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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #64788 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/64788)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Secret Dispatch, 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: The Secret Dispatch
- or, The Adventures of Captain Balgonie
-
-Author: James Grant
-
-Release Date: March 11, 2021 [eBook #64788]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: Al Haines
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SECRET DISPATCH ***
-
-
-
-
- THE
- SECRET DISPATCH;
-
- OR,
-
- THE ADVENTURES OF CAPTAIN BALGONIE.
-
-
-
- BY
-
- JAMES GRANT,
-
- AUTHOR OF "ROMANCE OF WAR," "SCOTTISH CAVALIERS,"
- ETC. ETC.
-
-
-
- NEW EDITION.
-
-
-
- LONDON:
- CHAPMAN AND HALL, 193, PICCADILLY.
-
-
-
-
- TO
-
- PROFESSOR SIR JAMES Y. SIMPSON, BART.,
-
- M.D., D.C.L., &C., &C.,
-
- THIS TALE,
- FROM RUSSIAN MILITARY HISTORY,
- IS INSCRIBED,
- AS A MEMORIAL OF ADMIRATION AND SINCERE REGARD.
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-I need scarcely inform the reader of history, that most of the events
-narrated in the subsequent pages actually occurred in the manner
-stated; and I have done much to soften, or subdue, the actual
-barbarity of the story, though such barbarity was consonant enough to
-the days of her, whose "lust of power and contempt of all moral
-restraint" won her the name of "the Semiramis of the North."
-
-For the betrothal of the young Lieutenant of the Valikolutz Infantry
-to his cousin, it may be mentioned that a dispensation was necessary,
-as the Russian Church--like the Catholic--forbids all marriages
-within four degrees of relationship.
-
-As stated in the text, the little song of the gipsy is one of many
-current enough in Russia, where the destruction of the Crescent is
-always fondly predicted; but never so confidently as during our late
-Crimean War: and even at this very time, an aged Muscovite, named
-Alexis Alexandrovitch, after a seclusion of many years in the
-district of Samara, has come forth as a prophet on the same subject,
-and is now proceeding from place to place, like another Peter the
-Hermit, foretelling and preaching the downfall of "the sick man" at
-Stamboul, and the speedy substitution of the Russian Cross for the
-Turkish Crescent on the dome of St. Sophia.
-
-26, DANUBE STREET, EDINBURGH.
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS.
-
- CHAPTER I.
- The Lost Traveller
-
- CHAPTER II.
- The Castle of Louga
-
- CHAPTER III.
- Natalie
-
- CHAPTER IV.
- Corporal Podatchkine
-
- CHAPTER V.
- The Dagger of Bernikoff
-
- CHAPTER VI.
- The Palatine
-
- CHAPTER VII.
- The Soldier of the Czarina
-
- CHAPTER VIII.
- In Love
-
- CHAPTER IX.
- Deluded
-
- CHAPTER X.
- The Corporal in his own Trap
-
- CHAPTER XI.
- Olga, the Gipsy
-
- CHAPTER XII.
- St. Petersburg
-
- CHAPTER XIII.
- What the Secret Dispatch contained
-
- CHAPTER XIV.
- Charlie's first day in Schlusselburg
-
- CHAPTER XV.
- The Imperial Prisoner
-
- CHAPTER XVI.
- The Tratkir
-
- CHAPTER XVII.
- The Wood of the Honey Tree
-
- CHAPTER XVIII.
- Doubt and Dread
-
- CHAPTER XIX.
- The Night of the 15th September
-
- CHAPTER XX.
- Morning of the 16th September
-
- CHAPTER XXI.
- Underground
-
- CHAPTER XXII
- Over their Wine
-
- CHAPTER XXIII.
- Will he Succeed?
-
- CHAPTER XXIV.
- Conclusion
-
- L'Envoi
-
-
-
-
-THE SECRET DISPATCH.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-THE LOST TRAVELLER.
-
-"Heaven aid me! here am I now--which way shall I turn--advance or
-retire?" exclaimed Balgonie, as his horse came plunging down almost
-on its knees, amid wild gorse and matted jungle.
-
-A cold day in the middle of April had passed away; a pale and
-cheerless sun, that had cast no heat on the leafless scenery and the
-half-frozen marshes that border the Louga in Western Russia, had
-sunk, and the darkness of a stormy night came on rapidly. The keen
-blast of the north, that swept the arid scalps of the Dudenhof (the
-only range of hills that traverses the ancient Ingria), was bellowing
-through a gorge, where the Louga poured in foam upon its passage to
-the Gulf of Finland, between steep banks that were covered by gloomy
-pines, when the speaker, a mounted officer in Russian uniform, who
-seemed too surely to have lost his way, reined up a weary and
-mud-covered horse on the margin of the stream, and by the light that
-yet lingered on the tops of the tall pines, and gilded faintly the
-metal-covered domes of a distant building on the opposite bank,
-looked hopelessly about him for the means of crossing the dangerous
-river.
-
-"Where am I?" he repeated, almost despairingly; for, as Schiller
-sings in his "Song of the Bell,"--
-
- "Man fears the kingly lion's tread;
- Man fears the tiger's fangs of terror;
- And still the dreadliest of the dread
- Is man himself in error!"
-
-
-Though clad in the uniform of the Russian Regiment of Smolensko,
-which was raised in the famous duchy of that name, the traveller was
-neither Muscovite nor Calmuck, Cossack nor Tartar, but a cool, wary,
-and determined young Briton, one of the many Scottish officers whom
-misfortune or ambition had drawn into the Russian service, both by
-sea and land, from the time of Peter the Great down to the beginning
-of the present century; for many Scottish officers served in the
-Russian fleet with Admiral Greig at the famous bombardment of Varna:
-and it was such volunteers as these that first taught the barbarous
-hordes of the growing empire the true science of war and the
-necessity for discipline.
-
-The rider's green uniform, faced with scarlet velvet and richly laced
-with gold, was covered by a thick grey pelisse (like our present
-patrol-jackets), trimmed with black wolf's fur: he wore a scarlet
-forage cap with a square top, long boots that came above the knee,
-and a Turkish sabre that had once armed a pasha of more tails than
-one.
-
-"Swim the river I must," he muttered, after having traversed the
-valley in vain, looking for a bridge, boat, or raft of timber; "but,
-egad, death may be the penalty. Well," he added, with a gleam of ire
-in his dark grey eyes and a bitter smile on his lip, "there was a
-time, perhaps, when I little thought that I, Charlie Balgonie, would
-find a nameless grave in this land of timber, hemp, and salted hides,
-where caviare is a luxury, train-oil a liqueur, and the air of
-Siberia deemed healthy for all who have any absurd ideas of political
-freedom, or are silly enough to imagine that a man may be the lord of
-his own proper person."
-
-To add to his troubles and discomfort, though the month was
-April--usually the most serene of the year in Russia--snow-flakes
-were beginning to fall, rendering yet greater the gloom of the
-gathering night.
-
-"I was to have found a bridge here. Can that Livonian villain,
-Podatchkine, have deluded, and then left me to my fate?"
-
-He knew that in his rear, the way by which he had come, lay
-half-frozen morasses, heathy wastes, and forests of spruce, larch,
-and silver-leaved firs--vast natural magazines for supplying all
-Europe with masts and spars--the haunt of the wolf and bear; he knew
-that to linger or to return were worse than to advance, and that he
-must cross the stream and seek quarters and guidance at the château,
-the name of which was yet unknown to him.
-
-This was, if possible, the worst season for passing the Louga, which
-is always deepest and most navigable in spring. It rises in the
-district of Novgorod; and, after traversing a country full of vast
-forests for more than 180 miles, falls into the Gulf of Finland.
-
-Balgonie buttoned tightly his holster-flaps, hooked up his sabre,
-assured himself that an important dispatch with which he was
-entrusted was safe in an inner pocket, and prepared seriously for the
-perilous task of swimming his horse across the stream.
-
-Again he looked anxiously at the château, the abode evidently of some
-wealthy noble or boyar. Its outline had almost disappeared in the
-increasing obscurity; the last faint gleams of the west had faded
-away on the onion-shaped roofs of its turrets, and a central dome of
-polished copper, which was cut into facets like the outside of a
-pine-apple (for there is much of the Oriental in the old Russian
-architecture); but lights were beginning to sparkle cheerfully
-through its double-sashed windows upon the feathery and the
-funeral-like foliage of the solemn pine woods.
-
-Could those who were comfortably, perhaps luxuriously seated within,
-but know that there was a poor human being on the eve, perhaps, of
-perishing helplessly amid the dark flow of that deep and roaring
-river!
-
-"Courage, friend Charlie!" said the rider to himself; and then he
-hallooed loudly, as if to attract attention, but did so in vain. The
-night was becoming a very severe one; the flakes of snow fell thicker
-and thicker on the gusty and cutting blast.
-
-"Ah! if I should perish here--such a fate!" thought he, shuddering.
-"Shall I be swept down this black and horrid stream, the Louga, to be
-cast a drowned corpse upon its banks, to be found stripped and buried
-by wondering but unpitying serfs and boors; or shall I be torn and
-mangled by bears and wolves; or borne even to the Gulf of Finland,
-far, far away, having thus an obscure and wretched fate, without
-winning the name I had hoped to gain--forgotten even by those who
-wronged me in Scotland, the land that never more shall be a home to
-me!"
-
-He did not say all this aloud; but certainly some such painful
-surmises flashed upon him as he forced his snorting and reluctant
-horse, by a vigorous use of the spurs, through the thickly interwoven
-brushwood that grew on the bank of the river, the dull and monotonous
-rush of which, encumbered as it was by large pieces of ice, was
-sufficient to appal even a stouter heart than that of this young
-Scottish soldier of fortune.
-
-With a brief invocation on his lips, he gave his horse the reins and
-gored it with the rowels. A strong, active, and clean-limbed, but
-somewhat undersized animal from the steppes of the Ukraine, with a
-fierce and angry snort, it plunged into the torrent, and breasted the
-icy masses bravely.
-
-The slippery fragments that glided past, struck at times both horse
-and rider, forcing them to swerve down the stream; others were dashed
-by the whirling eddies against the projecting pieces of rock or roots
-of old trees; but after twice nearly despairing of achieving the
-passage, and believing himself lost, his horse trod firmly on the
-opposite bank. It emerged, panting, snorting, dripping, and
-trembling in every fibre, from the flood, and then Captain Balgonie
-found that he had escaped with life, and had safely passed the
-swollen waters of the Louga!
-
-Leading his sturdy little steed by the bridle and caressing it the
-while, he made his way up the opposite bank, guided only by the
-lights in the mansion (or castle); but he proceeded with extreme
-difficulty, for the underwood was thick and dense as that which grew
-round the Palace of the Sleeping Beauty; ere long, however, he
-reached a plateau, the border of a park or lawn, and saw the
-snow-whitened walls and turrets of the edifice towering before him.
-
-Rising from a balustraded terrace, with an arched porte-cochère in
-front, the façade was square, and three storied, having a central
-dome like an inverted punchbowl, and several little angular towers,
-tall and slender like minarets; these cut the sky-line, and were
-surrounded each by a broad cornice or gallery, and terminated by a
-bulbous-shaped roof, exactly like an onion with its acute end in the
-air.
-
-The lights in its many windows, the red and yellow coloured curtains
-within, all indicated warmth and comfort; while with the snow flakes
-freezing on his sodden and saturated uniform, his limbs benumbed, and
-his teeth well-nigh chattering, Balgonie hastily led his horse under
-the porte-cochère, and applied his hand vigorously to the great
-brazen knocker on the front door.
-
-It was speedily opened, and a white-bearded _dvornick_, or porter,
-wearing a long flowing _shoubah_, or coat of fur, lined with red
-flannel, admitted him with many humble genuflections, at the same
-time summoning a groom to take charge of his horse.
-
-By the bearing of these lackeys, one might almost have thought that
-the Captain had been expected, or was a friend of the family: but a
-uniform has ever been an all-powerful passport, and an epaulette the
-most mighty of all introductions in Russia, where everything is
-measured by a military standard; thus, in an incredibly short space
-of time, the wants of rider and horse were alike hospitably attended
-to.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-THE CASTLE OF LOUGA.
-
-Captain Balgonie, of the Regiment of Smolensko, soon found himself in
-a comfortable bed-chamber, where the genial glow of a _peitchka_, or
-Russian wall-stove, diffused warmth through his chilled frame, and
-where every current of the external atmosphere was carefully excluded
-by double window sashes, adorned with artificial flowers between.
-
-When he chose to repose, a couch draped with snow-white curtains, and
-having a coverlet of the softest fur, awaited him; and above it hung
-a little holy picture of the Byzantine school, a Holy Virgin, with a
-halo of shining metal in the form of a horse-shoe round her head, if
-he chose to be devout and offer up a prayer.
-
-A valet, after supplying him with hot coffee and a good dram of vodka
-(which somewhat reminded him of his native "mountain dew"), said that
-the Count, his master, would rejoice to have the pleasure of the
-visitor's society, after he had made a suitable toilet, and exchanged
-his wet uniform for a luxurious robe-de-chambre, in the pocket of
-which he took especial care to secure his dispatch, unseen.
-
-Hospitality such as this, was not merely then a characteristic of the
-people, but was the result, perhaps, of a meagre population, and the
-absence of inns; thus the arrival of a stranger, especially an
-officer on duty, at this Russian mansion, created little or no
-surprise among its inmates.
-
-He was ushered into the presence of Count Mierowitz, whose name at
-once inspired him with confidence and satisfaction; for, by one of
-those singular coincidences "which novelists dare not use in fiction,
-but which occur daily in actual and matter-of-fact life," he had
-arrived at a mansion where he was not altogether unknown.
-
-"I have to apologise to your High Excellency for this apparent
-intrusion," said he; "but I have been misled or abandoned by my
-guide. I am Captain Balgonie, of the Regiment of Smolensko, and have
-the good fortune to number among my friends your son, Lieutenant
-Basil Mierowitz, the senior subaltern of my company."
-
-"For Basil's sake, not less than your own, Captain, are you most
-welcome to the Castle of Louga," replied the Count, lifting and
-laying aside his cap.
-
-He was a man well on in years; his stature was not great, neither was
-his presence dignified; he stooped a little and was thick set, with a
-venerable beard, undefiled by steel; for, like a true old Muscovite,
-he contended that man was made in the image of God, and should
-neither be cut or carved upon. His eyebrows were white, but his eyes
-were dark, keen, quick, and expressed a spirit of ready impulse, for
-laughter or for ferocity--one, who by turns could be suave or
-irritable, especially when under the influence of wine, which
-generally made him fierce and stupid; for never, in all his life, had
-he suffered control or had his will disputed.
-
-His silver hair was simply tied behind with a black ribbon; in his
-hand he carried a little cap of black wolf's fur, adorned by rudely
-set jewels; he wore a queerly cut coat of dark red cloth trimmed with
-fur, and wore breeches of the same stuff, and lacked but a dagger and
-pistols with brass Turkish butts at his girdle, to seem what he
-really was, in disposition and character, a type of the boyar of the
-old school, who preferred quass to champagne, ate his pancakes with
-caviare, and was proud of being a specimen of the old Russian noble,
-as he existed in the time of Peter the Great, when his class first
-united some of the vices and luxuries of Western Europe to their
-native lawlessness and hardy ferocity.
-
-Such was Count Mierowitz.
-
-"When did you last see my son?" he asked, in tone more of authority
-than of anxious inquiry.
-
-"Some three months since, Excellency: he has been detached on the
-Livonian frontier."
-
-"And you, Captain--"
-
-"I am proceeding on urgent imperial service from Novgorod where my
-regiment is stationed in the old palace of the Czars."
-
-"To whither?"
-
-"Schlusselburg."
-
-The host changed countenance and almost manifested signs of
-discomposure on hearing of that formidable fortress and prison--the
-veritable Bastille of St. Petersburg, and he said:
-
-"A name to shudder at--by St. Nicholas it is!"
-
-"And, but for the feather in the wax of my dispatch," resumed
-Balgonie (showing a red government seal in which a piece of feather
-twitched from a pen was inserted, the usual Russian emblem of
-_speed_), "I had not, perhaps, tempted the dangers of the Louga, but
-sought a billet on the other side, if such could be found."
-
-"You know not, perhaps, that my woods are full of wolves; but this is
-not the way to St. Petersburg."
-
-"Yet I was so directed, Excellency."
-
-"You have been misled, and are only some seventy versts or so from
-the place you have left."
-
-"You amaze me, Count," exclaimed the perplexed Captain; for in the
-Russian service, an error becomes a crime.
-
-"Captain, you should have gone by Gori, Oustensk, Spask, and so on."
-
-"That devil of a Podatchkine, an orderly of General Weymarn, who sent
-him specially with me, has either deluded or abandoned me."
-
-"Yet we must thank your Podatchkine, in so far that he has procured
-us the pleasure of your society in this lonely place--my daughter and
-my niece, Captain Ivanovitch Balgonie," continued the Count,
-introducing two young ladies who came through the curtains of a
-species of boudoir, "Natalie and Mariolizza Usakoff. Our visitor,
-Natalie, is that Ivanovitch Balgonie of whom Basil has spoken so much
-and so kindly."
-
-Without being a vain man, Balgonie felt at that moment considerable
-satisfaction in the conviction that he was--as his glass had often
-informed him--decidedly a good-looking young fellow, with regular
-features, fine dark eyes, curling brown hair, and a smart moustache;
-for Natalie Mierowna, like her cousin Mariolizza, was one of the most
-attractive women at the dangerous Court of the Empress Catharine II.;
-for it was during her reign that the story and the atrocities we have
-unfortunately to record took place; when among us, in more civilised
-Britain, the grandfather of her present Majesty, old George III., was
-king, and the arts of peace and war grew side by side.
-
-"The friend and comrade of my brother Basil is welcome," said
-Natalie, presenting her hands (very tiny and delicate they were) to
-Balgonie, who bowed and touched them lightly with his lips; "he has
-often written to us concerning you and your adventures together in
-Silesia."
-
-"I am but too fortunate to be remembered thus."
-
-"Nay," rejoined Natalie, "we could scarcely forget that daring act of
-yours, which won you the rank you hold at present. Ah, Basil told us
-all about that when he was last here," she added, with a beautiful
-smile, of which she knew that many had already felt the power.
-
-"You mean my reconnoitring the enemy's position and avoiding being
-taken by them?"
-
-"Yes, pray tell me about it?" said Mariolizza, her blue eyes dilating
-with pleasure; "my brother was there too--Apollo Usakoff, a
-lieutenant in the Regiment of Valikolutz."
-
-"It was a very simple matter," replied Balgonie, bowing to each of
-the cousins, and not sorry to have a good personal anecdote to relate
-of himself, one which was certain to make him appear to advantage in
-the estimation of two very attractive women. "It was only a _ruse de
-guerre_, and occurred when our Regiment of Smolensko was with the
-combined armies in Silesia, and before the King of Prussia attacked
-Count Daun at the Heights of Buckersdorff. An exact account of the
-Austrian position was required by our general, who had not then
-received the orders of the Empress to fall back upon the Russian
-frontier. The task was one of extreme peril; so I being a soldier of
-fortune, having all to win, and nothing to lose----"
-
-"Save your life!" interrupted Natalie.
-
-"One in my position, among a foreign army, must not value that too
-much," said the Captain, in a tone not untinged with melancholy.
-
-"Well?"
-
-"I volunteered for it, despite all that your son, Count, my friend
-could say to dissuade me. Well armed, at midnight, I set out upon my
-solitary mission, unattended and alone, without relinquishing my
-uniform; for if taken prisoner when otherwise attired, I would
-infallibly be hanged as a spy; but ere long I found, that in such a
-dress, there were insuperable difficulties to making the
-reconnoissance required.
-
-"At the cottage of a Silesian boor, near the base of the Eulanbirge
-(or mountain of the owls), I stopped to make some inquiries. The
-fellow proved to be partially tipsy; the contents of my pocket-flask,
-potent vodka, completed his happy condition, and after a few jests I
-prevailed upon him to change dresses with me. He donned the green
-coat, epaulettes, and boots of the Regiment of Smolensko; I, the
-ample canvas caftan and girdle of a Silesian boor,--a fur cap, and a
-visage daubed with grime, completed my costume. Thus attired, and
-retaining only my pistols, I reconnoitred safely and unheeded the
-Austrian position, noting the defences, trenches, fascine batteries,
-cannon, and general disposition; but I had a narrow escape, for when
-returning to the cottage of my new friend the boor, a party of Count
-Daun's Imperial Cuirassiers, who had been patrolling the Eulanbirge,
-overtook me, and at once perceiving I was not a Silesian, questioned
-me rather closely and curiously.
-
-"I succeeded in passing myself off as a Pomeranian, and pointing to
-the cottage, told them that there was concealed an officer of the
-famous Regiment of Smolensko. They at once galloped off and
-surrounded it, while I stole away to a thicket, and climbed into a
-tree, from whence I could see the poor boor, clad in my uniform, and
-still labouring under the influence of his late debauch, dragged a
-prisoner--despite all his bewildered protestations and
-denials--towards the camp of Count Daun, while I, under cover of
-night, reached in safety the lines of the allies, and made my report
-to General Weymarn, then commanding our division of the army.
-
-"It proved of no use to us, as we fell back next day; but it enabled
-our ally, the King of Prussia, to storm with signal success the
-Heights of Buckersdorff, to drive back Count Daun, and invest
-Schwiednitz. He offered me rank in his army; but I declined, on
-which the Empress sent me the commission of Captain in her Regiment
-of Smolensko, thus enabling me to rank as a noble of the ninth class."
-
-"May you soon rank as one of the sixth," said the Count, patting the
-Captain on the shoulder frankly.
-
-"Ah, Excellency, it may be long ere I become a colonel; yet," he
-added, almost as if talking to himself, "when I got the letter of the
-Empress addressed to me, Carl Ivanovitch Hospodeen* Balgonie, I could
-not but smile at the thought of how such a title would have sounded
-in the ears of my good father, old John Balgonie, of that Ilk!"
-
-
-* Equivalent to Monsieur or Esquire.
-
-
-"Let me repeat that you are most welcome," said the Count, who
-totally failed to understand the meaning of the last remark; "and
-luckily you have arrived just as the ladies and I were about to
-proceed to the supper-table."
-
-To Balgonie it had become apparent that each time he mentioned the
-name of the Empress, the proud pink nostrils of Natalie seemed to
-dilate, and that a decidedly dangerous expression glittered in her
-splendid dark eyes.
-
-Natalie Mierowna, whose beauty had caused such jealousy at Moscow and
-St. Petersburg (two duels are spoken of concerning her), had ever
-shone brilliantly in the "follow-my-leader" kind of dance, now so
-well known among us as the Mazurka,--the old Sclavonian measure, in
-which all succeeding couples have to imitate the motions of the
-first; and the chief Russian peculiarity of the dance consists still
-in the circumstance of the ladies selecting their own partners--the
-brilliant Natalie, we say, having twice sportively, or in a spirit of
-coquettish bravado, chosen a handsome young aide-de-camp, whom the
-Empress was supposed to view with favour, led to her abrupt exile
-from Court, and to the detaching of Captain Vlasfief, of the Imperial
-Guards, to irksome and secluded duty at the state prison of
-Schlusselburg. This unmerited affront filled her brother, Basil
-Mierowitz, with such fiery indignation, that but for the dread of
-compromising his whole family, he would have cast his commission at
-the feet of the imperious Catharine, and quitted the Russian army;
-but flight or exile must at once have followed the act.
-
-As it was, though detached and distant on the Livonian frontier, he
-was now conceiving a scheme for vengeance, much more perilous to
-himself and to all concerned, and which actually aimed at the
-dethronement of the Empress Catharine!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-NATALIE.
-
-There are few Russian ladies now, who do not speak with equal
-facility, German, French, and English; but Natalie Mierowna and her
-cousin were then each mistress of them all,--and this was in the
-comparatively barbarous time of Catharine II.
-
-Thus their acquaintance with European literature enabled them to
-excel in an easy and well-supported conversation of which the old
-bovar, their kinsman, could make nothing; and which they could
-embellish by their wit and power of quotation, and with an exquisite
-_finesse d'esprit_ peculiarly their own. When this dangerous charm
-was added to the great beauty of Natalie, she could not but prove a
-perilous acquaintance for the young Scottish wanderer.
-
-Her loveliness was indeed great.
-
-She was a large, showy, and snowy-skinned beauty, almost voluptuous
-yet very graceful in form, with fine dark eyes, that were dreamy or
-sparkling by turns as emotion moved her; long-lashed they were, and
-perhaps too heavily lidded. Her hair was of the darkest brown,
-almost black; her lips were full, but flexible, small and pouting
-when in repose, almost too large when she smiled, which was
-frequently.
-
-It was when she spoke of the Empress, that her white bosom heaved,
-and a fiery expression seemed to pervade her whole features. She
-said little, and that little was generally said with assumed
-gentleness or real reserve, for language cannot be too guarded in
-Russia; but her dark eyes flashed, her delicate nostrils dilated, her
-short upper lip quivered, she threw back her proud head, and more
-than once Balgonie saw her white hands clenched; for all the
-dove-like softness of her nature seemed to depart, when she thought
-of the affront that exile from Court had put upon her, and her whole
-family, even to delaying the marriage of her cousin Mariolizza to her
-brother Basil, to whom she was engaged--solemnly betrothed by a
-religious ceremony.
-
-She took the arm of Balgonie, and led the way to the dining-room,
-which was lit by brilliant crystal girandoles, and heated, of course,
-by a peitchka, the greatest luxury of civilised life that can be
-found in a cold climate, and which warms a house more effectually
-than any grate of coals can do. Built on that side of the large,
-lofty, and magnificent room which was farthest from the windows, it
-was formed of solid stone, with several carved apertures, and lined
-with white shining porcelain; within it, blazed a constant fire of
-billets and faggots, under the care of the dvornick, or house-porter,
-and these were furnished by the Count's serfs or woodsmen from the
-adjacent forests.
-
-All made a sign of the cross in the Greek fashion, and seated
-themselves; but weary and exhausted by his long ride and recent
-immersion in a swollen and icy river, Balgonie found it almost
-impossible to partake of the supper that was pressed upon him:
-caviare on slices of bread to begin with,--"caviare from the roe of
-the sturgeons of the Don," as the Count informed him,--roasted capon
-and jugged hare, dried figs and conserves, prunes, and pastilla of
-fruit and honey compounded, together with the champagne, Rhine wine,
-and vodka, in silver tankards and goblets of jewelled Venetian
-crystal.
-
-The jaded traveller could make only a pretence of eating; but he
-could drink deeply, for he was athirst; and more than one foaming
-goblet of sparkling Moselle was filled for him, till he became giddy
-and confused. Were the fumes of the wine mounting to his head? What
-was the Count saying in an undertone? Was it of him that the cousins
-were talking in some strange language, and covertly exchanging smiles
-with their beautiful eyes? "Courage, Charlie," thought he, "this is
-a bad beginning!"
-
-Though people were not very particular as to a bumper more or less in
-those days anywhere, in Russia least of all, an emotion of shame came
-over the young Scottish, officer; he felt his cheeks and forehead
-burn, and he made a vigorous effort to rally his senses, but in vain:
-he heard the voices of Natalie and of Mariolizza; but he knew not
-what they said or what he replied, for he felt as one in a
-half-waking dream. They were talking merrily, however, in French,
-which is always spoken well by the Russians; perhaps because the
-tongue that can master Russ may achieve anything.
-
-After a time he mustered sufficient energy and sense to beg that he
-might be permitted to retire, as he had his journey to resume betimes
-on the morrow; and he was escorted to his chamber by the Count in
-person. Its four corners seemed to be in rapid pursuit of each other
-now, and the floor and the ceiling to be incessantly changing places;
-then his senses reeled, and the light departed from his eyes. He
-found himself fainting.
-
-The sudden and rapid journey from Novgorod, the lack of food and the
-toil he had undergone for one night and two entire days, while
-wandering with the treacherous Podatchkine, the crossing of the
-Louga, and the bruises he had unconsciously received from several
-pieces of floating ice, had all proved too much for his system, and
-brought on a relapse of an old camp fever from which he had suffered
-once when serving with the army in Silesia,--and in the morning he
-was delirious.
-
-Though weak, bewildered, scared by the prospect of loitering thus
-when proceeding on urgent duty (for obedience and discipline become a
-second nature to the soldier), enduring a raging thirst and a burning
-pang that shot with each pulsation through his brain, stiff in every
-joint and covered with livid bruises, he had still strength left as
-dawning day stole through the double sashes of his windows, to
-stagger from bed, and search for the dispatch, which, on the hazard
-of his life, he was to place in the hands of Bernikoff, the Governor
-of Schlusselburg.
-
-He hurriedly, and with a tremor that increased, examined each of his
-pockets in succession, then his sabretasche, and lastly the pocket of
-the robe-de-chambre; but the dispatch--the dispatch of the
-Empress--entrusted to him as a chosen man by Lieutenant-General
-Weymarn was gone!
-
-Lost, or abstracted, it was irretrievably _gone_!
-
-Was he the victim of treachery or of a snare? Was it a dream that
-the voluptuous and beautiful Natalie, with her snowy skin, her dreamy
-eyes, and her fascinating smile, had been hovering about him--a dream
-or a reality?
-
-Alas! he knew not; for again the walls and windows were whirling
-round him in wild career, and he sank on the floor insensible.
-
-Poor Charlie Balgonie knew not that the morning on which he made this
-alarming discovery was that of the second day since his arrival at
-the Castle of Louga.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-CORPORAL PODATCHKINE.
-
-Scarcely had Charlie Balgonie achieved the passage of the Louga, and,
-in the dark, forced his panting horse up the wooded bank towards the
-lighted windows of the castle, than his guide and orderly, Corporal
-Michail Podatchkine, who, for reasons which were his own, and which
-shall ultimately be explained, had decoyed him many, many versts to
-the southward of his proper route and then abandoned him, while he
-still cautiously followed, and watched him plunge into the perilous
-stream--watched him in the hope that he might perish in its icy
-current; Corporal Podatchkine, we say, had barely seen that the
-officer's safety was certain and assured, than he turned his horse's
-head, and with a hoarse malediction on his bearded mouth, rode away
-in an opposite direction.
-
-The lighted windows of the Castle of Louga soon darkened and vanished
-in his rear; the snow-flakes came thicker and faster on the icy
-blast, whitening his round bearskin cap and fur shoubah or cloak, and
-the untrimmed mane of his shaggy little horse; but with his long
-lance slung behind him, his knees up to his saddle-bow, and his
-fierce, keen eyes peering out the way before him, the amiable
-Podatchkine, who, though a Livonian by birth, had the honour to hold
-the rank of corporal in a corps of Cossacks, rode on through the
-dense fir forest as unerringly as if every tree therein had been
-planted by his own warlike hands.
-
-Ere long, with a grunt of satisfaction, he struck upon a track that
-led to the right and left, and he unhesitatingly pursued the latter.
-There were then none of those verst-posts, about ten feet high or so,
-such as may now be found by the side of the Russian roads through the
-forests, or along the open steppe; but Podatchkine rode steadily on,
-pausing only now and then to unsling and grasp his spear, or give a
-fierce gleaming glance around him, while the nostrils of his thick
-snub-nose dilated, when a prolonged and melancholy howl, rising from
-the woody depths into the chill drear sky of night, announced that
-some wolf was rousing itself in its lair among the grass, or in its
-den beside the river.
-
-Anon he came to a place where the forest was partially cleared, and
-there stood a little hut built of squared logs. The walls of this
-edifice were whitened artificially; but the roof was rendered whiter
-still by a coat of the fast-freezing snow. A single ray of smoky
-light streamed from the opening (which passed for a window) near the
-door, on which Podatchkine, without dismounting, struck three blows
-with the butt of his lance.
-
-"Nicholas Paulovitch," he exclaimed, "are you within?"
-
-The door was soon unfastened, and thereat appeared a figure, not
-unlike an Esquimaux, bearing a pine torch. He was a man of great
-stature and muscular development, clad in a caftan of coarse, thick,
-and warm material, girt by a broad belt in which a long and rusty
-knife was stuck; he had on bark shoes and long leggings of sheepskin,
-which, like Bryan O'Linn's breeches, had "the skinny side out and the
-hairy side in;" and he cultivated one long lock of grizzled hair
-behind his right ear in the old fashion of the Black Cossacks; but
-this appendage was concealed by the hood and tippet of fur which he
-wore. This man, however, did not belong to any of the nomadic
-military tribes, but was a species of Russian gipsy, a half-breed.
-
-He held up the pine torch, and its flaring light tipped with a lurid,
-weird, and uncertain glow his fierce, tawny, and repulsive visage,
-causing his cunning and almond-shaped eyes to gleam redly, like two
-carbuncles, from under their thick and impending brows, which were
-nearly as shaggy as the moustache that blended with his greasy and
-uncombed beard; and in the same light the head of Podatchkine's lance
-and the hafts of his sabre, dagger, and pistols glittered at times,
-being the only bright parts of his remarkably dingy costume.
-
-"Is it you, Michail Podatchkine--and _alone_?" he asked surlily.
-
-"Yes; even so, alone. Dost think I have the evil eye about me that
-you stare so, Nicholas Paulovitch?"
-
-"God forbid!" replied Nicholas with a shudder, for this idea is the
-grossest and the greatest of all Russian superstitious; "but I
-expected two--yourself and another."
-
-"Who told you so?"
-
-"Olga Paulowna, my sister, who yesterday saw you at Krejko."
-
-"True, I remember. Now listen, old friend and comrade----"
-
-"Hush, the girl is within and may hear you."
-
-"Well," said Podatchkine, lowering his voice, while the other
-extinguished his torch, half closed the door of his hut, and drew
-nearer the speaker, "by order of General Weymarn, Governor of St.
-Petersburg, General of the Cavalry, Director-General of the Canals,
-Bridges, and Highways----"
-
-"And the devil knows all what more!" said the other impatiently.
-"Well?"
-
-"I am ordered to guide this Carl Ivanovitch Balgonie, who is a
-stranger, to the gates of Schlusselburg, as he bears to Bernikoff a
-dispatch of importance; but I have been promised a heavy sum----"
-
-"Ah! how much say you?"
-
-"I have said nothing yet."
-
-"But you spoke of a heavy sum."
-
-"Two hundred silver roubles."
-
-"Two hundred silver roubles!" exclaimed Nicholas, opening his
-avaricious eyes with wonder, and then closing them again, so that
-they looked like two narrow slits.
-
-"Yes, every _denusca_, if I, by fair means or by foul, prevent the
-delivery of that paper into the hands of old Bernikoff."
-
-"He whose dagger tickled the throat of Peter III.: and by whom are
-you offered this, friend Podatchkine?"
-
-"I can trust you: well, by the Lieutenant Apollo Usakoff."
-
-"The grandson of the Hetman Mazeppa!"
-
-"The same; and by Basil Mierowitz----"
-
-"Well, and what the devil have I to do with all this?" growled the
-half-breed.
-
-"Much: fifty roubles will be yours, Paulovitch, if you will assist
-me," said Podatchkine in a husky whisper.
-
-"Let us talk over this: dismount, and come in."
-
-"Nay, there is Olga Paulowna: then I have other work to do; but give
-me a drink, for I am sorely athirst."
-
-The other speedily brought him a painted bowl full of foamy quass,
-which the Cossack Corporal, for so we may term him, drained to the
-dregs; though it is a liquor, to any but a Russian, horrible as the
-water of Cocytus.
-
-"Let us be wary, friend Podatchkine," said the woodman: "the knout is
-not an angel, but it teaches us to tell the truth alike of ourselves
-and of others."
-
-Refreshed by his bitter draught, the Corporal shook the gathering
-snow-flakes from the sleeves of his fur shoubah, and resumed somewhat
-garrulously:
-
-"My next instructions are, that the dispatch, which is from the
-Empress herself (whom God and our Lady of Kazan long preserve!), and
-which bears the imperial seal, shall never be delivered; but must be
-obtained by me for Basil Mierowitz and the Lieutenant Usakoff, now
-detached upon the Livonian frontier, and who both know as little as I
-care, that its bearer is actually their own dearest and most valued
-friend! I misled the Hospodeen Balgonie, lured him to the river's
-brink, and left him there, in the hope that he and his horse might
-become frozen on the steppe or in the forest, where I could rob him
-at ease; but the man seems made of iron, and, to my astonishment, I
-saw him swim the Louga. I thought all gone, he, the dispatch, and my
-200 roubles, when he plunged his horse into the river; but he stoutly
-won the opposite bank, and has made his way straight to the dwelling
-of Count Mierowitz, where now, I doubt not, he is safely housed."
-
-"It seems to me, friend Podatchkine, that you took a great deal of
-useless trouble when you had your dagger and pistols," said the
-other, suspiciously.
-
-"Nay, if he was to perish thus, suspicion might too readily fall upon
-me, for he is a favourite officer of the Empress, and of Weymarn too.
-My plan is this: I may get the dispatch to-night in yonder castle of
-Count Mierowitz."
-
-"And if not?"
-
-"Then I shall again lure and mislead Balgonie, and bring him here in
-the night."
-
-"What then?" asked the woodman doggedly.
-
-"How dull we are, Paulovitch. We shall drug and drown him; thus
-shall he die without a wound. I will take back the dispatch to
-Novgorod; and you can carry the body on his horse to St. Petersburg,
-where a sum will be given you for finding it. The poor stranger,
-they will say, has perished amid our keen Russian frosts, and that
-will be all. Nicholas Paulovitch, the carcass will be well worth
-twenty roubles to thee."
-
-"And thy fifty?"
-
-"You shall receive when the affair is over, and when you come to me
-at Novgorod, where I am quartered."
-
-"By the bones of my tribe, and by the sword that flames in the hand
-of the holy Michail, I am with you, Podatchkine!" exclaimed the
-half-breed with ferocious joy, mingling his gipsy cant with that of
-the Russian church. Then they shook heartily their hard and dingy
-hands--hands that had wrought many a deed of merciless cruelty.
-
-"And now, Paulovitch, give me a light for my pipe, and let me begone."
-
-A few minutes more and these worthy compatriots had separated.
-
-Podatchkine rode somewhat leisurely to a ford that he knew of lower
-down the river, believing that in time the whole onus, and perhaps
-suspicion, of Balgonie's death (if it was necessary) might fall on
-the woodman, whom he had resolved to cheat of the promised fifty
-roubles if he could.
-
-"He will play me false," muttered Podatchkine. "Is not the dog a
-gipsy? Beware of the tamed wolf, of the baptized Jew, and the enemy
-who has made it up; why should I not delude him who will readily
-delude me?"
-
-Our enterprising Corporal was correct in his estimate of Nicholas
-Paulovitch; for, at the same moment, that personage, while wrapped in
-his filthy sheepskin (caring nothing for the comfort of any other bed
-than the floor), was considering how he might drug and drown both the
-officer and his treacherous guide, sell both their bodies at the
-nearest military post, and, by taking the dispatch to Novgorod
-himself, obtain the entire reward offered for it by the Lieutenants
-Mierowitz and Usakoff, or still more, perhaps, by delivering it to
-the Empress!
-
-There was a third person who had overheard the first savage plot, and
-who felt her heart stirred with pity and terror for Balgonie, who had
-given her a silver kopec at Krejko but yesterday,--the gipsy girl,
-Olga Paulowna, the sister of Nicholas Paulovitch; and she resolved to
-baffle both conspirators if she could.
-
-It was in perfect ignorance of who might be the bearer of that
-dispatch (with the contents of which a spy had acquainted them) that
-the two officers, who were then engaged in an extensive and dangerous
-political and military conspiracy, contrived to have Podatchkine, in
-the character of a guide and orderly, sent upon the trail of one who
-was really their most valued friend and comrade; though, as a
-foreigner and soldier of fortune, they deemed it proper to keep him
-as yet in total ignorance of their daring hopes and plans.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-THE DAGGER OF BERNIKOFF.
-
-It may now be necessary to afford the reader a little historical
-insight as to what it was that hinged on this important dispatch of
-the Scottish officer, Balgonie.
-
-When the Emperor Peter II. died of smallpox (just on the eve of his
-marriage), closing a short reign of three years of stormy trouble and
-dark intrigue, the whole male issue of Peter the Great of Russia
-became extinct.
-
-The Duke of Holstein, son of his eldest daughter, was entitled to the
-throne; but the Russians, for certain cogent political reasons,
-filled that perilous seat with Anne, Duchess of Courland, daughter of
-Ivan, Peter's eldest brother. Governed by her favourite Biron, on
-whom she bestowed the duchy of Courland, she broke through all the
-limits which growing civilisation had imposed upon the power of the
-Czars; she engaged in many useless wars, lost vast treasures and more
-than a hundred thousand men in strife with the Turks, and closing an
-inglorious reign, was succeeded by one who will shortly be introduced
-to the reader, Ivan Antonovitch, or John IV., son of her niece, the
-Princess of Mechlenburg, an infant only six months old. This
-Princess sent Biron, the Regent, to the usual place of Muscovite
-seclusion, Siberia, and assumed the administratorship during the
-minority of her son.
-
-This state of affairs was but of short duration when Elizabeth,
-daughter of Peter the Great, having a strong party, seized the crown,
-banished the entire family of Mechlenburg, and deposing the infant
-monarch, Ivan IV., confined him for life a prisoner of state in the
-great Castle of Schlusselburg, where he had been for twenty-three
-years, at the period when our narrative opens.
-
-To mention him in conversation, and still more to possess a coin
-bearing his effigy, incurred the guilt and insured the punishment of
-treason! More than twenty years after the deposition of this
-transitory emperor, a German tradesman, who had worked long as a
-cabinet-maker at St. Petersburg, went to Cronstadt, intending then to
-embark for his native city, Lubeck. As it was not permitted to carry
-out of Russia above a certain quantity of specie, an officer of
-customs asked the German "what he had with him?" "Only a few roubles
-to pay for my passage," he replied; and on being commanded to show
-them, one was discovered having the effigy of Ivan IV! In vain did
-the unhappy tradesman protest that he neither knew he had such a
-coin, nor from whom he had received it. Death was the penalty; but
-his goods were confiscated, and he was condemned to perpetual
-imprisonment in the mines of Siberia.
-
-The Empress Elizabeth died the victim of intemperance; and while poor
-Prince Ivan, an uncrowned emperor, a prisoner without a crime, was
-left to pine in the Castle of Schlusselburg, the sceptre was given to
-the feeble and dissipated Peter III., the husband of the beautiful,
-voluptuous, and talented Catharine II., daughter of a petty prince,
-but descended from the ancient house of Servestan,--a woman whom, in
-three short months after their coronation, he contrived to disgust by
-his political innovations, and still more by his amatory inconstancy;
-so it was resolved to get rid of Peter, who was then in his
-thirty-fourth year.
-
-Peter I. had nearly lost Russia by compelling the people to cut off
-the tails of their coats; and Peter III. became equally unpopular by
-ordering them to trim their vast beards, and by putting his troops in
-the Prussian uniform. Crowned heads should leave such matters to
-tailors and tonsors; but he certainly abolished the secret tribunal
-with its contingent horrors, and recalled many a poor exile from
-Siberia.
-
-A party was formed for his dethronement; so one evening in July,
-1762, when he was surrounded by his guard of Holsteiners, and amusing
-himself with his flower gardens (he was a great botanist), and with
-some of his beautiful mistresses at the palace of
-Orienbaum,--particularly the Countess of Woronzow, to whose
-allurements he had abandoned himself,--the exasperated Empress
-prepared to strike a final blow for Russia and for herself.
-
-Putting on a uniform of old Russian Guards belonging to her future
-favourite, Captain Vlasfief, with the most coquettish grace, this
-young and beautiful, but in some respects terrible, woman borrowed
-from the nobles around her all the accessories of a complete military
-toilette: of Basil Mierowitz, a hat; of Count Orloff, a scarf; of
-Colonel Bernikoff, a belt; of some one else, a sword. Over all, she
-wore the blue ribbon of the first order of the Empire, which her
-impolitic husband had laid aside for that of Prussia.
-
-The drums beat to arms: in this strange guise she showed herself to
-the troops, who were now mustered to the number of twenty thousand
-men in the great square of St. Petersburg, where the sight of the
-uniform of the old guard, which had been forced to give place to
-Peter's cherished Holsteiners, raised bursts of acclamation, quite as
-much as the appearance of Catharine, who was then "in the full flower
-of her robust beauty, perfectly elegant in figure, and purely
-feminine from her shoulders to her feet, which were remarkably
-handsome, and of which she was very proud." Her nose was aquiline,
-her eyes blue with black lashes, and her hair, a brilliant auburn,
-was curling on her shoulders. Thus has an eyewitness described her.
-
-The regiments began to file off against the Emperor, and little
-knowing the end of the expedition, among the troops on this night
-marched Charlie Balgonie, with the colours of the Regiment of
-Smolensko on his shoulder.
-
-Everywhere the rebellious Empress was received with enthusiasm, and
-the Great Chancellor Woroslaff, who was sent against her, was among
-the first to join her party.
-
-The Emperor, abandoning his flowers and his fair ones, fled to his
-yacht or galley, which was rowed to Cronstadt, of which his enemy,
-the High Admiral Talizine, had already made himself master. The
-imperial galley (relates M. Rulhière in his "Histoire sur la
-Révolution de Russie") came under the ramparts in the night, while
-the great alarm bells rung, the drums were beaten and scarlet rockets
-ascended in showers from the dark mass of the Castle of Kronslot; and
-then, all along the line of fortifications, Peter saw two hundred
-port-fires shedding their weird unearthly glare through the yawning
-embrasures upon the twilight sea and sky--each port-fire beside a
-loaded cannon--loaded against himself!
-
-This was at ten o'clock; but ere the great oars of the galley were
-laid in, or the anchor dropped, a sentinel challenged:
-
-"Who comes there?"
-
-"His Imperial Majesty the Emperor," replied the Captain of the
-galley, who was standing on its gilded prow.
-
-"There is no longer any Emperor!" was the stern reply of some one on
-the ramparts.
-
-"'Tis false! I am here--I, Peter Antonovitch," said the Emperor,
-growing pale at these daring and terrible words, as he stood up and
-threw back his cloak to show himself and his well-known Prussian
-star, by the clear, lingering twilight of the northern evening.
-
-"Sheer off," shouted the Admiral Talizine, "or, by our Lady of Kazan,
-I will fire on you!"
-
-"We are going--give us but time," cried the Captain hopelessly,
-through his speaking-trumpet.
-
-At that moment a thousand voices on the ramparts shouted on the still
-twilight air--
-
-"Long live the Empress Catharine II.!"
-
-On hearing this, Peter burst into tears, and fell back into the arms
-of his attendants, saying--
-
-"The conspiracy is general--from the first days of my short reign I
-have seen it coming!"
-
-He was soon after abandoned by all, even by his obnoxious Holstein
-Guards, who surrendered to the Regiments of Smolensko and Valikolutz;
-and then he was committed by his wife, prisoner of state, to the
-Castle of Robsch, in a solitary place, eighteen miles from St.
-Petersburg. Six days afterwards had only elapsed, when it was
-suggested that though young Ivan was still lingering a captive at
-Schlusselburg, and some were not without hopes of replacing him on
-the throne, tranquillity could not be perfectly restored while Peter
-lived, though lonely and abandoned now.
-
-His wife's lovers and favourites came to this decision speedily; so
-late one afternoon, three horsemen arrived at the residence of the
-fallen Emperor. They were Count Orloff, who had in his breast a
-laced handkerchief of the Empress, the grim Colonel Bernikoff, and a
-Hospodeen or gentleman, who announced that they had come to sup with
-him; and, according to the Russian fashion, glasses of brandy were
-served round before they sat down.
-
-In that given to the Emperor was poison.
-
-Whether, adds the historian we quote, they were in haste to carry
-back their dark tidings, or whether the horror of the deed made them
-anxious to finish it, none can know; but to hasten their terrible
-work, they insisted on giving him another glass.
-
-Already the subtle poison was diffusing itself through the vitals of
-the unhappy Emperor; and now, struck by the pallor of their faces and
-the ferocious expression of their eyes, he started back, refused the
-proffered glass, and despairingly summoned assistance.
-
-They then flung themselves upon him, and Count Orloff, pulling from
-his breast the handkerchief he had concealed there, threw it over the
-mouth of Peter, to gag him and stifle his cries. He was dashed again
-and again to the floor, where he defended himself against his
-assassins with all the fury that terror of death and despair could
-inspire.
-
-Two young officers of the guard now rushed in, and, as the orders of
-all were to slay Peter without a wound, they knotted the handkerchief
-round his neck to strangle him, while the Count pressed his knees
-upon his breast.
-
-Still the dying Emperor struggled so fearfully that the ferocious
-Bernikoff, losing all patience, plunged a dagger into his throat; and
-thus, poisoned, stabbed, and strangled, he expired without further
-resistance.
-
-A few hours after this, pale, dishevelled, and covered with blood,
-dust, and perspiration, with torn garments and disturbed bearing,
-Count Orloff appeared before the Empress. "She arose in silence,"
-says M. Rulhière, "and passed into an inner room, whither he followed
-her. Some minutes after, she called Count Panin, who was already
-named her minister, and informed him that the Emperor was dead, and
-consulted with him upon the mode of announcing his demise to the
-people."
-
-It was given out that he had died a natural death.
-
-The wound inflicted by Bernikoff's dagger was carefully sewed up; the
-orifice was neatly covered by a piece of gold-beater's skin; and the
-body, in an old green regimental coat, with four wax candles as a
-funeral state, was exposed for three days to the people. The
-Russians were permitted to wear their beards; the Empress poured out
-her afflictions in a ukase, and offered up her prayers, as became a
-widow, in the church of our holy Lady of Kazan.
-
-And it was in the service of this charming people,
-
- "----this new and polished nation,
- Whose names want nothing but pronounciation,"
-
---a people, who, in the arts of peace, were little better than the
-Scots when James I. was butchered in the Black Friary at Perth, or
-the men of "Merry England" when her crook-backed Dick was smothering
-the royal babies in the Tower--that, by an adverse fate, our hero
-found himself a soldier of fortune, when, as before stated, old
-George III. was King of the British Isles, and "the first gentleman
-in Europe" was a sinless infant on his mother's knee.
-
-After Peter was laid in his grave, and Catharine was firmly seated on
-his throne, her conduct was cautious and judicious, and, as even her
-enemies admitted, at times magnanimous; yet frightful atrocities were
-committed during her reign when she degenerated into ferocity and
-debauchery.
-
-The captivity of the young and innocent Ivan in Schlusselburg, in
-charge of the unscrupulous Bernikoff, Captain Vlasfief, and a
-Lieutenant named Tschekin--three officers in whom Catharine had
-implicit reliance--seemed more hopeless now than ever when the
-sceptre was in her firm grasp.
-
-Now that Peter was disposed of, her only dread consisted in the
-chance of Ivan's escape; so his guards were doubled, and her orders
-to Bernikoff concerning him were to ensure his detention even by
-death if necessary: and it was concerning this very dread that
-Captain Charles Balgonie was proceeding with a dispatch from
-Novgorod, where Catharine, with some of her favourites and courtiers,
-was residing for a time in the ancient palace of the Czars.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-THE PALATINE.
-
-Corporal Podatchkine was an admirable specimen of his own type of
-Russian,--one who was more afraid of neglecting Lent than of
-murdering his fellow-being, especially if that fellow-being was a
-foreigner; "for," saith M. L'Abbé Chappe at this time, "they do not
-reckon foreigners among the number of their brethren."
-
-His thick black scrubby hair was cut straight across the forehead in
-a line with the eyebrows, and at each side it hung perpendicularly
-down below the ears, in the old Russian and Mediæval fashion, and
-was, moreover, cut square across the neck behind, just as the English
-wore theirs in the days of Richard III.; and he kept alternately
-scratching and smoothing his rugged front, nervously and assiduously,
-when he removed his fur Cossack cap; and, full of affected concern,
-even to exhibiting tears in his small cunning eyes, presented
-himself, through the bribed auspices of the dvornick, to Natalie
-Mierowna next morning, and besought her to have him "conducted to the
-chamber of his brave, his beloved Captain, his comrade and brother,
-who was, he now learned, seriously ill, helpless, and
-delirious,"--and, in fact, just as the cunning Corporal wished him to
-be.
-
-There he found Balgonie, certainly too ill and weak either to
-recognise him or understand what he was about; so the faithful
-Cossack made a rapid and skilful investigation of all the officer's
-pockets, and especially his sabretasche, for the dispatch.
-
-Not a vestige of it was to be found.
-
-"What the devil can he have done with it?" muttered the bewildered
-Corporal, as he thought of his 200 silver roubles; "can he have lost
-it in the river, or swallowed it?"
-
-The truth is, that Natalie Mierowna had her doubts about the fidelity
-of Podatchkine, and even of some of her own domestics, and aware of
-the risk run by the stranger if he lost a dispatch of the Empress,
-she had, prior to the introduction of the Corporal, secured the
-document, and at that moment it was hidden in her own fair bosom
-until she could secure it in a safer place.
-
-In her bosom! Poor Natalie! Alas, she little knew its contents, and
-the horrors they were yet to produce!
-
-Baffled thus in his attempt to secure it, there was no resource for
-the faithful warrior of the steppes now but to take up his quarters,
-which he was nothing loth to do, at the Castle of the Louga, and
-there quietly and comfortably to smoke his pipe by the kitchen stove;
-await the recovery or the death, he cared not which, of Balgonie; and
-to concert further measures with the huge gipsy, Nicholas Paulovitch,
-whom he saw daily.
-
-It was no feverish dream of Balgonie that Natalie Mierowna had been
-hovering about his bedside; for she and her cousin Mariolizza had
-been his especial nurses.
-
-In less than three days the feverish delirium subsided, sense
-completely returned, and the young Captain appeared to be labouring
-only under a species of influenza. A cold, as we understand that
-homely but troublesome kind of ailment in foggy Britain, is almost
-unknown in the latitude of St. Petersburg. "It is," says Dr.
-Granville, "indigenous to England, and, above all, to London;" yet we
-fear Balgonie had a most unromantic and unmistakable cold, consequent
-on his immersion in the icy Louga, together with an aguish shivering,
-which rendered the quitting of his couch, and betaking himself to the
-saddle, as yet quite impossible.
-
-Balgonie had an insatiable thirst: he had visions of iced champagne;
-but in lieu, got only tea-punch, if we may so call it, being tea in
-the fashion still taken by the Russians (who hold that milk spoils
-it), with a slice of lemon or preserved fruit; and as he got
-stronger, Katinki, a strapping Polish damsel with fine black eyes,
-who was Natalie's own particular follower, added thereto a dash of
-rum and then _tsvetochay_, or flowery tea, with cakes, which the
-Captain seemed to relish all the more when he understood them to be
-made by the white hands of Natalie: an appreciation which showed a
-decided improvement in that young officer's health. But--
-
-"My dispatch," he frequently said aloud,--"I must be gone with my
-dispatch!"
-
-"Might it not be entrusted to the Corporal Podatchkine?" asked
-Natalie one morning, as she personally gave him his warm and soothing
-drink with her own hand, Katinka standing demurely by with a silver
-salver.
-
-"Impossible, Hosphoza, for so I may call you: an officer alone can
-carry a dispatch of the Empress. Its contents are most urgent: this
-delay, over which I have no control, may be visited by royal
-disfavour, even punishment; and I fear that the air of Tobolsk or
-Irkutsk would ill suit a Scotsman's lungs, Natalie Mierowna."
-
-"Yet tarry here you must," said she, with a smile, the beauty of
-which proved very bewildering: "the Louga is coated with ice this
-morning, but not so thick, however, that it might not be broken by
-throwing a five-kopec piece from here; but to travel yet would only
-kill you, Carl Ivanovitch, and cannot be thought of just now."
-
-Then as she glided away, with her beaming smile, her white hands and
-taper arms, her rustling dress of scarlet silk trimmed with snowy
-miniver, and all the sense of perfume that pervaded her, Balgonie
-sighed wearily yet pleasantly, and half thought that beautiful figure
-a dream, as he turned on his soft and luxurious pillow, and marvelled
-whether his past or his present existence was the real one.
-
-A captain in the ducal Regiment of Smolensko and not yet twenty-five!
-Same ten years ago, his future seemed to point to a very different
-course of life.
-
-Far from Russian steppes and icy streams, their forests and
-barbarity, his mind had been wandering home to Britain's happier
-shore; and he might have said with the Bard who sang the "Course of
-Time,"--
-
- "Nor do I of that Isle remember aught,
- Of prospect more sublime and beautiful,
- Than Scotia's northern battlement of hills,
- Which first I from my father's house beheld,
- At dawn of life; beloved in memory still,
- And standard yet of rural imagery."
-
-
-His story is a brief one, and not very startling, save for its rapid
-career of injustice.
-
-Charles Balgonie, son of John Balgonie of that Ilk in Strathearn, had
-come into the world during that which was perhaps the most stupid,
-lifeless, and impoverished era of Scottish existence, the middle of
-the reign of George II.; when the country was without trade, energy,
-or enterprise, and when nothing flourished save that which prospers
-there more than ever even under the rule of her present Majesty, and
-will do so apparently unto the end of time,--gloomy fanaticism and
-canting hypocrisy: more among the laity certainly, who make a trade
-and cloak of outward religion, than among the clergy, who dare not be
-liberal, even if so disposed; for without a public and noisy
-exhibition of sanctity, few have ever had much chance of place or
-profit north of the Tweed.
-
-Moreover, Charlie was born at a time when to be a Scotsman or an
-Irishman was almost a political crime in the eyes of their somewhat
-illiberal fellow-subjects, and when for either to attain eminence in
-the service of their native country was nearly an impossibility; and
-hence the Scots crowded to the armies and fleets of Russia and
-Holland, and the Irish to those of France and Spain.
-
-By the early death of his parents, Charlie had been cast, in his
-extreme boyhood, upon the tender mercies of a bachelor uncle, Mr.
-Gamaliel Balgonie, a hard-hearted, grasping and avaricious merchant
-in Dundee--one who was a noisy exhibitor of religion, a fervent
-expounder of crooked texts, and, of course, an Elder of the Kirk; a
-great quoter of Scripture upon unnecessary occasions; one who always
-wore garments of sad-coloured broad cloth, with a spotless white
-cravat, and whose quavering voice and meek but cunning eyes were
-frequently uplifted against the enormities, the wickedness, and "the
-temptawtions and tribulawtions of this weary world;" and who was,
-moreover, a vehement despiser of that which he stigmatized as "its
-wretched dross," but which he left no means, fair or foul, untried to
-acquire.
-
-In the lovely vale of Strathearn--one of the most exquisite tracts of
-verdant scenery in Scotland--stood the home of Charlie Balgonie. In
-his delirium, the present had fled, and the past returned. He had
-been a boy again at his father's knee--a child with his curly head
-nestling on his smiling mother's breast; again, in fancy, had her
-kisses rested on his cheek, and her soft voice lingered lovingly in
-his ear; again had he felt all that happiness, perfect trust, and
-security which the boy feels by his father's hearth, and the man, in
-after life, never more!
-
-He heard not the hoarse Louga crashing down its ice-blocks to the
-Baltic Sea; but the gentle murmur of the Earn, flowing from the
-wooded hills of Comrie towards the broad blue bosom of the Tay--the
-Earn, where many a time and oft he had lured the brown trout and the
-speckled salmon from the deep, dark pools, near the old battle-cross
-of Dupplin and the Birks of Invermay. Again he had heard the leaves
-rustle pleasantly in the summer woods, where he had nutted and
-birdnested when a boy; and he had seen, in a vivid dream, his
-glorious native valley where it narrows at Dunira; and far beyond,
-the blue ridges of the mighty Grampians, lifting their summits, alp
-on alp, to the clouds, eternal and unchanged as when the foiled
-legions of Julius Agricola fled along their slopes in rout and
-disorder.
-
-On the death of his parents his small paternal estate of a few
-hundreds per annum would have become, as all might have supposed, his
-inheritance; but the relation before mentioned--the paternal uncle,
-Gamaliel, a man of the strictest probity, and of that which was
-equally valued in Scotland, extreme sanctimony; one who, on the
-funeral day, had shed abundance of tears at the uncertainty of life,
-and had excelled even the minister in prayer and "in warsling wi' the
-diel" (_i.e.,_ wrestling with Satan)--suddenly produced a will, by
-which, to the profound astonishment of all, the entire estate was
-left to him as a return for certain loans and sums advanced to the
-deceased, of which, however, no proof could be found; but it was a
-veritable death-bed will, written accurately by a notary, and duly
-signetted with the autograph of "John Balgonie of yt Ilk."
-
-Though tremulous and shaky,--strangely so,--and rather unlike the
-usual signature of the deceased laird, three men there were,
-accounted good, worthy, and religious men, who solemnly deposed to
-having seen "the hand of the dead man pen those four words."
-
-It was a case which made some noise in those days, because thirty-six
-hours after the alleged signature was given John Balgonie died.
-
-The law of Scotland requires that, after framing and signing such a
-deed, the testator must have been able to go once at least to church
-or market. How it came to pass we know not now, but the dispute,
-though without a basis, was brought before the Supreme Court by some
-friends of the orphan, for there were not a few persons in Strathearn
-who alleged that John Balgonie's hand had certainly traced the
-signature which was sworn to so solemnly as his,--but had done so
-after death: the pen being placed in the fingers of the corpse, which
-were guided by those of the pious and worthy merchant of Dundee, who
-wanted his nephew's little patrimony in aid of certain speculations
-of his own.
-
-Pending a decision, the bereaved boy was removed to the busy town on
-Tay side, and was left to solace his sorrows at school, prior, as he
-supposed, to becoming a drudge in his affectionate uncle's
-counting-house, when the last of his slender inheritance had been
-frittered away in the fangs of the law.
-
-One day--poor Charlie never forgot it--his worthy Uncle Gam returned
-from Edinburgh by the packet. The case had been decided against him,
-and the Court was about to name trustees to look after the estate of
-the orphan boy: so that boy learned long after. Mr. Gamaliel
-Balgonie was unusually grave, stern, and abstracted; but he
-deliberately seated himself at his desk, and while humming, as was
-his wont, a verse of a psalm, he penned a letter addressed to the
-captain of a vessel then lying in the harbour, and gave it to his
-nephew for immediate delivery, desiring him to wait for the answer.
-
-Charlie remarked that Uncle Gam did not, according to his usual
-careful custom, keep any copy of this letter, and that it was written
-in a hand so unlike his usual penmanship as to be completely
-disguised.
-
-The boy, then in his fifteenth year, started on his errand with
-alacrity. It was better to be out amid the bustle of the sunlighted
-quays, than drudging with a quill in the sombre merchant's office in
-a narrow gloomy alley of Dundee. He soon found the ship, which was
-moored at some distance from the shore, with her fore-topsails loose,
-and blue-peter flying at the fore, to indicate that she was ready for
-sea; yet Charlie had no suspicion of the trap into which he was
-running, or the cruel fate that awaited him.
-
-The skipper, a rough, surly, and brutal-looking man, eyed the boy
-keenly, while tearing the letter into minute fragments, after he had
-perused it, with a grim smile of satisfaction. He then went to a
-locker, where he poured out a glass of something that seemed to be
-port-wine.
-
-"Drink that, my lad," said he, "while I write an answer to your
-uncle."
-
-Charlie, half afraid to refuse, though the skipper's bearing began to
-inspire him with distrust, drained the glass; but scarcely had he
-done so when the cabin seemed to be whirling round him; he thought
-that he was becoming sea-sick, and was in the act of staggering
-towards the cabin stairs, when he was felled to the floor by a blow
-from the skipper's heavy hand--a blow dealt cruelly and unsparingly.
-
-He recovered consciousness some time after, to find himself stiff,
-sore, and bloody from a wound in the temple, lying on deck in the
-moonlight, with some twenty-five other boys, several of whom were
-still in the same state of stupor or intoxication in which they had
-been brought on board. Others were loudly lamenting their parents
-and brothers or sisters they never more would see, and all were more
-or less covered with blows and bruises. To his horror and dismay,
-Charlie now found that the ship was at sea, and running between the
-dangerous reef known as the Bell Rock and the flat sandy shore of
-Barrie, and that, through the machinations of Uncle Gamaliel, he had
-been lured into the hands of one of the most notorious
-plantation-crimps that ever infested the Scottish coast, Captain
-Zachariah Coffin of New England, whose craft, a palatine ship, the
-_Piscatona_, was a letter of marque, carrying twelve six-pounders and
-fighting her own way.
-
-Many miserable little fellows who had been lured to a certain den in
-Aberdeen, and there drugged, robbed, and manacled, were brought on
-board the palatine ship as she lay off Girdleness and burned three
-red lights, in the night, as a private and concerted signal with the
-crimps ashore: and some of these same crimps were discovered, in
-after years, to have actually been the magistrates of the city!
-
-After this, the _Piscatona_ was hauled up, in order to go north about
-by Cape Wrath, having on board nearly fifty boys, who were to be sold
-as slaves to the highest bidder in Virginia, for nowhere was the
-infamous crime of kidnapping carried to a greater excess, even during
-the early years of George the Third's reign, than in the
-neighbourhood of the Granite City, where, in some instances, whole
-families disappeared, and their horror-stricken and bewildered
-parents died broken-hearted and insane.
-
-Among the little Palatines--a name given by Americans to individuals
-who were thus kidnapped--some there were who pined and wept for home;
-and some who built castles in the air, and looked to America as a
-land of promise. Others there were who schemed out vengeance, and
-were sullen. Among the latter was our hero, who hoped yet to repay
-his wrongs on Uncle Gam, but meanwhile was knocked about mercilessly
-by the sullen skipper, and was so repeatedly rope's-ended by him,
-that he was often a mass of blood and bruises; and then, like a poor
-little victim, as he certainly was, Charlie would creep away into a
-corner, or skulk between the lee-carronades, where the salt spray
-flew over him, and mingled with the tears he wept so unavailingly,
-for those once tender and affectionate parents who were lying side by
-side in their graves, in sunny Strathearn, far, far away.
-
-Many times, after being beaten cruelly, he was deprived of food for
-hours and put in the bilboes, where the captain amused himself by
-hunting a savage dog upon him.
-
-But his time of vengeance was coming!
-
-Storms came on when the _Piscatona_ entered the Pentland Firth; and
-four days after Dunnet Head with its flinty brow, four hundred feet
-in height, had vanished into the wrack and mist astern, a sudden cry
-of fire caused every heart to thrill on board the lawless vessel.
-
-Whether an act of treachery or not, it was impossible to ascertain;
-but it had broken out near the ship's magazine, to which it
-communicated with frightful rapidity; for suddenly, while the crew
-were all running fore and aft with buckets, a dreadful explosion
-seemed to rend the _Piscatona_ in two. Half of the main-deck was
-blown away with two of the boats. A whirlwind of fragments flew in
-every direction; and then the flames shot into the air in scorching
-volumes, which soon set the courses and topgallant sails on fire.
-
-Discipline, or such a system of it as Zachariah Coffin maintained on
-board, was totally at an end. Some of the crew lowered the only
-remaining boat, and fought like wild beasts for possession of it,
-knocking each other into the water without mercy. Captain Coffin
-cocked his pistols at the gangway, shot one man dead, and swore with
-a dreadful oath that he would kill the next who dared to precede him;
-but he was struck from behind by an iron marline-spike, and falling
-together with his savage dog into the flaming gulf that yawned
-amidships, was seen no more.
-
-Some of the crew ultimately pushed off in the boat; others sprang
-overboard and held on to spars and booms; but these and nearly all
-the little Palatines perished miserably, after being half scorched.
-Some were crushed to death by the falling yards and masts. Many held
-on to the fore and main chains, till these became so unbearably hot,
-that they had to drop off, with screams of despair, when they sank,
-faint, weary, and helpless, to the bottom at last.
-
-How it all happened Charlie Balgonie never knew, but hours after the
-whole affair was over, and the detested _Piscatona_ had burned down
-to her water-line and sunk, leaving all the sea around her
-discoloured and covered with floating pieces of charred wood and the
-buoyant parts of her cargo, he found himself adrift in the wide and
-stormy Pentland Firth; but wedged with comparative safety in a large
-fragment of the fore-top, to which, the yard being still attached by
-the sling, a certain amount of steadiness was given; yet his heart
-leaped painfully, each time, when the fragment of wreck rose on the
-summit of a green glassy wave, or went surging down into the dark and
-watery trough between.
-
-To add to the terrors of his lonely situation, the sun had sunk amid
-gloomy purple clouds, and a rainy night was drawing on. Half drowned
-perhaps, the poor boy soon became faint and exhausted, and would seem
-to have dropped into a species of stupor; for when roused by the
-sound of strange voices, he found himself close by a great and
-towering ship, which lay to, now right in the wind's eye with her
-main-yard aback, and her gunports and hammock nettings full of
-weatherbeaten faces, gazing at him with eagerness and curiosity in
-the twilight, while a boat was lowered from the davits and pulled
-steadily towards him by six sailors clad in dark green.
-
-She proved to be a Russian 50-gun ship, the _Anne Ivanowna_,
-commanded by Thomas Mackenzie, one of the many Scottish admirals who
-have bravely carried the Russian flag in the Baltic and the Black
-Sea, the same officer who a few years after was to build the great
-harbour and forts of Sebastopol, at the little Tartar village then
-known as Actiare.
-
-His youthful countryman became his _protégé_.
-
-The worthy admiral sought to make a sailor of the rescued Palatine;
-but the latter had seen quite enough of the sea while on board the
-_Piscatona_, and while he was clinging like a limpet or barnacle to
-the piece of drifting wreck; so he became a soldier, and served under
-General Ochterlony, of Guynd, in the Regiment of Smolensko, where, as
-a cadet, his superior smartness, intelligence and education, not less
-than his courage, soon distinguished him among his thick-pated
-Russian comrades: thus, in less than ten years, he became, as we find
-him, Captain Carl Ivanovitch Balgonie, the most trusted aide-de-camp
-of Lieutenant-General Weymarn, Commander-in-Chief of the City and
-District of St. Petersburg.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-THE SOLDIER OF THE CZARINA.
-
-"You can never know, Ivanovitch Balgonie, how much I pitied you--"
-
-"You, lady?" was the joyous response.
-
-"That is, I and Mariolizza," said Natalie Mierowna, slightly blushing
-(the Russians always speak thus, putting the personal pronoun first),
-"when we found you sunk on a fever-bed, in a foreign land, so far
-from your country, your friends, your mother, perhaps; for you are
-young enough, I think, to miss her still, at such a time, although a
-soldier."
-
-"Far indeed, in many ways!" replied Balgonie, with a bitter smile, as
-he thought of Uncle Gam and the Palatine ship, or perhaps it was
-illness that had weakened him. "I have a country to which more than
-probably I shall never return; but father, mother, or friends, I have
-none there: all who loved me once, have gone to the silent grave
-before me."
-
-"All?"
-
-"Yes, lady."
-
-"But you are making many friends in Russia," said Mariolizza,
-cheerfully: "there are my cousin, Basil Mierowitz and my brother
-Apollo Usakoff, who both, I know, love you as a brother."
-
-"True; and most grateful am I to them for their regard, for both are
-polished gentlemen. I have old General Weymarn, too, though I know
-not what he will think of this delay in delivering the Imperial
-dispatch."
-
-"Alas, that most tiresome dispatch!" exclaimed Natalie; "but I
-forget," she added, with a curl of her short upper lip, "those who
-proceed on the errands of the Empress Catharine, would need
-seven-league boots, or the carpet of the prince in the fairy tale,
-which transported the owner at a wish."
-
-"Hush, cousin," said Mariolizza, glancing timidly round: but no one
-was near save Corporal Podatchkine, who was stolidly smoking a huge
-pipe at a little distance on the terrace, when this conversation took
-place two days after Balgonie became convalescent, and fully a week
-since the night of peril on which he swam the Louga.
-
-"I cannot describe to you, ladies, the relief that came to my mind on
-discovering that it had neither been lost nor stolen, but was safe--"
-
-"In Natalie's bosom!" said Mariolizza, laughing.
-
-"Certainly the last place, where, for her own sake, I would place a
-dispatch of the widow of Peter III.," responded the other, haughtily;
-but Balgonie felt his heart beat quicker as she spoke. Her voice was
-sweet and low, and had a wonderful chord in it.
-
-The day was mild and beautiful, and truly an April one. The last of
-the ice had disappeared from the river; not a flake of snow was
-visible among the woods or on the distant hills; and the bright sun
-of noon shone clearly and brilliantly from a deep-blue sky flecked by
-floating masses of white cloud, and cast across the bosom of the
-Louga the shadows of the great fir trees that spread like a sea of
-solemn cones for miles along its banks; and amid that woody sea, the
-most striking feature was a white-walled monastery with its
-"golden-headed church" and all its metal cupolas glittering in the
-sunshine.
-
-As they promenaded on the gravelled terrace that lay before the
-Count's residence, Balgonie could see the domains of Mierowitz that
-lay for miles around: the patrimonial village of the Count, nestling
-among the coppice, containing a dozen or so of stone houses, and
-double that number of quaint tumble-down edifices of wood, and a
-church with a little gilt cupola, where his serfs said their prayers,
-and thanked God and him for permission to live and breathe, and to
-hoard their roubles in secret--for wealth in a serf was a sure source
-of misery, extortion, and perhaps of torture, if discovered.
-
-In the immediate foreground were wharves, where the wood for masts
-and spars from his forests were launched, and formed into great rafts
-for conveyance to the Gulf of Finland. The din of axes and the crash
-of falling timber, with the cheerful voices of the woodmen and
-labourers, were heard rising from the echoing woods, as they lopped
-and trimmed the giant pines for conveyance to the Baltic coast; for
-his forest trees were one of the chief sources of revenue to Count
-Mierowitz.
-
-"Your father's mansion is indeed a noble one!" said Balgonie, who
-after surveying the landscape from the terrace, ran his eyes over the
-façade of the castle, as it was named, though by no means so well
-fortified as his patrimonial tower in Strathearn, which dated from
-the days of the Sixth James.
-
-"So noble that the first Count of our name who built it, when Ivan
-Basilovitch--Ivan the Terrible--was Czar, put out the eyes of the
-architect, who was, of course, one of his serfs," said Natalie.
-
-"For what reason?" asked Balgonie, starting.
-
-"Lest he should repeat the work for another," replied Natalie; "but
-then the Count was a fierce soldier, who had served under Yermack in
-the conquest of Siberia. I fear you think us very barbarous, Captain
-Balgonie; but I can assure you, that even in the remote forests of
-Yakoutsk, on the banks of the Lena, there is more regard for human
-life and divine laws now, than existed when my father was a boy. He
-has, indeed, seen terrible things!"
-
-Balgonie did not see much of the Count, who was generally occupied
-among his people, to whom he was alternately a source of reverence
-and of terror.
-
-Though infinitely more civilised than the old Russian noble as
-described by Clarke, "unwashed, unshaven, eating raw turnip and
-drinking quass" (for according to the Doctor, in 1799, "raw turnips
-were handed about in slices in the first houses, on a silver salver,
-with brandy as a whet before dinner"), he was a fair average specimen
-of a fine old Muscovite gentleman "all of the olden time," who had a
-cat-o'-nine-tails always at hand; who generally unbuttoned his vest
-when the gold cup was brought, in which he drank his pink champagne
-or rare Hungarian wine, which he always had in equal plenty with his
-fiery vodka and bitter quass; who reckoned his silver roubles by
-sacksful, and his Sclavonian souls by thousands; and who, though by
-no means a bad fellow, as his imperious and outrageous class go in
-Russia, had still the somewhat czarish notion, that true nobility
-"means the privilege of being treated like a human being of
-intelligence and feeling, and of treating others as if they were
-nothing of the kind."
-
-Scandal said that in his wild youth he had flogged his serfs to fight
-with his favourite bear, and flogged them again if they maltreated or
-bit Bruin too much: Balgonie certainly saw two or three old serfs who
-had lost an ear in these combats. And when the Count took his
-afternoon nap, if a cock crowed in the village, a dog barked, or a
-cat mewed, the whole community were wont to tremble, when the stout
-dvornick, or house-porter, was seen to issue forth with his
-cat-o'-nine-tails in search of the proprietor.
-
-A rich sash usually girt the waist of his old-fashioned tunic, which
-was of fine cloth, and trimmed with fur, broad or narrow according to
-the season; a square cap of crimson velvet, tasselled with gold and
-edged with ermine as white as his beard, was placed diagonally on his
-head, when he went abroad; and then he carried a long gold-headed
-cane, with the exact weight of which most of the shoulders in the
-neighbourhood were perfectly familiar. On holy festivals the breast
-of his best velvet coat was always covered by orders of the empire; a
-dozen of servants usually hovered about him when he dined; and he
-always went to church and confession in a clumsy old coach drawn by
-six white horses, three abreast, in honour of the Holy Trinity.
-
-He was proud of being one of the old hereditary nobles, who are
-distinguished from the personal nobility by their right to possess
-serfs, and to whose earthly tyranny there was no limit, save the
-tomb. All the wretched serf possessed, even his wife, was the
-property of his lord. Fear of secret murder alone protected the
-latter species of property; hence no wonder is it that the land is
-without a middle class. Even in the present century, Heber, in his
-Journal, mentions an instance of a Russian noble who, in his profane
-cruelty and lust of power, nailed a servant on a cross, for which he
-was only imprisoned in a monastery.
-
-But in the character of Count Mierowitz, there was something of the
-rough and hardy country gentleman. He it was who caught with his own
-hands, and in his own forests by the Louga, the famous team of brown
-bears which, in the marriage procession of the late Empress
-Elizabeth's jester, drew that jocular personage and his bride, when
-the newly-wedded couple proceeded to the wonderful palace of ice
-(which was built on the frozen Neva), all the ornaments of which were
-icicles, and the appurtenances of which were also ice, even to the
-cannon which were fired, and did not burst.
-
-"When Peter the Great came to the throne," said he, one day, "he
-found only two lawyers in all Russia; so, Captain Balgonie, he hung
-one as an example to the other. Ah, he was a truly great man, Peter!
-The English admire him solely because he tried to imitate them; but,
-for that very reason, we don't approve of many of his innovations.
-We look from the north and south sides of the same hedge."
-
-It is not surprising that Charlie Balgonie preferred the society of
-two beautiful young girls to that of a testy old boyar. To enhance
-their natural attractions and winning manners, they were always
-dressed in the most fashionable French _mode_, and wore the rich
-stuffs which came from Moscow, and even from China.
-
-They and he had many topics in common, on which they could converse,
-after old Count Mierowitz had dined and dozed off to sleep--such as
-the theatre erected some years before at Yaroslaff, by Volkoff, whose
-troupe were now performing the tragedies of Soumorokoff at St.
-Petersburg, where a government theatre had just been erected by a
-ukase; while another ennobled the manager, Volkoff, who had died last
-year, after appearing at Moscow in Zelmira. Their knowledge of
-French and German opened up the best literature of Europe to the two
-cousins, which was fortunate; for at the period of our narrative,
-Russia had almost none, save some barbarous national songs, fabulous
-ecclesiastical records, and ferocious traditions: nor is she now much
-advanced in letters, though certainly, two months after publication,
-Charles Dickens may be read at Tobolsk--that terrible Tobolsk--where,
-as we have all read in our youth, Elizabeth wept such grateful tears
-on the bosom of her Smoloff.
-
-Exiled from court, and secluded amid these forests by the Louga, a
-Russian lady had few resources for amusement then; so the unexpected
-visit of Captain Balgonie, with whose name and courage they were
-quite familiar, proved a most welcome and fortunate circumstance to
-those two handsome girls, who were merely enduring life, or simply
-vegetating, in the great old mansion of Count Mierowitz.
-
-But there was one topic in which our soldier of fortune could by no
-means agree with Natalie Mierowna--her bitter and most unwise
-hostility to the strongly-established power of the Empress, or, as
-she styled her, "the woman who now occupied the throne of Ivan;" a
-prince whom she viewed exactly as the Scottish Jacobites did "the
-Young Chevalier," and a few old Frenchmen do at the present hour,
-"Henry V.," the descendant of St. Louis. These sentiments, however,
-she had to utter in secret, or when none were by them; and when he
-gazed into her dark and beautiful eyes, so full of romantic
-enthusiasm and of dangerous light, he felt thankful that one so
-peerless and so perilous was not, at all events, his enemy.
-
-She had accompanied the Empress on her celebrated pilgrimage to the
-ancient cathedral of Rostov, by the Lake of Nero, where the last of
-the Princes of Jaroslav was murdered in cold blood by Ivan the
-Terrible. Her expedition had taken place in the May of the preceding
-year. Catharine and her ladies walked ten versts afoot daily, and it
-was at the conclusion of this devotional journey that the final
-quarrel had taken place concerning the mazurka with the Aide-de-camp
-Vlasfief.
-
-"That insult shall never be forgotten here!" said she, stamping a
-little foot, in a prettily-embroidered scarlet shoe, on the carpet of
-the drawing-room where, fortunately for herself, she was alone with
-Balgonie: "an insult to me--to us, who have the blood of Ruric the
-Varangian in our veins; and from her--this woman of Anhalt-Zerbst!"
-
-Balgonie laughed; for the Ruric blood is to Russians what Captain
-John Smith's is to the Virginians, and the Norman element to the
-English.
-
-"Yes," she continued, "'tis something novel, an insult to us, from
-this Catharine, misnamed the Great, who has enslaved all the Ukraine,
-and given men and women away by thousands, like herds of cattle, to
-her courtiers and her lovers!"
-
-"Oh, be wary; I pray you, be wary, or speak in French!" said Balgonie
-imploringly, while laying his hand impressively--rather too
-impressively, we fear--upon hers, which was so delicately smooth and
-white, and was placed very temptingly within his reach, as they sat
-near each other for the purpose of conversing in low and confidential
-tones.
-
-"The people are mere slaves under her rule," continued Natalie,
-lowering her voice but without withdrawing that coveted hand; perhaps
-she forgot it in her energy; but the omission made poor Charlie
-Balgonie's honest heart beat very fast indeed, and his colour came
-and went painfully while her dark and glorious eyes were bent on his:
-"in her I behold only a usurper, who wields a knout in lieu of a
-sceptre, and who seats herself on a throne of human skulls; but the
-time is coming when all these things shall be altered!"
-
-"And this time, Natalie Microwna--what do you mean?" asked Balgonie,
-who had been long enough in Russia to feel a thrill of terror at
-words so wild and dangerous.
-
-"When it comes you will learn; if the blow fails, woe unto those on
-whom it recoils! You may escape as a stranger; but I fear me, she
-will punish the whole Regiment of Smolensko--"
-
-"My regiment--mine, say you?"
-
-"Yes, yours, Hospodeen, even as Peter the Great did the Battalion of
-Strelitz, for adherence to his sister Sophia; and that we know to be
-one of the most sanguinary sacrifices on record, even in Russia."
-
-"Heaven knows that is admitting a great deal; but you say either too
-much or too little to satisfy my curiosity: explain this coming
-peril--this mystery--to which you refer."
-
-In her growing energy, Natalie's other hand was now clasped above
-his, and truly "the situation had its charm."
-
-"Let us speak of it no more," said she, recollecting herself, and
-with a strange smile; "ere long you shall know all; but not now--not
-now. Alas! the best I can wish you, Ivanovitch Balgonie, is, that
-your chance visit here may not also compromise you with Catharine."
-
-They pressed each other's hands: it was done, perhaps, merely in the
-energy of conversation; but, to be brief, Balgonie found himself now
-hopelessly and helplessly in love with Natalie Mierowna.
-
-Though both cousins were remarkable for their beauty--one blonde, the
-other dark--he had never for a moment wavered between them; for he
-had been, from the first moment he beheld her, irresistibly attracted
-by the brilliant and black-eyed Natalie. Besides, he knew well that
-Mariolizza was betrothed, or, as the Russians might justly phrase it,
-assigned away, to his friend and brother-officer, Basil Mierowitz.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-IN LOVE.
-
-It was scarcely possible that the result of his visit could be
-otherwise than it had proved; for Natalie was no common-place beauty,
-but one who had subdued the hearts of many more men than Charlie
-Balgonie--men, who now at Moscow and St. Petersburg were counting the
-days of her exile from the Court of Catharine: and when Charlie
-thought of her in after years, the calm repose of his days of
-convalescence, the aspect and furniture of his chamber in the old
-Castle of Louga, the genial glow of the peitchka, the double window
-sashes with their bright false flowers between, the Byzantine picture
-of the Holy Virgin with its shining metal halo, and the varnished
-panels of the walls, were all associated, as in a pleasant dream,
-with the dark and beautiful eyes, the round taper arms, the white and
-delicate hands on which so many diamonds glittered, the jetty hair
-that was twisted in massive braids (yet fell in ringlets too) round
-the superb head,--the graceful, floating, and statuesque figure of
-Natalie Mierowna, always so richly, even coquettishly attired.
-Natalie, so soft, so tender, and so true, in all the relations of
-life and the amenities of society; and yet who could be so keen in
-her hate, so fiery in her political rancour, when thinking of her own
-injuries, and the terrible wrongs of the captive Ivan, whose adherent
-she had become.
-
-Charlie Balgonie blessed the exile and choice of circumstances, all
-so sudden and unforeseen, which had cast him in her path. He loved
-her with all the passionate adoration so beautiful and winning a
-woman could inspire in a young and ardent heart; nor was it long
-before Natalie became aware of this, and was affected by the same
-emotion. There was one glance given, by which "each read and
-understood each other's soul." Lovers soon find means to comprehend
-each other, and Mariolizza, who speedily guessed their secret, which
-she certainly thought a dangerous one, found many excuses to leave
-them often together.
-
-The long, long dream of his youth and early manhood,--the waking
-dream of many a lonely hour of reverie in the summer woods, by the
-seashore, or in the still hours of military duty, in camp and
-bivouac--a fair face that would smile on him,--a girl to love, and
-worship, and trust,--one who would trust and love him in return, was
-embodied at last; and in Natalie he saw this hitherto imaginary
-sphinx of whom he had been thinking, and for whom he had been waiting
-so long.
-
-Her voice, her smile, her presence, seemed to fill the air he
-breathed with a new charm, that made every nerve thrill, investing
-the most simple and common wants of every-day life with sudden
-delights and joys; in short, and in common phraseology, the poor
-young man was "over head and ears in love."
-
-The declaration of his passion, and Natalie's acceptance of it, came
-about just as others have done; and for three days after,--without
-looking the future confidently or inquiringly in the face,--Balgonie
-abandoned himself to the delight of his new and successful passion,
-and forgot all about the troublesome Empress, her pressing dispatch,
-and the terrors of Lieutenant-General Weymarn.
-
-How could he think of such, when seated in the half-curtained alcove
-which opened off the drawing-room, on those calm April evenings; when
-the soft breeze that floated over the vast forests came laden with
-the odour of the spruce and fir boughs? Seated, with Natalie--in all
-the glory of her youth, her beauty, and the flush of her first
-love--by his side, often deftly and with rapid fingers weaving up the
-coils of her heavy black hair (which would come down, somehow, on
-these occasions); as she did so, displaying to greater advantage than
-ever the magnificent contour of her bust, her white shoulders, and
-taper arms, and adding even to the coquettish side glance of the
-half-veiled eye, the most splendid of all her natural ornaments were
-those great, heavy loose braids on which the sunlight shone.
-
-What was to be the future of all this?
-
-On the strong friendship of Basil Mierowitz he could fully rely; but
-then Natalie was on bad terms with the vindictive Empress, and he,
-Balgonie, was a soldier, and, according to the rules of the Russian
-service, could not marry without permission from his colonel, who, at
-present, would not dare to accord it, circumstanced as the bride
-would be.
-
-Marry? What would the proud old Russian boyar say, or do, or think,
-when he heard that the penniless Scot--the mere adventurer--the
-soldier of fortune, was the accepted lover of his daughter, and that
-he had dared to lift his eyes to her otherwise than in the way of
-solemn and awful respect?
-
-If his High Excellency could have but peeped into the aforesaid
-alcove on some of the occasions referred to! The mere fact of being
-a Scot would not have conveyed much to the mind of the Count. If to
-any unlettered Englishman of the present day, the names of Moldavia,
-Croatia, Bulgaria, Servia, Pomerania, Grodno, Mingrelia, and so
-forth, give but a vague idea of their whereabouts or history, it was
-perhaps worse in the Count's instance; for so far as he, worthy man,
-was concerned, or for all he knew to the contrary, the Land of Cakes
-might have been in the flying island of Laputa.
-
-"He would be furious, no doubt," thought Balgonie; "but he might
-soothe his troubled mind by flogging a few serfs, shooting a few
-brown bears, and draining sundry horns of quass."
-
-Charlie had been present at more than one Russian marriage and
-betrothal, and the coolness of the ceremony had excited his
-astonishment and repugnance; for, in that country, those
-life-enduring arrangements are concluded by a mere match-maker, who
-makes the proposal, not to the girl, but to her father. He
-remembered particularly the case of Lieutenant Tschekin's espousal
-with the daughter of General Weymarn, who, having stated her dower to
-the go-between,--a thousand peasants or so,--the gallant subaltern
-was satisfied, and thus, as usual, the whole affair was settled
-without the taste or inclination of the young lady being consulted or
-considered. In Russia, the papa consents, and, according to some old
-custom, mamma pretends to object and weep.
-
-"My daughter," said the General, "I have given you away in presence
-of my aide-de-camp."
-
-"To one I know, father?" she asked.
-
-"No."
-
-"To whom, then?" she continued, perfectly undisturbed.
-
-"One you shall soon know--here he comes; and this is thy bridegroom,
-daughter: art satisfied?"
-
-The young lady, of course, declared she was satisfied. She and the
-Lieutenant placed their hands behind them, stretched out their necks,
-pouting their lips for a very frigid kiss, and the matter was soon
-concluded by a priest.
-
-When Balgonie thought of the delicacy and gentleness of Natalie, and
-remembered the marriage of the Lieutenant Tschekin, he shrunk alike
-from the idea of seeing her subjected to the mummery of a Greek
-espousal and the vulgar horrors of a wedding feast and drinking bout
-_à la Russe_.
-
-At last he began to wake from his dream, to find the stern necessity
-of departing; and, indeed, the snub-nosed Podatchkine, who was always
-hovering about, seemed as a perpetual reminder of the duty he was
-neglecting. The lovers were solemnly betrothed in
-secret,--Mariolizza was their only confidant,--and at present they
-could but arrange to wait until they could mutually confide in Basil
-Mierowitz, whom Natalie, ere long, expected to see. To write to each
-other, save by special messenger, was deemed at present unwise; but
-Balgonie would visit her as he returned again to Novgorod.
-
-So the last evening they were to spend together came; and they were
-seated, wreathed in each other's arms, with Natalie's cheek resting
-on Balgonie's shoulder, in an embowered rustic seat, not far from the
-very place where he had so boldly crossed the swollen river on that
-eventful night.
-
-Charlie's heart was full of sadness and bewilderment; he could but
-mutter and whisper of his love and their hopes, and again and again
-kiss Natalie on the cheek, on the lips and snowy neck, her hands and
-arms, while her tears flowed fast; for she had all the cooing
-tenderness of a ringdove now, and could only murmur from time to
-time:--
-
-"Oh, Carl, Carl--my own Carl!" and so forth; and, like other young
-ladies similarly circumstanced on the eve of separation, believed
-herself to be the most miserable being in the world. But amid all
-this, she suddenly started and grew pale, on seeing a figure approach.
-
-"See, Carl, see!" she exclaimed: "that horrible woman must be ominous
-of evil at such a time. Why has she been permitted to approach?"
-
-Balgonie saw, at a little distance, only a Russian gipsy girl,
-possessed evidently of considerable personal attractions. She stood
-timidly, and irresolute whether to advance or retire; and bowed her
-head with great humility, while crossing her fine but dusky hands and
-arms upon her breast. In old age the Russian female gipsies are as
-remarkable for their extreme hideousness, as in youth they are famous
-for personal beauty; so this young girl was full of picturesque
-loveliness, and instead of being clothed in rags, as the wanderers of
-her race are elsewhere, her costume was brilliant in colours and rich
-in material. She had large glittering ear-rings; a gaudy kerchief
-bound her black tresses; and her rounded cheeks being freely rouged,
-added to the wonderful lustre of her dark and dusky eyes, and to the
-generally theatrical character of her singular beauty and bearing.
-
-"Oh!" resumed Natalie, with something of a shudder, "'tis Olga
-Paulowna: don't let her speak to us in our parting hour, Carl, lest
-we be compelled to hear her sing, and that may perhaps bode evil.
-The dvornick, I understand, has thrice by dog and whip driven away
-this gipsy girl, who has come to the house again and again,
-ostensibly to seek alms, but doubtless only to steal or work mischief
-by her cunning; for though our Russian gipsies are not allowed to
-pitch their tents on any land without the express consent of the
-owner, this girl's brother, Nicholas Paulovitch (as he calls
-himself), a half-blood, has permanently settled on our estate,
-somewhere in the forests, though he is despised and loathed by the
-peasantry, whom, doubtless, he loathes and hates most cordially in
-turn. I do wish she would go away without being ordered to do so."
-
-Little did Natalie know that those ill-requited visits of the poor
-gipsy girl had direct reference to the life and safety of him whose
-hand clasped hers so tenderly and confidingly.
-
-"Faugh!" said Natalie, with increasing annoyance; "she is about to
-sing,--something naughty no doubt,--but her voice will soon summon
-the dvornick."
-
-Many of those female wanderers in Russia can sing divinely; and it is
-on record that even the great Catalani was so enchanted by the
-melodious voice of a gipsy girl at Moscow, that she took from her own
-shoulders a superb shawl, which had been given to her by the Empress,
-and placed it on those of the nomadic singer, "as a tribute from art
-to nature."
-
-And Olga now began to sing with great sweetness one of those Russian
-songs, by which the gipsies, to flatter the people, sought to
-foretell the downfall of the Crescent; and many such prophetic
-strains were current even during the war in the Crimea, as
-foreshadowing the fate of the "sick man" at Constantinople.
-
- "Years after years shall roll,
- Ages o'er ages glide.
- Before the world's control
- Shall check the Crescent's pride.
- Banished from place to place,
- Where'er the ocean's roar,
- The mighty gipsy race,
- Shall visit every shore.
-
- "But when the hundredth year
- Shall three times doubled be,
- Then shall the end appear
- Of all their slavery.
- Then shall the warlike powers
- From distant climes return,
- Egypt again be ours,
- While the Turkish domes shall burn!
-
- "Again the Christian's cross
- Shall over Stamboul wave,
- And ruin, weeds, and moss,
- Mark the last Sooltan's grave!
- Again shall Christian bells
- Ring where the Muezzins cry,
- When across the Dardanelles
- The Moslem hordes shall fly!
-
- "So Egypt shall be freed,
- Her tribes return once more,
- Their flocks and herds to feed
- Where their fathers dwelt of yore:
- When all our warlike powers
- From distant climes return,
- Then Egypt shall be ours,
- While the Turkish turrets burn!"
-
-
-The last line ended in a shriek, with which a cry from Natalie
-mingled; for the cruel dvornick had been stealing through the thicket
-unperceived, and now bestowed a heavy lash across the tender
-shoulders of the cowering and shrinking girl; but ere he could repeat
-it, Balgonie sprang forward, arrested the descending whip, and then,
-placing in the hand of the singer a few Livonian groschen, bade her
-hasten away, on which she departed, with tears of pain and gratitude,
-after pressing his fingers to her lips; and, in her terror and
-confusion, leaving her task undone--her warning of coming treachery
-untold.
-
-"Oh, Carl!" said Natalie, laying her head again on Balgonie's breast,
-"dearest Carl, I am so glad she has gone without anathematizing
-us--or, or weaving some mischievous spell; for, smile as you may, I
-can't help fearing those people! I am a true Russian, and dread the
-evil eye!"
-
-Richer by a lock of dark and silky hair and a diamond ring (both the
-objects of many a secret kiss), but leaving his heart behind him, in
-one swift hour after this little episode, Balgonie had departed to
-meet, and, for greater security, to travel in consort with, a caravan
-of a hundred and fifty boors, who were conveying sugar from Moscow to
-St. Petersburg.
-
-He was guided again by the sly Podatchkine, who had resolved to take
-especial good care that the said caravan should be avoided.
-
-"God be with you, Hospodeen--God be with you--adieu," said the old
-Count, lifting his square velvet cap courteously, as he bade farewell
-to his guest at the porte-cochère.
-
-Balgonie so respectfully kissed the hands of Natalie and Mariolizza,
-that none could have detected a difference in his manner to either;
-and certainly none could have suspected that the tears of the former
-were yet wet upon his cheek--her kisses lingering on his lip, that he
-seemed to leave his soul upon her hand, and that the wrung hearts of
-both were swollen with concealed emotion.
-
-"Uich!" thought Corporal Michail Podatchkine as he rode after the
-officer into the deep forest, "I'd as soon think of kissing the foot
-as the hand; who knows among what carrion either may have been stuck?
-By St. Nicholas, I would rather eat a sheep's tail or a rump steak
-from an old troop mare than kiss either."
-
-Some hours after Balgonie's departure, and when Natalie in the
-solitude of her own room was abandoned to tears and unavailing
-regrets, a trusted messenger from her brother arrived with a brief
-note, written so enigmatically that none save herself could have
-understood or deciphered it; but the spirit of it was briefly this:--
-
-"All is arranged for freeing the prisoner of S. (chlusselburg) by a
-stratagem. A dispatch that may counteract, if not baffle our plans,
-and fatally compromise us all, has been sent by old Weymarn to St.
-Petersburg. I know not who the bearer is; but be assured of this,
-_he will never reach it alive_. We have set Podatchkine on his
-track, and he, worthy Livonian, for two hundred roubles, would skin
-his own father alive."
-
-After reading this pleasant epistle, little wonder is it that Natalie
-was found by Mariolizza, as the twilight deepened, half senseless
-upon her bed, cold, in tears, and utterly miserable.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-DELUDED.
-
-A lover has occasionally been likened to a fool, as being a man
-possessed by one idea, his mistress. This was certainly somewhat of
-poor Charlie Balgonie's state of mind. He saw only the dark eyes,
-the half drooped lids, and the farewell glance of Natalie; so full of
-hidden and tender meaning; and while thinking of her and of her last
-words and promises, their mutual hopes of the future, based almost
-entirely on Basil, he fell an easy prey to the plans and schemes of
-the wily Corporal Podatchkine, who saw only his anticipated two
-hundred silver roubles; and who, knowing the country as well as if it
-had been every acre, rood, and verst his own property, led him on and
-on he knew not where; but, at all events, two hours after they should
-have met the caravan, they found themselves, to all appearance, lost
-in a dense forest of dark pine trees.
-
-Failing the caravan, having now proceeded, as he believed, some
-twenty miles or so, Balgonie had thoughts of passing the night at the
-house of a friend of Count Mierowitz, a _duornin_, of whom he had
-been told by Mariolizza, who laughingly assured him, that this
-personage was "a fine Russian gentleman of the old school, who beat
-his wife regularly every Thursday and Saturday with a whip of
-thongs," and was seldom sober.
-
-Those duornins were country gentlemen, who held their lands by
-knights' service, and were bound to attend the Czar on horseback in
-time of war. Formerly it was sufficient to send a man well armed and
-mounted; but Peter the Great first compelled them or their sons to
-serve in person, if they could not pay for a substitute.
-
-In short, though he knew it not, Balgonie had been for the last two
-hours riding merely in a wide circle, and, by the careful guidance of
-Podatchkine, was now not many miles from the hut of the gipsy
-woodman, Nicholas Paulovitch; and, consequently, he was much nearer
-the Castle of Louga than he had the least idea of.
-
-On this night there was a glorious Aurora in the north, and full of
-his love, his own tender thoughts, and inspired by the beauty of the
-scene, it seemed to the somewhat provoked Podatchkine, that the
-dreaming Captain was quite disposed to pass the night where he was.
-
-When the dense wood of stupendous pines opened into long vistas, the
-whole northern quarter of the sky could be seen, illuminated from the
-horizon to the zenith. Gloriously bright as the most brilliant
-phosphorus, masses of fire arose in the form of columns that waved,
-towered, and shot into the air, with streaks of fainter light
-between. Anon they all blended and merged into each other with
-renewed grandeur, aslant, or radiating from a centre, like the sticks
-of a mighty fan. All that portion of the heavens seemed a mass of
-shining gold, rubies, and sapphires, with a wondrous light streaming
-over them, broadening, brightening, and deepening, then fading away,
-to flash forth again in greater beauty and glory, while, as if to
-enhance the magnificence of this illumination, many falling stars
-shot across it, leaving in their train sparkles of light, more
-brilliant even than the glory that blazed beyond. In black outline
-between, and in the immediate foreground, towered the dark and solemn
-pines, in solitude and silence.
-
-Not a sound was heard but the occasional snort of their horses, or
-the cry of a distant wolf.
-
-Balgonie was surmising whether Natalie would be surveying the
-beautiful natural illumination from her window, or from the terrace:
-he forgot that it was nothing new to her. Certainly it proved of
-little interest to Michail Podatchkine, who, under his thick beard,
-growled at the officer for loitering.
-
-The Scottish islesmen call the streamers of the Aurora "the merry
-dancers;" but the Siberians name them "the raging host:" and Balgonie
-was reflecting what a relief their brilliance must prove to the
-lonely hunters, who at that very time were pursuing the white bear
-and the blue fox, far beyond the Lena, and along the shores of the
-Icy Sea, when his attendant disturbed his reverie.
-
-"Well, Michail," said he, in reply to some remark in which the
-Corporal, who saw nothing wonderful in the matter, urged that they
-should proceed, "we have missed the sugar caravan, and cannot
-discover the residence of the duornin I spoke of, so I am rather
-provoked with you."
-
-"Oh, Excellency, who can withstand God or the Great Novgorod?" whined
-the fellow, using an old Russian proverb.
-
-Jean Paul Richter says, "the more weakness, the more lying; force
-goes straight, but any cannon-ball with cavities in it goes crooked."
-Some such thought as this occurred to Balgonie, as he checked his
-horse, and half turning round, with a stern expression in his face,
-which the light in the north made sufficiently plain, he said:--
-
-"Rascal! I fear you are deceiving me again!"
-
-Hustled up on his saddle, rather than in it, with his knees on his
-holsters and his lance slung behind him, Podatchkine made many signs
-of the cross, and called on St. Sergius and all the other
-_moshtschi_, or saints of Russia, to bear witness that he was as
-innocent as a young bear of any such foul idea; but only begged that
-his Excellency would proceed, and assured him that the track they
-were on must assuredly bring them, ere long, to some woodman's
-dwelling.
-
-At this time, such is the slavish influence of superstition, that
-Podatchkine, for mere fellowship, kept close to the very man against
-whom he had formed the most fiendish schemes; for stories of the Wood
-Fairies,--of the _Leechie_, or Forest-demon, whose fangs tore the
-benighted asunder,--of the _Domovoi_, or mischievous Russian
-Brownie,--of the _Vodianoi_, or smiling River-spirit, who lured
-travellers to a watery doom,--of wolves and bears in ravening herds,
-came fast upon his memory; for the forest was growing denser, and the
-darkness deepened painfully after the Aurora faded away, and a few
-solitary stars alone glinted through the openings between the broad,
-flat, pendant branches of the intertwisted pines.
-
-The silence of the night was now broken only by the whistling croak
-of the _valdchnep_, or great woodcock, as he darted from amid the
-black gloom of a pine tree, or the lighter shadow of the graceful,
-but, as yet, leafless birch; and the craven and clamorous anxiety
-that had been giving real pangs, and even qualms of conscience, to
-the superstitious Podatchkine began to subside, when the wood opened
-a little, a red light appeared, and they approached the cottage of
-Nicholas Paulovitch, the half-bred.
-
-It was, as already stated, built of logs, squared by the hatchet
-outside and inside, and whitened by chalk: before it yawned a deep
-draw-well, with a bucket, handle, and winch.
-
-"'Tis the cottage of a man I know. Here, Excellency, we can pass the
-night," said Podatchkine, leaping from his horse and dutifully taking
-Balgonie's bridle, as if to anticipate any proposition of proceeding
-further. "There is a shed behind where I shall stable our horses:
-Nicholas, I know, will make us welcome to his lodge."
-
-In a few minutes more, Balgonie found himself seated in the cottage,
-the aspect of which struck him as being peculiarly comfortless,
-dingy, and squalid, as he viewed it by the light of a _loutchin_, or
-species of pine torch, which stood in a rusty iron holder on the
-rough deal table, whereon lay a pack of frayed and dog-eared cards.
-
-On the walls were some rude images, stuck over with crumbs of black
-bread, which attracted the flies in summer and the dirt at all times.
-In a place of honour was a holy effigy, with some train oil flaring
-before it in a tin sconce, as a species of votive lamp; for the
-proprietor affected religion quite as much as Mr. Gamaliel Balgonie
-did in a more civilised part of the world.
-
-The furniture consisted of a few plain stools, and some very dirty
-bearskins spread on the floor in the corners, as beds; and on the
-table was a pitcher of foaming and seething quass, with wooden bowls
-to drink it by.
-
-Balgonie took in all these details at a glance.
-
-How great would have been his surprise, if he had known that after
-riding so many miles, he was only a short distance from _her_, from
-Natalie, who was now weeping bitterly and sleeplessly on the bosom of
-her cousin for him, and for the fate she dreaded, and yet had not the
-power to avert, or from which to save him.
-
-In addition to Podatchkine and the host, Nicholas Paulovitch, who
-stood respectfully at a little distance from Balgonie, and was
-appraising the exact value of his costume, arms, and ornaments, even
-to Natalie's diamond ring, there was present another ill-visaged
-fellow, with a powerful figure, square shoulders, and giant beard,
-like every Russian of the lower order; eyes that were small and
-piercing, like those of a mouse; a long, fierce nose and jagged
-teeth, hair shorn off close above the eyebrows and brushed all down
-straight from the crown of his head, which in form resembled a cone
-or a pine-apple.
-
-This barbarian, who was dressed chiefly in a shoubah of sheepskin,
-and had a small, but sharp, hatchet and dagger in his girdle, was a
-Stepniak, from a district where nothing like a town was ever seen or
-known, but whose aid and strength Paulovitch thought might be useful
-and necessary in the work he and Podatchkine had cut out for
-themselves in the night.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-THE CORPORAL IN HIS OWN TRAP.
-
-Balgonie was rather weary after his long and desultory ride by rough
-and unfrequented roads, chiefly devious forest paths; he felt
-thirsty, and looked at the pitcher of quass.
-
-"Will his Excellency drink?" asked Nicholas Paulovitch, in his hoarse
-and husky voice.
-
-Now as quass is simply a species of sour beer, made of rye and
-oatmeal, coloured by a red berry, and is generally the beverage by
-which the Russians wash down their coarse bread and salt, Balgonie
-declined: the Stepniak proposed to add thereto a dash of train oil;
-but the suggestion made the young officer shudder.
-
-"I have fortunately one bottle of Rhine wine," said the woodman, with
-a rapid and furtive glance at his comrades; "his Excellency will
-doubtless honour us by taking it with his supper, at least with such
-fare as the forest produces, a stewed rabbit or so."
-
-"I thank you, good fellow. Where is this cottage situated?"
-
-"Situated," repeated Nicholas, with a quick and uneasy glance at the
-Corporal, fearing there might be some discrepancy in their
-information.
-
-"Yes, in what part of the country?" said Podatchkine; "for we
-naturally wish to know."
-
-"Near Velie."
-
-"Then I am somewhere about forty versts from the Louga?"
-
-"Yes, Excellency, precisely," replied the rascal.
-
-"Hence, if my horse is fresh, I may reach Schlusselburg to-morrow?"
-
-"Scarcely, as it lies fully a hundred versts beyond Velie," said
-Nicholas.
-
-"Is the distance so great?" exclaimed Balgonie, little knowing that
-it was even more, and all unsuspicious of how these wretches were
-deluding him.*
-
-
-* The cottage of those assassins is said to have been situated ten
-versts, or about eight miles distant from Louga on the road to Velie.
-_Vide_ dispatch from General Weymarn to the Empress, dated 8th
-August, "concerning Carl Ivanovitoh Balgonie, a Scottish Captain in
-the Regiment of Smolensko."--_Utrecht Gazette_.
-
-
-"But, Excellency, we may prove more able guides than Michail
-Podatchkine," said the gipsy woodman; "for we--that is the Stepniak
-and I--must proceed to St. Petersburg to-morrow, on a little piece of
-business we shall have to perform together."
-
-"Poor devils!" thought Podatchkine, "if you take his body to St.
-Petersburg, you will both be accused of murder and knouted, as sure
-as my name is Michail; so I shall save my fifty silver roubles."
-
-Even at the present day in Russia, few will venture to receive or
-meddle with a dead body, or attempt to succour a dying or a drowning
-person, in dread of the dangerous accusations and extortions of the
-police.
-
-A sound, as of footsteps, and of something like a drinking vessel
-falling on the floor of an upper apartment, made the woodman start up
-with an oath of astonishment and alarm. He hurriedly applied a
-ladder to the trap which gave admission to this place, and ascended
-into it; but returned almost immediately to say, "there was no one
-there." The evident surprise and alarm of the three men at this
-trivial occurrence, is said to have been the first cause of exciting
-Balgonie's suspicion.
-
-He glanced at the Stepniak, who sat silently observant in a corner,
-drinking his quass, with his feet resting against the rude peitchka,
-or stone stove, which was built into the log wall of the cottage, and
-when surveying his vast bulk and colossal stature, together with his
-singularly ferocious aspect, the reflection occurred to him, that he
-should have placed his pistols in his girdle instead of leaving them
-in the holsters of the saddle.
-
-He was the reverse of timid; he was "brave even to rashness, and had
-faced death many times" (to quote General Weymarn) since his career
-of wandering began; but the idea certainly did flash upon his mind,
-that his situation in that lonely forest had its perils, and that two
-men more repulsive in aspect and in bearing than the gipsy and
-Stepniak, he had never seen, even in Russia.
-
-Was it some mysterious and intuitive sense of danger drawing near
-that made such thoughts pass through the steady mind of Balgonie?
-
-He and Podatchkine were both armed, and even were these men outlaws,
-they would scarcely, he believed, dare to assault an officer on
-military duty; besides, the very name of Schlusselburg, whither he
-was proceeding, carried a wholesome terror with it; so dismissing his
-casual suspicions, Charlie unbuckled his sword, and seated himself at
-the table, on which a cold supper of stewed rabbits and coarse rye
-bread was laid for the four who were present.
-
-A platter was placed for a fifth person whom Nicholas remarked to
-Podatchkine in a growling tone was still abroad in the forest, or had
-not returned from some place which was named in a whisper.
-
-With an affectation of extreme respect and courtesy, none of the
-three worthies would seat themselves at the table, until Balgonie
-specially invited and urged them in succession to do so.
-
-The bottle of Rhine wine was produced from the apartment above and
-opened. The length of the cork and the dust on the bottle (wherever
-it came from originally) argued well of the contents, and two horns,
-one of which, had a handsome silver rim, were placed for the Captain
-and the Corporal.
-
-The former was rather surprised to find such a drinking vessel as
-this silver mounted cup in a place so squalid, and he was about to
-lift and examine it, when Nicholas Paulovitch, with almost nervous
-haste, filled it, and also that of the Corporal, to the brim.
-
-To the surprise of Balgonie, the latter exhibited some undisguised
-alarm on seeing wine placed before _him_; it was an attention under
-all the circumstances he neither wished nor expected; and so he
-declined to drink of it, saying that he was "a true Russ, and would
-adhere to the quass."
-
-"Nay, fear not, friend Michail," said the woodman, "'tis the best of
-Rhine wine. The cup with the silver mounting is of course for his
-Excellency the Hospodeen," he added with a quiet but grim
-significance, which the wily Cossack quite understood, so he drained
-the wine horn without further objection.
-
-Soon after having supped, and imbibed his full share of the wine
-bottle, Balgonie expressed a desire for repose, as he wished to
-depart by daybreak; but he had other reasons for retiring so early.
-He did not much relish the society of the gipsy, the Stepniak, and
-the Corporal of Cossacks; and he wished to indulge in reverie, to
-commune with himself, and let the current of his thoughts run
-undisturbed on Natalie and their adieus.
-
-"This way, Excellency," said Nicholas, with alacrity, lifting the
-pine torch in its iron loutchin, and ushering him up the stair, a
-mere common ladder, and through the trap-door into the little
-apartment above, where his couch, composed merely of skins of the
-bear and sheep awaited him, and where he could see the dark forest
-and the occasional stars through a small window that gave light and
-air to the place, which was so limited in size, that it somewhat
-resembled a little cabin in a ship.
-
-Left in this miserable den to his own reflections and to
-darkness--when Nicholas descended with the pine torch, carefully
-closed the trap-door and secured it on the lower side by a wooden
-bolt, moreover, softly removing the ladder--Charlie Balgonie placed
-his sword conveniently at hand, and cast himself upon the pile of
-skins that were to form his bed, and thought he had often fared worse
-in the bivouacs of Silesia and Bavaria.
-
-"So--he is safe," said Nicholas Paulovitch, looking upward with a
-grin of savage satisfaction at the closed trap, as he replaced the
-loutchin on the table, and then closely scrutinised the Corporal,
-whose eyes had already become red and inflamed.
-
-"Hush!" said Podatchkine, "take care."
-
-"Why?" asked Nicholas, in a hoarse whisper.
-
-"Because all may not be yet as you wish it, and in Russia sometimes
-the tongue flays the shoulders and cuts off the head."
-
-"True," said the hitherto taciturn Stepniak, who was carefully
-feeling the keen edge of his hatchet; "as the Tartars have it, 'when
-you have spoken the word, it rules over you; while it is yet
-unspoken, you rule over it.' But it seems to me, Michail
-Podatchkine, that you have taken a great deal of trouble, and wasted
-much time in the matter of this dispatch. As you passed through the
-forest together, why the devil did you not give him a good
-_tzchick_"--(which we can only render "prod")--"in the back with your
-lance?"
-
-"Because, if a wound is found on him, folks might say he had been
-murdered; and he must bear not a scar."
-
-"And neither shall you, friend Podatchkine," said Paulovitch with a
-cruel grin.
-
-"Come--don't make unpleasant jests," growled the Corporal, with a
-yawn and a shudder; "wounds have not been fashionable since Orloff
-and Bernikoff supped with Peter III."
-
-"You grow wary as you grow older, Corporal."
-
-"I have no desire to travel with the next caravan to Siberia, with
-one side of my head and face shaved, and an iron rosary, some five
-pound weight, at my wrists."
-
-"Fear not--you will never see Siberia."
-
-"Then you have made all sure about this Ivanovitch Balgonie?" said
-Podatchkine, whose utterance was becoming somewhat inarticulate.
-
-"Ay, sure enough; the cups were----"
-
-"The cups!"
-
-"The cup, I mean, was drugged with those black berries which grow in
-the forest hereabout; the same stuff used by fine ladies to whiten
-their hands."
-
-"But why the cup and not the wine?"
-
-"For this reason: I might have been constrained to drink with him;
-and I had no desire to fall, like some one else, into a trap of my
-own baiting."
-
-Podatchkine, on whom the powerful soporific with which his cup had
-been drugged--the sleepy nightshade--had been rapidly taking effect,
-and whose small cunning eyes had been opening and shutting
-alternately, while a numbness stole with a weariness over all his
-faculties, seemed suddenly to grasp at the terrible meaning of the
-speaker. He gave a start--he essayed to rouse himself and shout, but
-in doing so, toppled off his stool, and sank on the clay floor in a
-profound slumber.
-
-"At last!" said the half-breed, administering a kick to the prostrate
-figure; "at last he has gone to sleep; now to make sure that he shall
-never waken more. Ah! the Asiatic! he was just getting suspicious at
-the end."
-
-"There are two kopecs in his pocket," said the Stepniak, after
-investigating the garments of the snorting Podatchkine, who was now
-breathing heavily through his red snub nose, which between his
-scrubby beard and his shock of hair, was almost the only feature of
-his face that was visible.
-
-"Leave the kopecs where you found them!" said Nicholas, with a gipsy
-oath.
-
-"Wherefore?" asked the Stepniak with surprise.
-
-"It will seem all the more honest in thee, my good Stepniak, when you
-take the body--bodies, I should say--to the nearest military post.
-You have but to say you found them dead in the forest."
-
-"And the wet clothing?"
-
-"Dew or rain--what a head you have!"
-
-"True--true; ah! what a man you are, Nicholas Paulovitch, so full of
-bright thoughts! That idea would never have occurred to me."
-
-"Nor the other either. Quick, now; we have not a moment to lose!"
-
-They extinguished the pine torch, and tying the Corporal's hands
-securely with a cord, carried him forth to the draw-well before the
-cottage. Then they substituted that worthy warrior's heels for the
-bucket which was usually appended to the rope, and permitting the
-winch to revolve softly and gently, lowered him down, snorting and
-gasping in his unnatural slumber, head foremost, into the deep dark
-water below!
-
-The Stepniak turned the iron handle of the winch or windlass, while
-the gipsy guided the rope with its heavy burden. He was deliberately
-lowered down until only his heels remained above water, as the two
-wretches could see by the starlight when stooping and peering into
-the darkness below.
-
-The snorting had ceased now!
-
-The dying Corporal was heard to struggle with his hands, as if he
-sought to free them from the cords; a few babbles filled with air
-rose to the surface and burst. This continued for a minute, during
-which all was silent elsewhere, save the half-suppressed breathing of
-the two assassins, and the dreary sound of the night wind, as it
-shook the dark branches of the giant pines that towered in solemn
-gloom around them.
-
-Nicholas Paulovitch listened intently, and kept his eyes fixed on the
-cottage where their other victim lay, as he doubted not, sunk in what
-was intended to be his last sleep.
-
-Anon, all became still--deathly still--in the depths of the dark
-well; the rope ceased to vibrate, and the bubbles came no more.
-
-"Let us leave him here for a few minutes, and now for the Captain and
-his dispatch! By the time that we return, the Corporal will be as
-stiff as if he stood for sale in the frozen market on the fête of St.
-Nicholas!" said the gipsy, with one of his diabolical grins; while
-the Stepniak, with a smile of satisfaction that showed all his huge
-yellow teeth, smoothed down to his eyebrows the thick coarse black
-hair that grew from the apex of his conical caput.
-
-They now re-entered the cottage, and again lighted the torch in its
-iron loutchin. All remained just as they had left it; the quass
-pitcher, the wooden bowls, the two cups, and the empty wine bottle
-were on the table, and the platters, with the débris of their rustic
-supper; but the superstitious gipsy felt a species of shudder come
-over him, for when the torch flared up in the night wind and cast
-strange shadows on the dingy and discoloured walls of the log-hut, it
-seemed to his diseased imagination, for a moment, as if the outline
-of the drowned Corporal still occupied the stool on which he had been
-seated.
-
-"Come," said he huskily, "the dispatch!--and then for the other!"
-
-They listened intently, and placed the ladder against the trap-door.
-All was still--not even the breathing of Balgonie was heard.
-Ascending first, with a knife in his teeth, in case of unexpected
-resistance, the gipsy knocked thrice on the trap without receiving
-any response. He then withdrew the wooden bolt, pushed it up, and
-introducing his head and shoulders, held aloft the pine torch, and
-turned towards the bed of skins.
-
-It was unoccupied; and in a moment he saw that the bare and desolate
-chamber was without a tenant!
-
-"Malediction!" he shouted; "he has escaped us--but how?
-Search--search! He cannot be far off, after the dose I have given
-him; search--and we must use our hatchets now!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-OLGA, THE GIPSY.
-
-Balgonie had scarcely thrown himself at length on the soft, but not
-very odorous, pile of skins which formed his couch, when a face
-appeared at the little window, which was pulled open, and a voice
-called to him in a low and earnest whisper:
-
-"Hospodeen--Carl Ivanovitch! Hospodeen, attend to me; but oh, be
-silent, as you value your life!"
-
-He started up, softly approached the window, and saw, by the dim
-starlight, a fair female face with very dark eyes, white and regular
-teeth, and long, glittering ear-rings.
-
-"I have seen this face before," thought he; "but when, and where?"
-
-Balgonie, in truth, was too much of a lover to have more than one
-female face ever before his eyes--that of Natalie Mierowna.
-
-"I am Olga, the gipsy," said the girl, humbly.
-
-"Olga! Olga! whom I saw at the house of Count Mierowitz this
-evening?"
-
-"The same, Hospodeen!" (Balgonie expressed an exclamation of
-astonishment to find her, as he thought, so far from that place.)
-"You gave me a silver kopec once upon a time, at Krejko, when passing
-through that town with Michail Podatchkine; and, this evening you
-saved me from the whip of the dvornick, when for the third time I had
-ventured near the Count's mansion, in a vain search for you, or the
-Hospoza Mierowna."
-
-"In search of us--and for what purpose, girl?"
-
-"To warn you, that for nearly a month past, a plot has been formed to
-deprive you of a valuable paper, and even of your life."
-
-"My life--when?"
-
-"On the first opportunity."
-
-"By whom--and where, girl--where?"
-
-"Here in this solitary hut--even now your assassins are in
-consultation--listen."
-
-He placed his ear to the trap-door, and heard the murmur of hoarse
-whispers below.
-
-"Hush," said Podatchkine, as already related, "take care!" Then
-followed the question of the subtle and ferocious Stepniak, as to why
-he had not given Balgonie a "prod" with his lance in the forest; and
-the whole conversation in all its horrible details, up to the moment
-when the wretched Corporal with death and terror mingling in his
-soul, fell from his seat in a stupor.
-
-"Father in heaven!" exclaimed Balgonie, full of despair and horror,
-as he mechanically felt for his fatal dispatch, to ascertain that it
-was yet safe, "I have drunk of this drugged stuff, and am also lost!"
-
-"Nay," said the gipsy, hurriedly, "nay----"
-
-"I drank the accursed wine from a cup----"
-
-"True; but not from the cup which was intended for you."
-
-"How?--speak!--speak!"
-
-"The wine and the cups too were all stolen by Podatchkine, with many
-other things, at different times, from the household of Count
-Mierowitz. This night you were duly expected here, and thus a plan
-was laid to destroy both you and your treacherous guide. Two cups
-were fully and deeply drugged by my brother Nicholas: one was richly
-mounted with silver; and knowing well that it was to be set before
-you, I abstracted it barely an hour ago, substituting another of the
-same kind, and now I have it here. Oh, Hospodeen, a narrow escape
-you have had!"
-
-Balgonie began to breathe more freely; but, assured that never had he
-run so narrow a risk of death, he felt, though enraged and furious,
-his blood run cold, when contemplating the fate intended for him.
-Peeping through a chink of the hatch or trap-door, he saw that the
-ladder of access had been removed, and that the door of the squalid
-cottage was open now, for the loutchin flared more than ever in the
-night wind. It was then extinguished; but still he could see, and
-hear them dragging forth the passive form of Corporal Podatchkine,
-whom he supposed to be dead.
-
-Personally, Balgonie felt that he was no match for either of the
-powerful giants below--men whose bodily strength was quite equal to
-their ferocity, and whose daggers and hatchets might make mince-meat
-of him. Moreover, they had now deprived Podatchkine of his sabre and
-loaded pistols, and were thus more completely armed. Charlie had his
-hand on his sword--a handsome Turkish sabre; but relinquishing the
-ideas either of attack or defence, while the glow of rage rose in his
-breast and cheek, he thought only of immediate flight.
-
-"If you would save your life and the dispatch of the Empress, follow
-me this instant, and get your horse before they return: you have not
-a moment to lose."
-
-It was the gipsy girl who spoke again, in her low earnest whisper,
-and with perfect decision.
-
-"Then I owe my escape--my safety----"
-
-"To my gratitude. Pass through the window and descend by the wall."
-
-"Women," says a certain philosopher, "are not at all inferior to men
-in coolness and courage, and perhaps much less in resolution than is
-commonly imagined; the reason they appear so is, because women affect
-to be more afraid than they really are, and men pretend to be less."
-
-Balgonie found that the courageous girl to whose guidance he now
-trusted himself, had been enabled to reach the window by standing on
-the roof of the outhouse, or shed, in which Podatchkine had stabled
-their horses. The whole edifice being built of squared logs, was not
-very high, and it afforded easy means of ascent and descent, by the
-interstices consequent to its rude construction by the hatchet. He
-soon leaped to the ground, and softly assisted her to descend.
-
-"Here is your horse: you see, Hospodeen, that your kindness to the
-poor gipsy girl was not thrown away."
-
-Balgonie looked rapidly to his bit and girth, adjusted himself in his
-saddle, hooked up the hilt of his sabre, and shortened his rein,
-almost unaware of the black tragedy being so coolly and deliberately
-acted on the other side of the cottage.
-
-"Ten versts farther from this will bring you to the monastery of the
-Troitza, which you will know by its three domes. You have but to
-ride straight westward by the forest path; God keep you, and may you
-and the beautiful Hospoza be happy in your loves!"
-
-"Tell me, gipsy girl----"
-
-"Ah, I can foretell nothing, save that in love mere merit is of
-little matter."
-
-"What is of most importance--beauty?"
-
-"No."
-
-"What then?"
-
-"Success, Hospodeen."
-
-He almost laughed, as he slipped into her hand two xervonitz (the
-largest coins he had), and in a moment more was galloping over the
-soft grass of the forest path she had indicated.
-
-"By Jove," thought he, as he spurred on, "I shall not be sorry when
-this infernal dispatch is safe in the hands of old Bernikoff; and to
-think of that wretch of a Podatchkine! I always expected the fellow
-to be a rogue, but not of so deep a dye!"
-
-The unfortunate Corporal, now, as he deserved, hanging head foremost
-downward in the draw-well, stark and stiff and cold, had been to all
-appearance a good Russian, Balgonie reflected: he neither confessed,
-fasted, nor did penance (too much bother all that would have been for
-the Corporal of Cossacks); but he kept Lent regularly to all
-appearance; made a sign of the cross fussily before and after every
-meal; always went to church when in camp or quarters; and never
-omitted his prayers and genuflexions at night, if in haunted places
-or when passing a wayside cross, especially if any one was by. All
-this was no doubt studiously hypocritical; and Charlie remembered
-that his worthy Uncle Gram kept Fast-days and "Sabbaths" with stern
-and gloomy rigour; that he said a long and sonorous prayer before
-meals--a longer prayer after them; that he went thrice daily to kirk
-at the ordained periods, and had nightly a noisy expounding and
-out-pouring of the spirit that would have put the great John of
-Geneva himself to the blush.
-
-"Ah," thought poor Charlie, as he trotted on his lonely way through
-the darkened forest, "decidedly there are Podatchkines in Scotland as
-well as elsewhere, and in Russia."
-
-The light was beginning to dawn, for it was the morning of one of the
-first days of May, so long had he been detained by illness--shall we
-say by love?--at the castle by the Louga, that Muscovite Eden, as now
-it seemed to him. The birds were chirping merrily in the woods; and
-in some places he saw the brown rocks shaded by a species of graceful
-silver birch and dark rowan tree, similar to those that grew in his
-native strath at home.
-
-By midsummer he knew that the birchen glades he traversed would be in
-full foliage, and that the rowan berries would hang in ripe red
-clusters among the thick green leaves; and that there, too, would be
-grey lichens on the granite cliffs, and in their clefts soft emerald
-moss, the wild strawberries, and the drooping bells of the purple
-foxglove, just as he had seen them where the Earn "gurgling kissed
-her pebbled shore" as it flowed towards the Tay.
-
-They seemed like old friends in that strange place, and with a sigh
-of gratitude for his escape from a perilous and deadly snare was
-mingled one of hope--a wish--a bootless wish, that one day he might
-sit by the banks of the lovely Earn with Natalie by his side, amid
-all the security his native land afforded, and under the white
-blooming hawthorns that cast their sweet fragrance to the soft winds
-of the Perthshire valley.
-
-Beloved Natalie--so fair and delicate, so dark haired and so
-bright-eyed! Her diamond ring, and still more her lock of soft and
-silky hair, brought all the charm and sense of her presence vividly
-before him. He counted the brief hours since they had parted, and
-sighed to think how many hours and days and weeks must inevitably
-elapse before they met again.
-
-In memory and imagination, he conned over and over again each tender
-speech and glance, each mute caress and passionate kiss, with every
-circumstance and minutiæ of their occurrence and bestowal; and what
-lover has not done so since time began, and apples grew, and roses
-bloomed in Eden! Even his recent narrow escape and the gipsy's
-gratitude were forgotten in the ardour of his thoughts.
-
-And he sighed again, when thinking how wild and insane were the
-dreams in which he was indulging, as he touched his horse with the
-spurs, on seeing the three shining domes of the Troitza, or monastery
-of the Holy Trinity, rise before him amid the green woodlands.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-ST. PETERSBURG.
-
-After traversing a green valley some five or six miles in length,
-bordered on each side by forests of fir trees, dark, solemn and
-acutely conical, where the sunlight could scarcely ever penetrate to
-the thick rank grass and herbage that grew below, and where a merry
-gurgling brook rushed noisily along by the side of the narrow
-horseway, Charlie Balgonie drew his bridle at the gates of the
-Troitza monastery, when its white walls, its three great cupolas,
-shaped each like a gigantic onion inverted, covered with plates of
-burnished copper, and all painted and bestarred, were shining gaily
-in the morning sun.
-
-There he was made welcome by the monks--quaint-looking men, in long
-black caftans, with high black caps, fashioned like our modern hats,
-but without brims, and having black veils floating behind over their
-long, straight hair. He deposited some money with the treasurer,
-declined the invitation of the sacristan to see the uncorrupted body
-of some saint with an unpronounceable name, reposing in its shrine
-like a silver bedstead, and its head begirt by a diadem with pearls
-as large as pistol bullets; for the saint had been a martyr, who, in
-the days of Ivan Basilovitch, the Tartars had rewarded for his
-attempts to convert them by knocking out his brains; and now he was a
-miserable mummified relic of humanity, before which, for many ages,
-thousands of devotees had knelt and wept and smote their breasts in
-paroxysms of prayer. Charlie waived the invitation; and after having
-a good breakfast in the refectory, and there telling his story to the
-monks, he was somewhat bewildered when informed by them, that after
-all his (certainly circuitous) journey with Podatchkine on the
-preceding evening and night, and after his riding since he had left
-the cottage of the gipsy, he was still barely twenty miles from the
-Louga!
-
-Was a spell cast upon him? was his horse bewitched, that he was to
-continue travelling thus, and yet never make progress? It almost
-seemed so; but one of the monks, a more shrewd man than his brothers,
-explained the whole affair as being consequent to the cunning of
-Podatchkine, and his scheme for destroying the dispatch-bearer.
-
-A large party of pilgrims on horse and foot were returning to St.
-Petersburg that afternoon. With them Balgonie travelled for the
-remainder of his journey; and, after traversing a wild and desert
-tract of country, on the evening of the next day he had the pleasure
-of beholding, in the distance before him, that new but vast and
-splendid capital,--
-
- "Proud city! Sovereign mother thou
- Of all Sclavonian cities now,"--
-
-covering the once wild waste whereon, before the time of Peter the
-Great, the father of his country, a few wretched fishermen were wont
-to contend with the wolves and bears for a spot to erect their
-huts--where, as Count Segur says, winter reigned for eight months of
-the year, rye was an article of garden culture, and a bee-hive a
-curiosity.
-
-Its bulbous-shaped Byzantine domes, and tall needle-like spires, and
-all its countless roofs, that rose beyond each other in ridgy
-succession like the waves of the sea, and are generally like the sea
-in colour, being of a brilliant green or an ashy hue, were now all
-tinted redly by the rays of the setting sun, which cast the shadows
-of its many bridges on the waters of the Neva and of the canals that
-glided silently and darkly beneath them.
-
-As the sun sank beyond the Gulf of Finland, and the shadows deepened
-on every plated dome and granite rampart, the great gilt crosses of
-our Lady of Kazan (a fane which was ten years in building) and of
-many other noble churches glittered, or rather seemed to burn like
-stars, amid the deep blue of the cloudless sky beyond.
-
-Balgonie's satisfaction, on finding himself so near the end of his
-journey, was somewhat clouded by a trivial circumstance.
-
-After entering the city by a palisaded barrier, where stood a guard
-of the Regiment of Valikolutz, he checked his horse's pace, while the
-caravan of pilgrims, whom he now wished to quit, traversed a long
-street of small wooden houses that lay beyond. Here, close by the
-margin of the Neva, lay a man with his loose caftan wet and dripping,
-and a piece of sack or old canvas spread over his face. On his
-breast lay his fur cap, as if to receive alms for his burial; for
-none doubted that he was a poor drowned fellow just fished up from
-the Neva, and that money was required of the religious and charitable
-alike for his obsequies and masses for the repose of his soul. So
-all the pilgrims from the Troitza threw something into the fur cap,
-where denuscas, kopecs, even roubles and Polish ducats, jingled fast
-together, while the passers muttered prayers and made signs of the
-cross.
-
-All the caravan had passed, so the clatter of Balgonie's charger,
-steel-scabbard, and accoutrements, seemed to create a different
-effect on the attentive ear of the seemingly drowned man; for the
-knave, who had only been acting, started up, and, with his spoil,
-fled like a hare down one of the little alleys that opened off the
-wooden street. He vanished in the twilight, yet not so quickly but
-that Balgonie was able to recognise in his face and form, the bulky
-and muscular half-bred, the gipsy, Nicholas Paulovitch.
-
-What had brought him to St. Petersburg? Was he still dogging the
-luckless dispatch-bearer, or had he only fled thither that, among its
-thousands, he might elude the punishment with which Count Mierowitz
-would be sure to visit him, if the murder of the Corporal was
-discovered?
-
-This episode made Balgonie feel uncomfortable, and suspicious that
-other and hidden dangers yet menaced him, as he rode steadily but
-watchfully through the densely crowded, but monotonously regular
-streets of houses, which are stuccoed, white-washed, and decorated
-with different colours, roofed with wood and iron, painted in most
-instances green, and nearly all pillared and piazzaed--each long
-vista, with its oil lamps, being terminated by domes and spires; and
-erelong he saw the lights shining in the lofty windows of that
-magnificent crescent, which, for a time, was the palace of
-Catharine's most cherished favourite, "the fair-faced Lanskoi," as
-Byron has it--
-
- "A lover who had cost her many a tear,
- And yet but made a middling Grenadier."
-
-
-And now the melodious bells were ringing for vespers in the towers of
-our Lady of Kazan--a Greek cruciform fane, which was founded as a
-rival to St. Peter's at Rome, and named after the Tartar kingdom of
-Kazan. It is the greatest church in the city, and one of high
-sanctity.
-
-Along the northern margin of the Neva, a river broad as the Thames at
-London Bridge, but (unlike the Thames) deep, blue, and transparent as
-crystal, lined with solid granite quays, and bordered by many stately
-palatial edifices, Balgonie pursued his way; but the stars were
-shining at midnight on the vast sheet of water called the Lake of
-Ladoga, before he, weary and worn with fatigue, dismounted beneath
-the formidable gates of the castellated prison of Schlusselburg,
-which had been strengthened and fortified anew by General Count
-Todleben, whose arrest and quarrel with the Empress had made so much
-noise three years before the time our story opens.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-WHAT THE SECRET DISPATCH CONTAINED.
-
-Twenty-four miles eastward of the city, the small town and fortress
-of Schlusselburg stand, at a point where the Neva issues from the
-Lake of Ladoga, and on the left bank of the river. The little town
-had then somewhere about three thousand inhabitants, who chiefly
-lived by the manufacture of cotton and porcelain.
-
-On an island, where the river joins the lake and moats it round, is
-built the fort, which is about four hundred yards square: its walls
-are of stone, massive, and fifty feet in height, terminating in
-battlements and turrets of antique form.
-
-The passage to this island is by a long drawbridge.
-
-The guard which kept this formidable state prison, where many a
-hopeless sigh was wafted through the rusty bars of its prison grilles
-across the waters of Ladoga, was composed entirely of a body of
-dismounted Cossacks, selected for the purpose, as the task of keeping
-or secluding the dethroned Emperor Ivan was one of no small
-responsibility and importance; so these men were all Cossacks of a
-high class, and were rather richly dressed.
-
-Their short blue jackets were elaborately embroidered with yellow
-lace, and a multitude of gilt buttons, but were hooked across the
-chest; their trowsers of scarlet cloth were loose, long, and gathered
-into their boots, which were of brown Russian leather, and reached to
-six inches above the ankle. Their busbies of black shining fur had
-bright scarlet bags, tall white feathers, a cockade, and tasselled
-cord. They were all clean and soldier-like men, well moustached, and
-sternly resolute in bearing; and all were armed with musketoons,
-short sabres, and brass pistols.
-
-A guard of these men received Balgonie at the gate and drawbridge
-with a profound military salute; and a picturesque aspect they
-presented, as their arms flashed in the murky light of the great oil
-lantern that swung in the dark, weird, and deep-mouthed archway,
-where a massive portcullis showed its iron teeth, all red and rusted
-by the mists of the Neva and the stormy blasts that swept across the
-Lake of Ladoga.
-
-The great masses of the fortress, ghostly and shrouded, with faint
-red lights gleaming out here and there; the enormous strength of the
-gates, their planking, bolts, and bars; the thickness of the walls;
-the number of embrasures and loopholes for cannon and musketry, all
-converging to one point, the approach or river entrance; the number
-of sentinels, and, more than all, the vast strength of the portcullis
-and double gates, together with the difficulties he experienced in
-procuring admission, though in uniform, and though a staff officer
-bearing a dispatch of the Empress, all served to impress unpleasantly
-on the mind of Charlie Balgonie a state of extreme watchfulness, of
-suspicion, and mistrust; and also a sense of the vast responsibility
-of the charge confided by Catharine to Colonel Bernikoff.
-
-That gallant officer and estimable personage had retired long since,
-after a deep drinking bout, and would be--as Lieutenant Tschekin (the
-son-in-law of General Weymarn), who was third in command of the
-fortress, informed Balgonie--quite invisible till breakfast time
-to-morrow, when the dispatch would be delivered to him: and a sigh of
-real annoyance escaped Charlie, when he found that this odious paper
-was to be yet some eight hours or more in his secret pocket.
-
-He repaired to the officers' guard-room at the barrier gate, and
-there, wrapped in his cloak, without undressing (as he hoped next day
-to exchange the atmosphere of Schlusselburg for that of some hotel in
-the Vasili-Ostrov), lay down to sleep, and if possible to dream of
-Natalie; but he had undergone too much toil for such gentle
-phantasms, so he slept like a dormouse, till the sun was high in
-heaven, unawakened even by the deep boom of the morning gun, a
-36-pounder, as it pealed across the Lake of Ladoga; but ultimately he
-was roused by Tschekin and Captain Vlasfief, a very handsome young
-man, but a cruel and heartless _roué_, whom ultimately he detested.
-These, after shaking him heartily, announced that Colonel Bernikoff
-awaited him at breakfast, and was not in a mood to brook much delay.
-
-His hasty toilette was soon complete, and he was speedily ushered
-into a plain, almost naked whitewashed apartment arched with stone.
-Through its grated windows the morning sun shone cheerily, and the
-blue waters of the lake could be seen with the white sails of many a
-tiny coasting vessel.
-
-Here, at a table of plain Memel timber, destitute of cloth, but on
-which massive silver vessels with rudely formed wooden bowls and
-platters were oddly intermingled, was seated the Governor, who, like
-the czars and boyars of old, still took quass for breakfast with
-roasted beef or bear's ham, bread with caviare, greens with vinegar,
-salted plums and other abominations. But Balgonie saw that coffee
-and even tea, with ham, eggs, and kippered salmon, were prepared,
-with other condiments, for those who, like himself, had nothing of
-the Tartar in their blood.
-
-"Hail to you--I wish you health," said Bernikoff, courteously enough,
-in the old Russian fashion, and presenting his hand to Charlie, who
-took it, shuddering as he remembered the fate of Peter III.; "welcome
-to Schlusselburg, Captain Ivanovitch Balgonie."
-
-Bernikoff, who wore a dark-green undress uniform faced with scarlet,
-was a man well up in years; he had fierce and shining black eyes that
-made soldier and serf alike quail beneath their gaze; yet they were
-small, cunning, and twinkling eyes, the lashes of which were half
-closed--the eyes of one who could act the cruel tyrant on one hand,
-and the cringing slave on the other. He had a massive, square, and
-brutal jaw, thin wicked lips, a nose as round as a grape-shot, close
-short grizzled hair, and long snaky mustachioes.
-
-He was of Tartar blood, and came of those "warlike and merciless
-tribes who studied nothing but the use of arms; who passed their
-lives on horseback; who even lived on their horses in this sense,
-that their chief food was horseflesh and the milk of mares; who, at
-the same time, could go for days without food; and who, when they
-took a city by storm, put all the inhabitants to the sword except the
-working men."
-
-"Seat yourself, Captain, and proceed to breakfast, while I read your
-dispatch," said the Governor. "Holy Sergius! it is from Catharine
-Christianowna herself! The Czarina is great, but Heaven is higher!"
-he added, placing the paper on his forehead, as he bowed over it; and
-then taking an enormous pinch of Beresovski snuff, a most pungent
-compound, from a gold box said to have been found in the pocket of
-Peter III., he proceeded to peruse that document which had proved of
-such trouble to the bearer.
-
-The eyes of Balgonie, Tschekin, and Vlasfief, who alone were present,
-were fixed inquiringly upon him, and they could see that the contents
-disturbed him greatly; he grew pale and flushed by turns; his brows
-contracted to a terrible frown; a red spark of devilish light
-glittered in his eyes, and his lips were compressed.
-
-"Ah, the Asiatics! the accursed Asiatics!" he muttered. This is a
-most opprobrious epithet in Russia, and excited some surprise in his
-hearers.
-
-He carefully folded the dispatch, and turning sternly to Charlie, who
-was keeping his eyes on him and drinking his coffee the while, he
-said:--
-
-"Ivanovitch Balgonie, there is a feather in the seal--the usual sign
-of _haste_ among us here in Russia; yet you have not troubled
-yourself much with speed, for this dispatch is dated at Novgorod more
-than a month back!"
-
-"Permit me to explain, Excellency," said Balgonie eagerly, and
-anxiously too.
-
-"I shall be glad if you _can_ explain it," replied Bernikoff, with
-increasing sternness. "I have known a general, a leader in ten
-battles, degraded, knouted, and sent to hunt the ermine with a cannon
-ball at his heels for a smaller dereliction of duty than this."
-
-Balgonie's heart beat very fast while he related his story--of his
-being misled by a traitor twice; of the passage of the Louga at such
-terrible hazard; of his subsequent illness; and the episode at that
-log hut.
-
-"That you were in the guidance of a traitor, I knew before your
-arrival; and I am extremely glad that he fell into his own snare,"
-replied Bernikoff, a little more calmly; "but this matter is
-extremely awkward for you, and becomes more complicated every hour."
-
-After glancing again at the dispatch, and bending his keen, rat-like
-eyes on Balgonie, he asked:
-
-"Were Basil Mierowitz or Usakoff, the grandson of Mazeppa, at the
-Castle of Louga any time during your sojourn there?"
-
-"No, Excellency, neither of them were."
-
-"Spies say differently--but you can swear it?"
-
-"On my honour do I swear it! But why?"
-
-"I have had bad news from the head-quarters of your regiment, and
-from Lieutenant-General Weymarn, since you left Novgorod."
-
-"And these tidings, Excellency?"
-
-"Are to the effect that your friends, the two subalterns, have both
-deserted, with several soldiers, all of whom are natives of the
-Ukraine."
-
-"Deserted!"
-
-"And are nowhere to be found, though pursued by a whole sotnia of
-Cossacks."
-
-"Deserted!" reiterated Balgonie with real concern.
-
-"Yes--the cursed Asiatics!" replied Bernikoff, expectorating with
-great vehemence, and thoroughly believing that each time he did so,
-he cast out a devil.
-
-For some moments intense anxiety and alarm bewildered Balgonie, and
-he felt himself grow pale at a time when six searching eyes were bent
-with a doubtful expression upon him. He remembered the hostility,
-the threatening and mysterious words of Natalie, and grew almost sick
-with apprehension of he knew not what, as he muttered inaudibly--
-
-"Basil deserted--and his cousin too! The whole family will be
-inculpated and degraded. Oh, Natalie, my hapless love! Did General
-Weymarn state this in _his_ dispatch?" he asked aloud.
-
-"He did, and at its end referred to you."
-
-"To me, Excellency?"
-
-"Yes; here is the document, and it concludes thus: 'as I and the
-Regiment of Smolensko will shortly march into St. Petersburg, Captain
-Carl Ivanovitch Balgonie need not return to Novgorod; but until then,
-shall attach himself to your staff, and remain in Schlusselburg,
-where, erelong, you may require all the good service he can render
-you.--WEYMARN.'"
-
-Great were the mortification and disgust of Balgonie on learning that
-he was to remain for an indefinite period in a place so revolting and
-uncomfortable, and with no other society than that of three military
-jailers,--cruel, hard-hearted, and avaricious Muscovites of the worst
-kind; and with these orders died his hopes of revisiting, as he
-intended, Louga, on his return, and of seeing Natalie again.
-
-Under ban as all the household of Mierowitz would be now, should he
-ever see her more? Every way fate and the tide of events seemed to
-be against him and her, already in the very dawn of their love.
-
-"And now, gentlemen," said the Governor, lowering his voice, "the
-Empress's dispatch contains only two lines, thus: 'A scheme is formed
-to free Prince Ivan. _Let him not fall alive into the hands of those
-who come to seek for him!_' Nor shall he!" exclaimed Bernikoff with
-ferocious enthusiasm, as he dashed a cup of vodka among his quass,
-and drained the goblet, after shouting, "The health of Her Imperial
-Majesty Catharine Christianowna--hurrah!"
-
-"Hurrah, hurrah!" added Vlasfief and the Lieutenant.
-
-Balgonie also, as in duty bound, essayed to "hurrah," but the sound
-died away on his lips.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
-CHARLIE'S FIRST DAY IN SCHLUSSELBERG.
-
-Full of anxious thoughts, he passed more than half of the succeeding
-day on the ramparts of the castled-prison, alone, avoiding Colonel
-Bernikoff, Captain Vlasfief, and their subaltern, Tschekin, none of
-whom were consonant to his taste, for all were deep gamblers and
-heavy drinkers.
-
-His mind was full of care for Natalie and all her family. Some
-desperate and revengeful plot, of which the desertion of her brother
-and of his cousin Usakoff was but the beginning, the means to an end,
-was certainly hatching--a plot that might too surely end in
-bloodshed, in the savage punishment and the ruin of all.
-
-He sorrowed keenly for his two friends Basil Mierowitz and Apollo
-Usakoff, for both were polished and educated gentlemen, men of a
-class and style more common in some corps of the Russian army now,
-than in those days. And there was poor Mariolizza, too--so brightly
-beautiful, so happy, and so merry! Her love, her hopes and schemes,
-would all be crushed and blighted, as well as his own.
-
-Balgonie was not without fears for himself, and of being compromised
-in the affair; or, perhaps, lured into subtle state intrigues and
-deep plots, in the failure or success of which he could have no
-interest politically or personally, save in his love for Natalie--a
-love that had changed the whole current of his ideas and opened up a
-new realm of thought and incentive to action.
-
-Already he was beginning to revolt at the Russian service, and yet he
-had been happy in the Regiment of Smolensko, and had found in the
-land of his adoption, like every Scottish adventurer that has trod
-the Russian soil, honours scarcely to be won at home.
-
-How long was he to be on the staff of this ferocious Commandant, and
-in this horrible prison, where many an innocent victim was pining
-hopelessly in chains and misery? "The mutual distrust in which
-people live in Russia," says the Abbé Chappe D'Auteroche in his
-scarce travels about this time, "and the total silence of the nation
-upon everything which may have the least relation either to the
-government or the sovereign, arise chiefly from the privilege every
-Russian has, without distinction, of crying out in public, _slowo
-dielo_; that is to say, 'I declare you are guilty of high treason,
-both in words and actions.' All the bystanders are then obliged to
-assist in arresting the person so accused; a father his son, and the
-son his father, while nature suffers in silence. The accuser and
-accused are at once conveyed to prison, and afterwards to St.
-Petersburg, where they are tried by the Secret Court of Chancery."
-
-Thanks to this pleasant state of society, the chambers and chains of
-Schlusselburg were seldom unoccupied.
-
-Vlasfief was hollow-hearted, avaricious, and sensual; Tschekin, the
-Lieutenant, a slimy, cruel, reckless, and ignorant Muscovite; but old
-Bernikoff was really a character whom Balgonie equally dreaded and
-despised.
-
-His subtlety and oppression had been the means of reducing, at
-different times, some thirty officers to the ranks, with permission
-to serve and work their way up again; and many more were now cursing
-him and their fate, at Irkutsk and remoter Siberia, for their
-inability to purchase his mercy or good-will. When commanding at
-Cronstadt, he had been detected once in the act of transmitting whole
-sledge loads of government shot, shell, lead, and ropes, across the
-frozen gulf for sale in Sweden; and also in buying at a cheap rate
-base denuscas to pay the troops: but so trusted was the old rascal by
-the Empress, that he always escaped the degradation, the hanging or
-shooting, which, on those discoveries, were so freely meted out to
-his subalterns.
-
-On the estate of Bernikoff a serf once amassed ten thousand roubles,
-and offered them for the freedom of his daughter, who was about to be
-married.
-
-"Let me see the girl!" was the reply.
-
-As a serf can possess nothing, the father trembled in his soul at
-this demand, as his daughter, unfortunately for herself, was
-beautiful.
-
-"Holy Sergius!" exclaimed Bernikoff, "what business has a serf with
-ten thousand roubles; the girl and the money are alike mine!"
-
-And so he literally and lawfully seized them both.
-
-Though a savage soldier, like every old Muscovite, he was the slave
-of mechanical devotion. No statue or picture of the Holy Virgin, of
-St. Sergius, or St. Alexander Newski, was ever passed by him without
-a profound reverence and a sign of the cross. To such effigies he
-would address himself before he knelt even to the Empress: and before
-them he had been known to kneel and kiss the ground five minutes
-before or after he had knouted a miserable boor (whose pockets were
-empty), or nearly slain a soldier by making him run the gauntlet, for
-merely having the seams of his gloves sewn outward instead of in; for
-wearing his hat on the left side of his head instead of the right; or
-for some other offence equally heinous.
-
-And it was on the staff of this distinguished officer (temporarily,
-however) that Charlie now, to his great disgust, found himself.
-
-On three sides, far around this island prison, stretched the waters
-of Ladoga--the largest lake in Europe, being one hundred and thirty
-miles long, by nearly ninety broad; full of rocky isles and dangerous
-quicksands, over which, from its flat shores, sweep frequent and
-perilous storms.
-
-From the somewhat dreary view of this small inland sea, whose
-northern and eastern coast could not be discerned, he turned to
-survey the fortress, with all its strength of gloomy walls, grated
-windows, and frowning cannon, till suddenly his eye was arrested by a
-very remarkable face, which was observing him from the sombre depth
-of a strongly barred and arched window of the great tower.
-
-It was a pale face, but singularly handsome--grave, and even sad in
-expression--a young man's face with the slightest indication of a
-moustache, but for which, in its paleness and extreme delicacy of
-feature and tint, it might have passed for that of a twin brother of
-Natalie Mierowna!
-
-Suddenly it was detected by a Cossack sentinel, who shouted shrilly,
-and slapped the butt-end of his loaded musketoon: on this, the face
-instantly disappeared.
-
-This was he concerning whom Balgonie had brought that terrible
-dispatch--Ivan, the deposed Emperor--the prisoner of Schlusselburg!
-
-"Twenty-three years!" thought Balgonie with a shudder; "twenty-three
-years in that tower--since his very babyhood--oh, it is terrible!"
-
-Other ears had heard the shout of the sentinel; for now a man, who in
-a boat had been fishing near the fortress, suddenly shipped a pair of
-sculls, and pulled away towards the town with an air of alarm that
-seemed equalled only by his dexterity. This fisher had been hovering
-about the fortress all day. "Can he be the gipsy--the half-breed?"
-thought Charlie: "ah! the dispatch is out of my hands now."
-
-Lieutenant Tschekin now approached with an invitation from Bernikoff
-to join him at dinner, adding, "remember that with the Colonel,
-eating is indeed a science, and temperance he views as mere want of
-spirit."
-
-As they proceeded together through various archways and gates, the
-shrieks and entreaties of a man apparently in mortal agony rang
-through the echoing prisons with a horrible cadence, that chilled the
-free blood in Balgonie's veins.
-
-A court through which they had to pass was crowded by soldiers,
-formed in hollow square, and Balgonie was compelled to linger and
-look on with Tschekin, who seemed rather to enjoy the spectacle.
-
-"Hah," said he, "the punishment is nearly ended--let us wait and see
-the _batogg_!"
-
-It was a soldier being knouted, which is simply the Russian word for
-"whipped."
-
-Stripped to the loins, he was strapped to an erect board, formed like
-an inverted cone, and having three notches at the upper end, one to
-receive his chin, and the other two his wrists, while the torturer
-wielded a knout, the handle of which is usually eighteen inches long
-with a thong of thirty-six inches. This is always boiled in milk, by
-which process it swells and the edges become sharp, hard, and more
-destructive.
-
-The whipper was skilful: he laid on his lashes from the neck to the
-loins, so as to deal them at intervals of one inch artistically
-apart, leaving a stripe of flesh between each; but these regulated
-and omitted stripes, after receiving a fresh knout, he proceeded to
-take off in succession, with wonderful and terrible precision, till
-the man's entire back was a mass of blood, and he hung, fainting and
-well-nigh speechless, by the wrists.
-
-"Oh, Excellency," he said, in an imploring voice, "remember that my
-brother, Alexis Jagouski, aided you in escaping from the battle of
-Zorndorff!"
-
-This was most true, but the story was a terrible one. At Zorndorff,
-where the Russians were defeated with such slaughter and driven
-towards the frontiers of Poland, the horse of Bernikoff was shot
-under him, and he was in danger of being cut down by the Prussian
-Hussars. In this sore extremity a Cossack named Alexis Jagouski took
-his leader behind him on his crupper; but that personage, finding
-that the double weight impeded the horse's speed, and that the
-Hussars were close behind, shortened his sabre in his hand, and
-plunging the blade into the body of his preserver, flung the corpse
-from the saddle, and escaped alone.
-
-At this reminiscence Bernikoff only scowled more deeply; and now the
-lacerated back of the sufferer was strewed with coarse gunpowder, to
-which a match was applied. This is technically known as the
-_batogg_, and the agony it produced is indescribable.
-
-The culprit was now cast loose, but was still able, according to the
-slavish usage of the country, to crawl on his hands and knees towards
-Bernikoff, and he gasped out:--
-
-"Hospodeen--Excellency, I thank you humbly for this most merciful
-punishment."
-
-"Begone, dog of an Asiatic!" replied the governor, kicking him in the
-face; "when next you seek to fill your pipe, this will teach you to
-keep your filthy fingers out of my tobacco pouch."
-
-These were the defenders of their country, the Holy Russia, among
-whom a wayward fate had cast the Scottish palatine: the blood of the
-latter boiled within him; but he knew too well that to expostulate
-would be but to excite suspicion, and to court degradation and the
-musket. Something, however, in the expression of his face did not
-escape Bernikoff's keen and angry eyes.
-
-"Ivanovitch Balgonie, a superior can never act unjustly to his
-inferior," said he sternly; and these words terribly embodied the
-genuine spirit of the true Russian _Tchinnovnik_, or noble class. "I
-am in the service of the state," he added; "and the state is the
-Czarina!"
-
-Yet this upright Governor, who knouted the poor Cossack for pilfering
-a pipeful of tobacco, had always a garrison double its actual
-strength on paper, the pay and rations of the men of straw forming a
-pleasant addition to his many secret perquisites, while his soldiers
-starved and frequently begged food from the very prisoners they
-guarded.
-
-It was neither hospitality nor love of society which had procured the
-honour of an invitation for Balgonie; but Bernikoff shrewdly
-suspecting that he might have some loose cash, resolved to possess
-himself thereof at cards; so barely was a dinner of _shee_ (which is
-identically Scotch broth), croquettes, with _purée_ of beet-root,
-beef in the Hussar style, with salad of baked beet-root and biscuits,
-dismissed, than champagne-cup, and vodka (or corn-brandy) punch
-became the order of the evening; and Bernikoff, who was a great
-gourmand, with his face flushed and his uniform open, after signing
-the cross and bowing thrice to a picture of St. Sergius, sat down to
-cards with Vlasfief and Tschekin, who were quite as sharp as himself,
-and with poor simple-hearted Charlie Balgonie, who dreaded to
-decline, circumstanced as he was on all hands; and who was glad when
-allowed to quit the table with the loss, he never could understand
-how, of twenty xervonitz, or pieces worth nine shillings sterling
-each.
-
-"Now, Vlasfief--'tis you and I; rouge-et-noir!" exclaimed Bernikoff,
-draining a goblet of vodka punch at a draught.
-
-"I am too weary to play, most excellent Colonel; pray excuse me,"
-urged the Captain, who had lost considerably to his senior also.
-
-"You, then, Tschekin?" said Bernikoff savagely.
-
-"I hav'n't a kopec to spare, Excellency!"
-
-"Well--I saw a pretty housemaid at your mansion in the town
-yesterday--the daughter of a serf apparently."
-
-"Feodorowna?"
-
-"Very likely--with red hair and brawn eyes."
-
-"Ah! the same; she came with Madame Tschekin from the household of
-her father, General Weymarn."
-
-"By all the devils, she is very like old Weymarn!"
-
-"She is the daughter of my old nurse, Colonel," said Tschekin
-gravely, with an air of annoyance.
-
-"I don't care whose daughter she is!"
-
-"Well?"
-
-"I'll put a hundred silver roubles on her."
-
-"Done! I put her on the ace."
-
-"The ace hath lost!" exclaimed Bernikoff, with a shout of laughter.
-"Holy Sergius! the girl is mine. To-morrow," he added, "I'll send a
-corporal and a file of men for her, with a covered kabitka. See that
-all her things are packed and ready, friend Tschekin, or write to
-your wife about it, and say you have lost her at cards."
-
-"The devil!--Excellency--this can't be."
-
-"Why? I won her fairly."
-
-"But the girl is about to be married to her cousin."
-
-"_Was_, you mean; the cards have changed her destiny, like that of
-the serfs whom Vlasfief drank away in champagne last night."
-
-So passed Charlie's first day at Schlusselburg.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-
-THE IMPERIAL PRISONER.
-
-Fortunately for Balgonie, there was a chaplain, or priest, of the
-Russian Greek Church, attached to the fortress; and his society, at
-times, tended to alleviate what he endured from having to associate
-with such a human bear as Colonel Bernikoff,--an annoyance from which
-he would only be relieved by the longed-for return of General Weymarn
-and the Regiment of Smolensko to St. Petersburg.
-
-The ceremonies of religion retain in Russia all their pristine
-influence, and afford the miserable and unlettered serf a short
-season of relaxation from labour and severity during festivals, when
-he may enjoy his can of fiery vodka and revel in intoxication.
-Unlike many of the Russian clergy, who adopt the cowl merely as the
-means of evading slavery in civil life, or slavery added to peril in
-the army, and also as a chance of attaining to power and nobility,
-Father Chrysostom, the Chaplain of Schlusselburg, was a humane,
-gentle, and learned old priest, whom the Commandant had been depraved
-enough to strike with his clenched hand on more than one occasion;
-but prior to doing so, he had always contrived, oddly and
-superstitiously enough, to have the chief badge of the father's
-sacred office, his baretta abstracted and hidden.
-
-Through the good offices of the Chaplain, with the permission of the
-Governor, which was yielded very unwillingly, Balgonie (whose
-curiosity and commiseration were greatly excited) was presented one
-evening to the deposed Emperor Ivan, and the particulars and
-incidents of that interview made a deep and sad impression upon him.
-
-The entrance-door of the central tower was small, arched, and of
-great strength. Above it were carved the Russian arms, first adopted
-by Ivan Basilovitch in the sixteenth century: a spread-eagle, having
-on its breast an escutcheon bearing St. Michael and a dragon, with
-three crowns in chief for Muscovy and the two Tartar kingdoms of
-Kazan and Astracan.
-
-On passing through a little paved court, grated over with iron, where
-the royal recluse was permitted to breathe the external air, while a
-sentinel trod to and fro above his head; another door-way, secured by
-a portcullis grooved into the wall, gave access to the narrow stair
-which led to his apartments. These were two in number: their windows
-and doors were all grated with iron; and sentinels, with loaded arms,
-watched every avenue by day and night.
-
-His sitting-room was plainly, even neatly furnished: its chief
-ornaments being a pretty Madonna and some gaudy pictures of Muscovite
-saints; and it had one window, which opened towards the vast expanse
-of the Lake of Ladoga.
-
-Pale, handsome, and resigned, gentle in eye and manner, the poor
-young Prince had grown to manhood in total ignorance of the outer
-world and of all he had lost. He knew only the four walls of the
-prison, the changing hues of the waves and clouds, the wild swans and
-the waters of Ladoga.
-
-As related in our fifth chapter, the Prisoner of Schlusselburg was
-the eldest son of the Princess of of Mecklenburg,
-Elizabeth-Catharine, niece of the Empress Anne. His father was
-Anthony Ulric, Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbuttel, whose whole family was
-banished Russia by the usurping Empress Elizabeth.
-
-The infant Ivan had been dethroned, after being a king for exactly
-one year.
-
-During the reign of the Empress Catharine, he was detained in
-Schlusselburg "under the denomination of a _Person Unknown_, and it
-was given out that his senses were impaired, though it is pretty well
-understood that this is without foundation." "His fate has been
-particularly lamentable," continues a newspaper of the period; "torn
-from the bosom of his family, he has now passed twenty-three years in
-close captivity. The late Empress Elizabeth, towards the latter end
-of her life, seemed disposed to treat this noble captive with
-clemency and favour, either from sentiments of justice and
-compassion, or to render two great personages more circumspect and
-submissive."
-
-These personages were her successors, the unfortunate Peter III. and
-Catharine II.
-
-Ivan's mother is said to have died of grief; but Duke Anthony Ulric
-and his four other children were all confined for life in a house at
-Horsens, a town of Jutland, at the extremity of the Baltic, where
-they had a precinct of a mile English; but it was surrounded by high
-palisades, beyond which they dared not venture under pain of death;
-and there the Duke, old and blind, passed the last years of his
-melancholy life.
-
-His youngest daughter, Elizabeth, "was a woman of high spirit and
-elegant manners," according to Coxe, the traveller, who visited her;
-"she possessed portraits of her father and mother, and even contrived
-to procure a rouble of her brother Ivan, struck during his short
-reign. It is difficult to conjecture how she could obtain a coin,
-the possession of which was more than once punished by the Empress
-Elizabeth as high-treason, and it is still more difficult to imagine
-how she could secret it from the knowledge of her guards during her
-long imprisonment."
-
-Confinement had rendered Ivan's features unnaturally pale and
-delicate; and, by years of systematic constraint and oppression, his
-fine, clear, and very beautiful dark eyes had a soft, subdued, and
-chastened expression, that was singularly touching and winning.
-
-The tone of his voice was also gentle and alluring.
-
-"Hospodeen," said he, presenting his hand to Balgonie, "I rejoice to
-meet you, if one who leads a life so strange as mine can be said to
-rejoice; but you are one to whom I may talk a little without
-danger--eh, Father Chrysostom? And he has told me, Hospodeen, that
-you are not a Russian, but a native of some island that is far away
-in the sea. What are you? A Tartar--a Tcherkesse? Oh no, you
-cannot be either. I know them; for they guard me," he added, with a
-little shudder.
-
-"I am your friend, believe me, Ivan Antonovitch," replied Balgonie,
-who was touched by the childlike simplicity of the poor recluse, who
-was plainly attired in a caftan of fine green cloth, edged with a
-narrow trimming of yellow fur; the square crowned cap, which he only
-wore when in the grated court, was of the same materials. A small
-gold cross was at his neck, a rosary of amber hung at his right
-wrist, and a little pipe, the only luxury allowed him, was dangling
-from one of his breast buttons.
-
-When in his presence, Balgonie always thought with horror of the
-cruel tenor of the dispatch he had brought, and trembled for the
-result of his friends' conspiracy.
-
-To teach Ivan anything, even to read or to write, was treason; yet he
-had gleaned a little of his own history, and that of his family, from
-the casual remarks of his guards and from the Chaplain, during the
-long, long years of his captivity, the reason for which he failed to
-understand, but the system of which had become as a second nature to
-him; and the little he learned, made a deep, rather than a bitter
-impression upon him.
-
-The whole energies of each successive Chaplain had been given to
-preparing him for another and a brighter state of existence, and to
-turning his hope's and wishes towards it, rather than to this world,
-of which he was well-nigh weary if not utterly ignorant; and so much
-was he impressed by the uncertainty of human life in general, and of
-his own in particular, that daily, for years, he had seen the sun
-rise from the waters of Ladoga in doubt whether he would see it set;
-and nightly had he laid down his head without the assurance of being
-a live man in the morning.
-
-Life had no charm--death no terror for Ivan.
-
-In his visits, which were frequent, as the young Prince had conceived
-a great regard for him, Charlie Balgonie knew not upon what topics to
-converse; for he experienced great difficulty in fashioning his
-sentences and observations to suit a listener whose knowledge of the
-external world and of all the machinery of life was so limited. In
-those visits, Balgonie was always accompanied by the Chaplain, or
-Captain Vlasfief, as the watchful and suspicious Bernikoff would by
-no means permit them to have an interview alone.
-
-"I am so glad to have you for a friend, Ivanovitch Balgonie," the
-Prince would say sometimes; "though Father Chrysostom assures me that
-kings may have peers and soldiers, serfs and slaves, but, alas! they
-can never have a friend! I have heard my guards say that I was once
-a King--an Emperor; but I cannot remember when. It must have been
-long, long ago, as Russia has had four monarchs since. I have not
-even a dream of it--an Emperor? Yet I shall too probably die even as
-Demetrius did. I cannot remember even my mother; for they tell me
-that she died of sorrow, when I was brought here from a place called
-Moscow. Do you, Hospodeen, remember yours?"
-
-"When I was but a child she died, to my sorrow. Had she lived, I
-might not have been here in Russia to-day," replied Balgonie.
-
-"Well--but you may remember," persisted the young Prince.
-
-"True, your Highness; memories I have of a soft fair face that bent
-over my little bed at night; of one who kissed and hushed me to
-sleep; but those memories are faint or vivid, broken and uncertain,
-according to my mood of mind; and strange it is that they come to me
-more in dreams by night than thoughts by day, especially as I grow
-older."
-
-"I should like to have some such dreams, but then I have nothing to
-remember; I know not even my own age or when I came here," said Ivan
-thoughtfully. "If I do dream, by night, I seem to hear only what I
-hear by day--the voices of the Cossack sentinels, the screams of the
-sea-birds, the dashing of the waves when the wind crosses the lake,
-or the clanging of the castle bell. Then there are times when I
-dream that I see Demetrius, and then I awake in a cold perspiration.
-Tell me of the things that are being acted in the great world that
-lies beyond the Lake of Ladoga, for Father Chrysostom speaks to me
-only of Heaven."
-
-"It is said that the King of Prussia has agreed to the proposal
-of--of--the Empress, about the county of Wirtemberg, in Silesia."
-
-"How, agreed?"
-
-"Count Biron is to have the estate as Duke of Courland, on paying
-eight thousand guineas to Field-Marshal Count Munich," said Balgonie.
-
-The Prince sighed with a bewildered air, for all those names were
-quite new to him.
-
-"And who is Count Biron?" he asked.
-
-"A friend of the Empress," said Father Chrysostom rather hastily, to
-anticipate the reply of Balgonie.
-
-"Tell me something more. Nay, Father Chrysostom, don't chide us,
-pray," said he, seeing that the white bearded chaplain looked uneasy
-and rose to retire.
-
-"Conversation of this kind is strictly forbidden," said he; "and if
-Captain Vlasfief was here----"
-
-"Oh!" exclaimed the Prince, with a shudder, but not of anger (he
-seemed too gentle for that emotion), "don't talk of Vlasfief I
-implore you. Pray tell me more news, Hospodeen; I shall learn all
-the names in time, and try to remember them."
-
-"There are strange tidings from Warsaw," replied Balgonie, who began
-to get bewildered and knew not on what to converse, if the most
-simple topics of the day were forbidden; "a battle has been fought at
-Slonim, between Prince Radzivil and the Russians, who defeated him
-after a five hours' engagement, and the Princess Radzivil, who is
-newly married and remarkably beautiful, fought on horseback among the
-Polish troops."
-
-"Ah, Demetrius fought on horseback too," said the Prince, as if
-speaking to himself, and a gesture of undisguised impatience escaped
-the chaplain; "pray tell me something more, for no one ever speaks of
-such things to me."
-
-"A new theatre has been opened at St. Petersburg," replied Balgonie
-(who thought to himself, "the devil is in it, if I cannot speak of
-_that_!"), "and there was represented an opera, entitled _Charles the
-Great_."
-
-"Ah, I don't quite understand all that; say it again."
-
-Indeed, Balgonie might as well have spoken of carbonic gas or the
-Atlantic cable, had he ever heard of such things; for the mind of the
-young Prince could not comprehend the most simple matters of every
-day-life. This was merely the result of his entire seclusion; but
-the adherents of the Empress, her favourites and lovers,
-industriously circulated through Russia the report that he was in a
-state of idiotcy.
-
-"And this place that you spoke of?" he resumed enquiringly.
-
-"The theatre?"
-
-"Yes, Hospodeen; who lives in it?"
-
-"One of the actresses performed a magnificent cantata, in honour of
-the Empress."
-
-"Ah! 'tis she, I understand, who keeps me here," said the Prince,
-with a sad smile; and now in real terror, and quite repenting the
-introduction he had brought about, Father Chrysostom rose to hurry
-Balgonie away.
-
-As they were retiring, the Prince said:--
-
-"Hospodeen, you have dropped something."
-
-It was the locket with Natalie's hair.
-
-"What is in this?" asked Ivan, with childlike interest.
-
-"A lock of hair, your Highness."
-
-"How odd! and you wear it, just as I wear my cross?"
-
-"It is the gift, the souvenir of a lady I love, and who loves me: a
-countrywoman of your own."
-
-"A woman?" said Ivan, ponderingly.
-
-"Yes, Excellency."
-
-"I have never looked upon a woman's face, and know not what it is
-like, though the Empress (whom God long preserve!) visited me when a
-child, as I have been told. I have heard that they are not bearded
-like men. I shall never see one, it is forbidden; yet--yet--as I
-often tell Father Chrysostom, I have dreams by day--dreams of
-something else than wild swans and bearded Cossacks--of something to
-cling to, some one to love and be loved by. It must be this kind of
-love you speak of--oh yes, it must!" said Ivan, as he gazed with
-stupid, but reverent wonder at the lock of hair, ere he returned it
-to Balgonie.
-
-"Poor young Prince!" exclaimed the latter, as the chaplain hurried
-him away, and the portcullis clanged behind them in its grooves of
-stone.
-
-The priest now urged upon Balgonie, that if his visits were to be
-continued, the affairs of the outer world must in no way be referred
-to, or the result might be most disastrous for all concerned.
-
-"The seclusion in which the prisoner is kept, has, I fear, impaired
-his understanding," said Balgonie.
-
-"Hah! do you think so?" grunted Colonel Bernikoff, who overheard the
-remark, as they issued from the tower of Ivan. "You must know, that
-your genuine Russian is like a tiger, as some writer has it--a tiger
-who licks the hand of his keeper, so long as he is chained; but who
-tears him asunder when loose. The Empress quite understands this!"
-
-"How is it that you intrust me so freely to visit your prisoner?"
-asked Charlie, who began to fear that Bernikoff might be laying some
-snare for him, by according this hitherto unwonted permission.
-
-"Do you really wish to know?"
-
-"Yes, Colonel--why I in particular--I only?"
-
-"Because you are the safest man in Russia to have this liberty."
-
-"How?"
-
-"As a soldier of fortune,--a stranger among us,--you can have no
-sympathy with anything but the strict and steady execution of your
-duty; and the line of that," added Bernikoff, darting a keen glance
-at the Scot, "as with us all, lies in fidelity to the Empress."
-
-"True," replied Balgonie, with something of sadness in his tone, and
-very little of enthusiasm.
-
-"Thus, were I to order you to blow Ivan Antonovitch from the mouth of
-a cannon, I should expect you to obey!"
-
-"I trust that no such test of my obedience will ever be necessary,"
-replied Balgonie, with a hauteur which Bernikoff was somewhat unused
-to see among his subordinates.
-
-"We shall have some other and more troublesome prisoners in
-Schlusselburg ere long," said the Governor, with knitted brows.
-
-"Whom do you mean?"
-
-"Old Count Mierowitz and his family. Warrants have been issued by
-the Chancellor to arrest them all."
-
-"All!" said Balgonie, in a faint voice.
-
-"Yes, women as well as men: an escort of the Regiment of Smolensko
-arrived at St. Petersburg yesterday with the Count and the Hospoza
-Mariolizza. His daughter, who seems to be deeply involved in some
-plot, has for the time effected her escape. But they will soon be
-all before the Secret Chancery, and then the knout and the wheel will
-be at work with a vengeance!"
-
-The reader may judge how these and similar remarks affected poor
-Charlie, while the Governor, as if pleased that he could thus inflict
-pain, walked away with a malicious smile on his sombre visage,
-cramming tobacco into the bowl of his pipe.
-
-There were times, however, when the captive Prince, after his
-acquaintance with Balgonie, was a little less resigned, and had
-strange longings to see something of the great world that lay beyond
-his prison walls, and the waves that lashed them; to see other faces
-than those of the fierce and bearded Tchernemoski and Volga Cossacks
-who guarded him; a longing even to do something great and daring, to
-be remembered in after years with love and reverence; to be
-remembered, as he said, "in tradition, like Demetrius." Then,
-feeling all the utter hopelessness of such new aspirations, he would
-strive to be contented, to repeat with fresh energy the daily prayers
-set for him by Father Chrysostom, and to be grateful for life, lest
-he should die even as Demetrius died.
-
-"Who is this Demetrius, of whom he constantly speaks, and whose fate
-he fears so much may be his own?" asked Balgonie one day.
-
-"It is an old, but a strange and terrible story," replied the
-chaplain. "When Ivan Basilovitch died about the end of the sixteenth
-century, his widow was banished to Northern Russia by the new Czar
-Feodor, whose Prime Minister urged that he could never reign in peace
-or security unless he imitated the Turks by sacrificing all who were
-nearly allied to the throne; so he exiled his mother, as I have said,
-and ordered an officer to assassinate his younger brother Demetrius.
-
-"The officer, being a humane man, was filled with horror on receiving
-an order so barbarous; but fearing alike to disobey, or to leave the
-terrible task to be fulfilled by one less scrupulous, he took the
-child with him to a remote district, travelling many days' journey
-from Moscow. Then he wrote some words indelibly on the skin of the
-little Prince, tied a cross of brilliants about his neck, laid him at
-the door of a peasant's hut, and galloped away.
-
-"To the tyrant Feodor he gave a circumstantial detail of how and
-where he had killed the infant Prince, and sought the promised reward.
-
-"'Receive it _thus_!' replied Feodor, who plunged a sword into his
-heart, the further to suppress all proof of guilt.
-
-"The young tyrant died of a poison administered by his Chancellor,
-and others inherited his crown; but all to perish miserably in
-succession. And no less than four pretenders all appeared, each
-calling himself Demetrius, to contest for the throne; and all the
-land was deluged with blood.
-
-"Some twenty years after the alleged death of the brother of Ivan, a
-young Cossack of the Volga was bathing in that river with some of his
-companions, who saw with surprise that he had chained round his neck
-a cross of brilliants, and that certain words in the old Muscovite
-character were pricked upon his back. They were examined by a
-neighbouring priest and found to be---
-
- '_This is Demetrius, son of the Czar._'
-
-
-"Then all exclaimed that the true Demetrius had been found at last,
-and that a miracle from Heaven had saved him. His life was soon in
-peril, so he fled to Holstein, the Duke of which, after keeping him
-long in prison, sold him to the Emperor Michael, by whom he was
-savagely quartered alive. And it is the fate of this hapless heir of
-Russia, whose story he thinks in some points resembles his own
-(although he really knows but little of his own annals), that haunts
-the unfortunate Ivan in his gloomiest hours."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI.
-
-THE TRATKIR.
-
-With evident suspicion and mistrust, Bernikoff viewed the growing
-intimacy between his prisoner Ivan and the Scottish Captain; and
-though he neither recommended that it should cease or interdicted it,
-as he might and perhaps ought to have done, he made many mental notes
-thereof.
-
-Though Balgonie sympathised with Ivan to the fullest extent, he knew
-too well the danger of doing more; and he felt that he had his own
-share of secret sorrow and anxiety, and might yet have greater to
-endure. The girl he loved with all the strength of a first and
-romantic passion was already a political fugitive; her father and
-cousin were prisoners, and perhaps in chains; her brother and his
-kinsman, Usakoff, already viewed as criminals; and with the terrors
-of despotism hanging over them all.
-
-Natalie a fugitive--and where? In the wild forests, perhaps, where
-wolves and outlaws lurked: what perils and privations might she not
-be suffering! Natalie so delicate, so pure, so gently nurtured, and
-so highly bred.
-
-Balgonie was aware, also, that intimacy with the family of Count
-Mierowitz, and the deep interest he had in their fate, was fraught
-with personal peril to himself in such a land of tyranny as Russia.
-Full of such thoughts as these one forenoon, he was leaning on a
-cannon in one of those deep embrasures of the fortress which faced
-the drawbridge communicating with the land. The guard was in the act
-of lowering the bridge to permit a man to pass out. This person was
-just parting from Bernikoff, with whom he had been for some time in
-close and earnest conversation, and from whom he was evidently
-receiving money--an unusual circumstance, as that distinguished
-field-officer generally lavished more kicks and cuffs than thanks or
-kopecs.
-
-On beholding this man, as he bowed humbly, cap in hand, cross the
-bridge and disappear among the houses of the town beyond, Balgonie
-experienced a species of nervous shock. He could not doubt that this
-fellow, so gigantic in stature and powerful in muscular development,
-in the coarse caftan and leathern girdle, with the long lock of
-grizzled hair dangling behind his right ear, was Nicholas Paulovitch,
-the murderer of Podatchkine, the gipsy woodman, and the swindling
-mendicant of the barrier at the Neva.
-
-"This man here in Schlusselburg," thought Balgonie, with indignation
-and alarm; "here in earnest conversation with Bernikoff! The spirit
-of mischief seems to pervade the air again!"
-
-A few minutes afterwards the Cossack Jagouski who, as related, had
-been so severely knouted by Bernikoff for pilfering a pipeful of
-tobacco, came forward with tottering steps, and looking painfully
-thin and feeble from recent suffering; and with the crouching bearing
-of the Muscovite towards a superior, said that his Excellency the
-Governor wished to speak with him in his quarters, whither Balgonie
-at once repaired, after having, as military etiquette required,
-buckled on his sword.
-
-"Carl Ivanovitch," said Bernikoff, who certainly had rather a
-perturbed air, "some suspicious characters are in our vicinity, and
-have actually been hovering in boats about the fortress. What think
-you of that?"
-
-"Suspicious characters, Excellency--how?"
-
-"In a Tratkir of the town, one dropped this coin--a silver rouble of
-the prisoner Ivan--Ivan the Unknown Person. To possess one, unless
-as I do this, for proof of treason, is to court death or Siberia."
-
-"And from whom had you this?"
-
-"A spy," replied the Colonel curtly.
-
-"The man who has just left you?"
-
-"The same."
-
-"Nicholas Paulovitch," continued Balgonie, with increasing
-astonishment at the other's coolness; "the assassin of the
-Corporal--the wretch of whom I told you when I first arrived here!"
-
-"All that may, or may not be," replied Bernikoff, with a stern air,
-almost amounting to rudeness: "when I require this devil of a fellow
-no more, you may impale him, if you please; but molest him not at
-present."
-
-"I do not see, Excellency, that all this in any way concerns me,"
-said Balgonie haughtily, as he lifted his hat, and put his sabre
-under his arm, as if about to retire.
-
-"It does concern you thus far. I shall anticipate any attempt that
-be made by those lurkers, whoever they may be. You must remember,"
-he added, lowering his voice, "the tenor of the dispatch you brought
-me?"
-
-"Perfectly," replied Charlie, in a somewhat faint voice, as he knew
-not how terrible or repugnant might be the duty assigned him by this
-military despot.
-
-"Well, you shall pass forth into the town tonight, with a patrol of
-twenty men, armed with sabres and carbines. Surround and search the
-Tratkir in the main street, and compel all therein, who seem
-suspicious, to produce their papers; and if they are without such,
-bring them to me, and I shall question them, in a fashion of my own."
-
-By the laws of Russia, at that time, persons could not travel from
-St. Petersburg, or even from place to place, without a passport,
-describing their occupation, appearance, and route, which they were
-not at liberty to alter; and in the rural districts, travellers
-required a pass from the lord whose estate they may have been upon,
-before they were at liberty to quit it. Without such a document, no
-one would dare to furnish them with food or shelter, nor could a
-postmaster give them horses, however high their rank, or great their
-of reward. [Transcriber's note: the rest of this paragraph illegible
-in scan.]
-
-"And I am to take twenty men with me?" said Balgonie, after an
-unpleasant pause.
-
-"Yes! the bridge will be lowered for you after sunset. Whoever these
-lurkers are, they have been seen and overheard; and this coin is
-proof sufficient to warrant the transportation of a whole province.
-Be they who they may, by every dome in sacred Mother Moscow, they
-shall find me ready for them!"
-
-And Bernikoff grimly touched his small dagger, a species of weapon
-which a Russian officer is seldom or never without, even in the
-present day; and when Charlie Balgonie remembered how that same
-dagger had been thrust into the throat of the half-strangled Peter
-III., a flush of indignant hate and aversion crossed his honest face.
-To him it was evident that the spirit of mischief or malevolence made
-Bernikoff select him, as one whom he suspected of a friendly interest
-in the family of Count Mierowitz, for this unpleasant duty, instead
-of Captain Vlasfief, the Lieutenant of Schlusselburg, or any other
-officer, who must have been better acquainted with the adjacent town
-and all its places of entertainment, than he, a total stranger, could
-ever be.
-
-But he was a soldier; he had no resource but to obey in silence; and
-an angry sigh escaped him, as he stuck his loaded pistols in his
-girdle, when the sun sank behind the green painted roofs of the
-wooden town, and the evening gun boomed from the ramparts across the
-Lake of Ladoga.
-
-Defiling in the twilight through the streets of Schlusselburg, he
-marched straight to where he knew that the principal Tratkir, or
-tea-house, was situated; and while his heart sank within him in fear
-of _whom_ he might arrest,--perhaps Natalie herself,--he at once
-surrounded the building, to prevent all egress, and to the evident
-alarm and perturbation of all who were within.
-
-These tea-houses are no longer to be found in the capital of Russia
-now, for there all the _restaurants_ are constituted and arranged
-upon the French and German models; but they still exist in Moscow and
-elsewhere; and under their roofs, the genuine Muscovite consumes what
-would seem a fabulous amount of the Chinese plant. They are chiefly
-the resort of soldiers, porters, and droski drivers, all of whom must
-behave in a polite and orderly manner while there. All must enter
-the great room where the tea is served, cap in hand, alike out of
-respect for the company, and to the holy pictures, Souzdal daubs of
-SS. Sergius, Alexander Newski, and so forth, which decorate the
-walls; and all must salute the bar-keeper, after first saluting the
-Holy Image, which is to be found in every Russian apartment, and
-before which, a lamp of train oil is frequently burning.
-
-When the crooked sabres of the dismounted Cossacks were seen flashing
-in the porch, and when Balgonie entered with his sword drawn, passing
-along the narrow way between the numerous tables, at which the groups
-were seated, amid an oppressive odour of strong tea, coarse tobacco,
-and Russian leather from boots, caps, and girdles; many a peasant in
-his canvas caftan, and many a stout moujik in his fur shoubah, felt
-his heart quail with apprehension, he knew not of what; and every
-saucer--the tea is not drunk from cups--was set down untasted, while
-one or two men nearly choked themselves with their lumps of sugar;
-for usually it is not put into the tea, but is retained in the mouth
-of the drinker, so that, in a spirit of economy, the poor Muscovite
-may indulge in two, perhaps three cups of his favourite beverage, and
-use thereto but one piece of sugar.
-
-For his intrusion Balgonie apologised; this, though a very unusual
-proceeding in a country so despotic, failed to reassure the tea
-drinkers, who were all hushed in silence and expectation; and a girl
-who had been singing for their amusement, crouched down in a corner
-for concealment.
-
-Balgonie counted the number of persons in the Tratkir, and noted the
-exact hour by his watch; he then proceeded, with a heart full of
-anxiety and dread, to examine each person in succession, in reality
-looking for those he had no wish to find.
-
-All who possessed the requisite papers, showed them; others proved,
-all in succession, to be soldiers in uniform, moujiks, and droski
-drivers, with their brass badges, sailors, and serfs; thus, after a
-time, a load seemed to be lifted from the mind of the young officer.
-As he turned to leave the apartment without a prisoner, the Cossack
-Jagouski rather roughly dragged the singing girl from the nook where
-she had sought concealment, and then Balgonie recognised the fine
-dark face, the black eyes, and the large glittering ear-rings of Olga
-Paulowna, the gipsy girl whom he had befriended at Louga--she who
-saved him from a terrible fate in the forest.
-
-"Let the girl go free, Jagouski," said Balgonie; "I shall answer for
-her if required."
-
-Olga drew a paper from her bosom and showed that it was her passport
-from the Commandant of Krejko, permitting her to travel to and from
-Schlusselburg.
-
-Jagouski saluted and withdrew a few paces; and now, as if the cloud
-of doubt and dread Balgonie's arrival had cast over all was
-dispersed, again the noisy hum of voices pervaded the long room of
-the tea-house, and laughter even broke forth at intervals.
-
-"Olga," said Balgonie, "you here--so far from home?"
-
-"Yes, Hospodeen, for my home is anywhere, or wherever night finds me;
-but I have news for you."
-
-"News--and for me?"
-
-"Yes," said she, sinking her voice to a whisper; "I have news of
-Natalie Mierowna----"
-
-"Hush, for heaven's sake, girl!--hush!" said Balgonie with a nervous
-start.
-
-"She is here----"
-
-"Here in this house?"
-
-"No, Hospodeen."
-
-"Where then?--oh, speak quickly!"
-
-"In the neighbourhood of Schlusselburg."
-
-Charlie felt his heart die within him at this intelligence, for such
-a vicinity was full of peril.
-
-"Be to-morrow at noon on the road that leads to Tosna, and you shall
-learn more; but do you know it, Hospodeen?"
-
-"I shall soon discover it--and the place?"
-
-"The skirts of the wood four versts from this."
-
-"Good--till then, adieu; and God be with you."
-
-Balgonie retired all unaware or heedless that his Cossacks were
-secretly jesting at his whispering with the pretty gipsy; and through
-the dark streets he marched them towards the great and sombre masses
-of the fort which loomed between him and the star-lighted sky, his
-heart the while being literally sick with alarm and dismay, in the
-conviction, that the long-dreaded crisis was coming--that Natalie was
-near, and the place of her concealment was known to a vagrant gipsy
-girl, the sister of Nicholas Paulovitch, who, if he knew it not
-already, might wrest the secret from her with the point of his knife,
-for the information of him whose spy he was--the hateful Bernikoff!
-
-Ruin and sorrow were close at hand, indeed.
-
-On receiving the official but verbal report of Balgonie, and learning
-that the visit to the identical tea-house where the dangerous rouble
-was found had proved abortive, and that there was no one to be
-knouted or hanged in the morning, Colonel Bernikoff became
-transported with rage, and lifted his cane somewhat threateningly.
-On this, Balgonie's hand was instantly laid on the hilt of his sword.
-
-"Beware, Excellency," said he firmly: "a blow to an equal is a foul
-insult; to an inferior it is mean tyranny; and, in either instance,
-blood alone should wash it out."
-
-On this the Colonel's rage assumed a new phase; he trod on his cocked
-hat, and ordered the wax candles which he had always burning before
-the image of his patron, St. Sergius, to be extinguished. He loaded
-the effigy with the bitterest reproaches, and for that night left the
-poor saint in total darkness, despite the intercession of Father
-Chrysostom.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII.
-
-THE WOOD OF THE HONEY TREE.
-
-The noon of the following day saw Charlie Balgonie--after an anxious
-and almost sleepless night--proceeding on foot along the road that
-leads southward to Tosna, a little town which stands on a stream of
-the same name, a tributary of the Neva, but some thirty versts
-distant from Schlusselburg.
-
-His military ardour was already fading, so far as the Russian service
-was concerned, amid his pressing anxiety for the dangers that menaced
-Natalie; and he felt himself only a species of serf in an imperial
-uniform. Unlike the Admirals Douglas, Mackenzie, Count Balmaine, and
-hundreds of other Scotsmen who served the Empress by sea and land, he
-had thoughtlessly omitted to stipulate, as they had more warily done,
-that he was to be at perfect liberty, as a British subject, to return
-to his native land whenever he felt disposed to do so. The poor
-friendless boy--the kidnapped palatine, who had been rescued from the
-burning wreck of the _Piscatona_, while floating adrift in the North
-Sea--could know little how necessary such stipulations were when he
-joined the Regiment of Smolensko as a cadet; and now he felt himself
-literally a military slave of the ambitious and lascivious Catharine
-II.
-
-Before him rose the tall fir trees of the forest where he was to meet
-Olga--the Wood of the Honey Tree, as it was named from an episode
-(related by Demetrius, the ambassador, in his History of Muscovy)
-which occurred to a serf of Bernikoff's, Alexis Jagouski, father of
-the same man whom he slew so wickedly and ungratefully in the flight
-from Zorndorf; and the whole anecdote reads so very like one of the
-adventures of Baron Munchausen, or Sir Jonah Barrington's "bounces,"
-that we may be pardoned translating it here.
-
-"This man," says Demetrius, "when seeking honey, got into a hollow
-tree, where the bees had concealed such a quantity thereof, that it
-sucked him up to the breast, and being unable to extricate himself,
-he subsisted for two day upon honey alone, and finding that his
-shouts were answered only by the echoes of the vast forest, he began
-to despair of being freed from his sweet captivity. At last, to his
-terror, there came a large brown bear from the Neva, to eat of the
-honey which the old tree contained, and of which these animals are
-greedily fond. As the bear was descending with hinder part foremost,
-the poor serf caught hold of his loins. This sudden grasp among his
-fur so terrified the bear, that he started and fled, and in doing so,
-drew the peasant from that sweet prison, which otherwise had proved
-his grave: hence was the forest named, the Wood of the Honey Tree."
-
-There, as Balgonie approached, all was still save the voice of the
-valdchnep, or woodcock, and the hum of insects; he lingered for a few
-minutes on the outskirts, just where the highway to Tosna dipped down
-into a deep and gloomy dingle of intertwisted branches, which formed
-a species of leafy tunnel overhead.
-
-Three miles distant to the northward, he could see the place he had
-left, the gloomy Castle of Schlusselburg, moated round by the Neva
-and Lake of Ladoga, jutting into the latter on its rock, its towers
-wearing a sombre brown tint even in the noonday sunshine, as if no
-light could brighten them; and the white flag of Russia was
-fluttering on the summit of the keep, where Ivan was pining away the
-years of youth in silence and seclusion.
-
-Balgonie heard a voice waking the echoes of the dingle; three notes
-were struck on a tambourine, as a signal to him, and Olga approached
-singing a verse of that prophetic song, which is so soothing to
-Russian military and religious vanity:--
-
- "But when the hundredth year
- Shall three times doubled be;
- Then shall the end appear
- Of all our slavery.
- Then shall the warlike powers
- From distant climes return,
- Egypt again be ours,
- While the Turkish domes shall burn!"
-
-
-"I have kept my appointment, Olga," said he.
-
-"And I mine," she replied gaily, while tripping towards him in a
-playful manner; "now follow me, Hospodeen, and I shall take you to
-those who will be right glad to see you."
-
-"First let us be sure that we are unwatched."
-
-"Right," said she; and stooping in her earnestness, her keen, dark,
-and glittering eyes swept the whole landscape that lay between the
-wood and Schlusselburg, and glanced keenly beyond the stems of the
-trees into the dingles and vistas; but, save the birds on the
-branches and the gnats revolving in the sunshine, no living thing was
-visible.
-
-"Follow me, Hospodeen," said the gipsy; "we have not far to go."
-
-They descended into the dark dingle, or hollow, and then quitted the
-highway; Olga gathering up her skirts that she might tread with
-greater facility among the thick gorse and long rank grass,
-displaying, as she did so, two very handsome and taper ankles cased
-in scarlet stockings with elaborate clocks of yellow braid.
-
-She explained to Balgonie that, as there was no path to guide them,
-her chief clues were a set of notches, cut to all appearance
-carelessly, as if with a woodman's axe, on the bark of the great pine
-trees.
-
-"These marks seem fresh, and recently cut--who made them?" asked
-Balgonie.
-
-"The Hospodeen, Basil Mierowitz," she whispered.
-
-"Poor Basil!" responded Charlie, in a low tone.
-
-After toiling through the dense forest for more than half an hour,
-pausing ever and anon to listen and watch whether they were observed,
-they arrived at the foot of a grey granite cliff, the face of which
-was screened, or nearly covered, by masses of depending ivy,
-creepers, and green lichens, forming a background which, at a little
-distance, blended with the greenery of the woods.
-
-"We have arrived," said she, turning, with a flush on her dark face
-which made it radiantly beautiful. She struck three strokes on her
-tambourine, and shook its bells.
-
-Charlie thought of her kinsman, Nicholas Paulovitch, and
-instinctively grasped one of the pistols at his girdle, on seeing the
-dark and bearded face of a man appear among the ivy leaves some
-twenty feet above him. A rope ladder was lowered, and whatever
-doubts or misgivings were in his mind, he felt himself constrained
-now to go through the adventure to its end.
-
-He clambered up, and on the great screen of ivy being lifted aside,
-found himself face to face with his old friend Basil Mierowitz, the
-subaltern of his company, who, grasping both his hands with kindly
-warmth of manner, led him into a cavern or grotto, one of a series of
-many, into which the granite rocks had there been hollowed by some
-long past convulsion of nature.
-
-Another hand was instantly laid on his,--a smaller and softer
-one,--and two beautiful dark eyes were bending tenderly on his face.
-
-"Natalie!" he exclaimed, in a tremulous voice, and would have pressed
-her to his breast, but for the presence of Basil and several other
-men.
-
-Amid the twilight of the cavern, he could perceive its rough natural
-walls and arch, with hazy but sunny rays that streamed faintly in the
-background, athwart the obscurity, as if the vault communicated with
-other galleries in the rock, through which the upper light of day
-stole in by the crannies and chasms. He was also enabled to see,
-that with Natalie, her brother Basil, and her cousin Usakoff, who had
-been a Lieutenant of the Valikolutz Grenadiers, there were about
-twenty men in the place, all clad in sheepskin shoubahs, canvas
-doublets, or the caftan, the invariable dress of the Russian peasant,
-and nearly all had red serge breeches, rough boots, and girdles of
-rope or untanned leather.
-
-Though attired like woodmen or labouring serfs, all these men had
-unmistakably the bearing of well-trained soldiers: all were strong,
-active, and resolute in aspect; and Balgonie had no doubt that they
-were those natives of the Ukraine, the deserters from the Livonian
-frontier, of whom Bernikoff had spoken; for against the walls of the
-cavern were ranged a number of muskets and bayonets, with sets of
-accoutrements, sabres, and pistols. There, too, stood a regimental
-drum, decorated with the imperial arms, and the forbidden name of the
-Emperor _Ivan_!
-
-Every moment seemed to increase the perils that surrounded the
-luckless Balgonie, for now he was in the very den of the conspirators.
-
-All carried in their girdles a dagger or knife and double brace of
-pistols. They seemed to be chiefly soldiers of the Regiment of
-Valikolutz: and his sudden appearance among them, in the full uniform
-of the Smolensko Infantry, evidently excited, if it did not alarm
-them; for discipline becomes so completely a habit--a second nature;
-and, as if the presence of an epaulette rendered them uneasy, they
-all withdrew into the back or more obscure portion of the cavern,
-leaving him and their two leaders together.
-
-"Oh! Basil--Usakoff--my friends, if indeed I may yet dare to call
-you so, and live," said Balgonie, in a voice that was broken by
-emotion, "for what rash and dreadful purpose do I find you and these
-unfortunate fellows here?"
-
-"You, and all Russia too, shall learn ere long," replied Mierowitz
-calmly and sternly, yet with a grave and noble air, with which his
-coarse canvas caftan assorted oddly.
-
-"And poor Natalie!" exclaimed Balgonie, in a tone of grief and
-reproach; "have you no pity for her?"
-
-"Until Natalie informed me, I knew not, my friend, Carl Ivanovitch,
-that _you_ were the bearer of that secret dispatch, which might have
-cost you limb or life, when it was too late to arrest those I had set
-upon your track."
-
-"Well, certainly, I was not much indebted to the good offices of your
-rogue, Podatchkine."
-
-"The Corporal's orders were simply to abstract the document, and
-bring it to me; not to slay its bearer, unless such a catastrophe
-became unavoidable."
-
-"He fell into his own snare--a dark and deadly one."
-
-"Happily you escaped it; and I have saved two hundred silver roubles,
-for the service of the Emperor."
-
-"Who do you mean?" asked Balgonie, in a whisper.
-
-"Ivan--the Prisoner of Schlusselburg!" exclaimed Usakoff, with
-enthusiasm.
-
-"Alas!" added Balgonie, "you court but your own destruction."
-
-"Think not so; but join us, and share our perils and our glory,"
-replied the other.
-
-"I am bound by allegiance to the Empress."
-
-"You are but a tool in her hands, Carl Balgonie."
-
-"Perhaps so; but one with a devilish sharp edge, I hope," replied
-Balgonie, who felt only genuine sorrow; and a silence of nearly a
-minute ensued.
-
-The manner and voice of Basil Mierowitz were singularly soft and
-winning, yet he was bold and resolute; and though a young man, he had
-all the free and easy bearing of a courtly soldier, blended with
-something of the calm severity of a priest--a manner that was very
-impressive.
-
-The Polish and Cossack blood that mingled in the veins of Apollo
-Usakoff gave a freer and bolder, perhaps a wilder, bearing and style
-of language; his nose was aquiline, and expressed fierceness of
-disposition; yet his features otherwise were essentially delicate and
-noble, and his eyes were strangely beautiful in colour and variety of
-expression. They were dark grey, encircled by a ring of light, clear
-brown; and when he spoke, or became excited, the iris contracted and
-expanded, as the blood flowed and ebbed in his fiery and enthusiastic
-heart, for he was a grandson of the Hetman Mazeppa--that Pole, whose
-story is so well known, and who, after being bound naked on a wild
-and maddened horse, to punish him for having an intrigue with a noble
-lady of his own country, was carried by his steed through woods and
-wastes, and herds of wolves and bears, into the heart of the Ukraine,
-where he lived to become the prince and leader of those wild Cossacks
-who dwell upon the banks of the Dnieper.
-
-Sleeping in a cavern, among rough soldiers, on a bed of dried leaves
-and moss, had not improved either the costume or the appearance of
-Natalie Mierowna. With pain and sorrow,--almost with agony,--Charlie
-Balgonie could perceive how her once rich dress of yellow silk, with
-its trimmings of narrow ermine, was faded and soiled--even tattered
-and worn; her laces and her soft hair alike dishevelled and uncared
-for; and that already had a hunted and haggard expression been
-imparted to her beautiful eyes, and soft, pale, delicate face. Anger
-and pride alone remained; but both were for a time subdued by the
-sudden presence of Balgonie, and the love she was compelled to
-repress outwardly, at least, when before so many eyes.
-
-Katinka, the sturdy Polish attendant, who loved Natalie dearly, alone
-seemed unimpaired by the hardships of a forest life.
-
-"Concerning the secret dispatch of the woman, Catharine
-Christianowna, to the Governor of Schlusselburg," said Usakoff,
-resuming the subject of conversation, "you, Carl, are perhaps aware
-of its contents?"
-
-"Yes," replied Balgonie, and then paused.
-
-"Say on, my friend," said Usakoff; "we can hear anything now."
-
-"They were to the effect, that a scheme had been formed to free the
-Unknown Person in Schlusselburg, and that he was not to be permitted
-to fall _alive into the hands of any one who came to seek him_."
-
-"Savage orders, which there can be no mistaking."
-
-"Orders which Bernikoff is quite capable of fulfilling," added
-Mierowitz in a sad and stern voice, while their listening followers
-burst into low and whispered, but fierce imprecations against the
-Empress.
-
-"Bernikoff is a man without one human sympathy," said Basil.
-
-"And no marvel is it?" exclaimed Usakoff, while the strange light
-already described gleamed in his dark grey eyes; "his mother, like a
-true Tartar woman, is said to have anointed her breasts daily with
-blood, as she suckled him, even as Dion tells us the mother of
-Caligula did, that her child might, in manhood, be merciless."
-
-Vlasfief they stigmatised as "the son of a goat," being originally a
-boy of the great foundling Hospital at Moscow, where, when the
-increase of children became so great that nurses could not be found,
-the lacteal food of animals was introduced, and a herd of goats
-adopted as wet-nurses for the establishment.
-
-"Carl," said Basil, taking the hand of Balgonie, "Natalie has told me
-all."
-
-"All!"
-
-"Yes--all that passed in Louga. Dear Natalie has never had a secret
-from me."
-
-"And you forgive me?" said Balgonie earnestly.
-
-"I do--but on this condition."
-
-"Oh name it, Basil!"
-
-"That if you do not join us, you will, at least, not actively oppose
-our scheme."
-
-"I scarcely know what it is."
-
-"Know this then," replied the other emphatically, yet softly, "that
-on its success depends the success of your love; for if it fails,
-then all our lives are lost!"
-
-"You say that you love my cousin Natalie?" said young Usakoff, in a
-somewhat loftier tone.
-
-"With all my heart--with all my soul, I do!" replied Balgonie,
-pressing a hand of Natalie between his own.
-
-"Yet, Carl, if you valued generosity and loved pity--if you loved
-glory and honour, as a soldier should, you would risk the loss even
-of _her_,--yea, give her up, if necessary,--and join us!"
-
-"What would either life or glory be after such a sacrifice? Ah, my
-friend, you never loved as I do!" replied Charlie, with some
-irritation of manner.
-
-"Perhaps; but I have always thought how grandly terrible a figure was
-made by Mohammed the Great, when, on a stage, before his discontented
-army, he struck off the head of a favourite Sultana to convince his
-soldiers that he preferred glory to love."
-
-"Cousin, cousin," said Natalie, who felt all the peril and delicacy
-of her lover's position, "you talk thus to-day, when last night you
-shed tears--yes, bitter tears for the loss of your sister. We were
-all taken prisoners together, Carl--my poor father, Mariolizza, and
-I. Bound with cords,--see, the marks are on me still," she added,
-showing her white wrists, while her dark eyes filled with a dusky
-fire,--"we were conveyed in a covered kabitka towards St. Petersburg,
-on the way to which it broke down, in a wood near Paulovsk, not far
-from the outer walls of the imperial gardens. There, in the
-confusion, I was enabled to escape, by the aid of the gipsy girl
-Olga, who, hoping some such chance might occur, had followed us afoot
-from Louga; and through her further knowledge and assistance, I was
-enabled to join my brother Basil here."
-
-"My dear old father--and my soft and tender Mariolizza--a blow must
-be rapidly struck, if we would save them from greater horrors than
-those they now endure!" exclaimed Basil: "the die has been cast now;
-and if I cannot save them and our legitimate Emperor, we can at least
-all perish together."
-
-"Dangers menace you closely; the roads around the fortress are
-patrolled, and gun-boats watch the shores of the lake. A coin of
-Ivan found in a tea-house----"
-
-"Malediction--yes! 'twas I, Carl, who dropped it there," exclaimed
-Basil: "well, and this coin?"
-
-"Has roused all the suspicions of Bernikoff; and he knows that you
-and your cousin have deserted from your posts in Livonia."
-
-"Already, does he know of this?"
-
-"Yes, with many other details."
-
-"Then," replied Basil Mierowitz, with growing sternness, "we have not
-an hour to lose. Who informed him?"
-
-"Lieutenant-General Weymarn, by a special messenger, while I was
-loitering at Louga."
-
-"So, so! By our Lady of Kazan, we must be prompt in action. I have
-cruised thrice round Schlusselburg disguised as a fisherman, and know
-well all the approaches."
-
-"Basil, Usakoff, I implore you by all you hold dear on earth and
-sacred in Heaven to pause while there is yet time--to abandon your
-wild scheme, and make your peace, if possible, with the Empress."
-
-"You were right to add 'if possible,' my friend," replied the other
-calmly but bitterly. "Already compromised by desertion, my father
-and betrothed wife chained in a fortress by the Neva, what terms
-would Catharine offer us? Carl Ivanovitch," he added, with a lofty
-smile, "I do not press you to join us, or seek to lure you into the
-dangers of an enterprise the enthusiasm of which you cannot share. I
-do not seek even to turn your presence as a trusted staff officer in
-Schlusselburg to account, though it might further our objects, and be
-the means, perhaps, by strategy, of saving many a valuable life.
-Still less do I desire to turn to account your intimacy with the
-young Emperor Ivan, though I envy you that great privilege. Even in
-the love I bear my sister (though it might tempt you to cast your lot
-with us--_with her_ shall I say?), I leave you unquestioned and free."
-
-"I thank you, Basil," said Balgonie sadly, and with a heightened
-colour, caused by irrepressible annoyance at the last remark of
-Mierowitz.
-
-"But we have all sworn before the altar of our Lady of Kazan, and the
-image of St. Sergius, to devote our lives to the matter in hand; so
-retreat is impossible--advice and entreaty alike unavailing."
-
-Balgonie felt an acute pang on hearing this; for he knew that in
-Russia no place was esteemed as more holy than the church of our Lady
-of Kazan in St. Petersburg. Around its shrine--the _sanctum
-sanctorum_ of which no woman has ever entered--are the keys of
-conquered cities, the banners of a thousand slaughtered armies, and
-the batons and sabres of their leaders, the Frenchman, the Turk, the
-Pole, the Persian, and the Dane, the Swede and the German; and he
-knew, too, that no image, to the Muscovite mind, is more sacred than
-that of St. Sergius--the same absurd idol which the Kazan column bore
-with them at the battle of the Alma, and displayed in vain to the
-advancing bayonets of old Sir Colin's Highland Brigade.
-
-"The blow once struck," resumed Basil, "we shall be joined by the
-Cossacks of the Ukraine and the Don, among whom we have many
-impatient adherents, and by all who hold of the Houses of
-Brunswick-Wolfenbuttel, of Holstein Grottorp, and of all who hate
-Anhalt Zerbst; all Russia will soon follow, from the shores of the
-Black Sea to those of the White--from Revel to the Ural Mountains.
-We have not forgotten the reign of Elizabeth: how many noses were
-slit, how many foreheads were branded, how many ears cropped, and
-tongues shortened, and how many eyes were darkened for ever during
-that time of tyranny; how many backs flayed by the knout; how many
-nobles banished to Siberia, or drowned in prison vaults by the
-swollen waters of the Neva. Pure nationality is dying now; but we
-must revive Russia--not as it is ruled by a lascivious woman and her
-jealous lovers, but Holy Russia of Peter the Great--strong,
-invincible, and the terror alike of the Eastern and Western world.
-Let us save our country from those who oppress it, and replace upon
-its throne the Grand Duke, the Czar--the Emperor Ivan; for the right
-given by God and by inheritance can never be destroyed!"
-
-A murmur of applause from his followers succeeded this outburst
-(which we can render but feebly in English), and they clashed their
-weapons in approval, while, fired by her brother's energy, Natalie
-sung a verse of a well known Russian song:--
-
- "Now, as of old, the sabre's ready,
- And its might they'll feel afar,
- When but three short words are utter'd,
- God, our Country, and the Czar!"
-
-
-"Without cannon, you cannot mean to assault a place so strong as
-Schlusselburg, fortified as it has been by all the skill of
-Todleben?" said Balgonie, after a pause.
-
-"Ask me not what we mean to do, Carl: for your own sake, my dear
-friend, the less you know of us, and of our plans, the better. We
-shall come upon you all when you least expect us, and in that hour
-take no heed of what you see or hear. Mix yourself up with it as
-little as you can: if we fail, we perish in our failure; if we
-triumph, and Ivan is replaced upon his throne, be assured that Basil
-Mierowitz will not forget the lover of his sister--the comrade of
-many a brave and happy day with the Regiment of Smolensko. Now
-adieu--and come hither no more, lest your steps be watched."
-
-Balgonie pressed the hands of his two friends, whom he viewed as
-fated and foredoomed men; he kissed Natalie with a tenderness that
-was alike sorrowful and despairing, for he trembled in his heart lest
-he should never see her more; and, in another moment or so, like one
-in a bewildering dream, he had descended the rope ladder, and was
-traversing the forest--the Wood of the Honey Tree--forgetful or
-oblivious of whether he was watched or not.
-
-He foresaw but woe and ruin now; and proceeded slowly back to
-Schlusselburg, with his mind a prey to doubt, anxiety, and dread of
-what might be the sequel to the impending catastrophe. He felt
-assured of one thing only--that a deed, bold, reckless, and
-desperate, would be the result of his friend's desertion from
-Livonia, their political rancour, and personal desire for vengeance
-on the Empress and her favourites.
-
-In that deed, and its too probable failure, he foresaw the
-destruction of his love; and he felt bitterly that rather than have
-known and lost Natalie, it would have been better had fate drowned
-him when the Palatine ship was burned, or shot him when warring in
-Silesia!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII.
-
-DOUBT AND DREAD.
-
-Nearly all the events which followed the secret visit of Balgonie to
-the conspirators will be found in the more recent histories of
-Russia, and in the manifestoes published by the Empress Catharine at
-the time--especially her _oukaz_ subsequent to the revolt of Basil
-Mierowitz.
-
-On returning to Schlusselburg, Balgonie found the Governor, Colonel
-Bernikoff, in a very bad humour indeed. The Grand Chancellor had
-recently sent him a prisoner, with a note to the effect that he wrote
-verses, and was otherwise a dangerous fellow--to keep him for a week
-or two, and then get rid of him. He had thrice sent to the
-Chancellor, to learn under what name the man was to be _buried_, for
-the fellow was dead now--so much had the damp atmosphere of the lower
-vaults disagreed with his poetical temperament; but no answer had
-been returned, which was very annoying. So Bernikoff, whose patience
-was never very extensive, was furious; but he strove to soothe his
-ruffled feelings by several enormous pinches of the sharp snuff of
-Beresovski, from the box which--as we have before hinted--had been
-found in the fob of the late Peter III.; and by batooning, or beating
-with his cane, the Cossack Jagouski, whom he had suddenly detected in
-the act of praying secretly before the little image of St. Sergius,
-which was his--Colonel Bernikoff's--own peculiar and particular
-property.
-
-By the old laws of Muscovy, to be found worshipping at an image,
-erected by, or the property of another, designing thereby to have a
-share in the favour of the saint it represented, without being at any
-expense, was punishable by a fine, to refund "the owner some part of
-the money laid out for the said image;" but as the poor Cossack had
-not a copper denusca wherewith to bless himself, the Governor took it
-out of his back and shoulders (scarcely healed after his recent
-knouting), with the aid of a knotted walking cane.
-
-"'To steal and to lie,' according to Bulharyn, a famous Russian
-writer, 'are the two auxiliary verbs of our language,'" said the
-Colonel, panting with exertion, as the Cossack crept away with a
-glance of subdued ferocity in his stealthy eyes; "we take all that
-for granted; but this slave has been stealing the interest of my
-saint for himself!"
-
-He ordered an extra supply of wax candles to be lighted before the
-image, and then he knelt, bowed, and muttered:--
-
-"Holy St. Sergius, heed not the prayers of that rascal, he is only a
-vile serf, a slave, a Cossack from the Ukraine. Thou hast been very
-good to me, and shalt be treated handsomely. Candles of the finest
-wax shall burn before thee all night. I will love and pray for thee,
-so do thou protect and intercede for me, most holy Sergius!"
-
-And so he prayed till the dinner drum beat; and then, muttering an
-oath as he tripped over his sabre, the old savage hobbled away, to
-commit at least two of the seven deadly sins at table.
-
-"No tidings yet, Carl Ivanovitch, of those traitors!" said Bernikoff,
-when he had somewhat recovered his breath, after a deep draught of
-quass, the froth of which adhered to his grisly mustachio: "the
-Captain Vlasfief, and my faithful friend Tschekin, with forty picked
-Cossacks, and a clever guide----"
-
-"Nicholas Paulovitch, I presume."
-
-"The same," continued Bernikoff, with a fierce grimace on his lips
-and a cruel leer in his eyes, as he masticated a huge mouthful of
-green borsch with beef and eggs; "the same, sir,--and what then?"
-
-"Nothing, Excellency: but this oukha of sterlet is excellent. Well,
-these and the forty Cossacks----"
-
-"Are scouring all the roads between this and St. Petersburg on one
-flank, and between this and North Ladoga on the other; so the cursed
-Asiatics cannot escape me."
-
-"Who will betray them to you?" asked Balgonie, making a terrible
-effort to appear calm and unconcerned, as he played with his sword
-knot and the tassels of his sash, and forgot to eat.
-
-"Who?" exclaimed Bernikoff, grinding his teeth, and eating very fast.
-"Their own friends--their own dear comrades--adherents, which you
-will. Russia is full of people, yea of many nations. The Empress
-can reckon her faithful slaves by millions; yet, when a Russian hath
-his hat on his head, its rim contains the only friend on whom he can
-rely."
-
-"This is a severe libel on your country surely, Excellency."
-
-"'Tis truth though; so Basil Mierowitz, Usakoff, and the rest, are
-all doomed men. No one was ever lost on a straight road; thus the
-soldier who diverges from the straight line of duty must speedily
-find himself face to face with degradation and death. Punishment to
-those traitors will be swift and sure! So, I only fear that the
-Grand Chancellor will never give me the pleasure of having them under
-my judicious care in Schlusselburg. We have certain old vaults,
-built below the tide mark by Ivan the Terrible, for some of those
-people of Novgorod who leagued with the King of Poland. They are
-always full of fog; and I am curious to know how long an able-bodied
-prisoner might live there, or rather how long he would be in dying.
-But excuse me, Hospodeen, I confess me to-morrow, and there rings the
-bell for vespers already;" and making many Greek signs of the cross
-and other genuflexions, Bernikoff, after having gorged himself at
-table, hurried away to the chapel, where Father Chrysostom officiated.
-
-Charlie gladly sought the solitude afforded by the stockades and
-outworks of the fortress on the side towards the Lake of Ladoga.
-There, as elsewhere, was of course, a chain of sentinels; but they
-did not interrupt his lonely communing with himself.
-
-By his interest in Natalie, by his deep love for her, and more than
-all, perhaps, by his recent visit and interview, he already felt
-himself "art and part" (to use a Scottish legal phrase), or
-_particeps criminis_, with the rash adherents of Ivan. If one of
-these deserted the cause in which they had embarked, then would their
-lurking place be at once discovered, and the story of his recent
-visit be revealed.
-
-He dreaded lest Bernikoff and others suspected his friendly interest
-in the family of Count Mierowitz, and that more might yet be learned
-of it; thus he would have experienced neither shock nor surprise, had
-he, at any hour, in that land of treachery and espionage, seen either
-Captain Vlasfief, Lieutenant Tschekin, or any other officer of the
-fortress, advancing towards him sabre in hand, with an armed party,
-to demand his sword, to make him a prisoner, and march him off to the
-same prison which already held the old Count and Mariolizza, the
-innocent betrothed of Basil, and might soon hold another, who was
-dearer still--Natalie!
-
-"If I love her," he would say to himself at times, "why should I
-shrink from sharing all that she suffers now--all she may yet endure?
-Yet it would be wiser to watch well for her sake, and seek to save,
-or bear her away; but how--and where to?" was the next bewildering
-thought.
-
-And the generous Basil, the fiery and chivalrous Usakoff, oh that he
-might save them too! He mourned for Usakoff, who was the very soul
-of honour and heroism, the worthy grandson of that Mazeppa who, when
-Charles the XII. was retreating from Pultowa, swam the Borysthenes by
-the side of the fugitive king, and of whom the latter said in the
-words of the bard;--
-
- "Of all our band,
- Though firm of heart and strong of hand,
- In skirmish, march, or forage, none
- Can less have said or more have done
- Than thee, Mazeppa! on the earth
- So fit a pair had never birth,
- Since Alexander's day till now,
- As thy Bucephalus and thou;
- All Scythia's fame to thine should yield,
- For pricking on o'er flood and field."
-
-
-So worthy of such an ancestor, was he, too, to perish?
-
-This was, indeed, a miserable mood of mind in which to pass the
-nights and days of inactivity--of suspense and anxiety in which none
-could share, in that strong, guarded, and somewhat lonely fortress,
-which was washed, as we have said, on one side by the Neva, and on
-the other by the Lake of Ladoga, the very ripples of whose waves
-sounded hatefully in the ears of Balgonie.
-
-"Oh," thought he, "to be with Natalie on the side of a green and
-breezy Scottish mountain--on any part of the shore of free and happy
-Britain! to be with her there in peace and security, far, far from
-this land of suspicion and ferocious despotism, of state intrigues
-and savage punishments, where every second man is the spy upon, and
-the betrayer of, his fellow."
-
-Britain he might never see more: and now he found himself vaguely
-speculating on the probable comforts and public amusements afforded
-by Siberia, and those growing cities of the sorrowing and the
-banished, Tobolsk and Irkutsk, on the banks of the Lower Angara.
-
-He feared to look much, or often, towards the distant Wood of the
-Honey Tree, lest watchful eyes might be upon him to gather hints
-therefrom; still more did he fear to visit Natalie again, lest, by
-doing so, he might lead to the discovery and arrest of all: so the
-days and nights of dread, of longing, and suspense, passed slowly
-after each other now.
-
-The barriers of rank and wealth--the wealth afforded by the Count's
-estates and mines, his populous villages of serfs, and vast forests
-of timber--had all been removed now, and Natalie was reduced to a
-level lower even than her lover's; yet he cursed the mad schemes that
-had brought about such a revolution, and tossed feverishly and
-sleeplessly on his bed, when he thought of Natalie Mierowna,--his own
-loving and beloved Natalie,--so delicate and so tender, with her
-white soft skin and silky hair, her earnest and beautiful eyes,
-lurking among stern and outlawed soldiers in yonder damp cavern of
-the rocks, upon her bed of leaves and moss, at the mercy, perhaps, of
-any adherent of Basil's, who, to save his own head, might prove a
-traitor to them all! This dread was ever before him.
-
-The whole affair reminded him of some of the old Scottish raids or
-Jacobite plots, of years long passed away; and it was fated to
-resemble the former more strongly in some of its features, as the
-dark sequel will show.
-
-The guards and sentinels at Schlusselburg were doubled; the patrols
-were incessant by land, while on the lake the gun-boats of Admiral
-Mackenzie cruised near the walls; the cannons were loaded; the
-watch-words changed sometimes twice within four-and-twenty hours; and
-the general state of preparation for a sudden attack was unremitting:
-but time passed on quietly until the night of the fifteenth of
-September, when the crowning catastrophe came.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX.
-
-THE NIGHT OF THE 15TH SEPTEMBER.
-
-The past day had been unusually gloomy for the season. The sun had
-set in fiery clouds beyond the spires of St. Petersburg. The night
-was without a moon, and a strong east wind rolled the waters of
-Ladoga in billows of inky hue against the massive walls of the
-fortress in foam and fury on one side, while on the other, the waters
-of the Neva, swollen by recent rains, gurgled and chafed round the
-mouldy and moss-grown piers of the drawbridge.
-
-The wind moaned with a sullen sound past the mouths of the cannon,
-and whistled drearily through the deep embrasures and the loopholes
-for musketry in the casemates. Thunder had been heard at times, but
-afar; Elias, as the Russians poetically phrase it, was driving his
-chariot among the stars. Lightning had reddened all the lake, and
-cast the weird shadow of the castle athwart it for an instant; and,
-that a complete and melodramatic omen of impending evil might not be
-wanting, a huge sea-bird had perched upon the castle clock, and
-forcing round the hands, struck midnight four hours before the proper
-time.
-
-Since morning roll-call, Jagouski, the knouted, beaten, and ill-used
-Cossack, had been missing; he had quitted the fortress on some
-trivial pretence and had not since returned; patrols had seen nothing
-of him. Then Colonel Bernikoff was more than ever on the alert; but
-Balgonie, who now deemed anything better than the torture of
-suspense, had gone weary and feverishly to bed, to court for a time
-the happiness of oblivion, after having spent nearly the entire day
-upon the lake with an armed boat's crew, patrolling by water.
-
-From sleep, however, a sudden sound aroused him: he looked at his
-watch, and saw that the hands indicated twelve o'clock, midnight.
-
-What had he heard?
-
-In another moment the sound came again--the drums were beating to
-arms! He heard the clamour of hoarse Muscovite voices in court and
-corridor; the clanging of the castle bell; and he saw the gleam of
-torches reddening the old black walls and towers, and flaring on the
-grated windows as they were borne to and fro.
-
-His heart was beating with wild anxiety as he threw on his staff
-uniform, belted his sabre about him, placed his pistols in his
-girdle, and hurried forth to meet--it might be to cross blades--with
-the only friends he had in Russia!
-
-As he crossed the castle-yard by torchlight, he could perceive that
-the Cossacks, clad in their short blue jackets, red loose breeches,
-short boots, and tall, black, woollen busbies, were falling into
-their ranks with musketoon and sabre; and that the gunners were
-standing by their cannon with port-fires lighted: the latter casting
-a pale, ghastly, and unearthly glare upon the yawning embrasures, the
-walls of the fortress, and on their own stolid visages, which were
-pale and cadaverous as those of people usually who are hastily
-summoned from sleep in the night.
-
-As a staff officer who had no particular post, Charlie Balgonie knew
-that his duty attached him chiefly to Bernikoff, whom he now met
-hurrying forth in uniform, with a great cocked hat thrust angrily
-over his cunning and twinkling eyes, which were sparkling with anger,
-while every hair of his grizzled mustachioes, though these were long
-and snaky, bristled with excitement. There was a dangerous pallor in
-his visage; his square jaw looked still more tiger-like in contour,
-as his teeth were clenched; and he had his sabre drawn.
-
-By his side were his two favourite brother officers, who in face,
-form, and bearing, bore indications of being each, originally, a serf
-of the lowest, basest, and most unthinking kind--Captain Vlasfief,
-cruel and hollow-hearted, with his unfathomable smile; and Lieutenant
-Tschekin, the slimy, savage, and unscrupulous Muscovite. With these
-came several officers of the Cossack guard, with their elevated
-eyebrows, black mustachioes, their keen features, the plumes and
-cockades in their black fur caps, and their glittering costumes,
-forming altogether a striking and picturesque group, when seen by the
-light of several torches, which streamed through the deep and small
-arch, or doorway, of the keep in which Ivan was confined.
-
-The portcullis of this tower was up; and Balgonie could perceive its
-row of lower bars, like a line of black fangs in an open jaw, between
-him and the outline of the lighted archway.
-
-"What is the matter, Colonel Bernikoff," asked Balgonie; "what is the
-cause of all this alarm?"
-
-"Matter enough! We have had an _alerte_--the place seems to be
-invested by troops--Infantry of the Line, by all the devils--the head
-of a column--look for yourself, Balgonie!" exclaimed Bernikoff, with
-an oath.
-
-To omit the Christian name of a person addressed, and that of his
-father also, is a direct insult in Russia; but Balgonie heeded it not
-then. He hurried to the curtain wall which faced the landside, the
-outer gate, and drawbridge, and then, by the light of a torch, he
-could see that which certainly seemed to be the head of a column--a
-front rank of nearly fifty men, clad in the hideous uniform then worn
-by the Russian army, before it was altered, a few years after, by the
-superior taste of the notorious Major Semple Lisle, a Scottish
-adventurer,* who was well known as a lounger about St. James's Park,
-London, in 1804. Their coats were green, lined and faced with red,
-very tight in the body, with preposterously long skirts, tight
-breeches, and boots to the knee, with small cocked hats, having long
-flannel flaps to cover the ears in winter.
-
-
-* _Vide_ "Life of Major J. G. Semple Lisle, written by himself.
-London, 1800. Printed for W. Stewart, 194, Piccadilly."
-
-
-By the light of the same torch, Balgonie could see the bayonets
-fixed, and that two officers, with their sabres drawn, and a drummer,
-were in front of their little line. Having possession of the parole
-and countersign, which, no doubt, had been betrayed to them by the
-absent Jagouski, the whole party had contrived to delude the
-_Putparooschick_ (sub-lieutenant) in charge of the outer guard, and
-were now past the first barrier, and had actually taken possession of
-the drawbridge, which they had lowered across the Neva. The gate and
-guns of the second barrier were yet to be forced or passed; and thus
-these midnight visitors were in a species of trap.
-
-Too well could Balgonie recognise in the two officers--Basil
-Mierowitz, wearing the familiar uniform of the Regiment of Smolensko;
-and Usakoff, in the gay trappings of the Grenadiers of Valikolutz;
-and now, for the second time, their drummer beat a _chamade_, or
-summons for a parley, but as yet there was no response.
-
-Balgonie hastened after Bernikoff and the other officers. They had
-now ascended to the chamber of the unfortunate Ivan, from whose
-presence they had somewhat roughly expelled the chaplain, Father
-Chrysostom. On entering, he found that the royal recluse had sprung
-from bed, inspired by natural alarm, on finding his chamber suddenly
-entered at midnight, and full of armed men; but Ivan manifested no
-indignation--he was too gentle, too subdued, and completely broken in
-spirit for that.
-
-His singularly beautiful face was very pale; there was a strange
-calmness in his manner; and whatever he thought or anticipated, there
-was more of calm inquiry than of fear in his tone and in the
-expression of his fine soft eyes. Over his night-dress he had thrown
-a _robe-de-chambre_ of fine scarlet cloth edged with white ermine;
-and in this attire, with his long hair and delicate features, so
-chastened in expression by long solitude and complete seclusion from
-the outer world, he seemed more like a tall handsome woman, than a
-young man of three and twenty years.
-
-"What is this you tell me, Colonel Bernikoff," he was asking, as
-Balgonie entered; "my unhappy life threatened say you?"
-
-"Even so," said Bernikoff hoarsely, while averting his stealthy eyes
-from the young man's open and earnest face; "even so, Ivan
-Antonovitch; but your death will not be of our seeking."
-
-"Whose then, whose then?"
-
-"Your friends."
-
-"Oh, what dreadful paradox is this?" asked the Prince calmly; "must I
-die, even as Demetrius died?"
-
-"Yes," replied the other hoarsely.
-
-"And wherefore?"
-
-"There are those without the gates who seek you, and you must not
-fall alive into their hands," said Captain Vlasfief sternly, as he
-felt the point of his sabre with a finger.
-
-"Alas! I do not understand who can come to seek me!" replied the
-poor Prince, shuddering now, while an expression of horror began to
-spread over his fine face,--a horror gathered from the fierce and
-relentless aspect he read in the visages of those around him,--and he
-withdrew a pace or so towards his bed, saying, in a touching voice:--
-
-"Ah, do not leave me, good Colonel Bernikoff, or at least give me a
-sword--a sword----"
-
-"Fool--child--dolt! thou with a sword, and for what purpose?"
-thundered Bernikoff, as he sought to lash himself into the requisite
-pitch of fury; "for what purpose, I say?"
-
-"That I may defend myself."
-
-"'Tis needless," said Tschekin, with a cold smile; "we shall take
-every care of you."
-
-"Oh, Carl Ivanovitch Balgonie, my friend, my good friend! you I can
-trust--you I can command--come hither, and remain by my side," said
-the Prince, in an imploring accent, as a solemn foreboding came upon
-him when he saw the sabres stealthily drawn from their scabbards on
-every side, and even the terrible Nicholas Paulovitch drawing near,
-dagger in hand, with his long lock of hair, his scowling front, and a
-cruel expression, the very lust of blood, in his deep-set stony eyes.
-"Carl, Carl," cried Ivan; "your hand!"
-
-"Captain Balgonie--_he_ here!" roared Bernikoff, with one of his
-terrible maledictions.
-
-"Oh Excellency!" implored Balgonie, scarcely knowing what he should
-ask or urge.
-
-"Begone, sir, to the barrier gate, and keep the guard there to their
-duty--begone, sir, I command you, on your allegiance to the Empress!"
-
-To refuse or linger were alike impossible, though a wild cry of
-entreaty escaped the lips of the young Prince, who sprang forward,
-but was thrust roughly back towards his couch by many hands and many
-levelled weapons.
-
-The sword of Damocles, which had hung over his unhappy head so long,
-was about to descend at last!
-
-Balgonie, his heart swollen almost to bursting with shame, rage, and
-grief, rushed down the stair of the keep; but at the foot, and just
-as he passed where the old Chaplain Chrysostom was saying devoutly on
-his knees the prayers for the _dying_, he heard a shrill and
-protracted cry of agony ring through the vaulted tower--a cry that
-made his blood run cold!
-
-Humanity, generosity, and all his own good impulses would have drawn
-him back to the side, and, if possible, to the aid, of Ivan; but the
-force of discipline, and a knowledge of his own utter powerlessness,
-made him pause: for he was but one man--a young officer--a foreigner,
-too, opposed to a whole garrison of ferocious and unscrupulous
-soldiers.
-
-When, from the inner barrier gate, he looked up to the window of
-Ivan's room, he saw that the lights had been extinguished and all was
-darkness now.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX.
-
-MORNING OF THE 16TH SEPTEMBER.
-
-When Bernikoff appeared with his group of officers, Charlie Balgonie
-perceived that there were spots of blood upon his long, white leather
-gauntlets, that his sabre blade was broken off within six inches of
-the hilt, and that a terrible expression of ferocity clouded his
-features and those of all around him, the glare of the uplifted
-torches now paling as the light of day stole in, adding to the
-sinister significance of their faces.
-
-At that moment the drummer of the summoners beat a _chamade_ for the
-third time, and Bernikoff, advancing to the klinket, or wicket, in
-the palisades of the second inner gate, opened it, and, with a great
-sternness of manner, demanded what they required.
-
-"The release of His Imperial Majesty Ivan IV.," replied Basil
-Mierowitz, in a firm voice, while courteously saluting Bernikoff, in
-recognition of his superior rank.
-
-"If I refuse----"
-
-"You do so at your own peril," replied Basil, as sternly and as
-proudly as if, instead of a few discontented deserters and
-enthusiasts, the whole armies of Russia were at his back.
-
-"You cannot be mad enough, Basil Mierowitz, to think of assaulting
-us?"
-
-"That may or may not be, Excellency, according to circumstances," was
-the reply.
-
-"What troops are these under your orders?"
-
-"A guard of honour for the Emperor, if you peacefully comply--the
-first portion of an investing force, if you refuse," replied
-Mierowitz; but a sinister gleam of triumph flashed in the malicious
-eyes of Bernikoff, who gathered more of his real weakness from this
-evasive reply, than the rash young noble intended.
-
-"Listen, Colonel Bernikoff," he continued, while drawing from his
-breast a long paper of official aspect, to which several green and
-scarlet seals were attached: "Her Majesty Catharine II.--for a time
-of all the Russias--having come to the conclusion of resigning the
-imperial crown (convinced at last that she has no claim, thereto),
-and of replacing it on the head of the Emperor Ivan (son of Anthony
-Ulric, Duke of Wolfenbuttel), whom she now feels herself compelled to
-acknowledge as her lawful sovereign, though basely deposed in infancy
-by her predecessors, the Empress Elizabeth, and the Emperor Peter
-III.; therefore she hereby commands you, Colonel Bernikoff, Governor
-of her Castle of Schlusselburg, to set the Prince at liberty, with
-all speed and honour."
-
-For a document and summons of this artful and remarkable nature,
-Bernikoff was altogether unprepared. For a moment he grew deadly
-pale, but for a moment only, and glanced at the startled faces of
-those around him. Had he been too precipitate in bloodshed?
-
-"Where is Her Majesty just now?" he asked.
-
-"In the palace of the Czars, at Novgorod."
-
-"Was Novgorod so empty of all the great nobles and officers of
-Russia, that a document of such a nature was entrusted to a mere
-Lieutenant of Infantry--a deserter from Livonia?" said Bernikoff,
-with sudden rage. "'Tis an imposture--a forgery; there is but one
-God in Heaven--one monarch on earth, the Empress Catharine; and you,
-Mierowitz, and all who league with you, are but base dogs and
-traitors!"
-
-"Forward!" cried Basil, brandishing his sabre; "storm the
-gate--bayonet all who oppose us!"
-
-"Long live Ivan Antonovitch--long live the Emperor!" exclaimed his
-soldiers, rushing forward. But the klinket in the palisades was at
-once closed, and secured against them by an enormous transverse beam
-of wood; and though a confused volley of musketry was exchanged
-between them and the main guard, no one was struck, save Bernikoff,
-who staggered back into the arms of Vlasfief, having been bayoneted
-in the breast by the deserter Jagouski, who drove his weapon between
-the palisades, nearly finishing what Basil had begun by the blow of a
-musket but, which crushed the Colonel's hat, and nearly fractured his
-skull.
-
-"Ah! dogs and Asiatics, you have struck me!" shouted Bernikoff, whose
-voice was hoarse with rage and pain. "Dost know the penalty of
-wounding an officer--of striking a soldier who wears a decoration?"
-
-"Accursed Tartar, I neither know nor care. I revenge my brother's
-death at Zorndorf, my own wrongs, and the murder of Peter III.!"
-replied the exulting Cossack, with a bitter laugh.
-
-"May my right hand wither, and my tongue cleave to the roof of my
-mouth, when most I need them both, if I have not a terrible vengeance
-for all this work!" cried Bernikoff. "Vlasfief, Tschekin, show them
-their Prince!"
-
-While the undaunted Basil and his friend Usakoff, with their
-soldiers, proceeded to wheel round a cannon of the outworks, a
-32-pounder, for the purpose of blowing open the klinket of the inner
-barrier; and while Balgonie, a silent but excited and sick-hearted
-spectator of the whole affair, lingered close by, heedless whether
-the round-shot and grape, with which they were charging the gun, came
-his way, or not,--a window in the first story of the keep was dashed
-open, and while every torch and every eye were uplifted to the place,
-a terrible spectacle, which hushed all into momentary silence, was
-exhibited.
-
-It was the dead body of the young and handsome Ivan, suspended by the
-neck, at the end of a rope, stripped even of his night-dress, cold
-and white as the marble of Paros, and gashed with ten gaping wounds;
-for, as we are told in the newspapers of the period, "the unfortunate
-prince had struggled some time for his life, and even broke the
-Governor's sword in the conflict; but assistance was called for, and
-another bloody assassin (Vlasfief) appeared, who finished the horrid
-work."
-
-An exclamation of dismay and grief escaped Balgonie, on beholding
-this appalling spectacle; the weird and ghastly horror of which was
-enhanced by the uncertain light in which it was exhibited, and which
-imparted a wavering and almost life-like action to the corpse, as
-with its long hair floating, head and arms pendent, it swayed to and
-fro in the morning wind against the castle wall.
-
-"_Hospodi pomilui! Hospodi pomilui!_"* cried Basil Mierowitz,
-covering his face with his hands, and permitting the musket with
-which he had armed himself to fall to the ground with a clash, which,
-together with his most mournful exclamation, alone broke the silence.
-
-
-* Lord have mercy upon us!
-
-
-"'Behold,' said Bernikoff, in cruel triumph, while blasphemously
-using the words of Ezekiel--"'behold, I take away from thee the
-desire of thine eyes with a stroke!' Glory to God and to the
-Empress! This is your Emperor--now let him head your troops.
-Doubtless he will make a fine figure on the Imperial throne."
-
-"Oh! Bernikoff," exclaimed Basil, "you are like Judas, as we may see
-him at the Kazan church--one hand on the mouth denoting treachery,
-and the other on a bag of money."
-
-"Thou liest, Lieutenant! my fingers know more of the grip of steel
-than of gold," said the other furiously, as he hurled the hilt of his
-broken sabre at the speaker.
-
-"So--so--this has been your work and decision?"
-
-"Yes--how do you like it?" was the mocking reply.
-
-"Thou art a cruel judge; but remember the law of Peter the Great----"
-
-"Which makes the judge answerable for his decision?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Then shall I content me, traitor, and be answerable for my decision
-as well as for its execution. I have done my duty to the Czarina."
-
-"You have done a deed for which hell must blush and angels weep," was
-the forcible reply of Mierowitz, who seemed so overcome by grief and
-horror as to lose all self-possession; for he now ordered his men to
-disperse to the woods--to seek safety in flight; and then calmly
-taking off his sword-belt and sash, he threw them on the ground
-saying--
-
-"Since my Imperial master is dead, further resistance would be vain
-in me."
-
-He was almost immediately afterwards struck to the earth, and made
-prisoner by Lieutenant Tschekin, who, with a party of dismounted
-Cossacks, had stolen through the casemates and galleries to a postern
-opening on the rear of the drawbridge, and these, after firing a
-confused volley with their pistols and musketoons, fell with their
-sharp crooked sabres upon the now thoroughly disheartened adherents
-of Mierowitz. Lieutenant Usakoff and Jagouski alone made any
-vigorous resistance, resolving not to be taken alive.
-
-Fighting desperately, almost back to back, the former armed with the
-sabre of Mazeppa, and the latter with a musket, and both bleeding
-from many wounds, they were driven through the outer barrier towards
-the town. On the pathway Jagouski stumbled over a comrade, and was
-taken; but Apollo Usakoff, with a shout in which triumph and despair
-were mingled, leaped into the Neva, the waters of which swept him
-away, and he was seen no more by his pursuers.
-
-When Tschekin's Cossacks joined in the _mêlée_ with the fugitives,
-Balgonie sprang through the klinket, sword in hand, resolved to
-succour his friend at all hazards, and fortunately arrived just in
-time to save him (when struck down and trod under foot) from the
-bulky giant Nicholas Paulovitch, who, with a clubbed musket, was
-about to give him a blow that must inevitably have proved fatal.
-
-Paulovitch he ran through the heart--or at least the place where his
-heart might be supposed to have been--and spurning him off the blade
-with his foot, hurled the snorting ruffian to the ground, and raised
-his friend, with the assistance of a soldier and Lieutenant Tschekin.
-
-"Made prisoner, and by you too, Carl!" said Basil, reproachfully and
-in a low voice, for he was faint with wounds and bruises.
-
-"By me, but to save you."
-
-"Seek rather to save Natalie, if you can," he whispered; "she is, she
-is--"
-
-"Where, _where_?" said Balgonie, impetuously and imploringly.
-
-But there was no reply. Basil had fainted, and was borne into the
-Castle of Schlusselburg, a prisoner of State.
-
-Balgonie never saw the face of his friend again!
-
-So ended, for a time, a scheme, the importance of which was only
-equalled by its bold recklessness--the scheme of two subaltern
-officers to revolutionise the vast empire of Russia, and to subvert
-the firm dominion of Catharine II., one of the most powerful and
-popular, though licentious, monarchs that ever sat on the barbarous
-throne of the Czars; and such was the terrible sequel to the _Secret
-Dispatch_ of Balgonie.
-
-Day had completely broken when he was summoned by Bernikoff.
-Shuddering as he passed through the court of the Castle and under the
-very window where the corpse was yet swaying mournfully to and fro in
-the morning breeze that swept from the broad waters of the vast lake,
-whose ripples were shining like gold in the first beams of the
-autumnal sun, Charlie sought the presence of this detestable
-personage, the thunder of whose wrath he feared was about to descend
-upon himself.
-
-He found the Colonel in his shirt sleeves, and almost covered with
-blood, which was flowing from a wound in his breast and another on
-the head, from whence it was trickling to the ends of his long and
-snaky grey mustaches. To both of these cuts the barber was about to
-apply dressings, while the patient solaced himself by scheming out
-some dreadful punishment for Jagouski, who, with several others, had
-fallen into his gentle hands, and by uttering deep oaths, and
-imbibing deep draughts from a great wooden bowl of quass, dashed with
-fiery vodka.
-
-Balgonie, whose thoughts ran chiefly upon how to discover and succour
-Natalie, was roused to attention by Bernikoff saying grimly--
-
-"Carl Ivanovitch Balgonie, for aiding in the capture of the rebel
-Mierowitz, I thank you; suspicions I had, but they are gone. You are
-now, perhaps, to rejoin the Regiment of Smolensko, and shall bear a
-dispatch from me to Lieutenant-General Weymarn and Lieutenant-Colonel
-Caschkin (who are both in St. Petersburg), relating the affair of the
-last twelve hours. Vlasfief shall prepare it, and I will sign it.
-Place a feather in the seal, lest the Captain lingers as he did at
-Louga! Here, Carl Ivanovitch, taste the quass; 'tis the _trisna_ of
-Ivan the Unknown Person!"
-
-There was something so horrible in this levity and impiety to the
-Cossacks, that even they exchanged uneasy glances, for the trisna at
-funeral feasts is a mixture of rum, beer, and wine, and is an ancient
-Sclavonian beverage. When it is handed round, all stand up
-uncovered, the clergy recite a solemn prayer, and at its close the
-trisna is drunk to the health of the departed Christian soul; so
-Balgonie shuddered, as he thought of the gashed and dishonoured
-corpse that swung by the neck without the castle wall.
-
-This emotion did not escape the fierce eyes of Bernikoff, though his
-wounds were most severe, and his mind was wandering.
-
-"Nay, look not at me thus, Scot," said the genuine old Russian
-fatalist; "God willed it that Prince Ivan should be put in my charge;
-and the devil, together with my duty to the Empress, inspired me to
-destroy him. What is done, is done, and is the will of God; and you
-know, or ought to know, our Muscovite proverb--the Czar is high, and
-God is everywhere!"
-
-"Three times has this old reprobate mentioned that terrible Name, and
-each time bowing his sinful head!" thought Charlie, with disgust and
-wonder.
-
-"Hah!" resumed Bernikoff, pursuing his own thoughts, and clenching
-his teeth in rage and pain, "did that suckling of a Lieutenant think
-to deceive me--I, who have been forty years in the Russian army, and
-have to deal with the most cunning scoundrels between the Black Sea
-and the Baltic! Jagouski, too, I'll fill his mouth with gunpowder,
-put a fuse between his teeth, and blow his head off. By St. Sergius,
-I will! But, holy Saint, alleviate these pangs, by ever so little,
-and this night six pounds of the finest white wax shall burn before
-thee." He gnashed his teeth with pain, and added, "Be ready to ride
-in an hour, Captain; till then, leave me."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI.
-
-UNDERGROUND.
-
-The Empress's court of Secret Chancery soon decided on the fate of
-Basil Mierowitz; the Count, his father, and his cousin Mariolizza,
-who had been passive, though suspected in the matter, had their cases
-taken into future consideration, so they were kept close prisoners
-while their properties and possessions were given up to pillage and
-military execution. Basil was condemned to be broken alive upon the
-wheel; but the Empress, who had a particular tenderness for handsome
-men, "mitigated his punishment to the less severe one of being
-beheaded."
-
-A brief paragraph in the _London Gazette_ of the 23rd October records
-this brave fellow's death, just fourteen days after his rash affair
-at Schlusselburg:
-
-"M. Mierowitz, in pursuance of his sentence, was publicly beheaded on
-Wednesday last; he behaved at his execution, as he had done
-throughout the whole transaction, with the greatest resignation. Six
-of the soldiers and under-officers who were engaged with him ran the
-gantelope the same day; they were so severely whipped that it is said
-three of them are since dead. Many more are to be punished. One,
-Usakoff, a Lieutenant in the Regiment of Welikolutz (_sic_) who was
-privy to the design, was accidentally drowned."
-
-Notwithstanding his rank and years, old Count Mierowitz was retained
-in a dungeon among a number of miserable Russian rogues and Polish
-prisoners, clad in filthy sheepskin shoubahs, many of them being
-afflicted with the terrible disease known as _plica polonica_, or
-matted hair, which hung over their necks in clotted lumps, every tube
-being swollen and dilated with globules of blood.
-
-The lower vaults of Schlusselburg were those built by Ivan the
-Terrible, for the reception of a few of the revolters of Novgorod,
-after he had put twenty-five thousand of her citizens to the sword.
-They were such prisons as--let us hope--are no longer in use, even in
-Russia, although the London press has asserted that, until lately,
-exactly such _oubliettes_ or dungeons were in active operation, and
-never without tenants, under the royal rule of the deposed Francis
-II., and prior to the remodelling of Italy by Victor Emmanuel.
-
-They were like the frightful cells of the Bastile, which Victor Hugo
-has described in "Notre Dame;" those of the Inquisition at Goa or
-Madrid, or of old castles of the middle ages; but apart from the
-happily departed horrors of such places, even English jails have been
-little better than living graves within the memory of many now alive;
-for one of the greatest glories of modern civilisation, in all
-countries, has been the amelioration of prisons and their government,
-and the substitution of mercy and protection in their general economy
-for that irresponsible despotism and wanton cruelty which have formed
-such ample materials for the romancer and novelist to excite
-compassion and even dismay.
-
-Yet it is exactly such a place--a prison of the middle ages--a rival
-to that Chillon to which Byron's genius has given a greater name than
-ever its terrors won it--we are now about to describe: one of the
-lower vaults of Schlusselburg, a den, the floor of which was below
-the rocks whereon the seals of Ladoga basked in the sunshine, and
-which was consequently liable to be flooded during those inundations
-that at certain seasons, overflow all the country for a great way
-north, so that no crops will grow save upon the eminences.
-
-Vaulted with stone, it was nearly square, and measured twelve feet
-each way, with a floor that sloped down at one end, having been
-unevenly hewn out when the rock was pierced; and from a portion of
-this rock sprang the solid arch of granite blocks which formed the
-roof. A narrow slit, six inches broad by twelve high, and having
-even in that small space a thick iron bar, admitted to the interior a
-feeble ray of light. This slit was partly built of stone, but its
-sill was the living rock of Schlusselburg. It opened towards the
-lake, but gave no prospect save the clouds, for it was high up in the
-wall; yet the melancholy cries of the waterfowl and of the seabirds,
-which often came up the Neva from the Baltic, were heard through it
-at times.
-
-The prisoner, when seated on the stone bench which formed a bed or
-seat alternately, could only see the changing hues of the sky and
-patches of cloud, and know by the darkness which gradually obscured
-this mere shot-hole that day was passing away, and that another
-night, chill, dark, dreary, and hopeless, was at hand.
-
-As the floor sloped down some twelve inches or more, the lower end
-was always full of water, into which the slime that gathered on the
-vault of the arch fell at intervals with a regular plash that, to the
-silent and apparently forgotten prisoner, became maddening in its
-monotony of sound, by day and night, by morning and evening, by dawn
-and sunset. Then, as the tides rose and fell, or as the waters of
-the vast inland lake of Ladoga are affected by the Baltic stopping
-the downward flow of the Neva, or by rains flooding the many
-tributaries that join them, so did this dark pool in the dungeon rise
-and fall, when the current oozed through secret and unknown channels
-or crannies in the granite rocks.
-
-It was in this vault, or one of those adjoining--such a den as that
-in which Dante placed his Demon--that the betrayed wife of Count
-Orloff, the beautiful daughter of the Empress Elizabeth, was drowned,
-ten years after the date of this history, when the waters of the Neva
-rose ten feet; and, as they subsided, bore her body to the Gulf of
-Finland.
-
-No one could live very long in such a place--low, damp, cold, and
-horrible. And well did Bernikoff know this, when, in the blind
-transports of rage and agony resulting from his double wounds, he
-barbarously consigned Natalie Mierowna to such a place--ay, even
-Natalie, the soft and delicate, the highly-bred and tenderly-nurtured
-daughter of Count Mierowitz; and she had now been in the underground
-vault for three days and nights,--seventy-two hours,--which to her
-had resembled a horrible and protracted nightmare.
-
-She was ignorant as yet of her brother's execution, a week before.
-Betrayed by one of their most trusted adherents as the price of his
-own liberty, she and Katinka had been taken. Of the fate of the
-latter she knew nothing: a mere Polish waiting-maid, a pretty
-soubrette, she had too probably become the lawful prey of the
-Cossacks, whom Natalie had last seen in the forest, with terrible
-significance rattling their dice on a kettle-drum head.
-
-For herself, the poor girl only knew that she was placed there to
-await the pleasure of the Empress and the Grand Chancellor.
-
-Hope was dead completely in her heart; and though the desire to live
-was strong, her former life seemed all a dream, or something that had
-happened long, long ago!
-
-Crouching on a damp pallet that lay on the couch of stone, her hair
-dishevelled, her dress more than ever torn, discoloured, and
-disordered, her snowy arms and hands stripped of every ornament and
-ring, her tender feet well-nigh shoeless, her eyes half closed and
-surrounded by dark inflamed circles, her cheeks sunk and haggard,--it
-would be difficult to recognise in her the once beautiful and
-brilliant Natalie, whose coquetry had excited the ready jealousy of
-Catharine in that fatal Mazurka; the Natalie of the imperial _salons_
-at Moscow, at Oranienbaum, or the palace of Tsarsky Selo; or the
-Natalie of that princely old château near the Louga--the proud,
-bright-eyed, and beautiful girl whom Charlie Balgonie had loved, and
-worshipped as a goddess.
-
-As she crouched in a species of stupor beside a wooden bowl of stale
-water and a mouldy loaf of black bread, there seemed to be no breath
-in her tender nostrils, no sound in those little ears over which the
-black hair rolled in unheeded masses--no sound save the monotonous
-plash of the dropping slime. She was pale as white marble,--cold as
-death,--a prey to utter confusion rather than profound grief. There
-were times when she felt and thought and knew of nothing: but there
-were others when all the past--the memory of her ruined house, her
-shattered love, her slaughtered friends, their fatal project, and her
-lost position in society--brought a cruel and keen pang to her heart,
-and made her writhe and start and wring her hands, but not weep; for
-she had not a tear left; and her hard dry eyeballs were the only warm
-part of her shuddering frame.
-
-Seventy-two hours had she been there, yet the time seemed so long
-already, that she knew not whether it were seventy-two days or the
-same number of weeks.
-
-When she did rouse herself to steady reflection and the realities of
-her position, thought well-nigh drove her mad.
-
-Her old father--his sturdy figure, his venerable beard and white
-eyebrows, his silver hair queued by a simple ribbon, his quaint
-old-fashioned costume of the first Peter's time, rose vividly before
-her; and with a gush of memory came all his peculiarities of
-disposition, his warmth of heart and temper, his kindness and
-irritability, his pride of race and family. Where were all these now?
-
-Her lover too--his voice, and eyes, and gentle manner came next, to
-add to her pangs; for him too must she relinquish for ever: no
-shelter was there now for her save the cold grave, which was perhaps
-to receive them all! Basil, Usakoff, and Mariolizza--alas! terrible
-though her own sufferings, she little knew those to which the fairer
-beauty and more unwary tongue of Mariolizza had subjected that
-unhappy girl.
-
-The excellent taste, the polished education, and high accomplishments
-of Natalie, which were so far superior to those of most ladies of her
-own rank and country then, gave a greater poignancy to the horrors of
-reality and imagination; yet imagination could supply no horror but
-what was real and sternly so.
-
-Their princely old dwelling amid the pine forests--never more would
-she see its dome of polished copper shining in the sun, or the wooded
-domain that stretched for uncounted versts around it; or her father's
-patrimonial village, nestling by the Louga, which bore his rafts of
-timber to the sea, and by night reflected the glare of those furnaces
-which were another source of his vast wealth, and the means of
-procuring a thousand luxuries.
-
-Better would it have been, had she and they and all succumbed to
-Catharine's iron rule, than sought the freedom of Ivan IV; but it was
-too late--too late, now!
-
-Was it all a dream from, which she must awaken? Strange it was, that
-as weariness, sleep, or a stupor stole over her, scraps of songs,
-frivolous ones especially, airs from operas, and so forth, occurred
-to her drowsy ear, as if her brain was turning; and to these the
-filtering plash and the sound of the rising waves and wind without
-seemed to mark a cadence.
-
-Suddenly a scream escaped her: she was in total darkness. Amid her
-sleep or stupor, a fourth night had come on--a night of storm too;
-for she heard the roar of the autumn rain, as it descended like a
-vast sheet upon the lake without.
-
-Cold and slimy things had often crossed her slender ankles, making
-her shrink and shudder: but now she became sensible that her feet
-were completely immersed in water; that the wind was bellowing
-without and rolling the waves against the rocks; and that the current
-of the lake was flooding the floor of her vault, and rising fast
-within it.
-
-It rose with appalling rapidity: and now the terror of a dreadful
-death made Natalie utter a succession of piercing shrieks, mingled
-with prayers to heaven. But her cries were unheard; for the same
-cold, icy tide that flooded her cell, filled all the corridors by
-which it and others on the same floor were approached.
-
-Rapidly it rose, this dark, silent, and terrible tide--rapidly and
-without a sound.
-
-She sprang upon her stone couch, but already the pallet was floated
-away. Up yet rose the invading water, and it was soon nearly to her
-waist; and gasping and shuddering cries were mingled with her
-prayers. A little more, and the narrow slit through which she could
-hear the bellowing wind and see the black clouds careering past one
-red and fiery northern star--the last gleam of life and of the outer
-world--would vanish from her eyes, as she perished in that miserable
-tomb: even as the Princess Orloff and many others have done, helpless
-and unheeded in their dying agony--drowned miserably, like the prison
-rats that swam around them.
-
-In the last energies of her despair, she made her way to the
-enormously thick door which closed this trap of stone, and, applying
-her lips to the joints, shrieked loudly again and again for succour,
-and beat wildly and fruitlessly with her tender hands upon its
-massive planks and iron bolts.
-
-Her brain seemed bursting, for she was suffocating as the air
-lessened. She thought she saw a red light shining through the
-crannies of the doorway; but whether this were fancy or reality, it
-was impossible to say, as a faintness came over her, and she sank
-down choking and drowning in the dark flood that rose within the
-walls and against the door of the prison.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII.
-
-OVER THEIR WINE.
-
-Heavy and sad was the heart of Charlie Balgonie when, on the evening
-of the 16th September, that which was subsequent to the episode at
-Schlusselburg, he saw the domes and towers of St. Petersburg
-glittering in gold and bronze, in green and fiery or fantastic
-colours, amid the rich glow of a ruddy sunset; and where rising from
-the haze of the vast city, the polished cupola of St. Isaac's
-Cathedral, and the slender spire of the Admiralty, like a needle of
-flame, seemed to float in mid air.
-
-As he entered the first guarded barrier, he met a party of Lancers
-riding at a trot, their tall fur caps having scarlet kalpecs and
-large plumes, their lances, each with a long bannerole of the same
-colour, waving in the wind. They escorted a covered kabitka, or
-waggon, and were led by the Count de Balmain, a Scottish officer,
-who, in after years, stormed Kaffa, in the Crimea.
-
-"Whither go you, Count?" he asked.
-
-"For Schlusselburg--the place of sorrow."
-
-"With a prisoner, of course?"
-
-"Yes, I regret to say, with the niece of Count Mierowitz, with
-Mademoiselle Mariolizza. She is to be confined under a warrant from
-the Grand Chancellor--poor girl!"
-
-Sadder and heavier grew the honest heart of Balgonie, as the escort
-and its hearse-like carriage passed on; and, as he looked after it,
-the fair merry face, the full and voluptuous figure, the gay manner,
-and remarkable _finesse d'esprit_ of the betrothed of poor Basil, as
-he had last seen her at Louga, came back vividly to memory now.
-
-Balgonie was at St. Petersburg when Mierowitz was executed, and when
-other horrors followed. Moreover, he was closely and repeatedly
-interrogated by the Grand Chancellor, the Privy Councillor, Count
-Panim, by Count Orloff (the present lover of the Empress), and by
-General Weymarn, as to all he knew and had seen of the
-conspirators--so closely, that nothing surprised him so much as to
-find that no suspicion was attached to himself. But being a soldier
-of fortune, who possessed nothing in the world but his sword and his
-epaulettes, he was not worth suspecting by the Imperial Government.
-
-Ere long, the name of Natalie came before the Secret Chancery, as a
-prisoner in Schlusselburg; and, like the rest, she was tried and
-condemned in absence, undefended and unheard; and sentenced, too,
-amid the solitude of her prison.
-
-To Balgonie the charm of life seemed to have passed away; and, during
-the week or two that followed his return to St. Petersburg, dreary,
-weary, and unmeaning, indeed, seemed the routine of his duties as
-aide-de-camp at the vast parades, the brilliant receptions, the
-courts-martial, and other public affairs to which he followed his
-_chef_, General Weymarn, at the palaces of Tsarsky Selo or
-Oranienbaum, and elsewhere, while ignorant of the fate of
-Natalie--while the very life of her he loved hung in the balance.
-
-When compared with their fate, how happy seemed those lovers, who,
-though separated for a period, could look confidently forward through
-the long succession of hours, of days and nights, of weeks, and
-months, or even years, and reckon with certainty on the time of
-reunion! With him and Natalie, time stretched into a length that
-seemed interminable: their future had no background; their separation
-was one without hope.
-
-Charlie, in his desperation, applied to the Marquis de Bausset and to
-Sir George Macartney, then the Ambassadors from France and Britain;
-and both received his verbal prayers--he dared not write on such a
-subject--for mercy to the Count's family: but they were unheeded; and
-the Ministers replied only by bows, grimaces, and shrugs of their
-diplomatic shoulders. Their interference was impossible--quite; and,
-unfortunately, his old patron, Admiral Thomas Mackenzie, was with the
-fleet in the Black Sea.
-
-The suspicions excited against his Regiment and the Grenadiers of
-Valikolutz, might procure the banishment of both; he feared it in the
-form of service in Siberia, or at the Crimean lines of Perecop. In
-either case, unless Weymarn stood his friend, how could he hope to
-succour Natalie!
-
-At every tea-house, hotel, and café, his uniform of the Smolensko
-Infantry, and the knowledge that he was the staff officer who had
-been in Schlusselburg, and who brought the first tidings of the late
-affair, made him an object of special interest; but the subject was
-alike a perilous and painful one. Walls have many ears in Russia; so
-he was compelled to be silent, or discreet, even to rudeness, though
-the following declaration, which was issued by the Empress, might
-have allayed his fears:--
-
-
-"We, Catharine the Second, by the Grace of God, Empress and Sovereign
-of all the Russias, &c., &c., make known to our Regiment of Smolensko
-Infantry that, according to the equity which we exert towards our
-faithful subjects, we cannot represent to ourselves, without profound
-grief, how much that regiment must be afflicted, for having among its
-officers a wretch in the person of Mierowitz: nevertheless, as the
-crime of one man cannot affect those who had no part in it, and that,
-besides, we know the bravery with which the regiment has
-distinguished itself upon all occasions, its attachment to strict
-discipline, and its exactness in the military duty of our empire;
-therefore we grant it, through our imperial good-will, the same
-assurances of protection which it has in all times deserved. In
-consequence, we forbid all and every one, to reproach or upbraid the
-said regiment concerning the treason of Mierowitz, under pain of
-incurring our indignation, and drawing on themselves the effects of
-our just resentment.
-
-(_Signed_) "CATHARINE."
-
-
-Hope seemed to revive a little after the issue of this conciliatory
-oukaz; but it was speedily dashed, when Balgonie, on returning from
-Cronstadt, whither he had been sent by General Weymarn, suddenly met
-Captain Vlasfief face to face, near the palace of the favourite
-Lanskoi.
-
-This personage he would have avoided like a toad or a leper; but from
-him only might he learn something of her he loved in Schlusselburg,
-that hateful place to which the Captain was returning; so,
-overcoming, or rather concealing, his repugnance, he adjourned with
-him to a café, and ordered wine.
-
-"I dare say you have heard," said Vlasfief, with a strange leer in
-his eyes, as he tossed his hat and sabre on one sofa and deposited
-his jack-booted limbs on another, "how the estates of the Count and
-those of Usakoff have been sold or gifted away; pillaged and ravaged
-by Lanskoi with a party of Tchernemoski Cossacks; and that the
-plunder has been stored up in Schlusselburg?"
-
-"Something of all this I have heard," replied Balgonie, when the
-waiter had filled their glasses and withdrawn, "and--and--but you
-have there two ladies of the Count's family?"
-
-"True--Mademoiselle Mariolizza, who was engaged to Mierowitz, and the
-Count's daughter: one beautifully fair, the other black-haired like a
-Pole. Poor girls!" he continued, while leisurely filling the large
-china bowl of a tasselled pipe, which suspiciously resembled one
-Charlie had often seen the old Count smoking, "I remember them both
-in happier and brighter times; but those who play with fire will, you
-know, be burned. The sentences on all have been found, recorded,
-and, in two instances, executed; and they are truly terrible!"
-
-"Executed--the sentence!" repeated Balgonie, in a faint voice.
-
-"Yes; you have been four days at Cronstadt: well, in those four days
-many things have been done--a light; thank you. The Count is now
-travelling towards Tobolsk under an escort of Balmain's Lancers.
-There he will have to hunt the ermine, cultivate asafœtida, or dig
-in the mines, with a collar at his neck, for the remainder of his
-days; but for the ladies of his family, a more severe punishment was
-reserved: ah! he is a stern fellow, old Panim!"
-
-"How--what? Vlasfief, you jest?"
-
-"'Tis no jest: we don't jest on such matters in Russia," replied
-Vlasfief, who was too thorough a _roué_--too "used up," in fact--to
-care for what any woman might suffer or undergo; for every human
-emotion and sympathy were dead in this man now.
-
-"What new horrors am I to hear?" exclaimed Balgonie, with passionate
-vehemence, as he dashed his heavy Turkish sabre on the table.
-
-Vlasfief smiled sourly, and his cunning eyes twinkled.
-
-"You are a Scot, like Balmain," said he disdainfully; "and as the
-Turks--those accursed unbelievers--say, but truly, 'Those who have
-never seen the world think it is all like their father's house.'
-Pass the bottle--'tis Cracow wine this, and not worth four ducats the
-flask. In short, the--the two ladies of the Count's family, in the
-wildness of their grief,--Mariolizza especially,--on hearing of the
-death of Mierowitz, permitted their tongues to run riot, and to say
-such things of Her Imperial Majesty and some of her favourites, such
-as Count Orloff, Lanskoi, the Grenadier, and so forth, as no woman
-would pardon, you understand; so they are to be given in succession
-to _le maître d'entre les épaules_--the master of the shoulders,"
-added Vlasfief, with a species of laugh at the strange expression
-which he saw gathering in Balgonie's face.
-
-"Explain, I implore you, explain!" asked the latter, with quivering
-lips, as he set down a crystal goblet of Hungarian wine untasted on
-the table.
-
-"Mademoiselle Mariolizza--but you don't drink fairly, Ivanovitch--has
-received six blows of the knout. The torturer is a new man, and
-mangled her cruelly. She has had her tongue cut out, and her
-forehead branded with the executioner's mark;* and she goes to
-Siberia as soon as she recovers: but she will never reach it alive,
-even if she escapes the fever that has now seized her; for as the
-whole family has been degraded,--declared infamous and without
-protection,--being tongueless, she will become the prey of the
-Cossacks en route. Once beyond the Volga, we never know what
-happens. The Count's daughter will undergo exactly similar
-punishment; and, if she survives it, they will be mercifully
-permitted to travel together: and there ends the House of Mierowitz,
-which boasts of its descent from Ruric of Kiev--Ruric the Varagian of
-Old Ladoga!"
-
-
-* The latter punishment is abolished now.
-
-
-With wonderful coolness of manner, over his wine and pipe, almost
-with an occasional jest, the cruel and snakelike Vlasfief--who, as a
-parvenu of the foundling hospital (the son of a goat), hated the
-hereditary aristocracy--detailed these matters; and Balgonie felt as
-if a black cloud enveloped him. He heard the Captain talking; but
-his mind and thoughts were far, far away; and, after a time, he found
-himself alone.
-
-Vlasfief had mounted and ridden off; and mechanically, like an
-automaton, Balgonie had bidden him adieu at the portico of the café,
-and returned to finish his wine, as one in a waking dream: nor was it
-until the bell of St. Isaac's tolled midnight, when the lights were
-burned low, the fire in the peitchka had died away, the decanters
-were empty, and he saw a drowsy waiter hovering near him, that he
-rose to depart; for to him, now, all places seemed alike.
-
-In the street a shower of tears revived him; and he wept unseen, like
-a great boy, while grinding his teeth and twisting his mustaches like
-a furious and desperate man. Russia, her laws, her rulers, her very
-air, he loathed and detested. But what was he to do?--which way was
-he to turn?--was he to permit these horrors, and live?
-
-He had been present when the Regiment of Smolensko guarded the
-punishment of Madame Lapouchin, one of the most beautiful women of
-the Imperial Court, where she shone like a planet, was loved,
-admired, and more than once was fought for. An alleged conspiracy
-brought her to the knout in all her nude loveliness, in the light of
-open day; and Charlie remembered that sickening scene, before the
-eyes of assembled thousands, and how, as the Abbé d'Anterroche
-records, "in a few moments all the skin of her tender back was cut
-away in small slips, most of which remained hanging on her shift.
-Her tongue was cut out immediately after; and she was banished into
-Siberia."
-
-"Oh Natalie, Natalie!" he could but repeat, while he wrung his hands;
-and thus the dawn of day found him.
-
-After mature consideration of his position, his powerlessness, and
-the difficulties that beset him, with the horrors impending over
-Natalie, poor Charlie Balgonie felt maddened, crushed, and
-heart-broken. Could he see her perish without a struggle, an effort,
-however reckless, fruitless, and futile, on her behalf, even if he
-pistoled the executioner? Could he know that she too, probably,
-would die, in agony and mutilation, a horrible and ignominious
-death,--she, so gentle, delicate, and pure,--and would he survive it?
-
-"Hearts will break in this life," says a recent writer; "it is the
-nature of them; but if God wills it, and it were possible, it is
-honester, braver, and nobler to live than to die." Most true; but to
-live is to hope. Balgonie vaguely, but sternly, resolved that he
-would do something, or--like the hero of a melodrama--"die in the
-attempt;" but being a poor, bewildered, loving young fellow, he could
-in no way practically see what that something might be.
-
-Let not the reader flatter himself or herself that their own beloved
-country was entirely free from legal barbarism at this time; for in
-the very year of Ivan's murder,--the fourth year of the reign of His
-Majesty George III.,--a woman was burned at the stake in Ilchester
-for poisoning her husband. During the reign of his son, more than
-one head was chopped off for treason; and women were flogged by tap
-of drum, for petty theft, at the Market Cross of Edinburgh. Neither
-need the superstitions of the poor Muscovites excite surprise, when
-we find, in 1867, Highlanders in Scotland putting clay figures into
-running streams to bring consumption and wasting upon their enemies;
-burying a living cock (as the Pagan sacrificed to Hermes) to cure
-epilepsy; and a woman in Somersetshire* cooking toads in a pan,
-exactly as the "black and midnight hags" did in the days of Macbeth,
-for the amiable purpose of bewitching her neighbours. So truly does
-the world reproduce itself, in spite of its boasted civilisation.
-
-
-* Western Gazette, September, 1867.
-
-
-The next day was not far advanced when Balgonie was summoned by
-General Weymarn, whose staff he had been resolving to quit; but for
-what purpose, or whither to go, he knew not. With something of a
-shudder, he beheld the Stepniak--the comrade and confederate of the
-late Nicholas Paulovitch--leaving the General's quarters.
-
-Save that he wore the scarlet livery of his new trade,--torture and
-death,--he was unchanged, and was the same hideous and ill-visaged
-giant--with square shoulders, enormous beard, mouse-like eyes, hair
-shorn off straight across the beetlebrows, and the pine-apple shaped
-head--whom Balgonie had seen in the hut where the wretched
-Podatchkine perished. He was now public executioner of St.
-Petersburg: under his felon hands had poor Mierowitz and Mariolizza
-been, and erelong would Natalie be!
-
-Weymarn was a grave and stern, yet not unkind, old soldier; and, on
-perceiving that his young aide-de-camp looked pale, he spoke to him
-with unusual kindness, and added:--
-
-"I am sorry to say, that I have a new duty of importance for you to
-perform."
-
-"Thanks, General; any excitement is better than--than idleness."
-
-"True. You will have to ride to Schlusselburg with an escort,
-composed of six Cossacks of the Imperial Guard, and bring hither in a
-kabitka the sum of eighty thousand roubles, which are there in canvas
-bags, _sealed_. They have been levied on the estates of the Count
-Mierowitz. You will receive them from the officer commanding there:
-give a signed receipt, and deliver them into the Imperial Treasury."
-
-Balgonie bowed in silence.
-
-The General, who, of course, knew well the corrupt venality of the
-Russian service, added:--
-
-"If the sum is brought entire to the Treasury, Carl Ivanovitch, a
-reasonable gratuity will, of course, be paid you."
-
-"Excellency, I require none for doing my duty, either in this or any
-other matter," replied Balgonie coldly, even haughtily.
-
-"As you please, sir,--as you please. Some among us might be less
-particular," said the old General, tugging his grisly mustaches.
-"And stay; by-the-bye, there is a prisoner in Schlusselburg, whose
-sentence is to be executed to-morrow, in presence of the assembled
-troops and people here----"
-
-Balgonie thought of but _one_ prisoner there; and an icy chill came
-over him, as Weymarn said--
-
-"With the escort and the kabitka, Captain, you will, at the same
-time, bring the culprit here."
-
-"And--and this pris--on--oner, Excellency?" faltered the poor fellow.
-
-"Is Jagouski, the Cossack, who so severely wounded Colonel Bernikoff
-when in the execution of his duty."
-
-Charlie breathed more freely.
-
-"An order will be necessary for you--a special order: since the
-affair of that wretched young fellow Mierowitz, we cannot be too
-particular, so take this:--
-
-
-"'_To the officer commanding in Schlusselburg._
-
-"'You are hereby directed to deliver to Captain Carl Ivanovitch
-Balgonie, of the Smolensko Regiment, the prisoner who is to be
-executed to-morrow.
-
-"'WEYMARN, _Lieutenant-General._'
-
-
-"For the delivery of the money, here is a separate order from the
-Treasurer--adieu."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII.
-
-WILL HE SUCCEED?
-
-As Balgonie left the presence of General Weymarn, a sudden light
-broke through the darkness of his mind--an unlooked-for thought and
-hope suddenly inspired him, and a prayer of thanks to Heaven rose to
-his lips therefore. No prisoner was actually designated by name in
-the written order of the General!
-
-Thus, in lieu of the Cossack Jagouski, he would demand that Natalie
-Mierowna be given into his custody; and with her he would escape,
-quit Russia and the service of the Empress at all risks.
-
-He had no papers--no leave of absence, or passport; but, as the
-epaulette is an all-powerful badge in Russia, his uniform and his
-sabre would be passports enough. For the rest, he must trust to his
-own love and courage, and to his knowledge of the country. But then
-there was the Cossack escort--how was he to rid himself of it? The
-same kind Heaven which favoured and inspired him now, would not fail
-to do so, he hoped, when the crisis came.
-
-While his best horse was being saddled and accoutred, and even when
-the escort was at the door, he consulted, till the last moment, the
-map of Russia, and also that of Finland, which was not ceded to the
-latter till forty-four years after; and he made notes of his proposed
-route. Escape by sea, by the Lake of Ladoga, or by the shores of the
-Gulf, were alike impossible.
-
-There was no way for it but to ride, at all hazards, towards the
-frontier of Finland, or the shores of the Lake of Saima; they would
-there be safe beyond pursuit--safe among the hospitable Swedes, who
-are always hostile to the grasping and aggressive Russians. And so
-for nearly an hour he sat, compass in hand, calculating the chances
-and measuring the distances, while his brain grew giddy, and his
-heart was sick, with mingled hope, anxiety, and a love that was full
-of terror and compassion.
-
-At last he saw his way clearly, as he thought, through Viborg, from
-Schlusselburg, north-westward, in safety. He put all the money he
-possessed--not much, certainly--about his person in gold; filled his
-cartridge-box with ammunition, and buckled on his sabre.
-
-"By this time to-morrow," he muttered, as he glanced at his watch,
-"the game will have been won or--lost!"
-
-He then mounted, with a resolute heart, and set forth, having with
-him a light kabitka, or covered waggon, drawn by a single horse, and
-attended by his escort--six Malo-Russian Cossacks who wore the
-uniform of Hussars, and who were all stout, athletic, and
-noble-looking fellows, whose clean-limbed, active, and hardy little
-horses, unmatched for strength and speed, made Balgonie speculate
-painfully and anxiously on his slender chance of outstripping them,
-if pursued.
-
-It was considerably past the noon of an October day--a dark,
-lowering, and ominous day--when they set out for Schlusselburg, and
-erelong the rain began to fall heavily, soaking the Hussar finery of
-the Cossacks of the Guard; but Charlie Balgonie rode silently on at
-their head, heedless of the blinding torrents and the bellowing wind;
-though he little knew that as the darkness increased, and the early
-night drew on, that the waters of the lake and river were rising
-fast, and that a peril, of which he had no conception, already
-menaced the existence of Natalie.
-
-But her voice seemed to be ever whispering in his ear--
-
-"Carl, Carl--my beloved Carl, come to my aid--save me--help me, if
-you love me!"
-
-When they were mid-way to Schlusselburg, the kabitka driver, who was
-either sleepy or tipsy, fell awkwardly from his seat, and broke his
-right arm. What was to be done now?
-
-No Cossack of the Guard would condescend to supply his place, and for
-more than an hour the party remained halted in a desolate spot, near
-a pine wood, while looking about to capture the first peasant, serf,
-or civilian of any kind, whom they might meet, and press him into the
-service, as a temporary whip, in the employ of the Empress.
-
-A skulking and somewhat sulky boor, in a fur cap and canvas caftan,
-leather leggings and bark shoes, who had been smoking his pipe under
-a great tree, was, erelong, discovered, dragged forward, and, with
-sundry oaths and threats, commanded to mount the shaft and act as
-driver, which he did, with a reluctance he was at no pains to conceal.
-
-Knowing how necessary it was to control or to conciliate this new
-acquisition, Balgonie asked him a few questions, with sternness, but
-yet with politeness.
-
-The serf was a singularly handsome young man, with eagle-like eyes,
-and an aquiline nose, that was almost hooked; he was without his
-mustache, which seemed to have been recently shaved off; but he had a
-curly red beard, with a complexion of well-nigh Asiatic darkness.
-
-"Trust me, dear Carl Ivanovitch," said he, in a low and impressive
-voice, that was strangely familiar to Balgonie. "My disguise, I
-find, is complete indeed, when it deceives even you; but speak in
-French."
-
-"Your disguise--yours?"
-
-"Yes,--I am Apollo Usakoff," he added through his teeth.
-
-"Heaven be blessed for this new omen of success!" exclaimed Balgonie,
-in French. "And you were not drowned?"
-
-"No; I swam down the Neva, under water, escaping many a bullet--got
-ashore, and reached the old place in the wood, where Olga, the gipsy,
-stained my face, trimmed and dyed my beard, as you see. She is quite
-an artist, that girl! Even Mariolizza would not know me now."
-
-Balgonie sighed as the poor fellow spoke. Mutilated and disfigured
-as she was now, would he have known _her_? He evidently knew nothing
-of the barbarities to which she had been subjected, so Balgonie
-resolved, mercifully, to keep him in ignorance; and they proceeded at
-an easy pace together, he keeping his horse close by the shaft of the
-kabitka, on which the pretended peasant rode; and, as they spoke in
-French, a language unknown to their ignorant and half-savage escort,
-Usakoff, in referring to the late event and its failure, poured out
-all the bitterness, the hate, and fury of his soul, against the
-Government, the Councillors, and the rule of the Empress; and, of
-course, entered with fervour into the scheme of an escape with
-Natalie. But still their ultimate plans were undecided, when they
-saw the red flash of the evening gun, as it pealed from
-Schlusselburg, amid the murky haze of a wet and stormy sunset; and
-erelong they saw the lights that glittered at times from amid the
-massive towers and black outline of that old castle (the scene of so
-many terrors, sufferings, and atrocities) streaming and wavering on
-the turbulent waters of the lake, and the wet slime of the sluices
-and ditches.
-
-When, all dripping and jaded, the escort halted and dismounted under
-the castle arch, Balgonie found that some changes were taking place
-in the executive of the fortress.
-
-Bernikoff, whose wounds had been inflamed to gangrene, by passion,
-rage, and vodka, was at that moment actually on his death-bed, with
-Father Chrysostom kneeling by his side. The old sinner was in all
-the agonies and terrors of reviewing his past life on one hand, and
-anticipating the coming change on the other. Many pounds of perfumed
-wax candles were flaming now round the effigy of St. Sergius, whom,
-in weak and querulous accents, he implored for intercession,
-alternately with the Chaplain, to whose cassock he clung tenaciously,
-and to whom he was mingling threats of punishment, if he permitted
-him to fare ill in the other world, or omitted masses for his soul's
-repose. And that superstition and absurdity might not be wanting
-amid this solemn but repulsive scene, from which Balgonie hurried
-away with more disgust than pity, Bernikoff was dying in the habit of
-a _friar_, with cowl, cord, beads, and sandals, hoping even on his
-death-bed, as Ivan the Terrible hoped, when similarly arrayed and
-disguised, to cheat the devil, if that dread personage came for his
-sinful soul.
-
-The cowl and other paraphernalia he had obtained from the
-Chamberlain, or wardrobe-keeper, of the Troitza monastery near the
-Louga--a cowl that had lain on the mummy of the uncorrupted saint in
-the silver shrine;--and almost with his last breath, he threatened
-Father Chrysostom with a drum-head court-martial for venturing to
-hint that this attempt to mask his past life was vain without true
-repentance.
-
-Leaving this scene, Balgonie presented the order of General Weymarn
-and that of the Treasurer, to Captain Vlasfief, who was now in
-command, and to whom he stated that "the prisoner referred to was
-Mademoiselle Natalie Mierowna."
-
-"Carl Ivanovitch," said the Captain, "you cannot think of leaving
-to-night in such a storm of wind and rain?"
-
-"I've seen worse in Silesia," said Balgonie, looking to the locks of
-his pistols.
-
-"What of that?"
-
-"But the _verbal_ order of the General was most peremptory."
-
-"Ah!--and you have brought a kabitka for the money?"
-
-"A kabitka for the prisoner also--so be quick, Captain."
-
-"'Tis a large sum in roubles," mused the other.
-
-"I am in haste to be gone!--the prisoner--you hear me, sir?" said
-Balgonie impatiently.
-
-"By all the devils, you seem more anxious about the prisoner than the
-treasure!" responded Vlasfief sulkily, as he knocked the ashes from
-his pipe, but still delayed to move.
-
-"You have my orders--I come in the name of the Empress--let there be
-no delay, Captain Vlasfief," was the curt reply.
-
-"Bring in two Cossacks of the escort; the money is here in seventy
-bags, each containing a thousand roubles."
-
-"Excuse me, but the order of the Imperial Treasurer says expressly
-_eighty_ sealed bags of a thousand each," said Balgonie, trembling
-with anxiety, yet compelled to appear to take an interest when he
-really felt none.
-
-"Ten thousand are missing," said Vlasfief, leisurely, refilling his
-pipe.
-
-"Missing!"
-
-"Yes. Suppose," he added in a whisper, "suppose we divide the lost
-sum between us, and offer a thousand to the Treasurer."
-
-"Impossible, sir!" said Balgonie, with a fiery and impatient manner.
-
-"Well, well--there are the other ten sealed bags," added Captain
-Vlasfief, with a dark and stealthy frown of greed and hate, as the
-Cossacks tossed the whole among the straw of the kabitka: "it matters
-little; but I hope you may not find the road beset, and so lose the
-whole."
-
-"To be forewarned, sir, is to be forearmed," said Balgonie, touching
-his pistols; for he quite understood the treachery implied, and only
-trembled lest it might mar his dearest plans. "And now, sir, for my
-prisoner."
-
-"If she be not drowned; for the lower vaults are apt to be flooded on
-such a night as this," said Vlasfief spitefully.
-
-Writhing under the keen glances of this low-born Muscovite, Balgonie
-felt that all now depended upon his outward and assumed bearing of
-coolness and carelessness. Night favoured him in this, and his face
-was almost concealed. Could any one then have read his heart, as he,
-Usakoff, two Cossacks, and two soldiers of the main-guard made their
-way down, down through dark and slimy passages and stairs, till they
-were foot deep and then knee deep in the water that flooded the low
-and humid corridors, off which were the arched doors of numerous
-cells--corridors where spiders spun their webs, rats were swimming,
-and terrified bats flew wildly to and fro!
-
-Erelong they reached the door, through the crannies of which
-despairing cries and painful gaspings had been heard, and, after
-unlocking, forced it open by main strength.
-
-"A great flood of water poured from the aperture amid the darkness,"
-says the _Utrecht Gazette_, "and with it came the body of the poor
-lady, who was well-nigh drowned."
-
-So the red light seen by Natalie was no fancy, but that of the lamp
-which was borne by one of those who came just in time to save her
-from the same terrible death by which the Princess Orloff perished.
-
-Lest all might be perilled by a recognition, Balgonie was compelled
-to retire and leave her in the Chaplain's hands till she was restored
-to consciousness, to warmth, and till she was habited anew; and he
-passed three dreadful hours of doubt and anxiety, while pacing to and
-fro in the cold and gloomy archways of the fortress, and having to
-conceal his face when she was brought forth and supported into the
-kabitka, to which two _fresh_ horses were now traced. Usakoff sprang
-on the shaft and flourished his whip; then the Cossacks and Balgonie
-put spurs to their chargers, and clattered over the wet drawbridge,
-just as the passing bell for the departure of Bernikoff's tortured
-spirit rang ominously and solemnly on the stormy gusts of that black
-and gloomy night.
-
-Balgonie, instead of proceeding by the way he had come, avoided the
-town of Schlusselburg, and wheeled off to the right, committing
-himself partly to the guidance of Usakoff, and quite in ignorance
-that, about an hour before, Vlasfief, who could by no means let so
-many roubles escape without paying toll, had beset two of the roads
-by chosen followers of his own--men whom he hoped might pass for some
-of the adherents of the late Prince Ivan, rescuing the daughter of
-the exiled Count Mierowitz.
-
-A strange incident occurred before the interment of old Bernikoff,
-who had a pompous military funeral. The bottom of his grave was
-found to be on fire!
-
-A Scottish doctor (named Rogerson, we believe) at Catharine's Court
-attempted to explain this phenomenon, as resulting from a species of
-ironstone which was saturated with the phosphorus supplied by the
-bones of old interments, and which had been ignited by the friction
-of the sexton's shovel; but the superstitious Russians took a very
-different and much more diabolical view of the matter, and laughed to
-scorn the learned opinion of the Scottish pundit.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV.
-
-CONCLUSION.
-
-Their horses were tolerably refreshed by the halt at Schlusselburg,
-and the nags which drew the light kabitka had been quite unused, so
-the whole party pushed on at a brisk pace, by the road towards the
-frontiers of Finland, the Cossacks of the escort, whatever they
-thought, making neither remark nor inquiry, as they trusted
-obediently and implicitly to the officer who led them; but the
-darkness of the October morning, the deep and muddy, stony and rough,
-nature of the roads, and the violence of the storm, erelong began to
-have a severe effect upon their cattle, and, to the great
-satisfaction of Balgonie, two of the troopers gradually dropped to
-the rear, and were seen no more.
-
-Now the Corporal of the Cossacks ventured to hint, that "perhaps they
-were not pursuing the way they had come, as the lights in St. Isaac's
-Cathedral must have been visible long ago;" but Balgonie replied,
-haughtily and briefly, that he "had _special_ orders."
-
-Then the Corporal urged a short halt, as the horses were sinking; but
-again Balgonie replied, that he "had peculiar orders, and must push
-on."
-
-After passing a little village with a windmill, several miles from
-the shore of the Lake of Ladoga, the road dipped down into a dark
-hollow, between impending crags of granite, the grey faces of which
-were already beginning to brighten in the first light of the lagging
-October sun. The rain and wind were over; the hollow way was fall of
-rolling and perplexing mist; but Usakoff affirmed with confidence
-that he knew the country well.
-
-Out of the grey vapour, from both sides of the path, there flashed,
-redly and luridly, five or six muskets! One bullet struck white
-splinters from the kabitka eliciting a shriek from its occupant;
-another whistled through the mane of Charlie's horse; and a third
-killed one of the Cossacks, who died without a groan, for it passed
-fairly through his temples.
-
-The way was beset by armed men, whose numbers and disposition the dim
-light, or, rather, the darkness and the mist, alike served to conceal.
-
-"Make way, in the name of the Empress!" cried Balgonie, dashing
-forward, with his sabre drawn; "Nay, I command you, on your peril and
-allegiance!" he added, as the threatening words of Vlasfief occurred
-to him; and, to his astonishment and dismay, he saw that personage
-actually appear, mounted and armed, wearing a regimental hat and
-plume, with a kind of dark green tunic, or patrol jacket, richly
-braided with gold, and trimmed heavily with black fur. His party,
-who seemed all on foot, were clad like peasants, but were armed with
-muskets, which they were rapidly casting about and reloading.
-
-"Halt, in the name of the Empress--halt, I command you! for this is
-_not_ the way to St. Petersburg, whither the prisoner and treasure
-were to be conveyed. Treason! treason!" shouted the Staff Captain
-Vlasfief.
-
-Balgonie fired a pistol at his head; but the Captain's horse reared,
-or was compelled to do so by bit and spur, for the bullet pierced its
-throat; and with an oath, Vlasfief fell on the pathway, entangled in
-the stirrups as the animal sank under him.
-
-The three remaining Cossacks, who were somewhat bewildered by the
-attack, by the appearance of Vlasfief, whom they knew, and whose
-confident bearing confirmed certain gathering suspicions that
-something was wrong as to their route, now drew their sabres, aimed
-several blows at Usakoff's head, and endeavoured to cut the reins of
-his horse, or stab it between the shafts, as he lashed the animal
-almost to racing speed, and the light kabitka jolted, rolled, and
-bounded along the rough road behind it.
-
-By another pistol-shot Balgonie rid himself of the Cossack Corporal,
-whose bridle arm he broke, while facing about and galloping in rear
-of the kabitka; and now with wild hallooes, the entire party of armed
-men followed it on foot, with all speed, up a steep slope, over which
-the path wound.
-
-Usakoff ground his teeth, for he was without weapons, and passive in
-the flying combat; but, being fertile in expedients, he tore open a
-bag of roubles, and scattered them on the upland road with a ready
-and reckless hand.
-
-The bright silver coins proved too exciting for the cupidity of the
-pursuers, who loitered to pick them up, tumbling, scrambling, rising
-and falling over each other, with shouts, curses, and maledictions,
-their fire-arms sometimes exploding the while; and so the whole were
-speedily left behind, as the kabitka, guarded now by Balgonie alone,
-was driven along a lonely and unfrequented road, that led to the
-little town of Pomphela.
-
-"Thanks, dear Usakoff--thanks for your presence of mind," said
-Balgonie; "I had forgot all about those roubles."
-
-"Silver has achieved for us what neither our lead or steel would have
-done!"
-
-"But, to lighten the kabitka, let us throw out those remaining
-bags--this perilous lumber, the intended recapture of which has
-nearly cost us our lives--honour--all, at the hands of Vlasfief."
-
-"Nay, nay, never! Lumber, say you? The roubles are Natalie's--hers
-and mine--hers and yours, when you wed her; they have saved us once,
-and may do so again," replied Usakoff cheerfully, as the sun burst
-forth in his clear October splendour, and they saw the dome-shaped
-cupola of the Church of Pomphela rising with a golden gleam from amid
-the white morning haze.
-
-There Balgonie's uniform and a display of gold and roubles operated
-powerfully on the Postmaster, who, without asking for passports or
-other papers, at once, and in the name of the Empress, supplied them
-with fresh horses for the frontier, towards which, after procuring
-some proper nourishment and restoratives for Natalie, they pushed on
-without a moment of unnecessary delay.
-
-"Ah," thought Balgonie, with a shudder and a prayer; "had Jagouski's
-name not been omitted in that order of Weymarn, where would she have
-been now?"
-
-Pale with sorrow and long suffering, her face was still beautiful,
-though sorely wasted; the deep thoughtful eyes had yet a wealth--a
-world of tenderness in their liquid depths; and the long dark hair
-was thick, soft, and wavy as ever, as it fell in masses behind the
-small, compact, and finely-formed head.
-
-Yet withal, her wretchedness had been extreme, having been so
-suddenly and rudely rent from all those habits of luxury and tender
-nurture, which had become, as it were, a second nature; and often,
-very often, had it occurred to her in her later misery of soul "that
-the repose of the grave is sweet, and that there cometh after death a
-levelling and making even of things which would at last cure all her
-evils."
-
-But all was changed now; and, as she laid her head on Charlie's
-breast, she felt content--almost happy; and the horrors that hung
-over her family alone prevented her, as yet, from being completely so.
-
-No trace of pursuers were behind them now, though their flight must
-by this time have been known both in the capital and at
-Schlusselburg. But in those days there were neither railroads nor
-electric telegraphs; so, riding on more leisurely, Balgonie changed
-horses again near Viborg, and erelong the great Lake of Saima
-appeared before them, with the distant hills of Swedish Finland
-beyond its friendly waters.
-
-A boat was procured there; the kabitka was abandoned; and, with a
-shout of joy, Usakoff assisted the Finnish boatman to hoist the great
-lug-sail to catch the breeze of a balmy and beautiful evening, as
-they bade a long farewell to Russia and all its terrors.
-
-In a quaint old Church of Finland, by the eastern shore of the Lake
-of Saima, and in view of its little archipelago of granite isles,--a
-lonely little fane, buried amid groves of plum and cherry trees,
-built of wood and painted red, with a little holy bell jangling in
-its humble belfry,--Charlie Balgonie and his fugitive bride were
-united by the old Curate, with the consent of the Lutheran Bishop of
-Heinola; and there a thousand roubles spent among the poor spread in
-the primitive district a happiness, the tradition of which is still
-remembered with many a grateful exaggeration.
-
-After this, poor Usakoff, finding himself perhaps, as a third person,
-rather in the way, left them to become a soldier of fortune; and he
-is supposed to have perished in one of the Polish struggles for
-freedom; at least, they heard of him no more, after their final
-journey to Scotland.
-
-Two years before these events, it would appear that Charlie's uncle,
-"the godly and upright" Gamaliel Balgonie, merchant, magistrate, and
-elder, had departed in peace to sin no more, leaving the lands and
-possessions of Balgonie unimpaired; and a long tombstone in that
-famous city of the dead, the Howff of Dundee, records at length all
-the virtues which his contemporaries in general and the Presbytery in
-particular believed him to possess.
-
-So Carl Ivanovitch became once more Balgonie of that Ilk; and the
-roubles of Natalie added many a turret and many an acre to his
-patrimonial dwelling in beautiful Strathearn.
-
-
-
-
-L'ENVOI.--ILLUSTRATIVE NOTE.
-
-To convince the reader how nearly History has been followed in the
-previous pages, we shall take the liberty of inserting the subsequent
-manifesto, published with reference to the death of Ivan IV.
-
-
-"By the Grace of God, we, Catharine the Second, Empress and
-Autocratrice of all the Russias, &c., &c., to all whom these presents
-may concern:
-
-When by the divine will, and in compliance with the unanimous desires
-of our faithful subjects, we ascended the throne of Russia, we were
-not ignorant that Ivan, son of Anthony, Prince of
-Brunswick-Wolfenbuttel, and of the Princess Anne of Mecklenburg was
-still alive. This Prince, as is well known, was immediately after
-his birth unlawfully declared heir to the imperial crown; _but_, by
-the decrees of Providence, he was soon after irrevocably excluded
-from that high dignity, and the sceptre was placed in the hands of
-the lawful heiress, Elizabeth (daughter of Peter the Great), our
-beloved aunt of glorious memory.
-
-"After we had ascended the throne, and offered up to Heaven our just
-thanksgivings, the first object that employed our thoughts, in
-consequence of _that humanity which is so natural to us_, was the
-unhappy situation of that Prince, who was _dethroned_ by _divine
-Providence_, and had been unfortunate since his birth.
-
-"To prevent, therefore, ill-intentioned persons from giving him any
-trouble, or from making use of his name to disturb the public
-tranquillity, we gave him a guard, and placed about his person two
-officers, in whose fidelity and integrity we could confide. These
-were Captain Vlasfief and Lieutenant Tschekin, who by their long
-military services deserved a suitable recompense, and a station in
-which they might pass quietly the remainder of their days. They were
-accordingly charged with the care of the Prince, and were strictly
-enjoined to let none approach him. Yet all these precautions were
-not sufficient....
-
-"A _Put-parooschick_ (a sub-lieutenant) of the Regiment of Smolensko,
-a native of the Ukraine, Basil Mierowitz (grandson of the first rebel
-that followed Mazeppa), took it into his head to make use of this
-Prince, to advance his fortune at all events, without being
-restrained by a consideration of the bloody scene that such an
-attempt might occasion. In order to execute this detestable,
-dangerous, and desperate project, he contrived, during our absence in
-Livonia, to be upon guard in the fortress of Schlusselburg, where the
-guard is relieved every eight days; and the 15th of last month, about
-two in the morning, he called out the main guard, formed it in line,
-and ordered the soldiers to load with ball. Bernikoff, Governor of
-the fortress, came out of his apartment, and asked Mierowitz the
-reason of the disturbance, but received no other answer from this
-rebel than a blow with the butt-end of his musket.
-
-"Captain Vlasfief and Lieutenant Tschekin seeing that it was
-impossible to resist such a superior force, and considering the
-unhappy consequences that must ensue from the deliverance of THE
-PERSOX who was committed to their care, after deliberating together,
-took the only step that they thought proper to maintain public
-tranquillity, which was to _cut short the days of the unfortunate
-Ivan_. Mierowitz, on seeing the dead body of the Prince, was so
-confounded by a sight he so little expected, that he acknowledged his
-temerity and guilt, and discovered his repentance to the troops,
-whom, about an hour before, he had seduced from their duty, and
-rendered the accomplices of his crime.
-
-"Then it was that the two officers who had nipped this rebellion in
-the bud, joined the Governor of the fortress in securing this rebel,
-and bringing back the soldiers to their duty. They also sent to our
-Privy Councillor Count Fanin, _under whose orders they acted_, a
-relation of this event, which, though unhappy, has nevertheless,
-_under the protection of Heaven_, prevented still greater calamities.
-This Senator despatched immediately _Pulovnick_ (Colonel) Caschkin,
-with sufficient instructions to maintain tranquillity on the spot (or
-where the assassination was committed), and sent us, at the same
-time, a circumstantial account of the whole affair. In consequence
-of this, we ordered Lieutenant-General Weymarn, of the division of
-St. Petersburg, to take the necessary information on the spot; and
-the confession of the villain himself, who has acknowledged his crime.
-
-"Sensible of its enormity and consequences with regard to the peace
-of our country, we have referred the whole affair to the
-consideration of our Senate, which we have ordered, jointly with the
-Synod, to invite the three first classes and the Presidents of all
-the Colleges to hear the verbal relation of General Weymarn, who has
-taken the proper informations, to pronounce sentence in consequence
-thereof, and to present it to us, for confirmation of the same.
-
-"CATHARINE."
-
-
-By a singular species of sophistry, the guilt of Ivan's death is
-thus, by a subsequent document, transferred to Basil Mierowitz:--
-
-"As the violent death of the unfortunate Prince Ivan was the
-immediate consequence of the desperate attempt of Mierowitz, so must
-this officer be considered as the principal cause of this
-assassination--nay, even regarded as _the murderer of that unhappy
-Prince_."
-
-To this, five Russian Bishops appended their signatures.
-
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Secret Dispatch, by James Grant
-</title>
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-<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Secret Dispatch, 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
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-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<table style='min-width:0; padding:0; margin-left:0; border-collapse:collapse'>
- <tr><td>Title:</td><td>The Secret Dispatch</td></tr>
- <tr><td></td><td>or, The Adventures of Captain Balgonie</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: March 11, 2021 [eBook #64788]</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 THE SECRET DISPATCH ***</div>
-
-<h1>
-<br /><br />
- THE<br />
- SECRET DISPATCH;<br />
-</h1>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- OR,<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- THE ADVENTURES OF CAPTAIN BALGONIE.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- BY<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t2">
- JAMES GRANT,<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t4">
- AUTHOR OF "ROMANCE OF WAR," "SCOTTISH CAVALIERS,"<br />
- ETC. ETC.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- NEW EDITION.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- LONDON:<br />
- CHAPMAN AND HALL, 193, PICCADILLY.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- TO<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- PROFESSOR SIR JAMES Y. SIMPSON, BART.,<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t4">
- M.D., D.C.L., &amp;C., &amp;C.,<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- THIS TALE,<br />
- FROM RUSSIAN MILITARY HISTORY,<br />
- IS INSCRIBED,<br />
- AS A MEMORIAL OF ADMIRATION AND SINCERE REGARD.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
-PREFACE.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I need scarcely inform the reader of history, that
-most of the events narrated in the subsequent
-pages actually occurred in the manner stated; and
-I have done much to soften, or subdue, the actual
-barbarity of the story, though such barbarity was
-consonant enough to the days of her, whose "lust
-of power and contempt of all moral restraint"
-won her the name of "the Semiramis of the
-North."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For the betrothal of the young Lieutenant of
-the Valikolutz Infantry to his cousin, it may be
-mentioned that a dispensation was necessary, as
-the Russian Church&mdash;like the Catholic&mdash;forbids
-all marriages within four degrees of relationship.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As stated in the text, the little song of the
-gipsy is one of many current enough in Russia,
-where the destruction of the Crescent is always
-fondly predicted; but never so confidently as
-during our late Crimean War: and even at this
-very time, an aged Muscovite, named Alexis
-Alexandrovitch, after a seclusion of many years in the
-district of Samara, has come forth as a prophet on
-the same subject, and is now proceeding from
-place to place, like another Peter the Hermit,
-foretelling and preaching the downfall of "the
-sick man" at Stamboul, and the speedy substitution
-of the Russian Cross for the Turkish Crescent
-on the dome of St. Sophia.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-26, DANUBE STREET, EDINBURGH.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- CONTENTS.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- CHAPTER I.<br />
- <a href="#chap01">The Lost Traveller</a><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- CHAPTER II.<br />
- <a href="#chap02">The Castle of Louga</a><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- CHAPTER III.<br />
- <a href="#chap03">Natalie</a><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- CHAPTER IV.<br />
- <a href="#chap04">Corporal Podatchkine</a><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- CHAPTER V.<br />
- <a href="#chap05">The Dagger of Bernikoff</a><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- CHAPTER VI.<br />
- <a href="#chap06">The Palatine</a><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- CHAPTER VII.<br />
- <a href="#chap07">The Soldier of the Czarina</a><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- CHAPTER VIII.<br />
- <a href="#chap08">In Love</a><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- CHAPTER IX.<br />
- <a href="#chap09">Deluded</a><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- CHAPTER X.<br />
- <a href="#chap10">The Corporal in his own Trap</a><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- CHAPTER XI.<br />
- <a href="#chap11">Olga, the Gipsy</a><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- CHAPTER XII.<br />
- <a href="#chap12">St. Petersburg</a><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- CHAPTER XIII.<br />
- <a href="#chap13">What the Secret Dispatch contained</a><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- CHAPTER XIV.<br />
- <a href="#chap14">Charlie's first day in Schlusselburg</a><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- CHAPTER XV.<br />
- <a href="#chap15">The Imperial Prisoner</a><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- CHAPTER XVI.<br />
- <a href="#chap16">The Tratkir</a><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- CHAPTER XVII.<br />
- <a href="#chap17">The Wood of the Honey Tree</a><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- CHAPTER XVIII.<br />
- <a href="#chap18">Doubt and Dread</a><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- CHAPTER XIX.<br />
- <a href="#chap19">The Night of the 15th September</a><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- CHAPTER XX.<br />
- <a href="#chap20">Morning of the 16th September</a><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- CHAPTER XXI.<br />
- <a href="#chap21">Underground</a><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- CHAPTER XXII<br />
- <a href="#chap22">Over their Wine</a><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- CHAPTER XXIII.<br />
- <a href="#chap23">Will he Succeed?</a><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- CHAPTER XXIV.<br />
- <a href="#chap24">Conclusion</a><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- <a href="#chap25">L'Envoi</a><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap01"></a></p>
-
-<p class="t2">
-THE SECRET DISPATCH.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER I.
-<br /><br />
-THE LOST TRAVELLER.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-"Heaven aid me! here am I now&mdash;which way
-shall I turn&mdash;advance or retire?" exclaimed
-Balgonie, as his horse came plunging down
-almost on its knees, amid wild gorse and matted
-jungle.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A cold day in the middle of April had passed
-away; a pale and cheerless sun, that had cast no
-heat on the leafless scenery and the half-frozen
-marshes that border the Louga in Western Russia,
-had sunk, and the darkness of a stormy night
-came on rapidly. The keen blast of the north,
-that swept the arid scalps of the Dudenhof (the
-only range of hills that traverses the ancient
-Ingria), was bellowing through a gorge, where
-the Louga poured in foam upon its passage to the
-Gulf of Finland, between steep banks that were
-covered by gloomy pines, when the speaker, a
-mounted officer in Russian uniform, who seemed
-too surely to have lost his way, reined up a weary
-and mud-covered horse on the margin of the
-stream, and by the light that yet lingered on the
-tops of the tall pines, and gilded faintly the
-metal-covered domes of a distant building on the
-opposite bank, looked hopelessly about him for the
-means of crossing the dangerous river.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Where am I?" he repeated, almost despairingly;
-for, as Schiller sings in his "Song of the
-Bell,"&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- "Man fears the kingly lion's tread;<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Man fears the tiger's fangs of terror;<br />
- And still the dreadliest of the dread<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Is man himself in error!"<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Though clad in the uniform of the Russian
-Regiment of Smolensko, which was raised in the
-famous duchy of that name, the traveller was
-neither Muscovite nor Calmuck, Cossack nor
-Tartar, but a cool, wary, and determined young
-Briton, one of the many Scottish officers whom
-misfortune or ambition had drawn into the
-Russian service, both by sea and land, from the
-time of Peter the Great down to the beginning
-of the present century; for many Scottish officers
-served in the Russian fleet with Admiral Greig
-at the famous bombardment of Varna: and it was
-such volunteers as these that first taught the
-barbarous hordes of the growing empire the true
-science of war and the necessity for discipline.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The rider's green uniform, faced with scarlet
-velvet and richly laced with gold, was covered
-by a thick grey pelisse (like our present
-patrol-jackets), trimmed with black wolf's fur: he wore
-a scarlet forage cap with a square top, long
-boots that came above the knee, and a Turkish
-sabre that had once armed a pasha of more tails
-than one.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Swim the river I must," he muttered, after
-having traversed the valley in vain, looking for
-a bridge, boat, or raft of timber; "but, egad,
-death may be the penalty. Well," he added,
-with a gleam of ire in his dark grey eyes and
-a bitter smile on his lip, "there was a time,
-perhaps, when I little thought that I, Charlie
-Balgonie, would find a nameless grave in this
-land of timber, hemp, and salted hides, where
-caviare is a luxury, train-oil a liqueur, and the
-air of Siberia deemed healthy for all who have
-any absurd ideas of political freedom, or are silly
-enough to imagine that a man may be the lord of
-his own proper person."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To add to his troubles and discomfort, though
-the month was April&mdash;usually the most serene of
-the year in Russia&mdash;snow-flakes were beginning
-to fall, rendering yet greater the gloom of the
-gathering night.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I was to have found a bridge here. Can that
-Livonian villain, Podatchkine, have deluded, and
-then left me to my fate?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He knew that in his rear, the way by which
-he had come, lay half-frozen morasses, heathy
-wastes, and forests of spruce, larch, and
-silver-leaved firs&mdash;vast natural magazines for supplying
-all Europe with masts and spars&mdash;the haunt of
-the wolf and bear; he knew that to linger or to
-return were worse than to advance, and that he
-must cross the stream and seek quarters and
-guidance at the château, the name of which was
-yet unknown to him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This was, if possible, the worst season for
-passing the Louga, which is always deepest and
-most navigable in spring. It rises in the district
-of Novgorod; and, after traversing a country full
-of vast forests for more than 180 miles, falls into
-the Gulf of Finland.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Balgonie buttoned tightly his holster-flaps,
-hooked up his sabre, assured himself that an
-important dispatch with which he was entrusted
-was safe in an inner pocket, and prepared
-seriously for the perilous task of swimming his
-horse across the stream.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Again he looked anxiously at the château, the
-abode evidently of some wealthy noble or boyar.
-Its outline had almost disappeared in the increasing
-obscurity; the last faint gleams of the west
-had faded away on the onion-shaped roofs of its
-turrets, and a central dome of polished copper,
-which was cut into facets like the outside of a
-pine-apple (for there is much of the Oriental in
-the old Russian architecture); but lights were
-beginning to sparkle cheerfully through its
-double-sashed windows upon the feathery and
-the funeral-like foliage of the solemn pine
-woods.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Could those who were comfortably, perhaps
-luxuriously seated within, but know that there
-was a poor human being on the eve, perhaps, of
-perishing helplessly amid the dark flow of that
-deep and roaring river!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Courage, friend Charlie!" said the rider to
-himself; and then he hallooed loudly, as if to
-attract attention, but did so in vain. The night
-was becoming a very severe one; the flakes of
-snow fell thicker and thicker on the gusty and
-cutting blast.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ah! if I should perish here&mdash;such a fate!"
-thought he, shuddering. "Shall I be swept down
-this black and horrid stream, the Louga, to be
-cast a drowned corpse upon its banks, to be found
-stripped and buried by wondering but unpitying
-serfs and boors; or shall I be torn and mangled
-by bears and wolves; or borne even to the Gulf
-of Finland, far, far away, having thus an obscure
-and wretched fate, without winning the name I
-had hoped to gain&mdash;forgotten even by those who
-wronged me in Scotland, the land that never
-more shall be a home to me!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He did not say all this aloud; but certainly
-some such painful surmises flashed upon him as
-he forced his snorting and reluctant horse, by a
-vigorous use of the spurs, through the thickly
-interwoven brushwood that grew on the bank of
-the river, the dull and monotonous rush of which,
-encumbered as it was by large pieces of ice, was
-sufficient to appal even a stouter heart than that
-of this young Scottish soldier of fortune.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With a brief invocation on his lips, he gave
-his horse the reins and gored it with the rowels.
-A strong, active, and clean-limbed, but
-somewhat undersized animal from the steppes of
-the Ukraine, with a fierce and angry snort, it
-plunged into the torrent, and breasted the icy
-masses bravely.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The slippery fragments that glided past, struck
-at times both horse and rider, forcing them to
-swerve down the stream; others were dashed by
-the whirling eddies against the projecting pieces
-of rock or roots of old trees; but after twice
-nearly despairing of achieving the passage, and
-believing himself lost, his horse trod firmly on the
-opposite bank. It emerged, panting, snorting,
-dripping, and trembling in every fibre, from the
-flood, and then Captain Balgonie found that he
-had escaped with life, and had safely passed the
-swollen waters of the Louga!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Leading his sturdy little steed by the bridle
-and caressing it the while, he made his way up
-the opposite bank, guided only by the lights in
-the mansion (or castle); but he proceeded with
-extreme difficulty, for the underwood was thick
-and dense as that which grew round the Palace
-of the Sleeping Beauty; ere long, however, he
-reached a plateau, the border of a park or lawn,
-and saw the snow-whitened walls and turrets of
-the edifice towering before him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Rising from a balustraded terrace, with an
-arched porte-cochère in front, the façade was
-square, and three storied, having a central dome
-like an inverted punchbowl, and several little
-angular towers, tall and slender like minarets;
-these cut the sky-line, and were surrounded each
-by a broad cornice or gallery, and terminated by
-a bulbous-shaped roof, exactly like an onion with
-its acute end in the air.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The lights in its many windows, the red and
-yellow coloured curtains within, all indicated
-warmth and comfort; while with the snow flakes
-freezing on his sodden and saturated uniform, his
-limbs benumbed, and his teeth well-nigh chattering,
-Balgonie hastily led his horse under the
-porte-cochère, and applied his hand vigorously to the
-great brazen knocker on the front door.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was speedily opened, and a white-bearded
-<i>dvornick</i>, or porter, wearing a long flowing <i>shoubah</i>,
-or coat of fur, lined with red flannel, admitted
-him with many humble genuflections, at the same
-time summoning a groom to take charge of his
-horse.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By the bearing of these lackeys, one might
-almost have thought that the Captain had been
-expected, or was a friend of the family: but a
-uniform has ever been an all-powerful passport,
-and an epaulette the most mighty of all introductions
-in Russia, where everything is measured
-by a military standard; thus, in an incredibly
-short space of time, the wants of rider and horse
-were alike hospitably attended to.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap02"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER II.
-<br /><br />
-THE CASTLE OF LOUGA.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Captain Balgonie, of the Regiment of Smolensko,
-soon found himself in a comfortable bed-chamber,
-where the genial glow of a <i>peitchka</i>, or Russian
-wall-stove, diffused warmth through his chilled
-frame, and where every current of the external
-atmosphere was carefully excluded by double
-window sashes, adorned with artificial flowers
-between.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When he chose to repose, a couch draped with
-snow-white curtains, and having a coverlet of the
-softest fur, awaited him; and above it hung a little
-holy picture of the Byzantine school, a Holy
-Virgin, with a halo of shining metal in the form
-of a horse-shoe round her head, if he chose to be
-devout and offer up a prayer.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A valet, after supplying him with hot coffee and
-a good dram of vodka (which somewhat reminded
-him of his native "mountain dew"), said that the
-Count, his master, would rejoice to have the
-pleasure of the visitor's society, after he had made
-a suitable toilet, and exchanged his wet uniform
-for a luxurious robe-de-chambre, in the pocket of
-which he took especial care to secure his dispatch,
-unseen.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Hospitality such as this, was not merely then a
-characteristic of the people, but was the result,
-perhaps, of a meagre population, and the absence
-of inns; thus the arrival of a stranger, especially
-an officer on duty, at this Russian mansion, created
-little or no surprise among its inmates.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was ushered into the presence of Count
-Mierowitz, whose name at once inspired him
-with confidence and satisfaction; for, by one of
-those singular coincidences "which novelists
-dare not use in fiction, but which occur daily
-in actual and matter-of-fact life," he had
-arrived at a mansion where he was not
-altogether unknown.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I have to apologise to your High Excellency
-for this apparent intrusion," said he; "but I have
-been misled or abandoned by my guide. I am
-Captain Balgonie, of the Regiment of Smolensko,
-and have the good fortune to number among my
-friends your son, Lieutenant Basil Mierowitz, the
-senior subaltern of my company."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"For Basil's sake, not less than your own,
-Captain, are you most welcome to the Castle of
-Louga," replied the Count, lifting and laying aside
-his cap.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was a man well on in years; his stature
-was not great, neither was his presence dignified;
-he stooped a little and was thick set, with a
-venerable beard, undefiled by steel; for, like a
-true old Muscovite, he contended that man was
-made in the image of God, and should neither be
-cut or carved upon. His eyebrows were white,
-but his eyes were dark, keen, quick, and expressed
-a spirit of ready impulse, for laughter or for
-ferocity&mdash;one, who by turns could be suave or
-irritable, especially when under the influence of
-wine, which generally made him fierce and stupid;
-for never, in all his life, had he suffered control
-or had his will disputed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His silver hair was simply tied behind with a
-black ribbon; in his hand he carried a little cap
-of black wolf's fur, adorned by rudely set jewels;
-he wore a queerly cut coat of dark red cloth
-trimmed with fur, and wore breeches of the same
-stuff, and lacked but a dagger and pistols with
-brass Turkish butts at his girdle, to seem what he
-really was, in disposition and character, a type of
-the boyar of the old school, who preferred quass
-to champagne, ate his pancakes with caviare, and
-was proud of being a specimen of the old Russian
-noble, as he existed in the time of Peter the Great,
-when his class first united some of the vices and
-luxuries of Western Europe to their native
-lawlessness and hardy ferocity.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Such was Count Mierowitz.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"When did you last see my son?" he asked,
-in tone more of authority than of anxious inquiry.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Some three months since, Excellency: he
-has been detached on the Livonian frontier."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And you, Captain&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I am proceeding on urgent imperial service
-from Novgorod where my regiment is stationed
-in the old palace of the Czars."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"To whither?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Schlusselburg."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The host changed countenance and almost
-manifested signs of discomposure on hearing of
-that formidable fortress and prison&mdash;the veritable
-Bastille of St. Petersburg, and he said:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A name to shudder at&mdash;by St. Nicholas it is!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And, but for the feather in the wax of my
-dispatch," resumed Balgonie (showing a red
-government seal in which a piece of feather
-twitched from a pen was inserted, the usual
-Russian emblem of <i>speed</i>), "I had not, perhaps,
-tempted the dangers of the Louga, but sought a
-billet on the other side, if such could be found."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You know not, perhaps, that my woods are
-full of wolves; but this is not the way to
-St. Petersburg."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yet I was so directed, Excellency."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You have been misled, and are only some
-seventy versts or so from the place you have left."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You amaze me, Count," exclaimed the perplexed
-Captain; for in the Russian service, an
-error becomes a crime.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Captain, you should have gone by Gori,
-Oustensk, Spask, and so on."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"That devil of a Podatchkine, an orderly of
-General Weymarn, who sent him specially with
-me, has either deluded or abandoned me."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yet we must thank your Podatchkine, in so
-far that he has procured us the pleasure of your
-society in this lonely place&mdash;my daughter and
-my niece, Captain Ivanovitch Balgonie,"
-continued the Count, introducing two young ladies
-who came through the curtains of a species of
-boudoir, "Natalie and Mariolizza Usakoff. Our
-visitor, Natalie, is that Ivanovitch Balgonie
-of whom Basil has spoken so much and so
-kindly."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Without being a vain man, Balgonie felt at
-that moment considerable satisfaction in the
-conviction that he was&mdash;as his glass had often
-informed him&mdash;decidedly a good-looking young
-fellow, with regular features, fine dark eyes,
-curling brown hair, and a smart moustache; for
-Natalie Mierowna, like her cousin Mariolizza,
-was one of the most attractive women at the
-dangerous Court of the Empress Catharine II.;
-for it was during her reign that the story and
-the atrocities we have unfortunately to record
-took place; when among us, in more civilised
-Britain, the grandfather of her present Majesty,
-old George III., was king, and the arts of peace
-and war grew side by side.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The friend and comrade of my brother Basil
-is welcome," said Natalie, presenting her hands
-(very tiny and delicate they were) to Balgonie,
-who bowed and touched them lightly with his
-lips; "he has often written to us concerning you
-and your adventures together in Silesia."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I am but too fortunate to be remembered
-thus."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Nay," rejoined Natalie, "we could scarcely
-forget that daring act of yours, which won you
-the rank you hold at present. Ah, Basil told
-us all about that when he was last here," she
-added, with a beautiful smile, of which she knew
-that many had already felt the power.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You mean my reconnoitring the enemy's
-position and avoiding being taken by them?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes, pray tell me about it?" said Mariolizza,
-her blue eyes dilating with pleasure; "my
-brother was there too&mdash;Apollo Usakoff, a
-lieutenant in the Regiment of Valikolutz."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It was a very simple matter," replied Balgonie,
-bowing to each of the cousins, and not
-sorry to have a good personal anecdote to relate
-of himself, one which was certain to make him
-appear to advantage in the estimation of two very
-attractive women. "It was only a <i>ruse de guerre</i>,
-and occurred when our Regiment of Smolensko
-was with the combined armies in Silesia, and
-before the King of Prussia attacked Count Daun
-at the Heights of Buckersdorff. An exact account
-of the Austrian position was required by our
-general, who had not then received the orders
-of the Empress to fall back upon the Russian
-frontier. The task was one of extreme peril;
-so I being a soldier of fortune, having all to win,
-and nothing to lose&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Save your life!" interrupted Natalie.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"One in my position, among a foreign army,
-must not value that too much," said the Captain,
-in a tone not untinged with melancholy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I volunteered for it, despite all that your
-son, Count, my friend could say to dissuade me.
-Well armed, at midnight, I set out upon my
-solitary mission, unattended and alone, without
-relinquishing my uniform; for if taken prisoner
-when otherwise attired, I would infallibly be
-hanged as a spy; but ere long I found, that in
-such a dress, there were insuperable difficulties
-to making the reconnoissance required.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"At the cottage of a Silesian boor, near the
-base of the Eulanbirge (or mountain of the owls),
-I stopped to make some inquiries. The fellow
-proved to be partially tipsy; the contents of my
-pocket-flask, potent vodka, completed his happy
-condition, and after a few jests I prevailed upon
-him to change dresses with me. He donned the
-green coat, epaulettes, and boots of the Regiment
-of Smolensko; I, the ample canvas caftan and
-girdle of a Silesian boor,&mdash;a fur cap, and a visage
-daubed with grime, completed my costume. Thus
-attired, and retaining only my pistols, I reconnoitred
-safely and unheeded the Austrian position,
-noting the defences, trenches, fascine batteries,
-cannon, and general disposition; but I had a
-narrow escape, for when returning to the cottage of
-my new friend the boor, a party of Count Daun's
-Imperial Cuirassiers, who had been patrolling
-the Eulanbirge, overtook me, and at once
-perceiving I was not a Silesian, questioned me rather
-closely and curiously.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I succeeded in passing myself off as a Pomeranian,
-and pointing to the cottage, told them
-that there was concealed an officer of the famous
-Regiment of Smolensko. They at once galloped
-off and surrounded it, while I stole away to a
-thicket, and climbed into a tree, from whence
-I could see the poor boor, clad in my uniform,
-and still labouring under the influence of his late
-debauch, dragged a prisoner&mdash;despite all his
-bewildered protestations and denials&mdash;towards
-the camp of Count Daun, while I, under cover
-of night, reached in safety the lines of the allies,
-and made my report to General Weymarn, then
-commanding our division of the army.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It proved of no use to us, as we fell back
-next day; but it enabled our ally, the King of
-Prussia, to storm with signal success the Heights
-of Buckersdorff, to drive back Count Daun, and
-invest Schwiednitz. He offered me rank in his
-army; but I declined, on which the Empress sent
-me the commission of Captain in her Regiment
-of Smolensko, thus enabling me to rank as a
-noble of the ninth class."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"May you soon rank as one of the sixth," said
-the Count, patting the Captain on the shoulder
-frankly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ah, Excellency, it may be long ere I become
-a colonel; yet," he added, almost as if talking to
-himself, "when I got the letter of the Empress
-addressed to me, Carl Ivanovitch Hospodeen*
-Balgonie, I could not but smile at the thought
-of how such a title would have sounded in the
-ears of my good father, old John Balgonie, of
-that Ilk!"
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="footnote">
-* Equivalent to Monsieur or Esquire.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-"Let me repeat that you are most welcome,"
-said the Count, who totally failed to understand
-the meaning of the last remark; "and luckily
-you have arrived just as the ladies and I were
-about to proceed to the supper-table."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To Balgonie it had become apparent that each
-time he mentioned the name of the Empress, the
-proud pink nostrils of Natalie seemed to dilate,
-and that a decidedly dangerous expression
-glittered in her splendid dark eyes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Natalie Mierowna, whose beauty had caused
-such jealousy at Moscow and St. Petersburg
-(two duels are spoken of concerning her), had
-ever shone brilliantly in the "follow-my-leader"
-kind of dance, now so well known among us as
-the Mazurka,&mdash;the old Sclavonian measure, in
-which all succeeding couples have to imitate the
-motions of the first; and the chief Russian
-peculiarity of the dance consists still in the
-circumstance of the ladies selecting their own
-partners&mdash;the brilliant Natalie, we say, having twice
-sportively, or in a spirit of coquettish bravado,
-chosen a handsome young aide-de-camp, whom
-the Empress was supposed to view with favour,
-led to her abrupt exile from Court, and to the
-detaching of Captain Vlasfief, of the Imperial
-Guards, to irksome and secluded duty at the
-state prison of Schlusselburg. This unmerited
-affront filled her brother, Basil Mierowitz, with
-such fiery indignation, that but for the dread of
-compromising his whole family, he would have
-cast his commission at the feet of the imperious
-Catharine, and quitted the Russian army; but
-flight or exile must at once have followed the
-act.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As it was, though detached and distant on
-the Livonian frontier, he was now conceiving
-a scheme for vengeance, much more perilous to
-himself and to all concerned, and which actually
-aimed at the dethronement of the Empress
-Catharine!
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap03"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER III.
-<br /><br />
-NATALIE.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-There are few Russian ladies now, who do not
-speak with equal facility, German, French, and
-English; but Natalie Mierowna and her cousin
-were then each mistress of them all,&mdash;and this
-was in the comparatively barbarous time of
-Catharine II.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thus their acquaintance with European
-literature enabled them to excel in an easy and
-well-supported conversation of which the old
-bovar, their kinsman, could make nothing; and
-which they could embellish by their wit and
-power of quotation, and with an exquisite <i>finesse
-d'esprit</i> peculiarly their own. When this
-dangerous charm was added to the great beauty of
-Natalie, she could not but prove a perilous
-acquaintance for the young Scottish wanderer.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her loveliness was indeed great.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She was a large, showy, and snowy-skinned
-beauty, almost voluptuous yet very graceful in
-form, with fine dark eyes, that were dreamy or
-sparkling by turns as emotion moved her;
-long-lashed they were, and perhaps too heavily lidded.
-Her hair was of the darkest brown, almost black;
-her lips were full, but flexible, small and pouting
-when in repose, almost too large when she smiled,
-which was frequently.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was when she spoke of the Empress, that
-her white bosom heaved, and a fiery expression
-seemed to pervade her whole features. She said
-little, and that little was generally said with
-assumed gentleness or real reserve, for language
-cannot be too guarded in Russia; but her dark
-eyes flashed, her delicate nostrils dilated, her short
-upper lip quivered, she threw back her proud
-head, and more than once Balgonie saw her white
-hands clenched; for all the dove-like softness of
-her nature seemed to depart, when she thought
-of the affront that exile from Court had put upon
-her, and her whole family, even to delaying the
-marriage of her cousin Mariolizza to her brother
-Basil, to whom she was engaged&mdash;solemnly
-betrothed by a religious ceremony.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She took the arm of Balgonie, and led the way
-to the dining-room, which was lit by brilliant
-crystal girandoles, and heated, of course, by a
-peitchka, the greatest luxury of civilised life that
-can be found in a cold climate, and which warms
-a house more effectually than any grate of coals
-can do. Built on that side of the large, lofty, and
-magnificent room which was farthest from the
-windows, it was formed of solid stone, with several
-carved apertures, and lined with white shining
-porcelain; within it, blazed a constant fire of
-billets and faggots, under the care of the dvornick,
-or house-porter, and these were furnished by the
-Count's serfs or woodsmen from the adjacent
-forests.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All made a sign of the cross in the Greek
-fashion, and seated themselves; but weary and
-exhausted by his long ride and recent immersion
-in a swollen and icy river, Balgonie found it
-almost impossible to partake of the supper that
-was pressed upon him: caviare on slices of bread
-to begin with,&mdash;"caviare from the roe of the
-sturgeons of the Don," as the Count informed
-him,&mdash;roasted capon and jugged hare, dried figs and
-conserves, prunes, and pastilla of fruit and honey
-compounded, together with the champagne, Rhine
-wine, and vodka, in silver tankards and goblets of
-jewelled Venetian crystal.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The jaded traveller could make only a pretence
-of eating; but he could drink deeply, for he was
-athirst; and more than one foaming goblet of
-sparkling Moselle was filled for him, till he
-became giddy and confused. Were the fumes of
-the wine mounting to his head? What was the
-Count saying in an undertone? Was it of him
-that the cousins were talking in some strange
-language, and covertly exchanging smiles with
-their beautiful eyes? "Courage, Charlie,"
-thought he, "this is a bad beginning!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though people were not very particular as to a
-bumper more or less in those days anywhere, in
-Russia least of all, an emotion of shame came over
-the young Scottish, officer; he felt his cheeks and
-forehead burn, and he made a vigorous effort to
-rally his senses, but in vain: he heard the voices
-of Natalie and of Mariolizza; but he knew not
-what they said or what he replied, for he felt as
-one in a half-waking dream. They were talking
-merrily, however, in French, which is always spoken
-well by the Russians; perhaps because the tongue
-that can master Russ may achieve anything.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After a time he mustered sufficient energy and
-sense to beg that he might be permitted to retire,
-as he had his journey to resume betimes on the
-morrow; and he was escorted to his chamber by
-the Count in person. Its four corners seemed to
-be in rapid pursuit of each other now, and the
-floor and the ceiling to be incessantly changing
-places; then his senses reeled, and the light
-departed from his eyes. He found himself fainting.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The sudden and rapid journey from Novgorod,
-the lack of food and the toil he had undergone
-for one night and two entire days, while wandering
-with the treacherous Podatchkine, the crossing
-of the Louga, and the bruises he had unconsciously
-received from several pieces of floating ice, had
-all proved too much for his system, and brought
-on a relapse of an old camp fever from which he
-had suffered once when serving with the army in
-Silesia,&mdash;and in the morning he was delirious.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though weak, bewildered, scared by the prospect
-of loitering thus when proceeding on urgent
-duty (for obedience and discipline become a second
-nature to the soldier), enduring a raging thirst
-and a burning pang that shot with each pulsation
-through his brain, stiff in every joint and covered
-with livid bruises, he had still strength left as
-dawning day stole through the double sashes of
-his windows, to stagger from bed, and search for
-the dispatch, which, on the hazard of his life,
-he was to place in the hands of Bernikoff, the
-Governor of Schlusselburg.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He hurriedly, and with a tremor that increased,
-examined each of his pockets in succession, then
-his sabretasche, and lastly the pocket of the
-robe-de-chambre; but the dispatch&mdash;the dispatch of
-the Empress&mdash;entrusted to him as a chosen man
-by Lieutenant-General Weymarn was gone!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lost, or abstracted, it was irretrievably <i>gone</i>!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Was he the victim of treachery or of a snare?
-Was it a dream that the voluptuous and beautiful
-Natalie, with her snowy skin, her dreamy eyes,
-and her fascinating smile, had been hovering about
-him&mdash;a dream or a reality?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Alas! he knew not; for again the walls and
-windows were whirling round him in wild career,
-and he sank on the floor insensible.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Poor Charlie Balgonie knew not that the morning
-on which he made this alarming discovery was
-that of the second day since his arrival at the
-Castle of Louga.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap04"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER IV.
-<br /><br />
-CORPORAL PODATCHKINE.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Scarcely had Charlie Balgonie achieved the
-passage of the Louga, and, in the dark, forced
-his panting horse up the wooded bank towards
-the lighted windows of the castle, than his guide
-and orderly, Corporal Michail Podatchkine, who,
-for reasons which were his own, and which shall
-ultimately be explained, had decoyed him many,
-many versts to the southward of his proper route
-and then abandoned him, while he still cautiously
-followed, and watched him plunge into the perilous
-stream&mdash;watched him in the hope that he might
-perish in its icy current; Corporal Podatchkine,
-we say, had barely seen that the officer's safety
-was certain and assured, than he turned his
-horse's head, and with a hoarse malediction on
-his bearded mouth, rode away in an opposite
-direction.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The lighted windows of the Castle of Louga
-soon darkened and vanished in his rear; the
-snow-flakes came thicker and faster on the icy
-blast, whitening his round bearskin cap and fur
-shoubah or cloak, and the untrimmed mane of his
-shaggy little horse; but with his long lance slung
-behind him, his knees up to his saddle-bow, and
-his fierce, keen eyes peering out the way before
-him, the amiable Podatchkine, who, though a
-Livonian by birth, had the honour to hold the
-rank of corporal in a corps of Cossacks, rode on
-through the dense fir forest as unerringly as if
-every tree therein had been planted by his own
-warlike hands.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Ere long, with a grunt of satisfaction, he struck
-upon a track that led to the right and left, and he
-unhesitatingly pursued the latter. There were
-then none of those verst-posts, about ten feet
-high or so, such as may now be found by the
-side of the Russian roads through the forests, or
-along the open steppe; but Podatchkine rode
-steadily on, pausing only now and then to unsling
-and grasp his spear, or give a fierce gleaming
-glance around him, while the nostrils of his thick
-snub-nose dilated, when a prolonged and melancholy
-howl, rising from the woody depths into
-the chill drear sky of night, announced that some
-wolf was rousing itself in its lair among the grass,
-or in its den beside the river.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Anon he came to a place where the forest was
-partially cleared, and there stood a little hut built
-of squared logs. The walls of this edifice were
-whitened artificially; but the roof was rendered
-whiter still by a coat of the fast-freezing snow.
-A single ray of smoky light streamed from the
-opening (which passed for a window) near the
-door, on which Podatchkine, without dismounting,
-struck three blows with the butt of his lance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Nicholas Paulovitch," he exclaimed, "are
-you within?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The door was soon unfastened, and thereat
-appeared a figure, not unlike an Esquimaux,
-bearing a pine torch. He was a man of great
-stature and muscular development, clad in a
-caftan of coarse, thick, and warm material, girt
-by a broad belt in which a long and rusty knife
-was stuck; he had on bark shoes and long
-leggings of sheepskin, which, like Bryan O'Linn's
-breeches, had "the skinny side out and the
-hairy side in;" and he cultivated one long lock
-of grizzled hair behind his right ear in the
-old fashion of the Black Cossacks; but this
-appendage was concealed by the hood and tippet
-of fur which he wore. This man, however, did
-not belong to any of the nomadic military tribes,
-but was a species of Russian gipsy, a half-breed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He held up the pine torch, and its flaring light
-tipped with a lurid, weird, and uncertain glow his
-fierce, tawny, and repulsive visage, causing his
-cunning and almond-shaped eyes to gleam redly,
-like two carbuncles, from under their thick and
-impending brows, which were nearly as shaggy
-as the moustache that blended with his greasy
-and uncombed beard; and in the same light the
-head of Podatchkine's lance and the hafts of his
-sabre, dagger, and pistols glittered at times, being
-the only bright parts of his remarkably dingy
-costume.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Is it you, Michail Podatchkine&mdash;and <i>alone</i>?"
-he asked surlily.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes; even so, alone. Dost think I have the
-evil eye about me that you stare so, Nicholas
-Paulovitch?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"God forbid!" replied Nicholas with a shudder,
-for this idea is the grossest and the greatest of
-all Russian superstitious; "but I expected
-two&mdash;yourself and another."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Who told you so?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Olga Paulowna, my sister, who yesterday saw
-you at Krejko."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"True, I remember. Now listen, old friend
-and comrade&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Hush, the girl is within and may hear you."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well," said Podatchkine, lowering his voice,
-while the other extinguished his torch, half closed
-the door of his hut, and drew nearer the speaker,
-"by order of General Weymarn, Governor of
-St. Petersburg, General of the Cavalry,
-Director-General of the Canals, Bridges, and
-Highways&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And the devil knows all what more!" said
-the other impatiently. "Well?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I am ordered to guide this Carl Ivanovitch
-Balgonie, who is a stranger, to the gates of
-Schlusselburg, as he bears to Bernikoff a dispatch
-of importance; but I have been promised a heavy
-sum&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ah! how much say you?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I have said nothing yet."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But you spoke of a heavy sum."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Two hundred silver roubles."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Two hundred silver roubles!" exclaimed Nicholas,
-opening his avaricious eyes with wonder,
-and then closing them again, so that they looked
-like two narrow slits.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes, every <i>denusca</i>, if I, by fair means or by
-foul, prevent the delivery of that paper into the
-hands of old Bernikoff."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He whose dagger tickled the throat of Peter
-III.: and by whom are you offered this, friend
-Podatchkine?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I can trust you: well, by the Lieutenant
-Apollo Usakoff."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The grandson of the Hetman Mazeppa!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The same; and by Basil Mierowitz&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well, and what the devil have I to do with
-all this?" growled the half-breed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Much: fifty roubles will be yours, Paulovitch,
-if you will assist me," said Podatchkine in a
-husky whisper.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Let us talk over this: dismount, and come in."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Nay, there is Olga Paulowna: then I have
-other work to do; but give me a drink, for I am
-sorely athirst."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The other speedily brought him a painted bowl
-full of foamy quass, which the Cossack Corporal,
-for so we may term him, drained to the dregs;
-though it is a liquor, to any but a Russian,
-horrible as the water of Cocytus.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Let us be wary, friend Podatchkine," said the
-woodman: "the knout is not an angel, but it
-teaches us to tell the truth alike of ourselves and
-of others."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Refreshed by his bitter draught, the Corporal
-shook the gathering snow-flakes from the sleeves
-of his fur shoubah, and resumed somewhat garrulously:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My next instructions are, that the dispatch,
-which is from the Empress herself (whom God
-and our Lady of Kazan long preserve!), and
-which bears the imperial seal, shall never be
-delivered; but must be obtained by me for Basil
-Mierowitz and the Lieutenant Usakoff, now
-detached upon the Livonian frontier, and who
-both know as little as I care, that its bearer is
-actually their own dearest and most valued friend!
-I misled the Hospodeen Balgonie, lured him to
-the river's brink, and left him there, in the hope
-that he and his horse might become frozen on the
-steppe or in the forest, where I could rob him at
-ease; but the man seems made of iron, and, to
-my astonishment, I saw him swim the Louga. I
-thought all gone, he, the dispatch, and my 200
-roubles, when he plunged his horse into the
-river; but he stoutly won the opposite bank,
-and has made his way straight to the dwelling of
-Count Mierowitz, where now, I doubt not, he is
-safely housed."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It seems to me, friend Podatchkine, that you
-took a great deal of useless trouble when you
-had your dagger and pistols," said the other,
-suspiciously.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Nay, if he was to perish thus, suspicion
-might too readily fall upon me, for he is a
-favourite officer of the Empress, and of Weymarn
-too. My plan is this: I may get the dispatch
-to-night in yonder castle of Count Mierowitz."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And if not?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Then I shall again lure and mislead Balgonie,
-and bring him here in the night."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What then?" asked the woodman doggedly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How dull we are, Paulovitch. We shall
-drug and drown him; thus shall he die without
-a wound. I will take back the dispatch to
-Novgorod; and you can carry the body on his
-horse to St. Petersburg, where a sum will be
-given you for finding it. The poor stranger, they
-will say, has perished amid our keen Russian
-frosts, and that will be all. Nicholas Paulovitch,
-the carcass will be well worth twenty roubles to
-thee."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And thy fifty?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You shall receive when the affair is over, and
-when you come to me at Novgorod, where I am
-quartered."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"By the bones of my tribe, and by the sword
-that flames in the hand of the holy Michail, I am
-with you, Podatchkine!" exclaimed the half-breed
-with ferocious joy, mingling his gipsy
-cant with that of the Russian church. Then
-they shook heartily their hard and dingy
-hands&mdash;hands that had wrought many a deed of
-merciless cruelty.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And now, Paulovitch, give me a light for my
-pipe, and let me begone."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A few minutes more and these worthy
-compatriots had separated.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Podatchkine rode somewhat leisurely to a ford
-that he knew of lower down the river, believing
-that in time the whole onus, and perhaps suspicion,
-of Balgonie's death (if it was necessary) might
-fall on the woodman, whom he had resolved to
-cheat of the promised fifty roubles if he could.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He will play me false," muttered Podatchkine.
-"Is not the dog a gipsy? Beware of the
-tamed wolf, of the baptized Jew, and the enemy
-who has made it up; why should I not delude
-him who will readily delude me?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Our enterprising Corporal was correct in his
-estimate of Nicholas Paulovitch; for, at the same
-moment, that personage, while wrapped in his
-filthy sheepskin (caring nothing for the comfort
-of any other bed than the floor), was considering
-how he might drug and drown both the officer
-and his treacherous guide, sell both their bodies
-at the nearest military post, and, by taking the
-dispatch to Novgorod himself, obtain the entire
-reward offered for it by the Lieutenants Mierowitz
-and Usakoff, or still more, perhaps, by delivering
-it to the Empress!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was a third person who had overheard
-the first savage plot, and who felt her heart
-stirred with pity and terror for Balgonie, who had
-given her a silver kopec at Krejko but yesterday,&mdash;the
-gipsy girl, Olga Paulowna, the sister of
-Nicholas Paulovitch; and she resolved to baffle
-both conspirators if she could.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was in perfect ignorance of who might be
-the bearer of that dispatch (with the contents of
-which a spy had acquainted them) that the two
-officers, who were then engaged in an extensive
-and dangerous political and military conspiracy,
-contrived to have Podatchkine, in the character
-of a guide and orderly, sent upon the trail of one
-who was really their most valued friend and
-comrade; though, as a foreigner and soldier of
-fortune, they deemed it proper to keep him as
-yet in total ignorance of their daring hopes
-and plans.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap05"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER V.
-<br /><br />
-THE DAGGER OF BERNIKOFF.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-It may now be necessary to afford the reader a
-little historical insight as to what it was that
-hinged on this important dispatch of the Scottish
-officer, Balgonie.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When the Emperor Peter II. died of smallpox
-(just on the eve of his marriage), closing
-a short reign of three years of stormy trouble
-and dark intrigue, the whole male issue of Peter
-the Great of Russia became extinct.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Duke of Holstein, son of his eldest
-daughter, was entitled to the throne; but the
-Russians, for certain cogent political reasons,
-filled that perilous seat with Anne, Duchess of
-Courland, daughter of Ivan, Peter's eldest
-brother. Governed by her favourite Biron, on whom
-she bestowed the duchy of Courland, she broke
-through all the limits which growing civilisation
-had imposed upon the power of the Czars; she
-engaged in many useless wars, lost vast treasures
-and more than a hundred thousand men in strife
-with the Turks, and closing an inglorious reign,
-was succeeded by one who will shortly be
-introduced to the reader, Ivan Antonovitch, or
-John IV., son of her niece, the Princess of
-Mechlenburg, an infant only six months old. This
-Princess sent Biron, the Regent, to the usual
-place of Muscovite seclusion, Siberia, and assumed
-the administratorship during the minority of her
-son.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This state of affairs was but of short duration
-when Elizabeth, daughter of Peter the Great,
-having a strong party, seized the crown, banished
-the entire family of Mechlenburg, and deposing
-the infant monarch, Ivan IV., confined him for life
-a prisoner of state in the great Castle of
-Schlusselburg, where he had been for twenty-three
-years, at the period when our narrative opens.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To mention him in conversation, and still more
-to possess a coin bearing his effigy, incurred the
-guilt and insured the punishment of treason!
-More than twenty years after the deposition of
-this transitory emperor, a German tradesman,
-who had worked long as a cabinet-maker at
-St. Petersburg, went to Cronstadt, intending then
-to embark for his native city, Lubeck. As it
-was not permitted to carry out of Russia above
-a certain quantity of specie, an officer of customs
-asked the German "what he had with him?" "Only
-a few roubles to pay for my passage," he
-replied; and on being commanded to show them,
-one was discovered having the effigy of Ivan IV!
-In vain did the unhappy tradesman protest that he
-neither knew he had such a coin, nor from whom
-he had received it. Death was the penalty; but
-his goods were confiscated, and he was condemned
-to perpetual imprisonment in the mines of Siberia.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Empress Elizabeth died the victim of
-intemperance; and while poor Prince Ivan, an
-uncrowned emperor, a prisoner without a crime,
-was left to pine in the Castle of Schlusselburg,
-the sceptre was given to the feeble and dissipated
-Peter III., the husband of the beautiful,
-voluptuous, and talented Catharine II., daughter of a
-petty prince, but descended from the ancient
-house of Servestan,&mdash;a woman whom, in three
-short months after their coronation, he contrived
-to disgust by his political innovations, and still
-more by his amatory inconstancy; so it was
-resolved to get rid of Peter, who was then in his
-thirty-fourth year.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Peter I. had nearly lost Russia by compelling
-the people to cut off the tails of their coats; and
-Peter III. became equally unpopular by ordering
-them to trim their vast beards, and by putting
-his troops in the Prussian uniform. Crowned
-heads should leave such matters to tailors and
-tonsors; but he certainly abolished the secret
-tribunal with its contingent horrors, and recalled
-many a poor exile from Siberia.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A party was formed for his dethronement; so
-one evening in July, 1762, when he was surrounded
-by his guard of Holsteiners, and amusing
-himself with his flower gardens (he was a great
-botanist), and with some of his beautiful
-mistresses at the palace of Orienbaum,&mdash;particularly
-the Countess of Woronzow, to whose allurements
-he had abandoned himself,&mdash;the exasperated
-Empress prepared to strike a final blow for Russia
-and for herself.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Putting on a uniform of old Russian Guards
-belonging to her future favourite, Captain Vlasfief,
-with the most coquettish grace, this young and
-beautiful, but in some respects terrible, woman
-borrowed from the nobles around her all the
-accessories of a complete military toilette: of Basil
-Mierowitz, a hat; of Count Orloff, a scarf; of
-Colonel Bernikoff, a belt; of some one else, a
-sword. Over all, she wore the blue ribbon of
-the first order of the Empire, which her
-impolitic husband had laid aside for that of Prussia.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The drums beat to arms: in this strange guise
-she showed herself to the troops, who were now
-mustered to the number of twenty thousand men
-in the great square of St. Petersburg, where the
-sight of the uniform of the old guard, which had
-been forced to give place to Peter's cherished
-Holsteiners, raised bursts of acclamation, quite
-as much as the appearance of Catharine, who was
-then "in the full flower of her robust beauty,
-perfectly elegant in figure, and purely feminine
-from her shoulders to her feet, which were
-remarkably handsome, and of which she was very
-proud." Her nose was aquiline, her eyes blue
-with black lashes, and her hair, a brilliant auburn,
-was curling on her shoulders. Thus has an
-eyewitness described her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The regiments began to file off against the
-Emperor, and little knowing the end of the
-expedition, among the troops on this night
-marched Charlie Balgonie, with the colours of
-the Regiment of Smolensko on his shoulder.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Everywhere the rebellious Empress was received
-with enthusiasm, and the Great Chancellor
-Woroslaff, who was sent against her, was among
-the first to join her party.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Emperor, abandoning his flowers and his
-fair ones, fled to his yacht or galley, which was
-rowed to Cronstadt, of which his enemy, the
-High Admiral Talizine, had already made himself
-master. The imperial galley (relates M. Rulhière
-in his "Histoire sur la Révolution de Russie")
-came under the ramparts in the night, while the
-great alarm bells rung, the drums were beaten
-and scarlet rockets ascended in showers from the
-dark mass of the Castle of Kronslot; and then,
-all along the line of fortifications, Peter saw two
-hundred port-fires shedding their weird unearthly
-glare through the yawning embrasures upon the
-twilight sea and sky&mdash;each port-fire beside a
-loaded cannon&mdash;loaded against himself!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This was at ten o'clock; but ere the great oars
-of the galley were laid in, or the anchor dropped,
-a sentinel challenged:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Who comes there?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"His Imperial Majesty the Emperor," replied
-the Captain of the galley, who was standing on its
-gilded prow.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"There is no longer any Emperor!" was the
-stern reply of some one on the ramparts.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Tis false! I am here&mdash;I, Peter Antonovitch,"
-said the Emperor, growing pale at these daring
-and terrible words, as he stood up and threw back
-his cloak to show himself and his well-known
-Prussian star, by the clear, lingering twilight
-of the northern evening.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Sheer off," shouted the Admiral Talizine,
-"or, by our Lady of Kazan, I will fire on you!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"We are going&mdash;give us but time," cried the
-Captain hopelessly, through his speaking-trumpet.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At that moment a thousand voices on the
-ramparts shouted on the still twilight air&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Long live the Empress Catharine II.!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On hearing this, Peter burst into tears, and fell
-back into the arms of his attendants, saying&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The conspiracy is general&mdash;from the first
-days of my short reign I have seen it coming!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was soon after abandoned by all, even by
-his obnoxious Holstein Guards, who surrendered
-to the Regiments of Smolensko and Valikolutz;
-and then he was committed by his wife, prisoner
-of state, to the Castle of Robsch, in a solitary
-place, eighteen miles from St. Petersburg. Six
-days afterwards had only elapsed, when it was
-suggested that though young Ivan was still
-lingering a captive at Schlusselburg, and some
-were not without hopes of replacing him on the
-throne, tranquillity could not be perfectly restored
-while Peter lived, though lonely and abandoned
-now.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His wife's lovers and favourites came to this
-decision speedily; so late one afternoon, three
-horsemen arrived at the residence of the fallen
-Emperor. They were Count Orloff, who had in
-his breast a laced handkerchief of the Empress,
-the grim Colonel Bernikoff, and a Hospodeen or
-gentleman, who announced that they had come
-to sup with him; and, according to the Russian
-fashion, glasses of brandy were served round
-before they sat down.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In that given to the Emperor was poison.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Whether, adds the historian we quote, they
-were in haste to carry back their dark tidings,
-or whether the horror of the deed made them
-anxious to finish it, none can know; but to hasten
-their terrible work, they insisted on giving him
-another glass.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Already the subtle poison was diffusing itself
-through the vitals of the unhappy Emperor;
-and now, struck by the pallor of their faces and
-the ferocious expression of their eyes, he started
-back, refused the proffered glass, and despairingly
-summoned assistance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They then flung themselves upon him, and
-Count Orloff, pulling from his breast the
-handkerchief he had concealed there, threw it over
-the mouth of Peter, to gag him and stifle his
-cries. He was dashed again and again to the
-floor, where he defended himself against his
-assassins with all the fury that terror of death
-and despair could inspire.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Two young officers of the guard now rushed
-in, and, as the orders of all were to slay Peter
-without a wound, they knotted the handkerchief
-round his neck to strangle him, while the Count
-pressed his knees upon his breast.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Still the dying Emperor struggled so fearfully
-that the ferocious Bernikoff, losing all patience,
-plunged a dagger into his throat; and thus,
-poisoned, stabbed, and strangled, he expired
-without further resistance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A few hours after this, pale, dishevelled, and
-covered with blood, dust, and perspiration, with
-torn garments and disturbed bearing, Count Orloff
-appeared before the Empress. "She arose in
-silence," says M. Rulhière, "and passed into
-an inner room, whither he followed her. Some
-minutes after, she called Count Panin, who was
-already named her minister, and informed him
-that the Emperor was dead, and consulted with
-him upon the mode of announcing his demise
-to the people."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was given out that he had died a natural
-death.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The wound inflicted by Bernikoff's dagger was
-carefully sewed up; the orifice was neatly covered
-by a piece of gold-beater's skin; and the body,
-in an old green regimental coat, with four wax
-candles as a funeral state, was exposed for three
-days to the people. The Russians were permitted
-to wear their beards; the Empress poured out her
-afflictions in a ukase, and offered up her prayers,
-as became a widow, in the church of our holy
-Lady of Kazan.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And it was in the service of this charming
-people,
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"&mdash;&mdash;this new and polished nation,<br />
- Whose names want nothing but pronounciation,"<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-&mdash;a people, who, in the arts of peace, were little
-better than the Scots when James I. was butchered
-in the Black Friary at Perth, or the men of
-"Merry England" when her crook-backed Dick
-was smothering the royal babies in the Tower&mdash;that,
-by an adverse fate, our hero found himself a
-soldier of fortune, when, as before stated, old
-George III. was King of the British Isles, and
-"the first gentleman in Europe" was a sinless
-infant on his mother's knee.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After Peter was laid in his grave, and Catharine
-was firmly seated on his throne, her conduct
-was cautious and judicious, and, as even her
-enemies admitted, at times magnanimous; yet
-frightful atrocities were committed during her
-reign when she degenerated into ferocity and
-debauchery.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The captivity of the young and innocent Ivan
-in Schlusselburg, in charge of the unscrupulous
-Bernikoff, Captain Vlasfief, and a Lieutenant
-named Tschekin&mdash;three officers in whom Catharine
-had implicit reliance&mdash;seemed more hopeless
-now than ever when the sceptre was in her
-firm grasp.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now that Peter was disposed of, her only dread
-consisted in the chance of Ivan's escape; so his
-guards were doubled, and her orders to Bernikoff
-concerning him were to ensure his detention even
-by death if necessary: and it was concerning this
-very dread that Captain Charles Balgonie was
-proceeding with a dispatch from Novgorod, where
-Catharine, with some of her favourites and courtiers,
-was residing for a time in the ancient palace
-of the Czars.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap06"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER VI.
-<br /><br />
-THE PALATINE.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Corporal Podatchkine was an admirable specimen
-of his own type of Russian,&mdash;one who was
-more afraid of neglecting Lent than of murdering
-his fellow-being, especially if that fellow-being
-was a foreigner; "for," saith M. L'Abbé Chappe
-at this time, "they do not reckon foreigners
-among the number of their brethren."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His thick black scrubby hair was cut straight
-across the forehead in a line with the eyebrows,
-and at each side it hung perpendicularly down
-below the ears, in the old Russian and Mediæval
-fashion, and was, moreover, cut square across the
-neck behind, just as the English wore theirs in
-the days of Richard III.; and he kept alternately
-scratching and smoothing his rugged front,
-nervously and assiduously, when he removed his
-fur Cossack cap; and, full of affected concern,
-even to exhibiting tears in his small cunning eyes,
-presented himself, through the bribed auspices
-of the dvornick, to Natalie Mierowna next
-morning, and besought her to have him "conducted
-to the chamber of his brave, his beloved Captain,
-his comrade and brother, who was, he now
-learned, seriously ill, helpless, and delirious,"&mdash;and,
-in fact, just as the cunning Corporal wished
-him to be.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There he found Balgonie, certainly too ill and
-weak either to recognise him or understand what
-he was about; so the faithful Cossack made a
-rapid and skilful investigation of all the officer's
-pockets, and especially his sabretasche, for the
-dispatch.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Not a vestige of it was to be found.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What the devil can he have done with it?"
-muttered the bewildered Corporal, as he thought
-of his 200 silver roubles; "can he have lost it in
-the river, or swallowed it?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The truth is, that Natalie Mierowna had her
-doubts about the fidelity of Podatchkine, and
-even of some of her own domestics, and aware of
-the risk run by the stranger if he lost a dispatch
-of the Empress, she had, prior to the introduction
-of the Corporal, secured the document, and at that
-moment it was hidden in her own fair bosom
-until she could secure it in a safer place.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In her bosom! Poor Natalie! Alas, she little
-knew its contents, and the horrors they were yet
-to produce!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Baffled thus in his attempt to secure it, there
-was no resource for the faithful warrior of the
-steppes now but to take up his quarters, which
-he was nothing loth to do, at the Castle of the
-Louga, and there quietly and comfortably to
-smoke his pipe by the kitchen stove; await the
-recovery or the death, he cared not which, of
-Balgonie; and to concert further measures with
-the huge gipsy, Nicholas Paulovitch, whom he
-saw daily.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was no feverish dream of Balgonie that
-Natalie Mierowna had been hovering about his
-bedside; for she and her cousin Mariolizza had
-been his especial nurses.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In less than three days the feverish delirium
-subsided, sense completely returned, and the
-young Captain appeared to be labouring only
-under a species of influenza. A cold, as we
-understand that homely but troublesome kind of
-ailment in foggy Britain, is almost unknown in
-the latitude of St. Petersburg. "It is," says
-Dr. Granville, "indigenous to England, and, above all,
-to London;" yet we fear Balgonie had a most
-unromantic and unmistakable cold, consequent
-on his immersion in the icy Louga, together with
-an aguish shivering, which rendered the quitting
-of his couch, and betaking himself to the saddle,
-as yet quite impossible.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Balgonie had an insatiable thirst: he had
-visions of iced champagne; but in lieu, got only
-tea-punch, if we may so call it, being tea in the
-fashion still taken by the Russians (who hold
-that milk spoils it), with a slice of lemon or
-preserved fruit; and as he got stronger, Katinki, a
-strapping Polish damsel with fine black eyes,
-who was Natalie's own particular follower, added
-thereto a dash of rum and then <i>tsvetochay</i>, or
-flowery tea, with cakes, which the Captain seemed
-to relish all the more when he understood them
-to be made by the white hands of Natalie: an
-appreciation which showed a decided improvement
-in that young officer's health. But&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My dispatch," he frequently said aloud,&mdash;"I
-must be gone with my dispatch!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Might it not be entrusted to the Corporal
-Podatchkine?" asked Natalie one morning, as
-she personally gave him his warm and soothing
-drink with her own hand, Katinka standing
-demurely by with a silver salver.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Impossible, Hosphoza, for so I may call you:
-an officer alone can carry a dispatch of the
-Empress. Its contents are most urgent: this delay,
-over which I have no control, may be visited by
-royal disfavour, even punishment; and I fear that
-the air of Tobolsk or Irkutsk would ill suit a
-Scotsman's lungs, Natalie Mierowna."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yet tarry here you must," said she, with a
-smile, the beauty of which proved very bewildering:
-"the Louga is coated with ice this morning,
-but not so thick, however, that it might not
-be broken by throwing a five-kopec piece from
-here; but to travel yet would only kill you, Carl
-Ivanovitch, and cannot be thought of just now."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then as she glided away, with her beaming
-smile, her white hands and taper arms, her
-rustling dress of scarlet silk trimmed with snowy
-miniver, and all the sense of perfume that
-pervaded her, Balgonie sighed wearily yet pleasantly,
-and half thought that beautiful figure a dream,
-as he turned on his soft and luxurious pillow, and
-marvelled whether his past or his present existence
-was the real one.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A captain in the ducal Regiment of Smolensko
-and not yet twenty-five! Same ten years ago,
-his future seemed to point to a very different
-course of life.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Far from Russian steppes and icy streams,
-their forests and barbarity, his mind had been
-wandering home to Britain's happier shore; and
-he might have said with the Bard who sang the
-"Course of Time,"&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- "Nor do I of that Isle remember aught,<br />
- Of prospect more sublime and beautiful,<br />
- Than Scotia's northern battlement of hills,<br />
- Which first I from my father's house beheld,<br />
- At dawn of life; beloved in memory still,<br />
- And standard yet of rural imagery."<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-His story is a brief one, and not very startling,
-save for its rapid career of injustice.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Charles Balgonie, son of John Balgonie of that
-Ilk in Strathearn, had come into the world
-during that which was perhaps the most stupid,
-lifeless, and impoverished era of Scottish existence,
-the middle of the reign of George II.; when the
-country was without trade, energy, or enterprise,
-and when nothing flourished save that which
-prospers there more than ever even under the rule
-of her present Majesty, and will do so apparently
-unto the end of time,&mdash;gloomy fanaticism and
-canting hypocrisy: more among the laity
-certainly, who make a trade and cloak of outward
-religion, than among the clergy, who dare not
-be liberal, even if so disposed; for without a
-public and noisy exhibition of sanctity, few have
-ever had much chance of place or profit north of
-the Tweed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Moreover, Charlie was born at a time when to
-be a Scotsman or an Irishman was almost a political
-crime in the eyes of their somewhat illiberal
-fellow-subjects, and when for either to attain
-eminence in the service of their native country
-was nearly an impossibility; and hence the Scots
-crowded to the armies and fleets of Russia and
-Holland, and the Irish to those of France and
-Spain.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By the early death of his parents, Charlie had
-been cast, in his extreme boyhood, upon the
-tender mercies of a bachelor uncle, Mr. Gamaliel
-Balgonie, a hard-hearted, grasping and avaricious
-merchant in Dundee&mdash;one who was a noisy exhibitor
-of religion, a fervent expounder of crooked
-texts, and, of course, an Elder of the Kirk; a
-great quoter of Scripture upon unnecessary
-occasions; one who always wore garments of
-sad-coloured broad cloth, with a spotless white cravat,
-and whose quavering voice and meek but cunning
-eyes were frequently uplifted against the
-enormities, the wickedness, and "the temptawtions
-and tribulawtions of this weary world;" and
-who was, moreover, a vehement despiser of that
-which he stigmatized as "its wretched dross,"
-but which he left no means, fair or foul, untried
-to acquire.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the lovely vale of Strathearn&mdash;one of the
-most exquisite tracts of verdant scenery in
-Scotland&mdash;stood the home of Charlie Balgonie. In
-his delirium, the present had fled, and the past
-returned. He had been a boy again at his father's
-knee&mdash;a child with his curly head nestling on his
-smiling mother's breast; again, in fancy, had her
-kisses rested on his cheek, and her soft voice
-lingered lovingly in his ear; again had he felt
-all that happiness, perfect trust, and security
-which the boy feels by his father's hearth, and
-the man, in after life, never more!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He heard not the hoarse Louga crashing down
-its ice-blocks to the Baltic Sea; but the gentle
-murmur of the Earn, flowing from the wooded
-hills of Comrie towards the broad blue bosom of
-the Tay&mdash;the Earn, where many a time and oft
-he had lured the brown trout and the speckled
-salmon from the deep, dark pools, near the old
-battle-cross of Dupplin and the Birks of
-Invermay. Again he had heard the leaves rustle
-pleasantly in the summer woods, where he had
-nutted and birdnested when a boy; and he had
-seen, in a vivid dream, his glorious native valley
-where it narrows at Dunira; and far beyond, the
-blue ridges of the mighty Grampians, lifting their
-summits, alp on alp, to the clouds, eternal and
-unchanged as when the foiled legions of Julius
-Agricola fled along their slopes in rout and disorder.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the death of his parents his small paternal
-estate of a few hundreds per annum would have
-become, as all might have supposed, his inheritance;
-but the relation before mentioned&mdash;the
-paternal uncle, Gamaliel, a man of the strictest
-probity, and of that which was equally valued in
-Scotland, extreme sanctimony; one who, on the
-funeral day, had shed abundance of tears at the
-uncertainty of life, and had excelled even the
-minister in prayer and "in warsling wi' the diel"
-(<i>i.e.,</i> wrestling with Satan)&mdash;suddenly produced
-a will, by which, to the profound astonishment
-of all, the entire estate was left to him as a
-return for certain loans and sums advanced to
-the deceased, of which, however, no proof could
-be found; but it was a veritable death-bed will,
-written accurately by a notary, and duly signetted
-with the autograph of "John Balgonie of yt Ilk."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though tremulous and shaky,&mdash;strangely so,&mdash;and
-rather unlike the usual signature of the
-deceased laird, three men there were, accounted
-good, worthy, and religious men, who solemnly
-deposed to having seen "the hand of the dead
-man pen those four words."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was a case which made some noise in those
-days, because thirty-six hours after the alleged
-signature was given John Balgonie died.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The law of Scotland requires that, after
-framing and signing such a deed, the testator must
-have been able to go once at least to church or
-market. How it came to pass we know not
-now, but the dispute, though without a basis,
-was brought before the Supreme Court by some
-friends of the orphan, for there were not a few
-persons in Strathearn who alleged that John
-Balgonie's hand had certainly traced the signature
-which was sworn to so solemnly as his,&mdash;but
-had done so after death: the pen being placed
-in the fingers of the corpse, which were guided
-by those of the pious and worthy merchant of
-Dundee, who wanted his nephew's little patrimony
-in aid of certain speculations of his own.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Pending a decision, the bereaved boy was
-removed to the busy town on Tay side, and was
-left to solace his sorrows at school, prior, as he
-supposed, to becoming a drudge in his affectionate
-uncle's counting-house, when the last of
-his slender inheritance had been frittered away
-in the fangs of the law.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-One day&mdash;poor Charlie never forgot it&mdash;his
-worthy Uncle Gam returned from Edinburgh by
-the packet. The case had been decided against
-him, and the Court was about to name trustees
-to look after the estate of the orphan boy: so
-that boy learned long after. Mr. Gamaliel
-Balgonie was unusually grave, stern, and abstracted;
-but he deliberately seated himself at his desk,
-and while humming, as was his wont, a verse of
-a psalm, he penned a letter addressed to the
-captain of a vessel then lying in the harbour,
-and gave it to his nephew for immediate delivery,
-desiring him to wait for the answer.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Charlie remarked that Uncle Gam did not,
-according to his usual careful custom, keep any
-copy of this letter, and that it was written in a
-hand so unlike his usual penmanship as to be
-completely disguised.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The boy, then in his fifteenth year, started
-on his errand with alacrity. It was better
-to be out amid the bustle of the sunlighted
-quays, than drudging with a quill in the sombre
-merchant's office in a narrow gloomy alley of
-Dundee. He soon found the ship, which was
-moored at some distance from the shore, with her
-fore-topsails loose, and blue-peter flying at the
-fore, to indicate that she was ready for sea;
-yet Charlie had no suspicion of the trap into
-which he was running, or the cruel fate that
-awaited him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The skipper, a rough, surly, and brutal-looking
-man, eyed the boy keenly, while tearing the
-letter into minute fragments, after he had perused
-it, with a grim smile of satisfaction. He then
-went to a locker, where he poured out a glass
-of something that seemed to be port-wine.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Drink that, my lad," said he, "while I
-write an answer to your uncle."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Charlie, half afraid to refuse, though the
-skipper's bearing began to inspire him with
-distrust, drained the glass; but scarcely had he
-done so when the cabin seemed to be whirling
-round him; he thought that he was becoming
-sea-sick, and was in the act of staggering towards
-the cabin stairs, when he was felled to the floor
-by a blow from the skipper's heavy hand&mdash;a blow
-dealt cruelly and unsparingly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He recovered consciousness some time after,
-to find himself stiff, sore, and bloody from a
-wound in the temple, lying on deck in the
-moonlight, with some twenty-five other boys,
-several of whom were still in the same state of
-stupor or intoxication in which they had been
-brought on board. Others were loudly lamenting
-their parents and brothers or sisters they never
-more would see, and all were more or less covered
-with blows and bruises. To his horror and
-dismay, Charlie now found that the ship was at
-sea, and running between the dangerous reef
-known as the Bell Rock and the flat sandy shore
-of Barrie, and that, through the machinations
-of Uncle Gamaliel, he had been lured into the
-hands of one of the most notorious plantation-crimps
-that ever infested the Scottish coast,
-Captain Zachariah Coffin of New England,
-whose craft, a palatine ship, the <i>Piscatona</i>, was
-a letter of marque, carrying twelve six-pounders
-and fighting her own way.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Many miserable little fellows who had been lured
-to a certain den in Aberdeen, and there drugged,
-robbed, and manacled, were brought on board
-the palatine ship as she lay off Girdleness and
-burned three red lights, in the night, as a
-private and concerted signal with the crimps
-ashore: and some of these same crimps were
-discovered, in after years, to have actually been
-the magistrates of the city!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After this, the <i>Piscatona</i> was hauled up, in
-order to go north about by Cape Wrath, having
-on board nearly fifty boys, who were to be sold
-as slaves to the highest bidder in Virginia, for
-nowhere was the infamous crime of kidnapping
-carried to a greater excess, even during the early
-years of George the Third's reign, than in the
-neighbourhood of the Granite City, where, in
-some instances, whole families disappeared, and
-their horror-stricken and bewildered parents
-died broken-hearted and insane.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Among the little Palatines&mdash;a name given by
-Americans to individuals who were thus
-kidnapped&mdash;some there were who pined and wept
-for home; and some who built castles in the
-air, and looked to America as a land of promise.
-Others there were who schemed out vengeance,
-and were sullen. Among the latter was our
-hero, who hoped yet to repay his wrongs on
-Uncle Gam, but meanwhile was knocked about
-mercilessly by the sullen skipper, and was so
-repeatedly rope's-ended by him, that he was
-often a mass of blood and bruises; and then,
-like a poor little victim, as he certainly was,
-Charlie would creep away into a corner, or skulk
-between the lee-carronades, where the salt spray
-flew over him, and mingled with the tears he
-wept so unavailingly, for those once tender and
-affectionate parents who were lying side by side
-in their graves, in sunny Strathearn, far, far
-away.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Many times, after being beaten cruelly, he was
-deprived of food for hours and put in the bilboes,
-where the captain amused himself by hunting
-a savage dog upon him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But his time of vengeance was coming!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Storms came on when the <i>Piscatona</i> entered
-the Pentland Firth; and four days after Dunnet
-Head with its flinty brow, four hundred feet in
-height, had vanished into the wrack and mist
-astern, a sudden cry of fire caused every heart
-to thrill on board the lawless vessel.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Whether an act of treachery or not, it was
-impossible to ascertain; but it had broken out
-near the ship's magazine, to which it communicated
-with frightful rapidity; for suddenly, while
-the crew were all running fore and aft with
-buckets, a dreadful explosion seemed to rend the
-<i>Piscatona</i> in two. Half of the main-deck was
-blown away with two of the boats. A whirlwind
-of fragments flew in every direction; and
-then the flames shot into the air in scorching
-volumes, which soon set the courses and
-topgallant sails on fire.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Discipline, or such a system of it as Zachariah
-Coffin maintained on board, was totally at an end.
-Some of the crew lowered the only remaining
-boat, and fought like wild beasts for possession
-of it, knocking each other into the water without
-mercy. Captain Coffin cocked his pistols at the
-gangway, shot one man dead, and swore with a
-dreadful oath that he would kill the next who
-dared to precede him; but he was struck from
-behind by an iron marline-spike, and falling
-together with his savage dog into the flaming
-gulf that yawned amidships, was seen no more.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Some of the crew ultimately pushed off in the
-boat; others sprang overboard and held on to
-spars and booms; but these and nearly all the
-little Palatines perished miserably, after being
-half scorched. Some were crushed to death by
-the falling yards and masts. Many held on to
-the fore and main chains, till these became so
-unbearably hot, that they had to drop off, with
-screams of despair, when they sank, faint, weary,
-and helpless, to the bottom at last.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How it all happened Charlie Balgonie never
-knew, but hours after the whole affair was over,
-and the detested <i>Piscatona</i> had burned down to
-her water-line and sunk, leaving all the sea
-around her discoloured and covered with floating
-pieces of charred wood and the buoyant parts of
-her cargo, he found himself adrift in the wide
-and stormy Pentland Firth; but wedged with
-comparative safety in a large fragment of the
-fore-top, to which, the yard being still attached
-by the sling, a certain amount of steadiness was
-given; yet his heart leaped painfully, each time,
-when the fragment of wreck rose on the summit
-of a green glassy wave, or went surging down
-into the dark and watery trough between.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To add to the terrors of his lonely situation,
-the sun had sunk amid gloomy purple clouds, and
-a rainy night was drawing on. Half drowned
-perhaps, the poor boy soon became faint and
-exhausted, and would seem to have dropped
-into a species of stupor; for when roused by the
-sound of strange voices, he found himself close by
-a great and towering ship, which lay to, now
-right in the wind's eye with her main-yard aback,
-and her gunports and hammock nettings full of
-weatherbeaten faces, gazing at him with eagerness
-and curiosity in the twilight, while a boat
-was lowered from the davits and pulled steadily
-towards him by six sailors clad in dark green.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She proved to be a Russian 50-gun ship, the
-<i>Anne Ivanowna</i>, commanded by Thomas Mackenzie,
-one of the many Scottish admirals who
-have bravely carried the Russian flag in the
-Baltic and the Black Sea, the same officer who a
-few years after was to build the great harbour
-and forts of Sebastopol, at the little Tartar village
-then known as Actiare.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His youthful countryman became his <i>protégé</i>.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The worthy admiral sought to make a sailor of
-the rescued Palatine; but the latter had seen
-quite enough of the sea while on board the
-<i>Piscatona</i>, and while he was clinging like a limpet or
-barnacle to the piece of drifting wreck; so he
-became a soldier, and served under General
-Ochterlony, of Guynd, in the Regiment of Smolensko,
-where, as a cadet, his superior smartness,
-intelligence and education, not less than his courage,
-soon distinguished him among his thick-pated
-Russian comrades: thus, in less than ten years,
-he became, as we find him, Captain Carl
-Ivanovitch Balgonie, the most trusted aide-de-camp
-of Lieutenant-General Weymarn, Commander-in-Chief
-of the City and District of St. Petersburg.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap07"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER VII.
-<br /><br />
-THE SOLDIER OF THE CZARINA.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-"You can never know, Ivanovitch Balgonie, how
-much I pitied you&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You, lady?" was the joyous response.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"That is, I and Mariolizza," said Natalie
-Mierowna, slightly blushing (the Russians always
-speak thus, putting the personal pronoun first),
-"when we found you sunk on a fever-bed, in
-a foreign land, so far from your country, your
-friends, your mother, perhaps; for you are
-young enough, I think, to miss her still, at
-such a time, although a soldier."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Far indeed, in many ways!" replied Balgonie,
-with a bitter smile, as he thought of Uncle Gam
-and the Palatine ship, or perhaps it was illness
-that had weakened him. "I have a country to
-which more than probably I shall never return;
-but father, mother, or friends, I have none there:
-all who loved me once, have gone to the silent
-grave before me."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"All?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes, lady."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But you are making many friends in Russia,"
-said Mariolizza, cheerfully: "there are my cousin,
-Basil Mierowitz and my brother Apollo Usakoff,
-who both, I know, love you as a brother."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"True; and most grateful am I to them for
-their regard, for both are polished gentlemen.
-I have old General Weymarn, too, though I
-know not what he will think of this delay in
-delivering the Imperial dispatch."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Alas, that most tiresome dispatch!"
-exclaimed Natalie; "but I forget," she added,
-with a curl of her short upper lip, "those who
-proceed on the errands of the Empress Catharine,
-would need seven-league boots, or the carpet of
-the prince in the fairy tale, which transported
-the owner at a wish."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Hush, cousin," said Mariolizza, glancing
-timidly round: but no one was near save
-Corporal Podatchkine, who was stolidly smoking
-a huge pipe at a little distance on the terrace,
-when this conversation took place two days after
-Balgonie became convalescent, and fully a week
-since the night of peril on which he swam the
-Louga.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I cannot describe to you, ladies, the relief
-that came to my mind on discovering that it
-had neither been lost nor stolen, but was safe&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"In Natalie's bosom!" said Mariolizza, laughing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Certainly the last place, where, for her own
-sake, I would place a dispatch of the widow
-of Peter III.," responded the other, haughtily;
-but Balgonie felt his heart beat quicker as
-she spoke. Her voice was sweet and low, and
-had a wonderful chord in it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The day was mild and beautiful, and truly an
-April one. The last of the ice had disappeared
-from the river; not a flake of snow was visible
-among the woods or on the distant hills; and
-the bright sun of noon shone clearly and
-brilliantly from a deep-blue sky flecked by floating
-masses of white cloud, and cast across the bosom
-of the Louga the shadows of the great fir trees
-that spread like a sea of solemn cones for miles
-along its banks; and amid that woody sea, the
-most striking feature was a white-walled
-monastery with its "golden-headed church" and all
-its metal cupolas glittering in the sunshine.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As they promenaded on the gravelled terrace
-that lay before the Count's residence, Balgonie
-could see the domains of Mierowitz that lay
-for miles around: the patrimonial village of
-the Count, nestling among the coppice, containing
-a dozen or so of stone houses, and double
-that number of quaint tumble-down edifices of
-wood, and a church with a little gilt cupola,
-where his serfs said their prayers, and thanked
-God and him for permission to live and breathe,
-and to hoard their roubles in secret&mdash;for wealth
-in a serf was a sure source of misery, extortion,
-and perhaps of torture, if discovered.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the immediate foreground were wharves,
-where the wood for masts and spars from his
-forests were launched, and formed into great
-rafts for conveyance to the Gulf of Finland.
-The din of axes and the crash of falling timber,
-with the cheerful voices of the woodmen and
-labourers, were heard rising from the echoing
-woods, as they lopped and trimmed the giant
-pines for conveyance to the Baltic coast; for
-his forest trees were one of the chief sources of
-revenue to Count Mierowitz.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Your father's mansion is indeed a noble
-one!" said Balgonie, who after surveying the
-landscape from the terrace, ran his eyes over
-the façade of the castle, as it was named, though
-by no means so well fortified as his patrimonial
-tower in Strathearn, which dated from the days
-of the Sixth James.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"So noble that the first Count of our name
-who built it, when Ivan Basilovitch&mdash;Ivan the
-Terrible&mdash;was Czar, put out the eyes of the
-architect, who was, of course, one of his serfs,"
-said Natalie.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"For what reason?" asked Balgonie, starting.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Lest he should repeat the work for another,"
-replied Natalie; "but then the Count was a
-fierce soldier, who had served under Yermack
-in the conquest of Siberia. I fear you think
-us very barbarous, Captain Balgonie; but I
-can assure you, that even in the remote forests
-of Yakoutsk, on the banks of the Lena, there
-is more regard for human life and divine laws
-now, than existed when my father was a boy.
-He has, indeed, seen terrible things!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Balgonie did not see much of the Count, who
-was generally occupied among his people, to
-whom he was alternately a source of reverence
-and of terror.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though infinitely more civilised than the old
-Russian noble as described by Clarke,
-"unwashed, unshaven, eating raw turnip and
-drinking quass" (for according to the Doctor, in
-1799, "raw turnips were handed about in slices
-in the first houses, on a silver salver, with
-brandy as a whet before dinner"), he was a
-fair average specimen of a fine old Muscovite
-gentleman "all of the olden time," who had a
-cat-o'-nine-tails always at hand; who generally
-unbuttoned his vest when the gold cup was
-brought, in which he drank his pink champagne
-or rare Hungarian wine, which he always had
-in equal plenty with his fiery vodka and bitter
-quass; who reckoned his silver roubles by
-sacksful, and his Sclavonian souls by thousands; and
-who, though by no means a bad fellow, as his
-imperious and outrageous class go in Russia,
-had still the somewhat czarish notion, that true
-nobility "means the privilege of being treated
-like a human being of intelligence and feeling,
-and of treating others as if they were nothing
-of the kind."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Scandal said that in his wild youth he had
-flogged his serfs to fight with his favourite bear,
-and flogged them again if they maltreated or bit
-Bruin too much: Balgonie certainly saw two or
-three old serfs who had lost an ear in these
-combats. And when the Count took his afternoon
-nap, if a cock crowed in the village, a dog barked,
-or a cat mewed, the whole community were
-wont to tremble, when the stout dvornick, or
-house-porter, was seen to issue forth with his
-cat-o'-nine-tails in search of the proprietor.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A rich sash usually girt the waist of his
-old-fashioned tunic, which was of fine cloth, and
-trimmed with fur, broad or narrow according to
-the season; a square cap of crimson velvet,
-tasselled with gold and edged with ermine as
-white as his beard, was placed diagonally on his
-head, when he went abroad; and then he carried
-a long gold-headed cane, with the exact weight
-of which most of the shoulders in the neighbourhood
-were perfectly familiar. On holy festivals
-the breast of his best velvet coat was always
-covered by orders of the empire; a dozen of
-servants usually hovered about him when he
-dined; and he always went to church and
-confession in a clumsy old coach drawn by six
-white horses, three abreast, in honour of the Holy
-Trinity.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was proud of being one of the old hereditary
-nobles, who are distinguished from the personal
-nobility by their right to possess serfs, and to
-whose earthly tyranny there was no limit, save the
-tomb. All the wretched serf possessed, even his
-wife, was the property of his lord. Fear of secret
-murder alone protected the latter species of
-property; hence no wonder is it that the land is
-without a middle class. Even in the present
-century, Heber, in his Journal, mentions an
-instance of a Russian noble who, in his profane
-cruelty and lust of power, nailed a servant on a
-cross, for which he was only imprisoned in a
-monastery.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But in the character of Count Mierowitz, there
-was something of the rough and hardy country
-gentleman. He it was who caught with his own
-hands, and in his own forests by the Louga, the
-famous team of brown bears which, in the
-marriage procession of the late Empress Elizabeth's
-jester, drew that jocular personage and his bride,
-when the newly-wedded couple proceeded to the
-wonderful palace of ice (which was built on the
-frozen Neva), all the ornaments of which were
-icicles, and the appurtenances of which were also
-ice, even to the cannon which were fired, and did
-not burst.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"When Peter the Great came to the throne,"
-said he, one day, "he found only two lawyers in
-all Russia; so, Captain Balgonie, he hung one as
-an example to the other. Ah, he was a truly
-great man, Peter! The English admire him
-solely because he tried to imitate them; but, for
-that very reason, we don't approve of many of his
-innovations. We look from the north and south
-sides of the same hedge."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is not surprising that Charlie Balgonie preferred
-the society of two beautiful young girls to
-that of a testy old boyar. To enhance their
-natural attractions and winning manners, they
-were always dressed in the most fashionable
-French <i>mode</i>, and wore the rich stuffs which
-came from Moscow, and even from China.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They and he had many topics in common,
-on which they could converse, after old Count
-Mierowitz had dined and dozed off to sleep&mdash;such
-as the theatre erected some years before at
-Yaroslaff, by Volkoff, whose troupe were now
-performing the tragedies of Soumorokoff at
-St. Petersburg, where a government theatre had
-just been erected by a ukase; while another
-ennobled the manager, Volkoff, who had died last
-year, after appearing at Moscow in Zelmira.
-Their knowledge of French and German opened
-up the best literature of Europe to the two
-cousins, which was fortunate; for at the period of
-our narrative, Russia had almost none, save some
-barbarous national songs, fabulous ecclesiastical
-records, and ferocious traditions: nor is she now
-much advanced in letters, though certainly, two
-months after publication, Charles Dickens may be
-read at Tobolsk&mdash;that terrible Tobolsk&mdash;where,
-as we have all read in our youth, Elizabeth wept
-such grateful tears on the bosom of her Smoloff.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Exiled from court, and secluded amid these
-forests by the Louga, a Russian lady had few
-resources for amusement then; so the unexpected
-visit of Captain Balgonie, with whose name and
-courage they were quite familiar, proved a most
-welcome and fortunate circumstance to those two
-handsome girls, who were merely enduring life,
-or simply vegetating, in the great old mansion of
-Count Mierowitz.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But there was one topic in which our soldier of
-fortune could by no means agree with Natalie
-Mierowna&mdash;her bitter and most unwise hostility
-to the strongly-established power of the Empress,
-or, as she styled her, "the woman who now
-occupied the throne of Ivan;" a prince whom she
-viewed exactly as the Scottish Jacobites did "the
-Young Chevalier," and a few old Frenchmen do
-at the present hour, "Henry V.," the descendant
-of St. Louis. These sentiments, however, she had
-to utter in secret, or when none were by them;
-and when he gazed into her dark and beautiful
-eyes, so full of romantic enthusiasm and of
-dangerous light, he felt thankful that one so
-peerless and so perilous was not, at all events,
-his enemy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She had accompanied the Empress on her
-celebrated pilgrimage to the ancient cathedral of
-Rostov, by the Lake of Nero, where the last of
-the Princes of Jaroslav was murdered in cold
-blood by Ivan the Terrible. Her expedition had
-taken place in the May of the preceding year.
-Catharine and her ladies walked ten versts afoot
-daily, and it was at the conclusion of this
-devotional journey that the final quarrel had taken
-place concerning the mazurka with the Aide-de-camp
-Vlasfief.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"That insult shall never be forgotten here!"
-said she, stamping a little foot, in a
-prettily-embroidered scarlet shoe, on the carpet of the
-drawing-room where, fortunately for herself, she
-was alone with Balgonie: "an insult to me&mdash;to
-us, who have the blood of Ruric the Varangian in
-our veins; and from her&mdash;this woman of Anhalt-Zerbst!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Balgonie laughed; for the Ruric blood is to
-Russians what Captain John Smith's is to the
-Virginians, and the Norman element to the
-English.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes," she continued, "'tis something novel,
-an insult to us, from this Catharine, misnamed
-the Great, who has enslaved all the Ukraine, and
-given men and women away by thousands, like
-herds of cattle, to her courtiers and her lovers!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, be wary; I pray you, be wary, or speak
-in French!" said Balgonie imploringly, while
-laying his hand impressively&mdash;rather too
-impressively, we fear&mdash;upon hers, which was so
-delicately smooth and white, and was placed
-very temptingly within his reach, as they sat
-near each other for the purpose of conversing in
-low and confidential tones.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The people are mere slaves under her rule,"
-continued Natalie, lowering her voice but without
-withdrawing that coveted hand; perhaps she
-forgot it in her energy; but the omission made
-poor Charlie Balgonie's honest heart beat very
-fast indeed, and his colour came and went
-painfully while her dark and glorious eyes were bent
-on his: "in her I behold only a usurper, who
-wields a knout in lieu of a sceptre, and who seats
-herself on a throne of human skulls; but the
-time is coming when all these things shall be
-altered!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And this time, Natalie Microwna&mdash;what do
-you mean?" asked Balgonie, who had been long
-enough in Russia to feel a thrill of terror at
-words so wild and dangerous.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"When it comes you will learn; if the blow
-fails, woe unto those on whom it recoils! You
-may escape as a stranger; but I fear me, she will
-punish the whole Regiment of Smolensko&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My regiment&mdash;mine, say you?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes, yours, Hospodeen, even as Peter the
-Great did the Battalion of Strelitz, for adherence
-to his sister Sophia; and that we know to be one
-of the most sanguinary sacrifices on record, even
-in Russia."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Heaven knows that is admitting a great
-deal; but you say either too much or too little
-to satisfy my curiosity: explain this coming
-peril&mdash;this mystery&mdash;to which you refer."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In her growing energy, Natalie's other hand
-was now clasped above his, and truly "the
-situation had its charm."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Let us speak of it no more," said she, recollecting
-herself, and with a strange smile; "ere long
-you shall know all; but not now&mdash;not now.
-Alas! the best I can wish you, Ivanovitch
-Balgonie, is, that your chance visit here may not
-also compromise you with Catharine."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They pressed each other's hands: it was done,
-perhaps, merely in the energy of conversation;
-but, to be brief, Balgonie found himself now
-hopelessly and helplessly in love with Natalie
-Mierowna.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though both cousins were remarkable for their
-beauty&mdash;one blonde, the other dark&mdash;he had
-never for a moment wavered between them; for
-he had been, from the first moment he beheld
-her, irresistibly attracted by the brilliant and
-black-eyed Natalie. Besides, he knew well that
-Mariolizza was betrothed, or, as the Russians
-might justly phrase it, assigned away, to his
-friend and brother-officer, Basil Mierowitz.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap08"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER VIII.
-<br /><br />
-IN LOVE.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-It was scarcely possible that the result of his
-visit could be otherwise than it had proved; for
-Natalie was no common-place beauty, but one
-who had subdued the hearts of many more men
-than Charlie Balgonie&mdash;men, who now at Moscow
-and St. Petersburg were counting the days of
-her exile from the Court of Catharine: and when
-Charlie thought of her in after years, the calm
-repose of his days of convalescence, the aspect
-and furniture of his chamber in the old Castle
-of Louga, the genial glow of the peitchka, the
-double window sashes with their bright false
-flowers between, the Byzantine picture of the
-Holy Virgin with its shining metal halo, and the
-varnished panels of the walls, were all associated,
-as in a pleasant dream, with the dark and beautiful
-eyes, the round taper arms, the white and
-delicate hands on which so many diamonds glittered,
-the jetty hair that was twisted in massive
-braids (yet fell in ringlets too) round the superb
-head,&mdash;the graceful, floating, and statuesque
-figure of Natalie Mierowna, always so richly, even
-coquettishly attired. Natalie, so soft, so tender,
-and so true, in all the relations of life and the
-amenities of society; and yet who could be so
-keen in her hate, so fiery in her political rancour,
-when thinking of her own injuries, and the
-terrible wrongs of the captive Ivan, whose
-adherent she had become.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Charlie Balgonie blessed the exile and choice
-of circumstances, all so sudden and unforeseen,
-which had cast him in her path. He loved her
-with all the passionate adoration so beautiful and
-winning a woman could inspire in a young and
-ardent heart; nor was it long before Natalie
-became aware of this, and was affected by the
-same emotion. There was one glance given, by
-which "each read and understood each other's
-soul." Lovers soon find means to comprehend
-each other, and Mariolizza, who speedily guessed
-their secret, which she certainly thought a
-dangerous one, found many excuses to leave them
-often together.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The long, long dream of his youth and early
-manhood,&mdash;the waking dream of many a lonely
-hour of reverie in the summer woods, by the
-seashore, or in the still hours of military duty, in
-camp and bivouac&mdash;a fair face that would smile on
-him,&mdash;a girl to love, and worship, and trust,&mdash;one
-who would trust and love him in return, was
-embodied at last; and in Natalie he saw this
-hitherto imaginary sphinx of whom he had been
-thinking, and for whom he had been waiting so
-long.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her voice, her smile, her presence, seemed to fill
-the air he breathed with a new charm, that made
-every nerve thrill, investing the most simple and
-common wants of every-day life with sudden
-delights and joys; in short, and in common
-phraseology, the poor young man was "over
-head and ears in love."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The declaration of his passion, and Natalie's
-acceptance of it, came about just as others have
-done; and for three days after,&mdash;without looking
-the future confidently or inquiringly in the
-face,&mdash;Balgonie abandoned himself to the delight of
-his new and successful passion, and forgot all
-about the troublesome Empress, her pressing
-dispatch, and the terrors of Lieutenant-General
-Weymarn.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How could he think of such, when seated in
-the half-curtained alcove which opened off the
-drawing-room, on those calm April evenings;
-when the soft breeze that floated over the vast
-forests came laden with the odour of the spruce
-and fir boughs? Seated, with Natalie&mdash;in all the
-glory of her youth, her beauty, and the flush of
-her first love&mdash;by his side, often deftly and with
-rapid fingers weaving up the coils of her heavy
-black hair (which would come down, somehow, on
-these occasions); as she did so, displaying to
-greater advantage than ever the magnificent
-contour of her bust, her white shoulders, and
-taper arms, and adding even to the coquettish side
-glance of the half-veiled eye, the most splendid
-of all her natural ornaments were those great,
-heavy loose braids on which the sunlight shone.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-What was to be the future of all this?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the strong friendship of Basil Mierowitz he
-could fully rely; but then Natalie was on bad
-terms with the vindictive Empress, and he,
-Balgonie, was a soldier, and, according to the
-rules of the Russian service, could not marry
-without permission from his colonel, who, at
-present, would not dare to accord it,
-circumstanced as the bride would be.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Marry? What would the proud old Russian
-boyar say, or do, or think, when he heard that
-the penniless Scot&mdash;the mere adventurer&mdash;the
-soldier of fortune, was the accepted lover of his
-daughter, and that he had dared to lift his eyes
-to her otherwise than in the way of solemn and
-awful respect?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-If his High Excellency could have but peeped
-into the aforesaid alcove on some of the occasions
-referred to! The mere fact of being a Scot
-would not have conveyed much to the mind of
-the Count. If to any unlettered Englishman of
-the present day, the names of Moldavia, Croatia,
-Bulgaria, Servia, Pomerania, Grodno, Mingrelia,
-and so forth, give but a vague idea of their
-whereabouts or history, it was perhaps worse in
-the Count's instance; for so far as he, worthy
-man, was concerned, or for all he knew to the
-contrary, the Land of Cakes might have been
-in the flying island of Laputa.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He would be furious, no doubt," thought
-Balgonie; "but he might soothe his troubled
-mind by flogging a few serfs, shooting a few
-brown bears, and draining sundry horns of
-quass."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Charlie had been present at more than one
-Russian marriage and betrothal, and the coolness
-of the ceremony had excited his astonishment
-and repugnance; for, in that country, those
-life-enduring arrangements are concluded by a mere
-match-maker, who makes the proposal, not to the
-girl, but to her father. He remembered
-particularly the case of Lieutenant Tschekin's
-espousal with the daughter of General Weymarn,
-who, having stated her dower to the go-between,&mdash;a
-thousand peasants or so,&mdash;the gallant subaltern
-was satisfied, and thus, as usual, the whole
-affair was settled without the taste or inclination
-of the young lady being consulted or considered.
-In Russia, the papa consents, and, according to
-some old custom, mamma pretends to object and
-weep.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My daughter," said the General, "I have given
-you away in presence of my aide-de-camp."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"To one I know, father?" she asked.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"To whom, then?" she continued, perfectly
-undisturbed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"One you shall soon know&mdash;here he comes;
-and this is thy bridegroom, daughter: art satisfied?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The young lady, of course, declared she was
-satisfied. She and the Lieutenant placed their
-hands behind them, stretched out their necks,
-pouting their lips for a very frigid kiss, and
-the matter was soon concluded by a priest.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When Balgonie thought of the delicacy and
-gentleness of Natalie, and remembered the
-marriage of the Lieutenant Tschekin, he shrunk
-alike from the idea of seeing her subjected to the
-mummery of a Greek espousal and the vulgar
-horrors of a wedding feast and drinking bout
-<i>à la Russe</i>.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At last he began to wake from his dream, to find
-the stern necessity of departing; and, indeed, the
-snub-nosed Podatchkine, who was always hovering
-about, seemed as a perpetual reminder of the duty
-he was neglecting. The lovers were solemnly
-betrothed in secret,&mdash;Mariolizza was their only
-confidant,&mdash;and at present they could but arrange
-to wait until they could mutually confide in Basil
-Mierowitz, whom Natalie, ere long, expected to
-see. To write to each other, save by special
-messenger, was deemed at present unwise; but
-Balgonie would visit her as he returned again to
-Novgorod.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So the last evening they were to spend together
-came; and they were seated, wreathed in each
-other's arms, with Natalie's cheek resting on
-Balgonie's shoulder, in an embowered rustic seat,
-not far from the very place where he had so boldly
-crossed the swollen river on that eventful night.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Charlie's heart was full of sadness and bewilderment;
-he could but mutter and whisper of his
-love and their hopes, and again and again kiss
-Natalie on the cheek, on the lips and snowy neck,
-her hands and arms, while her tears flowed fast;
-for she had all the cooing tenderness of a ringdove
-now, and could only murmur from time to time:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, Carl, Carl&mdash;my own Carl!" and so forth;
-and, like other young ladies similarly circumstanced
-on the eve of separation, believed herself
-to be the most miserable being in the world.
-But amid all this, she suddenly started and grew
-pale, on seeing a figure approach.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"See, Carl, see!" she exclaimed: "that horrible
-woman must be ominous of evil at such a time.
-Why has she been permitted to approach?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Balgonie saw, at a little distance, only a Russian
-gipsy girl, possessed evidently of considerable
-personal attractions. She stood timidly, and irresolute
-whether to advance or retire; and bowed her
-head with great humility, while crossing her fine
-but dusky hands and arms upon her breast. In
-old age the Russian female gipsies are as
-remarkable for their extreme hideousness, as in youth
-they are famous for personal beauty; so this
-young girl was full of picturesque loveliness, and
-instead of being clothed in rags, as the wanderers
-of her race are elsewhere, her costume was
-brilliant in colours and rich in material. She had
-large glittering ear-rings; a gaudy kerchief bound
-her black tresses; and her rounded cheeks being
-freely rouged, added to the wonderful lustre of
-her dark and dusky eyes, and to the generally
-theatrical character of her singular beauty and
-bearing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh!" resumed Natalie, with something of a
-shudder, "'tis Olga Paulowna: don't let her speak
-to us in our parting hour, Carl, lest we be
-compelled to hear her sing, and that may perhaps
-bode evil. The dvornick, I understand, has thrice
-by dog and whip driven away this gipsy girl,
-who has come to the house again and again,
-ostensibly to seek alms, but doubtless only to steal
-or work mischief by her cunning; for though our
-Russian gipsies are not allowed to pitch their
-tents on any land without the express consent of
-the owner, this girl's brother, Nicholas Paulovitch
-(as he calls himself), a half-blood, has permanently
-settled on our estate, somewhere in the
-forests, though he is despised and loathed by the
-peasantry, whom, doubtless, he loathes and hates
-most cordially in turn. I do wish she would go
-away without being ordered to do so."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Little did Natalie know that those ill-requited
-visits of the poor gipsy girl had direct reference
-to the life and safety of him whose hand clasped
-hers so tenderly and confidingly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Faugh!" said Natalie, with increasing annoyance;
-"she is about to sing,&mdash;something naughty
-no doubt,&mdash;but her voice will soon summon the
-dvornick."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Many of those female wanderers in Russia can
-sing divinely; and it is on record that even the
-great Catalani was so enchanted by the melodious
-voice of a gipsy girl at Moscow, that she took
-from her own shoulders a superb shawl, which
-had been given to her by the Empress, and placed
-it on those of the nomadic singer, "as a tribute
-from art to nature."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And Olga now began to sing with great sweetness
-one of those Russian songs, by which the
-gipsies, to flatter the people, sought to foretell
-the downfall of the Crescent; and many such
-prophetic strains were current even during the
-war in the Crimea, as foreshadowing the fate of
-the "sick man" at Constantinople.
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- "Years after years shall roll,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Ages o'er ages glide.<br />
- Before the world's control<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Shall check the Crescent's pride.<br />
- Banished from place to place,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Where'er the ocean's roar,<br />
- The mighty gipsy race,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Shall visit every shore.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- "But when the hundredth year<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Shall three times doubled be,<br />
- Then shall the end appear<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Of all their slavery.<br />
- Then shall the warlike powers<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;From distant climes return,<br />
- Egypt again be ours,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;While the Turkish domes shall burn!<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- "Again the Christian's cross<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Shall over Stamboul wave,<br />
- And ruin, weeds, and moss,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Mark the last Sooltan's grave!<br />
- Again shall Christian bells<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Ring where the Muezzins cry,<br />
- When across the Dardanelles<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Moslem hordes shall fly!<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- "So Egypt shall be freed,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Her tribes return once more,<br />
- Their flocks and herds to feed<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Where their fathers dwelt of yore:<br />
- When all our warlike powers<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;From distant climes return,<br />
- Then Egypt shall be ours,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;While the Turkish turrets burn!"<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-The last line ended in a shriek, with which a
-cry from Natalie mingled; for the cruel dvornick
-had been stealing through the thicket unperceived,
-and now bestowed a heavy lash across the
-tender shoulders of the cowering and shrinking
-girl; but ere he could repeat it, Balgonie sprang
-forward, arrested the descending whip, and then,
-placing in the hand of the singer a few Livonian
-groschen, bade her hasten away, on which she
-departed, with tears of pain and gratitude, after
-pressing his fingers to her lips; and, in her terror
-and confusion, leaving her task undone&mdash;her
-warning of coming treachery untold.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, Carl!" said Natalie, laying her head
-again on Balgonie's breast, "dearest Carl, I am
-so glad she has gone without anathematizing us&mdash;or,
-or weaving some mischievous spell; for, smile
-as you may, I can't help fearing those people! I
-am a true Russian, and dread the evil eye!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Richer by a lock of dark and silky hair and a
-diamond ring (both the objects of many a secret
-kiss), but leaving his heart behind him, in one
-swift hour after this little episode, Balgonie had
-departed to meet, and, for greater security, to
-travel in consort with, a caravan of a hundred
-and fifty boors, who were conveying sugar from
-Moscow to St. Petersburg.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was guided again by the sly Podatchkine,
-who had resolved to take especial good care that
-the said caravan should be avoided.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"God be with you, Hospodeen&mdash;God be with
-you&mdash;adieu," said the old Count, lifting his square
-velvet cap courteously, as he bade farewell to his
-guest at the porte-cochère.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Balgonie so respectfully kissed the hands of
-Natalie and Mariolizza, that none could have
-detected a difference in his manner to either; and
-certainly none could have suspected that the tears
-of the former were yet wet upon his cheek&mdash;her
-kisses lingering on his lip, that he seemed to
-leave his soul upon her hand, and that the wrung
-hearts of both were swollen with concealed emotion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Uich!" thought Corporal Michail Podatchkine
-as he rode after the officer into the deep
-forest, "I'd as soon think of kissing the foot as
-the hand; who knows among what carrion either
-may have been stuck? By St. Nicholas, I would
-rather eat a sheep's tail or a rump steak from an
-old troop mare than kiss either."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Some hours after Balgonie's departure, and
-when Natalie in the solitude of her own room
-was abandoned to tears and unavailing regrets,
-a trusted messenger from her brother arrived
-with a brief note, written so enigmatically that
-none save herself could have understood or
-deciphered it; but the spirit of it was briefly this:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"All is arranged for freeing the prisoner of
-S. (chlusselburg) by a stratagem. A dispatch
-that may counteract, if not baffle our plans, and
-fatally compromise us all, has been sent by old
-Weymarn to St. Petersburg. I know not who
-the bearer is; but be assured of this, <i>he will never
-reach it alive</i>. We have set Podatchkine on his
-track, and he, worthy Livonian, for two hundred
-roubles, would skin his own father alive."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After reading this pleasant epistle, little wonder
-is it that Natalie was found by Mariolizza, as the
-twilight deepened, half senseless upon her bed,
-cold, in tears, and utterly miserable.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap09"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER IX.
-<br /><br />
-DELUDED.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-A lover has occasionally been likened to a fool, as
-being a man possessed by one idea, his mistress.
-This was certainly somewhat of poor Charlie
-Balgonie's state of mind. He saw only the dark
-eyes, the half drooped lids, and the farewell glance
-of Natalie; so full of hidden and tender meaning;
-and while thinking of her and of her last
-words and promises, their mutual hopes of the
-future, based almost entirely on Basil, he fell an
-easy prey to the plans and schemes of the wily
-Corporal Podatchkine, who saw only his
-anticipated two hundred silver roubles; and who,
-knowing the country as well as if it had been
-every acre, rood, and verst his own property, led
-him on and on he knew not where; but, at all
-events, two hours after they should have met the
-caravan, they found themselves, to all appearance,
-lost in a dense forest of dark pine trees.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Failing the caravan, having now proceeded, as
-he believed, some twenty miles or so, Balgonie
-had thoughts of passing the night at the house
-of a friend of Count Mierowitz, a <i>duornin</i>, of
-whom he had been told by Mariolizza, who
-laughingly assured him, that this personage was
-"a fine Russian gentleman of the old school, who
-beat his wife regularly every Thursday and
-Saturday with a whip of thongs," and was
-seldom sober.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Those duornins were country gentlemen, who
-held their lands by knights' service, and were
-bound to attend the Czar on horseback in time
-of war. Formerly it was sufficient to send a man
-well armed and mounted; but Peter the Great
-first compelled them or their sons to serve in
-person, if they could not pay for a substitute.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In short, though he knew it not, Balgonie had
-been for the last two hours riding merely in a
-wide circle, and, by the careful guidance of
-Podatchkine, was now not many miles from the
-hut of the gipsy woodman, Nicholas Paulovitch;
-and, consequently, he was much nearer the Castle
-of Louga than he had the least idea of.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On this night there was a glorious Aurora in
-the north, and full of his love, his own tender
-thoughts, and inspired by the beauty of the scene,
-it seemed to the somewhat provoked Podatchkine,
-that the dreaming Captain was quite disposed to
-pass the night where he was.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When the dense wood of stupendous pines
-opened into long vistas, the whole northern
-quarter of the sky could be seen, illuminated from
-the horizon to the zenith. Gloriously bright as
-the most brilliant phosphorus, masses of fire arose
-in the form of columns that waved, towered, and
-shot into the air, with streaks of fainter light
-between. Anon they all blended and merged
-into each other with renewed grandeur, aslant, or
-radiating from a centre, like the sticks of a mighty
-fan. All that portion of the heavens seemed a
-mass of shining gold, rubies, and sapphires, with
-a wondrous light streaming over them, broadening,
-brightening, and deepening, then fading
-away, to flash forth again in greater beauty and
-glory, while, as if to enhance the magnificence of
-this illumination, many falling stars shot across
-it, leaving in their train sparkles of light, more
-brilliant even than the glory that blazed beyond.
-In black outline between, and in the immediate
-foreground, towered the dark and solemn pines,
-in solitude and silence.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Not a sound was heard but the occasional snort
-of their horses, or the cry of a distant wolf.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Balgonie was surmising whether Natalie would
-be surveying the beautiful natural illumination
-from her window, or from the terrace: he forgot
-that it was nothing new to her. Certainly it
-proved of little interest to Michail Podatchkine,
-who, under his thick beard, growled at the officer
-for loitering.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Scottish islesmen call the streamers of the
-Aurora "the merry dancers;" but the Siberians
-name them "the raging host:" and Balgonie was
-reflecting what a relief their brilliance must prove
-to the lonely hunters, who at that very time were
-pursuing the white bear and the blue fox, far
-beyond the Lena, and along the shores of the Icy
-Sea, when his attendant disturbed his reverie.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well, Michail," said he, in reply to some
-remark in which the Corporal, who saw nothing
-wonderful in the matter, urged that they should
-proceed, "we have missed the sugar caravan, and
-cannot discover the residence of the duornin I
-spoke of, so I am rather provoked with you."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, Excellency, who can withstand God
-or the Great Novgorod?" whined the fellow,
-using an old Russian proverb.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Jean Paul Richter says, "the more weakness,
-the more lying; force goes straight, but any
-cannon-ball with cavities in it goes crooked." Some
-such thought as this occurred to Balgonie,
-as he checked his horse, and half turning round,
-with a stern expression in his face, which the
-light in the north made sufficiently plain, he
-said:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Rascal! I fear you are deceiving me again!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Hustled up on his saddle, rather than in it,
-with his knees on his holsters and his lance slung
-behind him, Podatchkine made many signs of
-the cross, and called on St. Sergius and all the
-other <i>moshtschi</i>, or saints of Russia, to bear
-witness that he was as innocent as a young bear
-of any such foul idea; but only begged that his
-Excellency would proceed, and assured him that
-the track they were on must assuredly bring
-them, ere long, to some woodman's dwelling.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At this time, such is the slavish influence of
-superstition, that Podatchkine, for mere fellowship,
-kept close to the very man against whom he had
-formed the most fiendish schemes; for stories of
-the Wood Fairies,&mdash;of the <i>Leechie</i>, or
-Forest-demon, whose fangs tore the benighted
-asunder,&mdash;of the <i>Domovoi</i>, or mischievous Russian
-Brownie,&mdash;of the <i>Vodianoi</i>, or smiling River-spirit, who
-lured travellers to a watery doom,&mdash;of wolves and
-bears in ravening herds, came fast upon his
-memory; for the forest was growing denser,
-and the darkness deepened painfully after the
-Aurora faded away, and a few solitary stars alone
-glinted through the openings between the broad,
-flat, pendant branches of the intertwisted pines.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The silence of the night was now broken only
-by the whistling croak of the <i>valdchnep</i>, or great
-woodcock, as he darted from amid the black
-gloom of a pine tree, or the lighter shadow of the
-graceful, but, as yet, leafless birch; and the
-craven and clamorous anxiety that had been
-giving real pangs, and even qualms of conscience,
-to the superstitious Podatchkine began to
-subside, when the wood opened a little, a red light
-appeared, and they approached the cottage of
-Nicholas Paulovitch, the half-bred.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was, as already stated, built of logs, squared
-by the hatchet outside and inside, and whitened
-by chalk: before it yawned a deep draw-well,
-with a bucket, handle, and winch.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Tis the cottage of a man I know. Here,
-Excellency, we can pass the night," said Podatchkine,
-leaping from his horse and dutifully taking
-Balgonie's bridle, as if to anticipate any proposition
-of proceeding further. "There is a shed
-behind where I shall stable our horses: Nicholas,
-I know, will make us welcome to his lodge."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In a few minutes more, Balgonie found himself
-seated in the cottage, the aspect of which struck
-him as being peculiarly comfortless, dingy, and
-squalid, as he viewed it by the light of a <i>loutchin</i>,
-or species of pine torch, which stood in a rusty
-iron holder on the rough deal table, whereon lay
-a pack of frayed and dog-eared cards.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the walls were some rude images, stuck
-over with crumbs of black bread, which attracted
-the flies in summer and the dirt at all times. In
-a place of honour was a holy effigy, with some
-train oil flaring before it in a tin sconce, as a
-species of votive lamp; for the proprietor affected
-religion quite as much as Mr. Gamaliel Balgonie
-did in a more civilised part of the world.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The furniture consisted of a few plain stools,
-and some very dirty bearskins spread on the floor
-in the corners, as beds; and on the table was a
-pitcher of foaming and seething quass, with
-wooden bowls to drink it by.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Balgonie took in all these details at a glance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How great would have been his surprise, if he
-had known that after riding so many miles, he
-was only a short distance from <i>her</i>, from Natalie,
-who was now weeping bitterly and sleeplessly on
-the bosom of her cousin for him, and for the fate
-she dreaded, and yet had not the power to avert,
-or from which to save him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In addition to Podatchkine and the host,
-Nicholas Paulovitch, who stood respectfully at a
-little distance from Balgonie, and was appraising
-the exact value of his costume, arms, and
-ornaments, even to Natalie's diamond ring, there was
-present another ill-visaged fellow, with a powerful
-figure, square shoulders, and giant beard, like
-every Russian of the lower order; eyes that
-were small and piercing, like those of a mouse; a
-long, fierce nose and jagged teeth, hair shorn off
-close above the eyebrows and brushed all down
-straight from the crown of his head, which in
-form resembled a cone or a pine-apple.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This barbarian, who was dressed chiefly in a
-shoubah of sheepskin, and had a small, but sharp,
-hatchet and dagger in his girdle, was a Stepniak,
-from a district where nothing like a town was ever
-seen or known, but whose aid and strength
-Paulovitch thought might be useful and necessary
-in the work he and Podatchkine had cut out for
-themselves in the night.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap10"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER X.
-<br /><br />
-THE CORPORAL IN HIS OWN TRAP.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Balgonie was rather weary after his long and
-desultory ride by rough and unfrequented roads,
-chiefly devious forest paths; he felt thirsty, and
-looked at the pitcher of quass.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Will his Excellency drink?" asked Nicholas
-Paulovitch, in his hoarse and husky voice.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now as quass is simply a species of sour beer,
-made of rye and oatmeal, coloured by a red berry,
-and is generally the beverage by which the
-Russians wash down their coarse bread and salt,
-Balgonie declined: the Stepniak proposed to add
-thereto a dash of train oil; but the suggestion
-made the young officer shudder.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I have fortunately one bottle of Rhine wine,"
-said the woodman, with a rapid and furtive glance
-at his comrades; "his Excellency will doubtless
-honour us by taking it with his supper, at least
-with such fare as the forest produces, a stewed
-rabbit or so."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I thank you, good fellow. Where is this
-cottage situated?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Situated," repeated Nicholas, with a quick
-and uneasy glance at the Corporal, fearing there
-might be some discrepancy in their information.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes, in what part of the country?" said
-Podatchkine; "for we naturally wish to know."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Near Velie."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Then I am somewhere about forty versts from
-the Louga?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes, Excellency, precisely," replied the rascal.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Hence, if my horse is fresh, I may reach
-Schlusselburg to-morrow?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Scarcely, as it lies fully a hundred versts
-beyond Velie," said Nicholas.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Is the distance so great?" exclaimed Balgonie,
-little knowing that it was even more, and all
-unsuspicious of how these wretches were deluding
-him.*
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="footnote">
-* The cottage of those assassins is
-said to have been situated
-ten versts, or about eight miles distant
-from Louga on the road to
-Velie. <i>Vide</i> dispatch from General Weymarn
-to the Empress,
-dated 8th August,
-"concerning Carl Ivanovitoh Balgonie, a
-Scottish Captain in the
-Regiment of Smolensko."&mdash;<i>Utrecht Gazette</i>.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-"But, Excellency, we may prove more able
-guides than Michail Podatchkine," said the gipsy
-woodman; "for we&mdash;that is the Stepniak and I&mdash;must
-proceed to St. Petersburg to-morrow, on
-a little piece of business we shall have to
-perform together."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Poor devils!" thought Podatchkine, "if you
-take his body to St. Petersburg, you will both be
-accused of murder and knouted, as sure as my
-name is Michail; so I shall save my fifty silver
-roubles."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Even at the present day in Russia, few will
-venture to receive or meddle with a dead body,
-or attempt to succour a dying or a drowning
-person, in dread of the dangerous accusations and
-extortions of the police.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A sound, as of footsteps, and of something like
-a drinking vessel falling on the floor of an upper
-apartment, made the woodman start up with an
-oath of astonishment and alarm. He hurriedly
-applied a ladder to the trap which gave
-admission to this place, and ascended into it; but
-returned almost immediately to say, "there was
-no one there." The evident surprise and alarm
-of the three men at this trivial occurrence, is said
-to have been the first cause of exciting Balgonie's
-suspicion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He glanced at the Stepniak, who sat silently
-observant in a corner, drinking his quass, with
-his feet resting against the rude peitchka, or stone
-stove, which was built into the log wall of the
-cottage, and when surveying his vast bulk and
-colossal stature, together with his singularly
-ferocious aspect, the reflection occurred to him,
-that he should have placed his pistols in his
-girdle instead of leaving them in the holsters
-of the saddle.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was the reverse of timid; he was "brave
-even to rashness, and had faced death many
-times" (to quote General Weymarn) since his
-career of wandering began; but the idea certainly
-did flash upon his mind, that his situation
-in that lonely forest had its perils, and that two
-men more repulsive in aspect and in bearing than
-the gipsy and Stepniak, he had never seen, even
-in Russia.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Was it some mysterious and intuitive sense of
-danger drawing near that made such thoughts
-pass through the steady mind of Balgonie?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He and Podatchkine were both armed, and even
-were these men outlaws, they would scarcely, he
-believed, dare to assault an officer on military
-duty; besides, the very name of Schlusselburg,
-whither he was proceeding, carried a wholesome
-terror with it; so dismissing his casual suspicions,
-Charlie unbuckled his sword, and seated himself
-at the table, on which a cold supper of stewed
-rabbits and coarse rye bread was laid for the four
-who were present.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A platter was placed for a fifth person whom
-Nicholas remarked to Podatchkine in a growling
-tone was still abroad in the forest, or had not
-returned from some place which was named in a
-whisper.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With an affectation of extreme respect and
-courtesy, none of the three worthies would seat
-themselves at the table, until Balgonie specially
-invited and urged them in succession to do so.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The bottle of Rhine wine was produced from
-the apartment above and opened. The length of
-the cork and the dust on the bottle (wherever it
-came from originally) argued well of the
-contents, and two horns, one of which, had a
-handsome silver rim, were placed for the Captain and
-the Corporal.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The former was rather surprised to find such a
-drinking vessel as this silver mounted cup in a
-place so squalid, and he was about to lift and
-examine it, when Nicholas Paulovitch, with
-almost nervous haste, filled it, and also that of
-the Corporal, to the brim.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To the surprise of Balgonie, the latter exhibited
-some undisguised alarm on seeing wine placed
-before <i>him</i>; it was an attention under all the
-circumstances he neither wished nor expected;
-and so he declined to drink of it, saying that he
-was "a true Russ, and would adhere to the quass."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Nay, fear not, friend Michail," said the
-woodman, "'tis the best of Rhine wine. The cup with
-the silver mounting is of course for his Excellency
-the Hospodeen," he added with a quiet but grim
-significance, which the wily Cossack quite understood,
-so he drained the wine horn without further
-objection.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Soon after having supped, and imbibed his full
-share of the wine bottle, Balgonie expressed a
-desire for repose, as he wished to depart by
-daybreak; but he had other reasons for retiring so
-early. He did not much relish the society of the
-gipsy, the Stepniak, and the Corporal of Cossacks;
-and he wished to indulge in reverie, to commune
-with himself, and let the current of his thoughts
-run undisturbed on Natalie and their adieus.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"This way, Excellency," said Nicholas, with
-alacrity, lifting the pine torch in its iron loutchin,
-and ushering him up the stair, a mere common
-ladder, and through the trap-door into the little
-apartment above, where his couch, composed
-merely of skins of the bear and sheep awaited
-him, and where he could see the dark forest and
-the occasional stars through a small window that
-gave light and air to the place, which was so
-limited in size, that it somewhat resembled a little
-cabin in a ship.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Left in this miserable den to his own reflections
-and to darkness&mdash;when Nicholas descended with
-the pine torch, carefully closed the trap-door and
-secured it on the lower side by a wooden bolt,
-moreover, softly removing the ladder&mdash;Charlie
-Balgonie placed his sword conveniently at hand,
-and cast himself upon the pile of skins that were
-to form his bed, and thought he had often fared
-worse in the bivouacs of Silesia and Bavaria.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"So&mdash;he is safe," said Nicholas Paulovitch,
-looking upward with a grin of savage satisfaction
-at the closed trap, as he replaced the loutchin on
-the table, and then closely scrutinised the
-Corporal, whose eyes had already become red and
-inflamed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Hush!" said Podatchkine, "take care."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Why?" asked Nicholas, in a hoarse whisper.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Because all may not be yet as you wish it,
-and in Russia sometimes the tongue flays the
-shoulders and cuts off the head."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"True," said the hitherto taciturn Stepniak,
-who was carefully feeling the keen edge of his
-hatchet; "as the Tartars have it, 'when you have
-spoken the word, it rules over you; while it is
-yet unspoken, you rule over it.' But it seems to
-me, Michail Podatchkine, that you have taken a
-great deal of trouble, and wasted much time in
-the matter of this dispatch. As you passed
-through the forest together, why the devil did
-you not give him a good <i>tzchick</i>"&mdash;(which we
-can only render "prod")&mdash;"in the back with
-your lance?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Because, if a wound is found on him, folks
-might say he had been murdered; and he must
-bear not a scar."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And neither shall you, friend Podatchkine,"
-said Paulovitch with a cruel grin.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Come&mdash;don't make unpleasant jests," growled
-the Corporal, with a yawn and a shudder;
-"wounds have not been fashionable since Orloff
-and Bernikoff supped with Peter III."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You grow wary as you grow older, Corporal."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I have no desire to travel with the next
-caravan to Siberia, with one side of my head and
-face shaved, and an iron rosary, some five pound
-weight, at my wrists."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Fear not&mdash;you will never see Siberia."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Then you have made all sure about this
-Ivanovitch Balgonie?" said Podatchkine, whose
-utterance was becoming somewhat inarticulate.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ay, sure enough; the cups were&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The cups!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The cup, I mean, was drugged with those
-black berries which grow in the forest hereabout;
-the same stuff used by fine ladies to whiten their
-hands."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But why the cup and not the wine?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"For this reason: I might have been constrained
-to drink with him; and I had no desire
-to fall, like some one else, into a trap of my own
-baiting."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Podatchkine, on whom the powerful soporific
-with which his cup had been drugged&mdash;the sleepy
-nightshade&mdash;had been rapidly taking effect, and
-whose small cunning eyes had been opening
-and shutting alternately, while a numbness stole
-with a weariness over all his faculties, seemed
-suddenly to grasp at the terrible meaning of the
-speaker. He gave a start&mdash;he essayed to rouse
-himself and shout, but in doing so, toppled off
-his stool, and sank on the clay floor in a
-profound slumber.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"At last!" said the half-breed, administering
-a kick to the prostrate figure; "at last he has
-gone to sleep; now to make sure that he shall
-never waken more. Ah! the Asiatic! he was just
-getting suspicious at the end."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"There are two kopecs in his pocket," said the
-Stepniak, after investigating the garments of the
-snorting Podatchkine, who was now breathing
-heavily through his red snub nose, which between
-his scrubby beard and his shock of hair, was
-almost the only feature of his face that was
-visible.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Leave the kopecs where you found them!"
-said Nicholas, with a gipsy oath.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Wherefore?" asked the Stepniak with surprise.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It will seem all the more honest in thee, my
-good Stepniak, when you take the body&mdash;bodies,
-I should say&mdash;to the nearest military post. You
-have but to say you found them dead in the
-forest."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And the wet clothing?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Dew or rain&mdash;what a head you have!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"True&mdash;true; ah! what a man you are,
-Nicholas Paulovitch, so full of bright thoughts!
-That idea would never have occurred to me."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Nor the other either. Quick, now; we have
-not a moment to lose!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They extinguished the pine torch, and tying
-the Corporal's hands securely with a cord, carried
-him forth to the draw-well before the cottage.
-Then they substituted that worthy warrior's
-heels for the bucket which was usually appended
-to the rope, and permitting the winch to revolve
-softly and gently, lowered him down, snorting
-and gasping in his unnatural slumber, head
-foremost, into the deep dark water below!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Stepniak turned the iron handle of the
-winch or windlass, while the gipsy guided the
-rope with its heavy burden. He was deliberately
-lowered down until only his heels remained above
-water, as the two wretches could see by the
-starlight when stooping and peering into the
-darkness below.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The snorting had ceased now!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The dying Corporal was heard to struggle with
-his hands, as if he sought to free them from the
-cords; a few babbles filled with air rose to the
-surface and burst. This continued for a minute,
-during which all was silent elsewhere, save the
-half-suppressed breathing of the two assassins,
-and the dreary sound of the night wind, as it
-shook the dark branches of the giant pines that
-towered in solemn gloom around them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Nicholas Paulovitch listened intently, and kept
-his eyes fixed on the cottage where their other
-victim lay, as he doubted not, sunk in what was
-intended to be his last sleep.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Anon, all became still&mdash;deathly still&mdash;in the
-depths of the dark well; the rope ceased to
-vibrate, and the bubbles came no more.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Let us leave him here for a few minutes,
-and now for the Captain and his dispatch! By
-the time that we return, the Corporal will be as
-stiff as if he stood for sale in the frozen market on
-the fête of St. Nicholas!" said the gipsy, with
-one of his diabolical grins; while the Stepniak,
-with a smile of satisfaction that showed all his
-huge yellow teeth, smoothed down to his eyebrows
-the thick coarse black hair that grew from
-the apex of his conical caput.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They now re-entered the cottage, and again
-lighted the torch in its iron loutchin. All remained
-just as they had left it; the quass pitcher, the
-wooden bowls, the two cups, and the empty wine
-bottle were on the table, and the platters, with
-the débris of their rustic supper; but the
-superstitious gipsy felt a species of shudder come over
-him, for when the torch flared up in the night
-wind and cast strange shadows on the dingy and
-discoloured walls of the log-hut, it seemed to his
-diseased imagination, for a moment, as if the
-outline of the drowned Corporal still occupied the
-stool on which he had been seated.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Come," said he huskily, "the dispatch!&mdash;and
-then for the other!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They listened intently, and placed the ladder
-against the trap-door. All was still&mdash;not even
-the breathing of Balgonie was heard. Ascending
-first, with a knife in his teeth, in case of
-unexpected resistance, the gipsy knocked thrice
-on the trap without receiving any response. He
-then withdrew the wooden bolt, pushed it up,
-and introducing his head and shoulders, held
-aloft the pine torch, and turned towards the bed
-of skins.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was unoccupied; and in a moment he saw
-that the bare and desolate chamber was without a
-tenant!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Malediction!" he shouted; "he has escaped
-us&mdash;but how? Search&mdash;search! He cannot be
-far off, after the dose I have given him;
-search&mdash;and we must use our hatchets now!"
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap11"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XI.
-<br /><br />
-OLGA, THE GIPSY.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Balgonie had scarcely thrown himself at length
-on the soft, but not very odorous, pile of skins
-which formed his couch, when a face appeared
-at the little window, which was pulled open,
-and a voice called to him in a low and earnest
-whisper:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Hospodeen&mdash;Carl Ivanovitch! Hospodeen,
-attend to me; but oh, be silent, as you value
-your life!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He started up, softly approached the window,
-and saw, by the dim starlight, a fair female face
-with very dark eyes, white and regular teeth, and
-long, glittering ear-rings.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I have seen this face before," thought he;
-"but when, and where?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Balgonie, in truth, was too much of a lover to
-have more than one female face ever before his
-eyes&mdash;that of Natalie Mierowna.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I am Olga, the gipsy," said the girl, humbly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Olga! Olga! whom I saw at the house of
-Count Mierowitz this evening?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The same, Hospodeen!" (Balgonie expressed
-an exclamation of astonishment to find her, as
-he thought, so far from that place.) "You gave
-me a silver kopec once upon a time, at Krejko,
-when passing through that town with Michail
-Podatchkine; and, this evening you saved me
-from the whip of the dvornick, when for the
-third time I had ventured near the Count's
-mansion, in a vain search for you, or the Hospoza
-Mierowna."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"In search of us&mdash;and for what purpose, girl?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"To warn you, that for nearly a month past, a
-plot has been formed to deprive you of a valuable
-paper, and even of your life."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My life&mdash;when?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"On the first opportunity."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"By whom&mdash;and where, girl&mdash;where?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Here in this solitary hut&mdash;even now your
-assassins are in consultation&mdash;listen."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He placed his ear to the trap-door, and heard
-the murmur of hoarse whispers below.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Hush," said Podatchkine, as already related,
-"take care!" Then followed the question of the
-subtle and ferocious Stepniak, as to why he had
-not given Balgonie a "prod" with his lance in
-the forest; and the whole conversation in all its
-horrible details, up to the moment when the
-wretched Corporal with death and terror mingling
-in his soul, fell from his seat in a stupor.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Father in heaven!" exclaimed Balgonie, full
-of despair and horror, as he mechanically felt for
-his fatal dispatch, to ascertain that it was yet
-safe, "I have drunk of this drugged stuff, and
-am also lost!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Nay," said the gipsy, hurriedly, "nay&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I drank the accursed wine from a cup&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"True; but not from the cup which was
-intended for you."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How?&mdash;speak!&mdash;speak!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The wine and the cups too were all stolen
-by Podatchkine, with many other things, at
-different times, from the household of Count
-Mierowitz. This night you were duly expected
-here, and thus a plan was laid to destroy both
-you and your treacherous guide. Two cups were
-fully and deeply drugged by my brother Nicholas:
-one was richly mounted with silver; and knowing
-well that it was to be set before you, I abstracted
-it barely an hour ago, substituting another of the
-same kind, and now I have it here. Oh,
-Hospodeen, a narrow escape you have had!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Balgonie began to breathe more freely; but,
-assured that never had he run so narrow a risk
-of death, he felt, though enraged and furious, his
-blood run cold, when contemplating the fate
-intended for him. Peeping through a chink of
-the hatch or trap-door, he saw that the ladder of
-access had been removed, and that the door of the
-squalid cottage was open now, for the loutchin
-flared more than ever in the night wind. It was
-then extinguished; but still he could see, and
-hear them dragging forth the passive form of
-Corporal Podatchkine, whom he supposed to be dead.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Personally, Balgonie felt that he was no match
-for either of the powerful giants below&mdash;men
-whose bodily strength was quite equal to their
-ferocity, and whose daggers and hatchets might
-make mince-meat of him. Moreover, they had
-now deprived Podatchkine of his sabre and loaded
-pistols, and were thus more completely armed.
-Charlie had his hand on his sword&mdash;a handsome
-Turkish sabre; but relinquishing the ideas either
-of attack or defence, while the glow of rage rose
-in his breast and cheek, he thought only of
-immediate flight.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"If you would save your life and the dispatch
-of the Empress, follow me this instant, and get
-your horse before they return: you have not a
-moment to lose."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was the gipsy girl who spoke again, in her
-low earnest whisper, and with perfect decision.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Then I owe my escape&mdash;my safety&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"To my gratitude. Pass through the window
-and descend by the wall."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Women," says a certain philosopher, "are
-not at all inferior to men in coolness and courage,
-and perhaps much less in resolution than is
-commonly imagined; the reason they appear so is,
-because women affect to be more afraid than they
-really are, and men pretend to be less."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Balgonie found that the courageous girl to
-whose guidance he now trusted himself, had been
-enabled to reach the window by standing on the
-roof of the outhouse, or shed, in which
-Podatchkine had stabled their horses. The whole edifice
-being built of squared logs, was not very high,
-and it afforded easy means of ascent and descent,
-by the interstices consequent to its rude
-construction by the hatchet. He soon leaped to the
-ground, and softly assisted her to descend.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Here is your horse: you see, Hospodeen, that
-your kindness to the poor gipsy girl was not
-thrown away."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Balgonie looked rapidly to his bit and girth,
-adjusted himself in his saddle, hooked up the
-hilt of his sabre, and shortened his rein, almost
-unaware of the black tragedy being so coolly and
-deliberately acted on the other side of the cottage.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ten versts farther from this will bring you
-to the monastery of the Troitza, which you will
-know by its three domes. You have but to ride
-straight westward by the forest path; God keep
-you, and may you and the beautiful Hospoza be
-happy in your loves!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Tell me, gipsy girl&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ah, I can foretell nothing, save that in love
-mere merit is of little matter."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What is of most importance&mdash;beauty?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What then?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Success, Hospodeen."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He almost laughed, as he slipped into her
-hand two xervonitz (the largest coins he had),
-and in a moment more was galloping over the
-soft grass of the forest path she had indicated.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"By Jove," thought he, as he spurred on, "I
-shall not be sorry when this infernal dispatch is
-safe in the hands of old Bernikoff; and to think of
-that wretch of a Podatchkine! I always expected
-the fellow to be a rogue, but not of so deep a dye!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The unfortunate Corporal, now, as he deserved,
-hanging head foremost downward in the draw-well,
-stark and stiff and cold, had been to all
-appearance a good Russian, Balgonie reflected:
-he neither confessed, fasted, nor did penance (too
-much bother all that would have been for the
-Corporal of Cossacks); but he kept Lent
-regularly to all appearance; made a sign of the
-cross fussily before and after every meal; always
-went to church when in camp or quarters; and
-never omitted his prayers and genuflexions at
-night, if in haunted places or when passing a
-wayside cross, especially if any one was by. All
-this was no doubt studiously hypocritical; and
-Charlie remembered that his worthy Uncle Gram
-kept Fast-days and "Sabbaths" with stern and
-gloomy rigour; that he said a long and sonorous
-prayer before meals&mdash;a longer prayer after them;
-that he went thrice daily to kirk at the ordained
-periods, and had nightly a noisy expounding and
-out-pouring of the spirit that would have put the
-great John of Geneva himself to the blush.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ah," thought poor Charlie, as he trotted on
-his lonely way through the darkened forest,
-"decidedly there are Podatchkines in Scotland as
-well as elsewhere, and in Russia."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The light was beginning to dawn, for it was
-the morning of one of the first days of May, so
-long had he been detained by illness&mdash;shall we say
-by love?&mdash;at the castle by the Louga, that
-Muscovite Eden, as now it seemed to him. The birds
-were chirping merrily in the woods; and in some
-places he saw the brown rocks shaded by a species
-of graceful silver birch and dark rowan tree,
-similar to those that grew in his native strath at
-home.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By midsummer he knew that the birchen glades
-he traversed would be in full foliage, and that the
-rowan berries would hang in ripe red clusters among
-the thick green leaves; and that there, too, would
-be grey lichens on the granite cliffs, and in their
-clefts soft emerald moss, the wild strawberries, and
-the drooping bells of the purple foxglove, just as
-he had seen them where the Earn "gurgling
-kissed her pebbled shore" as it flowed towards
-the Tay.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They seemed like old friends in that strange
-place, and with a sigh of gratitude for his escape
-from a perilous and deadly snare was mingled
-one of hope&mdash;a wish&mdash;a bootless wish, that one
-day he might sit by the banks of the lovely Earn
-with Natalie by his side, amid all the security his
-native land afforded, and under the white blooming
-hawthorns that cast their sweet fragrance to
-the soft winds of the Perthshire valley.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Beloved Natalie&mdash;so fair and delicate, so dark
-haired and so bright-eyed! Her diamond ring,
-and still more her lock of soft and silky hair,
-brought all the charm and sense of her presence
-vividly before him. He counted the brief hours
-since they had parted, and sighed to think how
-many hours and days and weeks must inevitably
-elapse before they met again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In memory and imagination, he conned over
-and over again each tender speech and glance,
-each mute caress and passionate kiss, with every
-circumstance and minutiæ of their occurrence and
-bestowal; and what lover has not done so since
-time began, and apples grew, and roses bloomed
-in Eden! Even his recent narrow escape and
-the gipsy's gratitude were forgotten in the ardour
-of his thoughts.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And he sighed again, when thinking how wild
-and insane were the dreams in which he was
-indulging, as he touched his horse with the spurs,
-on seeing the three shining domes of the Troitza,
-or monastery of the Holy Trinity, rise before him
-amid the green woodlands.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap12"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XII.
-<br /><br />
-ST. PETERSBURG.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-After traversing a green valley some five or six
-miles in length, bordered on each side by forests
-of fir trees, dark, solemn and acutely conical,
-where the sunlight could scarcely ever penetrate
-to the thick rank grass and herbage that grew
-below, and where a merry gurgling brook rushed
-noisily along by the side of the narrow horseway,
-Charlie Balgonie drew his bridle at the gates of
-the Troitza monastery, when its white walls, its
-three great cupolas, shaped each like a gigantic
-onion inverted, covered with plates of burnished
-copper, and all painted and bestarred, were
-shining gaily in the morning sun.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There he was made welcome by the monks&mdash;quaint-looking
-men, in long black caftans, with
-high black caps, fashioned like our modern hats,
-but without brims, and having black veils
-floating behind over their long, straight hair. He
-deposited some money with the treasurer,
-declined the invitation of the sacristan to see the
-uncorrupted body of some saint with an
-unpronounceable name, reposing in its shrine like a
-silver bedstead, and its head begirt by a diadem
-with pearls as large as pistol bullets; for the
-saint had been a martyr, who, in the days of Ivan
-Basilovitch, the Tartars had rewarded for his
-attempts to convert them by knocking out his
-brains; and now he was a miserable mummified
-relic of humanity, before which, for many ages,
-thousands of devotees had knelt and wept and
-smote their breasts in paroxysms of prayer.
-Charlie waived the invitation; and after having a
-good breakfast in the refectory, and there
-telling his story to the monks, he was somewhat
-bewildered when informed by them, that after all
-his (certainly circuitous) journey with
-Podatchkine on the preceding evening and night, and
-after his riding since he had left the cottage of
-the gipsy, he was still barely twenty miles from
-the Louga!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Was a spell cast upon him? was his horse bewitched,
-that he was to continue travelling thus,
-and yet never make progress? It almost seemed
-so; but one of the monks, a more shrewd man than
-his brothers, explained the whole affair as being
-consequent to the cunning of Podatchkine, and
-his scheme for destroying the dispatch-bearer.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A large party of pilgrims on horse and foot
-were returning to St. Petersburg that afternoon.
-With them Balgonie travelled for the remainder
-of his journey; and, after traversing a wild and
-desert tract of country, on the evening of the next
-day he had the pleasure of beholding, in the
-distance before him, that new but vast and
-splendid capital,&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- "Proud city! Sovereign mother thou<br />
- Of all Sclavonian cities now,"&mdash;<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-covering the once wild waste whereon, before the
-time of Peter the Great, the father of his country,
-a few wretched fishermen were wont to contend
-with the wolves and bears for a spot to erect their
-huts&mdash;where, as Count Segur says, winter reigned
-for eight months of the year, rye was an article
-of garden culture, and a bee-hive a curiosity.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Its bulbous-shaped Byzantine domes, and tall
-needle-like spires, and all its countless roofs, that
-rose beyond each other in ridgy succession like
-the waves of the sea, and are generally like the
-sea in colour, being of a brilliant green or an ashy
-hue, were now all tinted redly by the rays of the
-setting sun, which cast the shadows of its many
-bridges on the waters of the Neva and of the
-canals that glided silently and darkly beneath
-them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As the sun sank beyond the Gulf of Finland,
-and the shadows deepened on every plated dome
-and granite rampart, the great gilt crosses of our
-Lady of Kazan (a fane which was ten years in
-building) and of many other noble churches
-glittered, or rather seemed to burn like stars,
-amid the deep blue of the cloudless sky beyond.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Balgonie's satisfaction, on finding himself so
-near the end of his journey, was somewhat clouded
-by a trivial circumstance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After entering the city by a palisaded barrier,
-where stood a guard of the Regiment of Valikolutz,
-he checked his horse's pace, while the caravan
-of pilgrims, whom he now wished to quit,
-traversed a long street of small wooden houses that
-lay beyond. Here, close by the margin of the
-Neva, lay a man with his loose caftan wet and
-dripping, and a piece of sack or old canvas spread
-over his face. On his breast lay his fur cap, as if
-to receive alms for his burial; for none doubted
-that he was a poor drowned fellow just fished up
-from the Neva, and that money was required of
-the religious and charitable alike for his obsequies
-and masses for the repose of his soul. So all the
-pilgrims from the Troitza threw something into
-the fur cap, where denuscas, kopecs, even roubles
-and Polish ducats, jingled fast together, while the
-passers muttered prayers and made signs of the
-cross.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All the caravan had passed, so the clatter of
-Balgonie's charger, steel-scabbard, and accoutrements,
-seemed to create a different effect on the
-attentive ear of the seemingly drowned man; for
-the knave, who had only been acting, started up,
-and, with his spoil, fled like a hare down one of
-the little alleys that opened off the wooden street.
-He vanished in the twilight, yet not so quickly
-but that Balgonie was able to recognise in his
-face and form, the bulky and muscular half-bred,
-the gipsy, Nicholas Paulovitch.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-What had brought him to St. Petersburg?
-Was he still dogging the luckless dispatch-bearer,
-or had he only fled thither that, among its
-thousands, he might elude the punishment with which
-Count Mierowitz would be sure to visit him, if
-the murder of the Corporal was discovered?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This episode made Balgonie feel uncomfortable,
-and suspicious that other and hidden dangers yet
-menaced him, as he rode steadily but watchfully
-through the densely crowded, but monotonously
-regular streets of houses, which are stuccoed,
-white-washed, and decorated with different colours,
-roofed with wood and iron, painted in most instances
-green, and nearly all pillared and piazzaed&mdash;each
-long vista, with its oil lamps, being terminated
-by domes and spires; and erelong he saw
-the lights shining in the lofty windows of that
-magnificent crescent, which, for a time, was the
-palace of Catharine's most cherished favourite,
-"the fair-faced Lanskoi," as Byron has it&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- "A lover who had cost her many a tear,<br />
- And yet but made a middling Grenadier."<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-And now the melodious bells were ringing for
-vespers in the towers of our Lady of Kazan&mdash;a
-Greek cruciform fane, which was founded as a
-rival to St. Peter's at Rome, and named after the
-Tartar kingdom of Kazan. It is the greatest
-church in the city, and one of high sanctity.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Along the northern margin of the Neva, a river
-broad as the Thames at London Bridge, but
-(unlike the Thames) deep, blue, and transparent
-as crystal, lined with solid granite quays, and
-bordered by many stately palatial edifices,
-Balgonie pursued his way; but the stars were
-shining at midnight on the vast sheet of water called
-the Lake of Ladoga, before he, weary and worn
-with fatigue, dismounted beneath the formidable
-gates of the castellated prison of Schlusselburg,
-which had been strengthened and fortified anew
-by General Count Todleben, whose arrest and
-quarrel with the Empress had made so much noise
-three years before the time our story opens.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap13"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XIII.
-<br /><br />
-WHAT THE SECRET DISPATCH CONTAINED.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Twenty-four miles eastward of the city, the small
-town and fortress of Schlusselburg stand, at a
-point where the Neva issues from the Lake of
-Ladoga, and on the left bank of the river. The
-little town had then somewhere about three
-thousand inhabitants, who chiefly lived by the
-manufacture of cotton and porcelain.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On an island, where the river joins the lake
-and moats it round, is built the fort, which is
-about four hundred yards square: its walls are of
-stone, massive, and fifty feet in height, terminating
-in battlements and turrets of antique form.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The passage to this island is by a long drawbridge.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The guard which kept this formidable state
-prison, where many a hopeless sigh was wafted
-through the rusty bars of its prison grilles across
-the waters of Ladoga, was composed entirely of a
-body of dismounted Cossacks, selected for the
-purpose, as the task of keeping or secluding the
-dethroned Emperor Ivan was one of no small
-responsibility and importance; so these men were
-all Cossacks of a high class, and were rather richly
-dressed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Their short blue jackets were elaborately
-embroidered with yellow lace, and a multitude of
-gilt buttons, but were hooked across the chest;
-their trowsers of scarlet cloth were loose, long,
-and gathered into their boots, which were of
-brown Russian leather, and reached to six inches
-above the ankle. Their busbies of black shining
-fur had bright scarlet bags, tall white feathers, a
-cockade, and tasselled cord. They were all clean
-and soldier-like men, well moustached, and sternly
-resolute in bearing; and all were armed with
-musketoons, short sabres, and brass pistols.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A guard of these men received Balgonie at the
-gate and drawbridge with a profound military
-salute; and a picturesque aspect they presented,
-as their arms flashed in the murky light of the
-great oil lantern that swung in the dark, weird,
-and deep-mouthed archway, where a massive portcullis
-showed its iron teeth, all red and rusted by
-the mists of the Neva and the stormy blasts that
-swept across the Lake of Ladoga.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The great masses of the fortress, ghostly and
-shrouded, with faint red lights gleaming out here
-and there; the enormous strength of the gates,
-their planking, bolts, and bars; the thickness of
-the walls; the number of embrasures and loopholes
-for cannon and musketry, all converging to
-one point, the approach or river entrance; the
-number of sentinels, and, more than all, the vast
-strength of the portcullis and double gates,
-together with the difficulties he experienced in
-procuring admission, though in uniform, and though
-a staff officer bearing a dispatch of the Empress,
-all served to impress unpleasantly on the mind of
-Charlie Balgonie a state of extreme watchfulness,
-of suspicion, and mistrust; and also a sense of
-the vast responsibility of the charge confided by
-Catharine to Colonel Bernikoff.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-That gallant officer and estimable personage
-had retired long since, after a deep drinking bout,
-and would be&mdash;as Lieutenant Tschekin (the son-in-law
-of General Weymarn), who was third in
-command of the fortress, informed Balgonie&mdash;quite
-invisible till breakfast time to-morrow, when
-the dispatch would be delivered to him: and a
-sigh of real annoyance escaped Charlie, when he
-found that this odious paper was to be yet some
-eight hours or more in his secret pocket.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He repaired to the officers' guard-room at the
-barrier gate, and there, wrapped in his cloak,
-without undressing (as he hoped next day to
-exchange the atmosphere of Schlusselburg for that
-of some hotel in the Vasili-Ostrov), lay down to
-sleep, and if possible to dream of Natalie; but
-he had undergone too much toil for such gentle
-phantasms, so he slept like a dormouse, till the
-sun was high in heaven, unawakened even by the
-deep boom of the morning gun, a 36-pounder, as
-it pealed across the Lake of Ladoga; but
-ultimately he was roused by Tschekin and Captain
-Vlasfief, a very handsome young man, but a
-cruel and heartless <i>roué</i>, whom ultimately he
-detested. These, after shaking him heartily,
-announced that Colonel Bernikoff awaited him at
-breakfast, and was not in a mood to brook much
-delay.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His hasty toilette was soon complete, and he was
-speedily ushered into a plain, almost naked
-whitewashed apartment arched with stone. Through
-its grated windows the morning sun shone cheerily,
-and the blue waters of the lake could be seen with
-the white sails of many a tiny coasting vessel.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Here, at a table of plain Memel timber, destitute
-of cloth, but on which massive silver vessels
-with rudely formed wooden bowls and platters
-were oddly intermingled, was seated the Governor,
-who, like the czars and boyars of old, still took
-quass for breakfast with roasted beef or bear's
-ham, bread with caviare, greens with vinegar,
-salted plums and other abominations. But
-Balgonie saw that coffee and even tea, with ham,
-eggs, and kippered salmon, were prepared, with
-other condiments, for those who, like himself, had
-nothing of the Tartar in their blood.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Hail to you&mdash;I wish you health," said Bernikoff,
-courteously enough, in the old Russian
-fashion, and presenting his hand to Charlie, who
-took it, shuddering as he remembered the fate of
-Peter III.; "welcome to Schlusselburg, Captain
-Ivanovitch Balgonie."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Bernikoff, who wore a dark-green undress
-uniform faced with scarlet, was a man well up in
-years; he had fierce and shining black eyes that
-made soldier and serf alike quail beneath their
-gaze; yet they were small, cunning, and twinkling
-eyes, the lashes of which were half closed&mdash;the
-eyes of one who could act the cruel tyrant on one
-hand, and the cringing slave on the other. He
-had a massive, square, and brutal jaw, thin wicked
-lips, a nose as round as a grape-shot, close short
-grizzled hair, and long snaky mustachioes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was of Tartar blood, and came of those
-"warlike and merciless tribes who studied nothing
-but the use of arms; who passed their lives on
-horseback; who even lived on their horses in this
-sense, that their chief food was horseflesh and the
-milk of mares; who, at the same time, could go for
-days without food; and who, when they took a city
-by storm, put all the inhabitants to the sword
-except the working men."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Seat yourself, Captain, and proceed to
-breakfast, while I read your dispatch," said the
-Governor. "Holy Sergius! it is from Catharine
-Christianowna herself! The Czarina is great,
-but Heaven is higher!" he added, placing the
-paper on his forehead, as he bowed over it; and
-then taking an enormous pinch of Beresovski
-snuff, a most pungent compound, from a gold box
-said to have been found in the pocket of Peter III.,
-he proceeded to peruse that document which had
-proved of such trouble to the bearer.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The eyes of Balgonie, Tschekin, and Vlasfief,
-who alone were present, were fixed inquiringly
-upon him, and they could see that the contents
-disturbed him greatly; he grew pale and flushed
-by turns; his brows contracted to a terrible frown;
-a red spark of devilish light glittered in his eyes,
-and his lips were compressed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ah, the Asiatics! the accursed Asiatics!" he
-muttered. This is a most opprobrious epithet in
-Russia, and excited some surprise in his hearers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He carefully folded the dispatch, and turning
-sternly to Charlie, who was keeping his eyes on
-him and drinking his coffee the while, he said:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ivanovitch Balgonie, there is a feather in the
-seal&mdash;the usual sign of <i>haste</i> among us here in
-Russia; yet you have not troubled yourself much
-with speed, for this dispatch is dated at Novgorod
-more than a month back!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Permit me to explain, Excellency," said
-Balgonie eagerly, and anxiously too.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I shall be glad if you <i>can</i> explain it," replied
-Bernikoff, with increasing sternness. "I have
-known a general, a leader in ten battles, degraded,
-knouted, and sent to hunt the ermine with a
-cannon ball at his heels for a smaller dereliction of
-duty than this."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Balgonie's heart beat very fast while he related
-his story&mdash;of his being misled by a traitor twice;
-of the passage of the Louga at such terrible
-hazard; of his subsequent illness; and the episode
-at that log hut.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"That you were in the guidance of a traitor,
-I knew before your arrival; and I am extremely
-glad that he fell into his own snare," replied
-Bernikoff, a little more calmly; "but this matter
-is extremely awkward for you, and becomes more
-complicated every hour."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After glancing again at the dispatch, and bending
-his keen, rat-like eyes on Balgonie, he asked:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Were Basil Mierowitz or Usakoff, the grandson
-of Mazeppa, at the Castle of Louga any time
-during your sojourn there?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No, Excellency, neither of them were."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Spies say differently&mdash;but you can swear it?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"On my honour do I swear it! But why?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I have had bad news from the head-quarters
-of your regiment, and from Lieutenant-General
-Weymarn, since you left Novgorod."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And these tidings, Excellency?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Are to the effect that your friends, the two
-subalterns, have both deserted, with several
-soldiers, all of whom are natives of the Ukraine."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Deserted!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And are nowhere to be found, though
-pursued by a whole sotnia of Cossacks."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Deserted!" reiterated Balgonie with real
-concern.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes&mdash;the cursed Asiatics!" replied Bernikoff,
-expectorating with great vehemence, and
-thoroughly believing that each time he did so, he
-cast out a devil.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For some moments intense anxiety and alarm
-bewildered Balgonie, and he felt himself grow
-pale at a time when six searching eyes were bent
-with a doubtful expression upon him. He
-remembered the hostility, the threatening and
-mysterious words of Natalie, and grew almost
-sick with apprehension of he knew not what, as
-he muttered inaudibly&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Basil deserted&mdash;and his cousin too! The
-whole family will be inculpated and degraded.
-Oh, Natalie, my hapless love! Did General
-Weymarn state this in <i>his</i> dispatch?" he asked
-aloud.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He did, and at its end referred to you."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"To me, Excellency?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes; here is the document, and it concludes
-thus: 'as I and the Regiment of Smolensko will
-shortly march into St. Petersburg, Captain Carl
-Ivanovitch Balgonie need not return to Novgorod;
-but until then, shall attach himself to your staff,
-and remain in Schlusselburg, where, erelong, you
-may require all the good service he can render
-you.&mdash;WEYMARN.'"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Great were the mortification and disgust of
-Balgonie on learning that he was to remain for
-an indefinite period in a place so revolting and
-uncomfortable, and with no other society than
-that of three military jailers,&mdash;cruel, hard-hearted,
-and avaricious Muscovites of the worst kind; and
-with these orders died his hopes of revisiting, as
-he intended, Louga, on his return, and of seeing
-Natalie again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Under ban as all the household of Mierowitz
-would be now, should he ever see her more?
-Every way fate and the tide of events seemed to
-be against him and her, already in the very dawn
-of their love.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And now, gentlemen," said the Governor,
-lowering his voice, "the Empress's dispatch
-contains only two lines, thus: 'A scheme is formed
-to free Prince Ivan. <i>Let him not fall alive into the
-hands of those who come to seek for him!</i>' Nor
-shall he!" exclaimed Bernikoff with ferocious
-enthusiasm, as he dashed a cup of vodka among
-his quass, and drained the goblet, after shouting,
-"The health of Her Imperial Majesty Catharine
-Christianowna&mdash;hurrah!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Hurrah, hurrah!" added Vlasfief and the
-Lieutenant.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Balgonie also, as in duty bound, essayed to
-"hurrah," but the sound died away on his lips.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap14"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XIV.
-<br /><br />
-CHARLIE'S FIRST DAY IN SCHLUSSELBERG.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Full of anxious thoughts, he passed more than
-half of the succeeding day on the ramparts of the
-castled-prison, alone, avoiding Colonel Bernikoff,
-Captain Vlasfief, and their subaltern, Tschekin,
-none of whom were consonant to his taste, for all
-were deep gamblers and heavy drinkers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His mind was full of care for Natalie and all
-her family. Some desperate and revengeful plot,
-of which the desertion of her brother and of his
-cousin Usakoff was but the beginning, the means
-to an end, was certainly hatching&mdash;a plot that
-might too surely end in bloodshed, in the savage
-punishment and the ruin of all.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He sorrowed keenly for his two friends Basil
-Mierowitz and Apollo Usakoff, for both were
-polished and educated gentlemen, men of a class
-and style more common in some corps of the
-Russian army now, than in those days. And
-there was poor Mariolizza, too&mdash;so brightly
-beautiful, so happy, and so merry! Her love, her
-hopes and schemes, would all be crushed and
-blighted, as well as his own.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Balgonie was not without fears for himself, and
-of being compromised in the affair; or, perhaps,
-lured into subtle state intrigues and deep plots,
-in the failure or success of which he could have
-no interest politically or personally, save in his
-love for Natalie&mdash;a love that had changed the
-whole current of his ideas and opened up a new
-realm of thought and incentive to action.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Already he was beginning to revolt at the
-Russian service, and yet he had been happy in
-the Regiment of Smolensko, and had found in the
-land of his adoption, like every Scottish
-adventurer that has trod the Russian soil, honours
-scarcely to be won at home.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How long was he to be on the staff of this
-ferocious Commandant, and in this horrible prison,
-where many an innocent victim was pining
-hopelessly in chains and misery? "The mutual
-distrust in which people live in Russia," says the
-Abbé Chappe D'Auteroche in his scarce travels
-about this time, "and the total silence of the
-nation upon everything which may have the least
-relation either to the government or the
-sovereign, arise chiefly from the privilege every
-Russian has, without distinction, of crying out in
-public, <i>slowo dielo</i>; that is to say, 'I declare you
-are guilty of high treason, both in words and
-actions.' All the bystanders are then obliged to
-assist in arresting the person so accused; a father
-his son, and the son his father, while nature
-suffers in silence. The accuser and accused are
-at once conveyed to prison, and afterwards to
-St. Petersburg, where they are tried by the Secret
-Court of Chancery."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thanks to this pleasant state of society, the
-chambers and chains of Schlusselburg were
-seldom unoccupied.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Vlasfief was hollow-hearted, avaricious, and
-sensual; Tschekin, the Lieutenant, a slimy, cruel,
-reckless, and ignorant Muscovite; but old Bernikoff
-was really a character whom Balgonie equally
-dreaded and despised.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His subtlety and oppression had been the means
-of reducing, at different times, some thirty officers
-to the ranks, with permission to serve and work
-their way up again; and many more were now
-cursing him and their fate, at Irkutsk and remoter
-Siberia, for their inability to purchase his mercy
-or good-will. When commanding at Cronstadt,
-he had been detected once in the act of transmitting
-whole sledge loads of government shot, shell,
-lead, and ropes, across the frozen gulf for sale in
-Sweden; and also in buying at a cheap rate base
-denuscas to pay the troops: but so trusted was
-the old rascal by the Empress, that he always
-escaped the degradation, the hanging or shooting,
-which, on those discoveries, were so freely meted
-out to his subalterns.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the estate of Bernikoff a serf once amassed
-ten thousand roubles, and offered them for the
-freedom of his daughter, who was about to be
-married.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Let me see the girl!" was the reply.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As a serf can possess nothing, the father trembled
-in his soul at this demand, as his daughter,
-unfortunately for herself, was beautiful.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Holy Sergius!" exclaimed Bernikoff, "what
-business has a serf with ten thousand roubles;
-the girl and the money are alike mine!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And so he literally and lawfully seized them
-both.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though a savage soldier, like every old
-Muscovite, he was the slave of mechanical devotion.
-No statue or picture of the Holy Virgin, of
-St. Sergius, or St. Alexander Newski, was ever passed
-by him without a profound reverence and a sign
-of the cross. To such effigies he would address
-himself before he knelt even to the Empress:
-and before them he had been known to kneel and
-kiss the ground five minutes before or after he
-had knouted a miserable boor (whose pockets were
-empty), or nearly slain a soldier by making him
-run the gauntlet, for merely having the seams of
-his gloves sewn outward instead of in; for
-wearing his hat on the left side of his head instead
-of the right; or for some other offence equally
-heinous.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And it was on the staff of this distinguished
-officer (temporarily, however) that Charlie now,
-to his great disgust, found himself.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On three sides, far around this island prison,
-stretched the waters of Ladoga&mdash;the largest lake
-in Europe, being one hundred and thirty miles
-long, by nearly ninety broad; full of rocky isles
-and dangerous quicksands, over which, from its
-flat shores, sweep frequent and perilous storms.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From the somewhat dreary view of this small
-inland sea, whose northern and eastern coast could
-not be discerned, he turned to survey the fortress,
-with all its strength of gloomy walls, grated
-windows, and frowning cannon, till suddenly his
-eye was arrested by a very remarkable face, which
-was observing him from the sombre depth of a
-strongly barred and arched window of the great
-tower.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was a pale face, but singularly handsome&mdash;grave,
-and even sad in expression&mdash;a young man's
-face with the slightest indication of a moustache,
-but for which, in its paleness and extreme delicacy
-of feature and tint, it might have passed for that
-of a twin brother of Natalie Mierowna!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Suddenly it was detected by a Cossack sentinel,
-who shouted shrilly, and slapped the butt-end of
-his loaded musketoon: on this, the face instantly
-disappeared.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This was he concerning whom Balgonie had
-brought that terrible dispatch&mdash;Ivan, the deposed
-Emperor&mdash;the prisoner of Schlusselburg!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Twenty-three years!" thought Balgonie with
-a shudder; "twenty-three years in that tower&mdash;since
-his very babyhood&mdash;oh, it is terrible!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Other ears had heard the shout of the sentinel;
-for now a man, who in a boat had been fishing
-near the fortress, suddenly shipped a pair of sculls,
-and pulled away towards the town with an air of
-alarm that seemed equalled only by his dexterity.
-This fisher had been hovering about the fortress
-all day. "Can he be the gipsy&mdash;the half-breed?"
-thought Charlie: "ah! the dispatch is out of my
-hands now."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lieutenant Tschekin now approached with an
-invitation from Bernikoff to join him at dinner,
-adding, "remember that with the Colonel, eating
-is indeed a science, and temperance he views as
-mere want of spirit."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As they proceeded together through various
-archways and gates, the shrieks and entreaties of
-a man apparently in mortal agony rang through
-the echoing prisons with a horrible cadence, that
-chilled the free blood in Balgonie's veins.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A court through which they had to pass was
-crowded by soldiers, formed in hollow square,
-and Balgonie was compelled to linger and look
-on with Tschekin, who seemed rather to enjoy the
-spectacle.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Hah," said he, "the punishment is nearly
-ended&mdash;let us wait and see the <i>batogg</i>!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was a soldier being knouted, which is simply
-the Russian word for "whipped."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Stripped to the loins, he was strapped to an
-erect board, formed like an inverted cone, and
-having three notches at the upper end, one to
-receive his chin, and the other two his wrists,
-while the torturer wielded a knout, the handle
-of which is usually eighteen inches long with a
-thong of thirty-six inches. This is always boiled
-in milk, by which process it swells and the edges
-become sharp, hard, and more destructive.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The whipper was skilful: he laid on his lashes
-from the neck to the loins, so as to deal them at
-intervals of one inch artistically apart, leaving a
-stripe of flesh between each; but these regulated
-and omitted stripes, after receiving a fresh knout,
-he proceeded to take off in succession, with
-wonderful and terrible precision, till the man's
-entire back was a mass of blood, and he hung,
-fainting and well-nigh speechless, by the wrists.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, Excellency," he said, in an imploring voice,
-"remember that my brother, Alexis
-Jagouski, aided you in escaping from the battle
-of Zorndorff!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This was most true, but the story was a terrible
-one. At Zorndorff, where the Russians were
-defeated with such slaughter and driven towards
-the frontiers of Poland, the horse of Bernikoff
-was shot under him, and he was in danger of
-being cut down by the Prussian Hussars. In
-this sore extremity a Cossack named Alexis
-Jagouski took his leader behind him on his
-crupper; but that personage, finding that the
-double weight impeded the horse's speed, and
-that the Hussars were close behind, shortened his
-sabre in his hand, and plunging the blade into the
-body of his preserver, flung the corpse from the
-saddle, and escaped alone.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At this reminiscence Bernikoff only scowled
-more deeply; and now the lacerated back of the
-sufferer was strewed with coarse gunpowder, to
-which a match was applied. This is technically
-known as the <i>batogg</i>, and the agony it produced
-is indescribable.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The culprit was now cast loose, but was still
-able, according to the slavish usage of the country,
-to crawl on his hands and knees towards Bernikoff,
-and he gasped out:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Hospodeen&mdash;Excellency, I thank you humbly
-for this most merciful punishment."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Begone, dog of an Asiatic!" replied the
-governor, kicking him in the face; "when next
-you seek to fill your pipe, this will teach you
-to keep your filthy fingers out of my tobacco
-pouch."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-These were the defenders of their country, the
-Holy Russia, among whom a wayward fate had
-cast the Scottish palatine: the blood of the latter
-boiled within him; but he knew too well that to
-expostulate would be but to excite suspicion, and
-to court degradation and the musket. Something,
-however, in the expression of his face did not
-escape Bernikoff's keen and angry eyes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ivanovitch Balgonie, a superior can never
-act unjustly to his inferior," said he sternly; and
-these words terribly embodied the genuine spirit
-of the true Russian <i>Tchinnovnik</i>, or noble class.
-"I am in the service of the state," he added;
-"and the state is the Czarina!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yet this upright Governor, who knouted the
-poor Cossack for pilfering a pipeful of tobacco,
-had always a garrison double its actual strength
-on paper, the pay and rations of the men of
-straw forming a pleasant addition to his many
-secret perquisites, while his soldiers starved and
-frequently begged food from the very prisoners
-they guarded.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was neither hospitality nor love of society
-which had procured the honour of an invitation
-for Balgonie; but Bernikoff shrewdly suspecting
-that he might have some loose cash, resolved to
-possess himself thereof at cards; so barely was a
-dinner of <i>shee</i> (which is identically Scotch broth),
-croquettes, with <i>purée</i> of beet-root, beef in the
-Hussar style, with salad of baked beet-root and
-biscuits, dismissed, than champagne-cup, and
-vodka (or corn-brandy) punch became the order
-of the evening; and Bernikoff, who was a great
-gourmand, with his face flushed and his uniform
-open, after signing the cross and bowing thrice
-to a picture of St. Sergius, sat down to cards with
-Vlasfief and Tschekin, who were quite as sharp
-as himself, and with poor simple-hearted Charlie
-Balgonie, who dreaded to decline, circumstanced
-as he was on all hands; and who was glad
-when allowed to quit the table with the loss, he
-never could understand how, of twenty xervonitz,
-or pieces worth nine shillings sterling each.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Now, Vlasfief&mdash;'tis you and I; rouge-et-noir!"
-exclaimed Bernikoff, draining a goblet of
-vodka punch at a draught.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I am too weary to play, most excellent
-Colonel; pray excuse me," urged the Captain,
-who had lost considerably to his senior also.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You, then, Tschekin?" said Bernikoff savagely.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I hav'n't a kopec to spare, Excellency!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well&mdash;I saw a pretty housemaid at your
-mansion in the town yesterday&mdash;the daughter of
-a serf apparently."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Feodorowna?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Very likely&mdash;with red hair and brawn eyes."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ah! the same; she came with Madame
-Tschekin from the household of her father,
-General Weymarn."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"By all the devils, she is very like old Weymarn!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"She is the daughter of my old nurse, Colonel,"
-said Tschekin gravely, with an air of annoyance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I don't care whose daughter she is!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I'll put a hundred silver roubles on her."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Done! I put her on the ace."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The ace hath lost!" exclaimed Bernikoff,
-with a shout of laughter. "Holy Sergius! the
-girl is mine. To-morrow," he added, "I'll send
-a corporal and a file of men for her, with a
-covered kabitka. See that all her things are
-packed and ready, friend Tschekin, or write to
-your wife about it, and say you have lost her
-at cards."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The devil!&mdash;Excellency&mdash;this can't be."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Why? I won her fairly."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But the girl is about to be married to her cousin."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"<i>Was</i>, you mean; the cards have changed her
-destiny, like that of the serfs whom Vlasfief drank
-away in champagne last night."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So passed Charlie's first day at Schlusselburg.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap15"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XV.
-<br /><br />
-THE IMPERIAL PRISONER.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Fortunately for Balgonie, there was a chaplain,
-or priest, of the Russian Greek Church, attached
-to the fortress; and his society, at times, tended
-to alleviate what he endured from having to
-associate with such a human bear as Colonel
-Bernikoff,&mdash;an annoyance from which he would
-only be relieved by the longed-for return of
-General Weymarn and the Regiment of Smolensko
-to St. Petersburg.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The ceremonies of religion retain in Russia all
-their pristine influence, and afford the miserable
-and unlettered serf a short season of relaxation
-from labour and severity during festivals, when
-he may enjoy his can of fiery vodka and revel in
-intoxication. Unlike many of the Russian clergy,
-who adopt the cowl merely as the means of
-evading slavery in civil life, or slavery added to
-peril in the army, and also as a chance of attaining
-to power and nobility, Father Chrysostom, the
-Chaplain of Schlusselburg, was a humane, gentle,
-and learned old priest, whom the Commandant
-had been depraved enough to strike with his
-clenched hand on more than one occasion; but
-prior to doing so, he had always contrived, oddly
-and superstitiously enough, to have the chief
-badge of the father's sacred office, his baretta
-abstracted and hidden.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Through the good offices of the Chaplain, with
-the permission of the Governor, which was yielded
-very unwillingly, Balgonie (whose curiosity and
-commiseration were greatly excited) was presented
-one evening to the deposed Emperor Ivan,
-and the particulars and incidents of that
-interview made a deep and sad impression upon him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The entrance-door of the central tower was
-small, arched, and of great strength. Above it
-were carved the Russian arms, first adopted
-by Ivan Basilovitch in the sixteenth century: a
-spread-eagle, having on its breast an escutcheon
-bearing St. Michael and a dragon, with three
-crowns in chief for Muscovy and the two Tartar
-kingdoms of Kazan and Astracan.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On passing through a little paved court, grated
-over with iron, where the royal recluse was
-permitted to breathe the external air, while a
-sentinel trod to and fro above his head; another
-door-way, secured by a portcullis grooved into the
-wall, gave access to the narrow stair which led
-to his apartments. These were two in number:
-their windows and doors were all grated with
-iron; and sentinels, with loaded arms, watched
-every avenue by day and night.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His sitting-room was plainly, even neatly
-furnished: its chief ornaments being a pretty
-Madonna and some gaudy pictures of Muscovite
-saints; and it had one window, which opened
-towards the vast expanse of the Lake of Ladoga.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Pale, handsome, and resigned, gentle in eye
-and manner, the poor young Prince had grown to
-manhood in total ignorance of the outer world and
-of all he had lost. He knew only the four walls
-of the prison, the changing hues of the waves and
-clouds, the wild swans and the waters of Ladoga.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As related in our fifth chapter, the Prisoner of
-Schlusselburg was the eldest son of the Princess of
-of Mecklenburg, Elizabeth-Catharine, niece of
-the Empress Anne. His father was Anthony
-Ulric, Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbuttel, whose
-whole family was banished Russia by the
-usurping Empress Elizabeth.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The infant Ivan had been dethroned, after
-being a king for exactly one year.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-During the reign of the Empress Catharine,
-he was detained in Schlusselburg "under the
-denomination of a <i>Person Unknown</i>, and it was
-given out that his senses were impaired, though
-it is pretty well understood that this is without
-foundation." "His fate has been particularly
-lamentable," continues a newspaper of the period;
-"torn from the bosom of his family, he has now
-passed twenty-three years in close captivity. The
-late Empress Elizabeth, towards the latter end of
-her life, seemed disposed to treat this noble
-captive with clemency and favour, either from
-sentiments of justice and compassion, or to
-render two great personages more circumspect and
-submissive."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-These personages were her successors, the
-unfortunate Peter III. and Catharine II.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Ivan's mother is said to have died of grief; but
-Duke Anthony Ulric and his four other children
-were all confined for life in a house at Horsens, a
-town of Jutland, at the extremity of the Baltic,
-where they had a precinct of a mile English; but
-it was surrounded by high palisades, beyond which
-they dared not venture under pain of death; and
-there the Duke, old and blind, passed the last years
-of his melancholy life.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His youngest daughter, Elizabeth, "was a
-woman of high spirit and elegant manners,"
-according to Coxe, the traveller, who visited her;
-"she possessed portraits of her father and mother,
-and even contrived to procure a rouble of her
-brother Ivan, struck during his short reign. It is
-difficult to conjecture how she could obtain a coin,
-the possession of which was more than once
-punished by the Empress Elizabeth as high-treason,
-and it is still more difficult to imagine
-how she could secret it from the knowledge of
-her guards during her long imprisonment."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Confinement had rendered Ivan's features
-unnaturally pale and delicate; and, by years of
-systematic constraint and oppression, his fine, clear,
-and very beautiful dark eyes had a soft, subdued,
-and chastened expression, that was singularly
-touching and winning.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The tone of his voice was also gentle and
-alluring.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Hospodeen," said he, presenting his hand to
-Balgonie, "I rejoice to meet you, if one who leads
-a life so strange as mine can be said to rejoice;
-but you are one to whom I may talk a little
-without danger&mdash;eh, Father Chrysostom? And he
-has told me, Hospodeen, that you are not a Russian,
-but a native of some island that is far away
-in the sea. What are you? A Tartar&mdash;a
-Tcherkesse? Oh no, you cannot be either. I know
-them; for they guard me," he added, with a
-little shudder.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I am your friend, believe me, Ivan Antonovitch,"
-replied Balgonie, who was touched by the
-childlike simplicity of the poor recluse, who was
-plainly attired in a caftan of fine green cloth,
-edged with a narrow trimming of yellow fur;
-the square crowned cap, which he only wore
-when in the grated court, was of the same
-materials. A small gold cross was at his neck, a
-rosary of amber hung at his right wrist, and a
-little pipe, the only luxury allowed him, was
-dangling from one of his breast buttons.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When in his presence, Balgonie always thought
-with horror of the cruel tenor of the dispatch he
-had brought, and trembled for the result of his
-friends' conspiracy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To teach Ivan anything, even to read or to
-write, was treason; yet he had gleaned a little
-of his own history, and that of his family, from
-the casual remarks of his guards and from the
-Chaplain, during the long, long years of his
-captivity, the reason for which he failed to
-understand, but the system of which had become
-as a second nature to him; and the little he
-learned, made a deep, rather than a bitter
-impression upon him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The whole energies of each successive Chaplain
-had been given to preparing him for another
-and a brighter state of existence, and to turning
-his hope's and wishes towards it, rather than to
-this world, of which he was well-nigh weary if
-not utterly ignorant; and so much was he
-impressed by the uncertainty of human life in
-general, and of his own in particular, that daily,
-for years, he had seen the sun rise from the
-waters of Ladoga in doubt whether he would see
-it set; and nightly had he laid down his head
-without the assurance of being a live man in the
-morning.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Life had no charm&mdash;death no terror for Ivan.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In his visits, which were frequent, as the young
-Prince had conceived a great regard for him,
-Charlie Balgonie knew not upon what topics to
-converse; for he experienced great difficulty in
-fashioning his sentences and observations to suit
-a listener whose knowledge of the external world
-and of all the machinery of life was so limited.
-In those visits, Balgonie was always accompanied
-by the Chaplain, or Captain Vlasfief, as the
-watchful and suspicious Bernikoff would by no
-means permit them to have an interview alone.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I am so glad to have you for a friend,
-Ivanovitch Balgonie," the Prince would say
-sometimes; "though Father Chrysostom assures me
-that kings may have peers and soldiers, serfs and
-slaves, but, alas! they can never have a friend! I
-have heard my guards say that I was once a
-King&mdash;an Emperor; but I cannot remember when.
-It must have been long, long ago, as Russia has
-had four monarchs since. I have not even a dream
-of it&mdash;an Emperor? Yet I shall too probably
-die even as Demetrius did. I cannot remember
-even my mother; for they tell me that she died
-of sorrow, when I was brought here from a place
-called Moscow. Do you, Hospodeen, remember
-yours?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"When I was but a child she died, to my
-sorrow. Had she lived, I might not have been
-here in Russia to-day," replied Balgonie.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well&mdash;but you may remember," persisted
-the young Prince.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"True, your Highness; memories I have of
-a soft fair face that bent over my little bed at
-night; of one who kissed and hushed me to sleep;
-but those memories are faint or vivid, broken and
-uncertain, according to my mood of mind; and
-strange it is that they come to me more in dreams
-by night than thoughts by day, especially as I
-grow older."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I should like to have some such dreams, but
-then I have nothing to remember; I know not
-even my own age or when I came here," said Ivan
-thoughtfully. "If I do dream, by night, I seem
-to hear only what I hear by day&mdash;the voices of
-the Cossack sentinels, the screams of the sea-birds,
-the dashing of the waves when the wind crosses
-the lake, or the clanging of the castle bell. Then
-there are times when I dream that I see Demetrius,
-and then I awake in a cold perspiration.
-Tell me of the things that are being acted in the
-great world that lies beyond the Lake of Ladoga,
-for Father Chrysostom speaks to me only of
-Heaven."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It is said that the King of Prussia has agreed
-to the proposal of&mdash;of&mdash;the Empress, about the
-county of Wirtemberg, in Silesia."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How, agreed?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Count Biron is to have the estate as Duke of
-Courland, on paying eight thousand guineas to
-Field-Marshal Count Munich," said Balgonie.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Prince sighed with a bewildered air, for all
-those names were quite new to him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And who is Count Biron?" he asked.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A friend of the Empress," said Father Chrysostom
-rather hastily, to anticipate the reply of
-Balgonie.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Tell me something more. Nay, Father Chrysostom,
-don't chide us, pray," said he, seeing that
-the white bearded chaplain looked uneasy and rose
-to retire.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Conversation of this kind is strictly
-forbidden," said he; "and if Captain Vlasfief was
-here&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh!" exclaimed the Prince, with a shudder,
-but not of anger (he seemed too gentle for that
-emotion), "don't talk of Vlasfief I implore you.
-Pray tell me more news, Hospodeen; I shall learn
-all the names in time, and try to remember them."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"There are strange tidings from Warsaw,"
-replied Balgonie, who began to get bewildered
-and knew not on what to converse, if the most
-simple topics of the day were forbidden; "a
-battle has been fought at Slonim, between Prince
-Radzivil and the Russians, who defeated him
-after a five hours' engagement, and the Princess
-Radzivil, who is newly married and remarkably
-beautiful, fought on horseback among the Polish
-troops."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ah, Demetrius fought on horseback too," said
-the Prince, as if speaking to himself, and a gesture
-of undisguised impatience escaped the chaplain;
-"pray tell me something more, for no one ever
-speaks of such things to me."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A new theatre has been opened at St. Petersburg,"
-replied Balgonie (who thought to himself,
-"the devil is in it, if I cannot speak of <i>that</i>!"),
-"and there was represented an opera, entitled
-<i>Charles the Great</i>."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ah, I don't quite understand all that; say it
-again."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Indeed, Balgonie might as well have spoken of
-carbonic gas or the Atlantic cable, had he ever
-heard of such things; for the mind of the young
-Prince could not comprehend the most simple
-matters of every day-life. This was merely the
-result of his entire seclusion; but the adherents
-of the Empress, her favourites and lovers,
-industriously circulated through Russia the report
-that he was in a state of idiotcy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And this place that you spoke of?" he resumed
-enquiringly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The theatre?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes, Hospodeen; who lives in it?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"One of the actresses performed a magnificent
-cantata, in honour of the Empress."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ah! 'tis she, I understand, who keeps me
-here," said the Prince, with a sad smile; and
-now in real terror, and quite repenting the
-introduction he had brought about, Father
-Chrysostom rose to hurry Balgonie away.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As they were retiring, the Prince said:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Hospodeen, you have dropped something."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was the locket with Natalie's hair.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What is in this?" asked Ivan, with childlike
-interest.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A lock of hair, your Highness."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How odd! and you wear it, just as I wear my
-cross?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It is the gift, the souvenir of a lady I love,
-and who loves me: a countrywoman of your own."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A woman?" said Ivan, ponderingly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes, Excellency."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I have never looked upon a woman's face,
-and know not what it is like, though the Empress
-(whom God long preserve!) visited me when a
-child, as I have been told. I have heard that
-they are not bearded like men. I shall never see
-one, it is forbidden; yet&mdash;yet&mdash;as I often tell
-Father Chrysostom, I have dreams by day&mdash;dreams
-of something else than wild swans and
-bearded Cossacks&mdash;of something to cling to, some
-one to love and be loved by. It must be this kind
-of love you speak of&mdash;oh yes, it must!" said Ivan,
-as he gazed with stupid, but reverent wonder at
-the lock of hair, ere he returned it to Balgonie.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Poor young Prince!" exclaimed the latter, as
-the chaplain hurried him away, and the portcullis
-clanged behind them in its grooves of stone.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The priest now urged upon Balgonie, that if his
-visits were to be continued, the affairs of the outer
-world must in no way be referred to, or the result
-might be most disastrous for all concerned.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The seclusion in which the prisoner is kept,
-has, I fear, impaired his understanding," said
-Balgonie.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Hah! do you think so?" grunted Colonel
-Bernikoff, who overheard the remark, as they
-issued from the tower of Ivan. "You must know,
-that your genuine Russian is like a tiger, as some
-writer has it&mdash;a tiger who licks the hand of his
-keeper, so long as he is chained; but who tears
-him asunder when loose. The Empress quite
-understands this!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How is it that you intrust me so freely to
-visit your prisoner?" asked Charlie, who began
-to fear that Bernikoff might be laying some snare
-for him, by according this hitherto unwonted
-permission.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Do you really wish to know?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes, Colonel&mdash;why I in particular&mdash;I only?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Because you are the safest man in Russia to
-have this liberty."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"As a soldier of fortune,&mdash;a stranger among
-us,&mdash;you can have no sympathy with anything
-but the strict and steady execution of your duty;
-and the line of that," added Bernikoff, darting a
-keen glance at the Scot, "as with us all, lies in
-fidelity to the Empress."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"True," replied Balgonie, with something of
-sadness in his tone, and very little of enthusiasm.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Thus, were I to order you to blow Ivan
-Antonovitch from the mouth of a cannon, I should
-expect you to obey!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I trust that no such test of my obedience will
-ever be necessary," replied Balgonie, with a
-hauteur which Bernikoff was somewhat unused to see
-among his subordinates.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"We shall have some other and more troublesome
-prisoners in Schlusselburg ere long," said
-the Governor, with knitted brows.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Whom do you mean?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Old Count Mierowitz and his family. Warrants
-have been issued by the Chancellor to arrest
-them all."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"All!" said Balgonie, in a faint voice.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes, women as well as men: an escort of the
-Regiment of Smolensko arrived at St. Petersburg
-yesterday with the Count and the Hospoza Mariolizza.
-His daughter, who seems to be deeply involved
-in some plot, has for the time effected her
-escape. But they will soon be all before the Secret
-Chancery, and then the knout and the wheel will
-be at work with a vengeance!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The reader may judge how these and similar
-remarks affected poor Charlie, while the Governor,
-as if pleased that he could thus inflict pain, walked
-away with a malicious smile on his sombre visage,
-cramming tobacco into the bowl of his pipe.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There were times, however, when the captive
-Prince, after his acquaintance with Balgonie, was
-a little less resigned, and had strange longings to
-see something of the great world that lay beyond
-his prison walls, and the waves that lashed them;
-to see other faces than those of the fierce and
-bearded Tchernemoski and Volga Cossacks who
-guarded him; a longing even to do something
-great and daring, to be remembered in after years
-with love and reverence; to be remembered, as he
-said, "in tradition, like Demetrius." Then,
-feeling all the utter hopelessness of such new
-aspirations, he would strive to be contented, to repeat
-with fresh energy the daily prayers set for him
-by Father Chrysostom, and to be grateful for life,
-lest he should die even as Demetrius died.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Who is this Demetrius, of whom he constantly
-speaks, and whose fate he fears so much
-may be his own?" asked Balgonie one day.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It is an old, but a strange and terrible story,"
-replied the chaplain. "When Ivan Basilovitch
-died about the end of the sixteenth century, his
-widow was banished to Northern Russia by the
-new Czar Feodor, whose Prime Minister urged
-that he could never reign in peace or security
-unless he imitated the Turks by sacrificing all
-who were nearly allied to the throne; so he
-exiled his mother, as I have said, and ordered
-an officer to assassinate his younger brother
-Demetrius.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The officer, being a humane man, was filled
-with horror on receiving an order so barbarous;
-but fearing alike to disobey, or to leave the terrible
-task to be fulfilled by one less scrupulous, he
-took the child with him to a remote district,
-travelling many days' journey from Moscow. Then
-he wrote some words indelibly on the skin of the
-little Prince, tied a cross of brilliants about his
-neck, laid him at the door of a peasant's hut, and
-galloped away.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"To the tyrant Feodor he gave a circumstantial
-detail of how and where he had killed the
-infant Prince, and sought the promised reward.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Receive it <i>thus</i>!' replied Feodor, who plunged
-a sword into his heart, the further to suppress all
-proof of guilt.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The young tyrant died of a poison administered
-by his Chancellor, and others inherited his
-crown; but all to perish miserably in succession.
-And no less than four pretenders all appeared,
-each calling himself Demetrius, to contest for the
-throne; and all the land was deluged with blood.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Some twenty years after the alleged death of
-the brother of Ivan, a young Cossack of the Volga
-was bathing in that river with some of his
-companions, who saw with surprise that he had
-chained round his neck a cross of brilliants, and
-that certain words in the old Muscovite character
-were pricked upon his back. They were examined
-by a neighbouring priest and found to be&mdash;-
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- '<i>This is Demetrius, son of the Czar.</i>'<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-"Then all exclaimed that the true Demetrius
-had been found at last, and that a miracle from
-Heaven had saved him. His life was soon in
-peril, so he fled to Holstein, the Duke of which,
-after keeping him long in prison, sold him to the
-Emperor Michael, by whom he was savagely quartered
-alive. And it is the fate of this hapless heir
-of Russia, whose story he thinks in some points
-resembles his own (although he really knows but
-little of his own annals), that haunts the
-unfortunate Ivan in his gloomiest hours."
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap16"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XVI.
-<br /><br />
-THE TRATKIR.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-With evident suspicion and mistrust, Bernikoff
-viewed the growing intimacy between his prisoner
-Ivan and the Scottish Captain; and though he
-neither recommended that it should cease or
-interdicted it, as he might and perhaps ought to
-have done, he made many mental notes thereof.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though Balgonie sympathised with Ivan to
-the fullest extent, he knew too well the danger of
-doing more; and he felt that he had his own share
-of secret sorrow and anxiety, and might yet have
-greater to endure. The girl he loved with all the
-strength of a first and romantic passion was
-already a political fugitive; her father and cousin
-were prisoners, and perhaps in chains; her brother
-and his kinsman, Usakoff, already viewed as
-criminals; and with the terrors of despotism hanging
-over them all.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Natalie a fugitive&mdash;and where? In the wild
-forests, perhaps, where wolves and outlaws lurked:
-what perils and privations might she not be
-suffering! Natalie so delicate, so pure, so gently
-nurtured, and so highly bred.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Balgonie was aware, also, that intimacy with
-the family of Count Mierowitz, and the deep
-interest he had in their fate, was fraught with
-personal peril to himself in such a land of tyranny as
-Russia. Full of such thoughts as these one
-forenoon, he was leaning on a cannon in one of those
-deep embrasures of the fortress which faced the
-drawbridge communicating with the land. The
-guard was in the act of lowering the bridge to
-permit a man to pass out. This person was just
-parting from Bernikoff, with whom he had been
-for some time in close and earnest conversation,
-and from whom he was evidently receiving money&mdash;an
-unusual circumstance, as that distinguished
-field-officer generally lavished more kicks and
-cuffs than thanks or kopecs.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On beholding this man, as he bowed humbly,
-cap in hand, cross the bridge and disappear
-among the houses of the town beyond, Balgonie
-experienced a species of nervous shock. He could
-not doubt that this fellow, so gigantic in stature
-and powerful in muscular development, in the
-coarse caftan and leathern girdle, with the long
-lock of grizzled hair dangling behind his right
-ear, was Nicholas Paulovitch, the murderer of
-Podatchkine, the gipsy woodman, and the
-swindling mendicant of the barrier at the Neva.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"This man here in Schlusselburg," thought
-Balgonie, with indignation and alarm; "here in
-earnest conversation with Bernikoff! The spirit
-of mischief seems to pervade the air again!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A few minutes afterwards the Cossack Jagouski
-who, as related, had been so severely knouted by
-Bernikoff for pilfering a pipeful of tobacco, came
-forward with tottering steps, and looking
-painfully thin and feeble from recent suffering; and
-with the crouching bearing of the Muscovite
-towards a superior, said that his Excellency the
-Governor wished to speak with him in his
-quarters, whither Balgonie at once repaired, after
-having, as military etiquette required, buckled on
-his sword.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Carl Ivanovitch," said Bernikoff, who
-certainly had rather a perturbed air, "some
-suspicious characters are in our vicinity, and have
-actually been hovering in boats about the fortress.
-What think you of that?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Suspicious characters, Excellency&mdash;how?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"In a Tratkir of the town, one dropped this
-coin&mdash;a silver rouble of the prisoner Ivan&mdash;Ivan
-the Unknown Person. To possess one, unless as
-I do this, for proof of treason, is to court death
-or Siberia."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And from whom had you this?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A spy," replied the Colonel curtly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The man who has just left you?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The same."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Nicholas Paulovitch," continued Balgonie,
-with increasing astonishment at the other's
-coolness; "the assassin of the Corporal&mdash;the wretch
-of whom I told you when I first arrived here!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"All that may, or may not be," replied
-Bernikoff, with a stern air, almost amounting to
-rudeness: "when I require this devil of a fellow
-no more, you may impale him, if you please; but
-molest him not at present."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I do not see, Excellency, that all this in any
-way concerns me," said Balgonie haughtily, as he
-lifted his hat, and put his sabre under his arm,
-as if about to retire.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It does concern you thus far. I shall anticipate
-any attempt that be made by those lurkers,
-whoever they may be. You must remember,"
-he added, lowering his voice, "the tenor of the
-dispatch you brought me?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Perfectly," replied Charlie, in a somewhat
-faint voice, as he knew not how terrible or
-repugnant might be the duty assigned him by this
-military despot.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well, you shall pass forth into the town
-tonight, with a patrol of twenty men, armed with
-sabres and carbines. Surround and search the
-Tratkir in the main street, and compel all therein,
-who seem suspicious, to produce their papers; and
-if they are without such, bring them to me, and
-I shall question them, in a fashion of my own."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By the laws of Russia, at that time, persons
-could not travel from St. Petersburg, or even from
-place to place, without a passport, describing their
-occupation, appearance, and route, which they
-were not at liberty to alter; and in the rural
-districts, travellers required a pass from the lord
-whose estate they may have been upon, before
-they were at liberty to quit it. Without such a
-document, no one would dare to furnish them with
-food or shelter, nor could a postmaster give them
-horses, however high their rank, or great their
-of reward. [Transcriber's note: the rest of
-this paragraph illegible in scan.]
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And I am to take twenty men with me?" said
-Balgonie, after an unpleasant pause.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes! the bridge will be lowered for you after
-sunset. Whoever these lurkers are, they have
-been seen and overheard; and this coin is proof
-sufficient to warrant the transportation of a whole
-province. Be they who they may, by every dome
-in sacred Mother Moscow, they shall find me ready
-for them!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And Bernikoff grimly touched his small dagger,
-a species of weapon which a Russian officer is
-seldom or never without, even in the present day;
-and when Charlie Balgonie remembered how that
-same dagger had been thrust into the throat of
-the half-strangled Peter III., a flush of indignant
-hate and aversion crossed his honest face. To him
-it was evident that the spirit of mischief or
-malevolence made Bernikoff select him, as one whom
-he suspected of a friendly interest in the family
-of Count Mierowitz, for this unpleasant duty,
-instead of Captain Vlasfief, the Lieutenant of
-Schlusselburg, or any other officer, who must have
-been better acquainted with the adjacent town
-and all its places of entertainment, than he, a
-total stranger, could ever be.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But he was a soldier; he had no resource but
-to obey in silence; and an angry sigh escaped him,
-as he stuck his loaded pistols in his girdle, when
-the sun sank behind the green painted roofs of
-the wooden town, and the evening gun boomed
-from the ramparts across the Lake of Ladoga.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Defiling in the twilight through the streets of
-Schlusselburg, he marched straight to where he
-knew that the principal Tratkir, or tea-house,
-was situated; and while his heart sank within
-him in fear of <i>whom</i> he might arrest,&mdash;perhaps
-Natalie herself,&mdash;he at once surrounded the building,
-to prevent all egress, and to the evident alarm
-and perturbation of all who were within.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-These tea-houses are no longer to be found in
-the capital of Russia now, for there all the
-<i>restaurants</i> are constituted and arranged upon the
-French and German models; but they still exist
-in Moscow and elsewhere; and under their roofs,
-the genuine Muscovite consumes what would seem
-a fabulous amount of the Chinese plant. They
-are chiefly the resort of soldiers, porters, and
-droski drivers, all of whom must behave in a
-polite and orderly manner while there. All must
-enter the great room where the tea is served, cap
-in hand, alike out of respect for the company,
-and to the holy pictures, Souzdal daubs of
-SS. Sergius, Alexander Newski, and so forth,
-which decorate the walls; and all must salute the
-bar-keeper, after first saluting the Holy Image,
-which is to be found in every Russian apartment,
-and before which, a lamp of train oil is
-frequently burning.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When the crooked sabres of the dismounted
-Cossacks were seen flashing in the porch, and
-when Balgonie entered with his sword drawn,
-passing along the narrow way between the
-numerous tables, at which the groups were seated,
-amid an oppressive odour of strong tea, coarse
-tobacco, and Russian leather from boots, caps, and
-girdles; many a peasant in his canvas caftan, and
-many a stout moujik in his fur shoubah, felt his
-heart quail with apprehension, he knew not of
-what; and every saucer&mdash;the tea is not drunk
-from cups&mdash;was set down untasted, while one or
-two men nearly choked themselves with their
-lumps of sugar; for usually it is not put into the
-tea, but is retained in the mouth of the drinker,
-so that, in a spirit of economy, the poor Muscovite
-may indulge in two, perhaps three cups of his
-favourite beverage, and use thereto but one piece
-of sugar.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For his intrusion Balgonie apologised; this,
-though a very unusual proceeding in a country so
-despotic, failed to reassure the tea drinkers, who
-were all hushed in silence and expectation; and
-a girl who had been singing for their amusement,
-crouched down in a corner for concealment.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Balgonie counted the number of persons in the
-Tratkir, and noted the exact hour by his watch;
-he then proceeded, with a heart full of anxiety
-and dread, to examine each person in succession,
-in reality looking for those he had no wish to
-find.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All who possessed the requisite papers, showed
-them; others proved, all in succession, to be
-soldiers in uniform, moujiks, and droski drivers,
-with their brass badges, sailors, and serfs; thus,
-after a time, a load seemed to be lifted from the
-mind of the young officer. As he turned to leave
-the apartment without a prisoner, the Cossack
-Jagouski rather roughly dragged the singing girl
-from the nook where she had sought concealment,
-and then Balgonie recognised the fine dark face,
-the black eyes, and the large glittering ear-rings
-of Olga Paulowna, the gipsy girl whom he had
-befriended at Louga&mdash;she who saved him from a
-terrible fate in the forest.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Let the girl go free, Jagouski," said Balgonie;
-"I shall answer for her if required."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Olga drew a paper from her bosom and showed
-that it was her passport from the Commandant of
-Krejko, permitting her to travel to and from
-Schlusselburg.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Jagouski saluted and withdrew a few paces;
-and now, as if the cloud of doubt and dread
-Balgonie's arrival had cast over all was dispersed,
-again the noisy hum of voices pervaded the long
-room of the tea-house, and laughter even broke
-forth at intervals.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Olga," said Balgonie, "you here&mdash;so far
-from home?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes, Hospodeen, for my home is anywhere,
-or wherever night finds me; but I have news for you."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"News&mdash;and for me?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes," said she, sinking her voice to a whisper;
-"I have news of Natalie Mierowna&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Hush, for heaven's sake, girl!&mdash;hush!" said
-Balgonie with a nervous start.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"She is here&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Here in this house?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No, Hospodeen."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Where then?&mdash;oh, speak quickly!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"In the neighbourhood of Schlusselburg."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Charlie felt his heart die within him at this
-intelligence, for such a vicinity was full of peril.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Be to-morrow at noon on the road that leads
-to Tosna, and you shall learn more; but do you
-know it, Hospodeen?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I shall soon discover it&mdash;and the place?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The skirts of the wood four versts from this."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Good&mdash;till then, adieu; and God be with you."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Balgonie retired all unaware or heedless that
-his Cossacks were secretly jesting at his whispering
-with the pretty gipsy; and through the dark
-streets he marched them towards the great and
-sombre masses of the fort which loomed between
-him and the star-lighted sky, his heart the while
-being literally sick with alarm and dismay, in the
-conviction, that the long-dreaded crisis was
-coming&mdash;that Natalie was near, and the place of her
-concealment was known to a vagrant gipsy girl, the
-sister of Nicholas Paulovitch, who, if he knew it
-not already, might wrest the secret from her with
-the point of his knife, for the information of him
-whose spy he was&mdash;the hateful Bernikoff!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Ruin and sorrow were close at hand, indeed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On receiving the official but verbal report of
-Balgonie, and learning that the visit to the
-identical tea-house where the dangerous rouble was
-found had proved abortive, and that there was
-no one to be knouted or hanged in the morning,
-Colonel Bernikoff became transported with rage,
-and lifted his cane somewhat threateningly. On
-this, Balgonie's hand was instantly laid on the
-hilt of his sword.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Beware, Excellency," said he firmly: "a
-blow to an equal is a foul insult; to an inferior it
-is mean tyranny; and, in either instance, blood
-alone should wash it out."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On this the Colonel's rage assumed a new
-phase; he trod on his cocked hat, and ordered
-the wax candles which he had always burning
-before the image of his patron, St. Sergius, to be
-extinguished. He loaded the effigy with the
-bitterest reproaches, and for that night left the
-poor saint in total darkness, despite the
-intercession of Father Chrysostom.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap17"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XVII.
-<br /><br />
-THE WOOD OF THE HONEY TREE.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-The noon of the following day saw Charlie
-Balgonie&mdash;after an anxious and almost sleepless
-night&mdash;proceeding on foot along the road that leads
-southward to Tosna, a little town which stands on
-a stream of the same name, a tributary of the
-Neva, but some thirty versts distant from
-Schlusselburg.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His military ardour was already fading, so far
-as the Russian service was concerned, amid his
-pressing anxiety for the dangers that menaced
-Natalie; and he felt himself only a species of serf
-in an imperial uniform. Unlike the Admirals
-Douglas, Mackenzie, Count Balmaine, and hundreds
-of other Scotsmen who served the Empress
-by sea and land, he had thoughtlessly omitted to
-stipulate, as they had more warily done, that he
-was to be at perfect liberty, as a British subject,
-to return to his native land whenever he felt
-disposed to do so. The poor friendless boy&mdash;the
-kidnapped palatine, who had been rescued from
-the burning wreck of the <i>Piscatona</i>, while
-floating adrift in the North Sea&mdash;could know little how
-necessary such stipulations were when he joined
-the Regiment of Smolensko as a cadet; and now
-he felt himself literally a military slave of the
-ambitious and lascivious Catharine II.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Before him rose the tall fir trees of the forest
-where he was to meet Olga&mdash;the Wood of the
-Honey Tree, as it was named from an episode
-(related by Demetrius, the ambassador, in his
-History of Muscovy) which occurred to a serf of
-Bernikoff's, Alexis Jagouski, father of the same man
-whom he slew so wickedly and ungratefully in the
-flight from Zorndorf; and the whole anecdote reads
-so very like one of the adventures of Baron
-Munchausen, or Sir Jonah Barrington's "bounces,"
-that we may be pardoned translating it here.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"This man," says Demetrius, "when seeking
-honey, got into a hollow tree, where the bees had
-concealed such a quantity thereof, that it sucked
-him up to the breast, and being unable to extricate
-himself, he subsisted for two day upon honey
-alone, and finding that his shouts were answered
-only by the echoes of the vast forest, he began to
-despair of being freed from his sweet captivity.
-At last, to his terror, there came a large brown
-bear from the Neva, to eat of the honey which the
-old tree contained, and of which these animals are
-greedily fond. As the bear was descending with
-hinder part foremost, the poor serf caught hold of
-his loins. This sudden grasp among his fur so
-terrified the bear, that he started and fled, and in
-doing so, drew the peasant from that sweet prison,
-which otherwise had proved his grave: hence
-was the forest named, the Wood of the Honey Tree."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There, as Balgonie approached, all was still
-save the voice of the valdchnep, or woodcock, and
-the hum of insects; he lingered for a few minutes
-on the outskirts, just where the highway to Tosna
-dipped down into a deep and gloomy dingle of
-intertwisted branches, which formed a species of
-leafy tunnel overhead.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Three miles distant to the northward, he could
-see the place he had left, the gloomy Castle of
-Schlusselburg, moated round by the Neva and
-Lake of Ladoga, jutting into the latter on its rock,
-its towers wearing a sombre brown tint even in
-the noonday sunshine, as if no light could brighten
-them; and the white flag of Russia was fluttering
-on the summit of the keep, where Ivan was pining
-away the years of youth in silence and seclusion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Balgonie heard a voice waking the echoes of
-the dingle; three notes were struck on a
-tambourine, as a signal to him, and Olga approached
-singing a verse of that prophetic song, which is
-so soothing to Russian military and religious
-vanity:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- "But when the hundredth year<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Shall three times doubled be;<br />
- Then shall the end appear<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Of all our slavery.<br />
- Then shall the warlike powers<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;From distant climes return,<br />
- Egypt again be ours,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;While the Turkish domes shall burn!"<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-"I have kept my appointment, Olga," said he.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And I mine," she replied gaily, while
-tripping towards him in a playful manner; "now
-follow me, Hospodeen, and I shall take you to
-those who will be right glad to see you."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"First let us be sure that we are unwatched."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Right," said she; and stooping in her earnestness,
-her keen, dark, and glittering eyes swept the
-whole landscape that lay between the wood and
-Schlusselburg, and glanced keenly beyond the
-stems of the trees into the dingles and vistas; but,
-save the birds on the branches and the gnats
-revolving in the sunshine, no living thing was
-visible.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Follow me, Hospodeen," said the gipsy; "we
-have not far to go."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They descended into the dark dingle, or hollow,
-and then quitted the highway; Olga gathering up
-her skirts that she might tread with greater
-facility among the thick gorse and long rank grass,
-displaying, as she did so, two very handsome and
-taper ankles cased in scarlet stockings with
-elaborate clocks of yellow braid.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She explained to Balgonie that, as there was no
-path to guide them, her chief clues were a set of
-notches, cut to all appearance carelessly, as if
-with a woodman's axe, on the bark of the great
-pine trees.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"These marks seem fresh, and recently cut&mdash;who
-made them?" asked Balgonie.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The Hospodeen, Basil Mierowitz," she whispered.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Poor Basil!" responded Charlie, in a low tone.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After toiling through the dense forest for more
-than half an hour, pausing ever and anon to listen
-and watch whether they were observed, they
-arrived at the foot of a grey granite cliff, the face of
-which was screened, or nearly covered, by masses
-of depending ivy, creepers, and green lichens,
-forming a background which, at a little distance,
-blended with the greenery of the woods.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"We have arrived," said she, turning, with a
-flush on her dark face which made it radiantly
-beautiful. She struck three strokes on her
-tambourine, and shook its bells.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Charlie thought of her kinsman, Nicholas
-Paulovitch, and instinctively grasped one of the
-pistols at his girdle, on seeing the dark and
-bearded face of a man appear among the ivy
-leaves some twenty feet above him. A rope
-ladder was lowered, and whatever doubts or
-misgivings were in his mind, he felt himself
-constrained now to go through the adventure to its
-end.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He clambered up, and on the great screen of
-ivy being lifted aside, found himself face to face
-with his old friend Basil Mierowitz, the subaltern
-of his company, who, grasping both his hands
-with kindly warmth of manner, led him into a
-cavern or grotto, one of a series of many, into
-which the granite rocks had there been hollowed
-by some long past convulsion of nature.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Another hand was instantly laid on his,&mdash;a
-smaller and softer one,&mdash;and two beautiful dark
-eyes were bending tenderly on his face.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Natalie!" he exclaimed, in a tremulous voice,
-and would have pressed her to his breast, but for
-the presence of Basil and several other men.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Amid the twilight of the cavern, he could
-perceive its rough natural walls and arch, with
-hazy but sunny rays that streamed faintly in the
-background, athwart the obscurity, as if the vault
-communicated with other galleries in the rock,
-through which the upper light of day stole in by
-the crannies and chasms. He was also enabled to
-see, that with Natalie, her brother Basil, and her
-cousin Usakoff, who had been a Lieutenant of the
-Valikolutz Grenadiers, there were about twenty
-men in the place, all clad in sheepskin shoubahs,
-canvas doublets, or the caftan, the invariable
-dress of the Russian peasant, and nearly all had
-red serge breeches, rough boots, and girdles of
-rope or untanned leather.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though attired like woodmen or labouring
-serfs, all these men had unmistakably the bearing
-of well-trained soldiers: all were strong, active,
-and resolute in aspect; and Balgonie had no doubt
-that they were those natives of the Ukraine, the
-deserters from the Livonian frontier, of whom
-Bernikoff had spoken; for against the walls of
-the cavern were ranged a number of muskets and
-bayonets, with sets of accoutrements, sabres, and
-pistols. There, too, stood a regimental drum,
-decorated with the imperial arms, and the
-forbidden name of the Emperor <i>Ivan</i>!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Every moment seemed to increase the perils
-that surrounded the luckless Balgonie, for now
-he was in the very den of the conspirators.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All carried in their girdles a dagger or knife
-and double brace of pistols. They seemed to be
-chiefly soldiers of the Regiment of Valikolutz: and
-his sudden appearance among them, in the full
-uniform of the Smolensko Infantry, evidently
-excited, if it did not alarm them; for discipline
-becomes so completely a habit&mdash;a second nature;
-and, as if the presence of an epaulette rendered
-them uneasy, they all withdrew into the back
-or more obscure portion of the cavern, leaving
-him and their two leaders together.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh! Basil&mdash;Usakoff&mdash;my friends, if indeed I
-may yet dare to call you so, and live," said
-Balgonie, in a voice that was broken by emotion,
-"for what rash and dreadful purpose do I find
-you and these unfortunate fellows here?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You, and all Russia too, shall learn ere long,"
-replied Mierowitz calmly and sternly, yet with a
-grave and noble air, with which his coarse canvas
-caftan assorted oddly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And poor Natalie!" exclaimed Balgonie, in
-a tone of grief and reproach; "have you no pity
-for her?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Until Natalie informed me, I knew not, my
-friend, Carl Ivanovitch, that <i>you</i> were the bearer
-of that secret dispatch, which might have cost
-you limb or life, when it was too late to arrest
-those I had set upon your track."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well, certainly, I was not much indebted to
-the good offices of your rogue, Podatchkine."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The Corporal's orders were simply to abstract
-the document, and bring it to me; not to
-slay its bearer, unless such a catastrophe became
-unavoidable."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He fell into his own snare&mdash;a dark and deadly one."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Happily you escaped it; and I have saved
-two hundred silver roubles, for the service of the
-Emperor."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Who do you mean?" asked Balgonie, in a whisper.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ivan&mdash;the Prisoner of Schlusselburg!" exclaimed
-Usakoff, with enthusiasm.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Alas!" added Balgonie, "you court but your
-own destruction."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Think not so; but join us, and share our
-perils and our glory," replied the other.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I am bound by allegiance to the Empress."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You are but a tool in her hands, Carl Balgonie."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Perhaps so; but one with a devilish sharp
-edge, I hope," replied Balgonie, who felt only
-genuine sorrow; and a silence of nearly a minute
-ensued.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The manner and voice of Basil Mierowitz were
-singularly soft and winning, yet he was bold and
-resolute; and though a young man, he had all
-the free and easy bearing of a courtly soldier,
-blended with something of the calm severity of a
-priest&mdash;a manner that was very impressive.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Polish and Cossack blood that mingled in
-the veins of Apollo Usakoff gave a freer and
-bolder, perhaps a wilder, bearing and style of
-language; his nose was aquiline, and expressed
-fierceness of disposition; yet his features otherwise
-were essentially delicate and noble, and his
-eyes were strangely beautiful in colour and variety
-of expression. They were dark grey, encircled
-by a ring of light, clear brown; and when he
-spoke, or became excited, the iris contracted and
-expanded, as the blood flowed and ebbed in his
-fiery and enthusiastic heart, for he was a grandson
-of the Hetman Mazeppa&mdash;that Pole, whose story
-is so well known, and who, after being bound naked
-on a wild and maddened horse, to punish him for
-having an intrigue with a noble lady of his own
-country, was carried by his steed through woods
-and wastes, and herds of wolves and bears, into
-the heart of the Ukraine, where he lived to become
-the prince and leader of those wild Cossacks who
-dwell upon the banks of the Dnieper.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sleeping in a cavern, among rough soldiers, on
-a bed of dried leaves and moss, had not improved
-either the costume or the appearance of Natalie
-Mierowna. With pain and sorrow,&mdash;almost with
-agony,&mdash;Charlie Balgonie could perceive how her
-once rich dress of yellow silk, with its trimmings
-of narrow ermine, was faded and soiled&mdash;even
-tattered and worn; her laces and her soft hair
-alike dishevelled and uncared for; and that
-already had a hunted and haggard expression
-been imparted to her beautiful eyes, and soft, pale,
-delicate face. Anger and pride alone remained;
-but both were for a time subdued by the sudden
-presence of Balgonie, and the love she was compelled
-to repress outwardly, at least, when before
-so many eyes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Katinka, the sturdy Polish attendant, who
-loved Natalie dearly, alone seemed unimpaired
-by the hardships of a forest life.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Concerning the secret dispatch of the woman,
-Catharine Christianowna, to the Governor of
-Schlusselburg," said Usakoff, resuming the
-subject of conversation, "you, Carl, are perhaps
-aware of its contents?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes," replied Balgonie, and then paused.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Say on, my friend," said Usakoff; "we can
-hear anything now."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"They were to the effect, that a scheme had
-been formed to free the Unknown Person in
-Schlusselburg, and that he was not to be permitted
-to fall <i>alive into the hands of any one who
-came to seek him</i>."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Savage orders, which there can be no mistaking."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Orders which Bernikoff is quite capable of
-fulfilling," added Mierowitz in a sad and stern
-voice, while their listening followers burst into
-low and whispered, but fierce imprecations against
-the Empress.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Bernikoff is a man without one human sympathy,"
-said Basil.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And no marvel is it?" exclaimed Usakoff,
-while the strange light already described gleamed
-in his dark grey eyes; "his mother, like a true
-Tartar woman, is said to have anointed her
-breasts daily with blood, as she suckled him, even
-as Dion tells us the mother of Caligula did, that
-her child might, in manhood, be merciless."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Vlasfief they stigmatised as "the son of a
-goat," being originally a boy of the great foundling
-Hospital at Moscow, where, when the increase
-of children became so great that nurses could not
-be found, the lacteal food of animals was
-introduced, and a herd of goats adopted as
-wet-nurses for the establishment.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Carl," said Basil, taking the hand of Balgonie,
-"Natalie has told me all."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"All!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes&mdash;all that passed in Louga. Dear Natalie
-has never had a secret from me."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And you forgive me?" said Balgonie earnestly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I do&mdash;but on this condition."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh name it, Basil!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"That if you do not join us, you will, at least,
-not actively oppose our scheme."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I scarcely know what it is."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Know this then," replied the other emphatically,
-yet softly, "that on its success depends the
-success of your love; for if it fails, then all our
-lives are lost!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You say that you love my cousin Natalie?"
-said young Usakoff, in a somewhat loftier tone.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"With all my heart&mdash;with all my soul, I do!"
-replied Balgonie, pressing a hand of Natalie
-between his own.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yet, Carl, if you valued generosity and loved
-pity&mdash;if you loved glory and honour, as a soldier
-should, you would risk the loss even of <i>her</i>,&mdash;yea,
-give her up, if necessary,&mdash;and join us!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What would either life or glory be after such
-a sacrifice? Ah, my friend, you never loved
-as I do!" replied Charlie, with some irritation of
-manner.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Perhaps; but I have always thought how
-grandly terrible a figure was made by Mohammed
-the Great, when, on a stage, before his discontented
-army, he struck off the head of a favourite
-Sultana to convince his soldiers that he preferred
-glory to love."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Cousin, cousin," said Natalie, who felt all
-the peril and delicacy of her lover's position,
-"you talk thus to-day, when last night you shed
-tears&mdash;yes, bitter tears for the loss of your sister.
-We were all taken prisoners together, Carl&mdash;my
-poor father, Mariolizza, and I. Bound with
-cords,&mdash;see, the marks are on me still," she
-added, showing her white wrists, while her dark
-eyes filled with a dusky fire,&mdash;"we were conveyed
-in a covered kabitka towards St. Petersburg,
-on the way to which it broke down, in a
-wood near Paulovsk, not far from the outer walls
-of the imperial gardens. There, in the confusion,
-I was enabled to escape, by the aid of the gipsy
-girl Olga, who, hoping some such chance might
-occur, had followed us afoot from Louga; and
-through her further knowledge and assistance, I
-was enabled to join my brother Basil here."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My dear old father&mdash;and my soft and tender
-Mariolizza&mdash;a blow must be rapidly struck, if we
-would save them from greater horrors than those
-they now endure!" exclaimed Basil: "the die
-has been cast now; and if I cannot save them
-and our legitimate Emperor, we can at least all
-perish together."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Dangers menace you closely; the roads
-around the fortress are patrolled, and gun-boats
-watch the shores of the lake. A coin of Ivan
-found in a tea-house&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Malediction&mdash;yes! 'twas I, Carl, who dropped
-it there," exclaimed Basil: "well, and this
-coin?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Has roused all the suspicions of Bernikoff;
-and he knows that you and your cousin have
-deserted from your posts in Livonia."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Already, does he know of this?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes, with many other details."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Then," replied Basil Mierowitz, with growing
-sternness, "we have not an hour to lose. Who
-informed him?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Lieutenant-General Weymarn, by a special
-messenger, while I was loitering at Louga."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"So, so! By our Lady of Kazan, we must be
-prompt in action. I have cruised thrice round
-Schlusselburg disguised as a fisherman, and know
-well all the approaches."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Basil, Usakoff, I implore you by all you hold
-dear on earth and sacred in Heaven to pause while
-there is yet time&mdash;to abandon your wild scheme,
-and make your peace, if possible, with the Empress."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You were right to add 'if possible,' my
-friend," replied the other calmly but bitterly.
-"Already compromised by desertion, my father
-and betrothed wife chained in a fortress by the
-Neva, what terms would Catharine offer us?
-Carl Ivanovitch," he added, with a lofty smile,
-"I do not press you to join us, or seek to
-lure you into the dangers of an enterprise the
-enthusiasm of which you cannot share. I do not
-seek even to turn your presence as a trusted staff
-officer in Schlusselburg to account, though it
-might further our objects, and be the means,
-perhaps, by strategy, of saving many a valuable life.
-Still less do I desire to turn to account your
-intimacy with the young Emperor Ivan, though I
-envy you that great privilege. Even in the love
-I bear my sister (though it might tempt you to
-cast your lot with us&mdash;<i>with her</i> shall I say?), I
-leave you unquestioned and free."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I thank you, Basil," said Balgonie sadly, and
-with a heightened colour, caused by irrepressible
-annoyance at the last remark of Mierowitz.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But we have all sworn before the altar of our
-Lady of Kazan, and the image of St. Sergius, to
-devote our lives to the matter in hand; so
-retreat is impossible&mdash;advice and entreaty alike
-unavailing."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Balgonie felt an acute pang on hearing this;
-for he knew that in Russia no place was esteemed
-as more holy than the church of our Lady of
-Kazan in St. Petersburg. Around its shrine&mdash;the
-<i>sanctum sanctorum</i> of which no woman has
-ever entered&mdash;are the keys of conquered cities,
-the banners of a thousand slaughtered armies, and
-the batons and sabres of their leaders, the
-Frenchman, the Turk, the Pole, the Persian, and the
-Dane, the Swede and the German; and he knew,
-too, that no image, to the Muscovite mind, is more
-sacred than that of St. Sergius&mdash;the same absurd
-idol which the Kazan column bore with them at
-the battle of the Alma, and displayed in vain to
-the advancing bayonets of old Sir Colin's
-Highland Brigade.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The blow once struck," resumed Basil, "we
-shall be joined by the Cossacks of the Ukraine and
-the Don, among whom we have many impatient
-adherents, and by all who hold of the Houses of
-Brunswick-Wolfenbuttel, of Holstein Grottorp,
-and of all who hate Anhalt Zerbst; all Russia
-will soon follow, from the shores of the Black Sea
-to those of the White&mdash;from Revel to the Ural
-Mountains. We have not forgotten the reign of
-Elizabeth: how many noses were slit, how many
-foreheads were branded, how many ears cropped,
-and tongues shortened, and how many eyes were
-darkened for ever during that time of tyranny;
-how many backs flayed by the knout; how many
-nobles banished to Siberia, or drowned in prison
-vaults by the swollen waters of the Neva. Pure
-nationality is dying now; but we must revive
-Russia&mdash;not as it is ruled by a lascivious woman
-and her jealous lovers, but Holy Russia of Peter
-the Great&mdash;strong, invincible, and the terror
-alike of the Eastern and Western world. Let us
-save our country from those who oppress it, and
-replace upon its throne the Grand Duke, the
-Czar&mdash;the Emperor Ivan; for the right given by God
-and by inheritance can never be destroyed!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A murmur of applause from his followers
-succeeded this outburst (which we can render
-but feebly in English), and they clashed their
-weapons in approval, while, fired by her
-brother's energy, Natalie sung a verse of a
-well known Russian song:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- "Now, as of old, the sabre's ready,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And its might they'll feel afar,<br />
- When but three short words are utter'd,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;God, our Country, and the Czar!"<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-"Without cannon, you cannot mean to assault
-a place so strong as Schlusselburg, fortified as it
-has been by all the skill of Todleben?" said
-Balgonie, after a pause.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ask me not what we mean to do, Carl: for
-your own sake, my dear friend, the less you know
-of us, and of our plans, the better. We shall
-come upon you all when you least expect us, and
-in that hour take no heed of what you see or hear.
-Mix yourself up with it as little as you can: if we
-fail, we perish in our failure; if we triumph, and
-Ivan is replaced upon his throne, be assured that
-Basil Mierowitz will not forget the lover of his
-sister&mdash;the comrade of many a brave and happy
-day with the Regiment of Smolensko. Now
-adieu&mdash;and come hither no more, lest your steps be
-watched."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Balgonie pressed the hands of his two friends,
-whom he viewed as fated and foredoomed men;
-he kissed Natalie with a tenderness that was alike
-sorrowful and despairing, for he trembled in his
-heart lest he should never see her more; and, in
-another moment or so, like one in a bewildering
-dream, he had descended the rope ladder, and was
-traversing the forest&mdash;the Wood of the Honey
-Tree&mdash;forgetful or oblivious of whether he was
-watched or not.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He foresaw but woe and ruin now; and proceeded
-slowly back to Schlusselburg, with his
-mind a prey to doubt, anxiety, and dread of what
-might be the sequel to the impending catastrophe.
-He felt assured of one thing only&mdash;that a deed,
-bold, reckless, and desperate, would be the result
-of his friend's desertion from Livonia, their
-political rancour, and personal desire for vengeance
-on the Empress and her favourites.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In that deed, and its too probable failure, he
-foresaw the destruction of his love; and he felt
-bitterly that rather than have known and lost
-Natalie, it would have been better had fate
-drowned him when the Palatine ship was burned,
-or shot him when warring in Silesia!
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap18"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XVIII.
-<br /><br />
-DOUBT AND DREAD.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Nearly all the events which followed the secret
-visit of Balgonie to the conspirators will be found
-in the more recent histories of Russia, and in the
-manifestoes published by the Empress Catharine
-at the time&mdash;especially her <i>oukaz</i> subsequent to
-the revolt of Basil Mierowitz.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On returning to Schlusselburg, Balgonie found
-the Governor, Colonel Bernikoff, in a very bad
-humour indeed. The Grand Chancellor had
-recently sent him a prisoner, with a note to the
-effect that he wrote verses, and was otherwise a
-dangerous fellow&mdash;to keep him for a week or two,
-and then get rid of him. He had thrice sent to
-the Chancellor, to learn under what name the
-man was to be <i>buried</i>, for the fellow was dead
-now&mdash;so much had the damp atmosphere of the lower
-vaults disagreed with his poetical temperament;
-but no answer had been returned, which was very
-annoying. So Bernikoff, whose patience was
-never very extensive, was furious; but he strove
-to soothe his ruffled feelings by several enormous
-pinches of the sharp snuff of Beresovski, from the
-box which&mdash;as we have before hinted&mdash;had been
-found in the fob of the late Peter III.; and by
-batooning, or beating with his cane, the Cossack
-Jagouski, whom he had suddenly detected in the
-act of praying secretly before the little image of
-St. Sergius, which was his&mdash;Colonel Bernikoff's&mdash;own
-peculiar and particular property.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By the old laws of Muscovy, to be found worshipping
-at an image, erected by, or the property
-of another, designing thereby to have a share in
-the favour of the saint it represented, without
-being at any expense, was punishable by a fine, to
-refund "the owner some part of the money laid
-out for the said image;" but as the poor Cossack
-had not a copper denusca wherewith to bless
-himself, the Governor took it out of his back and
-shoulders (scarcely healed after his recent
-knouting), with the aid of a knotted walking cane.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'To steal and to lie,' according to Bulharyn,
-a famous Russian writer, 'are the two auxiliary
-verbs of our language,'" said the Colonel, panting
-with exertion, as the Cossack crept away with a
-glance of subdued ferocity in his stealthy eyes;
-"we take all that for granted; but this slave
-has been stealing the interest of my saint for
-himself!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He ordered an extra supply of wax candles to
-be lighted before the image, and then he knelt,
-bowed, and muttered:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Holy St. Sergius, heed not the prayers of that
-rascal, he is only a vile serf, a slave, a Cossack from
-the Ukraine. Thou hast been very good to me, and
-shalt be treated handsomely. Candles of the finest
-wax shall burn before thee all night. I will love
-and pray for thee, so do thou protect and intercede
-for me, most holy Sergius!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And so he prayed till the dinner drum beat; and
-then, muttering an oath as he tripped over his
-sabre, the old savage hobbled away, to commit at
-least two of the seven deadly sins at table.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No tidings yet, Carl Ivanovitch, of those
-traitors!" said Bernikoff, when he had somewhat
-recovered his breath, after a deep draught of
-quass, the froth of which adhered to his grisly
-mustachio: "the Captain Vlasfief, and my faithful
-friend Tschekin, with forty picked Cossacks, and a
-clever guide&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Nicholas Paulovitch, I presume."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The same," continued Bernikoff, with a fierce
-grimace on his lips and a cruel leer in his eyes, as
-he masticated a huge mouthful of green borsch
-with beef and eggs; "the same, sir,&mdash;and what
-then?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Nothing, Excellency: but this oukha of
-sterlet is excellent. Well, these and the forty
-Cossacks&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Are scouring all the roads between this and
-St. Petersburg on one flank, and between this
-and North Ladoga on the other; so the cursed
-Asiatics cannot escape me."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Who will betray them to you?" asked
-Balgonie, making a terrible effort to appear calm
-and unconcerned, as he played with his sword
-knot and the tassels of his sash, and forgot to eat.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Who?" exclaimed Bernikoff, grinding his
-teeth, and eating very fast. "Their own
-friends&mdash;their own dear comrades&mdash;adherents, which
-you will. Russia is full of people, yea of many
-nations. The Empress can reckon her faithful
-slaves by millions; yet, when a Russian hath his
-hat on his head, its rim contains the only friend
-on whom he can rely."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"This is a severe libel on your country surely,
-Excellency."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Tis truth though; so Basil Mierowitz,
-Usakoff, and the rest, are all doomed men. No
-one was ever lost on a straight road; thus the
-soldier who diverges from the straight line of
-duty must speedily find himself face to face with
-degradation and death. Punishment to those
-traitors will be swift and sure! So, I only fear
-that the Grand Chancellor will never give me the
-pleasure of having them under my judicious care
-in Schlusselburg. We have certain old vaults,
-built below the tide mark by Ivan the Terrible,
-for some of those people of Novgorod who leagued
-with the King of Poland. They are always full
-of fog; and I am curious to know how long an
-able-bodied prisoner might live there, or rather
-how long he would be in dying. But excuse me,
-Hospodeen, I confess me to-morrow, and there
-rings the bell for vespers already;" and making
-many Greek signs of the cross and other
-genuflexions, Bernikoff, after having gorged himself
-at table, hurried away to the chapel, where
-Father Chrysostom officiated.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Charlie gladly sought the solitude afforded by
-the stockades and outworks of the fortress on the
-side towards the Lake of Ladoga. There, as
-elsewhere, was of course, a chain of sentinels; but
-they did not interrupt his lonely communing with
-himself.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By his interest in Natalie, by his deep love for
-her, and more than all, perhaps, by his recent
-visit and interview, he already felt himself "art
-and part" (to use a Scottish legal phrase), or
-<i>particeps criminis</i>, with the rash adherents of Ivan.
-If one of these deserted the cause in which they
-had embarked, then would their lurking place be
-at once discovered, and the story of his recent
-visit be revealed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He dreaded lest Bernikoff and others suspected
-his friendly interest in the family of Count
-Mierowitz, and that more might yet be learned of
-it; thus he would have experienced neither shock
-nor surprise, had he, at any hour, in that land of
-treachery and espionage, seen either Captain
-Vlasfief, Lieutenant Tschekin, or any other officer
-of the fortress, advancing towards him sabre in
-hand, with an armed party, to demand his sword,
-to make him a prisoner, and march him off to the
-same prison which already held the old Count and
-Mariolizza, the innocent betrothed of Basil, and
-might soon hold another, who was dearer
-still&mdash;Natalie!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"If I love her," he would say to himself at
-times, "why should I shrink from sharing all that
-she suffers now&mdash;all she may yet endure? Yet
-it would be wiser to watch well for her sake, and
-seek to save, or bear her away; but how&mdash;and
-where to?" was the next bewildering thought.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And the generous Basil, the fiery and chivalrous
-Usakoff, oh that he might save them too!
-He mourned for Usakoff, who was the very soul
-of honour and heroism, the worthy grandson of
-that Mazeppa who, when Charles the XII. was
-retreating from Pultowa, swam the Borysthenes
-by the side of the fugitive king, and of whom
-the latter said in the words of the bard;&mdash;
-</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;"Of all our band,<br />
- Though firm of heart and strong of hand,<br />
- In skirmish, march, or forage, none<br />
- Can less have said or more have done<br />
- Than thee, Mazeppa! on the earth<br />
- So fit a pair had never birth,<br />
- Since Alexander's day till now,<br />
- As thy Bucephalus and thou;<br />
- All Scythia's fame to thine should yield,<br />
- For pricking on o'er flood and field."<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-So worthy of such an ancestor, was he, too, to
-perish?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This was, indeed, a miserable mood of mind in
-which to pass the nights and days of inactivity&mdash;of
-suspense and anxiety in which none could
-share, in that strong, guarded, and somewhat
-lonely fortress, which was washed, as we have
-said, on one side by the Neva, and on the
-other by the Lake of Ladoga, the very ripples of
-whose waves sounded hatefully in the ears of
-Balgonie.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh," thought he, "to be with Natalie on the
-side of a green and breezy Scottish mountain&mdash;on
-any part of the shore of free and happy Britain! to
-be with her there in peace and security, far,
-far from this land of suspicion and ferocious
-despotism, of state intrigues and savage punishments,
-where every second man is the spy upon,
-and the betrayer of, his fellow."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Britain he might never see more: and now he
-found himself vaguely speculating on the
-probable comforts and public amusements afforded
-by Siberia, and those growing cities of the
-sorrowing and the banished, Tobolsk and Irkutsk,
-on the banks of the Lower Angara.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He feared to look much, or often, towards the
-distant Wood of the Honey Tree, lest watchful
-eyes might be upon him to gather hints therefrom;
-still more did he fear to visit Natalie again,
-lest, by doing so, he might lead to the discovery
-and arrest of all: so the days and nights of dread,
-of longing, and suspense, passed slowly after each
-other now.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The barriers of rank and wealth&mdash;the wealth
-afforded by the Count's estates and mines, his
-populous villages of serfs, and vast forests of
-timber&mdash;had all been removed now, and Natalie
-was reduced to a level lower even than her lover's;
-yet he cursed the mad schemes that had brought
-about such a revolution, and tossed feverishly and
-sleeplessly on his bed, when he thought of Natalie
-Mierowna,&mdash;his own loving and beloved Natalie,&mdash;so
-delicate and so tender, with her white soft
-skin and silky hair, her earnest and beautiful eyes,
-lurking among stern and outlawed soldiers in
-yonder damp cavern of the rocks, upon her bed
-of leaves and moss, at the mercy, perhaps, of any
-adherent of Basil's, who, to save his own head,
-might prove a traitor to them all! This dread
-was ever before him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The whole affair reminded him of some of the
-old Scottish raids or Jacobite plots, of years long
-passed away; and it was fated to resemble the
-former more strongly in some of its features, as
-the dark sequel will show.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The guards and sentinels at Schlusselburg were
-doubled; the patrols were incessant by land,
-while on the lake the gun-boats of Admiral
-Mackenzie cruised near the walls; the cannons
-were loaded; the watch-words changed sometimes
-twice within four-and-twenty hours; and
-the general state of preparation for a sudden
-attack was unremitting: but time passed on
-quietly until the night of the fifteenth of
-September, when the crowning catastrophe came.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap19"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XIX.
-<br /><br />
-THE NIGHT OF THE 15TH SEPTEMBER.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-The past day had been unusually gloomy for
-the season. The sun had set in fiery clouds
-beyond the spires of St. Petersburg. The night was
-without a moon, and a strong east wind rolled
-the waters of Ladoga in billows of inky hue
-against the massive walls of the fortress in foam
-and fury on one side, while on the other, the
-waters of the Neva, swollen by recent rains,
-gurgled and chafed round the mouldy and
-moss-grown piers of the drawbridge.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The wind moaned with a sullen sound past
-the mouths of the cannon, and whistled drearily
-through the deep embrasures and the loopholes for
-musketry in the casemates. Thunder had been
-heard at times, but afar; Elias, as the Russians
-poetically phrase it, was driving his chariot
-among the stars. Lightning had reddened all
-the lake, and cast the weird shadow of the castle
-athwart it for an instant; and, that a complete
-and melodramatic omen of impending evil might
-not be wanting, a huge sea-bird had perched upon
-the castle clock, and forcing round the hands,
-struck midnight four hours before the proper time.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Since morning roll-call, Jagouski, the knouted,
-beaten, and ill-used Cossack, had been missing;
-he had quitted the fortress on some trivial
-pretence and had not since returned; patrols had
-seen nothing of him. Then Colonel Bernikoff
-was more than ever on the alert; but Balgonie,
-who now deemed anything better than the torture
-of suspense, had gone weary and feverishly to
-bed, to court for a time the happiness of oblivion,
-after having spent nearly the entire day upon the
-lake with an armed boat's crew, patrolling by
-water.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From sleep, however, a sudden sound aroused
-him: he looked at his watch, and saw that the
-hands indicated twelve o'clock, midnight.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-What had he heard?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In another moment the sound came again&mdash;the
-drums were beating to arms! He heard the
-clamour of hoarse Muscovite voices in court and
-corridor; the clanging of the castle bell; and
-he saw the gleam of torches reddening the old
-black walls and towers, and flaring on the grated
-windows as they were borne to and fro.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His heart was beating with wild anxiety as he
-threw on his staff uniform, belted his sabre about
-him, placed his pistols in his girdle, and hurried
-forth to meet&mdash;it might be to cross blades&mdash;with
-the only friends he had in Russia!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As he crossed the castle-yard by torchlight, he
-could perceive that the Cossacks, clad in their
-short blue jackets, red loose breeches, short boots,
-and tall, black, woollen busbies, were falling into
-their ranks with musketoon and sabre; and that the
-gunners were standing by their cannon with port-fires
-lighted: the latter casting a pale, ghastly, and
-unearthly glare upon the yawning embrasures, the
-walls of the fortress, and on their own stolid
-visages, which were pale and cadaverous as those
-of people usually who are hastily summoned from
-sleep in the night.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As a staff officer who had no particular post,
-Charlie Balgonie knew that his duty attached him
-chiefly to Bernikoff, whom he now met hurrying
-forth in uniform, with a great cocked hat thrust
-angrily over his cunning and twinkling eyes,
-which were sparkling with anger, while every
-hair of his grizzled mustachioes, though these
-were long and snaky, bristled with excitement.
-There was a dangerous pallor in his visage; his
-square jaw looked still more tiger-like in contour,
-as his teeth were clenched; and he had his sabre
-drawn.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By his side were his two favourite brother
-officers, who in face, form, and bearing, bore
-indications of being each, originally, a serf of the
-lowest, basest, and most unthinking kind&mdash;Captain
-Vlasfief, cruel and hollow-hearted, with his
-unfathomable smile; and Lieutenant Tschekin,
-the slimy, savage, and unscrupulous Muscovite.
-With these came several officers of the Cossack
-guard, with their elevated eyebrows, black
-mustachioes, their keen features, the plumes and
-cockades in their black fur caps, and their glittering
-costumes, forming altogether a striking and
-picturesque group, when seen by the light of several
-torches, which streamed through the deep and
-small arch, or doorway, of the keep in which Ivan
-was confined.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The portcullis of this tower was up; and Balgonie
-could perceive its row of lower bars, like a
-line of black fangs in an open jaw, between him
-and the outline of the lighted archway.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What is the matter, Colonel Bernikoff,"
-asked Balgonie; "what is the cause of all this
-alarm?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Matter enough! We have had an <i>alerte</i>&mdash;the
-place seems to be invested by troops&mdash;Infantry of
-the Line, by all the devils&mdash;the head of a
-column&mdash;look for yourself, Balgonie!" exclaimed
-Bernikoff, with an oath.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To omit the Christian name of a person addressed,
-and that of his father also, is a direct
-insult in Russia; but Balgonie heeded it not then.
-He hurried to the curtain wall which faced the
-landside, the outer gate, and drawbridge, and then,
-by the light of a torch, he could see that which
-certainly seemed to be the head of a column&mdash;a
-front rank of nearly fifty men, clad in the hideous
-uniform then worn by the Russian army, before it
-was altered, a few years after, by the superior taste
-of the notorious Major Semple Lisle, a Scottish
-adventurer,* who was well known as a lounger
-about St. James's Park, London, in 1804. Their
-coats were green, lined and faced with red, very
-tight in the body, with preposterously long skirts,
-tight breeches, and boots to the knee, with small
-cocked hats, having long flannel flaps to cover the
-ears in winter.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="footnote">
-* <i>Vide</i> "Life of Major J. G. Semple Lisle, written by himself.
-London, 1800. Printed for W. Stewart, 194, Piccadilly."
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-By the light of the same torch, Balgonie could
-see the bayonets fixed, and that two officers, with
-their sabres drawn, and a drummer, were in front
-of their little line. Having possession of the parole
-and countersign, which, no doubt, had been betrayed
-to them by the absent Jagouski, the whole
-party had contrived to delude the <i>Putparooschick</i>
-(sub-lieutenant) in charge of the outer guard, and
-were now past the first barrier, and had actually
-taken possession of the drawbridge, which they
-had lowered across the Neva. The gate and guns
-of the second barrier were yet to be forced or
-passed; and thus these midnight visitors were in a
-species of trap.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Too well could Balgonie recognise in the two
-officers&mdash;Basil Mierowitz, wearing the familiar
-uniform of the Regiment of Smolensko; and
-Usakoff, in the gay trappings of the Grenadiers of
-Valikolutz; and now, for the second time, their
-drummer beat a <i>chamade</i>, or summons for a parley,
-but as yet there was no response.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Balgonie hastened after Bernikoff and the other
-officers. They had now ascended to the chamber
-of the unfortunate Ivan, from whose presence
-they had somewhat roughly expelled the chaplain,
-Father Chrysostom. On entering, he found
-that the royal recluse had sprung from bed,
-inspired by natural alarm, on finding his chamber
-suddenly entered at midnight, and full of armed
-men; but Ivan manifested no indignation&mdash;he
-was too gentle, too subdued, and completely
-broken in spirit for that.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His singularly beautiful face was very pale;
-there was a strange calmness in his manner; and
-whatever he thought or anticipated, there was
-more of calm inquiry than of fear in his tone and
-in the expression of his fine soft eyes. Over his
-night-dress he had thrown a <i>robe-de-chambre</i> of
-fine scarlet cloth edged with white ermine; and in
-this attire, with his long hair and delicate features,
-so chastened in expression by long solitude and
-complete seclusion from the outer world, he seemed
-more like a tall handsome woman, than a young
-man of three and twenty years.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What is this you tell me, Colonel Bernikoff,"
-he was asking, as Balgonie entered; "my unhappy
-life threatened say you?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Even so," said Bernikoff hoarsely, while
-averting his stealthy eyes from the young man's
-open and earnest face; "even so, Ivan
-Antonovitch; but your death will not be of our
-seeking."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Whose then, whose then?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Your friends."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, what dreadful paradox is this?" asked
-the Prince calmly; "must I die, even as
-Demetrius died?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes," replied the other hoarsely.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And wherefore?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"There are those without the gates who seek
-you, and you must not fall alive into their hands,"
-said Captain Vlasfief sternly, as he felt the point
-of his sabre with a finger.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Alas! I do not understand who can come to
-seek me!" replied the poor Prince, shuddering
-now, while an expression of horror began to
-spread over his fine face,&mdash;a horror gathered
-from the fierce and relentless aspect he read
-in the visages of those around him,&mdash;and he
-withdrew a pace or so towards his bed, saying,
-in a touching voice:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ah, do not leave me, good Colonel Bernikoff,
-or at least give me a sword&mdash;a sword&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Fool&mdash;child&mdash;dolt! thou with a sword, and
-for what purpose?" thundered Bernikoff, as he
-sought to lash himself into the requisite pitch of
-fury; "for what purpose, I say?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"That I may defend myself."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Tis needless," said Tschekin, with a cold
-smile; "we shall take every care of you."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, Carl Ivanovitch Balgonie, my friend, my
-good friend! you I can trust&mdash;you I can
-command&mdash;come hither, and remain by my side,"
-said the Prince, in an imploring accent, as a
-solemn foreboding came upon him when he saw
-the sabres stealthily drawn from their scabbards
-on every side, and even the terrible Nicholas
-Paulovitch drawing near, dagger in hand, with
-his long lock of hair, his scowling front, and a
-cruel expression, the very lust of blood, in his
-deep-set stony eyes. "Carl, Carl," cried Ivan;
-"your hand!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Captain Balgonie&mdash;<i>he</i> here!" roared Bernikoff,
-with one of his terrible maledictions.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh Excellency!" implored Balgonie, scarcely
-knowing what he should ask or urge.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Begone, sir, to the barrier gate, and keep the
-guard there to their duty&mdash;begone, sir, I
-command you, on your allegiance to the Empress!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To refuse or linger were alike impossible,
-though a wild cry of entreaty escaped the lips
-of the young Prince, who sprang forward, but
-was thrust roughly back towards his couch by
-many hands and many levelled weapons.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The sword of Damocles, which had hung over
-his unhappy head so long, was about to descend
-at last!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Balgonie, his heart swollen almost to bursting
-with shame, rage, and grief, rushed down the
-stair of the keep; but at the foot, and just as he
-passed where the old Chaplain Chrysostom was
-saying devoutly on his knees the prayers for the
-<i>dying</i>, he heard a shrill and protracted cry of
-agony ring through the vaulted tower&mdash;a cry
-that made his blood run cold!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Humanity, generosity, and all his own good
-impulses would have drawn him back to the
-side, and, if possible, to the aid, of Ivan; but the
-force of discipline, and a knowledge of his own
-utter powerlessness, made him pause: for he was
-but one man&mdash;a young officer&mdash;a foreigner, too,
-opposed to a whole garrison of ferocious and
-unscrupulous soldiers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When, from the inner barrier gate, he looked
-up to the window of Ivan's room, he saw that
-the lights had been extinguished and all was
-darkness now.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap20"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XX.
-<br /><br />
-MORNING OF THE 16TH SEPTEMBER.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-When Bernikoff appeared with his group of
-officers, Charlie Balgonie perceived that there
-were spots of blood upon his long, white leather
-gauntlets, that his sabre blade was broken off
-within six inches of the hilt, and that a terrible
-expression of ferocity clouded his features and
-those of all around him, the glare of the uplifted
-torches now paling as the light of day stole in,
-adding to the sinister significance of their faces.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At that moment the drummer of the summoners
-beat a <i>chamade</i> for the third time, and
-Bernikoff, advancing to the klinket, or wicket, in
-the palisades of the second inner gate, opened it,
-and, with a great sternness of manner, demanded
-what they required.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The release of His Imperial Majesty Ivan
-IV.," replied Basil Mierowitz, in a firm voice,
-while courteously saluting Bernikoff, in
-recognition of his superior rank.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"If I refuse&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You do so at your own peril," replied Basil,
-as sternly and as proudly as if, instead of a few
-discontented deserters and enthusiasts, the whole
-armies of Russia were at his back.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You cannot be mad enough, Basil Mierowitz,
-to think of assaulting us?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"That may or may not be, Excellency, according
-to circumstances," was the reply.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What troops are these under your orders?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A guard of honour for the Emperor, if you
-peacefully comply&mdash;the first portion of an investing
-force, if you refuse," replied Mierowitz; but
-a sinister gleam of triumph flashed in the
-malicious eyes of Bernikoff, who gathered more of his
-real weakness from this evasive reply, than the
-rash young noble intended.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Listen, Colonel Bernikoff," he continued,
-while drawing from his breast a long paper of
-official aspect, to which several green and scarlet
-seals were attached: "Her Majesty Catharine II.&mdash;for
-a time of all the Russias&mdash;having come
-to the conclusion of resigning the imperial crown
-(convinced at last that she has no claim,
-thereto), and of replacing it on the head of the
-Emperor Ivan (son of Anthony Ulric, Duke of
-Wolfenbuttel), whom she now feels herself
-compelled to acknowledge as her lawful sovereign,
-though basely deposed in infancy by her
-predecessors, the Empress Elizabeth, and the Emperor
-Peter III.; therefore she hereby commands you,
-Colonel Bernikoff, Governor of her Castle of
-Schlusselburg, to set the Prince at liberty, with
-all speed and honour."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For a document and summons of this artful and
-remarkable nature, Bernikoff was altogether
-unprepared. For a moment he grew deadly pale,
-but for a moment only, and glanced at the startled
-faces of those around him. Had he been too
-precipitate in bloodshed?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Where is Her Majesty just now?" he asked.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"In the palace of the Czars, at Novgorod."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Was Novgorod so empty of all the great
-nobles and officers of Russia, that a document of
-such a nature was entrusted to a mere Lieutenant
-of Infantry&mdash;a deserter from Livonia?" said
-Bernikoff, with sudden rage. "'Tis an
-imposture&mdash;a forgery; there is but one God in
-Heaven&mdash;one monarch on earth, the Empress Catharine;
-and you, Mierowitz, and all who league with you,
-are but base dogs and traitors!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Forward!" cried Basil, brandishing his sabre;
-"storm the gate&mdash;bayonet all who oppose us!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Long live Ivan Antonovitch&mdash;long live the
-Emperor!" exclaimed his soldiers, rushing forward.
-But the klinket in the palisades was at once
-closed, and secured against them by an enormous
-transverse beam of wood; and though a confused
-volley of musketry was exchanged between them
-and the main guard, no one was struck, save
-Bernikoff, who staggered back into the arms of
-Vlasfief, having been bayoneted in the breast by
-the deserter Jagouski, who drove his weapon
-between the palisades, nearly finishing what Basil
-had begun by the blow of a musket but, which
-crushed the Colonel's hat, and nearly fractured
-his skull.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ah! dogs and Asiatics, you have struck me!"
-shouted Bernikoff, whose voice was hoarse with
-rage and pain. "Dost know the penalty of
-wounding an officer&mdash;of striking a soldier who
-wears a decoration?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Accursed Tartar, I neither know nor care. I
-revenge my brother's death at Zorndorf, my own
-wrongs, and the murder of Peter III.!" replied
-the exulting Cossack, with a bitter laugh.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"May my right hand wither, and my tongue
-cleave to the roof of my mouth, when most I
-need them both, if I have not a terrible vengeance
-for all this work!" cried Bernikoff. "Vlasfief,
-Tschekin, show them their Prince!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-While the undaunted Basil and his friend
-Usakoff, with their soldiers, proceeded to wheel
-round a cannon of the outworks, a 32-pounder,
-for the purpose of blowing open the klinket of the
-inner barrier; and while Balgonie, a silent but
-excited and sick-hearted spectator of the whole
-affair, lingered close by, heedless whether the
-round-shot and grape, with which they were
-charging the gun, came his way, or not,&mdash;a
-window in the first story of the keep was dashed
-open, and while every torch and every eye were
-uplifted to the place, a terrible spectacle, which
-hushed all into momentary silence, was exhibited.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was the dead body of the young and
-handsome Ivan, suspended by the neck, at the end of
-a rope, stripped even of his night-dress, cold and
-white as the marble of Paros, and gashed with
-ten gaping wounds; for, as we are told in the
-newspapers of the period, "the unfortunate prince
-had struggled some time for his life, and even
-broke the Governor's sword in the conflict; but
-assistance was called for, and another bloody
-assassin (Vlasfief) appeared, who finished the
-horrid work."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-An exclamation of dismay and grief escaped
-Balgonie, on beholding this appalling spectacle;
-the weird and ghastly horror of which was
-enhanced by the uncertain light in which it was
-exhibited, and which imparted a wavering and
-almost life-like action to the corpse, as with its
-long hair floating, head and arms pendent, it
-swayed to and fro in the morning wind against
-the castle wall.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"<i>Hospodi pomilui! Hospodi pomilui!</i>"* cried
-Basil Mierowitz, covering his face with his hands,
-and permitting the musket with which he had
-armed himself to fall to the ground with a clash,
-which, together with his most mournful
-exclamation, alone broke the silence.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="footnote">
-* Lord have mercy upon us!
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-"'Behold,' said Bernikoff, in cruel triumph,
-while blasphemously using the words of Ezekiel&mdash;"'behold,
-I take away from thee the desire of
-thine eyes with a stroke!' Glory to God and to the
-Empress! This is your Emperor&mdash;now let him
-head your troops. Doubtless he will make a fine
-figure on the Imperial throne."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh! Bernikoff," exclaimed Basil, "you are
-like Judas, as we may see him at the Kazan
-church&mdash;one hand on the mouth denoting
-treachery, and the other on a bag of money."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Thou liest, Lieutenant! my fingers know more
-of the grip of steel than of gold," said the other
-furiously, as he hurled the hilt of his broken
-sabre at the speaker.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"So&mdash;so&mdash;this has been your work and decision?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes&mdash;how do you like it?" was the mocking reply.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Thou art a cruel judge; but remember the
-law of Peter the Great&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Which makes the judge answerable for his
-decision?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Then shall I content me, traitor, and be
-answerable for my decision as well as for its
-execution. I have done my duty to the Czarina."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You have done a deed for which hell must
-blush and angels weep," was the forcible reply of
-Mierowitz, who seemed so overcome by grief and
-horror as to lose all self-possession; for he now
-ordered his men to disperse to the woods&mdash;to seek
-safety in flight; and then calmly taking off his
-sword-belt and sash, he threw them on the ground
-saying&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Since my Imperial master is dead, further
-resistance would be vain in me."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was almost immediately afterwards struck
-to the earth, and made prisoner by Lieutenant
-Tschekin, who, with a party of dismounted
-Cossacks, had stolen through the casemates and
-galleries to a postern opening on the rear of the
-drawbridge, and these, after firing a confused
-volley with their pistols and musketoons, fell
-with their sharp crooked sabres upon the now
-thoroughly disheartened adherents of Mierowitz.
-Lieutenant Usakoff and Jagouski alone made any
-vigorous resistance, resolving not to be taken
-alive.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Fighting desperately, almost back to back, the
-former armed with the sabre of Mazeppa, and the
-latter with a musket, and both bleeding from many
-wounds, they were driven through the outer
-barrier towards the town. On the pathway Jagouski
-stumbled over a comrade, and was taken; but
-Apollo Usakoff, with a shout in which triumph
-and despair were mingled, leaped into the Neva,
-the waters of which swept him away, and he was
-seen no more by his pursuers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When Tschekin's Cossacks joined in the <i>mêlée</i>
-with the fugitives, Balgonie sprang through the
-klinket, sword in hand, resolved to succour his
-friend at all hazards, and fortunately arrived just
-in time to save him (when struck down and trod
-under foot) from the bulky giant Nicholas
-Paulovitch, who, with a clubbed musket, was about to
-give him a blow that must inevitably have proved
-fatal.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Paulovitch he ran through the heart&mdash;or at
-least the place where his heart might be supposed
-to have been&mdash;and spurning him off the blade
-with his foot, hurled the snorting ruffian to the
-ground, and raised his friend, with the assistance
-of a soldier and Lieutenant Tschekin.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Made prisoner, and by you too, Carl!" said
-Basil, reproachfully and in a low voice, for he was
-faint with wounds and bruises.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"By me, but to save you."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Seek rather to save Natalie, if you can," he
-whispered; "she is, she is&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Where, <i>where</i>?" said Balgonie, impetuously
-and imploringly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But there was no reply. Basil had fainted,
-and was borne into the Castle of Schlusselburg, a
-prisoner of State.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Balgonie never saw the face of his friend again!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So ended, for a time, a scheme, the importance
-of which was only equalled by its bold
-recklessness&mdash;the scheme of two subaltern officers to
-revolutionise the vast empire of Russia, and to
-subvert the firm dominion of Catharine II.,
-one of the most powerful and popular, though
-licentious, monarchs that ever sat on the
-barbarous throne of the Czars; and such was the
-terrible sequel to the <i>Secret Dispatch</i> of Balgonie.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Day had completely broken when he was
-summoned by Bernikoff. Shuddering as he passed
-through the court of the Castle and under the
-very window where the corpse was yet swaying
-mournfully to and fro in the morning breeze that
-swept from the broad waters of the vast lake,
-whose ripples were shining like gold in the first
-beams of the autumnal sun, Charlie sought the
-presence of this detestable personage, the thunder
-of whose wrath he feared was about to descend
-upon himself.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He found the Colonel in his shirt sleeves, and
-almost covered with blood, which was flowing
-from a wound in his breast and another on the
-head, from whence it was trickling to the ends of
-his long and snaky grey mustaches. To both of
-these cuts the barber was about to apply dressings,
-while the patient solaced himself by scheming out
-some dreadful punishment for Jagouski, who, with
-several others, had fallen into his gentle hands,
-and by uttering deep oaths, and imbibing deep
-draughts from a great wooden bowl of quass,
-dashed with fiery vodka.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Balgonie, whose thoughts ran chiefly upon how
-to discover and succour Natalie, was roused to
-attention by Bernikoff saying grimly&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Carl Ivanovitch Balgonie, for aiding in the
-capture of the rebel Mierowitz, I thank you;
-suspicions I had, but they are gone. You are now,
-perhaps, to rejoin the Regiment of Smolensko,
-and shall bear a dispatch from me to Lieutenant-General
-Weymarn and Lieutenant-Colonel Caschkin
-(who are both in St. Petersburg), relating the
-affair of the last twelve hours. Vlasfief shall
-prepare it, and I will sign it. Place a feather in the
-seal, lest the Captain lingers as he did at Louga!
-Here, Carl Ivanovitch, taste the quass; 'tis the
-<i>trisna</i> of Ivan the Unknown Person!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was something so horrible in this levity
-and impiety to the Cossacks, that even they
-exchanged uneasy glances, for the trisna at funeral
-feasts is a mixture of rum, beer, and wine, and is
-an ancient Sclavonian beverage. When it is
-handed round, all stand up uncovered, the clergy
-recite a solemn prayer, and at its close the trisna
-is drunk to the health of the departed Christian
-soul; so Balgonie shuddered, as he thought of the
-gashed and dishonoured corpse that swung by the
-neck without the castle wall.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This emotion did not escape the fierce eyes of
-Bernikoff, though his wounds were most severe,
-and his mind was wandering.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Nay, look not at me thus, Scot," said the
-genuine old Russian fatalist; "God willed it that
-Prince Ivan should be put in my charge; and the
-devil, together with my duty to the Empress,
-inspired me to destroy him. What is done, is done,
-and is the will of God; and you know, or ought
-to know, our Muscovite proverb&mdash;the Czar is
-high, and God is everywhere!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Three times has this old reprobate mentioned
-that terrible Name, and each time bowing his sinful
-head!" thought Charlie, with disgust and wonder.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Hah!" resumed Bernikoff, pursuing his own
-thoughts, and clenching his teeth in rage and
-pain, "did that suckling of a Lieutenant think to
-deceive me&mdash;I, who have been forty years in the
-Russian army, and have to deal with the most
-cunning scoundrels between the Black Sea and
-the Baltic! Jagouski, too, I'll fill his mouth with
-gunpowder, put a fuse between his teeth, and
-blow his head off. By St. Sergius, I will! But,
-holy Saint, alleviate these pangs, by ever so little,
-and this night six pounds of the finest white wax
-shall burn before thee." He gnashed his teeth
-with pain, and added, "Be ready to ride in an
-hour, Captain; till then, leave me."
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap21"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XXI.
-<br /><br />
-UNDERGROUND.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-The Empress's court of Secret Chancery soon
-decided on the fate of Basil Mierowitz; the
-Count, his father, and his cousin Mariolizza,
-who had been passive, though suspected in the
-matter, had their cases taken into future
-consideration, so they were kept close prisoners while
-their properties and possessions were given up
-to pillage and military execution. Basil was
-condemned to be broken alive upon the wheel;
-but the Empress, who had a particular tenderness
-for handsome men, "mitigated his punishment to
-the less severe one of being beheaded."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A brief paragraph in the <i>London Gazette</i> of the
-23rd October records this brave fellow's death,
-just fourteen days after his rash affair at
-Schlusselburg:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"M. Mierowitz, in pursuance of his sentence,
-was publicly beheaded on Wednesday last; he
-behaved at his execution, as he had done throughout
-the whole transaction, with the greatest
-resignation. Six of the soldiers and under-officers
-who were engaged with him ran the gantelope
-the same day; they were so severely whipped
-that it is said three of them are since dead.
-Many more are to be punished. One, Usakoff,
-a Lieutenant in the Regiment of Welikolutz
-(<i>sic</i>) who was privy to the design, was
-accidentally drowned."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Notwithstanding his rank and years, old Count
-Mierowitz was retained in a dungeon among a
-number of miserable Russian rogues and Polish
-prisoners, clad in filthy sheepskin shoubahs, many
-of them being afflicted with the terrible disease
-known as <i>plica polonica</i>, or matted hair, which
-hung over their necks in clotted lumps, every
-tube being swollen and dilated with globules of
-blood.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The lower vaults of Schlusselburg were those
-built by Ivan the Terrible, for the reception of a
-few of the revolters of Novgorod, after he had
-put twenty-five thousand of her citizens to the
-sword. They were such prisons as&mdash;let us hope&mdash;are
-no longer in use, even in Russia, although
-the London press has asserted that, until lately,
-exactly such <i>oubliettes</i> or dungeons were in active
-operation, and never without tenants, under the
-royal rule of the deposed Francis II., and prior to
-the remodelling of Italy by Victor Emmanuel.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They were like the frightful cells of the
-Bastile, which Victor Hugo has described in "Notre
-Dame;" those of the Inquisition at Goa or Madrid,
-or of old castles of the middle ages; but apart
-from the happily departed horrors of such places,
-even English jails have been little better than
-living graves within the memory of many now
-alive; for one of the greatest glories of modern
-civilisation, in all countries, has been the
-amelioration of prisons and their government, and the
-substitution of mercy and protection in their
-general economy for that irresponsible despotism
-and wanton cruelty which have formed such
-ample materials for the romancer and novelist
-to excite compassion and even dismay.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yet it is exactly such a place&mdash;a prison of the
-middle ages&mdash;a rival to that Chillon to which
-Byron's genius has given a greater name than
-ever its terrors won it&mdash;we are now about to
-describe: one of the lower vaults of Schlusselburg,
-a den, the floor of which was below the rocks
-whereon the seals of Ladoga basked in the
-sunshine, and which was consequently liable to be
-flooded during those inundations that at certain
-seasons, overflow all the country for a great way
-north, so that no crops will grow save upon the
-eminences.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Vaulted with stone, it was nearly square, and
-measured twelve feet each way, with a floor
-that sloped down at one end, having been
-unevenly hewn out when the rock was pierced;
-and from a portion of this rock sprang the solid
-arch of granite blocks which formed the roof.
-A narrow slit, six inches broad by twelve high,
-and having even in that small space a thick iron
-bar, admitted to the interior a feeble ray of light.
-This slit was partly built of stone, but its sill was
-the living rock of Schlusselburg. It opened
-towards the lake, but gave no prospect save the
-clouds, for it was high up in the wall; yet the
-melancholy cries of the waterfowl and of the
-seabirds, which often came up the Neva from the
-Baltic, were heard through it at times.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The prisoner, when seated on the stone bench
-which formed a bed or seat alternately, could
-only see the changing hues of the sky and
-patches of cloud, and know by the darkness
-which gradually obscured this mere shot-hole
-that day was passing away, and that another night,
-chill, dark, dreary, and hopeless, was at hand.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As the floor sloped down some twelve inches or
-more, the lower end was always full of water,
-into which the slime that gathered on the vault
-of the arch fell at intervals with a regular plash
-that, to the silent and apparently forgotten
-prisoner, became maddening in its monotony of
-sound, by day and night, by morning and
-evening, by dawn and sunset. Then, as the tides
-rose and fell, or as the waters of the vast inland
-lake of Ladoga are affected by the Baltic stopping
-the downward flow of the Neva, or by rains
-flooding the many tributaries that join them, so did
-this dark pool in the dungeon rise and fall,
-when the current oozed through secret and
-unknown channels or crannies in the granite
-rocks.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was in this vault, or one of those adjoining&mdash;such
-a den as that in which Dante placed his
-Demon&mdash;that the betrayed wife of Count Orloff,
-the beautiful daughter of the Empress Elizabeth,
-was drowned, ten years after the date of this
-history, when the waters of the Neva rose ten
-feet; and, as they subsided, bore her body to the
-Gulf of Finland.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-No one could live very long in such a place&mdash;low,
-damp, cold, and horrible. And well did
-Bernikoff know this, when, in the blind
-transports of rage and agony resulting from his
-double wounds, he barbarously consigned Natalie
-Mierowna to such a place&mdash;ay, even Natalie,
-the soft and delicate, the highly-bred and
-tenderly-nurtured daughter of Count Mierowitz;
-and she had now been in the underground vault
-for three days and nights,&mdash;seventy-two
-hours,&mdash;which to her had resembled a horrible and
-protracted nightmare.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She was ignorant as yet of her brother's
-execution, a week before. Betrayed by one of their
-most trusted adherents as the price of his own
-liberty, she and Katinka had been taken. Of
-the fate of the latter she knew nothing: a mere
-Polish waiting-maid, a pretty soubrette, she had
-too probably become the lawful prey of the
-Cossacks, whom Natalie had last seen in the
-forest, with terrible significance rattling their
-dice on a kettle-drum head.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For herself, the poor girl only knew that she
-was placed there to await the pleasure of the
-Empress and the Grand Chancellor.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Hope was dead completely in her heart; and
-though the desire to live was strong, her former
-life seemed all a dream, or something that had
-happened long, long ago!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Crouching on a damp pallet that lay on the
-couch of stone, her hair dishevelled, her dress
-more than ever torn, discoloured, and disordered,
-her snowy arms and hands stripped of every ornament
-and ring, her tender feet well-nigh shoeless,
-her eyes half closed and surrounded by dark
-inflamed circles, her cheeks sunk and haggard,&mdash;it
-would be difficult to recognise in her the once
-beautiful and brilliant Natalie, whose coquetry
-had excited the ready jealousy of Catharine in
-that fatal Mazurka; the Natalie of the imperial
-<i>salons</i> at Moscow, at Oranienbaum, or the palace
-of Tsarsky Selo; or the Natalie of that princely
-old château near the Louga&mdash;the proud, bright-eyed,
-and beautiful girl whom Charlie Balgonie
-had loved, and worshipped as a goddess.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As she crouched in a species of stupor beside
-a wooden bowl of stale water and a mouldy loaf of
-black bread, there seemed to be no breath in her
-tender nostrils, no sound in those little ears over
-which the black hair rolled in unheeded masses&mdash;no
-sound save the monotonous plash of the
-dropping slime. She was pale as white marble,&mdash;cold
-as death,&mdash;a prey to utter confusion rather
-than profound grief. There were times when
-she felt and thought and knew of nothing: but
-there were others when all the past&mdash;the memory
-of her ruined house, her shattered love, her
-slaughtered friends, their fatal project, and her
-lost position in society&mdash;brought a cruel and keen
-pang to her heart, and made her writhe and start
-and wring her hands, but not weep; for she had
-not a tear left; and her hard dry eyeballs were
-the only warm part of her shuddering frame.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Seventy-two hours had she been there, yet the
-time seemed so long already, that she knew not
-whether it were seventy-two days or the same
-number of weeks.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When she did rouse herself to steady reflection
-and the realities of her position, thought well-nigh
-drove her mad.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her old father&mdash;his sturdy figure, his venerable
-beard and white eyebrows, his silver hair queued
-by a simple ribbon, his quaint old-fashioned
-costume of the first Peter's time, rose vividly before
-her; and with a gush of memory came all his
-peculiarities of disposition, his warmth of heart
-and temper, his kindness and irritability, his pride
-of race and family. Where were all these now?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her lover too&mdash;his voice, and eyes, and gentle
-manner came next, to add to her pangs; for him
-too must she relinquish for ever: no shelter was
-there now for her save the cold grave, which was
-perhaps to receive them all! Basil, Usakoff, and
-Mariolizza&mdash;alas! terrible though her own
-sufferings, she little knew those to which the fairer
-beauty and more unwary tongue of Mariolizza
-had subjected that unhappy girl.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The excellent taste, the polished education, and
-high accomplishments of Natalie, which were so
-far superior to those of most ladies of her own
-rank and country then, gave a greater poignancy
-to the horrors of reality and imagination; yet
-imagination could supply no horror but what was
-real and sternly so.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Their princely old dwelling amid the pine
-forests&mdash;never more would she see its dome of
-polished copper shining in the sun, or the wooded
-domain that stretched for uncounted versts around
-it; or her father's patrimonial village, nestling by
-the Louga, which bore his rafts of timber to the
-sea, and by night reflected the glare of those
-furnaces which were another source of his vast wealth,
-and the means of procuring a thousand luxuries.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Better would it have been, had she and they
-and all succumbed to Catharine's iron rule, than
-sought the freedom of Ivan IV; but it was too
-late&mdash;too late, now!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Was it all a dream from, which she must
-awaken? Strange it was, that as weariness, sleep,
-or a stupor stole over her, scraps of songs, frivolous
-ones especially, airs from operas, and so forth,
-occurred to her drowsy ear, as if her brain was
-turning; and to these the filtering plash and the
-sound of the rising waves and wind without
-seemed to mark a cadence.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Suddenly a scream escaped her: she was in
-total darkness. Amid her sleep or stupor, a fourth
-night had come on&mdash;a night of storm too; for she
-heard the roar of the autumn rain, as it descended
-like a vast sheet upon the lake without.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Cold and slimy things had often crossed her
-slender ankles, making her shrink and shudder:
-but now she became sensible that her feet were
-completely immersed in water; that the wind was
-bellowing without and rolling the waves against
-the rocks; and that the current of the lake was
-flooding the floor of her vault, and rising fast
-within it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It rose with appalling rapidity: and now the
-terror of a dreadful death made Natalie utter a
-succession of piercing shrieks, mingled with
-prayers to heaven. But her cries were unheard; for
-the same cold, icy tide that flooded her cell, filled
-all the corridors by which it and others on the
-same floor were approached.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Rapidly it rose, this dark, silent, and terrible
-tide&mdash;rapidly and without a sound.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She sprang upon her stone couch, but already
-the pallet was floated away. Up yet rose the
-invading water, and it was soon nearly to her waist;
-and gasping and shuddering cries were mingled
-with her prayers. A little more, and the narrow
-slit through which she could hear the bellowing
-wind and see the black clouds careering past one
-red and fiery northern star&mdash;the last gleam of life
-and of the outer world&mdash;would vanish from her
-eyes, as she perished in that miserable tomb:
-even as the Princess Orloff and many others have
-done, helpless and unheeded in their dying
-agony&mdash;drowned miserably, like the prison rats that
-swam around them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the last energies of her despair, she made her
-way to the enormously thick door which closed
-this trap of stone, and, applying her lips to the
-joints, shrieked loudly again and again for succour,
-and beat wildly and fruitlessly with her tender
-hands upon its massive planks and iron bolts.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her brain seemed bursting, for she was suffocating
-as the air lessened. She thought she saw
-a red light shining through the crannies of the
-doorway; but whether this were fancy or reality, it
-was impossible to say, as a faintness came over
-her, and she sank down choking and drowning in
-the dark flood that rose within the walls and
-against the door of the prison.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap22"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XXII.
-<br /><br />
-OVER THEIR WINE.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Heavy and sad was the heart of Charlie
-Balgonie when, on the evening of the 16th
-September, that which was subsequent to the episode
-at Schlusselburg, he saw the domes and towers of
-St. Petersburg glittering in gold and bronze, in
-green and fiery or fantastic colours, amid the rich
-glow of a ruddy sunset; and where rising from
-the haze of the vast city, the polished cupola of
-St. Isaac's Cathedral, and the slender spire of the
-Admiralty, like a needle of flame, seemed to float
-in mid air.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As he entered the first guarded barrier, he met
-a party of Lancers riding at a trot, their tall fur
-caps having scarlet kalpecs and large plumes,
-their lances, each with a long bannerole of the
-same colour, waving in the wind. They escorted
-a covered kabitka, or waggon, and were led by
-the Count de Balmain, a Scottish officer, who, in
-after years, stormed Kaffa, in the Crimea.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Whither go you, Count?" he asked.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"For Schlusselburg&mdash;the place of sorrow."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"With a prisoner, of course?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes, I regret to say, with the niece of Count
-Mierowitz, with Mademoiselle Mariolizza. She is
-to be confined under a warrant from the Grand
-Chancellor&mdash;poor girl!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sadder and heavier grew the honest heart of
-Balgonie, as the escort and its hearse-like
-carriage passed on; and, as he looked after it, the
-fair merry face, the full and voluptuous figure, the
-gay manner, and remarkable <i>finesse d'esprit</i> of the
-betrothed of poor Basil, as he had last seen her at
-Louga, came back vividly to memory now.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Balgonie was at St. Petersburg when Mierowitz
-was executed, and when other horrors followed.
-Moreover, he was closely and repeatedly interrogated
-by the Grand Chancellor, the Privy Councillor,
-Count Panim, by Count Orloff (the present
-lover of the Empress), and by General Weymarn,
-as to all he knew and had seen of the conspirators&mdash;so
-closely, that nothing surprised him so much
-as to find that no suspicion was attached to
-himself. But being a soldier of fortune, who
-possessed nothing in the world but his sword and his
-epaulettes, he was not worth suspecting by the
-Imperial Government.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Ere long, the name of Natalie came before the
-Secret Chancery, as a prisoner in Schlusselburg;
-and, like the rest, she was tried and condemned in
-absence, undefended and unheard; and sentenced,
-too, amid the solitude of her prison.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To Balgonie the charm of life seemed to
-have passed away; and, during the week or two
-that followed his return to St. Petersburg, dreary,
-weary, and unmeaning, indeed, seemed the routine
-of his duties as aide-de-camp at the vast
-parades, the brilliant receptions, the courts-martial,
-and other public affairs to which he followed
-his <i>chef</i>, General Weymarn, at the palaces of
-Tsarsky Selo or Oranienbaum, and elsewhere,
-while ignorant of the fate of Natalie&mdash;while the
-very life of her he loved hung in the balance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When compared with their fate, how happy
-seemed those lovers, who, though separated for a
-period, could look confidently forward through the
-long succession of hours, of days and nights, of
-weeks, and months, or even years, and reckon with
-certainty on the time of reunion! With him and
-Natalie, time stretched into a length that seemed
-interminable: their future had no background;
-their separation was one without hope.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Charlie, in his desperation, applied to the
-Marquis de Bausset and to Sir George Macartney,
-then the Ambassadors from France and Britain;
-and both received his verbal prayers&mdash;he dared
-not write on such a subject&mdash;for mercy to the
-Count's family: but they were unheeded; and the
-Ministers replied only by bows, grimaces, and
-shrugs of their diplomatic shoulders. Their
-interference was impossible&mdash;quite; and,
-unfortunately, his old patron, Admiral Thomas
-Mackenzie, was with the fleet in the Black Sea.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The suspicions excited against his Regiment
-and the Grenadiers of Valikolutz, might procure
-the banishment of both; he feared it in the form
-of service in Siberia, or at the Crimean lines of
-Perecop. In either case, unless Weymarn stood
-his friend, how could he hope to succour Natalie!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At every tea-house, hotel, and café, his uniform
-of the Smolensko Infantry, and the knowledge
-that he was the staff officer who had been in
-Schlusselburg, and who brought the first tidings
-of the late affair, made him an object of special
-interest; but the subject was alike a perilous and
-painful one. Walls have many ears in Russia; so
-he was compelled to be silent, or discreet, even to
-rudeness, though the following declaration, which
-was issued by the Empress, might have allayed
-his fears:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-"We, Catharine the Second, by the Grace of
-God, Empress and Sovereign of all the Russias,
-&amp;c., &amp;c., make known to our Regiment of
-Smolensko Infantry that, according to the equity
-which we exert towards our faithful subjects, we
-cannot represent to ourselves, without profound
-grief, how much that regiment must be afflicted,
-for having among its officers a wretch in the
-person of Mierowitz: nevertheless, as the crime
-of one man cannot affect those who had no part
-in it, and that, besides, we know the bravery with
-which the regiment has distinguished itself upon
-all occasions, its attachment to strict discipline,
-and its exactness in the military duty of our
-empire; therefore we grant it, through our imperial
-good-will, the same assurances of protection which
-it has in all times deserved. In consequence, we
-forbid all and every one, to reproach or upbraid
-the said regiment concerning the treason of
-Mierowitz, under pain of incurring our indignation,
-and drawing on themselves the effects of our
-just resentment.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-(<i>Signed</i>) "CATHARINE."
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Hope seemed to revive a little after the issue
-of this conciliatory oukaz; but it was speedily
-dashed, when Balgonie, on returning from
-Cronstadt, whither he had been sent by General
-Weymarn, suddenly met Captain Vlasfief face to face,
-near the palace of the favourite Lanskoi.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This personage he would have avoided like a
-toad or a leper; but from him only might he
-learn something of her he loved in Schlusselburg,
-that hateful place to which the Captain was
-returning; so, overcoming, or rather concealing,
-his repugnance, he adjourned with him to a café,
-and ordered wine.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I dare say you have heard," said Vlasfief,
-with a strange leer in his eyes, as he tossed his
-hat and sabre on one sofa and deposited his
-jack-booted limbs on another, "how the estates of the
-Count and those of Usakoff have been sold or
-gifted away; pillaged and ravaged by Lanskoi
-with a party of Tchernemoski Cossacks; and
-that the plunder has been stored up in Schlusselburg?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Something of all this I have heard," replied
-Balgonie, when the waiter had filled their glasses
-and withdrawn, "and&mdash;and&mdash;but you have there
-two ladies of the Count's family?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"True&mdash;Mademoiselle Mariolizza, who was
-engaged to Mierowitz, and the Count's daughter:
-one beautifully fair, the other black-haired like a
-Pole. Poor girls!" he continued, while leisurely
-filling the large china bowl of a tasselled pipe,
-which suspiciously resembled one Charlie had
-often seen the old Count smoking, "I remember
-them both in happier and brighter times; but
-those who play with fire will, you know, be
-burned. The sentences on all have been found,
-recorded, and, in two instances, executed; and
-they are truly terrible!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Executed&mdash;the sentence!" repeated Balgonie,
-in a faint voice.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes; you have been four days at Cronstadt:
-well, in those four days many things have been
-done&mdash;a light; thank you. The Count is now
-travelling towards Tobolsk under an escort of
-Balmain's Lancers. There he will have to hunt
-the ermine, cultivate asafœtida, or dig in the
-mines, with a collar at his neck, for the remainder
-of his days; but for the ladies of his family, a
-more severe punishment was reserved: ah! he is
-a stern fellow, old Panim!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How&mdash;what? Vlasfief, you jest?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Tis no jest: we don't jest on such matters
-in Russia," replied Vlasfief, who was too thorough
-a <i>roué</i>&mdash;too "used up," in fact&mdash;to care for what
-any woman might suffer or undergo; for every
-human emotion and sympathy were dead in
-this man now.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What new horrors am I to hear?" exclaimed
-Balgonie, with passionate vehemence, as he
-dashed his heavy Turkish sabre on the table.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Vlasfief smiled sourly, and his cunning eyes
-twinkled.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You are a Scot, like Balmain," said he
-disdainfully; "and as the Turks&mdash;those accursed
-unbelievers&mdash;say, but truly, 'Those who have
-never seen the world think it is all like their
-father's house.' Pass the bottle&mdash;'tis Cracow
-wine this, and not worth four ducats the flask.
-In short, the&mdash;the two ladies of the Count's
-family, in the wildness of their grief,&mdash;Mariolizza
-especially,&mdash;on hearing of the death of Mierowitz,
-permitted their tongues to run riot, and to say
-such things of Her Imperial Majesty and some of
-her favourites, such as Count Orloff, Lanskoi, the
-Grenadier, and so forth, as no woman would
-pardon, you understand; so they are to be given
-in succession to <i>le maître d'entre les épaules</i>&mdash;the
-master of the shoulders," added Vlasfief, with a
-species of laugh at the strange expression which
-he saw gathering in Balgonie's face.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Explain, I implore you, explain!" asked the
-latter, with quivering lips, as he set down a
-crystal goblet of Hungarian wine untasted on
-the table.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Mademoiselle Mariolizza&mdash;but you don't
-drink fairly, Ivanovitch&mdash;has received six blows
-of the knout. The torturer is a new man, and
-mangled her cruelly. She has had her tongue
-cut out, and her forehead branded with the
-executioner's mark;* and she goes to Siberia as soon as
-she recovers: but she will never reach it alive,
-even if she escapes the fever that has now seized
-her; for as the whole family has been
-degraded,&mdash;declared infamous and without protection,&mdash;being
-tongueless, she will become the prey of the
-Cossacks en route. Once beyond the Volga, we
-never know what happens. The Count's daughter
-will undergo exactly similar punishment; and, if
-she survives it, they will be mercifully permitted
-to travel together: and there ends the House of
-Mierowitz, which boasts of its descent from Ruric
-of Kiev&mdash;Ruric the Varagian of Old Ladoga!"
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="footnote">
-* The latter punishment is abolished now.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-With wonderful coolness of manner, over his
-wine and pipe, almost with an occasional jest, the
-cruel and snakelike Vlasfief&mdash;who, as a parvenu
-of the foundling hospital (the son of a goat), hated
-the hereditary aristocracy&mdash;detailed these matters;
-and Balgonie felt as if a black cloud enveloped
-him. He heard the Captain talking; but his
-mind and thoughts were far, far away; and, after
-a time, he found himself alone.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Vlasfief had mounted and ridden off; and
-mechanically, like an automaton, Balgonie had
-bidden him adieu at the portico of the café, and
-returned to finish his wine, as one in a waking
-dream: nor was it until the bell of St. Isaac's
-tolled midnight, when the lights were burned
-low, the fire in the peitchka had died away, the
-decanters were empty, and he saw a drowsy
-waiter hovering near him, that he rose to depart;
-for to him, now, all places seemed alike.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the street a shower of tears revived him;
-and he wept unseen, like a great boy, while
-grinding his teeth and twisting his mustaches like a
-furious and desperate man. Russia, her laws, her
-rulers, her very air, he loathed and detested. But
-what was he to do?&mdash;which way was he to turn?&mdash;was
-he to permit these horrors, and live?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had been present when the Regiment of
-Smolensko guarded the punishment of Madame
-Lapouchin, one of the most beautiful women of
-the Imperial Court, where she shone like a
-planet, was loved, admired, and more than once
-was fought for. An alleged conspiracy brought
-her to the knout in all her nude loveliness, in the
-light of open day; and Charlie remembered that
-sickening scene, before the eyes of assembled
-thousands, and how, as the Abbé d'Anterroche
-records, "in a few moments all the skin of her
-tender back was cut away in small slips, most of
-which remained hanging on her shift. Her
-tongue was cut out immediately after; and she
-was banished into Siberia."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh Natalie, Natalie!" he could but repeat,
-while he wrung his hands; and thus the dawn of
-day found him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After mature consideration of his position, his
-powerlessness, and the difficulties that beset him,
-with the horrors impending over Natalie, poor
-Charlie Balgonie felt maddened, crushed, and
-heart-broken. Could he see her perish without a
-struggle, an effort, however reckless, fruitless, and
-futile, on her behalf, even if he pistoled the
-executioner? Could he know that she too, probably,
-would die, in agony and mutilation, a horrible and
-ignominious death,&mdash;she, so gentle, delicate, and
-pure,&mdash;and would he survive it?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Hearts will break in this life," says a recent
-writer; "it is the nature of them; but if God
-wills it, and it were possible, it is honester, braver,
-and nobler to live than to die." Most true; but
-to live is to hope. Balgonie vaguely, but sternly,
-resolved that he would do something, or&mdash;like the
-hero of a melodrama&mdash;"die in the attempt;" but
-being a poor, bewildered, loving young fellow, he
-could in no way practically see what that
-something might be.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Let not the reader flatter himself or herself
-that their own beloved country was entirely free
-from legal barbarism at this time; for in the very
-year of Ivan's murder,&mdash;the fourth year of the
-reign of His Majesty George III.,&mdash;a woman was
-burned at the stake in Ilchester for poisoning her
-husband. During the reign of his son, more
-than one head was chopped off for treason; and
-women were flogged by tap of drum, for petty
-theft, at the Market Cross of Edinburgh. Neither
-need the superstitions of the poor Muscovites
-excite surprise, when we find, in 1867, Highlanders
-in Scotland putting clay figures into running
-streams to bring consumption and wasting upon
-their enemies; burying a living cock (as the Pagan
-sacrificed to Hermes) to cure epilepsy; and a
-woman in Somersetshire* cooking toads in a pan,
-exactly as the "black and midnight hags" did in
-the days of Macbeth, for the amiable purpose of
-bewitching her neighbours. So truly does the world
-reproduce itself, in spite of its boasted civilisation.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="footnote">
-* Western Gazette, September, 1867.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-The next day was not far advanced when
-Balgonie was summoned by General Weymarn,
-whose staff he had been resolving to quit; but for
-what purpose, or whither to go, he knew not.
-With something of a shudder, he beheld the
-Stepniak&mdash;the comrade and confederate of the
-late Nicholas Paulovitch&mdash;leaving the General's
-quarters.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Save that he wore the scarlet livery of his new
-trade,&mdash;torture and death,&mdash;he was unchanged,
-and was the same hideous and ill-visaged giant&mdash;with
-square shoulders, enormous beard, mouse-like
-eyes, hair shorn off straight across the beetlebrows,
-and the pine-apple shaped head&mdash;whom
-Balgonie had seen in the hut where the
-wretched Podatchkine perished. He was now
-public executioner of St. Petersburg: under his
-felon hands had poor Mierowitz and Mariolizza
-been, and erelong would Natalie be!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Weymarn was a grave and stern, yet not unkind,
-old soldier; and, on perceiving that his
-young aide-de-camp looked pale, he spoke to him
-with unusual kindness, and added:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I am sorry to say, that I have a new duty of
-importance for you to perform."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Thanks, General; any excitement is better
-than&mdash;than idleness."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"True. You will have to ride to Schlusselburg
-with an escort, composed of six Cossacks of the
-Imperial Guard, and bring hither in a kabitka
-the sum of eighty thousand roubles, which are
-there in canvas bags, <i>sealed</i>. They have been
-levied on the estates of the Count Mierowitz. You
-will receive them from the officer commanding
-there: give a signed receipt, and deliver them
-into the Imperial Treasury."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Balgonie bowed in silence.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The General, who, of course, knew well the
-corrupt venality of the Russian service, added:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"If the sum is brought entire to the Treasury,
-Carl Ivanovitch, a reasonable gratuity will, of
-course, be paid you."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Excellency, I require none for doing my
-duty, either in this or any other matter," replied
-Balgonie coldly, even haughtily.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"As you please, sir,&mdash;as you please. Some
-among us might be less particular," said the old
-General, tugging his grisly mustaches. "And
-stay; by-the-bye, there is a prisoner in Schlusselburg,
-whose sentence is to be executed to-morrow,
-in presence of the assembled troops and people
-here&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Balgonie thought of but <i>one</i> prisoner there; and
-an icy chill came over him, as Weymarn said&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"With the escort and the kabitka, Captain,
-you will, at the same time, bring the culprit
-here."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And&mdash;and this pris&mdash;on&mdash;oner, Excellency?"
-faltered the poor fellow.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Is Jagouski, the Cossack, who so severely
-wounded Colonel Bernikoff when in the execution
-of his duty."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Charlie breathed more freely.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"An order will be necessary for you&mdash;a special
-order: since the affair of that wretched young
-fellow Mierowitz, we cannot be too particular, so
-take this:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-"'<i>To the officer commanding in Schlusselburg.</i>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'You are hereby directed to deliver to
-Captain Carl Ivanovitch Balgonie, of the
-Smolensko Regiment, the prisoner who is to be
-executed to-morrow.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-"'WEYMARN, <i>Lieutenant-General.</i>'
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-"For the delivery of the money, here is a
-separate order from the Treasurer&mdash;adieu."
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap23"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XXIII.
-<br /><br />
-WILL HE SUCCEED?
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-As Balgonie left the presence of General Weymarn,
-a sudden light broke through the darkness
-of his mind&mdash;an unlooked-for thought and hope
-suddenly inspired him, and a prayer of thanks to
-Heaven rose to his lips therefore. No prisoner
-was actually designated by name in the written
-order of the General!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thus, in lieu of the Cossack Jagouski, he would
-demand that Natalie Mierowna be given into his
-custody; and with her he would escape, quit
-Russia and the service of the Empress at all
-risks.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had no papers&mdash;no leave of absence, or
-passport; but, as the epaulette is an all-powerful
-badge in Russia, his uniform and his sabre would
-be passports enough. For the rest, he must trust
-to his own love and courage, and to his knowledge
-of the country. But then there was the Cossack
-escort&mdash;how was he to rid himself of it? The
-same kind Heaven which favoured and inspired
-him now, would not fail to do so, he hoped, when
-the crisis came.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-While his best horse was being saddled and
-accoutred, and even when the escort was at the
-door, he consulted, till the last moment, the map
-of Russia, and also that of Finland, which was not
-ceded to the latter till forty-four years after; and
-he made notes of his proposed route. Escape by
-sea, by the Lake of Ladoga, or by the shores of
-the Gulf, were alike impossible.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was no way for it but to ride, at all
-hazards, towards the frontier of Finland, or the
-shores of the Lake of Saima; they would there
-be safe beyond pursuit&mdash;safe among the hospitable
-Swedes, who are always hostile to the grasping
-and aggressive Russians. And so for nearly
-an hour he sat, compass in hand, calculating the
-chances and measuring the distances, while his
-brain grew giddy, and his heart was sick, with
-mingled hope, anxiety, and a love that was full
-of terror and compassion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At last he saw his way clearly, as he thought,
-through Viborg, from Schlusselburg, north-westward,
-in safety. He put all the money he possessed&mdash;not
-much, certainly&mdash;about his person in
-gold; filled his cartridge-box with ammunition,
-and buckled on his sabre.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"By this time to-morrow," he muttered, as he
-glanced at his watch, "the game will have been
-won or&mdash;lost!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He then mounted, with a resolute heart, and
-set forth, having with him a light kabitka, or
-covered waggon, drawn by a single horse, and
-attended by his escort&mdash;six Malo-Russian Cossacks
-who wore the uniform of Hussars, and who were
-all stout, athletic, and noble-looking fellows,
-whose clean-limbed, active, and hardy little
-horses, unmatched for strength and speed, made
-Balgonie speculate painfully and anxiously on
-his slender chance of outstripping them, if
-pursued.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was considerably past the noon of an October
-day&mdash;a dark, lowering, and ominous day&mdash;when
-they set out for Schlusselburg, and erelong the
-rain began to fall heavily, soaking the Hussar
-finery of the Cossacks of the Guard; but Charlie
-Balgonie rode silently on at their head, heedless
-of the blinding torrents and the bellowing wind;
-though he little knew that as the darkness
-increased, and the early night drew on, that the
-waters of the lake and river were rising fast,
-and that a peril, of which he had no conception,
-already menaced the existence of Natalie.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But her voice seemed to be ever whispering in
-his ear&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Carl, Carl&mdash;my beloved Carl, come to my
-aid&mdash;save me&mdash;help me, if you love me!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When they were mid-way to Schlusselburg,
-the kabitka driver, who was either sleepy or
-tipsy, fell awkwardly from his seat, and broke his
-right arm. What was to be done now?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-No Cossack of the Guard would condescend to
-supply his place, and for more than an hour the
-party remained halted in a desolate spot, near a
-pine wood, while looking about to capture the
-first peasant, serf, or civilian of any kind, whom
-they might meet, and press him into the service,
-as a temporary whip, in the employ of the Empress.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A skulking and somewhat sulky boor, in a
-fur cap and canvas caftan, leather leggings
-and bark shoes, who had been smoking his pipe
-under a great tree, was, erelong, discovered,
-dragged forward, and, with sundry oaths and
-threats, commanded to mount the shaft and act
-as driver, which he did, with a reluctance he was
-at no pains to conceal.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Knowing how necessary it was to control or to
-conciliate this new acquisition, Balgonie asked
-him a few questions, with sternness, but yet with
-politeness.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The serf was a singularly handsome young
-man, with eagle-like eyes, and an aquiline nose,
-that was almost hooked; he was without his
-mustache, which seemed to have been recently shaved
-off; but he had a curly red beard, with a
-complexion of well-nigh Asiatic darkness.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Trust me, dear Carl Ivanovitch," said he, in
-a low and impressive voice, that was strangely
-familiar to Balgonie. "My disguise, I find, is
-complete indeed, when it deceives even you; but
-speak in French."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Your disguise&mdash;yours?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes,&mdash;I am Apollo Usakoff," he added
-through his teeth.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Heaven be blessed for this new omen of
-success!" exclaimed Balgonie, in French. "And
-you were not drowned?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No; I swam down the Neva, under water,
-escaping many a bullet&mdash;got ashore, and reached
-the old place in the wood, where Olga, the gipsy,
-stained my face, trimmed and dyed my beard, as
-you see. She is quite an artist, that girl! Even
-Mariolizza would not know me now."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Balgonie sighed as the poor fellow spoke.
-Mutilated and disfigured as she was now, would he
-have known <i>her</i>? He evidently knew nothing of
-the barbarities to which she had been subjected,
-so Balgonie resolved, mercifully, to keep him in
-ignorance; and they proceeded at an easy pace
-together, he keeping his horse close by the shaft
-of the kabitka, on which the pretended peasant
-rode; and, as they spoke in French, a language
-unknown to their ignorant and half-savage escort,
-Usakoff, in referring to the late event and its
-failure, poured out all the bitterness, the hate, and
-fury of his soul, against the Government, the
-Councillors, and the rule of the Empress; and,
-of course, entered with fervour into the scheme
-of an escape with Natalie. But still their ultimate
-plans were undecided, when they saw the red flash
-of the evening gun, as it pealed from
-Schlusselburg, amid the murky haze of a wet and
-stormy sunset; and erelong they saw the lights
-that glittered at times from amid the massive
-towers and black outline of that old castle (the
-scene of so many terrors, sufferings, and atrocities)
-streaming and wavering on the turbulent waters
-of the lake, and the wet slime of the sluices and
-ditches.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When, all dripping and jaded, the escort halted
-and dismounted under the castle arch, Balgonie
-found that some changes were taking place in the
-executive of the fortress.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Bernikoff, whose wounds had been inflamed to
-gangrene, by passion, rage, and vodka, was at that
-moment actually on his death-bed, with Father
-Chrysostom kneeling by his side. The old sinner
-was in all the agonies and terrors of reviewing
-his past life on one hand, and anticipating the
-coming change on the other. Many pounds of
-perfumed wax candles were flaming now round
-the effigy of St. Sergius, whom, in weak and
-querulous accents, he implored for intercession,
-alternately with the Chaplain, to whose cassock he
-clung tenaciously, and to whom he was mingling
-threats of punishment, if he permitted him to fare
-ill in the other world, or omitted masses for his
-soul's repose. And that superstition and absurdity
-might not be wanting amid this solemn but
-repulsive scene, from which Balgonie hurried away
-with more disgust than pity, Bernikoff was dying
-in the habit of a <i>friar</i>, with cowl, cord, beads,
-and sandals, hoping even on his death-bed, as
-Ivan the Terrible hoped, when similarly arrayed
-and disguised, to cheat the devil, if that dread
-personage came for his sinful soul.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The cowl and other paraphernalia he had
-obtained from the Chamberlain, or wardrobe-keeper,
-of the Troitza monastery near the Louga&mdash;a cowl
-that had lain on the mummy of the uncorrupted
-saint in the silver shrine;&mdash;and almost with his
-last breath, he threatened Father Chrysostom with
-a drum-head court-martial for venturing to hint
-that this attempt to mask his past life was vain
-without true repentance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Leaving this scene, Balgonie presented the
-order of General Weymarn and that of the
-Treasurer, to Captain Vlasfief, who was now in
-command, and to whom he stated that "the
-prisoner referred to was Mademoiselle Natalie
-Mierowna."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Carl Ivanovitch," said the Captain, "you
-cannot think of leaving to-night in such a storm
-of wind and rain?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I've seen worse in Silesia," said Balgonie,
-looking to the locks of his pistols.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What of that?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But the <i>verbal</i> order of the General was
-most peremptory."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ah!&mdash;and you have brought a kabitka for
-the money?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A kabitka for the prisoner also&mdash;so be quick,
-Captain."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Tis a large sum in roubles," mused the other.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I am in haste to be gone!&mdash;the prisoner&mdash;you
-hear me, sir?" said Balgonie impatiently.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"By all the devils, you seem more anxious
-about the prisoner than the treasure!" responded
-Vlasfief sulkily, as he knocked the ashes from
-his pipe, but still delayed to move.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You have my orders&mdash;I come in the name of
-the Empress&mdash;let there be no delay, Captain
-Vlasfief," was the curt reply.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Bring in two Cossacks of the escort; the
-money is here in seventy bags, each containing a
-thousand roubles."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Excuse me, but the order of the Imperial
-Treasurer says expressly <i>eighty</i> sealed bags of
-a thousand each," said Balgonie, trembling with
-anxiety, yet compelled to appear to take an
-interest when he really felt none.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ten thousand are missing," said Vlasfief,
-leisurely, refilling his pipe.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Missing!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes. Suppose," he added in a whisper,
-"suppose we divide the lost sum between us, and
-offer a thousand to the Treasurer."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Impossible, sir!" said Balgonie, with a fiery
-and impatient manner.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well, well&mdash;there are the other ten sealed
-bags," added Captain Vlasfief, with a dark and
-stealthy frown of greed and hate, as the
-Cossacks tossed the whole among the straw of
-the kabitka: "it matters little; but I hope
-you may not find the road beset, and so lose
-the whole."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"To be forewarned, sir, is to be forearmed,"
-said Balgonie, touching his pistols; for he quite
-understood the treachery implied, and only
-trembled lest it might mar his dearest plans. "And
-now, sir, for my prisoner."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"If she be not drowned; for the lower vaults
-are apt to be flooded on such a night as this,"
-said Vlasfief spitefully.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Writhing under the keen glances of this low-born
-Muscovite, Balgonie felt that all now
-depended upon his outward and assumed bearing
-of coolness and carelessness. Night favoured him
-in this, and his face was almost concealed. Could
-any one then have read his heart, as he,
-Usakoff, two Cossacks, and two soldiers of the
-main-guard made their way down, down through
-dark and slimy passages and stairs, till they
-were foot deep and then knee deep in the water
-that flooded the low and humid corridors, off
-which were the arched doors of numerous
-cells&mdash;corridors where spiders spun their webs, rats
-were swimming, and terrified bats flew wildly to
-and fro!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Erelong they reached the door, through the
-crannies of which despairing cries and painful
-gaspings had been heard, and, after unlocking,
-forced it open by main strength.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A great flood of water poured from the aperture
-amid the darkness," says the <i>Utrecht Gazette</i>,
-"and with it came the body of the poor lady, who
-was well-nigh drowned."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So the red light seen by Natalie was no fancy,
-but that of the lamp which was borne by one
-of those who came just in time to save her from
-the same terrible death by which the Princess
-Orloff perished.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lest all might be perilled by a recognition,
-Balgonie was compelled to retire and leave her
-in the Chaplain's hands till she was restored to
-consciousness, to warmth, and till she was habited
-anew; and he passed three dreadful hours of
-doubt and anxiety, while pacing to and fro in
-the cold and gloomy archways of the fortress,
-and having to conceal his face when she was
-brought forth and supported into the kabitka, to
-which two <i>fresh</i> horses were now traced. Usakoff
-sprang on the shaft and flourished his whip;
-then the Cossacks and Balgonie put spurs to their
-chargers, and clattered over the wet drawbridge,
-just as the passing bell for the departure of
-Bernikoff's tortured spirit rang ominously and
-solemnly on the stormy gusts of that black and
-gloomy night.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Balgonie, instead of proceeding by the way
-he had come, avoided the town of Schlusselburg,
-and wheeled off to the right, committing himself
-partly to the guidance of Usakoff, and quite in
-ignorance that, about an hour before, Vlasfief,
-who could by no means let so many roubles
-escape without paying toll, had beset two of the
-roads by chosen followers of his own&mdash;men
-whom he hoped might pass for some of the
-adherents of the late Prince Ivan, rescuing the
-daughter of the exiled Count Mierowitz.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A strange incident occurred before the
-interment of old Bernikoff, who had a pompous
-military funeral. The bottom of his grave was found
-to be on fire!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A Scottish doctor (named Rogerson, we believe)
-at Catharine's Court attempted to explain
-this phenomenon, as resulting from a species of
-ironstone which was saturated with the phosphorus
-supplied by the bones of old interments,
-and which had been ignited by the friction of
-the sexton's shovel; but the superstitious
-Russians took a very different and much more
-diabolical view of the matter, and laughed to scorn
-the learned opinion of the Scottish pundit.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap24"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XXIV.
-<br /><br />
-CONCLUSION.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Their horses were tolerably refreshed by the halt
-at Schlusselburg, and the nags which drew the
-light kabitka had been quite unused, so the
-whole party pushed on at a brisk pace, by the
-road towards the frontiers of Finland, the
-Cossacks of the escort, whatever they thought, making
-neither remark nor inquiry, as they trusted
-obediently and implicitly to the officer who led
-them; but the darkness of the October morning,
-the deep and muddy, stony and rough, nature of
-the roads, and the violence of the storm, erelong
-began to have a severe effect upon their cattle,
-and, to the great satisfaction of Balgonie, two of
-the troopers gradually dropped to the rear, and
-were seen no more.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now the Corporal of the Cossacks ventured to
-hint, that "perhaps they were not pursuing the
-way they had come, as the lights in St. Isaac's
-Cathedral must have been visible long ago;" but
-Balgonie replied, haughtily and briefly, that he
-"had <i>special</i> orders."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then the Corporal urged a short halt, as the
-horses were sinking; but again Balgonie replied,
-that he "had peculiar orders, and must push on."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After passing a little village with a windmill,
-several miles from the shore of the Lake of
-Ladoga, the road dipped down into a dark hollow,
-between impending crags of granite, the grey
-faces of which were already beginning to brighten
-in the first light of the lagging October sun. The
-rain and wind were over; the hollow way was
-fall of rolling and perplexing mist; but Usakoff
-affirmed with confidence that he knew the
-country well.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Out of the grey vapour, from both sides of the
-path, there flashed, redly and luridly, five or six
-muskets! One bullet struck white splinters from
-the kabitka eliciting a shriek from its occupant;
-another whistled through the mane of Charlie's
-horse; and a third killed one of the Cossacks, who
-died without a groan, for it passed fairly through
-his temples.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The way was beset by armed men, whose numbers
-and disposition the dim light, or, rather, the
-darkness and the mist, alike served to conceal.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Make way, in the name of the Empress!"
-cried Balgonie, dashing forward, with his sabre
-drawn; "Nay, I command you, on your peril
-and allegiance!" he added, as the threatening
-words of Vlasfief occurred to him; and, to his
-astonishment and dismay, he saw that personage
-actually appear, mounted and armed, wearing a
-regimental hat and plume, with a kind of dark
-green tunic, or patrol jacket, richly braided with
-gold, and trimmed heavily with black fur. His
-party, who seemed all on foot, were clad like
-peasants, but were armed with muskets, which
-they were rapidly casting about and reloading.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Halt, in the name of the Empress&mdash;halt, I
-command you! for this is <i>not</i> the way to
-St. Petersburg, whither the prisoner and treasure
-were to be conveyed. Treason! treason!"
-shouted the Staff Captain Vlasfief.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Balgonie fired a pistol at his head; but the
-Captain's horse reared, or was compelled to do so
-by bit and spur, for the bullet pierced its throat;
-and with an oath, Vlasfief fell on the pathway,
-entangled in the stirrups as the animal sank under
-him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The three remaining Cossacks, who were somewhat
-bewildered by the attack, by the appearance
-of Vlasfief, whom they knew, and whose confident
-bearing confirmed certain gathering suspicions
-that something was wrong as to their route, now
-drew their sabres, aimed several blows at
-Usakoff's head, and endeavoured to cut the reins of
-his horse, or stab it between the shafts, as he
-lashed the animal almost to racing speed, and the
-light kabitka jolted, rolled, and bounded along
-the rough road behind it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By another pistol-shot Balgonie rid himself of
-the Cossack Corporal, whose bridle arm he broke,
-while facing about and galloping in rear of the
-kabitka; and now with wild hallooes, the entire
-party of armed men followed it on foot, with all
-speed, up a steep slope, over which the path
-wound.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Usakoff ground his teeth, for he was without
-weapons, and passive in the flying combat; but,
-being fertile in expedients, he tore open a bag of
-roubles, and scattered them on the upland road
-with a ready and reckless hand.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The bright silver coins proved too exciting for
-the cupidity of the pursuers, who loitered to pick
-them up, tumbling, scrambling, rising and falling
-over each other, with shouts, curses, and
-maledictions, their fire-arms sometimes exploding the
-while; and so the whole were speedily left
-behind, as the kabitka, guarded now by
-Balgonie alone, was driven along a lonely and
-unfrequented road, that led to the little town of
-Pomphela.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Thanks, dear Usakoff&mdash;thanks for your
-presence of mind," said Balgonie; "I had forgot
-all about those roubles."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Silver has achieved for us what neither our
-lead or steel would have done!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But, to lighten the kabitka, let us throw out
-those remaining bags&mdash;this perilous lumber, the
-intended recapture of which has nearly cost us
-our lives&mdash;honour&mdash;all, at the hands of Vlasfief."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Nay, nay, never! Lumber, say you? The
-roubles are Natalie's&mdash;hers and mine&mdash;hers and
-yours, when you wed her; they have saved us
-once, and may do so again," replied Usakoff
-cheerfully, as the sun burst forth in his clear October
-splendour, and they saw the dome-shaped cupola
-of the Church of Pomphela rising with a golden
-gleam from amid the white morning haze.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There Balgonie's uniform and a display of gold
-and roubles operated powerfully on the Postmaster,
-who, without asking for passports or other
-papers, at once, and in the name of the Empress,
-supplied them with fresh horses for the frontier,
-towards which, after procuring some proper
-nourishment and restoratives for Natalie, they
-pushed on without a moment of unnecessary
-delay.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ah," thought Balgonie, with a shudder and
-a prayer; "had Jagouski's name not been omitted
-in that order of Weymarn, where would she have
-been now?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Pale with sorrow and long suffering, her face
-was still beautiful, though sorely wasted; the
-deep thoughtful eyes had yet a wealth&mdash;a world
-of tenderness in their liquid depths; and the long
-dark hair was thick, soft, and wavy as ever, as it
-fell in masses behind the small, compact, and
-finely-formed head.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yet withal, her wretchedness had been extreme,
-having been so suddenly and rudely rent from
-all those habits of luxury and tender nurture,
-which had become, as it were, a second nature;
-and often, very often, had it occurred to her in
-her later misery of soul "that the repose of the
-grave is sweet, and that there cometh after death
-a levelling and making even of things which
-would at last cure all her evils."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But all was changed now; and, as she laid her
-head on Charlie's breast, she felt content&mdash;almost
-happy; and the horrors that hung over her family
-alone prevented her, as yet, from being completely so.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-No trace of pursuers were behind them now,
-though their flight must by this time have been
-known both in the capital and at Schlusselburg.
-But in those days there were neither railroads nor
-electric telegraphs; so, riding on more leisurely,
-Balgonie changed horses again near Viborg, and
-erelong the great Lake of Saima appeared before
-them, with the distant hills of Swedish Finland
-beyond its friendly waters.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A boat was procured there; the kabitka was
-abandoned; and, with a shout of joy, Usakoff
-assisted the Finnish boatman to hoist the great
-lug-sail to catch the breeze of a balmy and
-beautiful evening, as they bade a long farewell to
-Russia and all its terrors.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In a quaint old Church of Finland, by the
-eastern shore of the Lake of Saima, and in view
-of its little archipelago of granite isles,&mdash;a lonely
-little fane, buried amid groves of plum and cherry
-trees, built of wood and painted red, with a little
-holy bell jangling in its humble belfry,&mdash;Charlie
-Balgonie and his fugitive bride were united by
-the old Curate, with the consent of the Lutheran
-Bishop of Heinola; and there a thousand roubles
-spent among the poor spread in the primitive
-district a happiness, the tradition of which is still
-remembered with many a grateful exaggeration.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After this, poor Usakoff, finding himself perhaps,
-as a third person, rather in the way, left
-them to become a soldier of fortune; and he is
-supposed to have perished in one of the Polish
-struggles for freedom; at least, they heard of him
-no more, after their final journey to Scotland.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Two years before these events, it would appear
-that Charlie's uncle, "the godly and upright"
-Gamaliel Balgonie, merchant, magistrate, and
-elder, had departed in peace to sin no more,
-leaving the lands and possessions of Balgonie
-unimpaired; and a long tombstone in that famous
-city of the dead, the Howff of Dundee, records
-at length all the virtues which his contemporaries
-in general and the Presbytery in particular
-believed him to possess.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So Carl Ivanovitch became once more Balgonie
-of that Ilk; and the roubles of Natalie added
-many a turret and many an acre to his patrimonial
-dwelling in beautiful Strathearn.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap25"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-L'ENVOI.&mdash;ILLUSTRATIVE NOTE.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-To convince the reader how nearly History
-has been followed in the previous pages, we
-shall take the liberty of inserting the subsequent
-manifesto, published with reference to the death
-of Ivan IV.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-"By the Grace of God, we, Catharine the
-Second, Empress and Autocratrice of all
-the Russias, &amp;c., &amp;c., to all whom these
-presents may concern:
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-When by the divine will, and in compliance
-with the unanimous desires of our faithful subjects,
-we ascended the throne of Russia, we were not
-ignorant that Ivan, son of Anthony, Prince of
-Brunswick-Wolfenbuttel, and of the Princess
-Anne of Mecklenburg was still alive. This
-Prince, as is well known, was immediately after
-his birth unlawfully declared heir to the imperial
-crown; <i>but</i>, by the decrees of Providence, he was
-soon after irrevocably excluded from that high
-dignity, and the sceptre was placed in the hands
-of the lawful heiress, Elizabeth (daughter of Peter
-the Great), our beloved aunt of glorious memory.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"After we had ascended the throne, and
-offered up to Heaven our just thanksgivings, the
-first object that employed our thoughts, in
-consequence of <i>that humanity which is so natural to us</i>,
-was the unhappy situation of that Prince, who
-was <i>dethroned</i> by <i>divine Providence</i>, and had been
-unfortunate since his birth.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"To prevent, therefore, ill-intentioned persons
-from giving him any trouble, or from making use
-of his name to disturb the public tranquillity, we
-gave him a guard, and placed about his person
-two officers, in whose fidelity and integrity we
-could confide. These were Captain Vlasfief and
-Lieutenant Tschekin, who by their long military
-services deserved a suitable recompense, and a
-station in which they might pass quietly the
-remainder of their days. They were accordingly
-charged with the care of the Prince, and were
-strictly enjoined to let none approach him. Yet
-all these precautions were not sufficient....
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A <i>Put-parooschick</i> (a sub-lieutenant) of the
-Regiment of Smolensko, a native of the Ukraine,
-Basil Mierowitz (grandson of the first rebel that
-followed Mazeppa), took it into his head to make
-use of this Prince, to advance his fortune at all
-events, without being restrained by a consideration
-of the bloody scene that such an attempt
-might occasion. In order to execute this detestable,
-dangerous, and desperate project, he
-contrived, during our absence in Livonia, to be
-upon guard in the fortress of Schlusselburg,
-where the guard is relieved every eight days;
-and the 15th of last month, about two in the
-morning, he called out the main guard, formed
-it in line, and ordered the soldiers to load with
-ball. Bernikoff, Governor of the fortress, came
-out of his apartment, and asked Mierowitz the
-reason of the disturbance, but received no other
-answer from this rebel than a blow with the
-butt-end of his musket.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Captain Vlasfief and Lieutenant Tschekin
-seeing that it was impossible to resist such a
-superior force, and considering the unhappy
-consequences that must ensue from the deliverance
-of THE PERSOX who was committed to their care,
-after deliberating together, took the only step that
-they thought proper to maintain public tranquillity,
-which was to <i>cut short the days of the
-unfortunate Ivan</i>. Mierowitz, on seeing the dead body
-of the Prince, was so confounded by a sight he so
-little expected, that he acknowledged his temerity
-and guilt, and discovered his repentance to the
-troops, whom, about an hour before, he had
-seduced from their duty, and rendered the
-accomplices of his crime.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Then it was that the two officers who had
-nipped this rebellion in the bud, joined the
-Governor of the fortress in securing this rebel,
-and bringing back the soldiers to their duty.
-They also sent to our Privy Councillor Count
-Fanin, <i>under whose orders they acted</i>, a relation of
-this event, which, though unhappy, has nevertheless,
-<i>under the protection of Heaven</i>, prevented still
-greater calamities. This Senator despatched
-immediately <i>Pulovnick</i> (Colonel) Caschkin, with
-sufficient instructions to maintain tranquillity on the
-spot (or where the assassination was committed),
-and sent us, at the same time, a circumstantial
-account of the whole affair. In consequence of
-this, we ordered Lieutenant-General Weymarn,
-of the division of St. Petersburg, to take the
-necessary information on the spot; and the
-confession of the villain himself, who has
-acknowledged his crime.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Sensible of its enormity and consequences
-with regard to the peace of our country, we have
-referred the whole affair to the consideration of
-our Senate, which we have ordered, jointly with
-the Synod, to invite the three first classes and the
-Presidents of all the Colleges to hear the verbal
-relation of General Weymarn, who has taken the
-proper informations, to pronounce sentence in
-consequence thereof, and to present it to us, for
-confirmation of the same.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-"CATHARINE."
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-By a singular species of sophistry, the guilt of
-Ivan's death is thus, by a subsequent document,
-transferred to Basil Mierowitz:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"As the violent death of the unfortunate Prince
-Ivan was the immediate consequence of the
-desperate attempt of Mierowitz, so must this officer be
-considered as the principal cause of this
-assassination&mdash;nay, even regarded as <i>the murderer of that
-unhappy Prince</i>."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To this, five Russian Bishops appended their
-signatures.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Vlasfief was made a General, and his Lieutenant
-a Colonel, in the following year, with a
-pension of ten thousand roubles each.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-THE END.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t4">
-PRINTED BY W. H. SMITH AND SON, 186, STRAND, LONDON.
-<br /><br />
-9-8-69.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
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