least."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Have you never flirted?" asked Sybil, laughing
-to cover what she felt to be a second mistake.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Often."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Then why not with me?" she asked naïvely and
-archly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"First, tell me what is flirtation?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I know what it is; but cannot define or describe
-it."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Shall I make the attempt?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Do, please," said Sybil, now laughing outright.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It is neither coquetry nor exactly playing at
-courtship. It is one of those things most difficult
-indeed of description and of definition. It depends
-so much upon the time and place, the tone and
-tenor of those who attempt it, and on the mood of
-the moment, whether it be sad or gay. It is perilous
-work among the young and beautiful, as it is often
-so much mere nonsense, and yet is so much more
-dangerous to one's peace of mind than any nonsense
-could ever be. It is not so earnest or solemn as
-deliberate love-making, and yet it is not quite a
-mockery of it. It is a sharp weapon in the hands
-of the wary; but a dangerous pastime for those who
-have had no experience in <i>affaires du coeur</i>. It is a
-kind of lovemaking that commits one to no promise,
-and yet may raise the proudest and wildest anticipations
-in the breast, and elicit the most unwary confidence.
-Thus it is difficult to find where flirtation
-exactly begins, and still more to say where it may
-end&mdash;perhaps in real love and marriage. I fear I
-have read you quite a dissertation on the subject, a
-most hazardous one while looking into your bright
-eyes; and now tell me," added the officer, his tone
-and manner becoming more soft and earnest, "have
-you not done injustice to yourself and to me, for in
-all we have talked over so pleasantly both yesterday
-and to-day has anything of this vague kind been
-attempted?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Most certainly not," replied Sybil, laughing
-again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"With you it would indeed be perilous for me,"
-said the officer, taking her hand caressingly between
-his own; "for I could not feign, where I would
-rather feel."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His eyes were dark and deep, their colour a kind
-of blue, difficult to define, but unfathomable in
-expression, though very soft just then; and now Sybil
-grew pale, for if the speaker was not flirting, he had
-suddenly slid into downright love-making; so she
-said, with an effort&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"We have been here more than an hour; am I
-not detaining you from your friends?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Perhaps," said he, with an air of pique; "pardon
-me for looking at my watch. Two o'clock, by Jove! and
-I promised to meet the Trecarrel girls on the
-Camelford road half-an-hour ago. I shall catch it
-from little Rose for this! And now good morning&mdash;pardon
-me again if I have seemed intrusive, but I
-do not despair of our meeting again."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had mounted while speaking, and, lifting his
-hat with studious politeness, cantered off, while
-Rajah went bounding and barking before him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What a bright little fairy it is&mdash;and so clever
-with her pencil! who the deuce can she be?" he was
-thinking, while Sybil, with a vague sense of
-disappointment and doubt, looked after him, half
-fearing that she had been too pointed in her hint
-that he should leave her; and yet how were they to
-continue such meetings as strangers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In her lonely life, at least latterly, since they had
-settled at Porthellick, she had met but few persons,
-and with none so pleasing as this young officer.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She hoped to meet him again on a more recognisable
-footing, for she felt that though stolen interviews
-might be very sweet, they could not be
-without some peril; and to the young girl's mind,
-it seemed that the formation of the acquaintance&mdash;the
-whole adventure&mdash;was quite like some of the
-episodes to be read of in novels; for a box from
-"Mudie's," came regularly to Porthellick Villa, and
-perhaps, by the laws of such literature, her strange
-friend might prove a peer of the realm&mdash;a prince
-it might be, incog.; who could say?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sybil lingered long by the lonely tarn, watching
-the white swans floating among the broad-leaved
-water-lilies, thinking over all the stranger had said,
-recalling the pleasantly modulated tones of his voice
-and the expression of his dark blue eyes (if blue
-they were), till the sound of hoofs on the distant
-highway drew her attention in that direction, and
-with something perhaps of jealousy and pique, she
-saw him gallop past with two ladies, both well
-mounted on bright bay horses. They were the
-Trecarrels, dashing and handsome girls, and the
-sound of their merry voices and ringing laughter
-came clearly over the moor as they rode at a
-scamper towards Lanteglos, on the roof of the old
-parish church of which the arms of the Trelawneys
-and Trecarrels have been carved for centuries.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And these girls have him with them always,"
-thought she, as she turned homeward. "What
-matter is it to me&mdash;the acquaintance of a couple
-of days? why should the idea of him affect me so?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After this day she sought the vicinity of the
-rock-pillar and the tarn no more.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She was too open and candid in all her actions,
-and loved her mamma too well to conceal ultimately
-from her the pleasant interviews she had by the
-moorland tarn "with such a delightful young man;"
-but there her confidence ended; she did not give
-the additional information that on three successive
-Sundays, when mamma was too ill to attend church,
-he had lingered or walked by the side of her
-basket-phaeton, to the manifest annoyance of the
-Misses Trecarrel, or that she had faintly promised,
-<i>some</i> day, to make with him a joint sketch of
-certain rocks upon the sea-shore; still less did she
-whisper, that in her secret heart she liked him well,
-or trusted to time or chance for the establishment
-of an interchange of thought as yet concealed, "as
-though the bridge between them was yet too frail
-to cross;" and Constance, occupied solely by solicitude
-concerning the now-protracted absence of her
-husband, did not at first make any inquiries.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sybil found the stranger's image, his tones and
-words recurring perpetually to her mind in spite
-of herself, and she blushed at the conviction. She
-had few male friends&mdash;beyond the burly rector and
-old village doctor, perhaps none&mdash;and certainly none
-that she had met elsewhere proved so graceful and
-winning as this unknown admirer. To her partial
-eyes, he seemed the beau-ideal of manly beauty,
-while to those of others&mdash;even the Trecarrel
-girls&mdash;he was simply a passably handsome fellow.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Why do I think of him at all?" she would ask
-of herself: "though so young, he may be married&mdash;or
-engaged&mdash;engaged perhaps to that Rose Trecarrel
-of whom he seemed so much afraid the other day.
-Yet he may surmise the same of me&mdash;I, Sybil
-Devereaux, married!" and then she laughed at
-her own conceit.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"There is a depth in the human heart which,
-once stirred, is long, long, ere its waters again
-subside," and this depth he had contrived to stir
-in the heart of Sybil. She who had seemed as
-bright as the day, and happy as the blackbird that
-sang on the adjacent rose-trees, became silent and
-thoughtful and apt to indulge in dreamy moods.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Old Winny Braddon was the first to detect this;
-and so she set herself to watch, and hence the hints
-she gave to Constance&mdash;hints which caused the
-production of the sketch-book, with some confusion on
-Sybil's part, as recorded in our tenth chapter, and
-she took her young favourite to task in the usual
-mode of old nurses, by commenting upon the
-enormity of thinking of love or marriage at her
-years.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now Sybil, like every young girl of her age, had
-her day-dreams of a lover, just such a lover as this,
-but she had not, as yet, thought of marriage. Such
-a catastrophe&mdash;such a separation from "dearest
-mamma"&mdash;had not quite entered her mind; but
-now, by Winny Braddon's remarks, it seemed to be
-thrust upon her consideration. She blushed and
-felt abashed, as if the modesty of her nature had
-been assailed, and her girlish mind was filled with
-a vague sense of dread and awe, she knew not of
-what or of whom.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-However, it chanced that on the last day he had
-lingered by the side of her pony-phaeton for a few
-minutes, resting his arms on the side thereof in
-such a way that she could not, without positive
-rudeness, have driven off, she had been resolving,
-but not without a struggle in her heart, that she
-would place herself in his way no more.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"This must end," had been her thought; "it is
-most unfair to poor mamma, and is unwise for my
-own peace of mind;" and it was while she thus
-determined, he came to her smiling, and leaning on
-the side of the little phaeton, when the Trecarrels
-were conversing with the rector's family, said in his
-pleasant voice,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Shall we ever resume the little discussion we
-had so merrily on that delightful day beside the old
-rock-pillar?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Discussion&mdash;on what?" asked Sybil, timidly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Flirtation&mdash;Miss Devereaux."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What! you know my name?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes; I am happy to say I do now, Sybil Devereaux."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How came this to pass?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Simply enough: the Trecarrel girls told me."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But I do not know them," said Sybil, with a
-tone of pique.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"May I have the pleasure of introducing&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Excuse me, please, but not just now," said she,
-hastily, remembering how her father had ever
-avoided the family of the General.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And now I must tell you my name&mdash;Audley
-Trevelyan, late of the 14th Hussars."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I have surely heard it before," said Sybil,
-pondering, "but where I know not now."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was in the <i>Gazette</i> together with that of Denzil,
-but she had forgotten the circumstance, and he said,
-smiling still,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You may easily have heard it&mdash;the name is
-peculiar to Cornwall, and my uncle is Lord
-Lamorna."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Indeed! all Cornwall has heard that the late
-lord was a very, very proud man.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Absurdly so; but I must bid you adieu. Rose
-Trecarrel is impatient."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"We are going, Mr. Trevelyan," said that young
-lady, with some asperity of tone, from the window
-of the carriage in which she and her sister were
-seated; and lifting his hat, Audley hastened to join
-them. The footman threw up the carriage-steps,
-fussily closed the door, and they departed. So, as
-doubtless the reader has foreseen, Sybil's admirer
-was her own cousin; yet neither knew of the
-relationship.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She drove off in a somewhat dubious state of
-mind, amid which, as she permitted the reins to
-drop listlessly on the backs of her two little ponies
-and allowed them to go at their own pace, she
-gave way to the current of thought, and ended in a
-quiet shower of tears, which, however, calmed and
-soothed her. She had an undefined emotion of
-pique alike at this stranger, Mr. Trevelyan, and
-Rose Trecarrel; and as she had been learning to
-love the former, she resented his extreme intimacy
-with the latter, and she knew all the perils of
-propinquity with a girl so lovely as Rose undoubtedly
-was.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Hence, more than ever did she resolve to avoid
-him, and even sought to nurse herself into emotions
-of anger by fancying there was something that
-savoured of forwardness in the mode in which he
-had recently addressed her. The moment she
-reached home and tossed the reins to the groom,
-she hastened to the side of Constance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, mamma," she exclaimed, in a tumult of
-excitement, "I have discovered the name of the
-gentleman about whom you spoke to me lately!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The hero of the sketch-book, and it is&mdash;what?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Mr. Audley Trevelyan; don't you think it so
-pretty?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Constance was silent for nearly a minute. Then
-foreseeing much trouble and danger if this intimacy
-were permitted to ripen before her husband's return,
-and the full recognition of herself, her son and
-daughter, in their proper place, and in society in
-general&mdash;society, "that Star Chamber of the
-well-bred world,"&mdash;she said, with grave energy, while
-taking Sybil's flushed face between her soft white
-hands,&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Promise to me, darling, that you will meet him
-no more&mdash;at least until advised by your papa."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I give you my promise, dearest mamma."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Remember that he is the friend, the guest, of
-those Trecarrels whom your papa has ever avoided
-for reasons best known to himself, though they
-seem people of the best style; and you owe this
-obedience to him in his absence."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Have no fear for me, mamma; I shall ever
-obey you," replied Sybil, as she threw her arms
-round her mother's neck and kissed her to conceal
-the tears that were welling up in her fine dark
-eyes.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap12"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XII.
-<br /><br />
-THE PIXIES' HOLE.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-On the following evening Sybil had set forth on
-an errand of charity to one of the many poor who
-blessed the bounteous hand of her mother&mdash;the
-widow of a fisherman who had perished during the
-pilchard season in the past summer&mdash;and she meant
-to return, as she stated, by the sea-shore.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sybil had much cause for thought, and was
-somewhat disposed to linger on the way. The ample
-means enjoyed by her parents on the one hand, with
-the general seclusion of their lives on the other, and
-their studied avoidance of society when in England,
-had now given the girl much reason for reflection.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her papa's mysterious absence too, and her
-mamma's nervous anxiety about American letters,
-were not without singularity; and why had both so
-sedulously abstained from all introduction to the
-family of the Trecarrels, who were greatly esteemed
-in the neighbourhood, and who were undoubtedly
-people of the best style? By the system of which
-this seemed merely a portion, she was even now
-debarred from having properly presented to her this
-Mr. Audley Trevelyan, who seemed so well disposed
-to admire&mdash;perhaps, to love her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"We have made but few acquaintances and, of
-course, still fewer friends at Porthellick," said Sybil,
-half aloud; "now why is it thus&mdash;to have means in
-plenty and so few to love us? What can be the
-reason? Mamma has some <i>secret</i>; but what can
-that secret be? Poor mamma&mdash;she looks so sweet
-always, and yet so sad at times!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She would write to Denzil, she thought, on the
-subject of these mysteries; but Denzil was yet at
-sea, and it would be long, long, before she might
-receive his answer; and, then, there would be an
-awkwardness in their parents' reading, as they
-would certainly wish to do, his letters and
-perceiving the doubts she had suggested&mdash;the secrets
-she wished to probe. Perhaps when her papa,
-whose especial pet she wras, returned, she might
-venture to give some hints, to make some inquiries;
-and as she saw the white sails of the shipping and
-the smoke of many a passing steamer, she lifted her
-eyes to heaven with an unuttered prayer in her
-heart, that she might soon again hear his voice and
-cast herself into his arms.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By one of those lanes peculiar to Cornwall, where
-the old road is sunk so deep in the ground and the
-bordering walls are so high that the surrounding
-scenery is sometimes hidden, lanes where in summer
-the elms cast their leafy shadows, and the fragrant
-wild rose and honeysuckle mingle with the long
-tangles of the bramble, Sybil reached the shore and
-descended to the very margin of the sea.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was one of those evenings which, even in the
-last days of autumn, come to the rocky and rugged
-duchy, when the atmosphere is so mild and balmy
-that one might think it was in the early weeks of
-spring, when the grey cliffs and purple moorland
-glisten in the yellow rays as the sunlight falls softly
-between the flying clouds, on land and sea; and the
-sparkling stream, that rolls from rock to rock on its
-passage to the shore, makes music in its plash as it
-falls from the cascade into the pool below, where the
-brown trout lurks in safety and unseen; and Sybil,
-as she wandered on, felt, she knew not why, an
-emotion of calm and contentment growing in her
-heart.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But in its serenity and beauty the evening was
-deceptive, and old fishermen on the heights, and
-other weather-beaten salts who lingered, telescope
-in hand, on many a rude pier that jutted into the
-Bristol Channel, when looking seaward detected
-that which the landsman saw not&mdash;the tokens of a
-coming storm; for seamen have strange instincts
-peculiarly their own, and can read the sky like the
-pages of a mighty book.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Across the sea the sun, now setting, poured a
-steady stream of golden radiance, like a broad and
-glittering pathway from the far horizon to the very
-shore, by the margin of which Sybil was now lingering;
-and it tinted with warm light the flinty brow of
-many a storm-beaten headland, and those fantastic
-piles of grey granite which cap the hills in Cornwall,
-and are there called <i>carns</i>.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Seated on a fragment of rock, lulled by the
-regular and monotonous rolling of the surge, Sybil
-was immersed in thoughts of her absent father and
-brother, each now traversing the same sea, and yet
-so far apart upon its waters; she thought of Audley
-Trevelyan. Should she ever meet him in society
-as she wished to do? A little time and it might be
-too late, for Rose Trecarrel was so lovely, and
-already seemed to consider him as her own
-property; for it was by her side he sat in church,
-where they used the same books, and it was she that
-he usually shawled or cloaked first for the carriage;
-so if they were not already engaged, they might very
-soon be so.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Amid this reverie she was startled by a distant
-voice holloing, and apparently to her. She looked
-up, and on the summit of a cliff that overhung the
-shore, some two hundred feet or so above where she
-was seated, a man was gesticulating violently and
-beckoning to her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Was he mad or tipsy? was her mamma ill; or
-what did this person mean? She listened intently
-and thought she heard her own name; he was
-evidently addressing her, and pointing to the sea.
-At last his voice distinctly reached her ear.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Look out, Miss Devereaux,&mdash;the tide is coming in!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She glanced hastily round her, and a chill struck
-upon her heart, for the fragment of granite on which
-she sat was almost environed by the encroaching
-sea, and the stripe of yellow sand, by which she had
-been walking at the base of the cliffs, was nearly
-covered by the surf, which was already chafing
-white and angrily about the rocky headlands which
-formed the horns of a little bay.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Heedless of wetting her feet, Sybil gathered her
-skirts in her hand and rushed shoreward, when a
-greater terror smote her heart as she looked around
-her. The man on the cliff had disappeared; no aid
-seemed nigh, and no living thing was visible save a
-solitary chough or red-legged crow, which was
-perched on a fragment of rock, from whence he eyed
-her in quiet security.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She was at a part of the coast where the land
-receded and the sea advanced between two headlands
-of granite, precipitous and sheer, but crowned by
-groves of ancient trees. The water, as yet, was
-smooth as a mill-pond within the bay, and reflected
-in its glassy depths the coast that towered above it;
-while no sound came along the vast expanse of
-shore, save the hollow gurgle of the flowing tide, as
-it sought the recesses of the many caverns and
-fissures in the lower rocks. In the offing, however,
-the rising waves were edged with white, and this
-sign, together with the lowering sky and gathering
-clouds, showed that the coming night would be a
-rough one.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From the stripe of sandy beach, now nearly
-covered by the incoming sea, the only path lay
-round a little moss-grown slope at the base of an
-enormous rock, from whence it wound upward to
-the verge of a steep precipice and led to the deep
-old lane, already described. Over this mossy and
-angular ledge the angry tide had already rolled its
-spray, consequently it was too slippery for the
-footsteps of the affrighted girl, who, after thrice
-approaching it, finally shrunk back, and ran, with
-wetted feet, towards the centre of the bay, keeping
-close to the sheer cliffs, against which the flowing
-sea was rising fast, and beginning to surge and
-boom, throwing masses of foam and froth over her
-whole person, while the scared seagulls and puffins
-whirled in flights around her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Once or twice a wild shriek escaped Sybil; then
-her voice began to fail her, and she could only utter
-prayers that were earnest, deep, and piteous.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Wildly and despairingly she looked upward to the
-summits of the cliffs; they were impending and
-inaccessible, by their gloomy outline fully illustrating
-the influence and fury of what is called "the
-Atlantic drift," which is especially turned into the
-Bristol Channel, where the rocks, by the waves for
-ever heaving and rolling in mighty undulations, are
-worn into concave fronts, and form thus a hopeless
-barrier to the shipwrecked, and to all who might
-seek to ascend them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She turned seaward with haggard eyes and wrung
-her poor little hands; not a boat was near, and
-nothing now was visible between the horns of the
-bay save the smoke of some distant steamer,
-hull-down below the horizon line, as she sped on her
-way to the coast of Ireland. The flowing tide was
-above Sybil's ankles now; she knew that at high
-water it would mount to several feet, and that ere
-long her drowned corse should be dashed and battered,
-at the sport of the waves, against those very
-rocks at which she glanced so despairingly!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The man who had seen from their summit and
-warned her&mdash;where was he now, and who was he?
-He knew her name, and yet had he abandoned her
-to her fate in that terrible place, with the sea and
-the darkness closing fast around her; for the sun
-had set and dun clouds were piled in stormy masses
-now, where so lately all was golden sheen.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Suddenly she bethought her of a cavern in the
-rocks known as the Pixies' Hole, which her brother
-Denzil had often explored&mdash;a gloomy place, the
-haunt at times of the seal and of the <i>zart</i>, as old
-Cornish folks called the sea-urchin. It was one of
-those great caverns in which, in the barbarous times
-of old, the Cornish men took shelter from the
-Romans and Saxons, just as the children of Israel
-did from the Midianites in the dens of the mountains;
-and there, by local superstition, still abode,
-unscared by the whistle of the adjacent railway,
-certain little beings known as the Pixies, who came
-hither from Devonshire on dark nights, mounted on
-the farmers' horses, and were heard to sing in its
-recesses while pounding their cider.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Gathering her skirts again, the poor girl dashed
-through the water, and ere long reaching the mouth
-of the cavern, clambered in breathlessly, falling, the
-while, more than once on her tender hands, when
-her feet slipped, on the glassy surface of the sea-weedy
-rocks and stones, which covered all the ascent
-to this gaunt and gloomy place of refuge.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She knew that it penetrated far inland, and hoped
-that there for a time she should be safe; but there
-would be hours of darkness, cold, and captivity to
-endure, ere the ebb of the tide would permit her to
-escape, and by that time what must be the terror of
-her poor mamma!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When fairly within this place her courage rose a
-little, for she saw that it closely resembled a grotto
-she had frequently visited and sketched&mdash;the Cave
-of Porthmellin. The floor of this great fissure in
-the rocks ascended at an angle from the shore, mid
-as the tide advanced, Sybil found herself compelled
-to retire further and further still, inward and
-upward amid its dreary uncertainties, while the rising
-tide, now rolling into the bay with the full force of a
-west wind, began to surge with a sound as of
-thunder, about the mouth by which she had entered,
-and that orifice seemed to lessen rapidly as the water
-rose within it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The roar of the sea woke a hundred weird echoes
-amid the impenetrable gloom beyond her; while the
-view outward from the point now attained by the
-breathless and affrighted girl, for a time proved
-strange and, to her artistic eye, full of wonderful
-effects. The walls of rock were dark, and yet so
-polished by time and the seas of ages as to emit
-reflected light, and to reveal little pools of crystal
-water lying still and motionless in fissures and
-crevices, where star-fish, shells, and hermit-crabs
-had been left by the last ebb-tide.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With growing terror Sybil could perceive that by
-each successive wave the mouth of her refuge grew
-smaller, and it was evident that ere long it would be
-covered by the sea, while she should be shut within!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A cry escaped her with this awful conviction; but
-she uttered no more, for the echoes of her voice
-came back to her strangely and with melancholy
-variations, as if from vast distances. If the cavern
-mouth were totally submerged, should she be suffocated;
-or if not, might she otherwise too surely die
-of cold, and lie there till some holiday explorer, or
-some boy in search of puffins' nests, found her
-remains? A cold current of air that swept past her
-from within the cavern warned her that it had an
-outlet somewhere; but it filled her soul with greater
-terror, for she remembered to have heard Denzil,
-old Derrick Braddon, and others say, that the Pixies'
-Hole terminated in the shaft of an old and long
-unused mine, down which she might fall and be dashed
-to a very pulp, if she ventured one foot further; for
-all was gloomy horror round her now; and as her
-knees yielded under her, and she sank upon them
-to pray, she felt the still rising tide flow over them
-as it had rolled completely above the rocky arch of
-the cave and submerged it!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Feeling the ground with her hands outspread, the
-unhappy girl continued to creep a few yards further
-in, and then she paused, for all that she knew to
-the contrary, on the very verge of the fatal mine!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-One little while she was full of pious resignation
-to die, for she had lived an innocent and guiltless
-life. She drew from her bosom a locket and
-fervently kissed it, as it contained the hair of
-her parents and Denzil&mdash;all she loved on earth.
-She knelt with her bowed head between her hands
-to shut out the horrid booming and sucking sounds
-of the sea in the lower part of the cave, and closing
-her eyes, as if the more to concentrate her thoughts,
-burst into passionate and vehement prayer.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then anon the horror of death&mdash;and especially of
-such a death, amid gloom and darkness, unseen,
-unpitied, and unknown, would draw from her a piteous
-wail, that was lost amid the bellowing of the sea, for
-a storm of wind had now risen in the channel.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Of that newly-found admirer whom she had been
-learning to love, Audley Trevelyan, she had totally
-ceased to think; her heart was wholly occupied by
-thoughts of her papa, her mamma, her brother
-Denzil&mdash;all of whom she might never, never see
-more!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Dread of falling headlong down the shaft of the
-ancient mine, more than a thousand feet, perhaps,
-made her, we have said, pause breathlessly, and lie
-on the sloping floor of rock, listening to her watery
-death coming nearer and nearer with a gurgling
-sound, that, to her nervous and excited imagination,
-seemed like the chuckle of a destroying fiend!
-The dark unspeakable himself was alleged by the
-peasantry to frequent the oozy recess of the
-Pixies' Hole, and the bottom of the old shaft was
-said, by the same veracious authorities, to be
-haunted by the unquiet spirits of ancient miners,
-who had perished there in the time of old.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Rapidly, yet terribly, through the mind of Sybil,
-then, as she fully believed herself to be, hovering on
-the verge of death, came back the eighteen years of
-her past life; at Como, in the old palace by the Arno;
-among the Apennines and the wild Abruzzi; Rome,
-Athens, and elsewhere, all passed before her like a
-rapid phantasmagoria&mdash;days and hours of happiness
-and pleasure. The faces and voices of her parents
-and her brother so beloved, came vividly amid those
-memories of their strange and aimless wandering in
-foreign lands. The secret of her mother&mdash;whatever
-it was&mdash;she should never learn now; but gleams of
-hope and the desire to live, mingled with the blackness
-of her despair, for existence seemed sweet, and
-she felt so young to die, when a long life should be
-before her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At Porthellick she must long since have been
-missed, and her fancy pictured the agony of her
-lonely and tender mother; the wild, noisy grief of
-Winny Braddon, and the honest anxiety of those
-who might be fruitlessly seeking for her along the
-cliffs or through the bay by boats; seeking for her
-alive or dead.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All their search would be vain, for the tide was
-still rising, and now where she stood, not daring to
-go further, the water flowed above her knees. A
-little time, a very little time more, and she should
-be lying drowned, the sport of the waves within the
-Pixies' Hole, or borne by them in their reflux, into
-the mighty waste of sea that washes the rugged
-shore of Cornwall.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A shrill cry escaped her as the water flowed to
-her waist; and gaspingly she felt with her hands for a
-little ledge of rock, up which she clambered, being in
-her terror endued by unnatural strength; and then,
-dripping and despairing, she felt a numbness come
-over all her faculties, which prevented her responding
-to certain strange sounds, somewhat like those
-of human voices mingled with the barking of a dog,
-now coming out of the inner gloom, while again a
-superstitious dread, the result of Winny Braddon's
-teaching, began to mingle with her more solid fears
-and sufferings.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap13"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XIII.
-<br /><br />
-THE TIDE IN!
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-For a little space we shall return to the pretty
-villa of Porthellick, and to the anxious life of her
-who dwelt there; her thoughts ever with her absent
-son and husband. In this instance we put Denzil
-before his father, for the return of Richard Lord
-Lamorna, was looked for daily, but that of his son
-might be the event of years to come; so Denzil's
-last fond glance ere he left her, and his calm aspect
-as he lay asleep and all unconscious that she
-hovered near his pillow, were deeply impressed on
-his poor mother's heart; and now an eternity of
-waters rolled between them, for his ship, she knew,
-must be ploughing the wide Indian Ocean.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To the wayfarer along the coast-road towards the
-quaint village of Endellion (with its weather-beaten
-church, and the ivied ruins of Rhoscarrock), that
-white-walled villa with its rose covered peristyle
-buried among the pale-green drooping willows from
-which the locality takes its Cornish name, no better
-example of peace, content and quiet could be
-given.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yet the place was fated to be one of anxiety and sorrow.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Seated at a little buhl escritoire in her
-drawing-room, Constance was lingering over the last
-letter from her husband, after the removal of
-the tea equipage, and long after Sybil had set
-out on her charitable mission to the fisherman's
-widow.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Richard is very long of returning, surely!" was
-her prevailing thought, as she sat with her graceful
-head resting on a white and dimpled hand, quite
-unconscious that the sun had set beyond the sea,
-and that the shades of evening were deepening
-around her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-No upbraiding thought of that absent husband
-entered the gentle heart of Constance; yet with all
-that heart's gentleness, she could not but think
-somewhat bitterly of the late Lord Lamorna, whose
-unreasonable prejudices and pride of birth and
-station, though only the result, the growth and
-maturity of centuries of time, and many generations
-of Trevelyans, had cost her years of anxiety, of
-unmerited seclusion and wandering in foreign lands
-under a name which was not that of her children's
-father, and thus keeping them in ignorance of their
-real family, its claims and rank&mdash;for the mystery
-had been continued, even to the gazetting of Denzil,
-under the name of Devereaux!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The rising wind as a sudden gust swept through
-the grove of willows, roused her from these thoughts,
-and she found old Winny Braddon, hard-featured
-and keen-eyed, lingering near, with anxiety depicted
-in her face.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The winter is setting in early, surely," said
-Constance; "we are not out of autumn yet, Winny,
-and see how dark the evening has become!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"<i>En hâv perkou gwâv</i>, my mother used to say,
-old Cornish for 'in summer, remember winter,'"
-replied Winny. "A sad night it will be for the
-poor fellows on board ship, ma'am, I fear."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Do not say so, Winny!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The waves are rolling in fast, and breaking
-white as snow upon Tintagel Head, and all along
-Trebarreth Strand."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And where is Miss Devereaux?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I know not, ma'am&mdash;only she has not
-returned."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And she was to come by the shore!" exclaimed
-Constance, starting from her seat.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The shore! do you mean the bit of sand that
-lies near the Pixies' Hole?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes&mdash;yes."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The tide has long since been in&mdash;my God! oh
-mistress, our poor <i>chealveen</i> may be lost!" exclaimed
-Winny, using the old endearing local word for
-'child.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Constance closed her escritoire with trembling
-hands, and went, in alarm, to the windows which
-faced the sea. The sun, we have said, had long
-since set, and athwart the dim and black and stormy
-clouds that now hid the point of his departure, a
-torrent of rain was falling aslant upon the dark and
-foam-flecked sea, and would ere long be drenching
-all the rocky shore. A little time and all should
-be darkness, and where was the absent Sybil?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Close-hauled, and running fast before the blast
-for shelter in Portquin Bay, a large boat, the last,
-perhaps, of the autumn pilchard fishers, careening
-wildly over amid the foam, was seen to vanish round
-a promontory.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A sudden access of terror now seized the heart of
-Constance. Instantly a mounted servant was
-dispatched to the hut of the widow, and the man soon
-came galloping back, with a scared visage and the
-tidings that Miss Devereaux had left her more than
-three hours ago, and had certainly descended to the
-beach, as she had been seen to do so. By this
-time, darkness had fairly set in; rain was falling
-fast upon the bleak coast, and "sowing wide the
-pathless main," while a heavy gale from thence was
-dashing a flood tide upon the shore, and the soul of
-Constance grew sick with apprehension.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The tide in! oh my God&mdash;in what can I have
-offended Thee to be punished thus? My Sybil&mdash;my
-Sybil&mdash;is the cup of my bitterness to be filled
-to overflowing!" she exclaimed, in a low voice as
-she sank upon a sofa, while Winny Braddon wrung
-her hands, and in the noisy grief peculiar to her
-class, lamented, as already said, "the darling
-<i>chealveen</i>" she had nursed in her bosom.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Constance would have gone forth in person to
-search, bleak and rainy though the night; but she
-was too feeble and delicate to face the storm, nor
-would Nurse Braddon permit her. She sent all her
-servants, male and female, in search of the tidings
-she was terrified to hear; and ever and anon she
-rushed to the front portico and looked out upon
-the gloomy night, to where away beyond the willow
-groves that grew around the villa, the bleak high
-road wound seaward over a bare Cornish moor,
-towards those clumps of old trees that crowned the
-rocks which overlooked the fatal Pixies' Hole.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Slowly, as if each were an eternity of time, hour
-after hour passed now&mdash;periods filled up by agony
-and the pulsations of her heart; and ere long her
-watch told her that midnight was nigh.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Midnight, and her child still absent&mdash;her Sybil,
-the mistress of a thousand pretty, winning and
-affectionate ways!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Higher and more high rose the blustering wind,
-sweeping before its angry breath the last brown
-leaves of autumn; wildly the willows seemed to lash
-the stormy air, as their supple branches were tossed
-on the stormy blast; and from a distance up the
-valley came the roaring of the sea, whose waves at
-the horizon were brightened occasionally by a
-ghastly glare of lightning. Between the scudding
-clouds, the moon's pale crescent was visible for a
-time, above the ruins of King Arthur's castle on
-steep Tintagel Head, a tremendous bluff (which is
-cleft by a chasm from the mainland) adding thus to
-the weird and wild aspect of the night; and what
-served to increase the distraction of the wretched
-mother, was the strange circumstance that of the
-several messengers she sent forth, not one had yet
-returned with tidings of any kind. Suspense thus
-became as it were, a bodily agony; she was led to
-anticipate the worst; and Winny Braddon though
-her heart was a prey to the keenest alarm and
-anxiety, had to use almost affectionate force to
-prevent her mistress, a weak and delicate little
-woman as she was, from sallying forth in her
-despair to prosecute the search in person.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Winny had but slender hope, she knew every foot of
-her native shore, and was old enough to remember
-many a dark and terrible story of the Cornish
-wreckers, and when many a keg of French brandy,
-and many a bale of good tobacco were brought from
-the Scilly Isles, and without the knowledge of the
-Coast Guard, landed slyly in some quiet nook and
-cavern, where those to whom they were consigned
-knew well when to find them; she knew many who
-had perished in those secret places, when seeking
-for the hidden wares; and it was for being engaged
-in some of these little affairs, that her brother
-Derrick, had to "levant" from the duchy, and
-become a soldier in "the master's regiment"&mdash;the
-Cornish Light Infantry.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Alternately Constance lay in a species of stupor
-on a sofa, or started to the front door, where she
-listened with eager ears, the rain falling on her pale
-face, and the wind blowing about her hair, while
-she could see the lanterns of the searchers,
-glimmering like distant <i>ignes fatui</i>, as they proceeded
-to and fro along the heights that overhung the
-sea.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Denzil, she thought, was gone on life's highway,
-and might never return; their daughter drowned&mdash;their
-only child now it would seem, reft from them
-suddenly and cruelly! What would Richard say
-on his return, and how was she to meet his eye?
-What account was she to give of her maternal
-solicitude and of her stewardship? Yet in what
-way was she to blame?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yes! she did accuse herself. The warnings and
-hints of Winny Braddon came to memory. She had
-been remiss; she had permitted Sybil to wander too
-much abroad with her sketch-book, and this was the
-end of it; yet who, without some divine prescience,
-could have foreseen a catastrophe so terrible?
-How often had Denzil filled her mind with fear and
-anxiety by his exploits among those very rocks, and
-by his explorations of that horrible Pixies Hole,
-where, too probably, his sister had perished
-miserably; yet her bold and handsome Denzil, always
-came back in safety to kiss and laugh away her fears
-and upbraidings.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh why is this terrible calamity put upon me?"
-she moaned, as she lay with her face covered by her
-hands, and her damp dishevelled hair; "is it but the
-forerunner of a greater&mdash;if a <i>greater</i> there can be?
-Can I have loved my husband and our children so
-much that I have forgotten to love my God!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And for a moment or two, she actually turned
-over in her mind this strange idea&mdash;the first proposition
-of the Mystics, which was, that the love of the
-Supreme Being must be pure and disinterested;
-that is, exempt from all views of interest, all care of
-those we love on earth, and all hope of reward&mdash;tenets
-defended by Madame de Guyon, and advocated
-by the eloquent Fénélon.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A sudden knocking at the front door, and a violent
-pealing of the house-bell, caused her to start as if
-with an electric shock.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Tidings had come at last&mdash;tidings that might fill
-her soul with joy, or cause it to die within her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"General Trecarrel, would speak with you
-ma'am," said Winny Braddon, hurrying in with fresh
-excitement in her tone and manner.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap14"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XIV.
-<br /><br />
-LOST.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-The stranger who had called to Sybil by name,
-and who had recognised her from the summit of the
-cliff, was no other than General Trecarrel, the
-same whom her parents had so studiously avoided;
-but who nevertheless knew her well by sight, having
-seen her on many occasions when riding abroad,
-and on Sundays at church, whither she always
-drove in her little pony phaeton, and he had always
-admired her beauty greatly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The General was not a very old man; he was
-still looking for another command in India, and
-though in affluent circumstances was yet an enthusiastic
-soldier, who believed that military rank and
-stars and ribbons, were the only things in this
-world worth living for. He was nearly six feet in
-height&mdash;erect as a pike, and well built; his features
-were handsome, his eyes dark and keen; his
-complexion was well bronzed and dark, his short
-shorn hair was becoming grey and grizzled, and his
-manner, by force of habit, and the air to command,
-was brief and authoritative.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He knew in a moment the great peril of the girl
-on the beach below him; he saw that already the
-tide was chafing in white surf at each horn of the
-bay, round either of which she could alone escape
-from the watery trap that enclosed her, unless taken
-off the shore by a boat. The General was on foot;
-that part of the coast was very lonely and no house
-or hut was, near; but intent upon her rescue, he
-hurried away as fast as a limp in a wounded leg
-(he had received a ball at Ghuznee) would permit
-him, from place to place, in search of a boat; but
-neither boat nor fisherman could be found in time
-to take her off that perilous beach, ere the tide
-covered it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The evening darkened quickly, and the stormy
-wind brought faster in the stormy sea. Near the
-gate-lodge of his own residence, he met Audley
-Trevelyan strolling leisurely in the avenue with
-his hands in his pockets, accompanied by his huge
-dog, and enjoying a cigar before the bell should
-ring to dress for dinner; but the havannah fairly
-dropped from his lips in his surprise on beholding
-the excited state of the usually calm and collected
-General Trecarrel.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What's the row, General&mdash;what the deuce is
-the matter?" he asked.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A dreadful thing will occur&mdash;if it has not
-already occurred&mdash;a poor girl on a solitary part of
-the beach yonder, has been cut off by the tide, and
-unless we can save her in ten minutes at farthest,
-all will be over&mdash;yes, in ten minutes!" added
-Trecarrel, looking at his gold watch&mdash;the gift of
-Sir John Keane, with whom he had served in the
-conquest of Cabul.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Good Heavens, let us get a boat at once!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"There is not one to be had&mdash;the pilchard fishers
-hereabout are all at sea!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Lower someone over the cliffs by a rope; I
-have gone myself, thus, for a chough's egg, more
-than once."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The rocks are nearly two hundred feet in height
-in some places, and the poor girl&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Is she a lady, General?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes, and a handsome one, too."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You know her then&mdash;she is not a stranger?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"To me only&mdash;a Miss Devereaux, who resides at
-Porthellick."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"<i>Who</i> do you say?" shouted Audley; "Sybil Devereaux?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The same."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Merciful Heavens, let us do something at once!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"True, but without a boat what can be done?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"She cannot, she must not, she <i>shall not</i> be left
-to perish thus, if I can save her!" exclaimed Audley
-Trevelyan, with all the impetuosity of youth, and
-with sudden emotions of terror, pity, and tenderness
-combined. He, usually so calm, quiet, and
-apparently unimpressionable, to the surprise of the
-General, now rushed to the stable-yard, and loudly,
-even fiercely summoned grooms, gardeners, and
-lodge-keepers, and with these carrying poles and
-stable-lanterns, hurried towards the seashore, while
-two messengers were despatched to the hut of a
-fisherman, who lived about a mile distant, to get
-his boat, or at least a coil of stout ropes, and they
-succeeded in securing the latter; but his boat was
-at sea, and was the same which Constance had seen
-running round the headland for shelter at Portquin.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The alarm spread rapidly, and soon a dozen of
-men at least were searching along the verge of the
-cliffs in the dusk. The sea was seen rolling its
-waves round all the little bay now, and the base
-of the cliffs was marked by a curling line of
-snow-white foam alone. Every vestige of sandy beach
-had disappeared, and so had all trace of the poor
-loiterer whom the General had last seen there!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Many a "halloo" was uttered, but vainly, for no
-response came upwards from below.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Audley Trevelyan was very pale, and very silent,
-though deeply excited. He was not wont to indulge
-in self-examination, and consequently he never knew
-until now how dear this girl was to him&mdash;in fact,
-how much he had begun to love her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The dusk deepened into darkness, and a weird
-effect was given to the wild rock scenery by the
-fitful gleams of the lanterns carried along the edges
-of those perilous cliffs by the searchers, who felt
-that they were literally doing nothing, yet in the
-spirit of humanity were loth to relinquish their
-task, in which they were now joined by the terrified
-and excited servants from the villa. The wind was
-rising fast, and its mournful voice, as it swept
-through the bare branches of the old groves above
-the bay, mingled with the booming of the waves
-upon the rocks below.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Audley felt almost thankful for the gloom, as it
-hid the workings of his features, and like a
-thorough Englishman, he detested alike a scene
-and to be a subject for speculation; but now the
-deep baying of his Thibet dog among a clump of
-bushes and gorse, attracted the marked attention of
-the searchers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The dog has found some track or trace; he
-never barks thus, save for some cogent reason!"
-exclaimed Audley, as he hastened to the spot.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Plaise sur, the dog do hear or see summat,"
-added Michael Treherne, an old and decrepit miner,
-who in his earlier years had been an "underground
-captain" in Botallack mine, and one of the best
-wrestlers in the duchy, and who had hobbled forth,
-staff in hand, to assist in the search; "if the dog be
-on the right road, we be on the wrang. But take
-'ee care, surs; there's the shaft of a main old mine
-hereabouts; and out of it, in its time, there have
-come many a keenly lode o' tin and goodly bunch
-of copper."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I know the place, Michael," cried Audley;
-"Heavens above! she must be in the Pixies' Hole,
-which, as you are all likely aware, opens into the
-shaft."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Just so, Mr. Trevelyan; through that same
-hole, the water was pumped into the sea in my
-grandfeyther's time&mdash;and that warn't yesterday,
-sur."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How old are you, Michael?" asked the General,
-lending the old man his hand.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Seventy past; few miners live to my time, and
-'tis ten years since I was underground," replied
-Treherne with a sigh; "I can mind o' 'ee a small
-booy, General, robbin' my garden o' apples."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Proceeding cautiously about a hundred yards
-back from the verge of the cliffs to the place where
-the dog was baying, they found amid the tangled
-gorse bushes, the mound of slag and other debris,
-now covered with rank grass and weeds, in the
-centre of which yawned the round mouth of the
-ancient mine; and as they drew near the dog
-continued to bay the louder, with its forefeet
-outstretched, and its nose in the air. Then it
-began to fawn and leap upon its master, with such
-ponderous gambols, that more than once he was
-nearly thrown to the ground.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Down, Rajah&mdash;down, sir! keep quiet, dog," he
-exclaimed, and while he spoke, something like the
-cry of a female came to his ear; "oh, General, I
-see it all now! She has been driven by the tide
-into the Pixies' hole, and is even now on the verge
-of this shaft; should she be ignorant of its
-existence, she may fall into the mine and be dead ere
-she reaches the bottom!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It must all be over with the poor lass,
-Mr. Trevelyan," said the old miner, shaking his head;
-"hear ye <i>that</i>."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And, as they listened, they could hear above the
-moaning of the wind and the surging of the sea, the
-sound of water pouring within the shaft of the
-mine, and falling apparently to a vast depth below.
-A sense of the deep profundity that yawned before
-them, made all save Audley and the old miner,
-Treherne, shrink, with faces that seemed pale in
-the fitful gleams of the lanterns, and now the latter
-spoke again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Aw dear, aw dear! dost hear, sur? The tide
-has risen to upper mouth o' the Pixies' Hole, and
-is now pouring down into the lower level o' the
-mine, so if the poor lady beant drowned in one
-place, she will be at the bottom o' tother."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There seemed to be some probability of such
-being the case; and though Audley was horror-struck
-with the suggestion, he said with apparent
-calmness, the result of a great effort,&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The upper mouth you speak of, Michael, is
-about fifty feet below where we stand; surely, the
-tide could never reach it, even at full flood?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But who will venture down to see?" asked
-Treherne, almost with a grin on his hard old
-visage.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I shall!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You, Mr. Trevelyan&mdash;you, sur?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Dare you go down, Trevelyan, with that terrible
-sound in your ears?" asked the General, and all
-present murmured the same thing, save Sybil's
-servants, who moaned and wrung their hands.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Dare I go down?" repeated Audley, "when a
-woman is in the case&mdash;a lady&mdash;Sybil Devereaux!
-To whom are you talking, General? Have I not
-for a joke taken a letter to the Devil's Post Office,
-and will I shrink for this?" he asked, referring to
-the deep and dangerous chasm at Kinance Cove,
-where the sea bellows for ever with a thundering
-sound, and from time to time hurls a column of
-water furiously through an aperture, when those
-who are adventurous enough to descend in the dark
-and deliver a letter, as if to the presiding Genius of
-the place, will find it rudely torn from their fingers
-by an inward current of air, accompanying the
-reflux of the sea. "We have blocks and tackle
-with us," continued Audley; "rig them to poles
-laid across the shaft, and by Jove, I'll go down
-with a lantern; quick, my lads, for God's sake lose
-no time!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Are you not afraid of gas&mdash;or foul air,
-Trevelyan?" asked the General.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I don't mean to go to the bottom."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Of course not; but if the rope should break?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"In that case, it won't matter what I meet with,"
-was the grimly significant reply; "but be careful,
-my good fellows, for I trust my life to you in this
-instance."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"If the tackle did break, thee'd soon be in
-jowds" (<i>i.e.</i>, pieces), said Treherne, with a
-saturnine smile.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-An oar and a stout pole, which two of the party
-carried, were laid across the mouth of the shaft.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A double-sheaved block was securely lashed to
-them; a strong rope was rove through the sheaves,
-and a species of cradle was formed for the
-adventurous Audley Trevelyan.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Long familiar with his native rocks, the latter
-when a bold boy, had clambered by Bodrigan's
-Leap at Portmellin,* when seeking for puffins' nests,
-and could look without shrinking from the steeps
-of Gurnard's Head, Tol Pedn Penwith, and the
-fantastic cliffs of Tintagel. He had been doted on
-by the miners, with whom he had often descended
-the deepest shafts, clad like themselves in flannel
-shirt and trousers. Thus attired, he had explored
-the vast levels and silent galleries by the dim light
-of a feeble candle, while, as Sybil told of Denzil, he
-could hear the roar of the Atlantic over his head,
-and the boulders dashed by its force on the bluffs of
-the Land's End; and thence beyond, in levels half
-a mile out at sea, where the passing ships glided
-like silent phantoms many a fathom far above where
-he wandered.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="footnote">
-* So called from Sir Henry Bodrigan, who in the reign of
-Henry VII. sprang down the cliff, when flying from his neighbours
-Trevannion and Edgecumbe, who sought to capture or slay him.
-He was so little injured by the fall, that he reached a vessel sailing
-near the shore, and escaped to France. A mound, called the
-Castle Hill, and a farm-house, once part of a splendid mansion, are
-all that now remain of the abode of this fine old Cornish family.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Fearlessly he tied himself to the cradle which old
-Michael Treherne prepared for him; a lantern was
-hung at his neck, leaving his arms free, and now a
-dozen of strong and careful hands were laid on the
-ropes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Lower away, my lads," cried he, almost gaily;
-and with something like a gasp of anxiety in his
-throat, the General saw his young friend's face
-disappear as they lowered him into that awful orifice,
-the mouth of a shaft that went down a thousand
-feet and more.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Steady, my booys!" cried old Treherne, in a
-species of glee.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Those who witnessed this descent were none of
-them, perhaps, very impressionable men; yet even
-to them, there was a gloomy horror in the idea of
-the vast profundity of the deserted mine, over which
-Trevelyan swung; and the wildness of the night,
-the storm at sea, the whistling and howling of the
-wind as it swept the rocky promontories, and rolled
-the waves in foam against them, were not without
-their due effects upon the mind.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap15"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XV.
-<br /><br />
-THE SEARCH.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-"He's a braave booy, sartainly!" said old
-Michael Treherne, admiringly, in his queer Cornish
-accent, "it is like him and like his family&mdash;the
-Trevelyans of Rhoscadzhel.
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- By Tre, Pol and Pen,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;We know the Cornish men.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-He'd face Tregeagle himself&mdash;lower away gently,
-lads. His ancestors existed hundreds of years ago;
-and for the matter o' that, I spose so did mine; we
-be all old Cornish <i>keth</i>."*
-</p>
-
-<p>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-* People.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Audley Trevelyan would freely have risked his
-life to save anyone&mdash;of course a woman more than
-all; but how glorious was this! The peril he
-risked&mdash;for no ordinary amount of nerve was
-requisite for him who swung thus over the profundity
-of the ancient mine&mdash;was for his lovely little friend
-of the sketch-book; the Naiad of the moorland
-tarn&mdash;she who seemed not indisposed to love him, and
-whose heart he might yet make his own.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But Heaven!" thought he; "that impulsive
-little heart may be&mdash;alas&mdash;still enough by this
-time!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And even as this disastrous fear occurred to him,
-the roar of the falling water was heard on the
-lower level of the empty mine, more than a
-thousand feet below him, while the lantern he
-carried cast strange gleams on the damp, slimy, and
-discoloured masonry of the shaft, after he left
-behind, or rather above him, the fringe of weeds
-and gorse, that grew about the mouth; yet in less
-than a minute he was assured that the water he
-heard falling, proceeded, not from the flow of the
-tide, as he and his companions foreboded, but from
-some subterranean spring falling into the shaft, far
-below the upper entrance of the Pixies' Hole; and
-anything more weird, dreary, and ghastly than that
-cavernous fissure which now opened off it on one
-side, and which he was preparing cautiously to
-explore, it would be difficult to conceive.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From its rocky and ragged mouth, which was
-covered with white and pendant stalactites and
-hideous fungi, on which the light of his lantern fell
-with fitful rays, its interior receded away into dark
-and gloomy blackness and uncertainty.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Good Heaven!" muttered Audley, "the poor
-girl cannot be here. Should she have fallen down
-the shaft!"&mdash;was his next terrible thought.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Are ee saafe, sur?" cried Treherne, peering
-down from above.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"All right, old fellow&mdash;stop lowering and make
-fast the rope; I am just at the place, and a horrid
-one it is."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Ere he entered it, and cast off the cradle by
-which he had descended, he could hear in the
-obscurity beyond the surging or gurgling sound
-of the tide, at the lower end; and a nervous chill
-that he might find Sybil drowned, came over his
-heart.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well, by Jove!" he muttered; "of all the places
-in this world, to search for a young lady, who would
-think of this&mdash;down the shaft of a devilish old
-copper mine! I have seen some queer things in
-India, but this out-herods them all!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Carrying the lantern so that its light should
-precede and guide his steps, he had barely gone
-twenty paces, when he discerned something white
-amid the dense gloom. Within but a few feet of the
-still encroaching water, a female figure was lying
-on a shelf of rock, from which she started into a
-half sitting posture, and gazed upward at him,
-with a wild and startled expression, in which
-hope and fear, joy and wonder, were singularly
-mingled.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She was that Sybil Devereaux of whom he was in
-search; her dress, a white pique, all soiled,
-bedrabbled and wet, her fine dark hair dishevelled and
-sodden, her hat and veil gone, and her whole aspect
-forlorn and pitiable.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I am saved!" she exclaimed in a wailing and
-excited voice; "I thank Heaven&mdash;I thank kind
-God that you are come to me; but how&mdash;and who
-are you that have had the courage&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Audley&mdash;Audley Trevelyan&mdash;don't you know me,
-Miss Devereaux?" said he, as he placed the lantern
-on a rock, and raised her tenderly in his arms.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh Audley!" she exclaimed, and her head fell
-upon his shoulder, for she was weak as a child and
-past all exertion. She had never called him by his
-Christian name before, and while he felt his heart
-swell with a new emotion of pleasure, he ventured
-tenderly to kiss her cheek, and then he became
-aware how cold and chill it was. She seemed
-scarcely conscious of the act, though she said in a
-broken voice,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Mamma&mdash;my poor mamma shall thank you, sir&mdash;I
-cannot speak my own thoughts&mdash;they are too
-terrible and my gratitude is too deep for words."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"From my soul, I thank Heaven, that I came in
-time to save you! A little longer here, my dearest
-girl, and you must have perished of cold!" said he
-as he perceived with genuine anxiety how pale she
-was and how the whole of her delicate frame
-shivered, but his words or manner seemed to recall
-her energies, for she tried to smile and said,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I shall have a strange story to write of to
-Denzil, and tell my papa when he returns."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Have ee found her zur&mdash;is the young lady
-saafe?" cried a voice there was no mistaking, down
-the shaft.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Safe and sound, Treherne," replied Trevelyan,
-whose voice made strange echoes in the cavernous
-recesses of the place; "we shall come up together,
-so take care my friends, for there will be a heavier
-strain on the rope&mdash;a double weight now. Permit
-me to lead you, Miss Devereaux&mdash;or, may I not call
-you Sybil?" he added, as his voice trembled a
-little.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You may call me what you please," replied Sybil
-with something of her usual frankness, "I owe
-my life to you," she added feebly, while clinging to
-his arm.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"To me, after Rajah who guided us here, no
-doubt on hearing you cry for aid&mdash;so with the
-permission you accord, I shall call you Sybil&mdash;yes
-dearest Sybil, permit me to blindfold you."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Why?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You may become giddy&mdash;terrified."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I submit myself to you," she answered, and he
-tied his handkerchief over her eyes, and while doing
-so, to resist touching her lovely little lips with his
-own, was impossible.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Pardon me for this, Sybil," said he, as the action
-brought a little colour to her pale cheek, "but I love
-you, love you dearly. Elsewhere, we shall talk of
-this&mdash;come, allow me to be your guide."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Shall we not wait till the tide ebbs, and escape
-by the sands?" she asked, and shrinking as his arm
-encircled her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Dearest girl, you would die of cold ere that took
-place."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thus from terror and despair on Sybil's part, and
-from a proud and joyous sense of exultation, on that
-of Trevelyan, there came about abruptly, a
-<i>dénouement</i> which might have been long of developing
-itself, even with those who were so young and
-enthusiastic, a declaration of love upon one hand, and
-a tacit acceptance of it on the other, for gratitude
-mastered the regard already formed in the heart of
-the girl.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Audley was now in that delightful state of the
-tender passion, when to see even the skirt, to hear
-the voice or to breathe the same atmosphere, with its
-object, had a charm; then how much greater was the
-joy of having her all to himself, and to feel that too
-probably, she owed her life to him!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You do not&mdash;do not&mdash;love&mdash;" she faltered and paused.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Whom?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Rose Trecarrel?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I love but you, and I bless God for the
-opportunity given me for testifying that love, by
-serving and saving you&mdash;Sybil&mdash;dear Sybil for so let
-me call you now and for ever."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What the deuce <i>are</i> you about, Trevelyan? Do
-you mean to stay down there all night&mdash;or is the
-lady ill? That dreary hole can be neither
-romantic nor pleasant, I should fancy."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was the voice of the General hailing him now.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Here we come, sir," replied Audley, as he
-fastened the rope cradle securely round his body
-and courageously took Sybil in his arms. It was
-no doubt delightful to hold her in an embrace so
-close, and to feel her clinging to him, but a thrill of
-intense anxiety passed over all his nerves, and it
-seemed as if the hair of his head bristled up, when
-he found himself swinging at the end of a rope over
-that dreadful abyss, down which the lantern, as it
-chanced to fall from his hand, vanished as if into the
-bowels of the earth, for the lower level of that old
-mine, was far below the sea. As for poor Sybil, she
-felt only a terror that amounted to a species of
-torpor&mdash;a numbness of all sense.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Now pull together, my booys!" cried the cheerful
-voice of Michael Treherne, "one, two&mdash;one, two&mdash;<i>ho</i>
-and here they come out of the <i>knacked bal</i>!"
-for so the Cornish miners designate an abandoned
-mine, as it is among his class, and in the mines,
-that words of the old language linger.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And in less than a minute, Audley and Sybil were
-at the surface and in the grasp of strong hands that
-placed them safely on terra firma, when, overcome
-by all she had endured, the former immediately
-fainted.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The poor child is as wet as a <i>quilquin</i>" (a frog),
-said Treherne with commiseration.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"She requires instant attention," said the General
-kindly; "let her own servants take her at once to
-your cottage, Treherne, as it is the nearest place in
-this stormy night. See to this, Audley, while I hurry
-down to Porthellick and relieve the anxiety of her
-mother. Give orders to have the carriage sent
-there for her. By the way, Audley, is not this the
-girl that Rose chaffs you about?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The same, sir," replied Trevelyan, whose
-heightened colour was unseen in the dark.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How strange! Rose is such a quiz, you will
-never hear the end of this."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"She is the daughter of an officer&mdash;a Captain
-Devereaux."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I have never met him&mdash;of what corps?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I don't know."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"To Mike's cottage with her, and lose no time.
-Here my lads, all of you go to Trevanion's Tavern,
-and score to me what you drink. The night is
-rough and wet."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Thank'ee sir," replied Treherne, while the
-others all bowed and scraped and pulled their
-forelocks; "my old woman 'll keep the young lady
-safe, till her pony-kittereen or your carriage comes
-for her; and we'll drink your health, and
-Mr. Trevelyan's too&mdash;aye, and the old Cornish toast of
-'Fish, tin, and copper,' in summat better than
-Devonshire cider."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So, while Sybil in Audley's care was taken to the
-cottage of the old miner, and the latter with those
-who had joined in the search departed to enjoy the
-bounty of the General, the latter limped off to visit
-Constance and relate the story of her daughter's
-escape and safety.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap16"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XVI.
-<br /><br />
-INTELLIGENCE AT LAST.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-On seeing Constance without her bonnet, and
-with her dark hair somewhat in disorder, the first
-impression of the General was, how extremely like
-her daughter she proved, and how very youthful
-too; for her figure, as we have elsewhere said, was
-petite; her features were minute, beautiful and full
-of animation at all times, but never more so than
-now, when she started forward on the entrance of
-the visitor, with her delicate hands uplifted, her
-fine eyes sparkling through their tears, full of hope
-and inquiry, and her lips parted, showing the
-whiteness and faultless regularity of her teeth.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You have news for me, General?" she faltered.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Happily, good news, madam," said he, bowing
-low; "your daughter is safe and well."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, sir&mdash;oh, General Trecarrel, how can I
-thank you?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"By composing yourself, my dear madam," he
-replied, leading her to a chair; but Constance
-became almost hysterical; she clasped his hand
-in hers, and almost sought to kiss it, in expression
-of her deep gratitude, greatly to the confusion of
-the old soldier, who was Englishman enough to
-dislike a "scene."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Under the circumstances, no apology is necessary
-for the abruptness of my visit," said he; "we
-are pretty near neighbours, and I hope shall
-ultimately be friends, though, singular to say, I
-have never had the pleasure of meeting Captain
-Devereaux."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-These words recalled Constance to a sense&mdash;the
-ever-bitter sense&mdash;of the awkwardness of her
-position, and she faltered out&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Captain Devereaux is absent at present&mdash;abroad
-indeed&mdash;but I hope he shall soon be home
-now. And our dear daughter&mdash;she escaped the
-rising tide&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"By fortunately being able to find shelter in the
-Pixies' Hole, from which she was promptly rescued
-by a young friend&mdash;a brother-officer of mine."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, how I shall bless him and ever treasure his
-name."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He is Mr. Audley Trevelyan, and has conveyed
-her, in the first place, to old Mike Treherne's
-cottage. She was drenched by rain and spray,
-suffering from chill, and overcome with terror."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My poor little Sybil!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The General did not add to the mother's alarm
-by adding that he had left Sybil insensible, but
-only said&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"She should not return till to-morrow, when
-perhaps the rain may cease, and the storm abate;
-but I have ordered my carriage, and she shall have
-the use of it with pleasure. It must be here in
-a few minutes now."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Constance could only murmur her heartfelt
-thanks; but now, more than ever, she felt the
-peculiarity of her position&mdash;its extreme awkwardness,
-and its doubtful aspect. It was but a few
-weeks since her husband, now known as Lord
-Lamorna, had stood by the General's side at the
-late lord's grave, amid a crowd of bareheaded
-tenantry, and here they were talking of him as
-"Captain Devereaux!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sybil's cousin-german had saved and protected
-her, thus cementing the acquaintance begun by
-chance at the little lake upon the moor, and was
-with her now too, probably; he was her husband's
-nephew, and while that husband was absent, with
-her own rank, name, and his concealed, she dared
-not avow the relationship that existed among them
-all! Poor Constance felt her cheek grow paler,
-with the sickly thoughts that oppressed her heart,
-as she muttered under her breath&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Patience yet a while, and, with God's help, dear
-Richard shall see me through all this!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In a few words the General, with military brevity,
-related the whole affair of the evening; the
-providential discovery of her daughter in the chasm, by
-her voice, as it was rightly conjectured, having
-reached the ears of Audley's Thibet mastiff; but
-for which circumstance she must have perished of
-cold and exhaustion, or perhaps fallen down the
-shaft of the old mine and never been heard of
-again, her fate remaining a mystery to all&mdash;contingencies,
-the contemplation of which appalled the
-heart of the poor mother, who said in a very faint
-voice&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My daughter is long in returning to me. Oh,
-sir, can it be that you are kindly concealing
-something from me?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Nay, madam, the tempestuous state of the
-weather and the feeble condition of the young lady
-herself require&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ah, that is it! my daughter is ill&mdash;dying
-perhaps, while I am idly talking here. Winny&mdash;Winny
-Braddon, my bonnet and cloak; I shall set
-forth this instant for Treherne's cottage!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I assure you, madame, that my carriage was at
-her disposal, and it shall bring your daughter
-home."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, General, the gratitude of my heart&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"There&mdash;there, please don't thank me for a little
-common humanity," continued the kind old soldier,
-"but give my compliments&mdash;General Trecarrel's
-compliments&mdash;to Captain Devereaux when he returns,
-and say that I think he ought, in etiquette,
-to have waited upon me as his senior officer; for
-such was the fashion in my young days, when two
-brethren of the sword took up their quarters in a
-district so secluded as this; and I should like my
-girls to know your daughter."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I have a son, too, General&mdash;my dear Denzil&mdash;who
-left us but lately to join his Regiment."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ah&mdash;indeed&mdash;you quite interest me. Where is
-it stationed?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"In India&mdash;far, far from me."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Of course, you could not have him always
-at your apron-strings. What, or which, is his
-corps?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The Cornish Light Infantry."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My own Regiment! I am the full colonel of
-it: why did he not leave a card with me on
-appointment?&mdash;he must have known of my whereabouts."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A cloud came over the fair open countenance of
-Trecarrel, and Constance felt that, in the further
-prosecution of their systematic incognito, a breach
-of military etiquette and punctilio had taken
-place.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My young friend Trevelyan is in the same
-corps," said the General, after a pause.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Constance knew that too, and that it had been
-the Regiment of her husband during their happiest
-days at Montreal; but when with it he had borne
-his family surname, and <i>not</i> that of Devereaux.
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- "Oh, what a tangled web we weave,<br />
- "When first we practise to deceive!"<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-So thought Constance, and who could not quite
-foresee the end of the web. Her present
-perplexities were increasing, and her usually pale
-cheeks began to blush scarlet.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But now, to her intense relief, the sound of
-wheels and hoofs at the door, followed by quick
-steps in the entrance, announced an arrival, and in
-a moment more mother and daughter were weeping
-joyfully in each other's arms.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Dearest mamma&mdash;darling mamma! Oh the
-joy of being safe with you again! An age seems to
-have elapsed since I left you this evening!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And old Winny Braddon came in for her share
-of caresses, while the General and Trevelyan,
-though they now began to feel themselves rather
-<i>de trop</i>, looked on with smiles of pleasure. So full
-of joy was Constance at the restoration of Sybil,
-that she never noticed the quaint and coarse (though
-comfortably dry) costume which the careful wife of
-Treherne had substituted for her wet and sodden
-habiliments.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Audley's quick and practised eye saw that
-Constance was a woman possessing more than an
-ordinary share of beauty and refinement. He took
-in the whole details of the drawing-room, and
-perceived by a glance that the occupants of this
-secluded villa "in the willow-glen&mdash;those peculiar
-Devereaux," as the Trecarrel girls called them,
-were evidently people of the best and most
-cultivated taste, for the buhl or marquetterie tables,
-consoles, and cabinets exhibited selections from the
-most chaste productions of Dresden and Sèvres;
-delicate Venetian bronzes, quaint Majolica vases and
-groups, some relics from Herculaneum; and other
-objects (more familiar to him) from India and
-Burmah were there&mdash;four-armed gods and other
-idols in silver or ivory.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Pausing for a moment in her caresses, Constance
-turned towards Audley Trevelyan with a pleading
-glance of irresolution, yet one of wonderful sweetness.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My young friend, Mr. Trevelyan," said the
-General; "allow me to introduce him, Mrs. Devereaux."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, sir, to you I owe the gratitude of a
-lifetime?" she exclaimed in an accent of touching
-tenderness.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He seemed so like her absent Denzil, that all her
-heart yearned to him, and in a genuine transport of
-gratitude she embraced him with such <i>empressement</i>,
-that in a woman so young apparently for her
-maternal character, and so very handsome too,
-rather perplexed Trevelyan, who said,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You owe me no thanks&mdash;indeed, indeed, you do
-not. I did but my duty&mdash;I obeyed only the dictates
-of humanity; and I assure you that you are quite as
-much indebted to Rajah as to me, Mrs. Devereaux."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The name he used recalled her to herself, and
-the peculiarity of her position as regarded him&mdash;the
-secret she could not yet reveal; and turning
-away as an expression of confusion come over her
-face, she stooped, and casting her arms round the
-great Thibet mastiff, caressed it with a grace and
-playfulness that partook of girlish glee.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By this time Sybil was reclining wearily, and
-with an air of utter exhaustion and languor, on a
-sofa. Her face was very pale, save when a kind
-of hectic flush passed over it, and her eyes seemed
-unnaturally bright. Even to the unpractised
-observation of the two gentlemen it was evident that
-they had better retire, and, after exchanging a
-glance suggestive of this, they both rose, hat in
-hand.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You will, I hope, permit me to call to-morrow
-and make inquiries?" said Audley Trevelyan.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Constance bowed, and her tongue trembled:
-what she said she scarcely knew, but it was a
-muttered wish of some kind, with many thanks and
-reference to her husband's return, all oddly
-combined. That she laboured under some species of
-hidden restraint was quite apparent to the perception
-of him she addressed, and also to the General;
-and so, after the usual well-bred wishes that both
-ladies should soon recover from the effects of their
-recent terror, they withdrew together; and as the
-sound of their carriage wheels died away in the
-willow avenue, all other sounds, and the light too,
-seemed to pass away from Sybil, as she sank
-gradually back, became insensible, and was conveyed
-to bed by Winny Braddon and her startled mother,
-who summoned medical aid without delay.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The next day found her in a species of nervous
-fever. She had undergone too much of mental fear
-and bodily suffering for a nature so delicate as hers,
-and remained for a time unconscious of all around
-her. Slowly and gradually, like water filtering
-through a rock&mdash;as some one describes the struggles
-of returning sensibility&mdash;she became aware that she
-was in her own bed, with her mother on one side
-and Winny Braddon on the other in watchful
-attendance; then, with a shudder, she would recall
-the horrors she had escaped, and clasp her hands
-as she had done ten years before, when a little
-child in prayer.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then exhaustion would bring sleep, but a sleep
-haunted by dreams, and, at times, visions wild as
-those of an opium-eater; thus, for many a night,
-long after this period, the episodes of that eventful
-evening would come back to memory with all their
-harrowing details: the advancing tide rolling against
-the impending cliffs and thundering in the Pixies'
-Hole, after it had swallowed the drenched sand;
-her retreating step by step fearfully and breathlessly
-before it, in terror of being drowned on one hand
-and of falling down the mine on the other!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Anon, she would imagine herself swung up that
-terrible shaft through darkness and space, and that
-the rope was just on the eve of <i>parting</i>, when she
-would wake with a half-stifled scream to find that
-she was in the arms of her mamma, who was
-soothing and caressing her.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap17"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XVII.
-<br /><br />
-THE TRECARRELS.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Duly next day, at a proper visiting-hour, the
-handsome and well-appointed carriage of General
-Trecarrel, occupied only by his two daughters and
-Audley Trevelyan, was seen bowling down the
-avenue of the villa at Porthellick, with Rajah
-bounding before it in as much glee as if at home in
-Thibet, "the northern land of snow," where many
-a time he had scoured along the slopes of the
-Himalaya range and the Dwalaghiri in pursuit of
-the Cashmere goat and the Tartarian yak; but, as
-the event proved, the visit was in vain: the two ladies
-could only leave their cards, as they were informed
-that both Mrs. and Miss Devereaux were too much
-indisposed after the events of yesterday to receive
-visitors.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It will be a case which warm drinks and cosseting
-will soon cure, I hope," said Rose, shrugging
-her pretty shoulders.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Where to, Miss Trecarrel?" asked the footman,
-touching his hat ere he sprang to his place behind.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"To Bodmin," replied the elder sister: "we
-have shopping to do, Mr. Trevelyan;" and after a
-pause she added, "I have told you that they were
-odd people, those Devereaux; we were fools to
-come&mdash;don't you think so, Rose?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Perhaps, Mab."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Do not judge so harshly," urged Audley. "What
-may be more probable than that both should feel
-excited after the last night's terror and&mdash;and&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Chivalry," suggested Rose Trecarrel, a little
-malice glittering in her fine eyes; but Audley
-remained silent.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Mabel and Rose Trecarrel were both eminently
-handsome girls. The elder was tall and showy,
-having dark grey eyes that filled, at times, with
-unusual lustre and had a wonderful variety of
-expression, but her chief beauties were perhaps her
-purity of complexion and the quantity and
-magnificence of her rich brown hair.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Rose was somewhat her counterpart&mdash;a large but
-very graceful girl, with clear, sparkling, hazel eyes,
-and hair much of the same hue, though her lashes
-and eyebrows were dark and well defined. Without
-attempting to describe her nose, we shall simply
-say it was a very pretty one, that seemed exactly
-to suit the expression of her eyes and the
-full-lipped yet little and alluring mouth below. Both
-girls were always dressed rather in the extreme of
-the mode, and were sure to be prime favourites at
-all balls, races, or meets to see the hounds throw
-off; and no entertainment in that part of the
-duchy was deemed complete without "the
-Trecarrels." No friend had ever accused them of being
-flirts, though fair enemies had frequently done so.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The General was very proud of his two daughters,
-and felt certain that both would make most eligible
-and wealthy marriages, when he took them to India,
-where he was in expectation daily of obtaining an
-important command.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For the time Audley Trevelyan was, what others
-had been, and others yet might be, a kind of
-privileged dangler in attendance on both sisters, and
-seemed to share their smiles and return attention
-to both in a pretty equal manner; thus both were
-somewhat disposed to resent the new and sudden
-interest he manifested in Sybil Devereaux.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Both were eminently dashing girls. Mabel, the
-elder, was perhaps the statelier of the two, but the
-beauty and manner of Rose were more sparkling and
-dazzling. Both sisters were highly accomplished,
-and both had that affected indifference to their own
-attractions, which is perhaps an indication of the
-strongest and most ineradicable vanity&mdash;for of those
-attractions they knew the full power and value.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But who are those Devereaux?" asked Mabel,
-as a turn of the road hid the villa, during a pause
-filled up only by the subdued noise of the carriage
-wheels in their patent axle-boxes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You should know by this time, Trevelyan,"
-added Rose, looking at him from under the long
-fringes of her eyes and her parasol, as she lay well
-back indolently yet gracefully among the soft
-cushions of the carriage.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Nay; how should I, when you, who are neighbours,
-know nothing? Her father was a captain in
-some Line Regiment."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"<i>Her</i> father&mdash;of whom were we speaking?" asked
-Rose.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Trevelyan coloured perceptibly, and Mabel
-laughed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, she occupies his thoughts already, Mab!
-He was of some Line Regiment, that is pretty vague,
-and scarcely suits our Cornish standard of such
-things as family and so forth&mdash;least of all the
-standard formed by your uncle, the late Lord
-Lamorna."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, he was an absurd old goose&mdash;mad with
-pride, in fact."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And barely remembered you in his will?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Precisely so," replied Audley, half amused and
-half provoked.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"They visit no one, and they make no acquaintances,"
-said Rose, resuming the theme.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"They settled here without an introduction, I
-have heard, and gave it to be understood that they
-declined all acquaintance save with the Rector and
-Doctor."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Neither of whom, Mab, are particular to a
-shade. I should not wonder, Audley, if your
-'captain' were some returned convict or retired
-housebreaker in easy circumstances."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Rose, you are too severe," urged Trevelyan;
-"Mrs. Devereaux is a kind of idol among the poor
-people here."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"We must all admit that she excels in chicken
-broth, is knowing in coals and tea, and great in
-corduroys, tobacco, and blankets; but fasten my
-bracelet, please," and she held forth coquettishly a
-slender wrist and a well-shaped hand, tightly cased
-in the finest of straw-coloured kid; and every
-movement of Rose Trecarrel, however quick and
-unstudied, was full of the poetry of action. "Thanks.
-If you will not admit that the mother of your fair
-friend is odd, you must that her father is so&mdash;or at
-least is ignorant of military etiquette, if he is a
-military man."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He has never left his card upon papa, which,
-in a solitary place like this, papa thinks he ought
-to have done, as it is the fashion in the service&mdash;going
-out I am aware&mdash;for the junior officer to wait
-upon the senior, though uninvited."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Though a bore at times, it was a good old
-custom, I admit, but like many other fashions is as
-much gone out as square letter-paper, sand-boxes
-and sealing wax, stage coaches and queues."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Then his son," she continued in an aggrieved
-tone, "on being appointed to papa's own Regiment,
-never had the politeness to leave a card upon us
-either!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Rose, you are quite a <i>Code Militaire</i>," said
-Trevelyan, laughing again. "Those Devereaux are
-thought handsome&mdash;I mean the mother and
-daughter."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I have no wish to disparage the taste of the
-Cornish gentlemen&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"None could afford to treat their taste with more
-indifference than you and Miss Trecarrel, who are
-both&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Both what?" asked Mabel, quickly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Above all comparison."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, we did not leave all our gallantry in the old
-coal-mine!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Excuse me, Rose," said Trevelyan, "it was
-originally a tin-mine."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Pity it was not brass&mdash;eh, Audley?" replied
-Rose, laughing with a voice like a silver bell.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Come, come, Rose," said Mabel, "you and
-Trevelyan are usually such good friends that I shall
-not have you to spar thus."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"We don't spar, it is only 'barrack-room chaff,' in
-which, as you may perceive, Mr. Trevelyan excels,"
-retorted the piqued belle.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The truth was rather apparent to Audley, that
-the pretty&mdash;nay, the beautiful and hazel-eyed
-Rose was nettled, and seriously so. Hitherto she
-had considered the handsome ex-Lieutenant of
-Hussars, and now of the Cornish Light Infantry,
-as her own peculiar property&mdash;even more than
-her sister. He was to be her papa's Aide-de-camp
-in India&mdash;she had settled this, <i>nem. con.</i>; and
-while on leave at home, he was to be her dangler,
-secret slave, and open adorer&mdash;husband in the end
-perhaps, if nothing better "turned up;" for Audley's
-expectations from his father, the barrister, as one
-of a family of five, were slender enough; and here
-he was too probably smitten with a little chit-faced
-interloper whom no one knew anything about!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was a pause in the conversation, during
-which the carriage had passed St. Teath and
-St. Kew, with their quaint churches, and that of
-Egloshayle, on the right bank of the Camel, where
-it peeped up among the trees, when Rose returned
-to the charge.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And you actually swung together at the end of a
-rope."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"At the end of a rope, as you say."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How romantic!&mdash;how charming!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"At least in one sense; yet I was glad enough
-when it was all over in safety."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What! though doubtless, as Byron says,
-</p>
-
-<p>
- 'The situation had its charm.'"<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Fie, Rose&mdash;you quote <i>Don Juan</i>!" exclaimed
-Mabel.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And why should not I, Mab, if the passage
-seems so familiar to you?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Rose, you are incorrigible!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well, Audley, your fellow-soldiers must be
-proud of you when they hear of this feat of arms."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"We say <i>brother</i>-soldiers in the service," replied
-Trevelyan.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I submit to the correction; it is like one from
-papa, who deems all civilians stupid fellows. And
-so you think she is a paragon of loveliness?"
-continued Rose Trecarrel, so bent on the game of
-tormenting him, that she cared little for showing
-her hand.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I did not say so&mdash;do you, Rose?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Call me <i>Miss</i> Rose, if you please," said she, with
-a charming air of pique on her lovely little lip.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well&mdash;where were we?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"About the beauty of the girl you rescued&mdash;were
-slung in a rope with. How funny!" said Mabel.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Of her beauty you can judge for yourselves; I
-have nothing to do with it," replied he wearily.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Fortunate for you," laughed Rose, "as the girl's
-position in society seems so dubious, Audley."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Call me Mr. Trevelyan, please, as we are to be
-on distant terms."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Let us only have you in India, where we shall be
-ere long," said she, shaking her parasol threateningly,
-"and I shall have papa to put you under arrest."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"For what?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Conduct unbecoming an officer and a gentleman."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"As how, my fair friend?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Behaving rudely, petulantly, and insolently."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"To a pretty girl?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes&mdash;moreover, a daughter of the general on
-whose staff he is serving."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And the sentence of the court will be, dismissal
-from her presence for ever."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Have some mercy on him," said Mabel.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You seem to know the duties of an aide-de-camp,"
-said Audley, not ill-pleased to find himself
-an object of interest to two such handsome girls.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Of papa's at least," said Rose: "to revise the
-dinner and visiting lists; to see Mab and me to
-and from all balls, kettle-drums, reviews, durbars,
-and so forth; to arrange picnics; to do all the
-squiring and shawling business, and to dance with
-us whenever we feel bored by some slow griff who
-can't keep time; to make bets of gloves, fans, and
-bouquets, and to lose them so nicely and so opportunely,
-that the payment thereof appears a veritable
-glory; to see us through the crush of the supper,
-and procure ices, creams, chicken, champagne, and
-crackers, no matter how the thermometer may stand,
-or how weary the punkahwallah may be&mdash;all of
-which are among the duties of an accomplished
-staff-officer."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, Rose, how your tongue runs on!" said
-Mabel.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Poor fellow, I must spare him, for his heart
-seems divided between the mother and daughter; so
-I hope that this Captain Devereaux may soon be
-home, lest evil happen. But here we are at
-Bodmin!" she added, as the carriage, after quitting
-the highlands of granite and dreary moorland which
-extend to within four miles of the ancient assize
-town, rolled through its centre street.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And now, if you choose," said Mabel, "Trevelyan,
-you may enjoy the indispensable cigar while
-we investigate the industrial treasures of a country
-draper's shop. We have but one hour to spare, and
-then homeward."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Or we shall have papa consulting that remarkable
-watch, which he got from Sir John Keane
-after the storming of Ghuznee," added Rose, as
-disdaining Audley's proffered hand, she sprang
-lightly from the carriage steps.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So, for a time he was left to "do" the lions of
-Bodmin, the handsome old Norman church, the
-few pointed arches and dilapidated walls of the
-Leper Hospital, and so forth; and to his own
-reflections and thoughts, which, heedless of the
-sharp banter he had undergone, were all of Sybil&mdash;at
-that very moment struggling back into perfect
-consciousness from feverish delirium, and stealing
-from Winny Braddon the visiting-card he had
-recently left, that she might conceal it under her
-pillow.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To her, he was fast becoming the realisation of
-all her day-dreams&mdash;"the one moving spirit that
-animated the whole world of her united romances."
-He was,
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"her first and passionate love, that all<br />
- Which Eve hath left her daughters since her fall."<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-To Rose and to Mabel Trecarrel, he was simply
-one among the many "nice fellows" they had met
-with in society, and should meet again in plenty.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap18"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XVIII.
-<br /><br />
-HE LOVES ME, TRULY!
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-To Audley's mind there was a freshness and innocence
-about Sybil, that made her image dwell in his
-heart prominently, and more vividly than the
-dashing and showy Mabel and Rose Trecarrel
-could have conceived to be possible. Moreover,
-there was, to him, something glorious in the
-conviction that for the sake of this lovely young girl he
-had confronted a manifest peril; that by doing so
-he had saved her and established&mdash;as he hoped&mdash;a
-tie of no ordinary strength and peculiarity between
-them, linking, in the future, their histories if not
-their lives together; for to him she owned now, most
-probably, the fact that she existed at all.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Such were the kind of thoughts to which
-Trevelyan, hitherto a heedless and pleasure-loving
-young subaltern of Hussars, indulged in many a
-dreamy hour, even when half flirting or "chaffing"
-with the Trecarrels, riding or driving abroad with
-them, turning the leaves at the piano while Rose
-displayed the perfection of her white shoulders and
-taper arms after dinner, and dawdled languidly over
-the airs of Verdi and Balfe; and to which he fully
-abandoned himself, when he strolled forth alone,
-to enjoy a cigar in the lawn or in some secluded lane.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sybil on her part deemed it equally delightful, to
-think that she owed her life to him; for had not
-Audley and others said (and she felt the truth of
-it) that, ere the ebb of the tide should have left the
-lower end of the cavern open and free, she must
-have perished of cold or terror, or both.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She had read the contents of many a box from
-"Mudie's," but no episode in any of the three
-volumes octavo therein seemed exactly to resemble
-hers in the Pixies' Hole. It was very romantic and
-strange, no doubt; but to Constance it appeared
-that the still concealed part of their relationship
-was the most strange and romantic feature in the
-affair.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Like most, if not all, young girls, she had read all
-about love in novels and romances; she had talked
-about love to school-companions, some of them
-enthusiastic Italian girls at Como, by the Arno, and
-elsewhere; and now a lover had actually come, one
-who on three successive days had left cards, with
-earnest inquiries concerning her health and that of
-her mamma.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She remembered the endearment of his manner
-when he saved her, but feared, at times, that such
-might only have been caused by the peculiarity of
-their situation; and then she would blush with
-annoyance at herself, as she recalled the somewhat
-too pointed way in which she questioned him about
-Rose Trecarrel, to whom she was still a stranger,
-and of whom she had thus evinced a jealousy&mdash;actually
-a jealousy, as if thereby assuming a right to
-question his actions!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But had he not called her Sybil, and said that he
-loved her, and her only?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The afternoon of the fourth day saw Audley
-Trevelyan&mdash;always careful of his costume, on this
-occasion unusually so&mdash;passing slowly down the
-willow avenue towards the villa; and as he
-approached the latter, the beating of his heart
-quickened on perceiving the light figure of Sybil
-pass from the pillared portico into a conservatory
-that adjoined the house. So she was convalescent&mdash;had
-recovered at last; and now he would speak
-with her alone, and might resume perhaps the
-thread of that hurried but delightful topic, which
-was so suddenly cut short on the evening he saved
-her, by the voice of the impatient General.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He approached the glass door of the conservatory,
-which she had left invitingly open, his footsteps
-being completely muffled by the soft and
-close-clipped turf of the little lawn.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The conservatory was handsome, lofty, and
-spacious, floored with brilliantly coloured encaustic
-tiles, and constructed of iron, like a kiosk; its
-shelves were laden with delicate ferns, with cacti
-and gorgeous exotics in full bloom, though the
-season was in the last days of autumn, and over all
-drooped, almost from the roof to the ground, the
-far-stretching and slender green sprays of a graceful
-acacia. Under this stood Sybil, clad in a simple
-white dress, decorated by trimmings of rose-coloured
-satin ribbon, and having a dainty little lace collar
-round her slender neck; and Trevelyan watched her
-in silence and with admiration for half a minute ere
-he entered.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was the freshness and girlish purity of Sybil
-that charmed him quite as much as the delicacy of
-her beauty. During his few years of military life, in
-London, at Bath, Brighton, and Canterbury, even at
-Calcutta, he had met many such girls as the
-Trecarrels&mdash;brilliant in flirtation and knowing in all
-manner of arts and graces; but none that
-resembled Sybil.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She had plucked a dwarf rose, and was about to
-place it in the breast of her dress. Suddenly she
-seemed to pause and change her intention; for a
-bright and fond smile spread over her soft little face,
-and while speaking to herself, leaf by leaf, she began
-to pluck the flower slowly to pieces.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She spoke aloud, but her voice was so low that it
-failed to reach the ears of Trevelyan, till after a
-time, when, as the leaves lessened in number, she
-began to raise her tones, and her occupation became
-plain to him. She was acting to herself&mdash;repeating
-the little part of Goethe's Marguerite in the garden,
-but in a fashion of her own.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He loves me a little&mdash;tenderly&mdash;truly&mdash;he loves
-me not!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With each pause in this floral formula, the old
-German mode of divination in love affairs, a pink
-leaf floated away or fell on her white dress; and when
-but seven remained round the calyx, she paused for
-a moment; her face brightened as the charm seemed
-to work satisfactorily; she resumed her plucking,
-and as the seventh or last leaf was twitched from
-the stem, she clasped her hands and exclaimed with
-joy&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Truly&mdash;Audley loves me <i>truly</i>!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her colour deepened, and there was almost a
-divine expression about her eyes and lips; but she
-became covered with intense confusion when
-Trevelyan approached her suddenly, and said with a
-tender and pleasantly modulated voice&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Your floral spell has worked to admiration, for
-Audley does love you truly and fondly, dearest
-Sybil!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, Mr. Trevelyan&mdash;and you have overheard
-my folly!" was all she could falter out, as he
-captured her hands in his own, and she stooped her
-face aside.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"<i>Mr.</i> Trevelyan? Why, a moment ago you
-called me plain Audley, and it did sound so
-delightful! Pray do not let us go back in our
-relations. And you have quite recovered, I hope,
-from the effects of that frightful affair?" he added,
-while smiling with fondness into the clear bright
-eyes that drooped beneath his gaze.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It seems as nothing, now&mdash;save when I dream;
-you make too much of it&mdash;indeed you do," blundered
-Sybil.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Can I do so of aught in which you have a part?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Poor mamma is still in a weak and nervous
-state; so, I am sorry to say, she will be unable to
-see you."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As it was not "mamma" he had come exactly to
-visit, Audley could only murmur some well-bred
-expression of regret.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How very remarkable that you should have
-been there to save me!" said Sybil, after a pause.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The coldly treated stranger by the moorland
-tarn, eh?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You forget that we had not been introduced, or
-how came it all to pass?" she asked, with growing
-confusion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"As all things in this life do, dearest Sybil."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But how?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It was fate&mdash;destiny."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What&mdash;are you a fatalist?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I hope not; and yet it were sweet to think that&mdash;that&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What?" murmured Sybil, her long lashes
-drooping beneath the ardour of his glance, while
-his clasp seemed to tighten on her slender fingers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Much more passed that has been said, over and
-over again, under the same circumstances, by every
-pair of lovers since roses grew in Eden (and,
-unluckily, apples too); and there were long pauses,
-that were only pauses of the tongue, and which
-beatings of the heart filled up, with many a sigh
-"the deeper for suppression." There grew between
-these two a sudden sense of great trust which
-increased the tenderness of their sentiments, while
-deep gratitude was mingled now with Sybil's former
-budding love. It did seem to her, as if Fate had
-deliberately cast each in the path of the other; and
-doubtless it was so, for "out of these chance-affinities
-grow sometimes the passion of a life, and
-sometimes the disappointments that embitter
-existence."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, Audley, without mamma's consent, dare I
-accept so lovely a ring?" said Sybil, in a low voice,
-as she lingered at the conservatory door and contemplated
-a jewel which Trevelyan had just slipped upon
-her engaged finger.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You will surely wear it for my sake, till&mdash;till&mdash;"
-he paused, and scarcely knew what to say, for he
-now began to reflect that he was only a subaltern,
-and had been "going the pace," in his love-making,
-with a vengeance! To fall in love and engage
-oneself were easy enough; but, as yet, he did not quite
-see the end of the affair. Sybil was, moreover, the
-daughter of an officer whose temper, perhaps, might
-not brook trifling.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, it is an exquisite diamond!" resumed the
-girl, the pause unnoticed, and its cause, to her,
-unknown.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It formed one of the eyes of Vishnu, a Hindoo
-idol, in a temple near Agra. One of the Cornish
-Light Infantry&mdash;old Mike Treherne, the miner's
-son&mdash;poked out both with his bayonet. Jack Delamere
-bought one; I the other, and had it set thus in a
-ring by a Parsee jeweller in the Chandney Choke, at
-a time when I little thought of having in mine so
-dear a hand to place it on. Has not our acquaintance
-ripened with wonderful rapidity, darling??
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Under such terrible circumstances, I don't
-wonder at it," said she, smiling tenderly as she
-toyed with the ring, which was now enhanced in
-value&mdash;priceless in her eyes, for it was a love-token.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A love-token! and what might be its future history,
-and what their fate? "Customs alter, and fashions
-change," says a writer; "but love-gifts never grow
-old-fashioned or out of date,&mdash;they are always fresh
-from the golden age. Old people die, and desks and
-drawers are ransacked by their heirs. Oh, take up
-tenderly the withered petals, the lock of hair, the
-quaint ring hidden away in some secret recess; for
-hearts have once thrilled and eyes moistened at
-their touch. Precious gems and rare objects there
-may be in casket and cabinet; but none preserved
-with such jealous care as <i>these</i>, for they were the
-gifts of love."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sybil was a thoughtful girl, and even in that
-happy hour a sadness stole through her heart, as
-some such ideas occurred to her; but the young
-officer thought only of the present time, of its joy
-and of her beauty.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He pressed her to name a day when she and her
-mamma, as by courtesy bound, would return the
-visit of the Trecarrels; but, ere that could be
-accomplished, there came to pass that "greater sorrow"
-which the heart of Constance had foreboded, and
-which must be duly recorded in its place; so the
-hoped-for visit was never paid.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On this evening, Audley lingered long with Sybil.
-Each had so much to say to the other, and so many
-questions to ask, and so many fond plans for the
-future, that parting was a difficult task, even with
-the knowledge that they were to meet again on the
-morrow.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It came; and noon saw him again at the villa,
-where he was received in the drawing-room by
-Constance alone; and to her he began to speak of Sybil
-after a time, and to express his admiration and
-regard for her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This Constance had fully foreseen and expected;
-but she was outwardly, to all appearance, collected
-and calm, till the secret that oppressed her became
-too much for her nervous system. Thus, the tenor
-of her bearing, which before had been all kindness
-and gratitude, suddenly changed. She became cold
-and constrained, perplexed and even awkward; so
-that a chill fell upon the heart of Audley, whose
-nature, all unlike that of his father, was frank and
-generous to a fault. She curtly but gently told
-him, that until the return of her husband she could
-afford no permission for her daughter to receive
-addresses; and soon after, full of deep mortification,
-and dreading he knew not what, Audley Trevelyan
-took his leave; and Constance, as she watched his
-figure pass out of the avenue, burst into tears.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sybil, as her youngest-born, she had ever looked
-upon as a species of child&mdash;called "<i>the</i> baby," when
-long past babyhood; and now Sybil had a lover!
-Awakened to the reality of this, the poor lonely
-mother regarded this new phase of her daughter's
-existence with a species of alarm that bordered on
-terror.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Would that Richard were home!" was her first
-thought; "even Denzil's advice would be something
-to me now, poor boy!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Audley had barely entered the Trecarrels'
-drawing-room, when Rose, who was reclining on a
-fauteuil, with her rich brown hair beautifully dressed
-by the hands of her Ayah, and who fancied herself
-immersed in a novel, tossed it aside, for her clear
-hazel eyes speedily detected the disturbed
-expression of his face, and proceeded forthwith to quiz
-him as usual about "the Devereaux girl," and his
-intentions in that quarter; while Mabel, who was
-seated at the piano, sang laughingly a verse of
-"Wanted, a Wife," then a popular song, altering
-certain words "to suit the occasion," as Rose said&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- "As to fortune&mdash;of course, I have but my pay,<br />
- A sub with seven-and-sixpence a day,<br />
- And a pension beside&mdash;rather small, 'tis confest,<br />
- For a leg shot away in the action 'off Brest;'<br />
- For the loss of three fingers in fighting a chase,<br />
- And a terrible cut from a sword in my face.<br />
- But with all these defects, my nerves I must string,<br />
- To propose for Miss Devereaux&mdash;delicate thing!"<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Audley felt almost inclined to quarrel with his fair
-friends.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Don't tease a fellow so, Rose," said he,
-wearily; "I have no money&mdash;at least, little beyond
-my pay; and have as much idea of marrying as&mdash;as&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I have, perhaps."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I cannot say that."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You could ask this Sybil Devereaux?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Of course&mdash;it would be easy as cribbage."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And what would she say, think you?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"As a sensible girl such as she seems to be&mdash;'wait.'"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Which means, that she would take you in time
-to come?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Perhaps."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Unless something better turned up."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Don't judge of her by yourself, Rose," he
-retorted, laughing, to conceal his annoyance, which
-was greatly increased when the General's butler,
-just as Audley was ascending to his own room to
-dress for dinner, handed him a letter on a silver
-salver.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was from his father; written in his usual clear
-and precise hand. Audley for a time left it on the
-toilette table; then he tore it open, with an air of
-irritation, as these paternal missives were rarely
-pleasant ones, being always filled with advice, varied
-by reprehension.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Fathers have flinty hearts&mdash;and, by Jove, here
-is one!" muttered Audley, while his brows contracted.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I have seen in the public prints," ran the letter,
-"all about your adventure with the daughter of
-those strange people who live at Porthellick. The
-woman Devereaux is, as her name imports, too
-probably some designing French adventuress. Mabel
-Trecarrel has written to your sister Gartha, that
-you are quite smitten with the daughter; but I give
-you my distinct advice and notice to take heed of
-what you are about, and to join us in London
-without delay. You left the Hussars, even in India,
-because of the expense of the corps, neither tentage
-nor loot" (loot! the governor means batta) "being
-sufficient to maintain you. Disobey me in the
-matter of this girl Devereaux, and <i>I shall cut off</i>
-even the slender allowance I promised you, for the
-Cornish Light Infantry."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Audley crushed up the letter in his hand, for it
-came, at that particular moment, like a sentence of
-death.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And Downie Trevelyan could write thus of the
-loving and amiable little family circle at the villa,
-knowing all he did, and suspecting more!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To fear, or to find that his brother Richard, so
-long deemed an eccentric bachelor, had a family
-ready made and at hand to succeed him in the
-honours of Rhoscadzhel and Lamorna was bad
-enough. These interlopers who came between his
-own family and the line of Trevelyan might (perhaps)
-be set aside; but to find that his eldest son
-had become entangled with one of those so-called
-Devereaux, proved too much for the equanimity of
-the far-seeing lawyer.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap19"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XIX.
-<br /><br />
-THE GREATER SORROW.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-At the very time when Mabel Trecarrel was
-singing to tease Audley, Sybil was beginning a song
-of a very different character and calibre to soothe or
-amuse her mamma. It was a grand old Hungarian
-ballad, with an accompaniment like a crash of
-trumpets at times; and was one she had picked up
-during their wanderings on the banks of the Danube;
-but she had only got the length of the first two
-verses, when her mother's tears arrested her.
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- "Was it the vine with clusters bright<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That clung round Buda's stateliest tower?<br />
- No, 'twas a lady fair and white,<br />
- Who hung around an armed knight;<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It was their sad, their parting hour.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- "They had been wedded in their youth,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Together they had spent life's bloom;<br />
- That hearts so long entwined by truth<br />
- Asunder should be torn in ruth&mdash;<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It was a cruel and boding doom!"<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh cease, Sybil," said Constance; "cease; it
-was your papa's favourite."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Then why cease, mamma?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He is not here, and I feel I know not what&mdash;a
-foreboding&mdash;a superstition of the heart."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So Sybil closed her piano, and it was long, long
-ere she opened it again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Three weeks had now elapsed since the Montreal
-steamer <i>Admiral</i> (his anticipated departure by which
-Richard Trevelyan fully notified to Constance) had
-been due at Blackwall, and yet there were no tidings
-of her, so insurances went up, and underwriters
-looked grave. No Atlantic cables had been laid
-as yet between Britain and America, though such
-things were talked of as being barely possible. The
-next steamer announced that the <i>Admiral</i> had duly
-sailed at her stated time; so, save the letter which
-contained the pleasant odds and ends concerning
-Montreal and their early lover days, poor Constance
-saw her husband's writing no more.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her surmises were endless, and the worthy rector
-lent his inventive aid to add to them. Might not
-the ship have met with some accident to her engines,
-and put back slowly under canvas to Montreal, the
-Azores, or elsewhere?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lost&mdash;was the word that hovered on her lips and
-trembled in her heart&mdash;LOST! Oh, that was not to
-be thought of. Yet if it were so, some must have
-survived to tell the terrible story; some might have
-been picked up, famished and weary, by a passing
-ship, and taken perhaps to a distant region, Heaven
-alone knew where. Such events happened every day
-on the mighty world of waters; so as week
-succeeded week, the familiarity with suspense, sorrow
-and horror seemed to become greater; till ideas
-began to confirm themselves, and probabilities to be
-steadily faced, that she would have shrunk from in
-utter woe but a month before!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then came those cruel and shadowy rumours, by
-which the public are usually tantalised, and the
-relatives of the missing are tortured&mdash;stories of
-wrecks passed, steamers abandoned&mdash;the masts gone,
-funnel standing, and so forth, in this, that or the
-other latitude; but all vague and never verified.
-How many stately ships have perished at sea, of
-which such stories have been told! In those days,
-it was the <i>President</i>, the great, "the lost Atlantic
-steamer," on the fate of which at least one novel and
-several dramas and songs have been written; and
-but lately it was the turret ship <i>Captain</i>, with her
-five hundred picked British seamen, that went down
-into the deep, a few loose spars alone remaining to
-tell of their sorrowful fate.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Constance and her daughter were inspired by
-successive hope that he might have survived, and
-fear that he had perished&mdash;too surely perished; and
-these alternations were agony, for "the promises of
-Hope are sweeter than roses in the bud, and far
-more flattering to expectation; but the threatenings
-of Fear are a terror to the heart."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At last there came a fatal day, when a passage cut
-from a London newspaper was enclosed to Constance
-by Audley Trevelyan, who had been constrained to
-visit and remain in town with his family.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It contained distinct details of the total wreck of
-the <i>Admiral</i>, which had foundered in a gale. She
-had been heavily pooped by successive seas, and
-had gone down with all on board, save the watch on
-deck, who had effected their escape in one of the
-quarter-boats, and been picked up in a most
-exhausted state, by one of Her Majesty's ships. All
-the passengers had been drowned in their cabins,
-and to this account a list of their names was
-appended.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It is very remarkable, my dear madam," wrote
-the unconscious Audley, "that I do not find the
-name of Captain Devereaux borne in this list;
-though we have all the sorrow to see that of my
-uncle Richard, Lord Lamorna, whose American
-trip has been to us all a source of mystery."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Constance read the printed list with staring stony
-eyes, and a heart that stood still!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Mr. Downie Trevelyan had perused it carefully
-too, with the aid of his gold double-eye-glass, and
-an unfathomable smile had spread over his sleek
-legal visage while he did so.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, my husband&mdash;my Richard&mdash;so innocent
-and true! Gone&mdash;gone, and your children and I
-are left&mdash;doomed to shame and sorrow&mdash;doomed&mdash;doomed!"
-wailed Constance in a piercing voice, as
-with her fingers interlaced across her face she cast
-herself upon a sofa in despair.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Mamma," urged the terrified Sybil, "what <i>do</i>
-you mean? Does not dear Audley write that papa's
-name is <i>not</i> in the list; so he cannot have sailed in
-that unhappy ship."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My poor child, you know not what you say,"
-moaned Constance, without looking or altering her
-position, for dark and bitter was the desolation of
-the heart which fell on her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In vain did poor Sybil caress and hang over her
-in utter bewilderment, and read and re-read Audley's
-letter without being able to comprehend the agitation
-of her mother, who answered nothing. For the
-time she was overwhelmed by the immensity of their
-calamity&mdash;by gloom and speechless sorrow.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But one thought was ever present&mdash;there was a
-face she should never more behold&mdash;a voice she
-never more should hear; the great ship going down
-in the dark; "the passengers drowned in their
-cabins," by the furious midnight sea; and he who
-loved her so well, who had crossed the Atlantic to
-bring back the full and legal proofs of their nuptials,
-was now in the shadowy land&mdash;the Promised
-Land&mdash;where there are neither marriages nor giving
-in marriage; and where there can be no graves
-either in the soil or in the sea.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With this calamity must many others come!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Richard's means died with him; the proofs of her
-marriage and of her children's position had perished
-with him too. Even the newspapers in their notices
-of the event, were careful to record that "as Lord
-Lamorna (who had so lately succeeded to that
-ancient title) died a bachelor, he would be heired by
-his brother, the eminent barrister, Mr. Downie
-Trevelyan, now twelfth Lord Lamorna of Rhoscadzhel,
-in the duchy of Cornwall."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was the usual obituary notice in a popular
-illustrated paper, with a wood-cut of the late lord's
-arms, the demi-horse <i>argent</i> issuing from the sea,
-the coronet, the wild cat, and the motto <i>Le jour
-viendra</i>.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Even Derrick Braddon's name was recorded as
-among the list of the drowned; so the sole surviving
-witness of the hasty and secret marriage had
-perished with his master.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sybil had answered Audley's letter&mdash;Constance
-was quite incapable of doing so&mdash;urging him
-piteously, for the love he bore her, to make what
-other inquiries he could at Lloyd's, the shipping
-offices and elsewhere, as her mamma seemed to be
-distracted; and promptly a reply came, but not in
-Audley's handwriting, though it bore the London
-post-mark. It was addressed to her mamma, who
-in a weak and breathless voice desired her to read
-it; and great were the terror and perplexity of the
-girl, when she perused the following sentence&mdash;for
-one contained the whole matter.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-"CHAMBERS, TEMPLE.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-"MADAM,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A letter written by your daughter and
-bearing the Porthellick postmark, has just fallen
-into my hands; so I hereby beg to intimate to you
-that my eldest son and heir, the Hon. Mr. Audley
-Trevelyan, can hold no such intercourse as that
-document would seem to import, or be on such
-terms of intimacy with a young woman who is
-destitute of position, who has not a shilling in the
-world, and whose parentage, family, and so forth&mdash;you
-cannot fail to understand me&mdash;are matters of
-such extreme uncertainty, not to say worse; thus
-you must endeavour to control her actions, as I
-shall those of my son, who goes at once to join his
-regiment in India.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- "I am yours, &amp;c.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"LAMORNA.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-"A copy kept."
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-"How dare this Lord Lamorna write to you thus,
-mamma?" asked Sybil, her dark eyes flashing with
-unusual light; but the pale mother answered only
-with her tears, and recalling now certain broken
-sentences which had escaped her&mdash;sentences that
-seemed somewhat to correspond painfully with the
-insulting tenor of the letter. Sybil, after the first
-hours of excessive grief were past, said in a
-composed voice, yet with tremulous lips,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What does Lord Lamorna mean? Who are we,
-mamma? and what are we?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Constance was silent, though each pulsation of
-her heart was a veritable pang.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Are we not Devereaux?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Who then?" urged Sybil, her pallor increasing
-while the silence or pause that ensued was painful
-to both; to none more than the innocent mother,
-the guarded secret of whose blameless life was now
-about to be laid bare before her own child&mdash;a secret
-that seemed now to assume the magnitude of a
-crime! All the care, doubt, anxiety, and mystery
-of the past years had gone for nothing, and the
-sacrifice she had made of herself, was now likely to
-recoil fearfully upon her, and more than all upon
-her children.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In broken accents, with her aching head reclined
-on Sybil's breast, she told all that the reader already
-knows; the insane pride of birth and family which
-inspired the old lord, his suspicions and threats, the
-long necessity for consequent secrecy; and Sybil
-heard all this strange story with intense bewilderment.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Could she realise it&mdash;take it all into her
-comprehension? Her mother was a lady of title&mdash;her
-brother Denzil was the real Lord Lamorna, she
-herself was not a Devereaux, but a Trevelyan like
-Audley&mdash;and he, Audley, who loved her so, was her
-own cousin!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This revelation then explained all to Sybil; all
-of their wanderings in strange places, and sudden
-departures from them, when unwelcome tourists
-who might have recognised Richard Trevelyan came,
-their secluded life at Porthellick, their marked
-avoidance of the Trecarrels and others, and on the
-whole poor Sybil felt cut to the heart, and inspired
-by not an atom of pride; yet she tenderly and fondly
-embraced her mother with greater fervour than ever,
-for more than ever did she feel that she must love
-her now.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My poor papa drowned&mdash;drowned, unburied in
-the sea&mdash;passing away from us without even the
-name by which we have known and loved him!"
-exclaimed Sybil. "Oh why is God so cruel to us?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Alas, Sybil, we can but adore the decrees of
-Heaven, without seeking to know more of them.
-This stroke is hard to bear, child&mdash;all the harder
-that I have reason to fear&mdash;to dread, oh, my God,
-that more than your papa's life has perished with him."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"More mamma; what can be more?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"That which was dearer to him than life; the
-succession of Denzil&mdash;the honour of us all!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After a long pause, with a vague expression in
-her eyes, as if her thoughts were travelling back
-into the years of the past, Sybil said,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I had begun to suspect there was some
-unpleasant mystery about us."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But affection and delicacy&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Both, dearest mamma sealed my lips and I was
-silent; but oh, to what good end or purpose has it
-all been? By this, too surely is Audley also lost
-to me."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My poor child, he was your lover, and through
-me you think you lose him. Oh pardon me, Sybil,
-darling, for I, your hapless mother, am the cause
-of all this! Had your papa never seen, or known,
-or loved me&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Do not say so, mamma dear," whispered Sybil
-as her mother's tremulous lips were pressed on her
-throbbing brow.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It was a plan your papa formed to save his
-inheritance for you and Denzil, and already his
-brother claims all."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It was a false plan, and see how it may fail
-us&mdash;nay already, to all appearance has failed us."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He is in his grave&mdash;if indeed the ocean can
-be called a grave."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"True, my darling papa&mdash;and I must not upbraid
-him, even in thought."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"If it is the will of God that I should suffer, His
-will be done! But my children&mdash;my children!"
-cried the widow wildly, and she raised her hands
-and her dark and beautiful but bloodshot eyes to
-Heaven; "my brave and handsome Denzil, and my
-soft sweet Sybil, of what have they been guilty,
-that shame and ruin, should fall on them?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Mamma," whispered Sybil, embracing her
-closely, "we must learn to bear with resignation
-the woes we cannot help. But oh," added the girl
-in her heart, "how am I to write to Denzil of all
-this sorrow, and probably worse than sorrow and
-poverty?"
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap20"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XX.
-<br /><br />
-A FAMILY GROUP.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-And so he was gone&mdash;this tender husband, who
-had loved her so dearly, and whose secret she had
-shared so unavailingly for years; and apart from
-the horror of the doubt that hung over the future
-of her children, whose means and honour, like her
-own, had too probably perished with him, a despair
-grew in the heart of Constance when she surveyed
-the familiar objects, the little household gods of
-their once happy home, and thought upon the days
-that could never, never come again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There were times when she could not believe
-that she had lost him; that her sorrow was a
-painful dream from which she must awake. She
-perpetually found herself softly whispering his name,
-especially in the waking hours of the night. Thus
-too, from overtension of the nervous system, she
-would start at the fancied sound of her own name,
-uttered as if by his voice at a vast distance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the delicacy and tenderness of Constance,
-there was an amount of keenness and intensity
-possessed by few, and thus her heart bled for her
-daughter, rather than for her own dubious position,
-the fact of which had been so coarsely thrust upon
-her by the insolent letter of Downie Trevelyan,
-who was now formally spoken of and everywhere
-announced and received as "Lord Lamorna."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-That Sybil had given all the wealth of her young
-heart to this man's son, was but too evident to her
-anxious mother's observation; but how would
-matters tend now, and could that misplaced love
-have a successful termination?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Days were passing in sorrow now; no letters
-from Audley came to either. Sybil looked delicate
-and grew pale and thin, for a double grief was
-consuming her, and Constance began to marvel in
-her heart, was she meant to live in suffering and
-penury, perhaps to die early, this child&mdash;her dead
-father's idol, so loved and petted by him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sybil felt secretly pleased with the idea that
-there existed between her and Audley a tie&mdash;the
-tie of blood&mdash;which even the antagonism of his
-crafty father could not break. "The idea of
-cousinly intimacy to girls is undoubtedly pleasant,"
-says Anthony Trollope; "and I do not know
-whether it is not the fact, that the better and the
-purer the girl, the sweeter and the pleasanter is the
-idea."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How often had Constance asked of herself&mdash;but
-never of him who was gone&mdash;"How long is this
-deception to be carried on? How long am I to
-wait before I take my place in the world as the
-wife of Richard Trevelyan, and cease to figure as
-a sham Devereaux, and how long are our children
-to be thus under a cloud?" All obstacles were
-removed now, but the sham was becoming a reality,
-and the cloud was growing darker than ever.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And was her poor Denzil, then so far away from
-her, to be tamely robbed of his noble inheritance
-after all?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The necessity for action in some way, even before
-acquainting him with his father's death and real
-rank, compelled Constance to bestir herself. She
-knew no one whom she felt tempted to consult
-with confidence, and was totally ignorant of the
-line of action to adopt, but on hearing, before a
-week had passed, that the whole family of the
-Trevelyans had come from town and taken up their
-residence at Rhoscadzhel, she resolved to lose no
-time in confronting the usurper personalty, attended
-only by her daughter. She could&mdash;she feared not&mdash;fully
-prove the identity of "Captain Devereaux" with
-Captain Trevelyan the late lord, and her husband's
-miniature, which she wore, and his letters, especially
-the last from Montreal, would prove still further
-the fact of her marriage, and his intentions as
-regarded his will, though they were all addressed to
-her as Mrs. Devereaux, and simply bore his
-signature as "Richard," save one already mentioned,
-to which he appended his title.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So she thought and flattered herself while,
-clad in the deepest mourning, she and Sybil
-traversed, by the Cornwall Railway, the forty odd
-miles that lay between Porthellick and Rhoscadzhel,
-followed by the prayers and blessings of old Winny
-Braddon.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"That which we fancy must break our hearts,
-we can bear patiently, and what is more, so learn to
-conform to, that after a few years of life, we can
-wonder that we thought them hardships," says a
-writer with much truth. So did Constance think
-her heart would break, when all the reality of her
-desolate condition was brought home to her, by
-her mirror reflecting her face&mdash;the face that
-Richard loved so well&mdash;encircled by a widow's
-cap&mdash;that odious ruche of tulle; but she already felt
-the conviction strongly, that whatever happened
-now, she would not have many years of life before
-her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Mother and daughter sat silent and sad while the
-train swept on, Lostwithiel with its antique octagon
-spire and the ruins of Restormal, with their moat
-full of sweet-briars; St. Blazey, to whose shrine
-the woolcombers made their pilgrimages in the days
-of old (the saint having been tortured or curried
-to death with wool-combs, by the Cornish men who
-declined to be converted from Druidism), with many
-a spacious lawn and bare autumnal wood and many
-a purple moor, were speedily left behind; and now
-it was past Grampound with its market-house and
-ancient granite cross, the train went screaming and
-clanking. Redruth next, in a dreary and barren
-district whose wealth lies far below the soil, which
-is literally honeycombed by the shafts and levels of
-mines; and then came Hayle, the houses of which
-are all built of scoria or slag, the debris of ancient
-mines; and then the travellers hired at the "White
-Hart," a carriage for Rhoscadzhel.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To Constance, the scenery there had its chief
-interest in the circumstance that in youth and
-manhood her husband must have been familiar with
-every feature of it, and must have shot and hunted
-over it all. Noon was past now; but the sun shed
-a rich golden light upon a calm sea, of which they
-had lovely glimpses at times between the grey
-granite <i>carns</i> and clumps of oak and elm. Sometimes
-the carriage rolled past wildernesses of rock
-and morass, where wild tarns reflected in their glassy
-depths the blue sky above, and where valleys opened
-westward to the Bristol Channel, whose waves were
-buttressed out by precipices of bold and striking
-outline, and the heart of Constance began to beat
-painfully as each revolution of the wheels drew her
-nearer and nearer to the house, that long ere this
-should have been her home.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She felt, or thought, that now she was about to
-face, confront, and grapple with her fate, and to
-know the best or worst! The secret burden so long
-intolerable, would now be cast aside, and the
-adoption of any line of action, in lieu of the existence
-she had led since her loss was confirmed&mdash;the dumb
-mechanical life of one too paralysed even to think&mdash;was
-a relief. Yet moments there were when she
-half repented of her journey.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her husband, her sole protector, was gone, and
-the proofs of their marriage, and of his intentions
-by will, too, were gone also! If her arguments were
-repelled, her assertions denied, what must be her
-fate, and how terribly should she and those he
-loved so well be exposed to the sneers and
-heartlessness of a world that knew nothing of their
-good qualities, or of the cause for that concealment
-which might now prove the cause of their
-destruction.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-What if even now, at the eleventh hour, as it were,
-she turned prudently back, and concealed the fact
-that she was the true Lady Lamorna&mdash;that her son
-was a peer of the realm&mdash;and let him and Sybil pass
-through life as humble Devereaux, content to earn
-their bread as best they could? But to see Downie
-Trevelyan, the author of that harsh and most insulting
-letter, occupying the place of her Denzil&mdash;no&mdash;no! a
-thousand times no!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Some such fears had been occurring to Sybil, who
-now said, in a low voice, as they drew near the stately
-gate of Rhoscadzhel,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I doubt, dearest mamma, whether this is a wise
-proceeding on our part; if we have the legal right
-to call ourselves Trevelyans, that right should be
-placed for proof in legal hands."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"If we have&mdash;" began Constance, impetuously,
-and then became silent, for she felt that the
-views of her daughter were, perhaps, the most
-correct.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The elaborate iron gate, and its tall granite pillars,
-each supporting a grotesque <i>Koithgath</i>, surmounted
-by a coronet, were left behind, and they proceeded
-along the stately avenue by which we have so lately
-seen Richard passing as chief mourner at the funeral
-of the old lord; and now, as the porte-cochère (which
-bore a double hatchment) was approached, came a
-new perplexity to the mind of Constance. How was
-she to announce herself?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As "Lady Lamorna," where there was already one
-who called herself so; simply as "Mrs. Devereaux,"
-or as "a lady wishing an interview with Lord
-Lamorna"? But from the utterance of his name in
-this instance she shrunk.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The pampered servants, on seeing that the
-approaching vehicle was only a carriage hired from the
-neighbouring inn, and not an equipage having coats
-of arms and showy liveries, were somewhat slow
-in answering the summons at the bell; but as
-the hall door stood open, and, luckily for the
-perplexed Constance, Mr. Jasper Funnel, the solemn,
-portly, and intensely respectable-looking butler,
-was lingering there, she asked if she could "see
-his master."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now this was a mode to which Mr. Jasper Funnel
-was all unused, and he might have been disposed to
-summon "Jeames" or "Chawles" to attend to her;
-but there was now a hauteur in the bearing of
-Constance that thoroughly bewildered, if it failed to awe
-him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Master, mum?" he stammered; "his lordship
-is at home, but engaged with General Trecarrel&mdash;I
-can take in your card, however."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I have not my card-case with me."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What name, then?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It matters not&mdash;just say&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Perhaps, mum, relations of the family?"
-suggested Funnel, perceiving the depth of mourning
-worn by the two ladies.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes&mdash;near relations, indeed," replied Constance,
-restraining her tears with difficulty.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The man of bins and vintages, who thought he
-knew the branches of the Trevelyan family through
-all their ramifications, looked still more perplexed;
-however, he said, with a still lower bow,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"This way, mum&mdash;please to follow me," and
-desiring their driver to await them, Constance and
-Sybil entered the mansion of Rhoscadzhel.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As if to tantalise them by a display of all they
-were perhaps to lose, or had already lost for ever,
-a valet, to whose care Mr. Funnel now consigned
-them, conducted them by a somewhat circuitous
-route, as all the suites of rooms were not in order,
-the family having arrived unexpectedly from town.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Passing through the marble vestibule, an arch on
-one side of which opened to a gay aviary, and one
-on the other to the beautiful conservatory, they
-entered a long and lofty corridor, where the soft
-carpet muffled every foot-fall, and where were the
-objects of <i>vertu</i>, accumulated by several generations
-of Trevelyans; a veritable museum it seemed, of
-glass cases filled with quaintly illuminated vellum
-MSS., in fine old Roman bindings, red-edged and
-clasped; old laces of Malines and Bruges; Chinese
-ivory carvings, delicate as gossamer webs; Burmese
-idols; Japanese cabinets, covered with flaming
-dragons; Majolica vases, where rosy cupids, grotesque
-tritons, nude nymphs, and shining dolphins, were all
-grouped together; Delft hardware of odd designs;
-Etruscan cups, cream-coloured or crimson, with
-slender black demoniac figures thereon; mediæval
-suits of armour; family portraits of dames in ruffs
-and farthingales, and of past Trevelyans, all
-well-wigged, cuirassed, and armed: some with Bardolph
-noses and paunches of comely curve, suggestive of
-sack and venison; the chiefs of these being Lord
-Henry, who was Governor of Rougemont Castle for
-Queen Elizabeth, and Launcelot, the cavalier-lord,
-who sought shelter in Trewoofe from the victorious
-Roundheads.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The refined and cultivated taste of Constance
-could well appreciate all these objects; but now, as
-one in a dream, her eyes wandered over those walls
-where many a gem of art was hanging; the soft-eyed
-and white-skinned girls of Greuze; the bearded and
-doubleted nobles of Vandyke; cattle, fat and
-lazy-looking, by Cuyp; hazy sea-pieces by Turner, and
-more than one lovely Raphael; but then her every
-thought was turned inward; and as if to support
-herself, she retained Sybil's tremulous little hand,
-on which her clasp tightened, as the servant, who
-was clad in mourning livery, with a black cord
-aiguilette on each shoulder, opened noiselessly the
-half of a folding-door, and ushered them into that
-splendid library where her husband had found his
-proud old uncle dead at the writing-table, and
-Downie (with the unsigned deed) hanging over him,
-with confusion and disappointment on his usually
-stolid visage.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Visitors, my lord," said the servant.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And to add to the perplexity of Constance, she
-found herself face to face with the whole family
-group&mdash;the whole, at least, save one, her nephew
-Audley.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap21"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XXI.
-<br /><br />
-HUMILIATION.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-The statements made to Audley Trevelyan by
-his father as to the dubious position of the two
-ladies at Porthellick&mdash;artful statements which
-seemed, without collusion, to corroborate so much
-that Mabel and Rose Trecarrel hinted or openly
-advanced&mdash;had seriously grieved and perplexed him.
-Thus, while loving Sybil and longing for her society
-on one hand, with the selfishness or vacillation
-peculiar to many young men, on the other, he began
-to wish that he had not gone quite so far&mdash;that he
-had been less precipitate in his love-making; but his
-perplexity increased to utter bewilderment, not
-unmixed with indignation, when his usually languid
-mother, with considerable scorn and irritation of
-manner, informed him that "the person calling
-herself Mrs. Devereaux" was but an <i>intriguante</i>, who
-had sought to lure his foolish uncle Richard into
-marriage; and his father admitted that he and
-others had long suspected his brother of having
-some low and illicit entanglement.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now Audley knew that this "<i>intriguante</i>" had a
-son, whose existence might endanger his own
-succession to a title.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Was this fair, slender and delicate girl, whose
-gentle image had wound itself about the heart of
-Audley, and on whose "engagement finger" he had
-so recently slipped a ring, actually a cousin; but
-one whom he could not acknowledge&mdash;a person
-whom he dared not marry, in dread of that
-trumpet-tongued bugbear called "Society"?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had ceased for some days to write to her. In
-this he accused himself of gross selfishness; but his
-father's open threats of withdrawing every shilling
-of his allowance, of turning his back upon him for
-ever, and so forth, if he dared to countenance the
-Devereaux in any way; and his total inability to
-live anywhere on his subaltern's pay alone, together
-with the dread of compromising his cold, proud, and
-intensely aristocratic mother and sister&mdash;in fact, it
-would seem, his whole family too&mdash;made him strive
-to crush in his heart the young love it was so sweet
-to brood upon; but Audley strove in vain, and began
-to think that the sooner he was back to India the
-better for all.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had been nervous, irritable, and "out of sorts"
-since he had returned to Rhoscadzhel, and obtaining
-a passing glimpse of the little white villa as the
-train passed it, en route, had made him worse. He
-had procured Champagne and various other vintages
-too freely from Jasper Funnel; he had broken the
-knees of a favourite horse; ripped up the green
-cloth of the new billiard table when practising alone,
-and more than once had angrily laid his whip across
-the back of unoffending Rajah.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the afternoon of the visit which closes the
-preceding chapter, his mother who was seated
-languidly in a deep easy chair near the library fire,
-playing with a feather fan, while her daintily slippered
-little feet rested on a velvet tabourette, said in
-her soft and monotonous voice,&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I do wish, Audley, that odious dog of yours was
-dead&mdash;shot or lost."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Why, mother, it was poor Jack Delamere's
-dying legacy."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It is such a shaggy, self-willed, huge and savage
-animal&mdash;always about one's skirts or in one's way."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You are unusually energetic in your adjectives
-this evening, my lady mother," replied Audley;
-"poor Rajah is as gentle as a lamb, and I might
-have found a kind owner for him ere this, however,"
-he added, as he thought sadly of the winning Sybil
-on whose skirts his splendid pet had been permitted
-to nestle unrebuked.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Visitors, mamma!" exclaimed Gartha Trevelyan,
-a fair-haired and languid edition of her mother, and
-already, in her sixteenth year, the imitator of all her
-tones and ways; "who can they be&mdash;in a hired carriage, too?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ladies in deep mourning," said General Trecarrel,
-glancing uneasily at Audley.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"By Jove!" muttered the latter, growing quite
-pale, as he recognised them from a bay window, and
-at once quitting the library, descended by a private
-staircase to where his horse and groom happened to
-be awaiting him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My cousin&mdash;he is my own cousin; this was the
-secret sympathy&mdash;the tie of blood that drew us to
-each other," Sybil was thinking softly, in her timid
-heart, to keep her courage up, at the very time when
-he who, without flinching, would have faced a Sikh
-gun-battery, or a horde of Afghans, was avoiding
-her, and galloping ingloriously away from what he
-deemed "a scene&mdash;a deuced family row," with a
-blush on his cheek, shame, pity, and anger mingling
-in his soul, with the half-formed wish that he had
-never met and never known her!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Advancing into the room, the mother and daughter
-bowed, and then stood irresolute. The former had
-expected to have seen Downie alone; but finding
-him thus, amid his family, and the General present
-too, all her pre-arranged and carefully considered
-explanations and remarks completely fled her
-memory, and her mind became blank as a sheet of
-unwritten paper, as Downie, after a rapid whisper
-to his wife, over whose colourless face there flashed
-a look of angry scorn, took the initiative.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His wife, with her everlasting smelling-bottle or
-vinaigrette and lace handkerchief; her newly-cut
-novel close by; her pale, dull eyes and unmeaning
-smile; her "company manners;" her soft white
-hands, smooth and unwrinkled as her forehead, yet
-cold and puerile as her heart, was always a kind of
-bore; but now her <i>tout-ensemble</i> had all the impress
-of insipidity, animated by insolence; for weak though
-the lawyer's wife was in character, she felt that she
-was mistress of the situation; and at least <i>pro tem.</i>,
-if not for life, Lady Lamorna.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She regarded the widow with a cold and supercilious
-stare, to which the former replied by a
-steady gaze, and each seemed to draw her
-conclusions of the other in an instant, for "to women
-alone pertains that marvellous freemasonry, which
-sees the character at a glance, and investigates the
-sincerity of a disposition or the value of a lace
-flounce with the same practised facility."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Downie, too, had his own peculiar acuteness and
-instincts, sharp and keen, wherever he went; he saw
-everything in a moment; whoever he met, he read
-their faces like a book, he marked all their features,
-deduced their personal characters, just as if he had
-been intimate with them for a life-time; and a very
-useful power this had proved to him, in the course
-of his legal career; and now, in his mourning suit,
-he looked like "one of those great crows that are to
-be seen, apparently asleep, in a meadow in autumn;
-but which, nevertheless, see everything that is going
-on around them." The gentle aspect, the forlorn
-bearing, and uncommon beauty of Constance and
-her daughter, would have softened any other heart
-than Downie's; but his was like Cornish granite&mdash;the
-oldest and stoniest of all stones.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-General Trecarrel&mdash;somewhat nervously it must
-be owned&mdash;shook hands with the intruders, for as
-such they felt themselves viewed; but the dog,
-Rajah, alone gave them a welcome by fawning round
-Sybil, who trembled excessively, and could scarcely
-restrain her tears, while the dog's recognition of her
-did not escape the wife of Downie, who drew certain
-conclusions therefrom.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Mrs. Devereaux, I believe?" said Downie
-Trevelyan, calmly, and with his professional smile, as
-he looked up from the table, which was literally
-heaped up with letters, many of them being
-unopened; "to what do I owe the pleasure of this
-visit?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You owe it to my sorrow, sir," replied Constance,
-gathering courage, as her eye caught a portrait of
-Richard Trevelyan, in his uniform, painted years
-ago, ere he went to America, and looking just as she
-had seen him in the early days of their happy
-loverhood; and now the pictured face seemed to smile
-upon her out of the past; "to the death of my
-husband&mdash;your brother, as you know, by drowning,"
-she added.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He gave her a stare of cold enquiry, over, and
-finally, through his double gold eye-glass, which he
-specially wiped for the occasion, and then turning to
-his wife, said,&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Gartha, my dear, take your namesake and the
-boys with you&mdash;retire, please, for we may have much
-to say that must not be said before you."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Perhaps I&mdash;I too, am <i>de trop</i>?" said General
-Trecarrel, a little nervously, assuming his hat and
-malacca cane.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Not at all&mdash;pray be seated," replied Downie.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"If&mdash;Mrs.&mdash;Mrs.&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, yes; Mrs. Devereaux will excuse you,
-General, I am sure," answered Downie, as his wife,
-with her four younger children, sailed haughtily
-from the room, drawing in her skirts as she passed
-Constance, whose pretty lip only quivered a little
-with disdain.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To do him justice, the barrister looked on the
-widow with something of interest, mingling,
-momentarily, with his fear and anger&mdash;but momentarily
-only. She was slenderly and so beautifully formed,
-small featured, and dark haired, with much that was
-intense and unfathomable in her pleading
-eyes&mdash;pleading for her children's honour and her own:
-and there was Sybil, too, clad in the deepest mourning,
-her high black dress, with its pretty cuffs, and
-a small white collar round her delicate neck, made
-her fair skin seem fairer still, and appeared to
-become the darkness of her hair and eyes better than
-any other style of dress would have done; but, then,
-Sybil looked charming in everything!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The little interest died, and Downie regarded
-them with intense hostility, for he had all "that
-sublime philosophy which teaches us to bear with
-tranquillity the woes of others."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh&mdash;ah&mdash;yes," he said, after a most harassing
-pause; "you are the lady who lives&mdash;in fact, who
-has lived for some time past, in a villa near
-Porthellick?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The same, sir."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Downie knit his brows, for she accorded him no
-title, and he was somewhat jealous on the point.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It was a bold act of my brother to bring you
-here to Cornwall&mdash;a secluded place&mdash;almost under
-the eyes of his own family too!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Circumstanced as we were by the eccentricity of
-his late uncle, it was, perhaps, unwise," she replied,
-gently.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I am glad that you admit so much: a little villa
-near St. John's Wood, or some such place, had been
-more appropriate for persons so situated."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The eyes of Constance began to flash dangerously.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My son is Lord Lamorna!" she exclaimed;
-"and even on his cold-blooded uncle may punish
-this cruel insult to his mother!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The General, to whom all this revelation was new
-and startling, began to feel uncomfortable, and to
-look quite perplexed; but Downie only smiled a
-crafty smile, as he said&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Pooh, my good woman, you are out of your
-senses; what can be the object of this visit? I am
-busy&mdash;does your carriage wait?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Before scandals go forth in our name, I beseech
-you to consider well, and to read this letter, which
-will show you who I am and what I am, and why for
-years we have all borne the name of Devereaux,"
-said Constance, making a prodigious effort to control
-her great grief and just indignation, as she held the
-document before Downie; "it is the last my dear,
-dear husband wrote me."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Husband&mdash;absurd! This is the wildest of wild
-assertions," said Downie Trevelyan, as he took the
-letter from her hand, nevertheless; and as he did so,
-the words of her dead husband came back to her
-memory, when he said "that proofs of their marriage,
-beyond mere assertion, must be forthcoming;"
-and now those proofs were buried in the sea.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You must recognise the handwriting," said
-Constance, in a tremulous tone; "and oh, sir," she
-added, as she eyed him doubtfully and wistfully,
-"you will restore it to me, and not destroy it?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Destroy!" said he, sternly; "what are you
-talking about? I hope I am too much of a lawyer
-to destroy any document."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Before witnesses, at least," was the awkward
-addendum of the General.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Downie's legal eye quickly took in the situation,
-as detailed by his brother Richard in that letter,
-which stated that the little chapel of St. Mary, at
-Montreal, had been burned down three years after
-the regiment had left the city; that the Père Latour
-and the acolyte were both dead; that though the
-Registers had all perished in the flames, the signed
-copy of the marriage certificate was preserved by
-Latour's successor, and "is now in my possession,"
-added the letter, the signature to which, "Lamorna,"
-made the reader's eyes to gleam with secret rage;
-but he merely said,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Suppose this letter were written by my brother&mdash;a
-supposition of which I do not admit the truth,&mdash;who
-are 'those at home' whom he doubts?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You, most probably," said the General, with
-soldierly candour.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Absurd, my dear sir," replied Downie, tossing
-the letter contemptuously to Constance. "This is a
-fabrication, written to suit the occasion: the church
-burned; the Register destroyed; the witnesses dead,
-too! It is a strange story, and strange chapter of
-accidents. You lived with him long enough, I doubt
-not, madam, to learn how to feign my brother's
-handwriting. This document has not even an
-envelope&mdash;so where are the postal marks?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I lost it&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Bah! I thought so."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was a peculiar basilisk flicker in the pale
-eyes of Downie Trevelyan, and he surveyed the
-shrinking widow of his brother pitilessly, with a
-glance of hate&mdash;a glance beyond all the eloquence
-of fury or wrath, for he felt in his heart&mdash;or what
-passed for such&mdash;that she spoke truth in all this
-matter, but a truth she would have difficulty in
-proving.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh mamma&mdash;mamma, let us go," implored Sybil.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And this Dick Braddon who accompanied my
-brother&mdash;the other witness&mdash;a worthless old Chelsea
-pensioner, and so he too is gone?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Gone with my husband," replied Constance,
-clasping her hands and looking upward.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"As my poor brother never yet, to my knowledge
-at least, prior to his luckless American tour,
-appended his name to any document as <i>Lamorna</i>, we
-have no means of testing or comparing the signature
-to your production, were such test necessary&mdash;which
-it is not."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Gathering courage, Constance was about to make
-some proud response, when Downie, in his (external)
-character pure and unspotted as his shirt front, said
-while turning to the General&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My brother Richard picked up, of course, some
-of those dissipated habits which are peculiar to the
-army, and&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, pardon me, my lord," began the General, in
-a deprecatory tone, while inserting his right hand in
-the breast of his closely buttoned surtout.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It is true, Trecarrel; you redcoats are a sad set,
-and here we see the result of an unlucky liaison."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Richard&mdash;Richard," wailed Constance, "how
-hard is all this to bear!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes, madam," said Downie; "but the way of
-transgressors is always hard."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Transgressors, sir?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Against the laws of morality and society, madam.
-Do not misunderstand me, madam."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh no&mdash;oh no," replied Constance, in a choking
-voice; "I quite understand you."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The General was deeply moved; he advanced a
-pace or two towards her, and lifted his hand with
-an air of entreaty; but Downie was pitiless, and
-added&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes, madam, and not content with seeking to
-entrap my brother, there has actually been an attempt
-made, too, to entrap and delude my son!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Sir," said Constance, moving towards the door
-of the library, "I came in hope&mdash;I must own,
-half-desperate hope&mdash;of having an explanation from, or a
-compromise with you&mdash;perhaps a recognition of our
-just claims. Assertion, even backed by such a
-letter as this, is, I must own, but slender evidence;
-so a court of law shall prove the rest."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"As you please, madam," replied Downie, rising
-and ringing a hand-bell deliberately. "Show
-this&mdash;<i>lady</i> out. So much for Mrs. Devereaux!" he added
-furiously, for he was greatly disturbed and ruffled.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A mist seemed before the eyes of both mother
-and daughter, as they quitted the stately room
-mechanically, to seek their vehicle at the porte-cochère.
-Constance kept her proud little head erect,
-however, so long as she was under observation; for
-though her heart was wrung with agony as she
-thought of her children, there was something of a
-Spartan matron in the outward bearing she affected,
-and in her perfect power of self-mastery then.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Stared at in the corridor by the wondering and
-mocking eyes of all the younger children of Downie,
-who had taken their cue from the manner in which
-their mamma had gathered her skirts in the library,
-as if to avoid pollution; stared at too in the
-vestibule and portal by Mr. Funnel the solemn Butler,
-by Boxer the rubicund coachman, and by a group of
-whiskered valets, who all saw that something, they
-knew not what, "was hup," they reached the hired
-carriage that was to take them back to Hayle; and
-Jeames in powder, wearing "the uniform" of the
-noble family, remarked to Chawles, a brother of the
-plush and shoulder-knot, quite audibly, that "they
-both seemed the lady, quite; but he feared they was
-only a couple of guv'nesses or companions out of
-place&mdash;a lot as miserable as curates and tutors, and
-all that sort o' thing."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Constance shivered as if with ague when she
-drew up the glasses of the carriage, and they took
-their departure from Rhoscadzhel.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Open war alone could save or sink them now!
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap22"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XXII.
-<br /><br />
-"MRS. GRUNDY."
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-General Trecarrel, who was an amiable and
-well-disposed man, felt the utmost regret in having
-been present at an interview so painful, unseemly,
-and perplexing. Notwithstanding the calmness,
-dignity, and confidence with which Constance
-asserted her claims to wifehood and nobility, he had
-his secret doubts&mdash;which Downie had not&mdash;as to
-the legality of the ties that had subsisted between
-her and his late friend, Richard Trevelyan. Yet he
-could not but think of her kindly, humanely, and
-with interest; she seemed so perfectly ladylike, was
-so gentle and so beautiful.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In short, the old soldier, little given to study
-character or matters not military, felt sorely bewildered
-by the strange story so suddenly unfolded by his
-fair neighbour, and withdrew to think over it and to
-dress for dinner.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"So that odious woman and the cunning minx,
-her daughter, are gone at last?" said Mrs. Downie&mdash;the
-acknowledged Lady Lamorna&mdash;entering the
-carpeted library, softly and noiselessly, in her usual
-languid and wearied way.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes, Gartha&mdash;at last," replied her husband,
-who was still seated at the writing-table with his
-head resting on his left hand, for he was full of
-thoughts that oppressed him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You look disturbed, Downie dear?" she lisped,
-as she sank into her easy chair and resumed the
-feather fan or hand screen.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"That idiot Audley has complicated matters by
-forming an attachment for the woman's daughter;
-but Trecarrel, who goes soon to India now, shall
-take him off there at once."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And what was the object of her visit, pray?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, she came here to try the favourite Whig
-scheme&mdash;conciliation at any price, no matter how
-humiliating; and exhibited a letter she had
-manufactured, as from my brother; but it won't pass with
-me&mdash;no, no!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You are right to repel such attempts as this;
-and I agree with you that Audley had better relinquish
-what remains of his leave and quit England,"
-she replied, yet not without a sigh, for her son had
-been but a short time at home, and India was so far
-away. But anything was better than that he should
-entangle himself with a girl like this&mdash;her son
-Audley, when she had almost registered a vow
-"never to syllable a name unchronicled by Debrett;"
-the idea was absurd, horrible in the extreme!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Perhaps, Downie dear," said she, after a little
-consideration, "we are too fearful. I have read
-somewhere that 'boy and girl cousins never fraternise.'"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Don't they, by Jove!" growled Downie; "especially
-when they come to the age of puberty, without
-having known each other previously. Then the
-Scots have a proverb about 'blood being thicker than
-water,' though I can't see it in that way myself. The
-girl is remarkably handsome, and Audley's affair
-with her must have made considerable progress ere
-her letter came into my possession in London."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Handsome? dear, dear! do you really think so?
-I thought her very saucy in expression, and a positive
-dowdy, in a dress made, no doubt, by some Penzance
-milliner," replied the lady, while contemplating
-complacently her own magnificent black <i>moire</i>, for she
-did not entertain more charitable opinions
-respecting the daughter than the mother.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though more advanced in life than Constance
-(for she had been married some years before her),
-the wife of Downie had still considerable remains of
-beauty, and, despite time and dimples turning fast
-to wrinkles, she was bent upon being gay, young,
-and beautiful still. She had an air that decidedly
-denoted high breeding, with much of languor and
-indifference to all that passed around her. She had
-completely attained that bearing of placidity, utter
-vacuity or unimpressionability, so sedulously affected
-or adopted by many among the upper class of
-English society, and even by their middle-class
-imitators. However, all the little spirit or energy
-she ever possessed fired up now, in the conviction
-that she was the Right Honourable Lady Lamorna,
-that Audley was one of "England's Honourable
-Misters," and that Gartha should find a husband
-among the tufts and strawberry leaves at least.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Downie had not her ambition even in these
-matters, but had naturally avarice; and his profession
-had, of course, taught him trickery. "Despair
-of no man," it has been said: "there are touches of
-kindness in natures the very roughest, that redeem
-whole lives of harshness;" but to have sought for
-charity or kindness at the hands of Downie were a
-task as easy as taking a bone from a famished
-tiger.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-That day, at the dinner-table, after the ladies had
-withdrawn, and Downie, the General, and Audley
-were lingering over their wine (or wines rather), the
-conversation naturally turned to the recent visit of
-Constance and her daughter; and a painful theme it
-proved to the young officer.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From General Trecarrel he had previously obtained
-a narrative of all that had passed, and though
-he thanked Heaven that he had been absent, his
-heart was preyed upon by many keen and conflicting
-emotions. He loved Sybil tenderly, he acknowledged
-to himself; but could he think of marriage
-with her, when she was the daughter of a woman in
-a position as dubious as that of Constance was now
-openly declared to be&mdash;one, moreover, whose claims
-were so startling, and whose allegations were, as his
-father called them, so daring as to merit criminal
-prosecution,&mdash;for so had the lawyer said in his wrath
-and the strength of his own position!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Intense pity for the girl mingled with his passion
-for her, and added to his great perplexity; and thus,
-while his cheek alternately flushed and grew pale,
-he sat with half-averted face, and the fingers of one
-hand buried among his thick brown hair, irritated
-by the conviction that his father's cold, keen, and
-scrutinising eyes were bent loweringly upon him,
-while in silence he heard the General bluntly
-urging him "if he had any tender views in that
-quarter, to get rid of them as soon as possible,
-and be off to join his regiment;" for to Trecarrel
-military service seemed a cure for every human ill.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But the letter she showed you?" pled Audley.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"That letter, sir, I have already denounced as a
-most daring forgery!" replied Downie, with as much
-energy as his usually quiet manner permitted.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Could she&mdash;one so eminently like a lady&mdash;be
-guilty of such a crime?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Your uncle's mistress would be, of course,
-familiar with his handwriting."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Audley felt his heart vibrate painfully at this
-injurious but, as the circumstances seemed to stand,
-not inapplicable term. Compassion and tenderness
-pleaded for the dove-eyed Sybil; but policy, society,
-or the promptings of "Mrs. Grundy" urged that he
-should, nay must, relinquish all thought of her for
-ever; so while sitting there, sipping his
-golden-tinted château yquem, and playing with the
-embossed grape scissors, to all appearance very calm
-and quiet, a storm of doubt and shame was struggling
-in his heart with love; "for this passion," says
-Lord Bacon, "hath its floods in the very times of
-weakness, which are great prosperity and great
-adversity, both which times kindle love and make
-it more fervent." And now Sybil was in an adversity
-of which he knew not the actual depth.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"To me it seems that you are somewhat severe
-in this whole affair, General," said he, after a
-pause.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"God forgive me if I am so!" replied Trecarrel,
-earnestly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Suppose this girl's position to be all you
-advance, if we love because we like and admire
-each other, are we to be censured?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Then who the devil should be censured?" said
-his father, with asperity.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Destiny."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Pshaw!" said Downie; "this is mere romance&mdash;mooning!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And deuced unlike one of the 14th Hussars,"
-added Trecarrel.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The very rubbish of which dramas are made."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You are right, Downie; but, till now, I always
-thought this young fellow of yours was rather fond
-of my girl Rose."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Audley coloured deeply, and assisted himself to
-wine, as he said&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I greatly admire both Miss Trecarrel and her
-sister Miss Rose; but I have not the honour to
-stand higher in their favour than that of others."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But this girl Devereaux&mdash;&mdash;" his father was
-beginning passionately.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Excuse me, dear sir," interrupted Audley, "if I
-beg that you will cease to taunt me on this painful
-subject. The tenor of the letter she wrote to
-me&mdash;the letter which you found on my desk, and
-which in all fairness you should not have read&mdash;a
-Lieutenant of the Line not being exactly a
-schoolboy&mdash;sufficiently evinced that we were on terms
-of affection and intimacy. I knew not then who
-she was, or who her people were. I had saved her
-life, as the General knows, at considerable peril, and
-so there grew a tender tie between us; but all shall
-be ended now," he continued in a tone of emotion.
-"I see that it must be so, sir. I see also the
-necessity for not compromising your just title to the
-rank and place you hold by attaching myself in any
-way to the fortunes of the Devereaux. So I
-implore you to let the matter cease, or I shall quit
-the room&mdash;yes, even the house itself, so surely
-as I shall ere long quit England, perhaps never to
-return!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I thank you for this promise, Audley," said
-Downie emphatically; "and when once with your
-regiment, you shall find your allowance most amply
-increased."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"For that I thank you, sir," said Audley, sighing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I am richer now than when you were in the
-Hussars."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And out of that wealth, Downie&mdash;I beg pardon,
-I mean my Lord Lamorna&mdash;I trust you will do
-something handsome now for poor Dick's widow
-and orphan?" blundered the General.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Widow and orphan!" repeated Downie, with
-growing anger.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well, widow in one sense."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"In what sense?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A widow of the heart," persisted Trecarrel,
-reddening to the roots of his grizzled hair. "She
-and her pretty daughter have suffered a fearful
-stroke of fortune&mdash;and even poverty may not be the
-most severe trial before them."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I shall settle a small sum on the mother,
-perhaps," said Downie, reluctantly; "and get the
-girl, if you wish it, a situation as companion at
-a distance from this."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Companion? That is a kind of upper servant
-who must wash the spaniel, and feed the parrot,"
-said the General, testily; "supervise the maid that
-dresses her mistress's hair, read novels aloud, and
-sermons on Sunday; write invitations, and answer
-them; pay all bills, and stand all manner of
-vapours and ill-humours, for thirty pounds per
-annum and a <i>quiet home</i>! Come, come, Downie,
-d&mdash;n it," added Trecarrel, "you might do
-something more handsome than that for a daughter
-of Richard Trevelyan."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Sir," replied the other, becoming slightly ruffled
-by the old officer's perfect bluntness, "when certain
-people in this world cannot get white bread and
-wine, they should content them with brown bread
-and water; they must also work, if they would not
-beg. I think that I shall have done enough if I do
-what I propose for the daughter; and as for the
-mother, through my humble endeavours, a housekeeper's
-place or the matronage of a lunatic asylum
-may be procured for her, if she is in poverty, and if
-her want of previous character could be tided over
-with the Board of Guardians. By her daring claim,
-she has certainly striven to injure me and all my
-innocent family," added Downie loftily; "yet I do
-not wish evil to happen to her."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Whether we wish it or wish it not, neither will
-come according to our mere human desire," retorted
-the General; "so pass the Madeira, please, Audley,
-for here comes Funnel with the coffee&mdash;a hint that
-we are to join the ladies in the drawing-room."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Downie Trevelyan had always had his secret fears
-of the family in the villa at Porthellick, and he knew
-not exactly how strong their claims upon his dead
-brother might be. However, he had lost no time in
-having himself fully served heir to the late lord, on
-the loss of the steamer "Admiral" becoming an
-ascertained fact; and, though a lawyer by profession,
-he now literally loathed the sight of the circulars
-and letters that poured in upon him on his accession
-to rank and fortune. There were legal details to be
-filled up, dry formalities to be gone through with
-perplexing repetitions and minuteness; there were
-entreaties from tradesmen that "his Lordship would
-not change the family custom," and applications of
-a similar nature from town and country agents to
-retain their agencies, &amp;c., &amp;c. Then there was "the
-suit of those Devereaux," as he called a bulky and
-menacing document which a shabby-looking fellow
-deposited at Rhoscadzhel one morning, with lists of
-the vexatious papers required for the defence&mdash;all
-the preparation of "some hedge-lawyer&mdash;some low
-legal desperado," as Downie styled him; for he now
-himself felt, in the tone and tenour of these legal
-letters and documents, the pointed stings he had for
-years past so pitilessly planted in others.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The legal document had the effect of completing
-all the silent arguments of Mrs. Grundy in the
-mind of Audley. But a few days ago, he was so
-happy in the conviction that he loved Sybil and was
-beloved again; and now he saw the necessity for
-action and resolution, and alike quitting her and
-England.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He seated himself at his desk one evening for the
-purpose of writing an explanatory or, if he could
-achieve it, an exculpatory and farewell letter to
-Sybil; but, after various attempts, he had got no
-further than the date, when Mr. Jasper Funnel
-entered the room, with a little sealed packet on a
-silver salver.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It had just come in the household despatch-box
-from Hayle, and bore the Porthellick postmark, so
-he tore it open with trembling hands.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap23"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XXIII.
-<br /><br />
-A LEGAL "FRIEND."
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Constance never smiled again; yet in the presence
-of Sybil she never gave way to the paroxysms
-of passionate grief that came over her when she was
-alone or in the seclusion of her own chamber.
-Wealth and title, so long looked forward to in the
-years that were gone, seemed alike most worthless
-now, save that with the loss of these her children
-lost their position in life, and herself her name and
-honour! Ever present was the idea, Oh that her
-husband could look up from his grave, and see the
-impending ruin and desolation of their once-happy
-home! for, as we have already said, their means of
-subsistence died with him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And now, how were they to live? The present
-time was agony; the future dark and gloomy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Paragraphs, the tenour of which proved intensely
-annoying to Downie Trevelyan and all his family,
-and which were painful and degrading to Constance
-and Sybil (for such they felt them to be), began to
-find their way into the local and even the London
-papers, under exciting titles or headings, such as
-"Singular Case of Presumption," or "Insanity,"
-"The Cornish Widow again," "The Lamorna
-Peerage," and so forth; and Messrs. Gorbelly and
-Culverhole, as "his Lordship's solicitors," in
-writing answers or contradictions to some of these
-effusions, were but too happy, by such legal
-advertisements, to mix their somewhat obscure and vulgar
-names with the affair.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Audley read those insulting notices, assertions,
-and contradictions with infinite sorrow and pain,
-for then Sybil's pleading and upbraiding eyes would
-come before him. Through such uncourted publicity,
-however, the mother and daughter began to
-find themselves coldly viewed by neighbours now.
-The rector ceased to come near the villa; the
-village doctor whipped up his horse as he passed the
-end of the willow avenue; and even the usually
-friendly Trecarrels left for town&mdash;rumour said
-correctly, for India&mdash;without paying another visit,
-though perhaps, as theirs had never been returned,
-they could not do otherwise.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All the charity and good they had performed, in
-all the necessities relieved, all the ailments
-alleviated, all the countless little kindnesses done, went
-for nothing now; for the world is a malevolent and
-censorious one; and that devilish maxim of Rochefoucauld,
-that people feel a strange satisfaction in
-the misfortunes of their best friends, was fully
-exemplified. Constance's new and startling
-assertion of rank and position, however meekly done,
-formed excellent food for the tongues of the
-malicious and vulgar, who exist everywhere. She had
-to bear unjustly the contempt of many, the ridicule
-of all; so that her pretty villa became daily less and
-less a home.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From the tenour of that horrible interview at
-Rhoscadzhel, where every word that passed seemed as if
-burned into her heart with letters of fire, Sybil felt
-a sure conviction that all must and should be at an
-end between herself and Audley Trevelyan. The
-treatment of her mother, of her absent brother's
-claims, of her own, and of her dead father's memory,
-his will and wishes, all required this sacrifice at her
-hands; so resolutely and calmly&mdash;though a few tears
-rolled silently down her cheek the while&mdash;she drew
-his diamond ring from her "engaged" finger&mdash;an
-engaged one now no longer&mdash;and making it up in a
-packet, together with a few letters he had written to
-her, she despatched it, addressed by her own
-trembling hand, and without a word of comment, to
-Rhoscadzhel; and this packet it was which we have just
-seen Jasper Funnel place in the hands of his excited
-young master.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her mother's embraces, tenderness, and kisses
-were her sole but best reward for acting thus; yet
-poor Sybil seemed the very impersonation of beauty,
-grief, and girlhood bordering on womanhood. The
-buoyancy of the former was gone; a change had
-come over her soft and once bright face, which wore
-a sad and settled expression now. It was that white
-woe which someone styles "the deepest mourning
-features can put on."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her pencil and her piano, each so much the
-solace of her lonely hours, were, of course,
-relinquished now; and it seemed as if she should never
-take to them again. She looked ill, and appeared
-to be pining: but, sooth to say, it was less the loss
-of Audley than her mother's grief that affected her.
-The doctor, when summoned, pocketed his guinea,
-but did nothing more; so Winny Braddon urged
-Constance, but in vain, that "their poor chealveen"
-should be taken to the nearest <i>Mean-tol</i> (or Holed
-Stone) so that she might try the sovereign old
-Cornish cure for all mysterious ailments, by creeping
-through the orifice thereof; for in the ancient
-duchy, as in some parts of Ireland and the remote
-Scottish Isles, where such natural or artificial
-perforations were used of old by the Druids to initiate
-and dedicate their children to the offices of rock-worship,
-they are still regarded with superstition, as
-possessing the gift of effecting miraculous cures.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Constance, too, was ill, and in the excess of her
-grief and lowness of heart, she fancied herself worse
-than she really was; and ever present was the
-thought, how perilous the lonely path of life would
-be to a girl so beautiful as Sybil, if she&mdash;her
-mother&mdash;were taken away by the hand of death before
-another and fitting protector were provided. Morbid
-at times by sorrow, this reflection made the breast of
-Constance a prey to the most craving and clamorous
-anxiety.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But a short time before, and their worldly prospects
-had all been so different&mdash;so brilliant and
-happy. Now all was dark indeed! When she
-thought over all the baronial splendours of
-Rhoscadzhel, and the many mementoes of her husband
-which must be there, something of hatred for the
-invaders of her children's patrimony and her own
-marital rights began to mingle with her dull despair
-of ever proving that she had the latter; and with all
-her constitutional gentleness, when she recalled the
-glance bestowed upon her by Mr. Trevelyan on
-quitting the library, and the insinuations uttered by
-Downie against her, in presence of General
-Trecarrel, too, her blood boiled up within her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, Sybil!" she exclaimed one day, after sitting
-long buried in thought, "some author says, 'there
-are wild beasts in the human race;' and truly your
-uncle Downie is one of these. Can it be possible
-that they had the same parents&mdash;he and your frank,
-generous, and open-hearted papa?&mdash;that they share
-the same blood, were nursed at the same breast,
-and nestled together, as I have heard, in the same
-little cot?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sybil was silent; she had, in this view of the
-matter, but one secret and reclaiming thought.
-Downie was Audley's father, and she would be
-merciful.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But it was when inspired by one of those gusts
-of indignation that Constance received, perhaps
-unfortunately, a visitor&mdash;an attorney from a
-neighbouring town&mdash;who stated that he had heard her
-strange and painful story, and had come to make a
-"friendly" offer of his legal services.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now Mr. Sharkley&mdash;for such was his name&mdash;was
-exactly, in many respects, what Downie, in his rage,
-called him, and was an excellent specimen of
-perhaps the most dangerous character in society&mdash;a
-needy and unscrupulous lawyer. He was attired
-in rusty black garments, that seemed to have been
-made for a much taller man. The collar of his
-swallow-tailed coat rose above the nape of his neck,
-while the cuffs nearly reached to the points of his
-fingers, and the legs of his trousers flapped loosely
-over his instep. He had a low projecting forehead
-and keen eyes, the expression of which varied only
-between intense cunning and the lowest suspicion.
-His ears were enormous, set high upon his head;
-and the right one, from being long used as a
-pen-holder, projected from his skull more than the
-left. His features would have shocked Lavater,
-while Gall and Spurzheim would have augured
-the worst of his character by the development of
-his head.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His legal practice&mdash;though Constance was in
-blessed ignorance of the circumstance&mdash;was of the
-lowest kind, and had seldom proved beneficial in a
-monetary or any other sense to those for whom he
-unluckily acted as agent; but the fellow could be,
-when it suited him, suave, artful, and plausible
-when he had a purpose to serve, and a relentless
-bully when it was achieved; thus, seeing that though
-little or nothing could be made of the present case
-with the hope of success, much might be made of
-it in the way of money, perhaps, of notoriety
-certainly, and that in the end he might betray all
-he knew to Downie Trevelyan for a consideration&mdash;with
-these amiable views, he sought to worm
-himself as a friend and legal volunteer into the
-confidence of the otherwise friendless Constance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Mr. Sharkley heard her story attentively, and
-committed it all to writing. That her marriage had
-been duly celebrated in a chapel at Montreal he
-doubted not, nor the reason for keeping it so
-secret&mdash;the absurd pride of old Lord Lamorna,
-whose aristocratic prejudices were a local proverb
-and hence her having, so unfortunately for her own
-honour, passed so long under her maiden name of
-Devereaux with her son and daughter.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But how was all this to be proved?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Père Latour was dead; the records of his chapel
-had been burned in one of the many conflagrations
-incident to the city; the certified extract from them
-had perished in the sea with her husband. Dick
-Braddon too had been drowned, and the acolyte,
-the other witness in the little French chapel, had
-been long since laid under a wooden cross in the
-little burial-ground that adjoined it. A few letters
-alone were not sufficient proof to upset in
-England&mdash;whatever they might have done in Scotland&mdash;the
-title and succession of a wealthy peer already
-in possession; yet nevertheless Mr. Sharkley talked
-about the instant institution of legal proceedings,
-having the matter brought before a select
-committee of privileges in the House of Lords, and so
-forth, quite as confidently and as pompously as if
-he was a Q.C. and high-class parliamentary lawyer;
-and poor Constance felt a glow of hope for her
-children's future rising in her heart, while he
-compiled a narrative, took away the letters of her
-husband, and, receiving in advance a handsome
-sum for certain imaginary fees and expenses,
-departed with nearly all the ready money she
-possessed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He really attempted, however, to get up a case
-against "Lord Lamorna," and hence the bulky and
-presumptuous document which exasperated Downie;
-but from the weakness of her cause and the
-character of her legal adviser it speedily fell to the
-ground, only to fix a deeper stigma on the hapless
-and innocent Constance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Rumours of misfortune and mystery brought all
-their creditors, now pretty numerous (for during
-her husband's lifetime they had lived in good style
-at the villa), down upon her in a pitiless horde.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Denzil, she knew, would now lose the liberal
-allowance his father had promised him after leaving
-Sandhurst on appointment; but with tentage, batta,
-and other allowance, a subaltern can live on his pay
-in India, when he might starve elsewhere. In her
-misery Constance gathered some comfort from this
-knowledge, though ruin and penury&mdash;or work for
-which they were both unfitted&mdash;were all that
-remained to her and Sybil now.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap24"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XXIV.
-<br /><br />
-THE DOCTRINE OF CHANCES.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-And what of Audley, the lover, all this time?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had written from Rhoscadzhel to Constance,
-imploring her permission in moving terms to see
-Sybil once again, and have some farewell explanation
-with her, ere he departed to India, too probably
-for years; for, with the usual inconsistency of the
-human heart, no sooner did he find himself repelled,
-than he felt the attraction towards her redoubled.
-This letter had been addressed to Constance as
-"Mrs. Devereaux;" and, without reflecting that he
-could not bestow upon her a title already borne by
-his own mother, she felt fresh anger at the
-circumstance. Without showing the missive to Sybil, who
-conceived it might be on some legal business, she
-cast it in the fire, and replied by an emphatic
-refusal, adding that if he came near the villa,
-which they were soon about to leave, her servant,
-Winny Braddon (she had but one domestic now)
-had received orders not to admit him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Undeterred, he next wrote to Sybil, but this
-effort proved equally unavailing. Resolved not to
-add to her mother's distress by any disobedience or
-duplicity on her part, she showed her the letter
-unopened; and it was at once re-addressed to
-Rhoscadzhel, with the envelope unbroken, and
-Audley flushed to the temples when it was placed
-in his hand.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He felt himself to be still solemnly engaged to
-Sybil, yet hopelessly separated from her, through
-no fault of his own&mdash;separated without even a lovers'
-quarrel. He wondered now at the selfish thoughts
-which more than once had occurred to him,
-particularly on that day when he quitted the library,
-and even the house, in such haste to avoid her, and
-times there were when he blushed at the memory
-of it. Relations they were unquestionably by blood,
-whether there had been a marriage or no marriage;
-and this made Audley reflect all the more deeply
-and tenderly on the subject of his severed ties with Sybil.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He wished to restore the ring to her in person,
-to replace it on her finger as a memento of himself;
-for the repossession of it made him restless and
-uneasy, as the crazed Halfheller with his bottle-imp;
-and if he was to do this, there was no time to
-be lost, as he had but one day to spend in Cornwall
-now.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The wild longing or craving to see her once
-again, to have an explanation of some kind&mdash;he
-knew not what&mdash;but beyond anything a letter could
-contain (even were she permitted to receive it),
-still inspired him, though prudence might have
-suggested the utter inexpediency of further
-interviews between them, circumstanced as they were.
-Audley, however, was not of an age, neither was he
-of the temperament, of one to play the part of
-casuist.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Why may I not baffle them all&mdash;this strange
-mother, who can be so winning and yet is so
-repellant, my cold and calculating father too&mdash;and
-carry off the dear girl in defiance of all and
-everything? This very night I might do it," he
-pondered: "the train in an hour or so would set me
-down close by her; and if we make allowance for
-human frailty and the 'doctrine of chances,' why
-the deuce should I not succeed, for I know that she
-loves me?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He started from a deep and easy library-chair,
-in which he had been seated, enjoying a pipe of
-cavendish, as this idea, or chain of ideas, occurred
-to him; but then calmer reflection suggested a view
-of the future&mdash;his father's rage, his proud mother's
-disgust, his allowance cut off, and no home for his
-bride in India, but barrack accommodation or a
-subaltern's bungalow.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No&mdash;no&mdash;by Jove, <i>that</i> would never do!" he
-muttered, and reseated himself. Yet he was
-resolved to see her, if he could. Perhaps old Winny
-Braddon might not have a heart so flinty as her
-mistress; and even if she had, it might not be
-inaccessible to temptation; so that night, when dusk
-was closing over land and sea, saw Audley Trevelyan
-speeding along the Cornwall Railway, with no very
-defined idea, save a desire to see, to speak with
-Sybil, and to hold once again her little hand in his,
-ere he left the country, it might be for ever.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The train had been unaccountably delayed; so
-the hour was late, almost close on ten, when he
-passed down the avenue, and found himself near
-the villa. To hope to see Sybil at that unwonted
-hour was absurd; but, after having come so far, he
-could not deny himself the pleasure of hovering
-near the place which, from its association with her
-presence, had for him so great a charm.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thus it was with much of tender interest he
-surveyed the façade of the little villa, the walls and
-rose-bound portico of which glimmered white in
-the light of the stars; for, as yet, the moon had not
-risen, but he could not fail to observe with genuine
-concern that the stables, as he passed them, and
-the coach-house too, seemed empty and deserted;
-for the little phaeton and its pretty ponies, so long
-the pets of Sybil, had been sold, with many
-other things, to furnish fees for the grasping
-Mr. Sharkley: moreover, the villa was ticketed
-to let.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There might be company, guests, or visitors at the
-villa; if so, even at that hour, he might perhaps see
-at least her figure. But no; as he drew nearer, all
-seemed dark and silent,&mdash;on the entrance floor at
-least; and now the barking of a watch-dog from its
-kennel near the house made him pause and consider
-how strange it was that he should be prowling
-thus, like a housebreaker in the night, when he
-might, under happier auspices, have been an
-honoured and welcome guest.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Constance and her daughter had evidently retired
-for the night, lights being visible in their bedrooms
-only. That of Sybil, he had chanced to know, was
-in the north wing of the house, and faced the garden,
-through the iron gate of which he could see a ray
-of light from her window falling on the trees,
-parterres, and shrubbery.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The iron gate was locked; could he but reach her
-window, he might leave a message for her pencilled
-on a calling-card,&mdash;for to write by post was hopeless;
-yet he should like her to know in the morning that
-he had been lingering so near her. Through the
-iron bars he looked most wistfully at the lighted
-window, where once or twice the candles cast a
-flitting shadow on the blind. Could he but attract
-her attention, make her aware of his presence, and
-exchange a word or two; perhaps he might have an
-interview with her, though that would be unseemly,
-and what she would not probably consent to; and
-yet, after relinquishing the handful of gravel he was
-about to toss against the window, he suddenly
-resorted to a plan, which, if discovered, would prove
-more awkward still.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The locked gate barred all entrance to the garden;
-but he perceived that a great espalier had its
-branches trained over all the wall, forming a solid
-and veritable ladder from the ground to its summit.
-The place was sequestered; the hour lonely, and
-every moment of delay might be perilous, for if she
-had begun to disrobe, he would be compelled to
-retire, so Audley proceeded at once to scale the
-barrier, that he might descend on the other side.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This proceeding was bold, rash, and rude, perhaps;
-but he had no other resource if he would see
-her ere he left Cornwall, which he must certainly
-do, by an early train on the morrow. With the
-speed of lightning, his thoughts reverted to their
-brief but pleasant past, and to every passage of their
-acquaintance; their first meeting beside the
-moorland tarn; her rescue from the Pixies' Hole; their
-solitary walks, and that one delightful hour in yonder
-conservatory, and he felt assured that she, at least,
-would forgive his present temerity.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Other ideas flashed through his mind, as he
-clambered from branch to branch, feeling them yielding
-the while under his feet as he tore or wrenched them
-from the masonry. He felt that his real object
-might be doubted; that his position was anomalous
-and improper, and might compromise the girl he
-loved. What would the mess of the Hussar
-regiment he had left, or that of the Light Infantry
-corps he was about to join, think if they saw him
-now? What would his cold-hearted, legal "papa"&mdash;his
-proud, aristocratic, and unimpressible mamma
-have thought of such an adventure; and in fancy
-he saw the stern grimace of the former, and the
-latter using her vinaigrette and fan with unwonted
-vigour, at the idea of her son visiting any lady
-thus&mdash;more than all, the daughter of "Mrs. Devereaux!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then fears occurred to him that some change
-might have taken place in the internal arrangements
-at the villa, and that the window before which he
-found himself, after dropping noiselessly into the
-garden, might open to the room, not of Sybil, but
-her mother, or old Winny Braddon!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Trusting to his doctrine of chances, he hoped this
-might prove a lucky one.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The blind of the window (which opened in the
-French fashion down to a flight of steps) was not
-completely closed; thus he could see the whole
-interior of a spacious and handsome bedroom,
-nearly in the centre of which stood a dressing-table
-and mirror festooned gracefully with white lace, and
-before it was seated Sybil in her dark mourning
-dress, with her chin resting in the hollow of one
-hand, the elbow being placed upon the table. Her
-other arm hung by her side, and she seemed lost in
-thought, for her eyes instead of gazing into the large
-oval mirror, wherein, by the light of two tall wax
-candles in ormolu holders, her own loveliness was
-reflected, were bent upon vacancy, or the floor.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sybil's usually pale and always pure complexion,
-was paler now; thus her eyes, their brows and
-lashes, and the masses of her hair seemed by
-contrast to be very dark indeed; and the latter in rich
-profusion fell over her shoulders and back below
-her waist. In the background of this pretty picture,
-stood forth the white and elegant draperies of her
-bed, the festooned muslin of which hung in vapour-like
-folds, over curtains of rose-coloured silk, looped
-up by white cords and tassels of the same material.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A glance enabled Audley to take in all these
-details, and his breathing became a series of sighs
-as he regarded Sybil, who sat quite motionless and
-sunk in reverie. He flattered himself that she was
-thinking of him; but it was not so; she had just
-concluded a sorrowful letter to Denzil, her only brother,
-and her thoughts were far away with him, or with
-her mamma and all their coming troubles; for all
-those luxuries by which the wealth and taste, and
-more than all, the love of her dead father had
-surrounded them, were about to be relinquished now,
-and ere long grim poverty would be staring them
-gauntly in the face.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At times her nether lip quivered; the tears began
-to roll over her cheeks, and as a sigh escaped her,
-the heaving movement of her neck and shoulders
-made more apparent their graceful character and
-undulating curve. Then suddenly, as with her quick
-white fingers she was proceeding to coil up the
-tresses of her hair for the night, a sound seemed to
-startle her, she paused, and her eyes flashed and
-dilated with surprise.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"There it is again&mdash;good heavens&mdash;what can it
-be?" she exclaimed half aloud, and rising from her
-seat, as Audley tapped very audibly on the window
-panes for a second time.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The deuce!" thought he, "I hope she won't
-scream&mdash;for that would spoil all."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With a candle in her hand, she paused midway
-between the window and her dressing-table, when
-he said distinctly,&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It is I, dearest Sybil&mdash;Audley Trevelyan&mdash;open
-the window, and speak with me&mdash;but for a moment."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Audley&mdash;you&mdash;you&mdash;here at this hour!" replied
-Sybil, with intense astonishment, bordering on
-fear.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She replaced the candle on the table, clasped her
-hands, and shrunk back irresolutely, for though she
-fully recognised the voice that thrilled her heart's
-core, it was somewhat bewildering to hear it there
-and at such a time; but summoning courage she
-drew up the blind, and beheld Audley's whole figure
-on the upper step, which formed the sill of her
-window.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, Audley&mdash;Audley&mdash;what has happened&mdash;what
-brings you here again?" she asked imploringly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The love I bear you," said he, humbly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You cannot think of entering here!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Far from it, dearest Sybil&mdash;I have no such
-thought; but pardon me for alarming you&mdash;pardon
-me for intruding on you thus."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I do pardon you, but require you to explain&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The object of such a visit at such a time," said
-he, lowering his voice lest he should be overheard
-in the stillness of the night.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Most certainly," said she, weeping.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Have you indeed discarded me&mdash;withdrawn your
-heart from me, and for ever, Sybil?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What would you have me to do, Audley?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"There is an arbour in the garden&mdash;throw a
-shawl over you, and grant me but a minute to say a
-few farewell words."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The moment you first asked for has become a
-minute&mdash;so would the minute soon become an
-hour."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"In pity to me, Sybil," urged Audley, with
-clasped hands.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After a little indecision, seeming to listen and
-perceive that all was still, she threw a shawl over
-her head, unbolted the French sash, and stepped
-forth into the garden, where now the light of an
-uprisen moon fell in a bright flood upon the grass
-plots, the shining evergreens, and tipped all the
-leafless trees with liquid silver. There seemed a divine
-peace over all the earth and sky; but the hearts of
-these two young people were sad and aching, while
-Audley pressed a long and silent kiss upon her
-upturned face, as he led her towards the bower in
-question.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I leave this to-morrow, Sybil," said he, as he
-seated himself by her side, and took her hands
-caressingly in his own, "and I could not resist
-the craving, the desire to see you once again, and
-explain much that my returned letters were meant
-to elucidate to you and your mamma&mdash;that I have
-no share in the spirit of animosity&mdash;hostility&mdash;how
-shall I term it?&mdash;cherished by my family against
-you and yours. With this family quarrel, for so
-shall I style it, I have nothing to do, and you, dear
-Sybil, have nothing to do. The employment of a
-legal wretch like Sharkley was, of course, a fatal
-mistake, making much public that need never have
-been so, and tending greatly to complicate and
-embitter our affairs."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My poor mamma had none to advise her,"
-urged Sybil, not heeding a slight tone of
-reprehension in what Audley said.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How fortunate has been the chance that led me
-to you to-night!" he whispered in her ear.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But to what end or purpose do we meet at all?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Fettered as I am&mdash;most true!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Audley could only sigh deeply and press her to
-his breast.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Then you&mdash;you love me still?" said Sybil, as
-her slender fingers strayed among his hair, the
-action in itself a mute caress.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My darling&mdash;I have never ceased to love you!"
-he exclaimed, gazing tenderly on the pure pale face
-whose features he could see distinctly, even amid
-the obscurity of the bower. Her head drooped on
-his shoulder, and they sat for some minutes quite
-silent, and full of thoughts that were beyond
-utterance; yet Audley's delight was not without alloy.
-He felt that he loved her dearly, and yet, with all
-the joy of the time, there mingled a selfish regret
-that he had won her so completely, as their love
-could never be a successful one.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And you leave this to-morrow?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"To-morrow."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her voice was broken and tremulous. Audley
-became deeply moved as he heard her weep; and he
-began to think, as better impulses inspired him,
-was it possible that he could relinquish or sacrifice
-a girl so soft and tender, so loving and true, for
-"Mrs. Grundy and Society?" and had he actually
-at one time&mdash;young-officer-like&mdash;felt a little glow of
-satisfaction when she returned the eye of Vishnu,
-and he felt himself once more <i>free</i>!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In his vacillation there was every prospect of the
-proposal to elope being made, but prudence made
-him pause, and an observation of Sybil's changed
-the current of his ideas.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Your father has acted most cruelly to poor
-mamma," said Sybil; "and most unjustly to his
-own brother's memory."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My father is a&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh hush, Audley," said Sybil.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-What epithet or adjective he was about to use in
-irritation at the chances of his allowance being cut
-off, we are unable to record, for Sybil's quick little
-hand intercepted it on his lips.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And now we must separate&mdash;you will find the
-key inside the garden gate, so no more escalading;
-oh, leave me," she urged, "for if you were
-discovered&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"One kiss more&mdash;one promise to remember me
-when I am gone."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, Audley, could I ever forget you?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They were lingering now midway between the
-bower and the house, and the full splendour of the
-moonlight fell around them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And you will take back your ring," he whispered;
-and once more the eye of Vishnu glittered on the
-hand of Sybil. "Keep it as the memento of a poor
-fellow who loves you well&mdash;and you must do
-something more for me."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"In what way, Audley?" asked Sybil, pausing on
-the upper step, and near the still open window of
-her room.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Keep poor Rajah for me; my lady mother won't
-abide the dog, and I can't take him back all the way
-to India, as I am perhaps going overland by the
-desert; and now my beloved girl&mdash;dear, dear
-Sybil&mdash;I must leave you, perhaps never to see you
-again."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A desperate calm seemed to come over Sybil, as
-she replied,&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Situated as we are; related as we are, and
-enemies as my mamma and your parents must ever
-be, it is indeed better that we should meet no
-more&mdash;yet part as friends."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"As friends&mdash;oh, Sybil&mdash;as friends!" murmured
-Audley, becoming more excited as she grew calm.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes&mdash;this meeting and parting will form a pleasant
-memory to look back upon, in years to come,
-when we are far apart."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Often in after times did these words come back to
-the heart of Audley Trevelyan.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And you will always wear my ring?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"For life&mdash;dear cousin Audley&mdash;farewell."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She was about to close the casement, her hands
-trembling and her cheeks ghastly pale, when he
-urged,&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I must write to you&mdash;under cover to some
-one&mdash;permit me&mdash;oh, permit me?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I cannot&mdash;I cannot," she replied, with a torrent
-of tears.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I must&mdash;pardon my importunity, darling."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Go&mdash;go, I entreat you&mdash;good-bye&mdash;farewell."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She was about to shut the French sash, when a
-voice startled her, by exclaiming,&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, my God&mdash;what is this I see?" and as Sybil
-started back, Audley found himself confronted by
-Constance, in her dressing-gown, for she had entered
-the room, candle in hand, having been roused by the
-sound of their voices at the open window.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This <i>dénouement</i>, so unexpected, was very awkward,
-and liable to the most serious misconstruction;
-so Audley's doctrine of chances proved a failure
-here.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap25"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XXV.
-<br /><br />
-MISCONCEPTION.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Little could Sybil or Audley have foreseen how
-fatal was to be the ultimate termination of this
-night's adventure.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The usually sweet and placid little face of
-Constance was now inflamed with rage and
-distorted by grief. Her colour came and went, like
-her breath, rapidly; and through their tears, her
-dark eyes were sparkling with fire.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A painful silence was maintained by the three for
-a few moments.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sybil scarcely understood the cause of her
-mother's terrible excitement, while Audley, who knew
-more of life and the world's ways, was filled with
-genuine shame and mortification on finding that
-his presence there was misunderstood, and the
-perfect purity of his intentions misconceived or
-entirely doubted.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Constance, on the other hand, was full of
-indignation against him for taking what she not
-unnaturally believed to be a most unwarrantable and
-unfair advantage of their now false position, their
-growing monetary troubles and disgrace, to insult
-her helpless daughter; she was furious, therefore,
-as a tigress about to be robbed of her young, and
-though fiery in her wrath, yet stately and proud in
-her bearing as a little tragedy queen.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How, sir, have you dared to come hither after
-being forbidden my house?" she exclaimed, in the
-full belief that Audley, when entreating only that he
-might write to Sybil, had been forcing a passage into
-her chamber; "and why at such an untimeous hour
-as this? Oh shame, sir! shame! Have you neither
-honour nor compassion? Could you forget that the
-poor girl you pretended to love was your own
-cousin?" Then changing suddenly from upbraiding
-to scorn, she added, "Truly the legal snake Downie
-Trevelyan is well represented by his son, who would
-break into my daughter's room like a thief in the
-night, and seek perhaps to steal her honour, after
-having stolen her patrimony! Begone, sir, instantly,
-ere I summon aid and have you exposed&mdash;it may be,
-arrested."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, madam, do permit me to explain all this,"
-urged Audley almost piteously; but Constance, in
-the full tide of her indignation would listen to
-nothing. She showered upon him reproaches, and,
-summoning Winny Braddon, ordered her to ring the
-long disused house-bell, cast loose the watch-dog,
-and bring assistance. Never had the terrified Sybil
-seen her constitutionally gentle, placid, and ladylike
-mother in so wild a gust of passion; and with
-clasped hands and colourless face, she turned her
-weeping eyes alternately, with imploring glances,
-from her to Audley, who seemed to feel acutely that
-his position was absurd, dangerous, and pitiful; so
-he was filled by an emotion of shame till it took the
-phase of irritation.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Leave us, Audley, I entreat you&mdash;see, mamma is
-seriously ill!" said Sybil, on perceiving Constance
-press her hands upon her temples, displaying, as
-she did so, the snowy whiteness of her taper arms,
-while tottering into a chair. Audley gave the
-scared girl a glance full of agony in expression, and
-said:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I shall write and explain all, and she will do
-me justice when calmer; to-night, any attempts at
-elucidation were utterly vain. I am to blame for
-my rashness and selfishness in compromising you
-thus; but not so much to blame as she thinks,
-however. Your heart at least will excuse and plead
-for me; and now, dearest Sybil, a long, long&mdash;farewell!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was gone!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sybil stayed not to listen to his departing steps,
-but sprang to the side of her mother, who, weakened
-by past sorrow and emotion, had felt this episode in
-all its real and imaginary details, too much for the
-nervous system. She had fainted, and now lay back
-in her chair whiter than a lily.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Full of humiliation and anger, Audley retired,
-not as he had come, by scaling the wall, but by the
-garden-gate, which he unlocked, and then quitted
-the place, resolving to write to Constance fully on
-the morrow. Irresolute and infirm of purpose, he
-continued to linger near the villa, as the chill hours
-of the morning succeeded each other, and it was
-far advanced ere he thought of seeking the vicinity
-of the train that was to take him home. He saw
-the day-dawn spread over the sea, and the shadows
-of the land, with its rocks and precipices cast, by
-the level sunlight, far across its brightening waters.
-He saw the gray mist rising from the valleys and
-rolling up the brown mountain sides, as it did so
-revealing new ravines and hollows it had hitherto
-concealed. He saw the red rays light up the mighty
-headland known as Willapark Point; all the barren
-ridge of Resparvell Down, and all the rocks and
-foam, and broken shore about Tintagel and Trevana
-tinted with marvellous beauty, and varied light and
-shadow, by the morning sun; and inland, Little
-Minster church, secluded in its nook among the hills;
-and from an eminence which he ascended, he could
-see amid the dun-coloured moorland, the lonely
-tarn and huge rock pillar where he had first met
-Sybil Devereaux; and with these all her presence,
-and the nameless magnetic charm she possessed in
-her own person, came vividly home to his heart.
-When the hedgerows that intersected the landscape
-would be green and those enclosures of stone coped
-with turf in the Cornish fashion, would be covered
-with wild violets, daisies, and kingcups; and when
-yonder groves of sycamore, ash, and elm, and the
-cherry orchards should be covered with the bloom
-of summer, half the world would be lying between
-him and Sybil!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He stifled the emotions that were rising within
-him, hurried to the railway, and throwing himself
-into a well-cushioned first-class carriage (after
-"tipping" the guard, that he might be free from
-intrusion), overcome and weary with the excitement
-and events of the past night, he sank into
-a profound slumber, and reached home in time
-to have a refresher of iced brandy and soda from
-Jasper Funnel before that stolid functionary rung
-the breakfast-bell, and before his somewhat unusual
-absence had been discovered by any one save his
-valet.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From Rhoscadzhel he wrote immediately to
-Constance, explaining that the sole object of his
-visit to Sybil was to bid her farewell, and entreating
-her pardon for the misconception and annoyance he
-had caused. To enable her to reply, he delayed his
-departure two days, but in vain. However, the
-circumstance of his humble and contrite letter being
-returned, not to himself, but under cover and
-unopened to his father (whom she addressed as
-"D. Trevelyan, Esq., Barrister-at-Law"), thereby causing
-a fresh family explosion, completed the full measure
-of his chagrin; and the young officer felt deeply
-stung by the contemptuous manner in which it was
-tossed to him across the breakfast-table.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"There, sir," said Downie, bitterly; "there is
-your precious production; and remember that a
-fool should never post his letters till twenty-four
-hours after they are written. I suppose we shall
-next have notice of an action filed against you, for
-breach of promise by that scoundrel
-Sharkley&mdash;Devereaux versus Trevelyan!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-That evening saw Audley depart from Rhoscadzhel.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He repaired at once to the depôt of his regiment,
-then lying in Tilbury Barracks, that quaint old
-tumble-down fort, whose handsome gateway, like a stately
-Temple Bar, has faced the river for nearly three
-centuries; and there he strove to forget Cornwall
-and all the trouble he had encountered, amid the
-dissipation and amusements afforded by English
-garrison life to every wealthy young man.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thus, when off duty, his days were consumed in
-tandem-driving, pigeon, cricket, or rowing matches;
-<i>déjeûners</i>, an occasional steeple-chase in Essex or
-Kent (or a day's leave in London to see the
-Trecarrels); while his nights were devoted to dining
-out, dancing, and drinking, billiards, and garrison
-balls, private theatricals, and, consequently, a fierce
-flirtation with an occasional pretty actress, despite
-rouge and pearl-powder.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It has been said that "at no time is a man so
-prone to fall in love as immediately after his being
-jilted;" but many a fair one tried her blandishments
-on Audley in vain; for he had been separated by
-adverse fortune from, and not jilted by, the object
-of his attachment. A long journey was before
-him, and he doubted not that he would get over
-the memory of Sybil in time.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So passed the weeks till he would have to go to
-India in the spring of the year; and thus he strove
-to forget her, who was yet to exercise a wondrous
-influence on his future life; with the recollection of
-those kisses that had thrilled his heart to the core,
-and those soft dark eyes whose beauty made even
-silence eloquent.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And did he achieve this complete forgetfulness?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Time and our story will show.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap26"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XXVI.
-<br /><br />
-REVERSES.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Meanwhile how fared it with poor Sybil, who
-knew not whether he was at home or abroad, or
-had already forgotten her, and married perhaps the
-more sparkling and showy Rose Trecarrel?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Re-addressing Audley's letter was fated to be the
-last action the right hand of Constance was to
-perform in this world.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For the two days subsequent to the episode just
-related she remained in bed, exhausted apparently,
-sadder and lower in spirit than usual; and on the
-morning of the third, Sybil, when drawing back the
-curtains to see if she were asleep or awake, to
-receive her daily kiss and join in prayer, was
-inexpressibly shocked and terrified to perceive a
-peculiar fixity in one eye, and that a corner of her
-still beautiful mouth was strangely drawn down on
-one side.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Paralysis had supervened, and poor Constance
-had totally lost the use of one half of her body!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Summoned in hot haste, the village doctor came,
-with his stereotyped professional expression of
-sympathy. He felt her pulse, repeater in hand, and
-ominously shook his head.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, sir, do you think there is danger?" asked
-Sybil, in intense agitation.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Hush, child&mdash;come this way," said he, and led
-her from the room.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"God help me, sir&mdash;you have something terrible
-to tell me?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I have, indeed; but nerve yourself, for she has
-none to depend upon now but you."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"None, indeed, save One who is in Heaven."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her disease, he said, was embalism; it came
-from the region of the heart, and had been gradually
-but rapidly forming in her system for some time
-past; anxiety and sorrow had doubtless induced it.
-and some recent excitement&mdash;that night affair, of
-which the doctor knew not&mdash;had brought it to a
-head. A second shock, he added, must inevitably
-prove fatal!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With dilated eyes and clasped hands, the unhappy
-girl listened to this sentence of death, for such it
-sounded in her overstrained ear and to her aching
-heart, as the doctor spoke it in an impressive and
-never-to-be-forgotten whisper, in a room adjoining
-that in which the sufferer lay. He then paused,
-and gazed with much of genuine sympathy into the
-pale face of the startled listener; perhaps he was
-mentally speculating upon the probable future of
-this lovely girl, with whose sad family history he
-was quite familiar now.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And what was embalism, she asked, in a low and
-intensely agitated voice.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A species of weed, or little fungus, that grew in
-the upper region of the heart, from whence it passed,
-by minute fibres, fine as a gossamer thread, through
-the blood-vessels, till, by choking the passage of one
-of them, there ensued the dire effect they had seen.
-And was it curable? No; yet the patient might
-linger for months; and, he added, that Sybil must
-control her grief, nor let the sufferer see by it that
-danger was apprehended.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The doctor was gone; but he was to come again,
-and for some minutes Sybil sat like one transformed
-to stone, unable even to weep, or reply to the excited
-questions, showered upon her by Winny Braddon,
-so stunning was the sense of this sudden and
-unrealisable calamity. She was, perhaps, on the very eve
-of losing her mamma&mdash;her sole relative and friend&mdash;that
-beautiful, and gentle, and loving mamma, to
-whom she had been quite as much like a sister and
-companion as a daughter; for, though a parent,
-Constance was still so young in appearance and
-manner, and, till their late calamities had come to
-pass, naturally so gay, happy, and buoyant in spirit,
-despite the secret of her wedded life.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She rushed to the bedroom, and clasped the
-sufferer in her arms, pillowing her head upon her
-bosom, and so for hours she hung about her, that
-she might have the melancholy joy of her society
-while yet spared to her; and for a time she almost
-forgot the grave warning given so recently, to
-control her emotions, nor excite the now passive
-and helpless Constance, who, ignorant alike of her
-own condition and danger, and propped up by
-cushions, could but gaze at her wistfully, and make
-efforts to speak that were intensely painful to the
-hearer.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The doctor had assured her, that "to expect an
-ultimate recovery was vain; that her mother's life
-was but a thing of time now&mdash;as it is with us all,"
-he added; yet, hoping against hope and these sad
-words, Sybil was unremitting in her attentions to
-her parent. Days there were when she rallied a
-little, and could even move her right hand, but only
-to become worse subsequently, and to find her
-breathing more laborious and painful.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The doctor was an honest though not brilliant
-man, and did his best for the patient, without thinking
-of fee or reward. Sybil, in her intense anxiety,
-doubted his skill: but how was she to procure that
-of others? There were, she knew, great physicians
-in London and elsewhere, but she was destitute of
-the means for employing them. Times there were,
-when, in her desperation, she thought of writing to
-Audley; but she knew that her mother would never
-have approved of such a proceeding; and their
-parting had been so strange, that she shrunk from
-the idea as suddenly as it had been conceived, and
-she thought, as she whispered in her heart the
-words of a once familiar song, that hers was&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- "A love that took an early root,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And had an early doom,<br />
- Like trees that never come to fruit,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And early shed their bloom&mdash;<br />
- Of vanished hopes and sunny smiles,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;All lost for evermore;<br />
- Like ships that sailed for sunny isles<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But never saw their shore."<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-She thought, too of the fatherly old soldier,
-General Trecarrel, and then as quickly remembered
-that he had been present during that humiliating
-interview at Rhoscadzhel; but any idea of writing
-to him for advice was crushed finally, when a stray
-newspaper announced one day, that the General
-"and his family" had sailed in the <i>Netley</i> transport
-for India, his extra aide-de-camp, the Honourable
-Mr. Audley Trevelyan, having proceeded overland,
-to serve on his staff in the new campaign against
-the Afghans.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Something of secret satisfaction mingled with the
-sorrow and fear of the lonely girl, as she read this
-paragraph&mdash;which she did a great many
-times&mdash;satisfaction that Audley had not gone in the same
-vessel with these gay Trecarrels, which he could
-easily have done, if so disposed; sorrow, that they
-were so completely and hopelessly separated now,
-and fear for the events of the coming campaign in
-which he was to serve, and more than probably her
-brother Denzil, too. Sybil could little suppose that
-it was purposely to avoid being quizzed by the
-Trecarrels about herself, and to avoid the imputation,
-or too probable danger, consequent to a long
-voyage with two such handsome and enterprising
-flirts as Mabel and Rose were known to be, that he
-had, with a few brother officers, started for the East
-overland, a less easy and luxurious journey then
-than it is now.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But Sybil was soon compelled by the exigencies
-of their situation to exert herself beyond her years
-and experience, for creditors, we have said, had
-become clamorous. Everything that could be
-spared was to be turned into money, and they were
-to seek another and more humble home. All the
-beautiful art-treasures collected by the taste of her
-parents in their continental wanderings, the oak and
-marqueterie cabinets, the chaste china of Dresden
-and Sèvres, the quaint Majolica vases, and alabaster
-groups, with all the most valued household gods,
-were despatched to the nearest market town in
-charge of the useful Mr. Sharkly, and disposed of
-with a ruinous commission to that somewhat
-"seedy" personage! and a little time after saw the
-pretty villa, so long the abode of so much peaceful
-and sequestered happiness, in the possession of
-strangers, while Sybil and her mamma were content
-to locate them in a small cottage which they rented
-from old Michael Treherne, the miner, and furnished
-in the plainest manner; but all their debts
-were cleared, and even Denzil's Indian outfit paid.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To Constance all places were pretty much alike
-now, for she had become listless and indifferent to
-external objects; but times there were when much
-of exasperation mingled with Sybil's grief, at the
-thought that her mamma&mdash;she so gently bred and
-nurtured, and so petted by her drowned father&mdash;she,
-who should then be in Rhoscadzhel, surrounded
-by every appliance that wealth, luxury, skill, and
-rank could furnish, was now in her desolate widowhood,
-and sore extremity, the inmate of a poor and
-sordid cottage.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thus day succeeded day, and weeks rolled on
-without any change, at least for the better&mdash;weeks
-which seemed so long, heavy and monotonous, that to
-Sybil the world and time appeared to stand still. No
-letters came from Denzil now, for he had marched
-up-country somewhere, and India was not then what
-it has been since the Great Mutiny of the Sepoys,
-intersected by railways and telegraph wires; but
-Denzil's last epistle was full of unusual interest to
-Sybil and her mamma.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had, of course, been duly acquainted by the
-former of all that had occurred at home, with the
-startling revelations consequent to his father's
-journey to Montreal, and his death at sea; and now
-he should probably meet, ere long, this cousin of
-his, this Audley Trevelyan, for they belonged to the
-same regiment, and it was, perhaps, to form a
-portion of Trecarrel's brigade. And <i>how</i> were they
-to meet&mdash;as friends and brother officers, as relations
-or enemies?&mdash;for Audley's father occupied <i>his</i>
-(Denzil's) place in the world or in society, at least.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Relations&mdash;pshaw!&mdash;could they ever be aught but
-foes? was the young man's immediate thought, and
-his sister's boding fear. And so his father was
-gone&mdash;his good, kind father, his friend, companion,
-and preceptor in many a manly sport. How often
-had they rode and rambled, shot and fished together
-in Calabria, the Abruzzi, and Switzerland, and at
-home in sturdy Cornwall, so many thousand miles
-away! Only those who are so far from home&mdash;so
-far away as India, with all its strange external
-influences and objects&mdash;can know how keen, and
-strong, and tender, to the young at least, are the
-ties of home and kindred, especially as the home-ties
-decrease in number by distance, change, and death.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Dead&mdash;his father dead! The "governor," as he
-had styled him, like "other fellows" at Sandhurst,
-his "dear old dad," as he called him in the home
-that was a broken home now; and as the pleasant
-face, that he never more would look upon, with
-years of past affection, came back to memory, the
-lad had covered his face with his hands, and wept.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It is only when we have been long at sea and
-have lost sight of Europe," wrote Denzil, "ay,
-dearest Sybil, even of Europe, which seems all one
-country and one home to us, that the Anglo-Indian
-feels his banishment has fairly begun, and he is to
-be, henceforth, as some fellow has it, 'among the
-dusky people of Ind, with whom we have no
-traditions, no religious, few domestic, and scarcely any
-moral sentiments in common, and whose very
-costume (want of it, sometimes, I should say) is only
-characteristic of a much greater difference of inward
-nature.' And so I am actually by birth a lord&mdash;a
-lord! I have thought, and many visions of future
-greatness have floated through my mind&mdash;and dear
-mamma is a lady&mdash;-Dowager Lady Lamorna. How
-odd it sounds. Are we all losing our identity; and
-how is all this to be proved? The past mystery
-nearly cost me my life when I first joined, and in
-this fashion:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Bob Waller, one of ours, a pleasant but sometimes
-supercilious fellow, asked me one evening in
-the mess bungalow, if 'my people were from the
-Channel Islands?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'No,' replied I, colouring, for I always felt that
-some mystery existed about us; 'but why do you
-ask?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'The name sounds like a French one,' replied
-Waller.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'We are connected somehow with Montreal.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Oh, that explains it,' rejoined Waller.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'There is nothing to explain,' said I, angrily.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Think not?&mdash;well&mdash;have a cigar?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I roughly, perhaps, declined it, so Waller
-returned to the charge by saying&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Your father was once in the Cornish Light
-Infantry, you say?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Yes&mdash;a captain&mdash;some twenty years ago.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Strange. I have looked all through the Army
-Lists, and can find no such name in the corps.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"This assertion exasperated me (I afterwards
-found it correct), and I challenged him to meet me
-the next morning in a grove of peepul trees, outside
-the cantonments; but duelling days are over&mdash;the
-affair got wind, and each of us was placed under
-arrest within his own compound till we exchanged
-mutual promises. Bob Waller and I are excellent
-friends now, and at the moment I am writing, he is
-sitting opposite me in his shirt and drawers, for we
-are having a glass of brandy-pawnee&mdash;the alcohol
-with water&mdash;and a couple of Chinsworah cheroots
-together; and I must close now, to catch the
-dauk-boat&mdash;as we call the mail."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This was Denzil's last letter, and after its arrival
-the weeks continued to roll monotonously on, and
-still found Sybil watching, with unwearied and
-unrepining zeal, by what she knew to be a bed of death.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Constance could speak but little, and then only
-to murmur her fears and prayers for the future of
-her daughter.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap27"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XXVII.
-<br /><br />
-ALONE!
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-At last there came an evening which Sybil was
-never to forget.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She had been, for the tenth and last time, at the
-nearest market-town, where, in the shop windows of
-a druggist, who combined the dispensing of
-medicines with groceries, and the cares of a
-circulating library with those of a post office, she
-had been fain to display some of her sketches for
-sale, that she might procure certain little comforts
-for her ailing mother in their penury. All had been
-offered to the local public in succession, even to that
-one which pourtrayed the lonely tarn and rock-pillar,
-where she had first met Audley, when he came to
-apologise for his dog's intrusion (why keep such a
-souvenir now?), and all had been offered in vain.
-Pleased with the girl's beauty and sweetness of
-manner, the shopman willingly enough displayed
-her productions (as decorations, perhaps) in his
-windows; and there they had grown yellow,
-blistered, and fly-blown, till they were completely
-spoiled. Each market-day she had hoped that
-some enterprising Hobnail or Chawbacon might
-fancy one of her sketches of some well-known
-locality, to ornament his dwelling, but only to be
-disappointed, for art seemed to be sorely at a
-discount in the land of Tre, Pol, and Pen.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the evening of the day in question, Sybil was
-returning from the town to their new home with a
-heavy heart. Not a sketch had been sold, and her
-purse was almost empty; the rain was falling
-heavily, and a cold, keen blast from the Bristol
-Channel swept over the desolate and open moorland
-she had to traverse; and her tears were mingling
-with the large drops that plashed on her delicate
-face and sodden hair. She had resolved that on
-the morrow&mdash;come what might&mdash;she should take
-means to dispose of Audley's farewell gift, the
-returned engagement ring; the diamond, she knew,
-was a valuable one, too much so to find a purchaser
-in their now humble neighbourhood; but the doctor,
-or the friendly druggist, who had her luckless
-sketches, would perhaps advise her in the matter;
-and with a sigh, in which sorrow mingled with
-relief and hope, she hastened onward.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The aspect of the district by which she had to
-pass to reach their present abode, was but
-ill-calculated to raise her spirit on a wet, stormy, and
-gloomy evening. In the distance rose the rough
-granite summits of the Row Tor and Bron Welli, each
-nearly some fourteen hundred feet in height, the
-sides of the former all covered by enormous blocks,
-the mightiest in Cornwall, piled over each other a
-very wilderness of spheroidal masses&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"Confusedly hurled,<br />
- The fragments of a former world."<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Over these mountain summits, the descending
-evening mists, cold and grey, had replaced the
-farewell rays of the red sun as he sunk beyond the sea;
-the appearance of the former, made Sybil quicken
-her steps, lest she should be overtaken on the moor,
-for then she should be able to see but a few yards
-before her, so sudden and dense are those floating
-vapours in Cornwall; and the bogholes were perilous.
-On either side of the way&mdash;a mere cart track&mdash;stood
-those lines of upright stones, which are
-ranged along it at regular distances, and extend all
-the way from Watergate, over the moor, having been
-erected at some remote period to mark the path in
-misty weather; and with a new but not unaccountable
-foreboding in her heart, for like Constance she
-was of a delicate organisation and had keen perceptions,
-Sybil hastened on, till she experienced a kind
-of sad relief on seeing the light that shone from the
-window of the little room where now her ailing
-mother lay, and where kind old Winny Braddon sat
-and watched.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Pausing at the threshold, she threw aside her
-drenched cloak and hat, and strove to smooth her
-wetted hair, ere she stealthily opened the door.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How is dear mamma now, Winny?" she whispered.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"She sleeps still."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Still?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes&mdash;the poor darling; but in her sleep she has
-been muttering much of the past&mdash;dreaming, I suppose;
-oh, my poor <i>chealveen</i>, you're wet, and cold,
-and weary too."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Please don't mind me, Winny; but tell me all
-about mamma."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What more have I to tell you?" asked the old
-woman, mournfully; "but you&mdash;you must have tea,
-or something warm; you will kill yourself at this
-rate, and then I shall have two to nurse instead of
-one."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No, no, I want nothing; let me but change
-these wet things, and then I shall take your place
-beside mamma's bed."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sad, sad indeed, was Sybil's heart on this night,
-for it was a melancholy one in many ways. As she
-sat by the plain unornamented bed wherein Constance
-lay, and surveyed, by the light of a single
-candle, the humble little room, destitute of cornice
-and all decoration, with its scanty furniture, she
-doubted at times her own identity, or whether this
-was not all a dream, from which she must awake to
-find herself at home in the villa&mdash;at home, in that
-pretty room where Audley saw her last, and
-where the windows opened to a beautiful flower
-garden.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And was this poor, wan and wasted invalid, so
-helpless and so passive now, her once merry and
-handsome mamma, whose hands had so loved to
-stray among her hair; who had hung over her little
-cot in infancy, and whose nightly and morning
-kisses would never come again; whose companionship
-she had shared like a younger sister, and with
-whom she had spent so many happy years?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All was very still in that sick room.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the hall, a great old-fashioned Dutch clock
-tick-tacked slowly and monotonously; without, the
-night was wild, and prolonged and angry blasts of
-wind swept over the desolate moor with a bellowing
-sound, that made the sleeper stir uneasily; and lost
-in thought, the pale girl sat there listening to the
-blast, the rain, and the clock, sounds that repeated
-themselves over and over again in dreary uniformity.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On this night she thought much of her absent
-brother. She had written to him that very
-morning, imploring him, if he met with Audley, to be
-friendly with him, as their secret claims to the
-name of Trevelyan and the Lamorna peerage, could
-never be established now; and thus she hoped and
-begged that he, like herself, would retain their
-mother's name of Devereaux, as they had always
-been known by it and by no other.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sybil must have dropped asleep, for she started
-to find the old clock wheezing and whirring as it
-struck the hour of three; and shivered, for she was
-stiff and chilled; the candle had nearly burned
-down, and what Winny Braddon would have called
-"a shroud" had guttered over the side of it; and
-Sybil felt fully how cheerless and depressing is the
-slow approach of morning in a sickroom&mdash;more than
-all, of a morning so hopeless as each successive one
-proved now.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The rain and the wind were over; the clouds were
-divided in heaven, and the stars shone out brightly;
-the weather was calm, and no sound came to Sybil's
-ear save the tick-tack of the old clock, and the
-breathing of the sufferer, which seemed laborious and
-irregular.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Shading the light with her hand, Sybil stole a
-glance at her mother's face, and an alteration in its
-expression filled her with such terror, that a cry
-almost escaped her. The mouth was more distorted,
-and the eyes&mdash;for Constance was quite awake&mdash;were
-regarding her with a strange, keen, sad and
-weird expression. At that moment, however, Winny,
-hearing her young mistress stir, appeared at the door
-of the room.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh Winny!" whispered Sybil in an agony of
-alarm, "there is a change come over mamma; go&mdash;go
-at once for the doctor, ere it is perhaps too&mdash;too
-late! No, no; you are old and frail, and the moor
-is wet," she suddenly added; "get me my hat and
-cloak&mdash;I, myself, shall fly for him."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No, no, darling; stay by her side&mdash;she may not
-be long spared to you, and I shall go. Past three
-in the morning, and dark as midnight. I'll take a
-lantern and be off."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, thank you, Winny, thank you!" said the
-girl, kissing the old woman's shrivelled cheek, and
-with hasty and trembling fingers assisting to muffle
-her in a cloak, and to light a lantern; and then
-seeing her issue forth upon her errand with all the
-speed her love and charity inspired, and her old
-limbs could exert; and with clasped hands, and a
-prayer upon her lips, Sybil at the door for a little
-space watched the lantern (Winny's figure was soon
-lost amid the gloom), as its fitful light fell in
-succession upon the grey, upright blocks of the stone
-avenue that marked the desolate moorland road, till
-at last it diminished to a spark, like an <i>ignis-fatuus</i>,
-and then she stole back once more to her mother's
-side.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The left arm of the latter was outside the coverlet
-now, and her hand, so snowy in its whiteness, rested
-on the edge of the bed. With her eyes full of tears,
-and her heart full of earnest prayer, Sybil knelt
-reverently down to kiss it, taking the hand between
-her own caressingly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How <i>heavy</i> that little hand felt now!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Cold, too&mdash;its touch startled her. She threw
-back the curtain; her mother lay motionless with
-jaw somewhat relaxed, her eyes still, and staring
-upward. Death was too surely there, but Sybil had
-never looked upon it, and only felt wildly startled and
-terrified. She tried to raise the head, but felt
-powerless.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh mamma&mdash;dear mamma, do not leave me!
-Come back to me, mamma&mdash;come back to me!" she
-exclaimed, in a voice the tones of which seemed
-discordant and shrill to her own ear. "Is
-this sleep or death? oh, no! no, not
-death&mdash;NOT death!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But it was so, and how terribly pale, serene and
-still, how calm and peacefully she lay, with something
-of a smile gathering on her lips, like one "who
-had ended the business of life before death, and who,
-when the hour cometh, hath nothing to do but to
-die."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Bewildered and awe-struck, with a wild beating in
-her heart and in her brain, Sybil drew back; then
-she stood still and listened.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was no sound save the pulsations in her
-own breast, and the odious ticking of the old wooden
-clock, which now seemed to have become unnaturally
-loud. Then emotions which appeared to be stifling
-came over her, and a craven terror which she could
-not describe, and of which she was afterwards
-ashamed, as if it had been a sin or crime, possessed
-her, and she fled from the room, and from the house
-itself, for she could not remain alone with the dead;
-and so, crouching down on the wet, damp soil near
-the entrance door, she muffled her head in her
-shawl.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A ray of light was streaming out into the darkness,
-but she could not look upon it, for it came where
-the dead was lying, and where the light of life had
-passed away.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Heaven help me&mdash;heaven help me! I am now
-alone; most utterly alone!" she moaned, and bent
-her head between her hands, as if the dark waves of
-thought were flowing over it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Alas! how much may be condensed&mdash;how much
-felt, and yet never expressed by that one little
-word&mdash;<i>alone</i>!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sybil, however, fainted from excess of emotion, for
-she was discovered there crouching in a heap by
-the doctor and Winny, when they arrived together,
-more than one hour after, when the distant horizon
-was grey with the coming dawn, and the white fog
-was rolling along the sides of the Kow Tor and Bron
-Welli; and thus, in insensibility, had she found, for
-a time, oblivion to all her sorrows.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-END OF VOL. I.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t4">
-BRADBURY, EVANS, AND CO., PRINTERS, WHITEFRIARS.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ONLY AN ENSIGN, VOLUME 1 (OF 3) ***</div>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Updated editions will replace the previous one&#8212;the old editions will
-be renamed.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
-States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG&#8482;
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for an eBook, except by following
-the terms of the trademark license, including paying royalties for use
-of the Project Gutenberg trademark. If you do not charge anything for
-copies of this eBook, complying with the trademark license is very
-easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose such as creation
-of derivative works, reports, performances and research. Project
-Gutenberg eBooks may be modified and printed and given away--you may
-do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks not protected
-by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the trademark
-license, especially commercial redistribution.
-</div>
-
-<div style='margin:0.83em 0; font-size:1.1em; text-align:center'>START: FULL LICENSE<br />
-<span style='font-size:smaller'>THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE<br />
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK</span>
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-To protect the Project Gutenberg&#8482; mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase &#8220;Project
-Gutenberg&#8221;), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg&#8482; License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person
-or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.B. &#8220;Project Gutenberg&#8221; is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation (&#8220;the
-Foundation&#8221; or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg&#8482; mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg&#8482; name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg&#8482; License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg&#8482; work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country other than the United States.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg&#8482; License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg&#8482; work (any work
-on which the phrase &#8220;Project Gutenberg&#8221; appears, or with which the
-phrase &#8220;Project Gutenberg&#8221; is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-</div>
-
-<blockquote>
- <div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
- 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 <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
- are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws
- of the country where you are located before using this eBook.
- </div>
-</blockquote>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase &#8220;Project
-Gutenberg&#8221; associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg&#8482; License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg&#8482;.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; License.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg&#8482; work in a format
-other than &#8220;Plain Vanilla ASCII&#8221; or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg&#8482; web site
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original &#8220;Plain
-Vanilla ASCII&#8221; or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg&#8482; License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg&#8482; works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works
-provided that:
-</div>
-
-<div style='margin-left:0.7em;'>
- <div style='text-indent:-0.7em'>
- &bull; You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg&#8482; works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg&#8482; trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, &#8220;Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation.&#8221;
- </div>
-
- <div style='text-indent:-0.7em'>
- &bull; You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg&#8482;
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg&#8482;
- works.
- </div>
-
- <div style='text-indent:-0.7em'>
- &bull; You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
- </div>
-
- <div style='text-indent:-0.7em'>
- &bull; You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg&#8482; works.
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the manager of
-the Project Gutenberg&#8482; trademark. Contact the Foundation as set
-forth in Section 3 below.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain &#8220;Defects,&#8221; such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the &#8220;Right
-of Replacement or Refund&#8221; described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you &#8216;AS-IS&#8217;, WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg&#8482; work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg&#8482; work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Project Gutenberg&#8482; is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg&#8482;&#8217;s
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg&#8482; collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg&#8482; and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at www.gutenberg.org.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non-profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation&#8217;s EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state&#8217;s laws.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-The Foundation&#8217;s business office is located at 809 North 1500 West,
-Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up
-to date contact information can be found at the Foundation&#8217;s web site
-and official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Project Gutenberg&#8482; depends upon and cannot survive without widespread
-public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine-readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular state
-visit <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org/donate/">www.gutenberg.org/donate</a>.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg&#8482; eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Project Gutenberg&#8482; eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search
-facility: <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg&#8482;,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
-</div>
-
-</body>
-</html>
diff --git a/old/64252-h/images/img-cover.jpg b/old/64252-h/images/img-cover.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 96e7358..0000000
--- a/old/64252-h/images/img-cover.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ