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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #68789 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68789)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The dead tryst, 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 dead tryst
-
-Author: James Grant
-
-Release Date: August 19, 2022 [eBook #68789]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Al Haines
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE DEAD TRYST ***
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- THE DEAD TRYST
-
-
- BY
-
- JAMES GRANT
-
- AUTHOR OF 'THE ROMANCE OF WAR'
-
-
- LONDON
- GEORGE ROUTLEDGE AND SONS
- BROADWAY, LUDGATE HILL
- NEW YORK: 9, LAFAYETTE PLACE
-
- 1883
-
-
-
-
- JAMES GRANT'S NOVELS,
-
- _Price 2s. each, Fancy Boards._
-
- The Romance of War
- The Aide-de-Camp
- The Scottish Cavalier
- Bothwell
- Jane Seton: or, the Queen's Advocate
- Philip Rollo
- The Black Watch
- Mary of Lorraine
- Oliver Ellis: or, the Fusileers
- Lucy Arden: or, Hollywood Hall
- Frank Hilton: or, the Queen's Own
- The Yellow Frigate
- Harry Ogilvie: or, the Black Dragoons
- Arthur Blane
- Laura Everingham: or, the Highlanders of Glenora
- The Captain of the Guard
- Letty Hyde's Lovers
- Cavaliers of Fortune
- Second to None
- The Constable of France
- The Phantom Regiment
- The King's Own Borderers
- The White Cockade
- First Love and Last Love
- Dick Rooney
- The Girl he Married
- Lady Wedderburn's Wish
- Jack Manly
- Only an Ensign
- Adventures of Rob Roy
- Under the Red Dragon
- The Queen's Cadet
- Shall I Win Her?
- Fairer than a Fairy
- One of the Six Hundred
- Morley Ashton
- Did She Love Him?
- The Ross-shire Buffs
- Six Years Ago
- Vere of Ours
- The Lord Hermitage
- The Royal Regiment
- Duke of Albany's Own Highlanders
- The Cameronians
- The Scots Brigade
- Violet Jermyn
- Jack Chaloner
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS.
-
-
- CHAPTER
-
- I. TWO COUSINS
- II. CHARLIE PIERREPONT
- III. THE DREADED MEETING
- IV. CHARLIE IN LOVE
- V. WHAT HAPPENED IN THE DOM KIRCHE
- VI. AN ALARM
- VII. AMONG THE BREAKERS
- VIII. CHARLIE'S VISITOR
- IX. FOR LIFE AND DEATH
- X. TO THE RHINE!
- XI. SEPARATED
- XII. THE BAPTISM OF FIRE
- XIII. THE DREAM IN THE BIVOUAC
- XIV. THE LETTER OF ERNESTINE
- XV. WHAT THE 'EXTRA BLATT' TOLD
- XVI. IN FRONT OF METZ
- XVII. FACING A BATTERY OF MITRAILLEUSES
- XVIII. IN THE ENEMY'S HANDS
- XIX. THE CHATEAU DE CAILLÉ
- XX. ERNESTINE
- XXI. AT AIX ONCE MORE
- XXII. AT BURTSCHEID
- CONCLUSION
-
-
-
-
-THE DEAD TRYST.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-THE COUSINS.
-
-On an evening in summer before the late siege of Paris, three
-ladies--one a matron of mature years, the other two both young and
-handsome girls, a brunette and a blonde--were seated in one of the
-lofty windows of a stately room on the first _étage_ of the Grand
-Hotel Royal, which immediately overlooks the Rhine at Cologne.
-
-The senior of these--Adelaide, Countess of Frankenburg, a woman
-grey-haired now, and with features somewhat of the heavy German
-type--had just received a letter, and was intent upon it, while her
-daughter Ernestine, and her orphan niece Herminia, watched her face
-with interest, and forgot the little Tauchnitz editions over which
-they had been idling.
-
-'What does my brother Heinrich say?' asked Ernestine.
-
-'That he has got extended leave of absence from Potsdam, and next
-week will arrive at Frankenburg, to spend some time with us. He
-brings with him a young English friend, Carl Pierrepont, an officer
-of his regiment. I trust, Herminia, you will receive my dear boy
-with all the affection he so justly merits.'
-
-But Herminia made no reply, so the Countess repeated what she had
-said, and fixed her eyes steadily and inquiringly upon her. She only
-sighed, opened, and then tossed aside her Tauchnitz edition of an
-English novel. The Countess's ideas of propriety would not permit
-her to allow her girls to peruse any other light literature; but
-having an idea that a married woman might read works of a
-higher-flavoured nature, she sometimes read the works of MM. Dumas
-and De Kock, to 'keep up her French,' as she phrased it
-
-The cousins--known as 'the Belles of Frankenburg'--were alike in
-stature and delicacy, but very dissimilar in style of beauty and in
-complexion. Herminia was dazzlingly fair, of a pure Saxon type, with
-hair of that lovely brown tint which seems shot with gold in the
-sunshine, and soft eyes of violet-blue, that seemed almost black at
-night, and though brown her tresses, and wondrously fair her skin,
-her eyelashes and eyebrows were dark, almost black; but her pretty
-little nose bordered rather on the _retroussé_.
-
-Ernestine was a dark beauty, with black hair and clear, but
-thoughtful and dreamy hazel eyes, which she inherited with the blood
-of some Hungarian ancestor; her whole style was more classic than
-that of her cousin. Her nose was slightly aquiline, with dark
-straight eyebrows that nearly met over it, imparting a great degree
-of character to her face, which was suggestive of decision of mind
-and firmness of purpose--a little self-willed and opinionated,
-perhaps; for Ernestine was not without her faults. She was fond of
-admiration; but what pretty girl is not? She liked dress and gaiety,
-and would dance all night if her partners pleased her.
-
-The Countess carefully folded her son's letter, and fixing her keen
-grey eyes on Herminia, said, somewhat sententiously:
-
-'Though an old man now, the father of my Heinrich was as brave a
-soldier as ever trod the soil of Germany, and his name is yet
-venerated among the Uhlans of the Archduke; and I am proud to say,
-Herminia, that his son is worthy of such a father.'
-
-'Were my cousin the Archduke himself,' said Herminia, wearily, for
-she was pretty well used to hear these encomiums, 'he would be
-totally indifferent to me.'
-
-'Herminia!'
-
-'Totally, I repeat. Pardon me, dear Aunt Adelaide; but he has no
-particular claim on my regard.'
-
-'He is your cousin, your own blood relation--near almost as a
-brother!' said the Countess, impatiently.
-
-'But still, mamma, as I have said a hundred times before, he can have
-no claim upon her hand,' urged Ernestine, who had not yet spoken on
-the subject.
-
-'Do you, Grafine, wish to abet Herminia in her strange contumacy?'
-asked the Countess, severely.
-
-'I speak but my thoughts, dearest mamma.'
-
-'Her father, the Staats Rath, gave her away to him as a child; but
-you, as well as I do, know the arrangement made by our family; they
-were betrothed when she was in her cradle, and he a schoolboy at
-Bonn; and now he comes to claim her hand, in virtue of that
-betrothal,' added the Countess, who, though a German, had
-considerable nobility and dignity in her bearing and aspect.
-
-'Such foolish arrangements may have been made long ago, Aunt
-Adelaide, when robber-barons lived in those ruined castles which look
-down from every rock upon the Rhine; but such would be absurd in
-these days of ours, when its waters are ploughed up by steamers, and
-the lurlies and elves have all been put to flight.'
-
-'Herminia,' said the Countess, with increasing severity, 'do you
-revere the memory of the Baron and Privy Councillor your father?'
-
-'I do, indeed, Aunt Adelaide; my father's memory is very dear to me,
-even as that of my dead mother, whom I never saw,' replied the girl,
-with her eyes growing moist; 'but I decline to admit the right of
-either to give me, while yet a helpless child, away to anyone in
-marriage. The idea is eccentric; it is more, it is odious and
-preposterous!'
-
-'You use somewhat strong language, Grafine.'
-
-'Surely not stronger than the situation merits?' replied Herminia,
-her soft voice trembling with agitation and annoyance. 'If my cousin
-Heinrich is unmanly enough to insist upon the fulfilment of this most
-absurd family compact, I shall ever deem him most unworthy of my
-regard, or, indeed, that of any woman!' added Herminia, whose tears
-now began to fall.
-
-'Then it is your resolution to violate, to trample upon, to utterly
-disregard the affectionate contract made by your parents and by his?'
-
-'But I have never seen this--this most tiresome cousin, Aunt
-Adelaide!'
-
-'That has been a misfortune caused by your being educated in England,
-while he was at the university, and then with the army.'
-
-'Hence he is to me a stranger, and must be greeted and received as
-such.'
-
-'I think my brother Heinrich is acting foolishly in bringing the
-English friend (of whom he writes so frequently) to Frankenburg,'
-said Ernestine.
-
-'Why?' asked the Countess.
-
-'Because Herminia, in the very spirit of opposition, may fall in love
-with _him_.'
-
-'My father could not have taken a surer way to make me shun and
-loathe my cousin, and even do something more dreadful still, than by
-forming this arrangement.'
-
-'Something more dreadful still!' repeated the Countess, raising her
-voice, and surveying her niece through her gold eyeglass. 'In
-Heaven's name, what _do_ you mean, Herminia?'
-
-'By compelling me to marry a man I don't love; for what happiness
-could follow a union with a total stranger? Besides, I don't want to
-marry.'
-
-'Your own cousin a stranger?' persisted the Countess. 'But though we
-have discussed this subject a thousand times before, there is one
-feature in it to which I have never referred, and which,
-consequently, will be _new_ to you.'
-
-'I am glad to hear _that_,' replied the contumacious little beauty,
-shrugging her pretty shoulders and almost yawning.
-
-'I mean a clause in your father's will, by which, if you do not marry
-our Heinrich, your fortune will be divided between him and your
-cousin Ernestine,--leaving you, in fact, without a silver groschen.'
-
-'I would not have a kreutzer of it--neither, I am sure, would
-Heinrich!' exclaimed Ernestine, emphatically.
-
-'Neither of you would be consulted in the matter. But now, Herminia,
-will you brave the prospect of poverty--a life of utter
-dependence--go back to England as a governess, perhaps?'
-
-'Yes,' said the girl proudly; 'I would brave anything.'
-
-'You love some one else!' exclaimed her aunt.
-
-'I have never said so,' replied Herminia, with a perceptible tremor
-in her sweet voice; 'but no doubt it is this fortune of which you
-speak that Heinrich wants.'
-
-'Did he want it when you were in your cradle, and he was carrying his
-satchel at Bonn?'
-
-'I should think not; but he may want it now, after some years spent
-in the army.'
-
-'Shame! you forget yourself, Herminia--forget that you speak of your
-own cousin--of _my_ son. It is much more likely that some
-adventurous friend, some acquaintance, whom you have picked up here
-is thinking of your fortune, than my dear Heinrich.'
-
-The old lady's eyes were actually filled with tears, and after a
-pause she said:
-
-'I regret, Herminia, that I ever sent you to England.'
-
-'Why, dearest aunt?'
-
-'Because those English girls, your school companions there, have
-indoctrinated you with preposterous ideas of female
-independence--right of choice, and so forth; and now that I think of
-it, _who_ is that gentleman with whom you waltz so frequently?'
-
-'Waltz, aunt?' said the girl, in a low voice.
-
-'And who gave you, last night, that rose which you now wear in your
-breast?'
-
-'Last night, aunt?' faltered Herminia, now blushing deeply, while
-Ernestine laughed mischievously.
-
-'Don't repeat my words, please. Yes, last night, when the band of
-the Uhlans was playing in the garden of the Prinz Carl?'
-
-'Herr Ludwig Mansfeld.'
-
-'And how came you to know him?' asked the Countess, severely, adding,
-'I hope he is not an officer from the barracks?'
-
-(Such dreadful fellows 'those officers from the barracks' seem to be
-all the world over, from Canterbury to Cabul!)
-
-'I met him first at a ball in the Kaiserlicher Hof, where the Master
-of the Ceremonies introduced him to me when you were playing cards in
-the ante-room. We dance frequently; and the introduction was
-unnecessary, according to our German ideas.'
-
-'In--deed!'
-
-'Is there any harm in all that when he dances so delightfully?
-
-'And oh, how handsome he is!' exclaimed Ernestine.
-
-'I fear some harm has been done already; and I do not think that any
-gentleman should dance with a young lady before he has obtained the
-permission of her chaperone.'
-
-There was now a pause, after which the Countess said:
-
-'The Count urges our return before Heinrich arrives; so we shall take
-the train to Aix-la-Chapelle to-morrow.'
-
-'So very soon, aunt?' said Herminia, growing pale.
-
-'My dear, I am sorry to spoil your pleasure here; but to-morrow
-morning _we go_,' said the Countess, rising haughtily; 'come with me,
-Ernestine. I need your assistance with my correspondence.'
-
-The mother and daughter swept out of the room, their dresses--the
-rustling moiré of the Countess and the maize-coloured silk of
-Ernestine--gliding noiselessly over the varnished floor, and Herminia
-was left to her own sad reflections.
-
-'Ich bin sehr böse!' (I am very angry) she heard the Countess
-exclaim, as the door closed, and then she heard her cousin make some
-laughing response.
-
-'How can Ernestine be so heartless?' thought the girl; 'but, alas!
-she knows not what love is! To-morrow,' she exclaimed
-aloud--'to-morrow, I shall lose him, and perhaps for ever, my dear,
-dear Ludwig!'
-
-Her handsome eyes were now welling over with hot, salt tears. She
-had her arms above her head, with her white slender fingers
-interlaced amid the coils of her beautiful brown hair; her eyes were
-cast mournfully upward; then she tore her fairy fingers asunder with
-a sob in her throat and let her hands drop by her side as she sank
-back in her chair.
-
-'Would to Heaven that I had never known him--that we had never, never
-come to Cologne,' she exclaimed.
-
-She felt that she must see Ludwig once again; but this dreadful
-cousin, how was he to be avoided?
-
-These two ideas filled her whole soul as she sat, silent and
-motionless, looking out on the view that lay before the hotel
-windows: the broad waters of the famous Rhine, shining redly in the
-light of the setting sun, covered with sailing vessels and steamers
-shooting to and fro, its great pontoon bridge, through which the
-current surged, the wilderness of roofs that formed the city--that
-Rome of the north which Petrarch apostrophized to Colonna--stretching
-far away, with the great masses of the unfinished cathedral, the dome
-of St. Gereon, with its three galleries, and the stately tower of St.
-Cunibert rising high in the air and casting mighty shadows eastward.
-But Herminia surveyed them all as one who was in a dream, and kept
-repeating to herself, as she drew the rose from her breast and
-pressed it to her trembling lips with all a young girl's fervour:
-
-'Yes--yes--I must see him once again, and then all will be over--over
-for ever!'
-
-She glanced at her watch, took her hat and gloves from a console
-table close by, and hastily and noiselessly quitted the room.
-Descending the great staircase of the hotel, she issued into the
-beautiful garden attached to it, and proceeded at once to a certain
-fountain, near which a gentleman was lingering. He hurried towards
-her, and took both her tremulous little hands within his own. He
-gazed tenderly into her eyes, and then scanned the windows of the
-hotel. Alas! too many overlooked them, so the longed-for kiss was
-neither given nor taken; and neither knew that at this very time,
-they were both seen by the Countess and the laughing Ernestine.
-
-Though in plain clothes, attired as a civilian, the soldier-like air
-of Ludwig Mansfeld would not conceal. He was dark-complexioned,
-especially for a German, with straight handsome features. He was
-closely shaven, all save a thick moustache, and he had tender brown
-eyes--tender, at least, when they looked into those of Herminia, who
-was now weeping freely.
-
-'Tears?' said he, inquiringly.
-
-'Yes, Ludwig, tears; I have much reason for them.'
-
-'How, darling?
-
-'We leave Cologne to-morrow.'
-
-'Ah! why so soon?'
-
-'It is the resolve of my aunt.'
-
-'And for where, darling?'
-
-'Aix-la-Chapelle.'
-
-Her lover's features brightened as she said this.
-
-'Well, my own one, I shall be there in a few days,' he whispered
-cheerfully; 'and if we are prudent, and watch well our opportunities,
-it will indeed be a very remarkable thing if we don't meet as often
-as we may desire.'
-
-'But my cousin--this most odious _fiancé_--Heinrich von Frankenburg,
-joins us in a week from Potsdam, where, I understand, his regiment is
-stationed.'
-
-'I have seen Frankenburg, and know that he has the reputation of
-being dangerously handsome; but I thought he was on leave of absence?'
-
-'So he has been. As for Aunt Adelaide, she is a tyrant, and I do
-believe would keep me in pinafores, if she could!' said Herminia
-bitterly.
-
-'Herminia, dearest,' said the young man, while gazing at her
-lovingly, earnestly, and very keenly, 'you have never seen this
-wondrous cousin, to whom your family wish to assign you like a bale
-of goods?'
-
-'Oh, never even once, Ludwig; and to me he is an object of
-abhorrence!' she exclaimed passionately.
-
-'Excuse me, my love,' said Ludwig sadly; 'but I have a strange
-foreboding--a presentiment which comes to me unbidden, and seems to
-say that when you _do_ see him, your present abhorrence may pass
-away, and--and a tender emotion take its place. The propinquity and
-charms given to a cousin are perilous for a secret lover like me.'
-
-Herminia now wept bitterly.
-
-'Ludwig, I could quarrel with you for such a cruel suspicion,' she
-sobbed out, 'but that we are, I fear me, now speaking together for
-the--the--the last time,' and, heedless of who might see the action,
-in the abandonment of her great grief, her head sank on his shoulder,
-and she nestled her sweet face in his neck.
-
-'Your tears, my own darling,' said he, 'are a rebuke, and more than a
-sufficient rebuke, for my suspicion; and bitter, indeed, would this
-parting-time have been to me, but for the knowledge--the sure
-conviction--that, even if a thousand cousins came, still we shall
-meet at Aix.'
-
-Herminia shook her head mournfully, and said, 'I pray to Heaven that
-it may be so, and with the hope these words inspire, I must now,
-dear, dear Ludwig, say--farewell!'
-
-And so they parted, with hearts that doubtless were aching sorely,
-for their future seemed dark and dubious. Yet he seemed more hopeful
-than her. He kissed her very tenderly, and, though his naturally
-brown cheek looked pale, she thought he smiled at their temporary
-separation--if temporary it was to be--more than she could account
-for.
-
-But doubtless, lover-like, he had some bold plan in view.
-
-'Yet it was a sad, sad smile my darling gave me,' thought the girl,
-as, with her veil closely drawn, she slowly and wearily ascended the
-great oak staircase to the _étage_ off which her bed-room opened;
-'but no doubt he only thought of cheering me.'
-
-Next morning the Countess's carriage took the trio to the
-Eisenbahnhof for Aix-la-Chapelle; and as Herminia from the
-swift-speeding train looked back to the sinking spires of Cologne, a
-curtain seemed to have fallen between her past and present existence.
-
-And oh! how weary was the night that followed, when tossing
-restlessly, defiantly, and petulantly on her laced pillow, she lay in
-broken slumber, with tears matting her long and lovely eyelashes.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-CHARLIE PIERREPONT.
-
-A week after this, a drochski deposited a smart-looking young
-officer, in the uniform of the 95th Thuringian regiment--blue with
-red facings and silver epaulettes, spike-helmet and black belt--at
-the entrance of the Pariser Hof of Cologne, a comfortable and
-moderate hotel, suitable to that style of economy continental
-military men are usually constrained to practise.
-
-Though wearing the well-known uniform of the Prussian army, it was
-impossible not to recognize in the new arrival, as he sprang lightly
-up the steps of the hotel, that he was an Englishman, a genuine
-Briton, for he was the Carl Pierrepont mentioned by young Frankenburg
-in his letter to the Countess. Carl--or Charlie, as he was known
-when he was wont to hold his wicket in the playing-grounds of Rugby
-against the best bowler in the three hundred, and to con his studies
-in the white brick Tudor school-house, or in the long avenue called
-Addison's Walk--was a great favourite with all his regiment, and
-already had the honour of being specially noticed on parade by our
-Princess Royal when her husband was reviewing the Prussian troops,
-and of receiving from his hand the much-coveted Iron Cross when
-almost in his boyhood.
-
-One great cause, perhaps, of Charlie's popularity among the
-Thuringians was, that as an Englishman he was destitute of that
-aristocratic hauteur which causes the well-born German officer to
-regard all under his command as an inferior order of beings, a style
-of bearing and sentiment unknown alike in the armies of Britain and
-France.
-
-His face was fair, his features handsome, and he was verging on
-thirty years of age. His character, like his figure, was fully
-developed and formed; the expression of his eyes betokened
-intelligence and promise; while his lithe and manly form had all that
-muscular strength and activity that women often prefer to intellect
-in men, and which is frequently the result of the out-door sports in
-the playgrounds of Rugby, Eton, and Harrow, a portion of our English
-system of education.
-
-Though the son of a fox-hunting Warwickshire squire, who knew every
-cover in Stoneleigh, the Brailes, and the Edgehills, the head of an
-old but certainly embarrassed family, so far as mortgages and so
-forth went, he was barely deemed among the wohlgeborn, according to
-the Prussian standard; and poor Charlie had nothing as yet but his
-epaulettes and sword, his pay as a soldier of Fortune, with the
-privileges usually accorded to Continental officers, such as going
-everywhere at half-price in virtue of their being in
-uniform--privileges which ours would decline 'with thanks.'
-
-Charlie Pierrepont was everywhere a great favourite with the other
-sex; and perhaps there was no species of flirtation in which he was
-not a skilled hand, and he had carefully studied the whole 'scale of
-familiarities, the gamut of love,' as he was wont to call it, from a
-touch of the hand or the elevation of an eyebrow, upward, to the
-extremity of tenderness; and thus much of his time had been passed
-pleasantly for some ten years in every garrison town between the Elbe
-and the Vistula; but he had always come off scot-free, for he was
-possessed, as we have said, of but his epaulettes and sword, while
-many of the girls he met were as finished flirts as himself; and
-some, after a short acquaintance, would show their hands with a
-laugh, and, as it were, throw up their cards.
-
-'Kellner! let me have a room on the lowest _étage_ that is
-unoccupied,' said he, as his portmanteaus were carried in by the
-hausknecht.
-
-'Yes, mein Herr,' replied the oberkellner, or head-waiter.
-
-'Is the young Count Von Frankenburg here--an officer of the
-Thuringians?'
-
-'Yes; he is now at the _table d'hôte_. The bell has just rung, so
-mein Herr is exactly in time for dinner.'
-
-'Very good.'
-
-'This way, mein Herr,' said the waiter, bowing; 'but, though in the
-Prussian uniform, I think the Herr is an Englishman.'
-
-'How do you know that I am so?'
-
-'Because I myself am one, and I recognized you by your voice.'
-
-And, sooth to say, Charlie was very unlike a German in that respect,
-and had the pleasantly modulated voice of a well-trained English
-gentleman, and few voices are more agreeable to listen to.
-
-He entered the stately speise-saal, or dining-hall of the hotel,
-where the landlord, in the kindly German fashion, sat at the head of
-the table, presiding over all his guests, more than a hundred in
-number, and already the waiters were busy. A single glance showed
-Pierrepont where his comrade sat--a smart and handsome young officer
-in undress uniform, who was caressing a dark moustache, and making
-himself agreeable to a lady beside him. He rose and beckoned to the
-new arrival.
-
-'Welcome to Cologne, Carl!'
-
-'Thanks, Heinrich. How are you?'
-
-They shook hands simply, as Charlie had a genuine English repugnance
-to salute a man in the German fashion on the cheek. He then took the
-chair which his friend, the Count, had reversed and placed against
-the table, for service beside his own.
-
-'Kellner! die speise-karte!' The wine card was called for next, and
-the serious business of the meal began, amid all that noise and
-hubbub peculiar to a German _table d'hôte_, where Counts and Barons,
-with ribbons and orders, may be seen handling their knives and forks
-like English ploughmen, and pretty frauleins tugging away at chicken
-bones with the whitest of teeth, and the most perfect air of
-self-possession. The first conversation was, of course, about the
-expected war concerning the Spanish succession, the political
-sketches in the _Kladderadatch_, the official accounts in the _Staats
-Anzeiger_; how all Paris was brimming over with enthusiasm, rage, and
-vengeance; that crowds were always in the streets shouting, 'Down
-with Prussia!' 'To the Rhine! to the Rhine!' 'To Berlin!' How the
-'Marseillaise' was being sung, and the hotel of the Prussian
-ambassador was only saved from total destruction by the intervention
-of the gendarmerie; for the time had now come when the Prussians
-spoke exultingly of Leipzig, even as the French did of Jena, and also
-raised the cry of 'To the Rhine!' while the national songs of the
-Fatherland were constantly sung in hoarse but martial chorus.
-
-Dinner over, the lighted candles came, as a hint for the ladies to
-retire, and rising like a covey of partridges they withdrew. The
-cloth was removed, and fresh bottles of wine, or lager-beer, with
-tobacco and cigars, were provided on all hands, and the conversation
-became more general, and, if possible, more noisy than before.
-
-As the subject of the coming war was discussed, many eyes were turned
-to the two friends in the uniform of the 95th Thuringians, for both
-seemed gentlemen and soldiers, and no troops in the world look more
-like our own in bearing, and in firm, manly physique, than the
-Prussians. Charlie Pierrepont had acquired many of the ways of the
-latter, and would join, when on the march, 'Was is des Deutschen
-Vaterland,' as lustily as if his father had been some Rhenish Baron,
-and not a hearty Warwickshire squire.
-
-'I am already sick of this subject of the war,' said Charlie, as he
-lingered over a cigar; 'one hears so much of it everywhere. By the
-way, have you yet seen your fair cousin, Heinrich?'
-
-'Yes.'
-
-'And found her charming?'
-
-'Beyond my fondest hopes; but she knew not that I had seen her, nor,
-in truth, did I care much to intrude upon her.'
-
-'Intrude!--upon your intended?'
-
-'That is the word,' said the Count, with a strange smile.
-
-'Why, Herr Graf?'
-
-'Don't "Herr Graf" me. Call me Heinrich.'
-
-'Well?'
-
-'A deuced fellow, named Ludwig Mansfeld (I found it so in the
-_Fremden Buch_, at the Grand Hotel), has cut me out--quite.'
-
-'Have him out in another fashion, and I am the man to measure the
-ground for you.'
-
-'Thanks, Carl, but I would rather fire at my own figure in a mirror,'
-said Frankenburg, laughing.
-
-'You are sure your friends expect me at the Schloss?'
-
-'Yes, at Frankenburg; they are familiar with your name there. I have
-written so often of you to Ernestine, my sister.'
-
-'She was educated in England, I believe?'
-
-'With Herminia at the west end of London; so you and she will get on
-famously together. As you are a musician, you will like her
-immensely, Carl.'
-
-'I have no doubt of that.'
-
-Little indeed could poor Charlie Pierrepont foresee all Ernestine was
-yet to be to him.
-
-'I am a bad fellow, I fear,' said the Count reflectively; 'I have
-trifled with too many women in my time, and fear that I am not worthy
-of this sweet cousin of mine, even if she would have me.'
-
-'Nay, nay, Heinrich----'
-
-'Somebody writes, that "if we were all judged by our deservings,
-there is scarcely a man on earth would find a woman _bad_ enough for
-him."'
-
-'That is taking a low estimate of mankind in general.'
-
-'And of the 95th Thuringians in particular,' added the young Count,
-laughing; 'to-morrow we shall start for Frankenburg in an open
-britzka--it is only twenty-five miles from this; and now, one bottle
-more of St. Julian, and then we shall go and see the girls at the
-gardens of the Prinz Carl.'
-
-'Half German and half French--some of them are, no doubt, very
-pretty.'
-
-'Nay, I hope they are wholly German now. It was in those gardens I
-first met my beautiful cousin, with that devil of a fellow, who,
-somehow, got introduced to her. Let us go then; the band of the 76th
-Hanoverians plays there every evening. This time to-morrow will find
-us at dear old Frankenburg, where, as I shall have the girl all to
-myself, I hope to turn the flank of this Herr Mansfeld. I am in love
-with my cousin--actually in love with her at last.'
-
-'My simple comrade, of what are you talking? Is this any age of the
-world in which to wear your heart upon your sleeve? Is this fellow
-Mansfeld good-looking?'
-
-'Rather,' said the Count, twirling the points of his moustaches, and
-eyeing himself complacently in the depths of a great mirror opposite;
-'but I wish I had your general success, Carl.'
-
-'In what--I took honours in nothing at dear old Rugby.'
-
-'Indeed--not even in flirtation?'
-
-'In that I might have had the golden medal, had golden medals been
-given for such excellence.'
-
-They assumed their spike helmets and swords, which the Prussian
-officers wear through a perforation in the left skirt, as their belt
-is worn under the coat, and thus bantering each other, cigar in mouth
-and arm-in-arm, they proceeded laughingly towards the crowded gardens
-of the Prinz Carl Hotel.
-
-Next day saw them off for Frankenburg in an open britzka. The day
-was a lovely one in summer, and the scenery around them grand.
-Charlie, of course, apostrophized the Rhine, and quoted Byron. They
-passed Düren and the valley of the Ruhr, with the picturesque hamlet
-of Riedeggen perched on its lofty rock; Merodé, the cradle of the
-Merodeur; industrious Stolberg, with its château crowning a hill, and
-the beautiful wood named the Reichswald.
-
-Young Frankenburg was in excellent spirits, and bantered the driver,
-calling him schwager (brother-in-law), a singular title for
-post-boys, and so forth, the origin of which is unknown. He was
-rather too liberal to him in the matter of trinkgeld (drink money);
-thus the britzka was driven at a thundering rate down that basin of
-beautiful hills which surround Aix, while Heinrich waved his
-forage-cap, and sung verses from the war-song of Arndt:
-
- 'My own Fatherland, my brave Germany on!
- We'll sing them a terrible strain.
- For what ages ago, their vile policy won--
- Of Strasburg, of Metz, and Lorraine.
- They shall hand it all back to the uttermost mite,
- Since for life or for death they compel us to fight.
- To shout, "To the Rhine, to the Rhine, and advance!
- All Germany onward, and march into France!"'
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-THE DREADED MEETING.
-
-A week had passed away at Frankenburg, and the subject of the young
-Count's return--that event so dreaded by poor Herminia, from motives
-of delicacy, perhaps--had not been resumed, till the evening which
-saw him and his comrade driving through the beautiful scenery just
-referred to.
-
-Dinner had been delayed, as the Count had telegraphed from the
-Pariser Hof that he was coming, and both the young ladies had made
-most careful toilettes, and perhaps sorely tried the temper of their
-attendants--Herminia, to please her watchful and somewhat suspicious
-aunt; Ernestine to please herself, and perhaps with a secret desire
-to please her brother's boasted friend, who, being an Englishman,
-would, she feared, be rather critical and fastidious.
-
-And still further to achieve the laudable end of subduing him, she
-was now at her piano, practising sundry vapid fashionable songs which
-she had learned in England, just as our English girls strum German
-and Italian, learned, perhaps, at second hand from some poor needy
-governess. Most warmly had Heinrich written to her again and again
-about his English comrade, who had once actually fought a duel for
-him at Altona, when he was too ill to fight for himself, so Ernestine
-was all anxiety to know, receive, and thank him; for she doted on
-Heinrich, her only brother, as a loving, tender, and devoted sister
-alone can dote.
-
-During all the past week, Herminia had but one thought, especially
-when riding, driving, or walking abroad. Her lover had confidently
-promised to see her again, and to follow her to Frankenburg; but she
-had seen nothing of him, and no letter or note, however brief, had
-reached her.
-
-Why was this? She could find no answer in her heart, and doubt and
-anxiety cost her many tears in secret.
-
-There had been great bustle and anticipation all day long in the
-somewhat secluded mansion in consequence of the expected arrival of
-the young Herr Graf and his friend. The family were to be 'not at
-home' to any visitors. Already Grunthal, Rheinburg, and sundry other
-Grafs had called in their ramshackle old-fashioned coaches and
-droschkies, covered with coats-of-arms exhibiting the usual German
-infinity of quarterings; and certain officials of Aix-la-Chapelle,
-with their wives, who, like other wives all over Germany, insisted
-upon taking the titles of their husbands' occupation, had been day
-after day leaving their cards, having heard that 'the Belles of
-Frankenburg had returned;' but now all were to be denied, and this
-afternoon was to be devoted to the only son of the house.
-
-The Countess, who, though a modern lady of fashion, requiring her
-novels, cushions, Spitz lap-dog in a basket, and the _Kladderadatch_
-to get through the day, was nevertheless, on the other hand, as
-thrifty a German housewife as any of the old school, had bustled
-about overseeing the culinary preparations, while her husband, Count
-Ulrich, who was passionately addicted to the pleasures of the chase,
-spent only half that day in the woods, and was now, with a huge pipe
-(having a china bowl and tassel) in his mouth, watching, like a
-sentinel, from a terrace before the drawing-room windows, the road
-that wound away towards Aix-la-Chapelle.
-
-The once smart officer of Uhlans, who had ridden on old Blucher's
-staff at Waterloo, on that eventful day when the 'Iron Duke' wept
-with joy to hear the boom of the Prussian cannon--the smart Lancer,
-of whom the Countess had boasted at the Grand Hotel, was somewhat
-obese now. He was, in fact, a very stout, bald-headed, and rather
-coarsely featured old Teuton, with a red ribbon (of course) at his
-button-hole, and a thick plain hoop on his marital finger, as all
-married men wear one in Germany.
-
-He had been kept uninformed, so far as Herminia knew, of her aversion
-to his son, and her very decided preference for a certain obscure
-Herr Mansfeld, whose image was rising painfully before her, as she,
-too, from time to time, looked down on the distant view, to where the
-spires of the Dom Kirche of Aix rose darkly up amid the ruddy haze of
-evening.
-
-The Countess could detect in the face and deportment of her niece
-that which the preoccupied or uninformed Count did not. It was but
-too evident that Herminia had passed a disturbed night, a restless
-and feverish day. Indeed, Ernestine admitted that she had heard her
-sighing and moaning in her sleep, and Herminia had quitted her couch
-that morning resolving to appeal to the chivalry, the manhood, the
-charity, and honour of her cousin to release her from the yoke, the
-thraldom his family had placed upon her, even with the loss of her
-fortune.
-
-Ignorant of this resolution, the Countess took her niece's passive
-hand--and a lovely little hand it was--in hers, and said kindly but
-firmly--
-
-'Meine liebe, I trust that when our dear Heinrich arrives, you will
-not exhibit any unpleasant coldness towards him.'
-
-'Can you expect me to exhibit warmth? Is he not an utter stranger
-save by name? Would warmth in me be modest or becoming, aunt?
-Besides----' she paused, for tears choked her utterance.
-
-'Do not be alarmed, mamma,' said Ernestine, as she looked laughingly
-back from her seat at the piano; 'I know our Heinrich to be so
-handsome and winning, that he will soon obliterate all recollection
-of our friend at the Grand Hotel.'
-
-'Ernestine,' said Herminia reproachfully, while she glanced nervously
-at the portly figure of her uncle, who was still watching the Aix
-road from the lofty terrace, where the box-trees were cut into
-strange and fantastic shapes, like lions and egg-cups, and where some
-stately peacocks strutted to and fro.
-
-Frankenburg is situated on the summit of a tall rock that towers
-above the line of the Antwerp railway. The actual castle is a ruined
-and ivy-mantled tower of unknown, but fabulous, antiquity, as it is
-actually averred to have been a hunting seat of Charlemagne. A more
-modern edifice has been engrafted on it, and this formed at the time
-the residence of the Count's family. It had all the usual comforts
-of a fashionable German household; but there was still attached to it
-a banqueting-hall of the seventeenth century--the pride of Count
-Ulrich's heart--with its black oak roof, its rows of deer skulls and
-antlers, with all the implements for fishing, shooting, and hunting,
-hung upon the walls, pell-mell with fragments of armour and weapons
-of every kind, from the great glaives of the middle ages to muskets
-and sabres gleaned up by the Count at Ligny and Waterloo.
-
-And there, at Christmas time, a tall fir-tree from the Reichswald;
-covered with toys and cakes, grotesque masks, _papier-maché_ dolls,
-candles and shining lights, gladdened the hearts of the little
-tenantry, who were cuddled and kissed up and down by the hearty old
-Baron acting Father Christmas, with a mighty white beard, a cowl, and
-long wand; while Ernestine and Herminia glided about like good
-fairies, dispensing viands and wine to the sturdy Teutons and their
-blooming fraus, when the trees of the Reichswald were leafless and
-bare, and the branches glittered like silver and crystal in the
-frostwork, and the first snowdrops of the season were peeping up in
-sheltered spots, and the brown stacks of the last harvest were
-mantled with snow.
-
-And on these annual festive occasions there was seen the Countess
-Adelaide, as lively and jovial at fifty, if not so pretty, as she was
-at fifteen. There, too, were the grim ancestry, the men and women of
-other days and years, looking down from their garlanded frames, in
-ruffs and stomachers, in breastplates or fardingales, just as Hans
-Holbein, Rubens, and others had depicted them, and looking as demure
-as if they had never flirted, squeezed hands under the tablecloth,
-known the use of the mistletoe, or been like other folks 'world
-without end.'
-
-'Hoch! hoch! Gott in Himmel! here they come--here is our dear boy at
-last!' exclaimed the Count, clapping his fat pudgy hands, as the open
-britzka, drawn by a pair of sparkling bays, came suddenly in sight,
-with two officers in blue uniforms occupying the back seat. One of
-these--Heinrich, no doubt--was waving his forage-cap, and the vehicle
-was driven straight to the grand approach. The enthusiasm of the old
-veteran of Waterloo swelling up in his breast when he saw the uniform
-of the 95th, for
-
- 'He thought of the days that had long since gone by,
- When his spirit was bold and his courage was high.'
-
-
-Herminia grew deadly pale, and took advantage of the Countess
-hurrying out upon the terrace to retire to her own room, whither,
-however, her watchful aunt almost immediately followed her.
-
-'Dearest Aunt Adelaide, oh! spare me this great mortification!'
-intreated the trembling girl.
-
-'Spare you?' repeated her aunt, now seriously angry, in expectation
-of a public scene before Charlie Pierrepont, a stranger.
-
-'Yes, I implore you to spare me the horror of this meeting. Oh,
-Ludwig!' she moaned in her heart, 'my own Ludwig!'
-
-'I do not know whether you are most weak or defiant,' replied her
-aunt. 'I give you a quarter of an hour to recover your composure and
-to make your appearance properly in the drawing-room, with such a
-bearing as will not be an insult to my son, to the memory of your
-father, and our whole family.'
-
-And with these words the Countess swept haughtily away.
-
-Herminia bathed her face and hands with eau-de-cologne and water,
-gave a finishing touch to her hair, kissed the envelope which
-contained the now dry and faded leaves of Ludwig's rose, placed it in
-her soft white bosom as a charm to strengthen her for the purpose she
-had in hand, and descended noiselessly to the drawing-room, when the
-sound of several voices, laughing loudly, jarred sorely on her ears
-and excited nerves.
-
-She entered with her heavy eyelids drooping, and advanced with her
-gaze bent on the oak planks of the polished floor; then she shuddered
-as some one approached and took her unresisting hand.
-
-'Herminia, dearest, look up! look upon _me_!' said a familiar voice.
-
-'Ludwig! my own Ludwig!' she exclaimed in astonishment--almost
-terror, to see him there, and in the uniform of the Thuringians, as
-he said--
-
-'And now, cousin, let me introduce you to my dear friend, Herr Carl
-Pierrepont of ours.'
-
-'Ludwig?' said the thoroughly bewildered girl.
-
-'No Ludwig at all,' he replied, laughing, and embracing her; 'but
-your own cousin, my belle--Heinrich of Frankenburg.'
-
-'Aunt Adelaide!--Ernestine!--what _does_ all this mean?'
-
-'It means, my dear child,' said the Countess, laughing heartily at
-her niece's perplexity; 'it means that it was all a plot of
-Ernestine's and Heinrich's, too. They had early learned your
-repugnance to the plan of betrothal, when you were too young to
-consent or refuse, and we all saw the folly of a constraint that
-seemed so heart-sickening to you. Thus we arranged that you should
-meet him as a stranger under an assumed name. You have met, and know
-and love each other, so the tie of that love alone binds you now.'
-
-'Oh, Ernestine, my sweet cousin, forgive and forget my reproaches!'
-exclaimed the blushing and trembling, but happy girl, as she laid her
-head on the bosom of the beautiful brunette, who laughed and kissed
-her, fondling her as if she were a child.
-
-'Well, Carl,' said Heinrich, 'what do _you_ think of all this?'
-
-'That I wish you every joy; but I must own, that when proposing to
-"have out" this Herr Mansfeld, your reply about shooting at
-_yourself_ in a mirror puzzled me,' said Pierrepont, laughing
-heartily at the whole situation, and enchanted with the happy scene
-amid which he was introduced to two such beautiful girls as the
-famous Belles of Frankenburg.
-
-But now the bell clanged for dinner. The Countess took his arm, the
-Count leading with his niece, Heinrich and his sister following, all
-laughter and smiles.
-
-The only silent one there was the radiant Herminia, who had been, as
-her affianced said, 'so pleasantly tricked.'
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-CHARLIE IN LOVE.
-
-That night, at the very time the three gentlemen were in the
-smoking-room busy with their china-bowled pipes, and with silver
-tankards of beer before them--Heinrich full of happy dreams about his
-fair-haired cousin and the trick they had played her; the old Count
-full of memories of Waterloo and the coming war, French insolence,
-the Vaterland, and all the rest of it; Charlie thinking how divinely
-Ernestine sang and played, how sweet her downcast lashes looked, how
-bright her upward glances, how lovely were the white hands that
-wandered over the ivory keys, and made the said keys look very dark
-and yellow by comparison, and while to him and Heinrich it seemed
-that life at Frankenburg would be almost insupportable without the
-two 'belles' thereof. While all this was being thought of in the
-smoking-room, we say, the two young ladies were comparing their notes
-in their mutual dressing-room before retiring for the night to their
-beds--those most uncomfortable couches which, in 'the Vaterland,' are
-mere wooden boxes with pillows half-way down, and so arranged that
-one can neither sit nor lie at full length therein.
-
-That Charlie was handsome, agreeable, pleasant, and so forth, was
-voted and carried _nem. con._, and Ernestine was full of fun and
-pleasure at the success of her scheme--for with her it
-originated--for luring Herminia into love with her brother by having
-him introduced to her as a stranger.
-
-'But oh, Herminia!' she exclaimed, 'to think of you getting the start
-of me!'
-
-'In what way?' asked Herminia, putting the whitest of feet into the
-daintiest of slippers.
-
-'In getting engaged _first_; it is most unkind!' continued Ernestine,
-laughing, as she let down the masses of her dark silky hair.
-
-'You forget, dear cousin, that I was engaged when in my cradle or
-berceaunette.'
-
-Then the two girls, now nearly half-undressed, laughed as only young
-and happy girls can laugh, and with two snowy arms upheld, and
-dimpled elbows shown, Ernestine went on brushing out that thick, dark
-silky hair of hers.
-
-'I declare, Herminia, I _do_ think I am pretty,' said she, suddenly
-pausing and surveying herself in her laced night-robe in the long
-cheval glass.
-
-'You are too beautiful not to be quite aware of it,' replied Herminia.
-
-'I wonder if Carl Pierrepont admired me?'
-
-'Why?'
-
-'Because--I should like him to do so.'
-
-'Who could fail to admire you?' responded the happy Herminia.
-
-'How sweetly he sang that song with me.'
-
-'Heinrich tells me he is poor,' was the suggestive remark of Herminia.
-
-'Alas!' after a pause, the former said, smiling.
-
-'Herr Pierrepont scarcely took his gaze off you all the night; when
-you sang alone he seemed entranced, and when with you, in those
-duets, his voice became tender and tremulous.'
-
-'Herminia, do you really think so, or do you jest?'
-
-'I do not jest; hence my suggestion about his being poor, for that
-man is loving you at first sight.'
-
-'Your own sudden happiness, and the revulsion of feeling consequent
-to the great _dénouement_ of to-day, lead you to think so,' replied
-Ernestine, her smile brightening nevertheless, for she liked the idea.
-
-'Nay, nay, his visit is to last some time; and time will prove that I
-am right,' persisted Herminia, twisting up her coils of golden brown
-hair.
-
-Ernestine sat for a time toying with a velvet slipper half on and
-half off her pretty foot, and then suddenly she said--
-
-'Oh, Herminia, how can such a man care for me?'
-
-'Why not, cousin dear? who would not, or could not, fail to care for
-you?'
-
-'But he seems so proud and cold, and so very English.'
-
-'You quite mistake, and only wish to hear me contradict you. He is
-much less so than your special admirer, Baron Grünthal, the Director
-of the Upper Consistorial Court.'
-
-'A hideous old frump!' said Ernestine, tossing her head.
-
-'Old! He is only forty.'
-
-'But that is more than twice my age. My husband must be young and
-handsome.'
-
-'Like Carl Pierrepont?'
-
-'Yes, like Carl Pierrepont.'
-
-'He certainly seems to have impressed you,' said Herminia.
-
-'You forget how often and how much Heinrich has written of him in his
-letters to me. He seems quite like an old friend. How strange it
-would be,' continued the girl, while a dreamy expression stole into
-her beautiful dark eyes, as she sat with her slender fingers
-interlaced over her knees, 'how very strange it would, if in him I
-should have met--met----'
-
-'What, cousin?
-
-'My fate.'
-
-'Let him take heed, that, in meeting you, he has not met with his
-own,' said Herminia merrily.
-
-'I have been longing to go to a wedding, and yours more than all,
-dear Herminia; for being aware of your betrothal, it was one to which
-I always looked forward. I shall be one of the bridesmaids, of
-course; and the two daughters of the Justiz-rath, and the two girls
-from Rheinberg, though their toilettes are odious, and Hermangilda's
-hair is always muffled up like a mop.'
-
-'A golden mop, though; but, dearest cousin, how your tongue does run
-on! Does it never occur to you that no marriage can take place with
-this French war--oh, meine Gott!--before us?'
-
-And her eyes of violet blue suddenly filled with tears as she spoke,
-as vague images of death and battle rose before her.
-
-'Forgive me, Herminia. Yet I was not jesting.'
-
-'Forgive you, dear? Yes. I may as well do so,' replied the other
-girl, kissing her cousin on both cheeks; 'for to you and aunt I owe
-the love that Heinrich bears me--the love that I bear him.'
-
-'And which Herr Mansfeld so nearly carried off!'
-
-'And now, as we have our prayer's to say, good-night.'
-
-
-Herminia was right; the girl, indeed, a close observer, was seldom
-wrong in her deductions, for 'Herr Carl Pierrepont' was hopelessly
-smitten at last by Ernestine, who, like the lively blonde, her
-cousin, was rich in those charms, and mere than all, those pretty
-mannerisms, or tricks of women, that win and secure a man's love for
-ever.
-
-Charlie was neither proud nor reserved--only a little shy at first;
-he had been engaged in many _affaires du coeur_, but a genuine attack
-of the tender passion was new to him. He soon found himself
-regularly installed and adopted, an _ami du maison_, with this
-delightful family at Frankenburg. As an Englishman, his natural love
-of hunting, shooting, and fishing won him the friendship of the old
-Count, with whom he drank as many flasks of Rhine wine and jugs of
-beer as he wished; but he had one blot in the eyes of the latter--he
-could never take cordially to _saur kraut_.
-
-He was a prime favourite with the Countess from his general
-_bonhommie_ of manner; and with Ernestine--ah! well, with
-Ernestine--he speedily became more of a favourite than the girl would
-have dared to acknowledge even to herself.
-
-Society at Frankenburg was narrow and monotonous; most of the
-visitors who came, especially Baron Grünthal and the Justiz-rath,
-spoke only of politics, of Bismarck's plans, and the coming war,
-which did not interest the ladies, save in so far as the 95th
-Thuringians were concerned.
-
-The days were devoted to rides and rambles amid the beautiful scenery
-around the old Schloss; the evenings to music, to singing, and
-frequently to dancing when the daughters of the Justiz-rath, or those
-of Baron Rhineberg, were present; and then our two 95th men were
-always in full uniform, _à la Prussien_; and the ladies were all
-unanimous that Charlie looked _so_ handsome.
-
-Those epaulettes! those epaulettes! To many a young English officer
-the pride and glory of wearing them was only secondary to the kiss of
-the first girl he loved; and where are they _now_?
-
-So Charlie was proud of his epaulettes.
-
-Heinrich had fairly won his lovely cousin--under 'false colours,'
-certainly; but, nevertheless, he _had_ won her; perhaps, from the
-girl's peculiar temperament and pride, he might never have done so
-otherwise; but having so won her, he was compelled to be thankful,
-for with this odious French war on the _tapis_--a war which, but for
-his love, he would have hailed with genuine German ardour, and the
-95th under 'orders of readiness' for the Rhine--marriage, as Herminia
-herself had said, was not to be thought of: so they had but to trust
-to time and wait.
-
-The Countess being always busy about the management of her household,
-the Count having frequently to visit Aix about a lawsuit in one of
-the courts there, and Heinrich being usually much with his _fiancée_,
-threw Charlie and the young Grafine so much together that their
-hearts were hopelessly entangled; yet no word of love escaped the
-latter: he knew too well his lack of civil rank, and how many, or
-rather how _few_, kreutzers he had per diem as a Prussian lieutenant
-of infantry. He could but abandon himself to the witchery of her
-society, to dream of the joy of loving and being loved by her, and
-drift away on the tide, too well aware that the charm of such a life
-and the tender influences of such society could not last for ever.
-
-With all their exalted and somewhat absurd ideas of their own family,
-their rank and antiquity, the household of the Count and Countess Von
-Frankenburg was a homely and kindly one; and, after his garrison
-life, there was, to Charlie, a wonderful charm in accompanying the
-cousins, Ernestine especially, to see the plough and carriage horses
-taken to water at a certain pond below the old Schloss, to feed the
-peacocks on the terrace, to throw corn to the hens, and watch them
-picking and pecking between the stones in the yard at the home farm.
-
-And Ernestine was to him the Eve of this Eden!
-
-But for the soft and gentle influences under which Charlie and his
-friend were at Frankenburg, they would certainly, like Prussian
-officers in general (though gaming is strictly forbidden in the
-army), have spent many an hour at the New Redoute, or Gaming House,
-in the Comphausbad-Strasse, where games of hazard, rouge-et-noir,
-roulette, and so forth, are played from morning till midnight.
-
-In lieu of this dissipation, they had quiet walks in the woods or
-visits to old ruins in the neighbourhood; and Ernestine, who was
-German enough to have a strong love of the mystic, the ethereal, and
-the romantic, and a desire to dabble with the unseen world, told
-Charlie many a strange weird story; and though with all an
-Englishman's mistrust of such things, it was impossible not to be
-charmed by her earnestness, the modulation of her voice, the bright
-expression of the dilated hazel eye, and the occasional but perfectly
-innocent pressure of her pretty hand upon his arm, when she sought to
-impress him by some remarkable episode.
-
-In the old ivied tower at Frankenburg she showed him the window of
-the room in which the third wife of Charlemagne, Fastrada, daughter
-of Count Raoul, died, while the Emperor was absent at Frankfort; and
-told how he caused her body, which was so fair and beautiful, to the
-end that it might never decay, to be enclosed in a coffin of the
-purest crystal, which he kept in that chamber, and he never quitted
-it by day or by night, neglecting his empire and government, and
-forgetting all the concerns of war or peace, till Turpin the Wise
-resolved to cure him.
-
-Watching his opportunity, while the Emperor slept, he opened the
-coffin, and took the golden wedding-ring from the finger of Fastrada,
-and cast it into the lake below the castle, and thus broke Charles'
-spell of sorrow. From that day the great lake into which the magic
-ring was cast, and which quite surrounded the Schloss, began to
-shrink, and nothing of it remained but the tiny horse-pond already
-mentioned.
-
-And while she was telling this legend, a little grey owl sat in the
-window of the ruin, winking and blinking in the sunshine, as if he
-was weary of having heard the story so often.
-
-The ruin, too, was haunted by the spectre of a former Count of
-Frankenburg, who, resolving to get rid of his Countess, to the end
-that he might marry again, invited her to share a dish of love-apples
-with him. These he divided with a silver-knife poisoned on one side;
-but by some mistake, he ate all the poisoned halves himself, and so
-fell dead at the table; and there in the upper story of the tower,
-his cries of pain and despair were sometimes heard on the wind in the
-stormy nights of winter.
-
-So, amid this sweet intercourse--like one gathering beautiful flowers
-on the brink of a giddy precipice--did Charlie Pierrepont drift into
-a deep and hopeless passion.
-
-He never spoke of it, but surely his eyes must have told, and his
-manner too, that he loved her. Oh yes, how he loved her, this
-earnest and warm-hearted young Englishman, yet was silent. He dared
-not seek to lead her into a promise to wait till the sun of Fortune
-shone on him, to waste her young and happy life till slow promotion
-came: and even were he a colonel, the Count might--nay, would--look
-for wealth or rank, or both; and while he--Charlie--was thus waiting,
-could he ask a girl so lovely to trust to the doctrine of chances,
-for a lucky spoke in the wheel of the blind goddess, and to grow
-_fade_ and withered with the sickness of hope deferred?
-
-Yet the sweet face, the dark shining hair, the tender, bright eyes,
-the pretty winning ways--oh, those pretty winning ways, that twine so
-round the heart of a man!--haunted him in the waking hours of the
-night, and in his tormenting, yet delicious, dreams by day.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-WHAT HAPPENED IN THE DOM KIRCHE.
-
-Strong though the sentiment of friendship that existed between him
-and Heinrich, Charlie shrunk from making a confidant of him, as he
-knew but too well that his aristocratic prejudices and native
-ambition would preclude him from having any sympathy with such a
-secret love, or giving it the least encouragement.
-
-So the days of joy stole away at Frankenburg, till Charlie began to
-reckon sadly the few that yet remained, when time would inexorably
-separate him from Ernestine, and, too probably, for ever.
-
-Did she suspect that he loved her?
-
-A hundred times had Charlie asked this question of himself in doubt:
-he was not an egotist; but every glance of her soft hazel eyes--that
-seemed, he knew not why, something between a caress and a compliment,
-together with a dash of entreaty--might have told him that he was
-far, far indeed from being indifferent to her.
-
-In the spirit of the old song, he often thought,
-
- 'He either fears his fate too much,
- Or his desert is small,
- Who dare not put it to the touch
- To win or lose it all.'
-
-
-If 'things did not turn,' in time--and for him how could they turn?
-it was torment to think of losing her by his own silence and
-diffidence; of seeing her, perhaps, won by another, far his inferior
-in bearing and spirit, while he hungered for her smile, doted on her
-shadow, and alternately blessed and _banned_ the hour that brought
-him to the Castle of Frankenburg.
-
-He thanked Heaven that there was this impending war with France
-before them. On the banks of the Rhine, or before the walls of
-Paris, if he ever reached it, a French bullet might end it all for
-him, and he would never have the horror and sorrow of knowing that
-she was the bride of another; and so on, and on, day by day, when by
-her side, talking with her and enjoying all the sweet charms of her
-society, did this honest fellow torment himself, for we may, in the
-matters of love and jealousy, torment ourselves far more than others
-can.
-
-Of this, a terror of every possible _parti_ who approached her was
-one element, especially if rich or titled.
-
-There was Baron Grünthal, who came about Ernestine more than Charlie
-relished. He was a man of great influence, and Oberconsistorial
-Director of the Court at Aix, not over forty, and rather
-good-looking. Even the daughter of a Count might be pleased to
-become Baroness Grünthal.
-
-Then one or two young Counts, friends of Heinrich, were among the
-frequent visitors, and Charlie gnawed his moustache viciously, as he
-pictured to himself, perhaps meeting her years hence, as the wife of
-one of these, when he was getting grey, weary of waiting for the
-promotion that never came; or if it did, he would value so little
-then: for with her, the glory of life would depart.
-
-Getting grey? But she would be a matron then in years; and does not
-Jean Jacques Rousseau tell us that a pair of grey-haired lovers were
-never known to sigh for each other? But Charlie thrust that thought
-aside; he preferred to live in the pleasant present than to picture
-the gloomy future. No romantic incident, no runaway horse, no death
-averted from accident, or other melodramatic episode to draw largely
-on the young lady's gratitude, as in novels, led to Charlie's avowal
-of his love.
-
-It all came about suddenly, in the most unromantic way, a quick
-outpouring of passion, a rush, as it were, of the heart to the lips,
-through the influence of which he told her that he loved her, her
-only, and craved her love in return; and it all came to pass in this
-fashion.
-
-One day--Charlie Pierrepont never forgot it--they had contrived to
-get away alone, to visit the great Dom Kirche at Aix, the shady
-aisles and vast depths of which, with all its sequestered chapels,
-were as well calculated to lure them into sweet and earnest converse
-as the leafy alleys of a forest.
-
-They had visited the tomb of Charlemagne, where, as Ernestine, while
-leaning on Charlie's arm, and looking up in his face, from under one
-of the prettiest of hats, told him with bated breath, that when it
-was opened in the tenth century, the Emperor was not found in the
-usual fashion of the dead, reclining in his coffin, but seated on a
-throne as if alive, clothed in imperial robes, a sceptre in his hand,
-and the gospels on his knee. On his fleshless brow was a crown, and
-by his side his famous sword, Joyeuse.
-
-'And now,' added his charming guide, 'I shall show you the throne on
-which he was seated; it stands in the Hoch Munster.'
-
-Now the said Hoch Munster is a gallery running round the octagon,
-facing the choir, and to reach it a narrow stair had to be traversed.
-Charlie, who, strange to say, had drawn off his gloves, held out a
-hand to guide Ernestine, who, by another coincidence, had drawn off
-one of hers, and when Charlie's fingers closed on her soft and
-velvet-like little hand, the desire to press it naturally occurred to
-him, but a thrill, as if of electricity, went to his heart, when he
-felt--with the gentlest assurance in the world--the pressure returned!
-
-The stair to the Hoch Munster was surely steeper than usual, they
-ascended it so slowly. Amid its obscurity, Charlie pressed to his
-lips twice the accorded hand, which was not withdrawn, and ere they
-gained the upper step that led to the gallery, the great secret of
-Charlie's heart had escaped him, and flushed and palpitating;
-Ernestine heard him with downcast eyes.
-
-The vehemence with which the avowal was made, though his voice was
-low and earnest, and the tender expression with which he regarded
-her, when they did emerge into daylight, bewildered her a little,
-which, perhaps, was the reason that she permitted Charlie to take
-prisoner her other hand; but after a time she regained her composure,
-and, looking up at him with a most bewitching expression in her
-tender brown eyes and pouting lip, said, as if she had doubted her
-ears, in a whispered voice,
-
-'You--you love me?'
-
-'Yes--oh yes! Dearest Ernestine, you must have known from the
-first--from the very first hour I saw you, that I loved you.'
-
-'I always thought,' she continued, in the same low and certainly
-agitated voice, 'that you preferred my society to that of Herminia or
-the Rhineberg girls.'
-
-'Preferred your society--oh, Ernestine!'
-
-'I did think that you were very fond of me--yes, very fond of me; but
-that you actually loved me, I could not conceive.'
-
-So the lovely little gipsy pretended, and cast her eyelids down,
-while her soft bosom heaved so much with emotion that her diamond
-brooch sparkled like prisms. After a pause, the tender eyes were
-again uplifted to Charlie, and as if she rather liked the sound of
-the avowal, she said timidly,
-
-'And so you love me--love me, Carl?'
-
-How Charlie's heart now leaped to hear his Christian name uttered by
-her lips for the first time!
-
-'Ernestine, my own darling!' (et cetera, and so forth).
-
-They remained--as the sacristan who was patiently waiting for his
-fees said--quite long enough to have made an acute archaeological
-investigation of the whole place; but somehow their minds were
-otherwise occupied.
-
-Singularly enough, they had forgotten all about the throne of
-Charlemagne, and actually descended--slower than they had
-ascended--the stairs of the Hoch Munster without having seen it.
-
-They were both very silent on the drive homeward, but their young
-hearts were brimming over with joy, and deep blushes suffused the
-face of Ernestine, and her lips were trembling; and as if her
-mother's eye might read how they had been occupied in the Dom Kirche,
-she hurried upstairs to her own room, to seek in solitude the power
-of reflecting over all that had passed, and her new position, for
-within an hour she had passed a certain rubicon in life.
-
-Charlie, too, desired to be alone, and ascended into the recess of
-the ruined Schloss, where, among the owls and the ivy, he slowly
-lighted a cigar, and while his heart was full of love and happiness,
-and of gratitude to Ernestine for returning his passion, he began to
-consider what was to be done next.
-
-He first abandoned himself to a dream of joy. In imagination
-Ernestine was with him still; her hands so soft and small yet
-lingered in his; her lips were still before him, and the perfume of
-her dark hair came back to him, as he rehearsed, over and over again,
-all that episode in the Dom Kirche.
-
-The secret that had trembled so long on his tongue--the secret that
-cold prudence and dread of German pride withheld so long, had escaped
-him at last. His love had been avowed; that love was accepted and
-reciprocated.
-
-But now, alas! there came home to Charlie's heart those thoughts that
-had occurred to him before--thoughts that had not, as yet, entered
-the mind of Ernestine. The future--how and what was it to be? How
-cold and miserable was reflection--miserable, but for a time only.
-Was not the fact of mutual love and perfect trust existing between
-them enough to make all seem glorious, and the path of life most
-flowery?
-
-She loved him--that bright and beautiful girl! Beyond that love she
-might never be his; but with that love for him, she would never be
-the wife of another. Yet, as he before asked himself, was it just or
-generous that her young life should be wasted, and for him?
-
-If he suggested an elopement, in what light would such an episode
-place him with his friend Heinrich, with her whole family, with his
-regiment, and society, even, which was very, very doubtful, if she
-would accede to such a measure.
-
-So long as he had not spoken of love to Ernestine, but lingered on
-the pleasant borderland that adjoins the realms of Cupid, Charlie
-felt that he was guilty of no breach of faith with her family, and no
-violation of the hearty hospitality extended to him. But _now_ his
-position seemed entirely altered. Their love was a fact; he had won
-her heart without the consent of her parents, and that consent, in
-his subaltern rank in social and military life, he knew but too well
-would never be accorded to him.
-
-'Well, well,' thought he, with something of grim joy, 'the war is
-before me, and who can foresee what honours I may win in defending
-Germany, or on the soil of France!'
-
-When the party in the Schloss met at dinner that evening, there was a
-conscious expression in the faces of Charlie and Ernestine that they
-alone could read, and to which their hearts had alone the key; and to
-both there was something novel, joyous, and inexpressibly sweet in
-this secret understanding between them. Each felt a delicious
-interest and right of proprietary in the other.
-
-Among the visitors was Baron Grünthal, the Oberdirector of the
-Consistory Court at Aix, a stout and florid, but rather handsome man,
-in the prime of life, with an ill-trimmed moustache hiding his whole
-mouth, and the inevitable red ribbon at his button-hole, who
-mentioned incidentally that he had seen the Grafine and Herr
-Pierrepont leaving the Dom Kirche by the great door, on either side
-of which are a she-wolf and a fir apple in bronze. Ernestine stooped
-over her bouquet to hide her conscious blush.
-
-'You know, mamma,' said she, in a tone of explanation, though none
-was required, 'we drove into town, Herr Pierrepont and I, that I
-might show him the tomb and throne of Charlemagne.'
-
-'Ah! yes,' said the Baron, making his champagne effervesce with a
-piece of biscuit; 'did you think the marble slabs of a good colour,
-Herr Pierrepont?'
-
-'Beautiful!' said Charlie. 'The finest black I ever saw,' he
-desperately added, at a venture.
-
-'Black?' said two or three voices. 'Why, they are of the purest
-_white_!'
-
-'Exactly; that was what I meant to say. My German is not perfect,
-Herr Baron,' said Charlie.
-
-And Ernestine, who had grown pale, now laughed and glanced furtively
-at her lover.
-
-Dinner over, the Count and Baron retired to smoke and talk politics;
-but the latter, whose suspicions had been roused by the confused
-manner of Charlie, and the evident absorption of him and his fair
-companion when quitting the Dom Kirche, began to talk of something
-that might seriously affect their happiness.
-
-Charlie and Ernestine betook themselves to the piano, where eye could
-look into eye, and finger touch finger occasionally in the duet, or
-soft whispers be exchanged amid a sonata of Beethoven; the Countess
-retired to doze in the boudoir, with her Spitz pug on her knee; while
-Herminia and her betrothed found sufficient attraction in each other;
-so the evening of this eventful day passed off peacefully and
-happily, as many others had done.
-
-During the protracted progress of the sonata, the two antiquarians
-from the Dom Kirche agreed that their engagement--for such they fully
-considered it now--should, as yet, not be divulged to anyone, not
-even to Herminia, from whom Ernestine had never before had a secret
-to withhold.
-
-Outwardly, our hero and heroine seemed merely intimate friends who
-were soon to part; inwardly, they had their own happy thoughts, while
-the family had not the slightest suspicion of how matters stood,
-though that night all was on the very verge of discovery!
-
-In the recess of a window, whither they had gone to study the stars,
-Charlie suddenly pressed Ernestine to his breast.
-
-'Oh, dearest, don't do that again!' she exclaimed. 'Aunt Adelaide
-may see us; and she has the eyes of a lynx!'
-
-After this night, matters progressed fast with the lovers. In the
-same house, they had a hundred means of meeting each other, were it
-but for five minutes at a time. Rings and locks of hair, of course,
-with coloured photos--the best that could be got in
-Aix-la-Chapelle--had been exchanged; promises were made and vows
-exchanged again and again, with other delicious tokens equally
-intangible.
-
-In the flush of his love, Charlie forgot for a time the cruel doubts
-that had at first oppressed him. Ernestine should be his wife at all
-risks, even if he carried her off to England; and, in the ardour of
-his imagination, he began to marvel whether his father's old place in
-Warwickshire would ever be free from those debts which drove him to
-become a wanderer, a soldier of fortune, and to feed himself by his
-sword in the ranks of the Prussian army.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-AN ALARM.
-
-Amid the pure satisfaction arising from the knowledge that Ernestine
-loved him, and the natural anxiety to discover how she was ever to be
-his wife, there was fated to come to Charlie Pierrepont the fear of
-greater opposition to his--as yet--secret hopes and wishes, in the
-person of a formidable rival, who, in a few weeks after the visit to
-the Dom Kirche, came suddenly into the field.
-
-One evening, when the Count, his son, and Charlie were seated cosily
-in a place which the former called his study (but which more
-resembled a harness and gun room, and littered with pipes of all
-kinds, as the literature there consisted of a few volumes on hunting,
-shooting, farriery), with their pipes and flasks of Rhine wine, which
-they drank from silver tankards, the Count startled our hero by a
-revelation which he made to him as a friend of the family.
-
-A wealthy and great man--an intimate friend of the house of
-Frankenburg, who, though not noble, was nevertheless Hochwohlgeboren,
-had made proposals for the hand of Ernestine.
-
-The cloud of smoke in which the trio had enveloped themselves perhaps
-prevented the father and son from seeing the sudden contraction of
-Charlie's brow on getting this unpleasant information.
-
-'Does it meet with your approval, Count?' he asked, with a violent
-effort to appear calm.
-
-'In every respect.'
-
-'And yours, Heinrich?'
-
-'No, Carl.'
-
-'Why?'
-
-'Because the man is more than double her age,' replied the young
-Count.
-
-'That is----' Charlie was about to say 'unfortunate;' but the fib
-remained unuttered. Then after a pause he asked, 'And what says the
-Grafine?'
-
-'She dismissed him with kind words, certainly,' replied the Count,
-'and well-bred wishes for his happiness. He then came to me, begging
-me to use my authority over her as a parent, which I shall certainly
-do.'
-
-'Herr Graf!' exclaimed Charlie, who felt a keener interest in all
-this than his hearers imagined; for even Heinrich, in the absorption
-of his passion for his cousin, had not the faintest suspicion that
-his friend did more than admire his sister; 'Herr Graf, would you
-actually attempt to control your daughter's affections?'
-
-'Der Teufel! attempt it? I shall do it!' replied the Count angrily,
-as he laid his hand emphatically on the arm of his chair.
-
-So this was the first intimation Charlie had of the coming storm. A
-rival in the field, and his leave of absence on the verge of expiry!
-The situation--with all his trust in Ernestine--was, to say the least
-of it, alarming. Would she actually be torn from him after all?
-Fearing to speak, he remained perfectly silent; but, as his curiosity
-was irrepressible, he asked after a time--
-
-'May I ask, Herr Graf, who this suitor is?'
-
-'The Baron Grünthal, Oberdirector of the Consistory Court in
-Aix-la-Chapelle.'
-
-Then Charlie remembered that the Baron had been at the Schloss that
-morning, and been long in the Graf's 'study' in consultation, and
-that he failed to see Ernestine as usual, save at dinner, after which
-she had hastily left the table. It occurred now to Charlie, too,
-that she had seemed both disturbed and taciturn during the progress
-of the meal.
-
-Such an offer was deemed flattering, even for a daughter of the house
-of Frankenburg. Ernestine had dismissed the Baron; but, backed by
-her father's authority, he returned to the charge, and came the
-following day to dinner; and until the bell rang for that meal,
-Charlie, to his perplexity and annoyance, could see nothing of
-Ernestine, who remained sequestered in her room. Had her mother any
-suspicions? thought he; but as yet the Countess had none.
-
-On this day, in honour of the suitor, whose aspirations met with her
-full approval, her white hair was done over a _toupée_ that was
-higher than usual, her train was longer than ever, and she wore the
-best of the family diamonds.
-
-This was the most miserable meal ever made by Charlie Pierrepont.
-The Count was rubicund, smiling, and conscious. He had smoked many
-pipes and imbibed much beer over the idea of having such a
-son-in-law. The Baron had made a careful study of his costume, and
-was most gracious to the ladies, but more especially to the Countess,
-who addressed nearly all her conversation to him--the winner of one
-of 'the Belles of Frankenburg.' Herminia looked waggish, Heinrich
-somewhat provoked, as he deemed the suitor too old, and that his
-sister's wishes should be consulted; while Ernestine--whose toilette
-(a golden-coloured silk, trimmed with black lace), a most becoming
-one for a brunette, had been made under the critical eye of her
-mother--looked pale, 'worried,' and worn, and, like Heinrich,
-provoked too, for, as we have said elsewhere, she was a self-willed
-little beauty, and somewhat opinionated.
-
-In spite of the desire of all to appear at their perfect ease, the
-meal passed off awkwardly; the conversation flagged, and was unequal;
-and if the eyes of Ernestine met those of Charlie, he would read in
-them an imploring and sad expression, and when they looked down, they
-seemed to sparkle with anger.
-
-At last the meal passed over--and it proved the last that Charlie
-Pierrepont was to consume in Frankenburg; the ladies rose from the
-table to retire.
-
-As Charlie opened the dining-room door for them, Ernestine contrived
-to be the last who passed out, and swiftly and unseen, she slipped
-into Charlie's hand a tiny scrap of folded paper. This he hastened
-to open and read covertly, on resuming his place at table. It
-contained but one pencilled line--
-
-'Be in mamma's boudoir to-night at eleven, when all are in bed.'
-
-He would have pressed it to his lips, but for the presence of those
-who were with him. Eleven o'clock? The hour was then eight, as a
-great ormolu clock on the side buffet informed him, and so he had
-three long hours to wait for this most coveted interview! And for
-two of those hours he would have to endure the society--or rather the
-presence--of this most obnoxious rival who had so suddenly started up
-in his path, and with whom he felt a violent desire to quarrel, but
-that such an episode would have been alike unseemly, unwise, and
-calculated to excite suspicion.
-
-They could meet in conversation on the neutral ground of the French
-war; but in everything he stated, Charlie could not suppress a keen
-desire to contradict the Baron. The latter asserted that King
-William would lead the Prussian army in person. To this Charlie gave
-a contradiction as flat as if he had it from the royal lips. Metz
-would be, undoubtedly, the chief base of the French operations. This
-idea he utterly scouted! England would take part in the war, through
-the influence of the Crown Princess. England would do nothing of the
-kind, said Charlie--what was the Rhine to her?
-
-The Baron began to elevate his eyebrows, and became silent. The
-Count looked uneasy; one glass more, he suggested, and then they
-would join the ladies. They did so; but on entering the drawing-room
-found the Countess asleep as usual, with the Spitz pug in her lap;
-Herminia idling over the piano, while longing for Heinrich; and that
-Ernestine was--which was never her wont--absent.
-
-She had pleaded a headache, and retired to her own room. The Baron
-looked glum and disconcerted. He had been framing many fine speeches
-to make to his intended; but now they were no longer required. He
-should see her no more for that night.
-
-Charlie fingered the little note in his waistcoat-pocket, and felt
-defiant and jubilant.
-
-The truth was that the Countess and her daughter had almost had high
-words on the subject of the Baron.
-
-'Mamma,' the latter had said, 'the idea of such a thing is
-intolerable and absurd!'
-
-'Why absurd, Grafine?' asked her mother, with asperity.
-
-'A man of forty or more, getting bald already,' said Ernestine
-mockingly; 'a stout man in a blue coat and brass buttons, with a red
-ribbon, of course, at his lapelle; a man who, for twenty years, has
-never made up his august mind to marry, comes now to make a
-matrimonial victim of me. Thanks--no. I am the Grafine Ernestine of
-Frankenburg, and such I shall remain.'
-
-'Do you prefer anyone else?' asked the Countess, her eyes glittering
-with sudden suspicion.
-
-'No--none,' she falteringly said, with her cheeks aflame.
-
-'Is there not _one_?'
-
-'What do you mean, mamma?'
-
-'I mean this,' said the Countess, with grim asperity, hiding her
-suspicions, if she had any, 'my dear child, the regiment of Heinrich
-is under orders for foreign service! his leave is conditional, and
-may be cancelled by telegraph at any moment; so that if we wish his
-presence at the marriage, the ceremony must be performed without much
-delay.'
-
-'It shall never take place with me,' replied Ernestine resolutely.
-
-'To your room, Grafine,' said the Countess with hauteur; so her
-daughter gladly withdrew, leaving her to make excuses for her absence
-as she pleased, so the usual female ailment of a headache came at
-once into play.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-AMONG THE BREAKERS.
-
-The Baron had been driven home to Aix in his britzka, promising to
-return for some final arrangements on the morrow, when he hoped to
-find the health of the Grafine restored; prayers were over; the
-household were all a-bed, or supposed to be so, and Charlie sat in
-his own room, looking sadly out upon the distant lights of Aix, which
-seemed to twinkle like the stars above them.
-
-He had ample food for reflection. Fear of the Baron's influence on
-Ernestine he had none; but he had real fear of the influence her
-family, and long-trained habits of implicit obedience, might have on
-her, and genuine love and truth are commodities too scarce and
-valuable in this world to be wasted.
-
-How much, thought Charlie, were Herminia and her cousin to be envied;
-they had been, and were, so successful in their love, and all through
-the fortunate little scheme of the Countess and Ernestine.
-
-How he longed to show the latter to his sisters; for Charlie had
-three, in that dear old home in Warwickshire, all softly featured and
-gently mannered girls, such as England excels in, more than all the
-world besides. Would they love her? But could they fail to do so?
-Well, his father might, perhaps, oh, no! he could not look coldly on
-her, because she was a foreigner. Pure innocence and beauty belong
-to no country in particular; and Ernestine looked more thoroughly
-English than many an English lady Charlie had seen in Regent Street
-and the Row.
-
-What was to be the end of all this?
-
-In spite of all his prudence and the suggestions of reason, Charlie
-had fallen madly in love, without considering what a costly whim a
-high-born wife would prove to a Prussian subaltern; or how the prize
-was to be obtained, the whim gratified.
-
-Eleven was struck by the great old clock in the hall of the Schloss,
-and Charlie, who had been awaiting it, watch in hand, took his wax
-taper, and softly and swiftly descended the great staircase to the
-boudoir of the Countess, a small octagonal apartment that opened off
-the drawing-room.
-
-It was, of course, without a fireplace; but, in lieu thereof, in one
-corner stood the prettiest of little German stoves, a black iron
-cylinder, or column, surmounted by a large coronet of ornamental
-brass, and set on a block of white marble. Numerous statuettes under
-glass shades, and pretty bijou articles, littered all the marble and
-marqueterie tables, with Dresden china vases of flowers, gathered
-fresh that morning by Ernestine and Herminia in the garden at the
-foot of the castle rock. The furniture and hangings were all pale
-blue silk, trimmed with white lace or silver; water-colours decorated
-the wall, and, in a place of honour, hung a Berlin engraving
-representing the meeting of Wellington and Blucher at La Belle
-Alliance.
-
-A moderator lamp, upheld by a bronze Atlas, was suddenly flashed up,
-and Ernestine stood before Charlie Pierrepont. She had let all her
-hair down, probably previous to coiling it up for the night, and now
-its silky masses floated over her shoulders far below her waist, and
-out of their darkness, her pale, minute, and delicately cut face came
-with strong distinctness in the subdued light of the lamp. How
-lovely she looked just then; her form, though _mignonne_, round and
-full. She threw her arms round Charlie, and putting her head on his
-shoulder, in a way she had like a petted love-bird, placed her sweet
-face amid the masses of her hair on his neck, and her lover gazed at
-her for some seconds ere he seated her by his side, with a kind of
-adoration, for she was in all the pride of her beauty and purity;
-and, as a writer says, with truth, 'There is nothing in the universe
-so exquisite, so fascinating, so irresistibly alluring, as a young
-girl! A girl in the first dawn of earliest womanhood, fresh and
-fragrant as a flower, and, alas! as fragile, for that bloom of youth
-is as evanescent as it is lovely, and its loss is never, to my mind,
-compensated by any maturer charm. Let who will inhale the perfume of
-the opening rose, but the sweet shy mystery of the folded bud for me!'
-
-And some such thoughts ran through the mind of Charlie as he gazed
-upon her.
-
-In the perfect confidence of this love, they did not at first speak
-of this sudden suitor (who had come like a thunder-cloud into their
-sunny summer sky), for rival he could scarcely be deemed by Charlie;
-but they referred to the last time they had been happy together in
-each other's society. Oh, _so_ happy! and but two days ago!
-
-They had ridden to Stolberg, after losing Heinrich and Herminia
-together in the wood (rather a common occurrence, by the way, when
-these four went out on excursions), and had taken shelter from a
-storm of rain in a village church, where a marriage ceremony had been
-performed before them, and they now recurred to this little episode.
-
-'How sweetly pretty the bride looked!' said Charlie, playing with her
-rippling hair.
-
-'And how happy the bridegroom!' she added, pulling Charlie's
-moustache, in her momentary joy, forgetful of the tears she had been
-shedding.
-
-'How I envied them, Ernestine! Will our day ever come?'
-
-'We can but hope.'
-
-'And if it never comes?'
-
-'I shall die--I shall die faithful to you, Carl. Faithful in life
-and in death!' said Ernestine, with passionate energy.
-
-'You say this so often that you alarm me,' said Charlie, with great
-tenderness of tone.
-
-'How can my promises of faith alarm you?'
-
-'Nay. It is these references to death.'
-
-Her eyes were tender, dreamy, and sad, yet full of love, as they
-looked into his. After a pause, he said,
-
-'I, Ernestine, am more in danger of death and peril than you,
-dearest.'
-
-'Oh, say not so! And yet, of course, it must be, Carl, my darling
-Carl!' she exclaimed, throwing herself upon his breast, in a passion
-of tears and affection.
-
-'Heaven and earth! So _these_ are the terms on which you two are!'
-exclaimed a shrill, stern voice behind them, and a low wail of terror
-escaped from Ernestine, on perceiving the Countess, her mother,
-standing there in her _robe-de-chambre_, a wax taper in her hand, and
-her usually pale cheeks and cold grey eyes inflamed with indignation.
-On this night she had, unfortunately, forgotten her unlucky Spitz cur
-(who was quietly looking on the scene from his basket of
-mother-of-pearl) and had descended from her room in search of him.
-
-'So! so!' she exclaimed again, 'these are the terms on which you are;
-and such are the hopes in which you dare to indulge!'
-
-How long she had been there, or how much she had heard or seen, they
-knew not. They had but one common thought--that they had been
-discovered, and all was over! This _dénouement_, occurring
-immediately after the proposal of the Baron, was too much for the
-patience or equanimity of the irate Countess. Even Charlie's
-friendship for her son Heinrich, and the duel he had fought in
-defence of his honour, were forgotten now.
-
-There was a pause, during which they all surveyed each other with
-undisguised signs of discomposure. At last Charlie spoke, while
-Ernestine withdrew a little way from him.
-
-'Gnädige Frau' (gracious madame), he began, 'blame not your daughter,
-but me, for all this; and pardon me for having so far forgotten my
-position in this house as to love her without your permission; but
-could I resist doing so--even without the hope of obtaining it? What
-can I say to mitigate your probable severity to her--your resentment
-to me? What am I to do?'
-
-'Much!'
-
-'Oh, say it!'
-
-'Leave my roof at once!'
-
-'Mamma, it is close on midnight,' urged Ernestine piteously.
-
-'Silence, minx!'
-
-Charlie's face had flushed to the temples at a tone and command so
-unusual and so humiliating.
-
-'Oh, mamma,' urged Ernestine, attempting, but in vain, to catch her
-mother's hand, 'spare me and pardon him!'
-
-'Him? Who!'
-
-'Carl.'
-
-'You call him Carl already--and this to my face! This intruder, who,
-though in the king's uniform, is little better in the scale of
-society than a poor Handwerks-Burschen!'
-
-Charlie now grew deadly pale at this insulting comparison, but
-restrained his rising anger for the sake of Ernestine, who said,
-piteously:
-
-'Dearest mamma, I implore you not to adopt this tone to Heinrich's
-firm and tried friend. It is inhospitable! It is rude! It is
-cruel!' she added, amid a torrent of tears.
-
-'You are no judge, _now_, of what is rude or not rude--proper or
-improper--to a violator of our hospitality. Oh, Herr Pierrepont, how
-little could I have foreseen all this!'
-
-Unless the old lady had been as blind as a mole, she might, or ought,
-very well to have foreseen it.
-
-'You know my views of all this matter, and I am certain they will be
-fully shared by the Count,' said the old lady, with intense hauteur.
-'You also know the measures we expect you to take with as little
-delay as possible.'
-
-She made a brief and haughty half-contemptuous bow, and taking her
-daughter by the hand, and, without permitting her to give even one
-farewell glance, led her away.
-
-Charlie stood for a moment as if rooted to the spot. He then very
-quietly extinguished the moderator lamp, in a mechanical kind of way,
-and, taking his taper, ascended the great gaunt staircase to his
-room, where, with his heart torn by the contending emotions of love
-and sorrow, rage and mortification--for the insult to which he, an
-English gentleman, had been subjected by that intolerant and
-insufferable old German woman--he sat for a time without thinking of
-undressing.
-
-Were she not the mother of Ernestine, he would have scattered a few
-pretty hard adjectives with reference to her. He then suddenly began
-to pack his portmanteau. He had but one desire and craving--to get
-as far away from Frankenburg as possible, though it was the cage that
-held his love-bird! And as if his wish had been anticipated, just as
-twelve o'clock was struck by the sonorous timepiece in the echoing
-hall, a knock came to his door.
-
-'It is Heinrich,' thought he; 'come in!'
-
-The visitor was not Heinrich, but the old family butler, who entered,
-bowing low, and looking very sleepy, cross, and very much surprised.
-
-'The Herr Graf's compliments to the Herr Lieutenant. At what time
-would he require the carriage to take him to Aix?' (He called it
-Aachen.)
-
-'Now!'
-
-'Now--at this hour, mein Herr?'
-
-'Now, I repeat--instantly--thanks; you may go.'
-
-The old butler, who had served as man and boy in the Frankenburg
-family from shortly after the days of Waterloo and Ligny, who had
-attended Marshal Blucher when on a visit, and had made the fortunes
-and honour of the denizens of the Schloss his own, as hereditary
-retainers of the Caleb Balderstone type occasionally do, even in this
-age of iron, opened his grey eyes very wide, alike at the fierce
-energy and the order of Charlie Pierrepont, but vanished at once to
-rouse the grooms and comply.
-
-So he was actually turned out of the house, however politely, at
-last; thrust out from _her home_ as if his presence there degraded
-it. He thought of the old arms of the Pierreponts carved about his
-father's gate--the lion rampant _sable_, between two wings, the
-mullets _semée_, and the motto '_Pie repone te_,' though he had never
-valued such things much; and his anger boiled up--nor did it cool
-down till he found himself on the eve of departure.
-
-Why did Heinrich not appear? for good or for evil? Had he also been
-informed, and, like his father, mounted a high horse? It seemed so.
-The carriage was duly announced, at last.
-
-As Charlie descended to it, the silver-haired butler appeared again
-with a salver, on which were a decanter and glass, saying:
-
-'The Herr Graf requests that mein Herr will take a little glass of
-cognac, before leaving the Schloss; the night is cold.'
-
-To have declined to accept this last act of old German hospitality
-would have been churlish, and the cause of comment among the
-domestics; so Charlie, with the name of her he loved on his lips,
-drained a _petit verre_, and sprang into the carriage.
-
-'Aachen,' said the butler to the driver, as he closed the door, and
-bowing, said--
-
-'Gute nacht--leben sie wohl, mein Herr.'
-
-And Charlie, as he thought, turned his back on Frankenburg for ever.
-
-Ernestine was as much, if not more, than any _only_ daughter could be
-to Count Ulrich. He was selfish enough to have looked with stern,
-black, and utter discouragement on any swain who had no high rank;
-then how much more with anger on a penniless soldier of Fortune--a
-sub. of the Thuringians, like Charlie Pierrepont.
-
-'All is at an end between the Frankenburgs and me,' thought the
-latter, as the carriage bowled on in the dark; 'but the war once
-over, if I escape it, I shall carry her off at all hazards--by
-Heaven, I shall.'
-
-As a soldier accustomed to change of quarters, billets, camps, and
-barracks, Charlie could make himself at home anywhere; but nowhere
-(save his father's house) had he found himself so much at home as in
-that old German castle: a shrine he deemed it--a shrine of which
-Ernestine was the idol; and now he was exiled from it.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-CHARLIE'S VISITOR.
-
-The carriage deposited Charlie Pierrepont at an hotel in
-Aix-la-Chapelle, where he meant to remain for a little to make some
-attempt to see Ernestine once more--to arrange, if possible, about
-their future correspondence, and then to rejoin the Thuringians.
-
-The dawn stole in over the city, and the Rhine began to glitter in
-light--the dawn of that day on which the Baron Grünthal was to return
-to Frankenburg, and 'the final arrangements' were to be made. What
-would they be?
-
-Five o'clock tolled from the great bell of the Dom Kirche. But five
-hours since she had been in his arms, with her head resting on his
-breast; how long it seemed ago; what storm of alarm, bitterness, and
-mortification had agitated his heart since then! The bell of the Dom
-Kirche brought instantly back to memory that day in the stair of the
-Hoch Munster, when the returned pressure of her little hand, though
-ever so lightly, nearly put him beside himself with joy, and lured
-him to divulge the great secret of his heart.
-
-So all their stolen glances and sweet daily intercourse were at an
-end now; all the quaint weird stories that she had been wont to tell
-him in their rides and rambles, of sprites and elves, of lurlies and
-knights, who had loved and been drawn thus into peril, all their
-mutual songs and music, would never come again!
-
-Too probably their paths on earth might lie for ever apart. A chasm
-separated the past from the present; still more did it seem to yawn
-between the present and the future; so Charlie could but wring his
-hands, and wish, at times, that Heinrich had never brought him to
-Frankenburg.
-
-Ah, those lovely eyes that were ever varying in expression, now
-dreamy and tender, and anon bright with mischief, or soft with
-inexpressible love; the pouting rosebud lips, that were so firm and
-delicately cut; the skin, smooth as satin; the hands, of velvet: the
-pinky tint on the rounded cheek; the winning ways and the quaint
-sayings of Ernestine--were they all, indeed, to be as things of the
-past to him? It was intolerable!
-
-They would be all as air-drawn pictures--nothing more. To
-Pierrepont, it seemed as if all the brightness had gone out of his
-life; or, as if half that life had left him. Would time ever cure
-this, or must it be war or death? God alone knew! In his sorrow for
-the loss he had sustained, and for the terrible emotions which he
-knew she would be feeling--torn from him on one hand, and menaced by
-a hateful marriage on the other--he could almost have wept, and
-perhaps would have done so, but for a glow of wrath and indignation,
-at the manner in which the imperious Countess had treated him.
-
-He had been bluntly turned out of the house! That was what the
-termination of his visit plainly amounted to. Charlie felt that his
-epaulettes had been insulted, and his native English pride revolted
-at the idea. He felt his blood boiling at times, but against whom?
-It could not be against the father or the mother of her he loved so
-tenderly. Oh no! for surely they would relent in time, on seeing how
-deep and tender was his passion for their daughter.
-
-'_How_ would it all end?' he asked of himself a hundred times.
-
-The day without was bright and sunny, but to Charlie Pierrepont it
-seemed as if the hours stole dully, darkly, and drearily on. The
-guests in the Speise-saal were numerous and noisy. Their voices
-irritated him; and often he started to his feet with the intention of
-vaguely proceeding to the vicinity of Frankenburg, and as frequently
-relinquished the idea; for he dreaded lest he should meet the Baron,
-and be tempted into the commission of some wild outrage.
-
-With much of the same gloom that Herminia had in her mind, when, from
-the windows of the Grand Hotel, on the evening our story opens, she
-looked dreamily down on Cologne, on city, church, and river, did
-Charlie, from a balcony of his hotel, opposite the new theatre, look
-down upon the strasse that leads to Borcette, and the crowded
-boulevard that now occupies the place of a levelled ditch and
-rampart, and is prettily laid out with pine trees, and many tiny
-sheets of water.
-
-Dinner was set before him under the awning which shaded the balcony,
-and there was a bottle of hock. Yes; he had ordered the kellner,
-mechanically, to serve it up; but the dinner remained untasted,
-though the hock was drained in draughts, as if to drown the
-ever-recurring thoughts--would he never again see that sweet girl
-whose witcheries were entwined around his heart? should he never more
-look into her eyes, whose tender glances were magnetic; never feel on
-his lips those clinging kisses, while he pressed her hand to his
-breast?
-
-Near him, under an awning in front of the hotel, seated on hard
-wooden stools, at a bare deal table, were some poor
-Handwerks-Burschen, or travelling workmen, in blue blouses and wooden
-sabots, smoking, drinking beer, and making merry with their wives or
-sweethearts, and singing--
-
- 'Draw the social chair yet closer;
- Vow by this full draught of mirth,
- That all evil is forgiven,
- Hell is banished from our earth.'
-
-It was Schiller's beautiful 'Song of Joy' they were singing to the
-clanking accompaniment of their cans and wooden shoes. How happy
-those humble fellows seemed; and how much he envied them!
-
-But Charlie was roused from his reverie by the Oberkellner
-announcing--
-
-'Der Graf von Frankenburg.'
-
-'Which?' asked Charlie, starting; 'Count Ulrich?'
-
-'No, mein Herr--Count Heinrich.'
-
-'Very good--show him up.'
-
-Charlie would rather that the old father of Ernestine had come than
-her brother, whose errand would no doubt be a hostile one. That
-Heinrich, his friend and comrade, came on such an errand seemed
-horrible and unnatural. The wild justice of the pistol, as some one
-has named it, was ceasing to be appreciated even in Germany. The
-time had gone past when the pistols of skilled homicides were notched
-as registers of the lives they had taken, or had cards attached to
-them, with the names of the slain, the date and the place of meeting,
-and the distance of fighting, all neatly written thereon.
-
-Let Heinrich taunt him how he would, a duel must not take place. 'In
-the battle-field,' thought Charlie, 'I shall cheerfully meet death,
-front to front and face to face; but I shall not carry there the mark
-of Cain, by perhaps shooting the brother of her I love--my brother in
-the spirit.'
-
-Charlie forgot that in the Heilinghaist-feld at Altona he had fought
-a duel for that brother, and winged an officer of the King's
-Grenadiers; and he was just remembering that if hostilities were
-contemplated, a messenger would have been sent by Heinrich, when the
-latter entered the room, and coming quickly forward to Charlie,
-grasped both his hands with his usual frankness.
-
-'Well, Sir Knight of the Rueful Countenance--' he was beginning, when
-Charlie said--
-
-'How can you jest, Heinrich, at a time like this?'
-
-'I do not jest; but have come, in defiance of all family views and
-prejudices, to cheer you, and have some conversation over this
-wretched affair. Poor Ernestine! I wish you and she had taken me
-into your confidence. By our past and present friendship, I surely
-merited that from you, at least.'
-
-'A bottle of wine, Heinrich?
-
-'Thanks--I have just galloped in from the Schloss, and had some
-difficulty in finding your quarters.'
-
-'There are cigars, and here is an easy-chair. I am thankful you did
-not come on a hostile visit. To decline would have been disgraceful,
-to accept might have been fratricide; but I should have fired in the
-air.'
-
-'What stuff you are talking!' said Heinrich, as he manipulated and
-lit a cigar, while the waiter was pouring out the wine.
-
-'Now let us talk,' said he, when the latter had withdrawn.
-
-'And how are the ladies this evening?' asked Charlie, trying, with a
-swelling heart, to talk common sense.
-
-'As you may suppose, the Grafine, my mother, is in a furious pet; and
-I knew nothing about your sudden departure till I found your place
-vacant at the breakfast table.'
-
-'And--and your sister, Heinrich?'
-
-'Has been all day fretting in her room.'
-
-'And the Grafine Herminia?'
-
-'With her. I saw Herminia for a little time to-day, and she desired
-me to assure you of her fullest sympathy.'
-
-'God bless her!' exclaimed he, whilst his eyes became moist.
-
-'The poor little thing endured too much, when she believed me to be
-Herr Mansfeld, and knew me not in my proper person, to be without due
-sympathy for all afflicted lovers.'
-
-'You do not speak of the Herr Graf.'
-
-'Oh, he is inexorable!'
-
-'And our infernal Baron--no doubt he was at Frankenburg to-day,
-hoping to play the lover,' said Charlie viciously.
-
-'He was not.'
-
-'How so?'
-
-'His Excellency has a violent fit of the gout!'
-
-'Long may it continue!' said Charlie fervently.
-
-'Amen!' added Heinrich, lying back in his chair and laughing
-heartily; 'the idea of an adoring swain having an ailment so
-unromantic! And now for the object of my visit. I have simply come
-to apologize for all that has occurred at the Schloss; but I might
-have foreseen it, had my own affairs not occupied too much of my
-attention. Ernestine is too enchanting a girl to have failed to
-attract. What is done cannot be undone. I do love you, Carl, and
-deplore all that has taken place.'
-
-The two friends shook hands warmly. With Charlie, his comrade,
-brother officer, and most particular 'chum,' was now the link between
-him and Ernestine--between him and Frankenburg--the Eden from which
-he had been banished, and without his Eve. How he loved the generous
-fellow! How gladly he would lay down his life for him; but in doing
-so, he would leave Ernestine, and, perhaps, to another. Another?
-Oh! that was not to be thought of! Heinrich began again--
-
-'Herminia says that Ernestine has never closed an eye since last
-night, which I am sorry to say, because if troubles can be slept upon
-they are curable. However, don't be alarmed about Ernestine,' he
-added, laughing, 'she's very low and sad, no doubt; but there is no
-chance of her drowning herself in Fastrada's pool below the
-Schloss--that odious pond where I used to puddle for many a day with
-a crooked pin and a string, catching many a cold, but never a fish.'
-
-'Why, Heinrich?'
-
-'For a very sufficient reason. There was none in it.'
-
-'Do you think your mother will ever forgive me?
-
-'Heaven alone knows. Time will show. She has the most absurd ideas
-concerning alliances and family rank. As for my father, he storms
-and gets into rages that I call apoplectic ones; but he'll sit in his
-study among the saddles, dogs' collars, and so forth, and smoke
-himself into quietude ere long. He is a wonderful hale and hearty
-old fellow for his great age; but he married late in life, and has
-only had a silver wedding, when his comrade, old Field-Marshal
-Wrangel, has had a golden one. And, then, you are a soldier,
-Carl--and to be a soldier is always a trump card with him. You have
-heard how he saved Blucher's life at Ligny?'
-
-'Only vaguely.'
-
-'It is a matter of history: Prussian history, at least; and was one
-of those impulses, or inspirations, which, if not acted on instantly,
-may never come again. It was at Ligny where the Prussians and French
-were engaged on the 16th of June, on that dreadful day of tempest;
-rain, and wind, when the British were retreating from Quatre Bras to
-their position at Waterloo. Victory was evidently declaring for the
-Emperor, when Blucher strove to arrest his success by consecutive
-charges of cavalry. In person he led on a regiment of Hussars, who
-were repulsed; his horse fell beneath him wounded, and the great
-Marshal could not be extricated, and the enemy were pressing on! The
-last of his flying Hussars had left the brave old man, who lay
-helpless on the ground; but his aide-de-camp, the Count, my father,
-resolving to share his fate, flung himself by Blucher's side, and
-covered him with his horse-cloak that he might not be recognised.
-Over them swept a brigade of Brass Cuirassiers, so named from the
-metal of their helmets and corslets. The routed Hussars rallied
-suddenly, wheeled about, and attacked their pursuers, and again
-passed their fallen leader, and the old Graf--a young Graf, then--in
-their pursuit of the French, whom they routed. My father instantly
-seized the opportunity. He dragged Blucher from under the fallen
-charger, mounted him on a dragoon horse, and thus saved his life!'
-
-While Heinrich, with something of exultation, was detailing this
-episode of the Count's early life, the thoughts of Carl were very far
-away from the events of Ligny and Waterloo.
-
-'Next week will see us on the march for France,' said he, 'and I may
-cross the purposes of your family and the path of Ernestine no more!
-You, Heinrich, who are so successful and so happy in your love, might
-surely pity us.'
-
-'I do, Carl. A fellow feeling makes us wondrous kind.'
-
-'Arrange for me,' continued Charlie, with great earnestness, 'that
-Ernestine and I may have one more interview. Our last farewell--our
-separation, was so cruelly abrupt.'
-
-'A meeting! When and where?'
-
-'When and where you choose. See her once again, I must at all
-hazards; and you alone can arrange this for me. Dear friend, don't
-deny us this last melancholy pleasure!'
-
-'Where, then, think you?'
-
-'Settle that with my darling; and may God bless you, Heinrich!' said
-Charlie, in a choking voice, as he patted his friend on the epaulette.
-
-'I shall write you to-night, to-morrow at the latest; for we must not
-lose time while the Baron's gout lasts.'
-
-And Heinrich ordered his horse and departed, leaving Charlie
-Pierrepont in a more contented mood of mind than he had been in since
-he left the boudoir of the Countess.
-
-So he should _see_ her once again!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-FOR LIFE AND DEATH.
-
-Eagerly did Charlie Pierrepont await the arrival of the Brieftrager,
-or letter-carrier, who brought him a brief note from Heinrich, saying
-that he meant to take his sister for a drive that evening, and that
-Charlie would find her in the little church at Burtscheid at the hour
-of seven. The note was signed, as usual, '_Ihr treuer Freund_,
-HEINRICH.' After all that had occurred, how delightful and
-encouraging it was to find her brother signing himself 'Your devoted
-friend,' as of old!
-
-'The little church of Burtscheid?' said Charlie, after perusing the
-note for the third or fourth time; 'it is a strange place to choose.'
-
-But Ernestine was a strange girl, and, with regard to this farewell
-meeting, had that in view which Charlie could not foresee. Ten hours
-had to elapse before the appointed one came; and to Charlie, who
-passed the day almost watch in hand, the time seemed interminable.
-Evening came, however, at last; and the shadows of the church spires
-were falling eastward when Charlie set out for the trysting-place,
-which is a mile and a half from the gates of Aix, and connected
-therewith by a handsome avenue of trees. The village is now chiefly
-celebrated for its mineral waters; but 'the abbey of Burtscheid,'
-says Forster, a writer at the close of the last century, 'is
-beautifully situated, and finished with all ecclesiastical splendour.
-Close by, a small wood runs towards a large reservoir, and as you
-advance you come to a narrow valley enclosed by woody hills, where
-several warm springs are soon discovered by the vapour that rises
-from them, and the large reservoir is quite filled with hot water.
-As you walk along a series of beautifully shaded reservoirs you see
-the romantic ruins of the old castle of Frankenburg.'
-
-Thus the trysting-place selected by Ernestine was quite near her
-home. The church was an appendage of the abbey mentioned by Forster.
-It was a lonely place, surrounded by a burial-ground, where, as usual
-in German cemeteries, the inventions of the mason and carpenter
-rarely go beyond an urn, a cross, or a broken pillar in fashioning a
-tombstone, and where, for reasons to be afterwards mentioned, few
-came to promenade, as the public usually do in public burying-grounds.
-
-At the gate stood a handsome britzka, with a pair of horses, the
-reins of which were held by Heinrich, who was without groom or other
-attendant.
-
-'Ernestine?' said Charlie, grasping the hand of his friend.
-
-'She is in the church. We have not been here three minutes. Do not
-detain her long, Carl, as I would not have suspicion excited.
-Meantime, I shall smoke a cigar.'
-
-Charlie hastened into the edifice, for the Herr Pastor of which, in
-happier times, Ernestine and Herminia had worked many altar-cloths,
-pen-wipers, slippers, and smoking-caps. It was a plain, whitewashed
-edifice, ancient Gothic in some parts, patched with modern brickwork
-elsewhere; and a subdued light stole through the windows on the
-portraits of certain defunct Herr Pastors hung upon the pillars, the
-oaken pews, and the rows of black iron spittoons in some, with
-kneeling hassocks in others. Before the rail of the altar, Ernestine
-was kneeling, in prayer apparently.
-
-There was no one else in the church, and on hearing Charlie approach,
-she threw herself into his arms, and for some time could but sob
-passionately and utter his name in a choking voice, while he patted
-her cheek and kissed away her tears. Then she became more composed,
-and taking Charlie's face between her soft and ungloved hands, gazed
-into his eyes with a tender smile.
-
-'You will yet love me, Carl, in spite of all that mamma has said?'
-she whispered.
-
-'Love you!' he exclaimed, 'what on earth could make me cease to love
-you?'
-
-'How enchanting it is to be with you again, my own Carl! You will
-write to me from--from France, when Heinrich writes to me or
-Herminia, and I can reply in the same manner.'
-
-'Thank you, darling, for the delightful promise.'
-
-'No power on earth must separate us, Carl. I have resolved that such
-cannot, shall not be.'
-
-'The Baron----'
-
-'Ah, don't speak of him at this precious time,' said she,
-contemptuously; 'that odious Grünthal--such a mouth he has! When he
-laughs you can almost see it behind him.'
-
-'Behind him, darling--how?'
-
-'The corners of his mouth might meet behind his head.'
-
-This was somewhat of an exaggeration, but as it was like some of
-Ernestine's speeches in merrier times, she made Charlie laugh.
-
-'Yet, to such a man _they_ would assign you!' said he.
-
-'If they dare!' she replied, with a little gesture, peculiarly her
-own, as it was partly imperious and partly child-like.
-
-Her tears began to flow again, and she said:
-
-'It is in vain that the Graf storms, and that mamma tells me every
-vow that has passed between us must be forgotten, that when you left
-Frankenburg you lost all claim on me, and I was, and am, perfectly
-free. I am not free, Carl; I have promised to become your wedded
-wife, and no other shall have my heart or hand while I live!'
-
-She spoke with strong passion, and as she lay in the arms of her
-lover, her whole delicate form was trembling violently.
-
-'But for this war, I would implore you to take me away with you, and
-make me your wife in spite of them all--your dear little wife, Carl.
-Wherever you went, there Ernestine would be with you, and we should
-live but for each other, and love each other as we have always done.'
-
-'And this war once over, if God spares me, I shall come, at every
-risk, at every hazard, and take you away--on this I had already
-resolved, darling.'
-
-'When that time comes, dearest Carl, I will live on your smiles by
-day, and rest my head on your bosom at night.'
-
-There was a smile on the eyes and on the lips of the girl as she
-spoke, though her heart was torn by the misery of the coming
-separation. Suddenly she said:
-
-'Kneel with me before this altar, ere some one interrupts us. Let us
-make a promise to be true to each other in life and in death----'
-
-'Death, darling?'
-
-'In sorrow and joy, peril and safety; sickness and health, in death
-and in life! Repeat after me, what I say.'
-
-Clasped hand in hand, and kneeling face to face, they each promised
-to be faithful, loving and true to the other, under all
-circumstances, exactly as if they had been wedded, till death parted
-them. The words she dictated were strangely nervous and
-solemn--solemn even to being fantastic--chilling, yet somehow
-charming, and they were never forgotten by Charlie, who repeated them
-after her as one in a dream.
-
-In the usually tender eyes and soft face of Ernestine there was, for
-a time, a sad yet stern expression of resolution and self-mastery,
-which Charlie failed to analyze, though the memory of it long haunted
-him.
-
-'We have forged our spiritual chain, beloved Carl,' said she, 'and
-cannot break it now.'
-
-'Nor shall it ever be broken!' he replied, caressing her tenderly.
-
-'_For life and death_ our bond be recorded in Heaven!' said the
-strange romantic girl; 'kiss me, Carl, kiss me--I feel much happier
-now.'
-
-'Surely Heaven will spare me for your sake, my love.'
-
-'If not, we shall meet there, Carl--for I should not be long behind
-you, there, where there are no harsh parents, "where there is neither
-marriage, nor giving in marriage,"--then we shall be re-united, Carl,
-and live our dreams of love over again.'
-
-The girl's manner was exquisitely tender, yet sad, and so earnest
-that there came a time when Charlie remembered it, occasionally with
-terror. The voice of her brother was now heard.
-
-'Heinrich is very impatient,' said Charlie.
-
-'One moment, Carl. If I were to come to you when dead, would you
-fear me?'
-
-'When dead?' said Charlie, looking down on the sweet upturned face
-that lay on his shoulder; 'what _do_ you mean, Ernestine?'
-
-'I scarcely know; but I should not fear _you_, love. I have some
-strange emotions in my heart this evening. I do not think even the
-grave would keep me from you; but would it keep you from me?'
-
-'I fear it would, darling,' said he, with a half smile, though rather
-bewildered by all this; 'battle trenches are often pretty deep and
-full.'
-
-'Oh, horror, Carl; don't talk of such an end as that!'
-
-He regarded her anxiously, fearing that sudden sorrow was affecting
-her mind. Again the voice of Heinrich was heard. She drew down the
-veil of her hat to conceal the redness of her eyes, and Charlie led
-her out to the britzka. All was over now, and they were separated
-till Fate or Chance should enable them to meet again.
-
-Those who saw Ernestine looking back from the britzka, and Charlie
-lift his hat more than once, as he walked slowly down the avenue that
-led to Aix, could little have imagined the strangely solemn betrothal
-that had just taken place between these two, in the little church of
-Burtscheid.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-TO THE RHINE!
-
-'To Paris! To Paris! Hoch Germania!'
-
-Such were the cries that rang along the line of march, when on the
-1st of August the various columns of the German army began to meet
-those which left Paris shouting 'To Berlin!'
-
-After detailing much that savours of what may seem romance, we have
-now to borrow a paragraph or two from the history of Europe.
-
-Perfect in organization, the forces which the Prussian Government
-were able to bring to the frontier a few days after the declaration
-of war against France were divided into three great armies, making a
-grand total of four hundred and twelve thousand infantry, and
-forty-seven thousand eight hundred cavalry, with one thousand four
-hundred and forty pieces of cannon.
-
-The first of these three armies was commanded by Major General
-Steinmetz, the second by Prince Frederick Charles, and the third by
-the Crown Prince--the whole being under the orders of the King of
-Prussia, assisted by General Count Von Moltke, a distinguished Dane,
-as chief of his staff.
-
-Strong reserves were posted at Hainau, Frankfort, at the old
-electoral city of Mayence, and amidst the vast defences of Coblentz
-between the Rhine and the Moselle. Another army defended the north,
-under Von Falkenstein; so taken altogether, including the Landwehr,
-Prussia, with her million and a quarter of well-drilled soldiery,
-seemed impregnable.
-
-Charlie Pierrepont's regiment was formed in brigade with the 7th, or
-King's Grenadiers, and the 37th, or Westphalians. The war
-establishment of a Prussian regiment is never less than 3,006 men,
-with 69 officers. His brigade was among the first troops actively
-employed, with orders to occupy the line of the Saar, resting its
-right on Saarbrück, with advanced posts at that place and in the
-schloss of the Princes of Nassau, at Saarlouis, which had been
-fortified by Vauban, at Bliescastle, where the Prussians and French
-fought a great battle in 1793, and at Merzig.
-
-The second army, with the royal headquarters, crossed the Rhine at
-Mayence, and took a position on the left of General Steinmetz,
-occupied Zweibrucken (which the French had named Deux Ponts), and
-Pirmasens, with its main body echeloned along the line of railway
-from the ruined castle of the Counts of Sickingen at Landstuhl to the
-strong fortress of Landau.
-
-The third army came on by the way of Mannheim and Germesheim, and
-formed to the left of the second, at the latter place, Speirs,
-Neustadt, and Landau. All these formidable columns could communicate
-with each other by railway, and were well secured in the rear in case
-of having to retreat. But no thought of retreating was in the
-Prussian ranks.
-
-From the suddenness and efficiency of these arrangements, it was
-clear 'that Count Bismarck and his master had been long and actively
-preparing for war, and had not been entirely absorbed in peaceful and
-innocent designs, as we were constantly assured by certain writers in
-this country, who desired to present France to the world as a crafty
-and ravening wolf, and Prussia a meek and inoffensive lamb.'
-
-Something of this kind was said by Heinrich to Charlie, as their
-brigade approached Saarbrück. But the latter would scarcely admit
-it, as his love for Ernestine, and his high military enthusiasm, made
-him, for the time, 'German all over--German at fever-heat,' as he
-said.
-
-And splendid was the aspect of the strong brigade, with the King's
-Grenadiers in front, the Westphalians in the centre, and the 95th
-Thuringians in the rear, as it defiled across the bridge that led to
-the suburb of St. Johann, each battalion with its carts of reserve
-ammunition, drawn by six horses. After each battalion, also, came
-thirteen baggage and one canteen waggon, all the brass drums beating
-smartly to make the men step quick. The colours of the King's
-Grenadiers, black and white; of the other corps, black, white, and
-red--the standard of the North German Confederation--were floating in
-the wind, above the long lines of spiked helmets, and of bright
-bayonets and brighter musket barrels sloped in the sunshine, for the
-Prussian arms are not browned as ours are now, but pure, white steel.
-Hence the glitter over all the column was great, though the uniforms
-were sombre and blue.
-
-Anon the brass bands struck up between the echoing streets of
-Saarbrück; but amid all the enthusiasm of the time, the crash of the
-martial music, the measured tramping of thousands of marching feet,
-Charlie's mind could not help reverting to those happy moments in the
-stair of the Hoch Munster, and the sadder ones in the quiet little
-church of Burtscheid, and, in memory, he still saw the rosy,
-trembling lips of the girl he loved, and the full bosom that rose and
-fell with sobs and sighs.
-
-When would he be marching home, and what might happen then? Would it
-come to pass that he might never return, but find a grave in the soil
-of France? They were now within thirty miles of Metz. He cast a
-backward glance to where the rearguard was descending a slope, and,
-as if to reply to his surmises, there came marching with it a corps
-of grave-diggers, for a force of this kind was attached to every
-column, while 'by an arrangement characterised by a grim horror, yet
-unquestionably useful,' every Prussian officer and soldier was
-ordered to wear round his neck a label, to establish his identity in
-case of his being killed.
-
-These reflections were but momentary, so Charlie's spirit rose again,
-and his heart beat responsive to the sharp and regulated crash of the
-drums; for there is much elasticity of mind in healthy twenty-eight
-or thirty years, and Charlie's were no more.
-
-The enthusiasm all over Germany was unquestionably great at this
-time, and as a specimen of it, Heinrich told Charlie, exultingly, how
-his father's old comrade and brother officer, Field Marshal the Count
-Von Wrangel, then in the eighty-fourth year of his age, on seeing his
-old regiment, the 3rd Cuirassiers, marching through Berlin, had
-petitioned the king for leave to join them as a private, as he was
-now too aged to lead; but the king declined the offer of the brave
-old man, and requested him to remain in Berlin, and make himself
-useful in a more peaceable way.
-
-On the early morning of the 2nd of August, Charlie Pierrepont was
-subaltern of the out-picket posted on the road that leads direct from
-the open town of Saarbrück towards Metz, where then the Emperor
-Napoleon III. commanded in person. He had returned from visiting his
-line of advanced sentinels, all of whom stood motionless, with musket
-ordered and bayonet fixed, with their faces turned in the direction
-of Metz, each longing, no doubt, for the relief and a pipe. Stiff,
-and chilled with the rain and dew of the summer night, Charlie shook
-himself, as a dog might do, and proceeded to light a cigar and look
-around him, as the dawn brightened, little foreseeing that this would
-be one of the most important days in the new current of events.
-
-He could see the Saar winding in and out at the foot of a chain of
-hills, covered to their summits by beautiful oaks and beeches. Here
-and there the red precipices started up from the bed of the stream;
-for the rocks and the soil were red, and even the river was red, too,
-for rain had fallen overnight.
-
-The scene looked lovely and peaceful. Red stones, spotted with
-orange-coloured lichens, lay plentifully in the bed of the Saar,
-where a solitary kingfisher wound about among the water-weeds. Here
-and there at the narrower parts of the stream, an occasional peasant
-was fishing with a tub and sink-net, and beyond lay the plain, where
-Saarlouis' ramparts rose above the swampy fields, where herds of
-cattle plashed disconsolately about.
-
-'Guten morgen, Carl!' cried a familiar voice, and on looking up, he
-saw Heinrich hurrying towards him. 'I have news for you.'
-
-'Are the enemy in motion?
-
-'As your post is an advanced one, you should be the first to know of
-that. My news is from the rear.'
-
-'From the rear!'
-
-'How dull you are, Carl--from Frankenburg! Here, take a pull at my
-bottle; your own is, no doubt, empty by this time.'
-
-'Thanks!'
-
-Charlie took a few mouthfuls from the metal flask of brandy-and-water
-that Heinrich wore slung over his shoulder in a belt, and said--
-
-'Now for your news, friend; it is not pleasant, I fear, when you
-fortify me thus.'
-
-'Anything must be pleasant that comes to us from the girls we love.
-The field-post has just come. I have a letter from Herminia, Carl,
-with a little enclosure for you.'
-
-It was a note--merely a note, on scented and tinted paper, for
-Ernestine was not above these feminine prettinesses, written in her
-graceful style and lady-like hand--to say that he was never absent
-from her thoughts, and how she and Herminia had wept and prayed in
-secret on the night the army crossed the Rhine.
-
-'I fear, Carl, that I am looking ill and pale,' she continued, 'but
-sunny-haired Herminia seems to thrive on her grief; but you know she
-is ever all dimples--dimples on her white elbows and chin, cheeks,
-and hands--soft jolly dimples. Mamma, tired of knitting--she always
-knits as if her livelihood depended upon it--has dozed off to sleep,
-with her Spitz pug under her lace shawl in the boudoir. (The
-boudoir! Do you ever think of it, and that horrible night when she
-surprised us while searching for that miserable little cur?) Papa,
-as dinner is over, is smoking in his study, among his fishing and
-shooting gear, pistols, guns, whips, collars, and whistles, no doubt
-drinking to the health of the Kaiser and studying the _Staats
-Anzeiger_. All is unchanged since you left Frankenburg, from whence
-my heart goes with this to you, my dearest Betrothed of Burtscheid.'
-
-Charlie was perusing this for the third time, Heinrich was lolling
-beside him on the grass, humming '_Du du_,' and idly playing with his
-silver sword-knot, while watching the bright morning sunshine
-stealing along the wooded hills and winding river, when suddenly
-there was the report of a needle-gun in front. Another, another, and
-a third followed, as the whole line of advanced sentinels opened
-fire, and the out-picket rushed to their arms and fell in their ranks.
-
-'Sapperment!' exclaimed young Frankenburg, springing to his feet; 'it
-has come at last! This is war! The French are in motion in front;
-there will soon be work for the grave-digger corps!'
-
-So opened the day on which the young Napoleon was to receive his
-'baptism of fire.'
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-SEPARATED.
-
-For a time the preparations for her marriage had gone on
-openly--though Ernestine, in her tenderness of heart and reluctance
-to wound one she loved so well, made no reference to this in her
-short letter--so openly that there were times when she contemplated
-flight; but whither could she fly? and then she shrunk from the
-dreadful _esclandre_ of such a proceeding; so settlements were made
-and deeds signed, and from time to time she found beautiful ornaments
-and jewels, the gifts of the Baron, on her toilette tables; but she
-never wore them, and the morocco cases remained unopened; till at
-last a serious illness, or sickness of the heart, in fact,
-supervened, and the espousals were delayed, and the Count cursed the
-hour that his thoughtless son had brought his troublesome English
-comrade to Frankenburg.
-
-She was no longer _espiègle_, as of old; the piano remained unopened
-now, and no entreaties on the part of her father could lure her into
-playing 'Die Wacht am Rhein,' the war-song of Arndt, or any of those
-stirring and patriotic airs with which all Germany was resounding
-now. The very sound of the instrument fretted her.
-
-Times there had been when she had tried over some of those songs she
-had loved to sing to Charlie Pierrepont--the same that she had been
-rehearsing on the evening of his arrival (how much had happened since
-then!)--but she fairly broke down and made the attempt no more.
-
-A summons from Prince Bismarck, for the Baron Grünthal to attend at
-Berlin, in consequence of some affairs connected with the
-Oberconsistory Court at Aix, gave poor Ernestine a temporary respite
-from the annoyance of his presence and clumsy attentions; and as she
-was at times easier in mind, and more content to wait the issue of
-events, after that remarkable and somewhat solemn interchange of
-promises at Burtscheid Church, her parents began to hope that all was
-at an end between her and the Herr Lieutenant of Infantry, and that
-she would be content to receive the Baron as her husband in time,
-perhaps when Heinrich returned, if God spared him ever to return.
-
-This was satisfactory to her on one hand, while on the other she had
-the pleasure of sharing her secret sorrows and hopes of future joy
-with Herminia, with whom she had now a double link and bond of
-sympathy.
-
-They led but a dull life now in the old Schloss.
-
-Baron Rhineberg, 'a beer-bloated Teuton' of the first class, came
-occasionally to talk politics with the Count, over a pipe and flask
-of Rhine wine; the two daughters of the Justiz-rath, and a few other
-visitors, dropped in, but Ernestine found it weary work to talk
-commonplaces with these people, not one of whom had any vital or
-particular interest, beyond a national one, in the army now in the
-field; and to chat of music and books, of Berlin wools and soup for
-the poor, when, perhaps, _at that very moment of time_, the bullets
-might be whistling about him she loved; or when he might be stretched
-wounded, dying or dead, upon the bloody sod--to talk, we say, of
-aught that was frivolous, with such fears in her heart, was
-impossible.
-
-Strong, yet tender, was thus the bond of sympathy between the
-cousins; for those whom they loved--the one openly, the other
-secretly--and to whom they were affianced, were facing side by side
-the foes of Germany, and risking the same perils and toils.
-
-Once only did she rouse herself thoroughly and feel startled when the
-portly Baron Rhineberg, taking his vast pipe out from his bushy
-moustaches, asked her abruptly if she 'ever visited the church of
-Burtscheid.'
-
-'Sometimes,' said she, colouring deeply for a moment, and then
-becoming pale as before; 'but why do you ask, Herr Baron?'
-
-'Because Herr Pastor Puffenvortz is preaching a series of stirring
-sermons there just now.'
-
-Poor Ernestine, who had begun to fear that her interview there with
-Charlie had been overheard or overseen by some eavesdropper unknown,
-felt greatly relieved by the Baron's simple reply; but her sudden
-change of colour was not unnoticed by the Countess, who drew certain
-conclusions therefrom, though she could scarcely give them any form.
-
-The sudden and blunt reference to the church at Burtscheid, the scene
-of her last and farewell interview with Charlie, gave her so sudden a
-shock--her sensibility had become so delicate now--that she had to
-retire to her room.
-
-Burtscheid! All the scene then came again before her--when words
-were spoken that were known to Heaven and themselves alone! He was
-gone--torn from her, the first and only man she had ever loved, so
-the girl pined in her heart. So now she sat, as she had been wont to
-sit for hours, listlessly, as if without consciousness of thought;
-yet her mind was keenly active and full of images of the absent one.
-
-To the latter, variety of occupation, change of scene in a foreign
-land, the activity of a military life, the incessant stir and alarms
-of war, would, in spite of love, separation, and fear of rivalry and
-of her family, draw in fresh moods of thought and afford thereby a
-certain healthy relief; but she was left amid the scenes of her
-departed joy, with the additional affliction before her of domestic
-persecution and the odious addresses of a would-be lover!
-
-How eagerly she hoped that he would be detained for months at Berlin!
-
-'Oh, Herminia!' she would sometimes say to her cousin; 'I was so
-happy--so happy, that it is a sin to make me so miserable!'
-
-'Be calm, darling, be calm; Heinrich will bring him to you once
-again,' replied the girl, embracing her.
-
-'It will be miraculous if they _both_ escape the dangers of this
-mighty war.'
-
-'Do not speak thus, I implore you,' said Herminia, passionately, and
-somewhat scared by her cousin's tone of voice and expression of eye.
-
-'My sufferings are indeed great, Herminia. Do you remember,' she
-asked, with a sad smile, 'all you endured at Cologne, when you only
-knew Heinrich as Herr Mansfeld?'
-
-'Never, never shall I forget them, and the agony that I suffered on
-one particular evening, when I heard you laughing, and deemed you
-heartless, dear cousin. How I then loathed the name of Heinrich--it
-seems wonderful now!'
-
-'So now do I loathe that of the Baron. Oh, Herminia, few like me
-have to endure misery without the prospect of relief!'
-
-In the evening after Rhineberg had withdrawn, the Countess, whose
-mind was still running on her daughter's evident emotion at the name
-of Burtscheid, gave vent to the anger and suspicion that excited her.
-
-'Did you ever _go_ to Burtscheid with Herr Pierrepont?' she asked
-abruptly.
-
-'Never, mamma,' replied Ernestine, blushing again, but at her own
-quibble rather than the question of her mother, who, after eyeing her
-narrowly, almost sternly for a minute, said--
-
-'You still pine for that insolent young man. I can see it in your
-face, Ernestine!'
-
-'Oh, mamma!' said the girl, with a wonderful tenderness of tone, 'is
-it a crime to love?'
-
-'Not if it is a proper love.'
-
-'Then why, mamma darling, are you so severe on _me_?' asked
-Ernestine, nestling in her mother's neck in the most endearing manner.
-
-'I wish to protect and guide you, and to teach you that you must not
-love one who is beneath you.'
-
-'But, dear Carl----' (The adjective escaped her unconsciously.)
-
-'Grafine!' exclaimed the astonished Countess.
-
-'Well, mamma, Carl Pierrepont is not beneath me.'
-
-'This is new to me--how?'
-
-'Because, even if he were so, love makes all equal.'
-
-By kisses and caresses she strove to win over her mother; but the
-latter almost thrust her back, saying:
-
-'This is folly--worse than folly; crush, forget, dismiss such
-thoughts. They are unworthy of you, Ernestine--unworthy of _my_
-daughter!'
-
-'And of mine, too,' added the Count, who had come unnoticed upon the
-scene. 'Der Teufel! much as I liked that English lad, I hope some
-French bullet may rid us of him for ever.'
-
-'Oh, father,' implored Ernestine, 'spare me such terrible remarks.
-Think of his old father and his three sisters in England. Think that
-our Heinrich shares his dangers.'
-
-'True--true; God forgive me the thought; but go to your room, child,
-and let us have no more scenes like this,' replied the old Count, who
-had long outlived the memory of what a young love was, and Ernestine
-gladly obeyed.
-
-The expression of her face changed at times; its softness seemed to
-pass away, and then contempt and anger mingled with sorrow on her
-white lips. She was a spirited yet a gentle girl; she felt that she
-had been insulted, and treated like a child; that her natural freedom
-had been trampled on, her wishes ignored, and in the long waking
-hours of the silent night, when no sound was heard but the hooting of
-the owls in the ruined tower close by, she brooded, almost
-revengefully, upon the pride and tyranny of her parents, and the
-gross insolence--for such she justly deemed it--of the Baron
-Grünthal, seeking her hand without her affection--her hand in
-defiance of herself and her avowed love for another!
-
-Then it was, in times such as these, that wild and impotent schemes
-of flight and freedom occurred--schemes from which she shrank when
-daylight came.
-
-Ernestine looked ere long careworn and became ill; her physician
-recommended the baths at different places, and the mineral waters
-elsewhere; but they were resorted to in vain. One little enclosure
-from Carl, received secretly in the letters of Herminia, was worth
-all the baths and wells in Germany to Ernestine.
-
-One evening Baron Rhineberg came galloping to the Schloss, and from
-his vast rotundity was ushered into the drawing-room when on the
-verge of an apoplectic fit. His features were purple, his eyes
-rolled wildly in their sockets, and from mingled excitement and
-enthusiasm, the burly old Teuton could only splutter and utter some
-incoherent sounds, while the Spitz pug barked furiously.
-
-'Ach Gott!' exclaimed the Count; 'what is the matter?'
-
-'Have you not heard the news, Herr Count?' he gasped.
-
-'News!' repeated Frankenburg, changing colour, and mechanically, or
-by use and wont, playing with the pipe that dangled at his button,
-for even he did not smoke in the drawing-room, though a thorough
-German.
-
-'But of course you could not, for I have just come from the city,'
-said Rhineberg.
-
-'Der Teufel!' said Frankenburg, angrily, 'and what may the news be?'
-
-'The advanced column of the German army has come to blows with the
-French at last.'
-
-'At last!' said the Count, with something of pride mingling in his
-irritation; 'I don't think the Kaiser has lost much time.'
-
-'Our troops were attacked, at least so the telegram says, by the
-French, led by the Emperor Napoleon in person.'
-
-'Where--where?' asked all his listeners, while the three ladies grew
-very pale indeed.
-
-'At Saarbrück.'
-
-'The devil!' exclaimed the Count; 'that is actually on our Prussian
-ground.'
-
-'Saarbrück?' re-echoed the Countess and Herminia, in faint voices,
-for they both knew that Heinrich was with the advanced column there.
-
-Ernestine knew that her Carl was there too; but no sound left her
-white and quivering lips.
-
-'And what were the results of the conflict--the casualties, and so
-forth?' asked the old Count, his mind flashing back to the days of
-Ligny, Wavre, and Waterloo.
-
-'Unknown as yet. The first man killed is said to be an _Englishman_.'
-
-'Gott in Himmel!' cried the Count, 'my girl has fainted!'
-
-So at Frankenburg, as at many other places, where the hearts of the
-people were with the flower of Germany, they could but wait and
-pray--pray and be patient till true tidings came.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-THE BAPTISM OF FIRE.
-
-It was no false alarm that, as related in a preceding chapter, made
-the advanced sentinels of the 95th, all hardy fellows from the
-Thuringerwald, open fire in quick succession.
-
-The Emperor Napoleon, who had recently arrived at Metz, looking old
-and ill, with his head sunk on his breast, and who, on the 28th of
-July, had issued that famous bulletin, 'Soldiers, the eyes of the
-world are upon you! The fate of civilization depends upon our
-success. Soldiers, let each one do his duty, and the God of armies
-will be with us!'--the Emperor, we say, finding that the time had
-come when something must be done to stimulate the spirit of those
-troops whom he had massed in and about Metz, as well as to appease
-the fiery impatience of the French people, being aware that Saarbrück
-was of importance to the Prussians, who there had command of three
-lines of railway for the conveyance of troops and stores, resolved to
-carry the place by storm.
-
-Hence, about nine o'clock on the morning of the 2nd of August, the
-gleam of bayonets was seen on some heights that overlook the town,
-and the dark columns of the French, in their long blue coats, and red
-or madder-coloured breeches, became visible, and by that time the
-whole Prussian force in and about Saarbrück was under arms, and their
-cannon went thundering to the front.
-
-Over the brass-spiked helmets, the brass-pointed pickel-haubes, with
-the spread eagle, rose forests of bayonets, a steelly sea flashing in
-the sunshine, the Uhlans riding with pennons furled and lances down
-on the flanks of the massed close columns. Anon the drums beat
-sharply, then the hoarse German words of command rang out on the
-clear air, the colours rustled on the morning breeze, and rays of
-light seemed to pass over all the force as the columns deployed into
-line, elbow touching elbow, loosely, and the order was given to
-load--to load those terrible needle-guns which carried death and
-destruction into the Austrian ranks in the war of 1866. They are
-simply breech-loading rifles, in which the charge is exploded by the
-projection of a piece of steel, called 'the needle,' on the
-detonating powder. The Prussians, whenever they encountered the
-French, allowed them to exhaust the fire of their chassepots at long
-range; then they poured in their own with deadly accuracy; and next
-came the bayonet charge--and those who have seen the Prussians charge
-will never forget the impression conveyed by their levelled ridge of
-steel, the shining helmets, the hoarse hurrahs, the flushed, yet
-resolute faces, the whole physique of the rushing infantry, and the
-roar of the trumpets as the Uhlans went thundering on their flanks,
-whirling their tremendous spears, as if impatient to close with the
-foe.
-
-All this did Charlie Pierrepont see on this eventful day at Saarbrück.
-
-Ere the Prussians formed line, the booming of their artillery was
-heard in front; a great deal of wood surrounded the town, and from
-this, as from an ambuscade, their cannon were fired, and high in the
-air rose the white smoke above the green foliage* With shouts of '_A
-bas la Prusse!_' the 2nd French corps, under General Bataille, came
-rushing on, only to be checked and decimated by the biting cannonade;
-the grassy slope that led to the heights was soon dotted by killed
-and wounded, and the stretchers and ambulance waggons made their
-appearance along the whole line of route.
-
-'What is the meaning of those cheers on the right?' asked Captain
-Schönforst, a tall soldier-like fellow of the 95th, of Charlie, who
-was busy scanning the enemy through his field-glass; 'are those
-dragoons coming in from Forbach?'
-
-'By Heaven, I think it is the Emperor in person, surrounded by a
-brilliant staff, with a little boy riding by his side!' was the
-excited response of Pierrepont.
-
-And the Emperor it was, accompanied by the Prince Imperial, then in
-his fourteenth year.
-
-'Tell the officer commanding that gun near us who these new arrivals
-are,' said Schönforst, a veteran of the Austro-Prussian war,' and
-desire him to send a few doses of grape in their direction.'
-
-Charlie promptly delivered the order; the direction of the gun was
-altered, and thus it was that the young prince received what was
-popularly known as his 'baptism of fire.'
-
-'He was admirably cool,' wrote the Emperor to the Empress; 'we were
-in front of the line, and the bullets fell at our feet. Louis has
-kept one which fell close to him. Some of the soldiers shed tears on
-seeing him so calm.'
-
-Filled with enthusiasm by all this, General Froissard despatched two
-battalions of the 67th regiment, under Colonel Theobaudin, to attack
-the hamlet of St. Arnaul, which was occupied by our friends the
-Thuringians, and was further defended by batteries of guns on the
-right flank of the Saar. The 15th French regiment made a rush at
-those batteries, and captured them with great bravery. Theobaudin's
-battalion, supported now by the 40th and 66th regiments, and some
-mitrailleuses--those horrible weapons, now for the first time tried
-in active warfare--made a furious attack on the village of St. Arnaul.
-
-Shoulder to shoulder stood the resolute Thuringians--the lineal
-descendants of the ancient Hyrcinian foresters--volleying over wall
-and bank and hedge with their deadly needle-guns; but the French came
-rushing up the slope with glorious _élan_, though hundreds went
-rolling down, dead or dying, and choking in blood.
-
-With those dreadful showers of balls, the mitrailleuses, 'those
-master-pieces for death and carnage,' were heard amid the roar of the
-musketry by the strange noise of their discharge, which was dry,
-shrieking, and terrible!
-
-Their balls in continuous streams tore thtough the Prussian ranks,
-mowing them down as scythes mow a field of corn. Everywhere the
-smoke was dense. Heinrich had an epaulette torn off by one bullet,
-and the spike of his helmet by another, while Charlie was twice on
-the point of being taken prisoner, when his company was skirmishing
-in front, at the time when the 8th and 23rd French regiments were
-also in skirmishing order through some thickly wooded ravines. Two
-powerful soldiers attacked him--in fact, he had run against them in
-the smoke--and he must inevitably have been killed or taken had he
-not rid himself of one with his revolver, while Captain Schönforst
-passed his long straight sword through the body of the other.
-
-But the Prussian drums were now beating a retreat. It was impossible
-for the small force in Saarbrück--a mere weak advanced guard--to
-withstand the many battalions sent against it by the Emperor,
-especially as the attacking force was supported by an entire battery
-of mitrailleuses.
-
-The affair was a skirmish rather than a battle, and ended by the town
-being set on fire, and the thick columns of smoke from the burning
-houses rose from amid the trees, rolled along the railway
-embankments, and added to the obscurity and confusion. Amid this
-rang the roar of the red flashing musketry, and the horrible
-shrieking of the mitrailleuse. The latter we may describe for the
-information of the reader is a four-pound gun, divided into
-twenty-five compartments by as many rifle barrels, all loaded at the
-breech by cartridges, and all discharged at once, the loading only
-requiring five actions, by which seven thousand eight hundred balls
-can be discharged in one hour into a circle of twelve feet in
-diameter.
-
-It was by the fire of one of these that Charlie saw an event which
-was one of the most touching scenes in the war. His skirmishers had
-been driven by the French 23rd close to the railway bank, and near
-them lay a Zouave, terribly wounded in the lungs apparently. The
-poor man's agony was frightful. He was past speech, and could only
-clasp his hands in prayer, cross himself, and point imploringly to
-his mouth.
-
-A kindly sergeant of the 95th uncorked his water-bottle, and raising
-the Frenchman's head, was about to slake his thirst, when the
-shrieking sound was heard amid the smoke close by. Out of that smoke
-came the leaden storm of the mitrailleuse, and the Prussian and the
-Zouave were literally blown to fragments.
-
-Over the railway bank the Thuringians were now driven, and everywhere
-the whole Prussian line was giving way! The moment the Emperor
-became aware of this, with generous humanity he ordered the
-mitrailleuses to cease firing, and thus arrested the useless carnage.
-
-As yet Charlie Pierrepont had escaped without a scratch, though
-frequently the very sod beneath his feet was torn and sowed by balls.
-Though the French obtained possession of Saarbrück--the last troops
-out of which were the Thuringians--the Prussians still continued to
-lurk in the village of St. Johann, on the further side of the Saar,
-and in the thick woods beyond it, from whence the white smoke spirted
-out in incessant puffs as their well-concealed skirmishers kept up a
-galling fire on the enemy.
-
-This gradually ceased, and the shadows of evening began to deepen
-over Saarbrück, and on the faces of the dead and dying who lay by the
-sedgy banks of the once peaceful river. The fishers had fled,
-abandoning their tubs and baskets; no figures were seen moving on
-either side now save those of men in various uniforms; and terrified
-by the unnatural din that then had seemed to rend the sky, the little
-birds were seen to grovel amid the reeds and grass, as if too scared
-to seek their nests in those thickets around which the tide of
-carnage rolled.
-
-The advanced sentinels were posted for the night, and under the
-shelter of a shattered cottage wall. Charlie Pierrepont, Heinrich,
-and Captain Schönforst congratulated each other that they all escaped
-untouched, and sat down amid the _debris_ of what had once been a
-cabbage-garden, to enjoy an humble repast, some German sausage, a few
-slices of bread, and the contents of their water-bottles, dashed with
-cognac.
-
-The telegram which, on that same evening, the Baron Rhineberg so duly
-reported at Frankenburg, thereby piercing, as with a poniard, the
-heart of Ernestine, was correct in some of its details, as the
-_first_ man killed in the Franco-Prussian war was an Englishman--but
-not Charlie.
-
-Prior to the affair at Saarbrück, twenty Baden troopers, led by a Mr.
-Winslow, made a dash into France at Lauterburg, and galloping on as
-far as Niederbronn, in open daylight, cut all the telegraph wires
-along the line of railway there. They halted next morning to
-breakfast at a French farmhouse, when they were surprised, and, in
-the combat that ensued, Winslow was cut down and slain.
-
-The terror and anxiety of Ernestine were, however, short-lived, as
-Heinrich's letter, written next morning, contained an enclosure for
-her that gave her a blessed relief.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-THE DREAM IN THE BIVOUAC.
-
-In talking over the stirring events of the past day, Captain
-Schönforst sat drawing out his fair fly-away whiskers to their full
-length, and then stuffing them into his mouth, as if to stifle his
-indignation at the Emperor Napoleon, for, like many other German
-officers at this time, he was loud in condemning him for bringing the
-Prince Imperial, a mere boy, under fire.
-
-'You forget, Herr Captain,' said Charlie, 'that princes have a great
-political game to play in this world, and that the heir of a throne
-should always be a soldier.'
-
-'But a boy--a mere boy--to be brought into action!' persisted the
-Captain.
-
-'Well. The sooner his nerves are strung, the better, I think; and we
-must remember that boys are employed in navies as well as in armies,
-and it is no more inhuman to have a prince under fire than a
-midshipman or drummer boy.'
-
-So the worthy captain was convinced, though much against his will.
-
-We have no intention of afflicting the reader with a history of the
-terrible Franco-Prussian war; but we cannot omit the details of some
-of those events in which Charlie Pierrepont and his comrades, the
-Thuringians, bore a share.
-
-Serious disasters followed the slight success won by the French at
-Saarbrück, when the Crown Prince of Prussia, two days after, made a
-furious attack on their right flank, which rested on a high hill
-called the Geisberg, just within the frontier of France and a little
-south-east of Saarbrück. All round the Geisberg the country is hilly
-and woody, with cultivated fields, detached cottages nestling among
-vines and flowers, and here and there pretty little hamlets.
-
-Just as grey dawn stole in on the morning of the 4th of August, and
-when the French troops on the Geisberg were cooking their breakfasts
-and drinking their coffee quietly between their piles of arms, and
-looking from time to time into the beautiful pastoral valley,
-suddenly a storm of shells burst over them. The air seemed alive
-with fire and falling bombs, while, at the same moment, the whole
-town of Weissenburg, close by, burst into flames.
-
-Unseen by, and unknown to the French, the Crown Prince of Prussia had
-established a terrible battery of guns on the heights of Schweigen, a
-village on the other side of the river, and these guns were supported
-by a vast force, variously estimated from 50,000 to 100,000 men.
-
-On and about the Geisberg were only 10,000 French troops.
-
-The country on the Bavarian side of the Lauter is so thickly wooded,
-that the approach of the Crown Prince's army was quite concealed; not
-a bayonet flashed out from amid the foliage; not a standard was seen
-to waver; hence the men on the Geisberg suddenly found themselves
-confronted by a vast host that crossed the river at various points,
-the first to plunge in being the Thuringians, with stentorian shouts
-of
-
-'Vorwarts! Vorwarts! Hoch Germania!'
-
-A young fähnrich (or ensign), a mere boy, carrying the King's colour,
-was shot through the head, and was being swept down the stream with
-the pole in his grasp, when Schönforst wrenched it away; and the
-standard, all bloody and dripping, was shouldered by another
-subaltern.
-
-Pierrepont could see nothing of what was being done at any other
-point than where his regiment crossed; but in a few minutes he found
-himself out of the water, and into clouds of smoke, through gaps in
-which, when made by the morning breeze, he could see the dusky
-columns of the enemy--the red-breeched Zouaves in their variegated
-Oriental costume, their necks bare, and their bearded faces dark and
-brown, and a corps of Voltigeurs in blue faced with white.
-
-Up the Geisberg went the Prussian troops, cheering, and with a
-rush--up so fast that the mounted officers were cantering their
-horses--and with a rush the hill was carried, after a short, sharp
-hand-to-hand conflict, though here the dark, savage Turcos fought
-with desperation and incredible bravery, charging many times with the
-bayonet, though their ranks were torn to pieces by grape-shot.
-
-General Douay, commanding the French, was here killed by a shell.
-His fate was a very melancholy one, and a noble instance of
-self-sacrifice.
-
-On seeing the battle hopelessly lost, he stood sadly apart on a
-little mound, watching the last desperate struggles of his
-fast-falling infantry. He then issued some final orders to the
-officers of his staff, and began to descend the slope of the mound
-alone. At its base he dismounted, and slaying his horse, as Roland
-did at the battle of Roncesvalles (but with a pistol), he drew his
-sword, and began to ascend the opposite slope of the Geisberg.
-
-'Where are you going, Monsieur le General?' cried some of his
-soldiers, in astonishment.
-
-'To meet the enemy,' he replied, through his clenched teeth.
-
-They continued to dissuade him, but in vain. Sword in hand he
-continued to advance, calmly and alone, till a passing shell struck
-him dead.
-
-General Montmarie, and many other brave officers, fell at the head of
-their men; and, on this day, was inaugurated that series of rapid
-disasters to France that never ended till the Prussian drums woke the
-echoes of the Arc de Triomphe at Paris.
-
-The troops were considerably broken as they fought their way up the
-hill, and some of the King's Grenadiers got mingled among the 95th.
-Carl missed Heinrich from his place on the left of the company.
-'Heavens!' thought he, 'has he fallen?'
-
-Looking round, even at the risk of being struck by a bullet from
-behind, he saw him about fifty yards in the rear, in the grasp of a
-savage-looking and powerfully built Turco, whose left hand was on
-Heinrich's throat, while, with his unfixed bayonet, the socket of
-which he grasped dagger-fashion in his right, he was making vain
-efforts to stab and thrust--we say vain efforts, for, though Heinrich
-had lost his sword in the fray, he had firm possession of the Turco's
-right wrist.
-
-While the two were wrenching and swaying to and fro, the black eyes
-of the swarthy Turco flashing fire, and his teeth glistening white as
-he hissed and muttered curses through them, a second Turco, not far
-off, took aim at Heinrich with his chassepot, and fired, but missed.
-He threw open the breech of the weapon to insert another cartridge;
-but ere he could close it, Pierrepont, quick as thought, snatched a
-needle-gun from the nearest soldier, took steady aim at him, and
-fired. The ball pierced the left side of the Turco, who bounded
-three feet from the ground, made a kind of half-turn in the air, and
-then fell flat on his face motionless.
-
-When the smoke cleared away, Charlie saw his friend with a breathless
-and half-strangled expression hurrying towards him, having been freed
-from the Turco by the bayonet of a Westphalian. He had saved her
-brother; and from that gory field, his heart--his thoughts--flashed
-home to Ernestine.
-
-It was now two o'clock p.m.; by this time the French were in full and
-rapid retreat, followed by the Prussian flying artillery, as they
-fell back upon the line of Bitsch. The Geisberg was won, but the
-slaughter on both sides was terrible. The French fought nobly.
-Fourteen men of the 24th regiment were all that were left _alive_ of
-that corps at the close of the day; and even those refused to
-surrender, but kept fighting on at the point of the bayonet until the
-Prussians, not liking to kill them, rushed upon them in a body and
-threw them down by wrestling.
-
-On the corpse-encumbered Geisberg the glorious old valour of France
-was conspicuous as ever; but her troops were badly officered and
-badly led.
-
-Night came down on the field; the quiet stars were reflected in the
-placid bosom of the river, and heavy were the moans, and loud
-sometimes the screams of anguish from the wounded. The sisters of
-charity began to flit about like good angels, and the bells were rung
-in Weissenberg to muster the firemen for the burial of the dead.
-
-To follow the 96th in detail through all the subsequent operations
-would be foreign to our story; suffice it that after the attack by
-the Crown Prince on the 6th of August, and the outflanking of Marshal
-MacMahon, after the desperate battle at Worth, Charlie Pierrepont and
-young Frankenburg found themselves still without a wound, hurrying in
-pursuit of the fugitive French, who were in full retreat towards
-Strasburg.
-
-Their brigade halted for the night, and bivouacked among some
-vineyards near a little village.
-
-Now that he had been so often under fire, Charlie Pierrepont looked
-back with surprise to the days when, in Frankenburg, he had hoped
-that a French bullet might kill him! But that was before he had told
-his love and had been accepted; before that happy day in the Dom
-Kirche.
-
-Life seemed very different now; it was both precious and valuable!
-
-The staff officers occupied all the cottages in the village, so
-Charlie, like other regimental officers, had to sleep among his men;
-and thus, weary and worn, Charlie muffled himself in his ample blue
-cloak, and with his sword and revolver beside him, went to roost
-under the shelter of a haystack. Undisturbed by the falling dew, by
-the occasional beat of a drum or sound of a trumpet, as the
-field-officers of the night paraded and inspected the out-pickets,
-the hoarse challenges of the German sentinels, and the clatter of
-ambulance waggons carrying wounded to the rear, he slept soundly, yet
-not so soundly as not to have after some strange rambling flights
-about old Rugby, and a delicious dream of Ernestine, which from its
-vividity made a great impression on him then, and was to make a still
-greater, when a future episode came to pass.
-
-In the visions of the night she came to him as distinctly as she had
-ever appeared to him in reality, and bent over him tenderly and
-pityingly, as he lay there in that miserable bivouac, with a bundle
-of hay under his head, and he heard her murmuring softly--oh, so
-softly, in his ear--
-
- 'My darling, my own darling!'
-
-
-Then, as a gush of her nature, which was ever passionate, deep, and
-earnest, came over her, she knelt by his side ere he could rise, and
-drew his head lovingly and caressingly on her soft breast, with her
-hands clasped under his chin--
-
-'Oh, my Carl, how weary and how worn you look!' she continued,
-kissing his cheek, on which her tears were falling, while the light
-of love, triumph, and joy shone in her beautiful eyes.
-
-'I think of you by day and night, my love, my wife, my own wife that
-is to be,' murmured Carl in his sleep; 'you are indeed my guardian
-angel.'
-
-He pressed her to his breast, and starting, awoke, to find it all but
-a _dream_; that the clock of the French village was striking the hour
-of _three_, and that around him were the weary Thuringians, sleeping
-in their blue greatcoats and spiked helmets, between their piles of
-loaded muskets, but to his half-awakened senses her voice seemed to
-linger in his ear, and he still felt her soft warm kiss on his lips.
-
-He closed his eyes and strove to sleep, in the hope of that dear
-vision coming back again; but he strove in vain: he was thoroughly
-awakened now; so dreams or slumber come no more to Charlie Pierrepont.
-
-The dawn of the 7th August came in, and the Prussian troops began
-their march on Forbach.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
-THE LETTER OF ERNESTINE.
-
-The events of the war succeeded each other with frightful speed.
-Marshal MacMahon's spirited address to the army and his promise,
-'with God's help, soon to take a brilliant revenge,' failed to
-inspire with courage the troops of France, whose military prowess
-seemed gone. The excitement in the army and at Paris grew terrible.
-Saarbrück was retaken by the Prussians; the French were again
-defeated at Forbach; vast bodies of prisoners taken in battle or by
-capitulation began to pour through the towns of Germany, where they
-were kindly received; the once great Empire of France seemed
-tottering to its fall, and on the 13th of August the Prussian scouts
-were at Pont-à-Mousson, on the Moselle.
-
-Then, more fully to cut off MacMahon's communications with Metz, the
-95th Thuringians, now greatly reduced in strength by fighting, and
-other troops, took post in the pleasant valley where the river
-divides the town in two parts. The town was soon filled by Prussian
-troops, but the hardy Thuringians pitched their tents near a village
-on the bank of the river, on a pretty wooded slope; and there on the
-first evening of the halt, Charlie received some intelligence from
-Frankenburg, which caused him much perplexity and thought.
-
-Most of the furniture from the village had been brought into camp;
-before the tent of Captain Schönforst stood a table and chairs, and
-there he, with Charlie, Heinrich, and two other officers, sat smoking
-and drinking, and making merry, while their servants prepared a
-repast for them.
-
-The aspect of the camp was very picturesque; it was now the beginning
-of evening, the August sun was sinking behind a wooded mountain
-range, the 'blue Moselle' looked bluer than ever between its green
-and fertile banks, and the rooks were cawing noisily overhead in the
-stately old beeches, amid which the tents of the 95th were pitched.
-
-A single day's halt had enabled the officers to remove all the mud of
-the march; parade suits of uniform with fresh lace had been donned in
-lieu of old 'fighting jackets;' boots were polished and spurs
-burnished, and Schönforst wore a sword of which he was justly vain,
-as he had received it from the hands of King William after a battle
-in the campaign of 1866, when he was but a feldwebel, but won his
-silver shoulder-straps by bravery.
-
-On all sides the men were cleaning their muskets, cutting wood,
-lighting fires, carrying water from the stream, singing merrily, and
-many of them in chorus.
-
-'Well, Schönforst,' said one of his guests, Herr Donnersberg, a
-thoughtless young fähnrich, 'I feel that I have an appetite--what is
-your speise-karte for to-day?'
-
-'The bill of fare shows rather an omnium gatherum,' replied the
-Captain, thrusting nearly half a pound of tobacco into the bowl of
-his pipe; 'but the chief feature in it is a goose, now broiling on
-ramrods. One of our foragers gave it to me this morning for a couple
-of kreutzers and a bottle of cognac.'
-
-'Excellent!' replied the other, 'though it is a bird, which an
-English gourmand said "was too much for one, but not quite enough for
-two."
-
-'Here is my contribution to the repast,' said Heinrich, producing
-from his tent a square case bottle of prime Geneva 'per Johann de
-Kuy, Rotterdam,' which he had picked up somewhere on the march.
-
-'So, as we have nothing better than Geneva and beer,' said the
-Captain, 'it will be useless to discuss the question as to the aroma
-of Veuve Clicquot, as compared with that of sparkling hock or
-Sillery.'
-
-'Hock!' cried the other; 'wait till our drums are ringing among the
-vineyards of Champagne!'
-
-The goose was pronounced excellent, and soon disappeared with all
-Schönforst's own viands; the bowled pipes were again resorted to, and
-when Charlie produced a bottle of cognac from his tent, the serious
-business of the evening began, with the usual amount of rough
-military joking; and Schönforst was making them all laugh noisily and
-heartily, with an account of how Herr Major Rumpenfalz, just before
-the Westphalians marched, had married the frolicsome widow of a
-Hofrath, and on waking in the morning found his bride's golden hair
-on the toilette table, and her pearly teeth in the tumbler out of
-which the Herr Major was about to take his matutinal draught of cold
-water. While they were still laughing at this, or rather at the
-manner in which Schönforst related it, an officer who was passing
-suddenly paused, and--
-
-'A glass with you, gentlemen!'
-
-'With pleasure,' replied Schönforst, handing him a bumper of brandy
-and water.
-
-'The Kaiser!' said the stranger, on which all started to their feet
-and drank the toast, standing with their caps off. Though wearing
-the usual spike-helmet, a plain blue surtout, with silver
-shoulder-straps, and a little eight-pointed cross at his neck, in the
-closely shaven face, the resolute mouth and square jaws, the stern
-grey eyes and aquiline nose of their visitor, they all recognised the
-Count Von Moltke--the spirit of the war, 'that embodied fate who
-prepared in mystery and gloom the blows that were to fall on mighty
-armaments, and in a few weeks to reduce great military powers to ruin
-and humiliation.'
-
-'I have news for you, gentlemen,' said he. 'The Emperor has resigned
-the command of the French army to Marshal Bazaine, so he will have to
-make the great stand at Metz, where he has one hundred and forty
-thousand men, with two hundred and eighty pieces of cannon.'
-
-He then put two fingers to the peak of his helmet, and walked slowly
-away, leaving them to discuss the probable turn events might take
-now; but jollity was soon resumed.
-
-Charlie was rather silent and thoughtful; for sooth to say, the vivid
-nature of his dream still haunted him; and Heinrich, who knew well
-where his thoughts were, gave him a clap on the epaulette, and began
-to sing a verse of an old love song:
-
- THE CARRIER PIGEON.
-
- 'They that behold me little dream
- How wide my spirit soars from them,
- And, borne on fancy's pinions, roves
- To seek the glorious form it loves.
-
- 'Know that a faithful herald flies
- To bear her image to my eyes,
- My constant thought for ever telling
- How fair she is, all else excelling!'
-
-
-'Pass the bottle, Carl,' he added; 'let us be merry; weep when you
-must, but laugh when you can. Vive la bagatelle! as these Frenchmen
-have it.'
-
-At that moment a Uhlan came spurring into camp with letters for the
-brigade from the field post; those for the 95th were soon
-distributed: there was one for Heinrich from Herminia, with another
-for Charlie enclosed, and both became at once deep in their contents
-by the last light of the sun. Ernestine's letter was very long, and
-so crossed and recrossed that the perusal of it occupied a long time.
-Ere he had read a few lines, Heinrich said:
-
-'I do not know whether I should show you this, Carl.'
-
-'What?'
-
-'A passage in Herminia's letter.'
-
-'About whom?' asked Charlie anxiously.
-
-'Ernestine--my sister.'
-
-'Read it, pray; anything is better than suspense.'
-
-'Herminia writes, "Poor Ernestine seems to fret fearfully. There is
-a flush on her cheeks such as often precedes but more often follows
-pallor; and all her actions, figure, and manner are indicative of
-listlessness and ill-health."'
-
-'My poor darling!' said Charlie, in a low agitated voice.
-
-'"Surely her mamma will have some pity upon her," continued Herminia;
-"the Baron Grünthal has returned to Aix, and though his gout still
-continues----"'
-
-'Praised be Plutus!' commented Charlie; 'I wish the nasty old beast
-was at the bottom of the Red Sea.'
-
-'"And though it does not improve his temper, he has become very
-anxious and importunate."'
-
-'Curse him! I hope the gout may get into his Excellency's stomach.'
-
-'"The Count and Countess begin to hint now that as the war will too
-probably be a protracted one, it was unwise to wait for Heinrich's
-presence at this odious marriage. How Aunt Adelaide pores over the
-_Gazettes_--those dreadful _Gazettes_!" And now, Herr Carl, all that
-follows are little _bon-bons_ for my own perusal.'
-
-Innocent Herminia little knew that her aunt watched the war
-_Gazettes_ with the double hope that Heinrich's name was not in them,
-and that Charlie's _was_--or might be.
-
-Poor Charlie! Her ladyship was to be gratified one day, however.
-
-'What news from Ernestine?' asked Heinrich, when Charlie had finished
-the perusal of _his_ letter; 'I feel as anxious about these girls at
-Frankenburg, as if I was Rip Van Winkle after his long snooze in the
-Sleepy Hollow.'
-
-But Charlie made no reply; he sat with the letter in his hand, and
-lost in thought.
-
-'What is the matter, my friend?' asked Heinrich. 'There is something
-more in your letter than there is in mine?'
-
-'There is, indeed!' replied Charlie, in a strange voice, as he
-drained his glass.
-
-'Good news?'
-
-'No, Heinrich.'
-
-'Bad news, then?'
-
-'No, thank Heaven!' replied Charlie fervently.
-
-'What, then, agitates you?'
-
-'That which I cannot tell you. That which you cannot understand.'
-
-'Carl!' exclaimed Heinrich.
-
-'Pardon me--another time, and I may tell you. Oh, Heinrich, your
-sister, Ernestine, is indeed the world's one woman to me!' he
-exclaimed, with deep emotion; and, heedless of Schönforst and the
-rest, he rose from the table, walked into his tent, and threw himself
-on the pallet which was his couch, to re-peruse the letter of his
-betrothed.
-
-The following was the passage at the end of her letter which caused
-him so much thought and bewilderment:
-
-'Oh, Carl! Carl! what is separation but a living death--a blank in
-life--a place vacant?' ('How prone the girl is to speak of death!'
-thought Charlie.) 'But I am ever and always with you in spirit, my
-love. Do you ever dream of me, Carl? I ask this because last night
-I had such a delicious dream of _you_.'
-
-'_Last_ night,' thought Charlie, glancing again at the date of her
-letter--'7th' August; 'last night must have been the 6th, when we
-bivouacked in the stackyard, and I had such a vivid dream of her.'
-
-'I imagined, love, Carl,' continued the letter, 'that I came upon you
-suddenly, when you were lying on the cold earth in your cloak, as I
-fear you too often are compelled to do. A great horror seized me! I
-thought you were dead, you looked so white and wasted; but a sudden
-joy came into my poor heart when I found you were but asleep. I drew
-your dear head upon my bosom, as a mother might do her baby's, and
-caressed you, calling you "My darling!" "My very own darling!" so
-distinctly that Herminia heard me speaking in my sleep.
-
-'And then you kissed me, Carl, with such tender and passionate kisses
-as you gave me on that dear day in the Hoch Munster, and called me
-your little wife and your guardian angel. I was then startled by the
-great hall clock striking three in the morning, and awoke to weep on
-finding that it was all a dream, but a dear, dear dream to me.'
-
-These were the actions and words of Charlie's dream, and he
-remembered that when he awoke the hour of _three_ was tolled in the
-village spire!
-
-'What can it mean?' he exclaimed, tossing his thick curly hair back
-from his forehead, impatiently--a way he had; 'the mystery of dreams
-is unfathomable; they are, indeed, "strange--passing strange!" The
-same dream, yet we are miles upon miles apart! The same words spoken
-and heard!--the same night!--the same hour and moment of time!'
-
-Was there some magnetic influence at work? Some spiritual affinity,
-born of this great love, between these two? It almost seemed so.
-
-Charlie Pierrepont, a matter-of-fact young officer, knew as little of
-the famous Dr. Emmerson's theories of polarity and odic force, as he
-did of the Philosophy of the Infinite, or any other abstruse
-speculation of the present day.
-
-Though bewildered and perplexed, as we have said, it gave him a
-thrill of strange delight to think how strong, and yet how tender,
-must be the tie of love between him and Ernestine to produce a
-spiritual intercourse like this; and lest they might be laughed at by
-the heedless Heinrich, it was not until some days subsequent to the
-arrival of her letter that he revealed its contents to her brother,
-to whom, fortunately for the corroboration of the story, he had told
-of his vivid dream on the morning it occurred, before the regiment
-marched from the village.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-
-WHAT THE 'EXTRA BLATT' TOLD.
-
-A few days after the Thuringians and others advanced from the
-Moselle, the quiet family in the old Schloss of Frankenburg assembled
-as usual at breakfast. The old butler had cut and aired the morning
-papers--the _Staats Anzeiger_, the _Cologne Gazette_, the _Extra
-Blatt_, and so forth, and laid them beside the Count. The two young
-ladies were there in most becoming morning toilets, and there, too,
-was the Herr Baron Grünthal. The hour was an unusual one for his
-Excellency to be at Frankenburg, but he had been dining there the
-evening before; a storm had come on, and, to the infinite annoyance
-of Ernestine, he had accepted the Count's invitation to remain all
-night.
-
-With the single exception of absurd family pride and the consequent
-tyranny over Ernestine, the general tenor of the Count's household
-presented a fair example of German domestic life.
-
-'The serious character of a people,' says the translator of
-Schiller's poem 'The Glocke,' 'who begin the common business of
-everyday life with prayer, who attach importance as well to the
-manner of performing an action as to the action itself, the custom of
-travelling, either in their own or in foreign countries, in the
-interval between the completion of their education and their
-settlement in life, the domestic manners, where great attention is
-paid to the minutiæ of domestic economy,' are all, he maintains,
-peculiar to the German people.
-
-As southerns, the family of Frankenburg were more gay and lively in
-manner than Germans usually are, for being nearer the Rhine they had
-been for generations insensibly under French influences; yet they
-were all German, to the heart's core.
-
-Ernestine was looking crushed and pale. The self-conscious air that
-a really beautiful girl usually possesses had nearly left her now;
-while Herminia, happy in her love, and having but one anxiety--the
-safety of Heinrich--looked bright and radiant as ever.
-
-In a letter from Heinrich to her, Ernestine had been told the story
-of the strangely coincident dreams; and to a romantic and
-enthusiastic girl like her--one deeply imbued, too, with German
-mysticism--the idea that she had thus communed and met, and might
-again commune with and meet her lover in the spirit, was a source of
-the purest joy. Every night she laid her head on the pillow in the
-hope that her soul might fly to him; but as yet no more such visions
-had come.
-
-And this brave-hearted and handsome young Englishman--Carl, her own
-Carl--he was risking wounds and death, enduring toil and suffering
-for the Kaiser, for Germany, and for _her_; for well she knew that
-Charlie Pierrepont identified her image with the Fatherland. Then
-how cruel it was of the Countess to view him so, and to treat him as
-she did; and again and again she asked in her heart--
-
-'Is it a crime to love?'
-
-But rank was the _joss_, the idol that was worshipped in Frankenburg.
-
-However, she had Charlie's ring on her finger, and a curly lock of
-his hair in a gold locket, reposing in the cleft of her white bosom,
-all unknown to the Herr Baron, and to all, save Herminia, who could
-now see the blue ribbon at which it hung encircling her slender neck;
-and in her bosom, too, she had his last letter, a mere scrap, but
-full of love and truth and great tenderness; and yet he wrote of pay
-and poverty. Ob, how hard it was when youth alone should be money,
-beauty, wealth, and everything.
-
-'Ernestine, meine liebe,' the Countess would say from time to time,
-'attend to the Herr Baron--assist him with your own pretty hands.
-Dear girl! she is always so bright when you are here, Grünthal. She
-must be doubly happy to see you this morning, after only leaving you
-last night.'
-
-But poor Ernestine looked anything but happy or bright either, and
-the Baron, though a lover, was middle-aged; hence his raptures did
-not spoil his appetite, and he made genuine German breakfast,
-demolishing steaks, potatoes, rolls, eggs, and coffee, in the most
-unromantic way in the world.
-
-His hair was turning iron-grey, and on his pericranium was a bald
-spot the size of a Prussian dollar. He limped a little in his
-gait--there was no concealing that devilish gout--yet he looked
-surprisingly young. He was attired in an elegant morning-coat with
-pale-coloured trousers, a scarlet flower as well as a red ribbon at
-his button-hole. His hair was brushed up into a stiff bristly
-pyramid in front; but his face looked flabby now, and his coarse
-moustache, like that of a walrus, overhung his mouth.
-
-Though suspicious, as we have said elsewhere, concerning that visit
-to the Dom Kirche, and the mistake about the colour of the marble of
-Charlemagne's throne, he had not the slightest idea that he had a
-rival so formidable as Charlie Pierrepont, or that he, Herr Baron
-Grünthal, Oberdirector of the Consistory Court, could have any rival
-at all!
-
-Yet there was one thing he could not help remarking--that of all the
-many handsome presents he had sent Ernestine, from Berlin and
-elsewhere, not one was ever to be seen on her slender wrists, her
-fairy-like hand, or round her delicate throat.
-
-This surely boded ill for him as a lover! He found himself, however,
-highly acceptable to her family, and the marriage once over, all that
-was necessary would be sure to come after. Whenever he was present
-or expected, the Countess always seemed, somehow, unusually large and
-rustling, and on this morning was especially so, in white lace over
-back moiré, with her high _toupée_--it was quite an evening costume
-she had donned.
-
-The meal was taken somewhat silently, for at times:
-
- 'When great events were on the gale,
- And each hour brought a varying tale;'
-
-and when newspaper correspondents were often fallacious and fallible,
-the gazettes were unfolded with fear and trembling, and the arrival
-of a telegram was quite sufficient to terrify the quiet household at
-Frankenburg.
-
-The Count and Baron, with spectacles on nose, had skimmed over the
-papers, which contained nothing to alarm them in the way of friends'
-names among the lists of killed and wounded in the action of the 14th
-of August; but the Baron read aloud, with peculiar unction, some of
-those barbarous reports and stories with which the French and German
-papers then teemed of cruelties perpetrated on both sides. No one
-knew then whether they were false or true; but they served to fan and
-inflame the hatred of the adverse parties to fever heat.
-
-The Baron read that many of the dead Arabs and Turcos at Freshweiler
-were found with fragments of human flesh--torn from the German
-wounded--between their jaws; that a Saxon officer, who had been
-struck by a bullet, and taken shelter in the house of a peasant,
-where he fainted from loss of blood, had his eyes torn out by a woman
-armed with a fork. These and many other details of atrocities, which
-actually found their way into the London papers, he read for the
-edification of the ladies, while Ernestine and Herminia exchanged
-glances of horror and commiseration, as much as to say how awful it
-was to think that those they loved so dearly had to run the risk of
-perils such as these!
-
-Even the Countess forgot her Spitz pug, and a piece of mysterious
-crochet, that seemed endless as the web of Penelope, while listening
-to the news, and far away from her peaceful home her thoughts
-followed her son, to where in the fields, the lanes, the valleys, and
-pretty hamlets of Alsace and Lorraine, and in places then rendered
-deserts, there lay in hundreds--yea, in thousands--the hopes of
-families, the heads of homes, the source of many a broken heart!
-
-Suddenly the Baron raised his voice, and a strange gleam passed over
-his face.
-
-'Der Teufel!' he exclaimed; 'here is the name of a friend of
-yours--in the _Extra Blatt_?
-
-'Of mine--who?' asked the Count.
-
-'We regret to learn by a recent telegram from the seat of war that a
-party of the 95th Thuringian Regiment met with a severe misfortune,
-and lost two officers. Herr Lieutenant Pierrepont fell, it is
-believed, mortally wounded----'
-
-The Baron paused and changed colour; the Countess grew pale, but with
-a smile of grim satisfaction on her lips; the Count said:
-
-'Poor fellow--poor fellow!'
-
-A low cry escaped Ernestine, who fell forward with her face on the
-table, and her arms stretched upon it at full length; but this
-emotion failed to avert the attention of the Baron, whose eyes, now
-dilated, were fixed on the newspaper. He was very pale, and shook
-his head slowly, as he said to the Count:
-
-'Ach Gott--the worst is yet to come. Compose yourself, my dear
-friend.'
-
-'Read--read--it is the name of my son--my Heinrich, that you see,'
-said the Countess, in a breathless voice.
-
-'It is, madam. "Herr Lieutenant Pierrepont fell, it is believed,
-mortally wounded----"'
-
-'You read that already; what matters it to me?'
-
-'"And the Herr Graf Von Frankenburg was taken prisoner, and _hanged
-by the Francs Tireurs_!" Oh, my friends,' added the Baron, 'I
-beseech you to suspend your grief for a time; it may all be some
-terrible mistake, to be cleared up in the end.'
-
-'We seem fated to have startling tidings here!' groaned the poor old
-Count, as his wife flung herself in a passion of tears upon his
-breast.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI.
-
-IN FRONT OF METZ.
-
-And now to relate that catastrophe which caused such grief and horror
-to the hearts of all in that hitherto peaceful German home.
-
-We have said that on the 13th of August the Prussian advanced guard
-was at Pont-à-Mousson. The following day saw them defiling, with
-drums beating, colours flying, and bayonets flashing in the sun,
-across the great bridge which there spans the Moselle, and gives its
-name to the town. This was on a Sunday morning, after the Herr
-Pastor of the 95th had preached on the text of 'Peace on earth and
-goodwill to all men'--French excepted, apparently--as the Colonel,
-while the regiment was yet in a hollow square, issued special orders
-as to the cleaning of the needle-guns and mode of carrying the
-ammunition in the pouches.
-
-General Steinmetz having orders to make a demonstration against the
-French troops lying between him and the great fortress of Metz, at
-two o'clock on the afternoon of Sunday ordered his seventh corps,
-including the Thuringians and Westphalians, under General Von
-Zastrow, to proceed to the attack.
-
-As if inspired by one of those presentiments of coming evil that come
-unbidden to many, and at times to the bravest of soldiers, on this
-day Charlie Pierrepont was unusually taciturn, thoughtful, and sunk
-in reverie. 'Rouse yourself, Carl, rouse!' Heinrich said to him,
-cheerfully; 'you have had a little romance that is not yet ended.
-The enemy is before us, and war brings promotion and glory.'
-
-'To some.'
-
-'And to others, Carl?'
-
-'Death, perhaps.'
-
-'Why so gloomy in an hour like this?' asked his friend.
-
-'Life, Heinrich, is, alas! so full of the unforeseen!'
-
-'Of course; but life has pleasant things in store for you yet. You
-have been having some gloomy dream of our Ernestine again.'
-
-'I have not,' replied Charlie, with a sad smile.
-
-'All will yet be well and happy for you both. _My_ sister does not
-require to look for wealth or position. These she had already, and
-the Baron of Grünthal is lower in rank than a Grafine of the family
-of Frankenburg,' he added so proudly, that there was much in his tone
-and bearing which reminded Charlie of the Countess, his mother.
-
-'This brigade will deploy into line, and throw forward skirmishers
-from the flank of each regiment,' were now the orders of General Von
-Zastrow; 'the other brigades will deploy in succession.'
-
-And, on the spur, his aides-de-camp went skurrying hither and thither
-to the commanders of battalions to have the requisite formation
-completed with as little delay as possible.
-
-'Take courage, Carl,' said Heinrich; 'my dear sister shall yet be
-your wife--or the wife of no one else.'
-
-'You forget that, save my pay, I am all but penniless. A terrible
-crime in the eyes of the Grafine Adelaide.'
-
-'Penniless girls are often married for their beauty,' said young
-Frankenburg, laughing; 'why should not a penniless man be married for
-his talents or bravery?'
-
-And, as the subdivisions were somewhat apart, those two brothers in
-heart shook hands, saluted each other with their swords, and took
-their places in the new _alignement_.
-
-The day was a bright and beautiful one. Over all Lorraine the green
-woods and vineyards seemed to be sleeping in the glowing summer
-sunshine, and the scared peasant near Courcelles Chaussy paused in
-his work with the sweat on his brow, and spoke with bated breath, as
-the marching troops went past to death and slaughter, and his honest
-sunburnt face grew pale, perhaps at the thought of what might be.
-
-Around Ars and Grigy, Borny and Colombey, and many other hamlets and
-picturesque chateaux, the cattle, rich in colour and sleek in hide,
-were chewing the cud among the knee-deep pastures; the fresh blue
-streams ran on their course as if rejoicing to escape the scenes of
-blood that were about to ensue; the blue kingfishers flitted about,
-and the sparrows twittered in the green hedge-rows, the branches of
-which were matted and intertwined with gorgeous wild flowers. The
-corn was waving in the ripening fields, the swallows skimmed in the
-air, and from their cottage doors the buxom peasant girls, their
-cheeks dusky with southern blood and their black eyes sparkling with
-tears and terror, stood by their mother's side and watched in sorrow
-and terror the forward march of the Prussian troops to conquest and
-carnage, and the village bells, from more than one Gothic spire, rang
-out the hour that was to be the death-knell of thousands closing in
-the shock of steel.
-
-The moment the formation of the infantry in line was complete, the
-cavalry scouts went galloping to the front, and in a few minutes a
-green ridge in front of the Prussian infantry was studded by Uhlans,
-with their figures and tall lances clearly defined against the pure
-blue of the sky. Anon, these weapons were slung, and pistols were
-resorted to, and a sharp cracking of these announced that the enemy
-was in sight.
-
-In a cloud of dust, a body of dragoons in close column of troops now
-poured along the broad highway, with swords and helmets flashing in
-the sun. There were the escort of the artillery, which came rumbling
-along, with rammers and sponges ready for use, the limber-boxes
-unlocked, the gunners ready to leap down, and wheel their muzzles to
-the enemy.
-
-When deploying from close column into line, the companies marched
-over everything, treading to mud and mire the golden grain--the hope
-of the husbandman and farmer; while the horses of the cavalry ate it
-standing in their ranks.
-
-Resolutely marched on the Prussian infantry, each man with his blue
-greatcoat rolled over his right shoulder, the deadly zundnadelgewehr
-with bayonet fixed, sloped on his left shoulder, the chain of his
-helmet down, lest it should fall off in the mêlée. The Uhlans fell
-back round the flanks, and then the French were seen lurking in
-rifle-pits, which on one hand afforded them protection, and, on the
-other, enabled them over the little earthen banks to take sure aim at
-the invaders.
-
-These rifle-pits and other defences extended over a considerable
-space of ground, from Colombey, with its fields of scarlet poppies,
-to Ars-sur-Moselle (so famous for its red wines), including
-Laguenxey, Grigy, and Borny, all pretty little hamlets. The firing
-first began at the village of Ste. Barbe, within seven miles from the
-walls of Metz, in front of which were the principal corps of the
-French army under Marshal Bazaine, according to the Prussian account.
-
-The fire from the chassepots was deadly, and in their eagerness to
-come to close quarters, the Prussian officers were seen brandishing
-their straight-cutting swords and heard crying--
-
-'Vorwarts! vorwarts! Hoch Germania!'
-
-On the other hand the French were not slow in crying--
-
-'En avant! en avant! à bas la Prusse, et vive la France.' For they
-were ceasing to shout the Emperor's name now.
-
-The whole of the villages had to be stormed by the Prussians in
-succession. The French resisted nobly; hence the slaughter was
-terrible. In one rifle-pit alone there lay seven hundred and
-eighty-one corpses; the chateau of Colombey was taken and recaptured
-three times at the point of the bayonet.
-
-The livelong day the battle lasted over all the ground before Metz,
-seven and a half miles in length. The air was loaded with the smoke
-of cannon and musketry, enveloping alike the dead and wounded, who
-lay everywhere, in fields and gardens, under hedgerows and hayricks,
-in vineyards and rifle-pits.
-
-The Prussians were every moment receiving fresh reinforcements, and
-the troops of Bazaine, unable to check their advance, fell slowly
-back upon Metz, but fighting every foot of the way.
-
-The 95th were at the third capture of the Chateau of Colombey, out of
-which the French Voltigeurs were driven in a fair hand-to-hand
-conflict, leaving behind them a vast number of wounded and slain.
-Among the former, supporting himself against a fragment of the
-shot-shattered wall, was a French captain bleeding profusely from a
-wound in the breast.
-
-The fähnrich of Charlie's company, young Donnersberg, approached and
-offered him his handkerchief to staunch the bleeding, when the
-Frenchman, inspired by some sudden gust of national hate and rancour,
-uttered 'a good garrison oath,' and with all the strength that yet
-remained in his arm, ran his sword through the body of the German,
-and killed him on the spot.
-
-Both fell nearly at the same time, as two or three bayonets clashed
-in the body of the Frenchman, who lay over a pile of dead, bleeding
-from several wounds. A few minutes after, Charlie chanced to pass
-where he still lay in the courtyard of the chateau, to all appearance
-dead. On his breast was the handsome white enamelled Grand Cross of
-the Legion of Honour, conspicuous among his Crimean medals.
-
-'A present for my Ernestine!' thought he; 'and it is no use now to
-this treacherous fellow.'
-
-'Not yet, not yet,' muttered the Frenchman, while his white lips
-quivered and his blood-shot glazing eyes turned slowly on Charlie;
-'accursed Prussian, I am not yet done with it.'
-
-Charlie drew back. He would have taken it from the dead man without
-compunction, but shrank from touching the living.
-
-'A little time--a little time,' moaned the Frenchman, 'and I shall
-indeed be done with it, and all--earthly things.'
-
-'Pardon me,' said Charlie, and was about to pass on, when the
-Frenchman spoke again.
-
-'Water,' said he, in a low piteous voice, like a sigh; 'one drop of
-water on my lips, for the love of God!'
-
-Charlie glanced for a moment at the body of young Donnersberg that
-lay close by, with the Voltigeur's sword nearly up to the hilt in his
-breast; and then, inspired by pity, placed his water-bottle to the
-lips of his slayer, whose face was ghastly now and covered with the
-dew of death.
-
-'_Merci! Merci!_ I am dying!' said he. 'Take my cross, or less
-worthy hands will soon do so,' he added, trying with a feeble and
-fatuous hand to detach the ornament from his breast; 'but what will
-you do with it?'
-
-'Hang it round the neck of her I love,' replied Charlie, who spoke
-French fluently, and hoping its destination might please a
-Frenchman's love of gallantry.
-
-'Take it, then. Take it,' replied the latter, as he rent the cross
-from his breast by a last effort; 'take it, accursed Prussian!' he
-hissed, through his clenched teeth, 'and when you hang it round the
-neck of her you love, may she be like--like me!'
-
-'What mean you?'
-
-'_A corpse!_'
-
-With this dreadful and inhuman wish, the vindictive Gaul sank back; a
-deadlier pallor overspread his features--there was a terrible sound
-in his throat, and all was over. For a moment Charlie stood
-bewildered, with the cross in his hand, and half-tempted to cast it
-from him. But he changed his mind, and carefully placed it in his
-breast-pocket as a _souvenir_ for Ernestine of the battles before
-Metz, and hurried to join the shattered remnant of his regiment, now
-hurrying with others, double-quick, to take part in the attack of the
-orchards of the farm of Bellecroix, where two batteries of
-mitrailleuses made dreadful havoc among the assailants, sweeping
-whole ranks away.
-
-By the time the batteries were taken, the French, after losing
-_nineteen_ thousand men (and the Prussians fully an equal number),
-were in rapid retreat for Metz. Charlie Pierrepont's work was over
-for the day, and like his friend Heinrich, he still found himself
-untouched.
-
-The sun was setting, and the shadows were darkening in the orchards
-of Bellecroix, when the 95th were ordered to pile arms and take a
-little rest; and a singular scene--singular by way of contrast, and
-yet terrible--did these orchards present. The trees were still in
-full foliage and bearing, and thickly among the green leaves the
-apples, golden and red, the yellow pears, the downy peaches, and the
-purple plums were all mingling on the branches above; below lay the
-dead and the dying, some of whom in their agony had burrowed their
-faces into the very earth; others had torn it up in handfuls. A few,
-who had been wounded early in the day, lay dead now, with their hairy
-knapsacks under their heads, and many with sweet smiles on their
-waxen faces, as if their last thoughts had been of home, and those
-who loved them there.
-
-Some had died with their fingers clasped in prayer, others with their
-hands clenched, as if in rage or pain, and with their faces terribly
-contorted. Everywhere lay knapsacks, shakos, kepis, helmets, arms,
-and water-bottles. Pierrepont gladly quitted these dreadful orchards
-of Bellecroix, and retired to a grassy bank by the side of the
-highway to Metz, where a few of his brother officers, apart from the
-rest, were sharing the contents of their havresacks and comparing
-notes on the dire events of the day.
-
-There he found young Frankenburg mounted on the horse of the
-adjutant, who had fallen in the attack on Bellecroix, and whose duty
-he had been ordered to take in the interim, an office that was nearly
-costing him very dear soon after.
-
-As the troops were to halt on the field pending those operations
-which led to the battle of Gravelotte, a chain of out-pickets was
-detailed for the night, and Charlie Pierrepont, as many of his
-seniors had been killed off or wounded in that day's strife, had
-command of one of these, consisting of two non-commissioned officers
-and thirty men, with whom he was ordered to take possession of a
-little chateau nearer Metz than Bellecroix, to use it as his
-picket-house, and post his sentinels as to him seemed best.
-
-He accordingly marched for this place, the Chateau de Caillé,
-belonging to a French gentleman of that name. It was a
-quaint-looking little place, with latticed windows of iron, two or
-three little stone _tourelles_, with conical roofs and vanes, and it
-was quite buried among masses of ivy, jasmine, and clematis, and
-embosomed, among rich fruit-trees.
-
-Having posted ten sentinels, equidistant and in communication with
-those of the adjacent pickets, with orders to stand on their posts
-and keep their faces steadily turned in the direction of Metz, the
-dark mass of the citadel which, together with the spires of the
-churches, could be traced against the now moonlit sky, he approached
-the chateau with the main body of his picket, never doubting that
-they would find it deserted, and that the family of M. de Caillé had
-fled.
-
-Passing down the little avenue which led to the front door, brilliant
-lights were visible in the lower rooms; loud and noisy voices were
-heard. Charlie ordered his men to look to their cartridges. As for
-the bayonets, they were never unfixed now; but a loud, hoarse German
-chorus that rang out upon the night showed that the place was already
-in possession of friends, and on entering the dining-room of the
-chateau, a curious scene presented itself.
-
-It was a handsome apartment, with an elaborately polished floor, and
-modern furniture in the fashion of the time of Louis XIV. Wax
-candles in great profusion were burning on the elaborately inlaid
-table, on which were spread in great confusion dishes, plates,
-glasses, and bottles with viands and fruit of every kind. M. de
-Caillé, as he proved to be, a fine-looking old French gentleman, with
-hair and moustache white as the thistle-down, was there tied hand and
-foot with a rope, the end of which was secured to the knob of a
-shutter, compelling him to look helplessly on at the desolation of
-his dwelling, into which a dozen or so of stragglers from some
-Bavarian regiment, as they appeared to be, as their helmets were
-crested with black bearskin and not spikes, had broken, and were now
-making merry, eating, drinking, singing, and roughly pulling about
-Mademoiselle de Caillé, her terrified _bonne_, and other female
-servants; and it was only too evident that but for the timely arrival
-of Charlie and his picket, something very disastrous must have
-ensued, as these fellows were fast maddening themselves by drinking
-all kinds of wines and spirits in succession.
-
-On Charlie's entrance, sword in hand, such is the influence of the
-epaulette, that they all started to their feet; their noise died away
-instantly, and every man raised his right hand to the peak of his
-helmet. Believing they were utterly lost now on the appearance of
-this fresh arrival, the young lady uttered a cry of despair, and
-shrank to the side of her father, who was unable to put forth even a
-hand to shield her, and who eyed Charlie Pierrepont with a
-half-piteous, half-defiant expression.
-
-He was considerably reassured, however, when he heard the latter
-announce the duty which brought him there, and ordered the Bavarians,
-on pain of being treated as mutineers or deserters, at once to return
-to their quarters. They hurried to obey with more alacrity than
-goodwill, one alone venturing to explain that they had been fighting
-all day without food or drink, and were in an enemy's country. By a
-wave of his sword, Charlie cut him short, and ere he had shot it into
-the sheath, the chateau was empty of all but his own men, who crowded
-into the kitchen, and there certainly made free with all that the
-cook's pantry contained.
-
-Charlie now apologized to M. de Caillé for the conduct of the
-Bavarians, and hastened to cut the cord that bound him. He was so
-weak and faint from all he had undergone, that he could only stagger
-into an arm-chair, when his daughter caressed him and chafed his
-hands, and while the _bonne_ poured out some wine for him and
-Charlie, to whom she curtseyed, and tendered her thanks again and
-again.
-
-After a time all became more composed, and the conversation naturally
-ran on the events of the day, and the dreadful din of cannon and
-musketry which had been ringing for miles around the little chateau;
-and somehow, while chatting over their wine, and Charlie received
-again and again the heartfelt thanks of the old Frenchman, the
-latter, by some word or exclamation that escaped him, discovered the
-nationality of the former.
-
-'Thank God, monsieur is an Englishman!' he exclaimed.
-
-'Yes,' said Charlie, with one of his pleasant smiles.
-
-'And yet you fight for those horrible barbarians, the Prussians?'
-exclaimed the young lady.
-
-'I am a soldier of fortune, my dear child,' said Charlie, laughing,
-for the girl was only in her fifteenth year, apparently, and he could
-not but remember that Ernestine was one of those 'horrible
-barbarians.'
-
-'I could have guessed as much,' said the girl.
-
-'How, Mademoiselle?
-
-'By a certain boldness in your bearing, and by something in your eyes
-that tells of----' she paused shyly and coloured at her own
-impetuosity.
-
-'An expression that tells of what?' asked Charlie.
-
-'I don't know, unless it is of--sorrow.'
-
-'You are an acute observer, Mademoiselle,' said Charlie, bowing. 'I
-have indeed undergone much sorrow but lately.'
-
-The girl had a pretty, innocent, and most lovable little face. She
-was, probably, half German in blood; her eyes were bright blue; her
-cheeks delicate and peach-like; her lips a ruddy red, though cheek
-and lips were ashy white with terror when Charlie first saw her,
-being pulled about roughly by the Bavarians, who had boisterously
-dragged her from one another, under the eyes of her helpless and
-agonized father.
-
-She nestled up to Charlie's side, and shaking the masses of her rich
-brown hair--hair that in its tint reminded him of Herminia--she put a
-pretty hand on each of his epaulettes, and looking into his face with
-pure childish confidence, said--
-
-'I shall like you. I am sure I shall. I am so happy you are not one
-of those barbarians, though you do wear a spike-helmet!'
-
-'Why? How should you like me?'
-
-'Can you ask me _why_, Monsieur, after saving our lives? In
-gratitude, I can love you and pray for you.'
-
-Charlie laughed, and said--
-
-'_Ma belle_, I am, indeed, thankful that we were in time to turn
-these marauders out of doors.'
-
-And then he thought of his three sisters at home, and what his
-emotions would be if such a scene, as he had just interrupted, had
-taken place in his father's quiet house in Warwickshire.
-
-'What is your name, Monsieur?' she asked, 'as I must never forget it.'
-
-'Carl--Charles Pierrepont.'
-
-She repeated it two or three times, and laughing, said:
-
-'It sounds very droll!'
-
-Charlie could not help laughing at the girl's _naïve_ manner, and
-thought that the old Warwickshire squire, who was fond of deducing
-his descent from Robert, who received the manor of Hurstpierpoint, in
-Sussex, from the Conqueror, would have found nothing 'droll' in it.
-
-'And what is yours, Mademoiselle?'
-
-'Célandine--Célandine de Caillé.'
-
-'Well, I cannot say it is _droll_. I think it very pretty.'
-
-'Your little rebuke is a just one, Monsieur,' said the smiling old
-gentleman, who, had Charlie been a genuine Prussian, would little
-have relished all this conversation between him and his daughter.
-
-'We shall be very good friends, I doubt not, for to-night, at least,
-Monsieur.'
-
-'Only for to-night?'
-
-'To-morrow shall relieve you of our hateful presence, as we shall
-probably move against Metz.'
-
-'Don't say "hateful," Monsieur, when we owe you so much, and esteem
-you so much,' urged Célandine.
-
-'Ernestine will never have a rival, even here,' thought Charlie, as
-he begged them to excuse him, as he had to go his rounds, and, with
-his sergeant, post fresh sentinels.
-
-That duty done, he undid his belt, but without undressing, threw
-himself on a sofa, and, utterly exhausted and worn out by the whole
-events of the day, oblivious of the presence of Mademoiselle de
-Caillé and her father in the dining-room, he slept as soundly as
-Hood's old woman,
-
- 'Who might have worn a percussion cap,
- And been knocked on the head without hearing it snap.'
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII.
-
-FACING A BATTERY OF MITRAILLEUSES.
-
-The night passed over quietly, and without alarm; but with dawn of
-day came an officer of Uhlans, attended by a trumpeter, flying at
-full speed along the line of advanced posts, calling in all the
-out-pickets, while the King was probably already telegraphing to
-Berlin as usual:--
-
-'Another new victory! Thank God for His mercy!'
-
-Referring to the official pietism of the Prussian monarch at this
-crisis, a very impartial historian of the war says thus:--'How little
-his armies were controlled by regard for humanity--the most essential
-element of any religion--will appear in lurid colours. Abu Bekr, the
-successor of Mohammed, enjoined his soldiers not to kill old people,
-women, or children; to cut down no palm-trees, nor burn any fields of
-corn; to spare all fruit-trees; and slay no cattle but such as they
-could take for their own use. But the Prussians made a desert of
-France, burned villages and small towns, and treated old people and
-women with horrible barbarity. But they were prodigal of religious
-words, and words with many have too often a greater weight than
-facts.'
-
-But with all this, it should be borne in mind, from past experience
-of French invading armies, how would those of the Emperor have
-behaved had they reached Berlin?
-
-One of a thousand of such episodes, as were daily occurring along the
-frontiers of Alsace and Lorraine, would no doubt have desolated for
-ever the household of M. de Caillé but for the timely arrival of
-Pierrepont and his twenty Thuringians.
-
-Aware of this, when the Uhlan trumpet sounded, Célandine de Caillé,
-like most young girls, a light sleeper, heard it before the war-worn
-Charlie, and pale and startled, came forth in the prettiest of
-morning robes to bid him farewell, and to stuff his havresack, and
-the havresacks of his men (though they were Prussians), with all that
-the Bavarians had not consumed last night.
-
-Charlie thought how fresh and radiant the young girl looked in her
-white morning dress, with blue breastknots, and a ribbon of the same
-colour in her hair, a soft light shining in her blue eyes, and a
-little colour in her peach-like cheek, that reminded him of
-Ernestine; but, ah! who was like Ernestine?
-
-A soldier fresh from one battle and going forth to fight another is
-an object of interest to all; but a handsome, frank, and free-hearted
-young fellow, like Charlie Pierrepont, was doubly so to an
-impassionable girl like Mademoiselle de Caillé; thus her blue eyes
-filled with tears as he kissed her tremulous little hand, which, like
-her taper arm, came so delicately forth from the wide-laced sleeves
-of her dress.
-
-'Why are there tears in your eyes, Mademoiselle?' asked Charlie, with
-a kind smile.
-
-'Because, Monsieur, I pity you.'
-
-'Pity me!'
-
-'Indeed I do, Monsieur. Most earnestly.'
-
-'And why?'
-
-'Because you are too young, and too good and kind, to be killed.
-Oh!' continued the girl, looking up in his face, 'I implore you to go
-home--home to your own England--home to your mother, if you have one,
-and leave these odious Prussians to fight their own battles.'
-
-'It is too late, my pretty friend.'
-
-'How so?'
-
-'The die is cast that makes me--Prussian.'
-
-'Will another horrible battle be fought to-day?' asked Monsieur de
-Caillé, who now made his appearance.
-
-'I am sure of it, Monsieur,' replied Charlie.
-
-'_Mon Dieu! Mon Dieu!_' exclaimed Célandine, clasping her hands, and
-looking upwards; 'and you will be in it?'
-
-'Undoubtedly, Mademoiselle.'
-
-She drew very close to Charlie, and said, in a low voice,
-
-'Pardon me, _mon ami_--but--but when were you last at mass or
-confession?'
-
-'We don't attend to either much in the 95th,' was Charlie's evasive
-reply; 'besides, our Herr Pastor is a Lutheran.'
-
-The sweet French girl eyed him wistfully.
-
-'You are too good and humane thus to die like a heathen!' said she,
-'and many more will die to-day. Promise me, Monsieur, that you will
-wear this.'
-
-And from her white neck she took a little holy cross and medal,
-suspended by a blue ribbon, which she passed over Charlie's head.
-
-'For your sake, then,' said Charlie gallantly.
-
-'For your own, rather. Whether you believe in such things or not, it
-will do you no harm to wear it.'
-
-'_Très bon_, my child!' said the old gentleman; 'but Monsieur has a
-cross already,' he added, patting the iron one at the breast of
-Charlie's blue tunic.
-
-'And now I must go,' said he, putting on his helmet; 'there sounds
-the trumpet again.'
-
-As he bade them adieu and left them, the French girl, with a quick
-pretty action, flicked some holy water in his face from a Dresden
-china font that hung inside the door of the dining-room, and the
-glittering drops fell on his moustache and silver gorget, which the
-Prussians still wear, or at least wore then; and father and daughter
-stood sadly in the porch, looking after their protector as he marched
-off at the head of his men, for Charlie, though a thorough English
-gentleman, was, as some say, 'the soldier all over, but the soldier
-adventurer--the soldier of fortune, rather than the soldier of
-routine.'
-
-Charlie, we fear, and are ashamed to admit it, did not pray often.
-'It wasn't much in his line; besides, what was the Herr Pastor paid
-for?' but as he marched back to headquarters on the Bellecroix road,
-at the head of his picket, he prayed in his heart that no harm--no
-perils, such as those of last night--might ever again menace that
-frank, engaging, and innocent young girl at the Chateau de Caillé.
-
-But he had not seen the last of that old mansion.
-
-By this time, a considerable portion of the German army had
-penetrated so far to the west and north-west of Metz, as to be almost
-already between Marshal Bazaine and Paris! The line of the invading
-forces was thus so greatly extended that the French generalissimo
-dared not make any offensive movement against them, but was compelled
-to retreat along the highways that led from Gravelotte to Verdun.
-
-Charlie had barely rejoined his regiment, and exchanged a few words
-with Heinrich, Schönforst, and other friends, when the order came for
-the line to advance, as the French were in position at Vionville,
-covering the whole southern road to Verdun, with a front extending to
-the village of Gorz, eight miles south-west of Metz; and in their
-martial ardour to meet the enemy, many of the Thuringians, as the
-march forward began, struck up the fine war-song of Arndt.
-
-In the ranks of this regiment, as in others of the Prussian army,
-were many well-born and gently nurtured young men, bred to
-professions or businesses, and who could speak several languages, and
-take their place in good society, but were dragged away from their
-avocation, hearth, and home, by the Prussian military system. There
-were others, again, grey, brown, and hardy men, who could digest
-sutler's beef and eat such ammunition bread as the Kaiser's
-commissariat supplied, sleep in their spike-helmets as soundly as in
-a velvet night-cap, feel, by a bivouac fire, as comfortable as if in
-the Grand Hotel at Cologne, and march to be maimed or massacred, to
-wound and to slay, with genuine Teutonic taciturnity and phlegm.
-
-
-The battle of the day began on some wooded hills above the pretty
-red-tiled village of Gorz, near a pleasant stream that meanders
-between fields and beautiful coppices from Mars-la-Tour to the
-Moselle.
-
-By sheer force of numbers, the Prussians, while giving and receiving
-a storm of musketry, pushed into the woods, driving the French
-skirmishers before them. Those who were spectators saw the little
-scarlet kepis of the latter dispersing in succession amid the white
-smoke and green foliage; then the dark-coated Prussians, with their
-spike-helmets and goat-skin packs, disappeared also in pursuit. What
-happened in this part of the battle no one knows, or ever will know,
-as it was entirely in the dense woods and deep valleys, and thus no
-general view could be obtained; yet it is to this part of the field
-we have to refer, for there fought the 95th regiment.
-
-From one wooded slope to another the French fell back, fighting
-desperately. In the valleys, the din of war rang with a hundred
-reverberations. Shrieks, cries, and hoarse cheering shook the very
-woodlands, and the smoke curled up from the latter as if they were on
-fire. White puffs and red flashes seemed to burst from every bush
-and tree. Now and then the bayonets flashed, or a tricolour appeared
-amid the foliage; but on, almost without check, went the Prussians,
-over ground strewn with the terrible _debris_ of men, gun-carriages,
-limbers, and horses, in many instances blown literally to pieces, for
-the whole ground was ploughed by shot and shell, and sown with rifle
-bullets.
-
-Charlie's regiment, with the 40th, 67th, and 69th, was ordered to
-surround and storm a cottage mid-way on the Gorze road. The reason
-of four battalions being sent to storm a mere cottage was that it was
-held by a half-battery of French mitrailleuses, which did frightful
-execution in their ranks as they advanced.
-
-Forward they went at a rush, the living tumbling over the
-fast-falling dead, these dreadful cannon belching death and
-destruction from amid the foliage in front, with that horrible
-shrieking sound peculiar to their discharge, and Charlie felt the
-_streams_ of shot as they passed him.
-
-A wild cry of agony, amid many others, made him look to his right.
-There lay Schönforst and half his company writhing or dead in one
-bloody heap; and the next moment it was Charlie's turn.
-
-He felt as if a hot sword-blade had entered his breast--there was a
-heavy blow, a sharp tearing of the body, an emotion of rage or
-anger--a loud cry escaped him, and he fell on his face, enduring
-terrible agony. He staggered up, just as the attacking force swept
-over him to assault the battery, but fell over on his side, and lay
-with the blood pouring from his chest.
-
-Wounded at last--perhaps mortally! was his first reflection; for he
-could feel that the bullet was in his body still. Life, death--the
-past, the future--'the possible heaven, the impending hell'--all
-flashed upon him, with thoughts of his own misery in lying there
-dying, helpless, and so far from Ernestine!
-
-A faintness came over him, from which he was roused by feeling some
-one opening his tunic.
-
-'Where are you wounded?' asked a familiar voice, and Charlie found
-the doctor of the regiment--with all of whom, we have said, he was a
-great favourite--bending over him kindly, with the hospital attendant
-of his company.
-
-'In the breast,' he gasped.
-
-The doctor had but little time to lose, and the bullets were
-_pinging_ past him and his patient in every direction.
-
-'The bullet is lodged near the spine,' said the doctor, 'and it must
-be cut out, but not here.'
-
-'Is--is the wound dangerous?' he faltered.
-
-'Not very; but great care will be requisite.'
-
-Whether on the part of himself or his medical attendant Charlie did
-not inquire; the tone in Which the doctor said 'very' lessened his
-hopes.
-
-'God's will be done,' said he; and there flashed on his memory all
-that little Célandine de Caillé had said to him that morning about
-religion; while the doctor put a pad on the wound, bandaged it, and
-hastened to look at Schönforst, but he was long since past all aid,
-and stone-dead.
-
-Save the moans, cries, and interjections--pious, fierce, or
-despairing--of those around him, Charlie heard little more but the
-occasional boom of the heavy guns as the tide and din of the battle
-rolled away towards Gravelotte; and great faintness, like a kind of
-sleep, stole over him. From time to time the acute agony of his
-wound roused him, and amid his terrible thoughts, ever present were
-the images of Ernestine and his family.
-
-The emotion of faintness increased as the day wore on and evening
-came. He saw many around him die, and thinking that his own time
-would soon come too, he thought once more of the French girl's words,
-and strove to fashion a prayer or two, but they were little else than
-pious invocations.
-
-Dying, as he certainly deemed himself to be, his thoughts flashed
-incessantly to her he loved; her whose soft hand might too probably
-never be in his again; anon to his boyhood's home in Warwickshire;
-the voices of his father and of his dead mother came drowsily to his
-ear; the soft English faces of his sisters floated before him. Oh,
-how hard it was to lie there bleeding, and too probably dying, when
-they were all making merry, perhaps, in that drawing-room which he
-remembered so well, and many of the pettiest details of which, even
-to a crack in the ceiling, came strangely back to memory now, with
-scraps of songs and forgotten airs.
-
-Would the Krankentrager never come to take him away? Had the doctor
-and hospital attendant both forgotten him, or had been killed? The
-latter, too probably.
-
-So the long, long day of anxiety, thirst, and agony passed away, and
-sunset came on. Charlie watched it fading on the distant woods and
-green slopes of those lovely Lorraine valleys, till the mellowing
-haze of twilight blurred all the landscape into gloom, and the
-silvery moon and the evening star came forth in their beauty to light
-up the carnage of the past day.
-
-Neither the doctor nor the hospital attendant of his company had
-forgotten poor Charlie; but strange to say, when they came to look
-for him with a party about midnight, no trace could be found of him
-save a pool of blood on the grass where he had lain.
-
-So the Countess, perhaps, had her wicked wish fulfilled at last, and
-fate had removed 'the intruder,' as she named him, for ever from the
-path of Baron Grünthal!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII.
-
-IN THE ENEMY'S HANDS.
-
-We must now devote a short chapter to the fate of young Frankenburg.
-
-Ignorant that his friend Pierrepont had fallen--and a knowledge
-thereof would have served the latter but little--Heinrich, in his
-present capacity of adjutant, had to keep at his post and go on with
-the regiment, which, like the others, carried all before it.
-
-The French, aware of the vital importance of keeping possession of a
-hill on their right, as soon as their troops began to fall back
-before those battalions sent forward by General Steinmetz, threw up
-some earthen works, in rear of which their 62nd regiment of the line
-lay down, while several batteries of artillery fired over their
-heads, raining grape and shell upon the fast-advancing Prussians.
-
-For three hours the fighting was desperate there--the slaughter on
-both sides woeful! Again the French fell back, and the Prussians
-brought up battery after battery of Krupp guns to the summit of the
-abandoned height, the gunners using their whips and spurs, the
-officers brandishing their swords and shouting, 'Vorwarts! vorwarts!'
-with their horses at a gallop.
-
-In the ardour of the pursuit, or in terror of the dreadful sounds
-which shook the air, the horse ridden by Heinrich, having got the bit
-of the bridle firmly wedged between his teeth for a time, darted with
-his rider to the front at racing speed, and fairly carried him
-through the line of the retreating French!
-
-Shot after shot was fired after him, but he escaped them all, and ere
-long found himself in a village, the main street of which was crowded
-by Francs-Tireurs, who seemed to have expended all their ammunition,
-as they pursued him simply with fixed bayonets, yells, and ferocious
-maledictions; for, as the Prussians gave no quarter to this species
-of volunteer force, they were not disposed to give any in return, so
-Heinrich began to give himself up for lost.
-
-An alley opened on his right, and by it he hoped to gain the open
-country. He spurred his horse and shouted; he urged it with leg and
-hand and voice, and forced it to the right down the alley, followed
-by a shout of fierce derisive laughter, the source of which he soon
-discovered to be the fact that the alley had no outlet, and that he
-was fairly entrapped in a narrow _cul-de-sac_!
-
-To take a pistol from the holsters, to leap from his horse, make a
-dash into the nearest house, was to Heinrich but the work of an
-instant; but he had barely closed and secured the door, ere the human
-tide of the Francs-Tireurs, intent on revenge and bloodshed, came
-surging wildly down the alley against it.
-
-The house had been abandoned by its owners. He sought for the
-back-door, but there was none. He could only drop from an upper
-window into a garden; but his uniform would cause him at once to be
-recognised, and instant death was sure to follow. Not a moment was
-to be lost! He looked wildly round him. On a peg there hung a
-loose, coarse peasant blouse of blue cloth. He tore off his uniform,
-threw it and his helmet aside with his weapons, donned the blouse,
-and was just in the act of dropping from the window, when his
-exulting pursuers, who had soon forced the door, burst into the room,
-with cries of:
-
-'Tué, tué!--justice, revenge!--revenge for the Francs-Tireurs!'
-
-The garden-wall was uncommonly high, the gate securely locked; outlet
-there was none; and in another minute Frankenburg found himself in
-the hands of a score of these French volunteers, so many of whose
-comrades had been--no doubt, barbarously--put to death by the
-Prussians, simply for being found with arms in their hands, so that
-to look for mercy was vain. Their grasp was upon him; and in their
-desire to destroy him, they actually impeded each other, and for a
-second or two it seemed doubtful whether he was to perish by the
-charged bayonet or the whirled butt-end of the chassepot, as he was
-hustled and dragged hither and thither from hand to hand.
-
-'Checkmated--cornered!' thought he, as the faces of Herminia and all
-at home came before him; 'to die thus--and at the hands of these
-rascally French peasantry.' Suddenly one exclaimed:
-
-'Un espion--un mouchard! A Prussian disguised in a blouse--he was
-about to become a spy!'
-
-'L'espion, l'espion!--a rope, a rope!' cried the rest, catching at
-the new idea with extreme fervour. 'No, no--bayonet him!' cried one.
-
-'They hanged my brother at Borny,' said another;' so, by Baalzebub,
-let us hang him--hang him, Etienne!'
-
-Heinrich's blood ran cold at this horrible suggestion.
-
-'I did but seek to escape, messieurs, in exchanging my uniform for
-this dress,' said he.
-
-'Oh, of course--of course!' they cried, with fierce mockery and
-cruelty flashing in their eyes.
-
-'I did it but to save my life,' he urged. 'Diable--of course!'
-
-'I am but one man among hundreds,' he continued.
-
-'And so shall die--tué! tué!' cried they altogether.
-
-'You are a band of cowards!' exclaimed Heinrich, defiantly; 'I do not
-fear to die. Hurrah for Germany!'
-
-'Hah, ha! hah, ha!--à bas le Prussien!' they chorused.
-
-One now appeared with a rope, which he had procured somewhere, and a
-cold perspiration burst over the brows of Heinrich.
-
-'I am the Graf Von Frankenburg,' he urged, almost, but not quite,
-piteously. 'I am an officer of the Thuringians--let me die the death
-of a soldier, not that of a felon.'
-
-'You are the Graf Von Frankenburg?' said one; 'be it so. The higher
-the rank the greater the disgrace in dying the death of a spy; so,
-coquin, hang you shall.'
-
-Resistance was vain; the iron grasp of many was on each of his arms,
-and he was as helpless in their hands as an infant. His father, his
-mother, his love--the bright-haired Herminia!--what horror would the
-story of his fate cost them! It was too dreadful to think of; it was
-madness!
-
-'Oh,' thought he, 'that I had but died on yonder field, and not
-thus--not _thus_--in the hands of wretches such as these!'
-
-He disdained to ask for mercy, and resolved to die with dignity even
-the horrid death to which they had doomed him. But little time was
-given him for reflection, and none for prayer; yet a cry certainly
-escaped him, and a nervous shudder, when he found a corporal actually
-adjusting the hastily constructed halter about his neck. An
-involuntary effort he made for resistance or escape, and then stood
-still and passive.
-
-'Throw the end of the rope over that apple-tree,' was the command of
-the corporal; and after one or two efforts it was thrown over a
-suitable branch, 'Stand aside, comrades,' was the next command; 'whip
-him up now, and make fast the rope to the branch below.'
-
-While a mocking shout burst from the band, and many brutal and
-irreligious speeches were made, some crying piteously, 'Bon voyage,
-Monsieur le Comte--bon voyage, mon Prussien,' the noose closed and
-tightened round the neck of Heinrich. His eyeballs seemed to start
-from their sockets, dark purple overspread his face, and he was swung
-up to the branch, where he dangled in convulsive agony, swinging and
-swaying to and fro, with a hoarse, rattling, gulping sound in his
-throat, and with his feet about eight feet from the ground.
-
-The other end of the fatal rope was made fast to a lower branch, and
-then the Francs-Tireurs rushed away, with mocking shouts, to join
-their comrades, and left the unhappy Heinrich--the 'Prussian spy,' as
-they falsely affected to call him--to his miserable fate.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX.
-
-THE CHATEAU DE CAILLE.
-
-And now to account for the mysterious disappearance of Charlie
-Pierrepont, which the Herr Doctor could only account for by supposing
-that in the restlessness of his agony, or desire to procure water, he
-had crawled away into some obscure corner to die. But such was not
-the case.
-
-It was still dusky night, or lighted only by the moon, when Charlie,
-lying where we left him, began to surmise whether the morning sun
-would evermore gladden his eyes, that were staring upward at the
-stars, as they twinkled through the branches of those trees amid
-which the battle had been partly fought, and the stems of which, in
-places, were barked and whitened by the passing whirlwinds of shot
-from the mitrailleuses.
-
-'If I die,' thought he, 'the label at my neck will tell the burial
-party who I am--or was.'
-
-And as the slow hours of the night stole on, he thought of the
-ghastly face of the French captain who killed the young ensign
-Donnersberg, and the peculiar hatred and inhumanity expressed by his
-dying wish. The sound of wheels coming slowly along now roused him.
-A party of the Krankentrager, picking up the wounded, were passing
-near. He tried to call aloud, but his voice had failed him.
-
-'How high the moon is to-night,' said one.
-
-'How bright, you mean; for I don't suppose she is higher up than
-usual,' replied another.
-
-'But it would be a lovely night for having another turn with the
-French schelms, in their long blue coats and red kepis.'
-
-'There has been slaughter enough, for one day, Rudiger; ugh!--how
-thick the corpses lie here, where the horrible mitrailleuses have
-been playing.'
-
-The waggon was stopped, and the soldiers looked about them.
-
-Suddenly one said--
-
-'There is young Herr Pierrepont, the Englander of the 95th. How in
-his heart he loved the crack of the zundnadelgewehr, or the click of
-steel on steel! So he is gone, too!'
-
-'He is worth a dozen dead men yet!' exclaimed one of the
-Krankentrager, leaping off the seat of the ambulance waggon, on
-seeing Charlie's eyes and hand move.
-
-Some brandy-and-water was given him as a reviver, and he was lifted
-into the waggon, which was already full, and was hence driven from
-the field; and here we may mention that the Krankentrager is one of
-the best-organized corps in the Prussian army, and its special duty
-is to carry the sick and wounded.
-
-In this Franco-Prussian war, it is to be recorded that to their
-immortal honour, the Sisters of Mercy were always on every field of
-battle _before the firing ceased_, and they went on foot, each little
-company preceded by a Catholic priest or Lutheran pastor.
-
-Luckily, as it proved in the end for Charlie, he had fallen into the
-hands of Landwehr men alone, for ere long, conceiving him to be dead,
-they took him out of the waggon and left him at the door of a
-mansion, which proved to be the Chateau de Caillé.
-
-Prior to this, as the waggon was driven slowly and tortuously, to
-avoid mutilating the killed and wounded, who lay thickly everywhere,
-in literal heaps in some places, in ranks in others, the moon went
-down, clouds overspread the sky, and, to add to the miseries of the
-helpless, rain began to fall. In the action of the previous day, the
-canopy of the waggon in which Charlie Pierrepont lay had been
-destroyed by a passing shot. No other had been substituted, so there
-he Jay, with seven others, packed closely side by side, some dying,
-some actually dead, with the rain of heaven pouring into their open
-months and eyes.
-
-Some there were who stirred restlessly from side to side, constantly
-requesting their position to be shifted, as the agonies of death came
-on; and when they died they were lifted from the waggon and laid by
-the side of the way.
-
-To the grim corps of grave-diggers was assigned the duty of noting
-the neck-labels, and doing what was necessary then!
-
-As Charlie lay very still and motionless with eyes closed, sunk
-indeed into a species of stupor, the unskilled men of the Landwehr
-concluded that he was dead, and lifting him from the waggon, laid him
-near the gate of the chateau, and drove off, just as grey dawn began
-to brighten on the wooded hills that look down, the Moselle, and the
-great spire of the distant cathedral of Metz.
-
-So there he was left to be killed, perhaps outright, by the first
-vindictive peasant of Lorraine who might be going a-field to his
-work; but there was too much gunpowder in the air about Metz just
-then to permit other work to be done than 'the harvest of death.'
-
-Now, before those terrible fellows in spike-helmets came into that
-peaceful part of pleasant Lorraine, where the old chateau lies
-embosomed among vineyards and apple-bowers--the Lorraine that whilom
-belonged to the mother of Mary Queen of Scots--it had been the wont
-and custom of Célandine de Caillé, at the hour of seven every
-morning, to go to early mass in a little chapel near the highway that
-leads to Metz. She dared not venture so far now; but by mere force
-of habit, she was saying the prayers for mass among the dew-drops in
-the flower-garden, when something caused her to peep out of the front
-gate, and then she saw---- What? Oh, it could not be!
-
-Was this pale, ghastly, sodden, and blood-stained creature the
-handsome young soldier who, but yesterday morning about the same
-hour, after being startled by the Uhlan trumpet, had marched away so
-proudly at the head of his Thuringians, with his silver epaulettes
-glittering in the sun, and had yet in his havresack--soaked with his
-own gore--the food so kindly placed there by Célandine?
-
-It seemed incredible, yet so it was!
-
-A shriek escaped the startled girl, and she rushed indoors for her
-father, her _bonne_, and everybody else; assistance was soon
-procured, the sufferer carried indoors, placed in bed, his uniform
-hidden, for the Francs-Tireurs were hovering about, and medical aid
-was procured from the nearest village, in the person of a young
-doctor, Adolphe Guerrand, on whom, as an admirer of Célandine, they
-could rely for silence and secrecy.
-
-The thunder of war was an awful event to the inmates of that little
-secluded chateau, to none more than to Monsieur de Caillé, whose days
-were usually spent in dozing about his flower-garden, plucking off a
-faded leaf here and there, or training vines and sprays, and whose
-evenings were passed over a bottle of vin ordinaire with the Curé, or
-listening to Célandine's performances on a--well, it was _not_ a
-grand trichord piano, because it had been her grandmother's.
-
-Some days and nights elapsed--strange, drearily days and nights to
-Charlie Pierrepont, who only knew at times where, by a strange
-coincidence, he was. They were passed by him in a chaos or confusion
-of thought, in dreams of Ernestine, of the day in the Hoch Munster,
-and the evening in the church at Burtscheid, of battle-fields, with
-lines of red kepis, fierce bearded faces, and hedges of bristling
-bayonets looming through the smoke, of the roaring shriek of those
-dreadful mitrailleuses--the veritable invention of Satan; yea, even
-the scowl and curse of the French captain were not forgotten; but
-after a time Charlie's thoughts became coherent; he knew fully where
-he was; that a conical rifle bullet had been cut out of his back,
-near the spine, by the skilful hands of Adolphe Guerrand; that he had
-a narrow escape from death; that he was recovering, and had, as
-nurses, Célandine de Caillé and her kind old _bonne_.
-
-'Ah! Célandine--Mademoiselle Célandine,' said he, taking the girl's
-tiny hand within his own, and just touching it with his lips,
-'neither your holy water, nor the consecrated medal, acted as a
-charm. In what a condition have I come back to you!'
-
-'But for my medal and the holy water, perhaps a cannon-ball might
-have taken off your head,' retorted little Mademoiselle de Caillé.
-
-'True,' replied Charlie, as he kissed her hand again.
-
-Three weeks had elapsed since the battle in which Charlie had fallen
-wounded; two days after, as Célandine told him, Gravelotte had been
-fought, and then the French had been defeated after a dreadful
-struggle, and driven back to Metz. Strasbourg was besieged,
-Phalsburg bombarded, the Prussians were daily everywhere victorious.
-
-'And, alas! monsieur,' said the little maid, clasping her pretty
-hands, and lifting upward eyes that were suffused with tears, 'France
-is lost! The glory of my France is gone! And surely now the cries
-of Melusine will be heard!'
-
-'Melusine?' asked Charlie, with surprise. 'Who is she?'
-
-'Don't you know, monsieur? Have you never heard of the "_Cris de
-Melusine_?"'
-
-'Never.'
-
-'It is an old legend believed in by most of our peasantry. Brantôme
-says she is a spirit that haunts the old castle of Lusignan, where,
-by loud shrieks, she announces any disasters that are to befall
-France.'
-
-'She must have been shrieking pretty loud and long of late,' said
-Charlie, smiling at the earnestness of the girl, who, in her love of
-the legendary, reminded him, he thought, of Ernestine, and he liked
-her the better for it.
-
-So Charlie continued to be attended daily by the young Doctor
-Guerrand, and nursed by Célandine in secret, as it would have been
-perilous for Charlie had the exasperated peasantry learned that a
-Prussian officer was concealed in the chateau. The heart of the
-young French doctor Guerrand was full of bitterness for the disgrace
-that was falling on his country, and, were it not that by his
-practice he supported an aged mother, he would have cast aside the
-lancet and betaken to the chassepot.
-
-'_Sacre!_' said he, on one occasion, to Charlie; 'in this war the
-French seem to make more use of their feet than their hands; but we
-won't talk of politics.'
-
-'Why, Doctor?'
-
-'Because I always lose my temper. I am a Republican now. I have
-become so in the bitterness of my heart. But, thank Heaven, we shall
-soon be rid of our Emperor, as you will, ere long, of your Kaiser;
-for what are kings, emperors, and princes, but a crowned confederacy
-against the freedom of the world? _Sacre!_'
-
-And the young Republican ground his teeth in his fierce energy.
-
-Charlie had Ernestine's photo, done and coloured at Aix-la-Chapelle.
-It was one which, so far as these sun pictures go, represented her to
-the life, and he had seen her in that particular posé, and with that
-expression on her soft face, many, many times. He kept it beneath
-his pillow. Never did he tire of gazing on it; thus, more than once,
-his active little nurse caught him with the blue velvet case in his
-hand.
-
-'Ah! It is monsieur's mother?' said she, trying to get a peep at it.
-
-'It is not,' said Charlie, with a fond smile.
-
-'A sister, then? I have seen that it is a lady!'
-
-'No, Célandine.'
-
-'Something as dear as both would be?'
-
-'I cannot say.'
-
-'How so, monsieur?'
-
-'I scarcely ever saw my mother. And when I left home to soldier in
-Prussia, my sisters were mere children; but dear she is, indeed.'
-
-'Ah,--a _fiancée_?' said Célandine, laughing and clapping her hands.
-
-'Yes, mademoiselle.'
-
-'Ah, show me the likeness, monsieur,' she entreated; so Charlie gave
-her the case. 'How sweet, how lovely she looks! Do let me kiss her!
-Monsieur Pierrepont, I congratulate you. And when are you to be
-married?'
-
-'Alas!' muttered Charlie, as his countenance fell.
-
-'Surely she loves you?' asked Célandine, with her blue eyes dilated.
-
-'Loves me?--dearly! so each of us has one secret of the heart to
-treasure.'
-
-'What have I?' asked the girl, demurely.
-
-'You have Adolphe.'
-
-'Ah!--yes; M. Adolphe loves me, I believe, and--and perhaps I may
-learn to love him in time. I am not sure. I may marry some one
-else, and learn to love that some one. Mon père will arrange all
-that for me, and it will be so kind of him.'
-
-Charlie looked puzzled; but ere long, in the case of Célandine
-herself, he was to see how matrimonial matters are arranged in the
-land of the silver lilies.
-
-Her question, 'When are you to be married?' opened up no new train of
-thought to Charlie; that important _when_ had been a source of
-frequent and painful surmise; but a new idea was ever before him now.
-
-What had Ernestine heard of his fate?--that he was killed, wounded,
-or missing? He had no means of communicating with her now, and thus
-sparing her that which he would gladly have done--a single sigh, a
-single throb of pain.
-
-There was no one at the chateau could tell him where the 95th were,
-whether in front of Metz, besieging Strasbourg, or fighting at
-Phalsburg. But, oh, how to relieve the grief of his betrothed! He
-would not, for worlds, have cost that warm, wilful, and impassioned
-heart one pang!
-
-Yet there he lay on his back, with a closing wound, helpless.
-
-Like an iron weight it bore on his heart, the remoteness and dubiety
-of their meeting again; and when all thought of his personal danger
-passed away, this reflection weighed more heavily on him than ever,
-while his very career as a soldier made the future more uncertain and
-gloomy.
-
-He had but one fixed, yet vague, idea--that, at the risk of his life,
-he would see Ernestine before he returned to the regiment in which he
-was, as yet, unfit to serve, and assure her of his all-unaltered
-love. Times there were when he thought he would ask Célandine to
-write to her, but in turn was afraid to do so--to Herminia, or to
-Ernestine, over whose postal correspondence, doubtless, the Countess
-kept a strict vigil--or, if she did write, there was no other post
-than the field one between France and Prussia now, and that was with
-the German army.
-
-So Charlie could but lie on his bed and writhe, though in the kindly
-hands of the sweetest of little nurses.
-
-Would the Countess Adelaide, he sometimes asked himself, feel any
-compunction for her proud severity, any pity for her daughter's
-honest lover, on hearing of his probable fate? Alas! it seemed more
-likely that she would exult at it as a barrier, a bramble, removed
-from her path. The Count was an old soldier; perhaps he might relent
-and prove generous; and so, on and on, Charlie hoped, surmised, and
-pondered, till his very brain ached.
-
-Célandine knew that Charlie was English by birth, yet Prussian by
-sympathy, which she deplored--they were such barbarians, those men in
-the spiked helmets. Thus when she played or sang to him, which she
-did with great taste and sweetness, with good taste she only chose
-neutral airs and songs, such as those from the Trovatore, etc., and
-in these Adolphe Guerrand frequently joined her.
-
-As she was in her mere girlhood, it appeared that she was too young
-to marry, nor had ever thought of it; and more than all, as Adolphe
-was poor, having only his practice as a hard-working village
-practitioner, Monsieur de Caillé was by no means disposed to look
-upon him, even in the future, as an eligible suitor for his daughter,
-till a letter reached young Guerrand from Paris by which one morning
-he found himself rich by one of the most extraordinary chances in the
-world.
-
-It happened that just a week before the Prussians crossed the Rhine,
-Adolphe Guerrand had been at Blankenberg with a patient, to whom he
-had prescribed sea-bathing, and, when walking on the beach there, had
-found a carefully sealed bottle among some sea-weed. Holding it
-between him and the light, he saw that it contained a written
-document, and conceiving naturally that it was a message from the
-sea--the last farewell from some sinking ship, he drew the cork, and
-perused the damp paper, which was properly signed and dated, from on
-board a French vessel, which had sprung a leak, and was going down in
-the middle of the Atlantic. And thus it ran on, in French:
-
-
-'About to perish by drowning, I commend my soul to God, the Blessed
-Virgin, and all the saints. I hereby constitute my sole heir the
-finder of this will, which I enclose in a glass bottle. The labour
-of years, my fortune amounts to two hundred and twenty thousand
-francs, and I am without a relation in the world. I wish the house I
-have resided in at Paris to be converted into a chapel of St.
-Dominique, my patron saint. The fortune is deposited in the hands of
-the notary, M. Vantin, in the Rue St. Honoré. _Ora pro me_.
-
-'DOMINIQUE SOURDEVAL.'
-
-
-The letter was from Vantin, the notary, to the young doctor, who thus
-found himself suddenly rich, so all obstacles were removed to a union
-with Célandine, when she was a few years older, though the family of
-Adolphe was of humble origin and that of De Caillé ancient, and shone
-at the court of Louis XIII. It was of a Madame de Caillé that we are
-told, how when that monarch was once playing at shuttlecock with her
-at Versailles, it fell into her bosom, on which she desired his
-majesty to take it; but such was his royal delicacy that, to avoid
-the snare laid by the charming Lorrainer, he discreetly extricated
-the toy with the aid of the tongs.
-
-Thus, on the first day of Charlie's convalescence, the formal
-betrothal of the daughter of the house took place; and to him it
-seemed a very cold-blooded affair to the wild, passionate, and solemn
-episode between himself and Ernestine in that lonely church at
-Burtscheid.
-
-Adolphe was in his twenty-fifth year, naturally sanguine and
-enthusiastic; his clear-cut features and thoughtful eyes were now
-full of light and brightness; there was a greater springiness in his
-step, born of the knowledge that he was now rich and the inheritor of
-a fortune--the fortune of M. de Sourdeval, so mysteriously cast at
-his feet by the waves of the sea.
-
-A well-bred French girl, of course, expects one day to be wedded, but
-chiefly looks forward to the event as an opportunity of displaying
-her presents and trousseau, and is supposed to have no preference in
-the matter. To Célandine it seemed only natural that she should
-accept her father's choice, just as he had done the choice of _his_
-parents in espousing her mother.
-
-Yet in her heart of hearts, the girl--though very young--had grown
-fond of Charlie Pierrepont, her helpless charge, who was always so
-gentle and grateful, so sad, too, and who looked, withal, so manly
-and soldier-like. And with this sentiment in her heart, the girl was
-to contract what we must call a French marriage. So full of
-cross-purposes, hidden currents of thought, and secret springs of
-action, is this work-a-day world of ours!
-
-She knew that it is understood and accepted in her native country
-that unions cannot, as in England, be contracted on the impulse of
-love or romantic notions, but upon principles of cold and practical
-utility, as mere transactions between parents; but they are sometimes
-equally so on this side of the Straits of Dover.
-
-So, on the day referred to, M. de Caillé said to his daughter, with
-his eyebrows elevated as if he had quite made a discovery, while
-kissing her on the forehead, 'I have found you a husband, my love.'
-
-'Merci, mon père--who is he?' asked Célandine, as if she had not the
-slightest guess on the subject.
-
-'The time will come anon--but here he is,' and he led in Adolphe, who
-approached Célandine, whose eyes were fixed on Charlie, pale, wan,
-and propping himself on a cane of M. de Caillé's.
-
-At such a crisis, Adolphe Guerrand had vague ideas--from what he had
-read in novels and seen at the theatre of the Porte St. Martin, when
-he was a student in Paris, at the Ecole de Medicin--that he should
-drop on his knees, or at least on one knee; but the floor was very
-slippery, and Célandine not being much in love with him, and very
-much inclined to laugh, he didn't attempt a melodramatic posé at this
-betrothal, which Charlie saw as in a dream; for his thoughts were at
-Burtscheid, and the heart-stirring parting words of Ernestine were
-lingering in his ear.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX.
-
-ERNESTINE.
-
-As the reader may suppose, some time elapsed ere the quiet little
-household at Frankfort realized--they could not for long recover
-from--the catastrophe recorded by the German papers; but when it was
-actually stated that a prisoner taken in a skirmish, a captain, was
-roasted alive, nothing seemed too horrible to happen now. That
-Heinrich might be wounded unto death, or slain outright in battle,
-seemed but a too probable contingency; but that he should be taken
-prisoner, and suffer an end of such enforced ignominy, was beyond the
-category of all their speculations.
-
-The whole family were utterly prostrated by an event so inexplicable,
-and Ernestine felt the shock in her own peculiar way. She loved her
-only brother dearly, and all the more dearly that he was the friend
-and defender of her lover Carl--her betrothed husband, for as such
-she always viewed him. Now that her beloved Heinrich was gone, the
-links between her and Carl--the means of communication--were broken,
-and she could hear of him no more.
-
-And, meanwhile, where was Carl? Alive or dead?
-
-The _Gazette_, so grudging in words, so meagre in detail, had simply
-said that he was severely wounded. Where, and in what fashion, was
-he wounded? By steel or lead? Was he mutilated, disfigured for
-life? Perhaps he had since perished in his agony, or when undergoing
-some terrible operation!
-
-So, for days and nights, the girl tormented herself till she became
-seriously ill with agonizing conjectures, over which she was
-compelled to brood in silence and tears.
-
-At last, to the astonishment, to the wild joy of all, there came a
-letter from Heinrich himself--a letter dated ten days subsequent to
-the catastrophe recorded in the _Extra Blatt_!
-
-It was dated from a village somewhere near Metz, and briefly
-recapitulated what has been detailed in Chapter Eighteen, and added
-that a humane peasant woman, who, from a hiding-place, had witnessed
-the terrible scene in the garden, the moment the Francs-Tireurs
-retired, had rushed forth and cut him down. She had quickly and
-adroitly released his neck from the odious cord, chafed it with her
-hands, given him water, and thoroughly revived him, though animation
-had never been quite suspended.
-
-Moreover, she had concealed him in her house for two days, and
-enabled him to join the regiment before Metz; but the shock to his
-system was such that the military surgeons advised his return home
-for a time, and that, doubtless, he would spend his Christmas with
-them all at Frankenburg.
-
-They had all mourned so deeply over his supposed terrible fate, that
-the account this letter contained--the assurance of his perfect
-safety and speedy return in his own handwriting--seemed like a
-resurrection from the tomb! All the family embraced each other and
-shed tears of joy, and a new and sudden happiness was diffused over
-the whole household, even to the grooms in the stable, for all loved
-the handsome young Graf.
-
-An enormous amount of beer was consumed on the occasion, and in 'the
-study,' the Count and Baron Grünthal over their pipes, and certainly
-more than one bottle of Rhenish wine, grasped each other's hands ever
-and anon, and shouted, in the melodious language of the Vaterland,
-
-'Hoch, Heinrich! Ich habe die Ehre, auf Ihre Gesundheit zu trinken!'
-(I have the honour of drinking your good health.)
-
-In his letter there was no mention of Carl Pierrepont, and no
-enclosure for _her_, thought Ernestine; but then, as Heinrich wrote
-to the Countess, he could not make a communication concerning him; so
-the girl, though her joy for her brother's safety was somewhat
-clouded by that circumstance and the wish that Heinrich had written
-to Herminia; could but wait and hope--hope and pray.
-
-'A little time, and my dear brother will tell me all,' she said to
-herself; 'but, oh! this suspense--this mystery concerning the fate of
-my Carl, is intolerable!'
-
-And now, in the excess of their happiness, the intended marriage of
-her and the Baron was revived in greater force than ever. Heinrich
-was returning, and his presence would make the happiness of all
-complete. Daily, Ernestine, while scanning the papers with keen and
-haggard eyes for intelligence of the lost one, heard the marriage
-arrangement schemed out; the projected breakfast; the cake which was
-to come from the most celebrated confectioner in Aix; the
-_trousseau_, which was to come from the most fashionable Putzmacherin
-(or _modiste_) in Berlin; the feast in the hall, and who were to be
-invited; whether the honeymoon was to be spent at Wiesbaden, at
-Carlsbad, or Bruckenau, and the girl listened to them as if she had
-been turned to stone. But there is a writer who says, 'Age
-legislates and youth trespasses; but the tide of love no more recedes
-at a _bidding_, than King Canute's waves.'
-
-Only once, however, did the sympathizing Herminia think her pale
-cousin was about to yield, when one night she laid her head on her
-bosom, and said with a gasping shudder,
-
-'Oh, how terrible it is to give one's hand to the living when one's
-heart has been given to the dead!'
-
-'But your dear Carl may not be dead. Heinrich is returning.'
-
-Other times there were when she would not believe that he was dead,
-yet how many brave hearts were growing cold in death then all over
-Northern France! How many men yet were to perish among the blushing
-vineyards of Champagne, and under the beleaguered walls of Paris!
-
-The cruel _Blatt_ had only said he had been wounded. But how had he
-disappeared?
-
-'He will return--oh, yet he will return! Kind God, you would not
-take him from me!'
-
-And in the fervour of such a moment she would lift her streaming eyes
-upward with a trustful and angelic expression.
-
-Like Charlie, when in many a comfortless bivouac under the sky and
-dew of heaven, under canvas when the summer rain pattered on the tent
-roof within an inch of his nose, of when in his bed tossing
-restlessly at the Chateau de Caillé, how many wild, strange, and
-impracticable plans and schemes did the busy mind of Ernestine frame,
-to reconstruct and hopelessly destroy again! Time, possibility, and
-the usages of life--and especially of her position in life, she
-overleaped with wonderful facility, so impulsive was she, but to fall
-back panting, as it were, and without one ray of hope, till she
-became, as we have said, like a stone, yet love lived on.
-
-Times there were when she imagined, or strove to imagine, that she
-had eloped with Charlie; that he had cast epaulettes, sword, and
-military reputation to the winds, and all for her sake; and that she
-was rambling with him among those lovely woods and sylvan scenes he
-had so often described to her, the scenes of his native home in
-Warwick. They did not require a huge schloss; they could be so happy
-in a little cottage, and she was certain that she could milk a cow,
-if she tried.
-
-Charlie she must and would see again at all hazards! Were they not
-each other's unto death--vowed in life and death? Even now _where_
-he was, she knew not, wist not; but in imagination she felt his arm
-pressing her hand to his side; she saw his brave and tender gaze of
-love into her eyes till they seemed to droop beneath the magnetism of
-it; she felt his kisses on their snowy lids, on her hair and on her
-brow, and all his soft uttered whispers come to memory again. And as
-she thought over all these things, the girl clasped her hot white
-hands in agony by day, and tossed feverishly and restlessly on her
-pillow by night.
-
-At last Heinrich returned, to the increased joy of all and the
-thoughts of Ernestine went back to that evening when, from the
-terrace, she had watched Carl, driving in the britzka towards the
-Schloss--her Carl, then a stranger to her save by name, but who was
-now so dear! Heinrich looked well and strong, sun-browned and
-bold-eyed, and as the Count said, after kissing him on both cheeks,
-and giving him a kindly thwack on the back, 'not a whit the worse for
-his hanging!'
-
-And now utterly regardless of what her parents might think or say,
-oblivious alike of their anger and their absurd pride, Ernestine, in
-her, usual passionate way, threw herself into her brother's arms, and
-cried in a piercing voice:
-
-'Oh, Heinrich, what news of _him_, of Carl? tell me, my brother--my
-brother, lest I die.'
-
-'I have no news, dear sister; the regiment has heard nothing of him
-since the battle of the 14th of August, before Metz,' replied
-Heinrich, speaking with great reluctance, being alike loath to wound
-his tender sister, or in that moment of their happiness to offend his
-parents. But now her father spoke, and calmly too.
-
-'The _Blatt_ stated that the Herr Lieutenant was wounded?'
-
-'Yes, when we were storming a mitrailleuse battery.'
-
-'Did you see him fall?'
-
-'No, Herr Graf. The smoke was thick, and I was on the left of the
-line, he on the right, in Schönforst's company. Poor Schönforst--he
-fell there, literally torn to shreds!'
-
-'What certainty is there that Here Pierrepont was wounded at all?'
-asked the Count, very desirous to learn that it was all over with
-poor Charlie, while Ernestine hung on her brother's words in agony.
-
-'His company saw him struck. He was leading them bravely on after
-Schönforst's death. Our doctor patched up his wound in some fashion;
-but on returning at night, could find no trace of him.'
-
-'Where was the wound?' asked Ernestine, with quivering lips.
-
-'In the breast--we shall hear all about it ere long,' continued
-Heinrich, putting an arm kindly round his sister. 'He is doubtless
-in some of the many hospitals that are near the fields where we have
-been fighting.'
-
-'Bah! the Herr Englander has probably tired of fighting, gone home to
-his own country, and will trouble Prussia no more!' said the Countess.
-
-Heinrich thought it much more probable that he had crawled away
-somewhere and died unseen, or, to judge from his own experience, been
-murdered by the peasantry; but he kept these ideas to himself. On
-the first opportunity when they were alone, Ernestine had a thousand
-questions to ask Heinrich; but to the fate--the disappearance of
-Pierrepont, he could not give the faintest clue, though to feed her
-hopes, when he had none, he drew largely on his imagination; for he
-knew that unless Charlie were dead, or most severely wounded indeed,
-and quite helpless, which we have shown him to be, he would have put
-himself in communication with the nearest Prussian military
-authorities.
-
-So, from the day of Heinrich's return, the health and spirits of
-Ernestine sank painfully and visibly.
-
-Summer had passed away, and the tints of autumn, brown and yellow,
-russet and orange, stole over the woodlands around the old Schloss
-and the beautiful dingles of the Reichswald. In vain were daily
-drives in the open carriage resorted to, and in vain were doctors
-consulted; the cheek of Ernestine grew paler and thinner; her
-roundness of form was passing away, and the once lovely hand becoming
-all but transparent. Had sure tidings come that Charlie had been
-killed outright, and, was actually dead, she might have got over the
-shock; but the suspense of not knowing where he was, how
-circumstanced, how mutilated, whether in his grave or still lingering
-in the land of the living, proved too much for a girl so sensitively
-organized as Ernestine.
-
-One fact was certain, as Heinrich's letters from the Thuringians
-assured her, that nothing had been heard of him by the regiment as
-yet. Owing to her state of health, the Countess's favourite topic
-and plan of the marriage was abandoned for the time, and in that
-matter she obtained some temporary relief.
-
-The poor girl really was, to all appearance, in a rapid consumption;
-but in all her family, hale, hearty, and strong on both sides, such
-an ailment had never been known. The whole tenor of her ways was
-changed. Even her pets--and she had many--were forgotten now.
-
-The winter would come, and with it Christmas, and to that festival
-Ernestine looked forward with a kind of horror now. Would it be
-jovial as usual in the old ancestral hall of Frankenburg? Doubtless
-the glittering Christmas tree--a pine from the Reichswald--would be
-there as of old, as it had been for generations; and there would be
-the venison pasty, and the brown shining boar's head to be solemnly
-cut and jovially eaten; speeches would be made, and toasts drunk with
-many a merry 'hoch!' while her heart would be with the German army
-before beleaguered Paris, or in the grave, where she feared her Carl
-lay; so she hoped as Christmas came that her place in Frankenburg
-would be vacant.
-
-The girl's mind was a prey to suspense and fear, sorrow and
-love--love, the strongest of all human passions.
-
-We have said that her nervous organization was delicate; hence these
-mental affections, together with incessant anxiety, threw her into a
-species of rapid consumption, which the presence and restoration of
-'her Carl,' as she always called him, alone could cure or arrest.
-She had a dry cough, a quick small pulse, a burning heat in her
-hands, a loss of strength, and sinking of the eyes, and her state
-became such at last that the Countess begged the Baron to absent
-himself from the Schloss for a time, as his visits there were a
-source of perpetual annoyance to Ernestine, though, for some time
-past, she secluded herself in her own room.
-
-Now her mother began to wring her hands, and pray that Heaven would
-find for her this Herr Pierrepont, if his presence, even if tolerated
-for a time, would restore her sinking child.
-
-Again and again did Heinrich write and telegraph to the head-quarters
-of the Thuringians concerning Charlie; but nothing had been heard of
-him there, and all were certain that he must have been killed in the
-action on the 14th of the preceding August.
-
-Poor Ernestine! Her case was soon pronounced hopeless. Her beauty
-remained; but it was of a strange and weird kind. On each cheek was
-a hectic spot; her eyes, sunken in their sockets, had an unnatural
-brightness; she spoke little, and laughed never.
-
-A little time more, and she was confined to her bed, where she lay
-for hours with her hot hand clasped in that of Herminia's, who bathed
-her temples with Rimmel and eau de Cologne, and fanned and petted
-her, while she tossed on her pillow, and muttered 'Carl! Carl!'
-
-It was always Carl.
-
-Often when she spoke, her dark eyes flashed up, like the momentary
-flicker of a lamp about to go out for ever--on earth, at least.
-
-'Oh, Herminia, darling!' she said on one occasion; 'life has no
-charms, and death has no terrors for me now.'
-
-'Carl will return.'
-
-'Never! Or it may be that he will come _too late_. Yet, even then,'
-she added, with a strange bright smile, that terrified her weeping
-cousin, 'even then I may see him, for it is among the possibilities
-of this world that the dead may return again!'
-
-'Strange weird words! What does she--what _can_ she mean?' thought
-Herminia.
-
-Some days after this she became almost speechless; yet she was quite
-conscious, and looked so lovely with the dishevelled masses of her
-dark hair floating over her laced pillow and delicate neck, as she
-smiled tenderly on her mother, Herminia, and all who hovered about
-her. Yet ever she whispered to herself, 'Carl! Carl!'
-
-On his last visit the doctor looked very grave as he departed.
-
-'Can nothing be done to save her?' implored the Countess, in a
-tremulous voice.
-
-'Nothing in my power, Grafine. Her disease is of the mind--the mind
-alone. Your daughter--I deplore to say it--is dying!'
-
-'Of what, Herr Doctor? Of what?
-
-'To me, it seems--of a broken heart!'
-
-'Impossible!' replied the Countess; 'people do not die of broken
-hearts, and grief does not kill.'
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI.
-
-AT AIX ONCE MORE.
-
-So, like Heinrich, Charlie had fallen into the 'enemy's hands;' but
-fortunately for him, they were the soft and gentle ones of little
-Célandine de Caillé.
-
-The passage of the ball had seriously injured him internally; thus he
-was long in recovering, and the winter of the year was almost at hand
-ere he could venture to travel; but it now seemed imperative to
-Charlie that he should trespass on his host and hostess no longer.
-
-'You would spoil any man with kindness, Mademoiselle de Caillé,' said
-he, one day; 'or any dog, too.'
-
-'Often the most loving animal of the two,' replied the French girl,
-laughing.
-
-During that protracted convalescence how often, in the waking hours
-of the night, had he thought of Ernestine, and strove to sleep in the
-hope to dream of her; of their moonlight walks in the garden of the
-old Schloss, when she had held his arm, with her little hands
-interlaced so confidingly on his sleeve, and he used to pet and
-caress them as she leant with all her weight upon his wrist; or of
-the mad gallops they were wont to have through the glades and dingles
-of the lovely Reichswald, when the green woods seemed to sleep under
-the dusky purple of the summer sky; but one night he had a dream that
-startled, and, like that one in the bivouac, made a deep impression
-upon him by its vividness and the sense of pain it left.
-
-In imagination she bent over him sadly and caressingly; her dark eyes
-were tender and beautiful as of old; but the rose-leaf tint had left
-her cheeks, as if for ever. Her smile was full of sweetness. Then a
-change came suddenly over her; the soft light died out of her eyes;
-her cheeks became hollow, her lips pallid; her whole expression and
-aspect painful and ghastly; the grasp of her hands became cold and
-chilling, and her voice grew faint and husky, as she said,
-
-'At Burtscheid, dearest Carl; meet me at Burtscheid, where last we
-met.'
-
-Then she seemed to melt away from before him, and Charlie started and
-awoke, to find it was happily but a mere dream, born too probably of
-his nervous and enfeebled condition, yet one so vivid, we have
-said--so terrifically vivid and painful, that he was trembling in
-every limb, a cold perspiration covered his whole frame; and by some
-strange association of ideas, the dying curse, if curse it was, of
-the French captain came rushing on his memory.
-
-And now the time came when he was to leave the Chateau de Caillé.
-
-'And you go, you go to her,' said Célandine, making a great effort to
-appear calm, on the day of his departure.
-
-'To her whose miniature I showed you, dear friend yes.'
-
-'Oh, may you both be happy--very, very happy!'
-
-'I thank you, dear Célandine; you will ever have her gratitude, as
-well as mine; but there are many things to oppose, many interests to
-thwart our happiness.'
-
-'Alas!' said the French girl, sadly; 'but remember that nothing is
-_impossible_.'
-
-And so when Charlie Pierrepont left his kind friends and that
-charming part of Lorraine, he little knew that he left behind a warm
-girlish heart that yearned for him, and him only, and thought nothing
-of Monsieur Adolphe, with all his thousands of francs, her father's
-choice; and keenly she envied her--the unknown lady--whose miniature
-was in Charlie's heart.
-
-From the surgeon of a Prussian regiment at Saarbrück, Charlie
-Pierrepont got a medical certificate, to the effect that he was
-incapable of rejoining the Thuringians, or of serving for some time.
-Leave was given him by the general in command, and he took the train
-from Saarbrück to Aix, to be near Frankenburg and her, of whom he had
-heard nothing for all those months, that seemed like so many ages
-now; for Charlie was so much of a lover, that to breathe the same
-atmosphere with her was a source of joy.
-
-Yet it was a cold and frosty atmosphere now, for Christmas was close
-at hand, the time when Christmas trees are lighted, when arcades and
-toyshops, fruiterers and pastry-cooks drive a roaring trade, when
-circles long separated are reunited, and happy parents sit at the
-head of happy tables surrounded by shining faces.
-
-The Reichswald was leafless and bare now, and a mantle of snow
-covered all those heights that surround Aix, which seems to lie in 'a
-fertile bowl surrounded by bold hills;' and ice lay in masses about
-the boats of the pontoon bridge of the Rhine. It was on the evening
-of the third Thursday before the great festival of the Christian year
-that Charlie found himself in the brilliant speise-saal of the Grand
-Monarque.
-
-He was now within a very short distance of Frankenburg; but how was
-he to communicate with Ernestine? See her he must before
-Christmas-eve, or she could not meet him then; and the hunger, the
-craving of his heart, was too great to be endured long. He feared to
-write to Herminia, lest his handwriting might be recognised by the
-Countess, and to write to Ernestine would too probably be useless, as
-her correspondence was too probably under her mother's supervision.
-
-What if she should now be the Baroness Grünthal? For months no one
-had known anything of his existence. All might have believed him to
-be dead, and she, perhaps yielding to the influences around her; but
-no, no--he thrust that thought aside, and recalled the solemnity of
-their vows interchanged at Burtscheid.
-
-Had she not then, and on that eventful night in the boudoir, promised
-to be faithful to him in life and death? and Charlie smiled at his
-momentary doubt.
-
-How many people there are in this world who treasure up and con over
-and over again an impossible day-dream that may never come to pass!
-Charlie thought of this as, from the hotel windows, he gazed moodily
-into the snow-covered street, with all its bustle and lamps, and
-shrank from the passing fear that his aspirations after Ernestine
-might only be an impossible and unrealizable longing; but see her
-again he must, even if he went to the Schloss--but no, that would
-never do after the treatment he had experienced there, and the
-epithets applied to him by the Countess.
-
-Suddenly he observed near him, while lingering over his wine in the
-speise-saal, which had emptied of guests, the Baron Rhineberg and, of
-all men in the world, Baron Grünthal, busy with their meerschaums and
-tankards of beer. Both seemed very quiet and taciturn; they had been
-speaking very little, which perhaps was the reason that, in his
-abstraction, they had hitherto been unnoticed by Charlie, who now
-held up the _Staats Anzeiger_ between them and him, as he had no wish
-to be recognised by either. However, they were a link between him
-and Frankenburg, so he could not help listening intently to whatever
-they said.
-
-They were talking at slow intervals of some recent sorrow they had
-sustained; but so great was the slaughter of the French war, that
-everyone in Germany then was wearing crape or mourning for the loss
-of some friend.
-
-'Ach Gott--yes,' said Rhineberg; 'it is certainly a great calamity
-even to the city of Aachen.'
-
-'When I saw the black flag flying on the old Schloss,' responded
-Grunthal, 'and the hatchment with its sixteen quarters over the gate,
-I--I knew that the dreaded event had taken place at last.'
-
-'That we had lost a dear friend?'
-
-'Yes. The poor old Graf!' said Grünthal, with a sigh.
-
-Charlie felt startled--almost inclined to speak and discover himself,
-but restrained the inclination, and listened intently, thinking,
-'Well, the poor old veteran of Ligny and Waterloo could not be
-expected to live for ever.'
-
-'He has never suffered more, I think,' said Rhineberg, after taking a
-long pull at his pipe, and watching the smoke thoughtfully as it
-ascended in concentric rings towards the lofty ceiling of the
-speise-saal, 'never, since that morning when the devilish _Extra
-Blatt_ had in it the mutilated telegram concerning the capture of
-Heinrich by the Francs-Tireurs.'
-
-'And the severe wounding--was it not mortally?--of the Englander,
-Herr Pierrepont,' added Grunthal, with something in his throat that
-sounded, as Charlie thought, exceedingly like a chuckle of
-satisfaction.
-
-But Heinrich, his dear friend and comrade, had been taken by the
-Francs-Tireurs! Knowing, from experience, how the Francs-Tireurs and
-the Prussians were in the habit of handling each other, this was an
-event to cause him anxiety, but, as it happened, only for a few
-minutes.
-
-Would the death of the Count in any way release Ernestine from
-parental thraldom? Though he felt genuine sympathy for her natural
-grief, he could not very much regret the event; 'and yet,' thought
-Charlie, 'the poor old fellow was always kind to me.'
-
-'It is most fortunate,' said Rhineberg, after a little pause, 'that
-the young Graf Heinrich is at home during such a terrible crisis.'
-
-'Most fortunate for his mother, and all.'
-
-So Heinrich was at Frankenburg, and not with the old 95th before the
-walls of Paris! This was indeed most welcome news for Charlie! More
-than once he had been on the verge of speaking, as his curiosity had
-been keenly excited, but repressed the inclination; he did not wish
-that his presence in Aix should be known to the Countess, and to
-address Grünthal, his acknowledged rival, or competitor, rather, was
-altogether an intolerable idea, so quitting the speise-saal softly,
-he hastened to his own room.
-
-Then he wrote rapidly a long and explanatory letter to Ernestine,
-full of all the deepest, most tender, and passionate thoughts of his
-heart, telling her of his presence at Aix, and beseeching her to meet
-him. He recalled the dream in which she had asked him to meet him at
-Burtscheid.
-
-'At Burtscheid, be it,' he wrote, 'at the same hour, dear, dear
-Ernestine, when last we met there; and I shall give you a strange
-souvenir of the war--the bullet that pierced my breast, and has been
-the means, perhaps, of keeping me so long from you. At Burtscheid,
-then, my darling.'
-
-This letter he despatched under cover to Heinrich, and felt more
-happy and composed than he had been since last he saw her.
-
-He knew that his letter would be delivered by the post at Frankenburg
-in the morning.
-
-Probably Heinrich would visit his hotel during the day, and he knew
-that at all risks--unless something most extraordinary
-intervened--Ernestine, who had such strength of will, would contrive
-to meet him in the old church.
-
-All the following day Charlie lingered about the Grand Monarque, but
-Heinrich never came; doubtless the business or calamity to which the
-Barons referred had detained him.
-
-Then a fear came over Charlie that the same event might prevent
-Ernestine meeting him, as she might be deprived of her brother's
-escort.
-
-But if she failed to come, a messenger of some kind might meet him at
-Burtscheid.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII.
-
-AT BURTSCHEID.
-
-'In five hours--in four--in two,' and so on he reckoned, 'I shall see
-her again--my darling! my darling!'
-
-At last the wished-for time came when he was to set forth on that
-walk which--he fondly, ardently, and tenderly hoped--was to end in
-_her_ presence; but, as he walked down the leafless avenue from the
-city, he felt his heart become tremulous, almost sick with anxiety
-and fear, lest she should be unable to meet him, even after all the
-months of separation undergone; yet his was a heart that never
-quailed, even when he faced that battery in the wood--a battery that
-was not of cannon, but mitrailleuses!
-
-Anon as he proceeded, something of Ernestine's high and strange
-enthusiasm gathered in his breast.
-
-Even if he were fated never to wed her, he felt that she was the one
-great passion of his life, a worship almost spiritualized, and that
-beyond the trammels of this material world, he would follow her,
-faithful and unchanged, into that to come.
-
-Then he almost smiled to think how German the tone of his mind was
-becoming.
-
-The evening sky was cloudless, and wore a kind of pale violet tint,
-amid which the stars sparkled out brilliantly.
-
-The trees of the avenue between the city and Burtscheid were covered
-with rimy frost, which made their branches seem to coruscate and
-glitter in myriad prisms. Frost was on the pathway; it shone on the
-stems and twigs, on the stalks and blades of the wayside plants; snow
-covered all the district, yet the air was far from being cold.
-
-At last the old church of Burtscheid rose before him again. In
-another minute or two, he would have clasped her to his breast, where
-he had clasped her last--at the altar-rail--when those sad and sweet
-and solemn vows were interchanged.
-
-In that moment the campaign in Alsace and Lorraine, danger, duty,
-wound, and suffering, were all forgotten; nothing was in his mind but
-the intense happiness of the event to come.
-
-He was conscious enough of the tombs and cypresses, the pillars and
-obelisks, standing grimly up from the snow-clad graves; of the dusky
-outlines of various distant buildings; of red lights streaming from
-windows out upon the gloom; and he could see the pale silver crescent
-of the new moon peeping sharply up above the black outline of the
-Schloss of Frankenburg.
-
-He heard the faint whisper of the ivy leaves on the old wall; but all
-as one might do in a dream.'
-
-He threw away the end of his cigar, and thought,
-
-'I should not have been smoking when coming to meet _her_.'
-
-No britzka or other carriage stood before the gate. Heinrich was not
-there as escort; neither was the old butler or any other servant
-there in attendance.
-
-So, as the evening was clear and fine, she must have come alone to
-meet him, that they might have the joy of walking back to the Schloss
-together!
-
-He entered the church. It was gaily decorated for the coming
-Christmas-eve.
-
-No one was in the church, and Charlie's heart began at once to sink,
-when there was a sound behind him, and coming down two steps, from a
-door that he had not observed before, was his own Ernestine.
-
-'Carl! Carl! It is thee! Thee, at last!' she exclaimed, in a
-piercing voice, and, with innocent self-abandonment and a tenderness
-that was irrepressible, but peculiarly her own, she flung herself
-into his arms, as on that night in the boudoir.
-
-She was dressed as if for a ball or some great festival; but Carl
-remembered that this was Christmas-time, always a season of gaiety at
-Frankenburg as elsewhere.
-
-Her dress was white silk, covered with waves of the finest white
-lace. A great veil of the latter material enveloped her head and
-shoulders.
-
-She wanted but a white wreath to make her look like a lovely bride,
-and Charlie's heart throbbed with pride and joy to think that she was
-his own.
-
-He thought she looked pale and tired. It might be--nay, doubtless,
-it must be--that the months of past anxiety had told upon her system
-as on his own.
-
-Yet her eyes had all the tender purity of an angel's in them, though
-when she became excited there came over them a strange glitter, a
-restless flashing, a sparkling animation, that contrasted strongly
-with the languor of her form and actions; but happily there was no
-fever flush on her cheek, which was pale--paler than of old, as
-Charlie thought.
-
-Long and silent was their embrace ere they spoke in broken accents of
-all they had mutually undergone; and, while speaking, her head
-nestling as it used to do on Charlie's neck, she shuddered sometimes,
-for she seemed to be sorely chilled by the damp cold atmosphere of
-the old church.
-
-'Are all well at the Schloss?' asked Charlie suddenly, after a pause,
-as the last evening's conversation recurred to him.
-
-'All! Thank Heaven!' replied Ernestine.
-
-'And your father, the Herr Graf?'
-
-'Well, too.'
-
-Charlie was puzzled. He must have been in a dream, or have
-misunderstood the remarks of the two barons.
-
-'Is Heinrich with the regiment?' he asked.
-
-'No,' she replied, 'dear Heinrich is at the Schloss, and this morning
-put your letter into my hand; and then, after, to tease or please me,
-in my bosom. See, it is there now!' she added, in the most engaging
-manner.
-
-'You found no difficulty in coming to meet me, dearest?'
-
-'None.'
-
-'How fortunate--how happy we are!'
-
-'My poor Carl!'
-
-'Why poor? I feel to-night the happiest man in Germany.'
-
-'I was resolved to meet you, at all risks, my darling. A faith
-plighted--a promise made is holy, Carl--holy to God and man. I
-promised to be here, Carl, in a dream that I had of you; and by a
-strange chance I have been permitted to come--to be here, to see you,
-feel your strong but tender arm round me once more. Oh, Carl, kiss
-me once again, as you did on that day in the Hoch Munster when first
-you said you loved me.'
-
-'Ernestine, what do you mean?' asked Charlie, eyeing her with some
-anxiety, and impressed with a strange fear by the solemnity of her
-manner.
-
-'I belong no longer to myself.'
-
-'To whom, then? Heavens!' he added, starting, 'you have not become
-the wife of that man!'
-
-'Who?'
-
-'Baron Grünthal.'
-
-'Oh, no; how could you think of such a thing for a moment, Carl?' she
-said, with a bitter smile, while looking down and playing with a ring
-he had given her in other days.
-
-'Then to whom do you belong?' he asked, fondly.
-
-'My love--to you!'
-
-She put up her little face tenderly to his, and then looked away,
-with the weary, wistful expression of those who have long lived in
-some world of their own, and can never seem to see out beyond the
-present.
-
-'We were betrothed together for life and death, Carl.'
-
-'Were--_are_, you mean, Ernestine.'
-
-'Yes, beloved Carl; but time presses--alas! I fear that I must leave
-you now.'
-
-'But to meet again----'
-
-'Very soon.'
-
-'I have brought these for you from Lorraine. This is the bullet that
-struck me down, and this cross is a trophy of the war.'
-
-'How pretty--nay, it is beautiful and interesting, too,' she
-exclaimed, with something of her old gleeful way, as he clasped round
-her slender throat a gold necklet he had procured in Aix, and now the
-white enamelled cross hung thereat.
-
-She shuddered when she looked at the chassepot ball and took it in
-her hand.
-
-'And this actually pierced you, my Carl?'
-
-'Nearly through and through, love. For five days it was in
-unpleasant proximity to my lungs.'
-
-'It is indeed a relic,' said she, while placing it in the bosom of
-her dress.
-
-'So--so,' said she, sadly, disengaging herself from his arms, 'our
-love has been sanctified by danger and death.'
-
-'Great Heavens!' thought Carl, 'sorrow has turned her brain!'
-
-'It has _not_,' she said; 'do not think so.'
-
-'What is not? I did not speak,' said Carl.
-
-'No, but you thought; and I know what you thought, and there is no
-living grace or glory like a love so sanctified as ours, Carl.'
-
-He regarded her with a bewilderment not unmixed with alarm.
-
-There was a strange wild and weird beauty in her pale face--a
-radiance in her eyes, a brightness all over her such as Charlie had
-never before witnessed.
-
-Whence did it come? From the altar-lights?
-
-They were too dim.
-
-What did it mean? Was it her natural beauty only, magnified by the
-force of his imagination, and enhanced by his great love for her?
-
-Somehow Charlie was perplexed and startled by her, amid all the
-transport and joy of the time.
-
-Suddenly there was a sound of wheels and horses' hoofs without, then
-of several feet ringing on the hard and frozen churchyard path.
-
-Ernestine started, and exclaimed in a voice husky, as it seemed, with
-alarm--
-
-'They are coming--my father and that dreadful Baron! I must leave
-you, beloved Carl--but only for a time; we shall meet again where
-even they can separate us no more!'
-
-She turned, and flying like a phantom, hurried through the little
-door by which she had entered the church; and Charlie Pierrepont,
-feeling certain that their interview had been discovered--that they
-had come in pursuit of her in ire and indignation, and that there
-would be a scene which he was most anxious to avoid--looked hastily
-round the little church for a place of concealment.
-
-There was none; so he resolved to make the best of it, and turned to
-the doorway just as the portly old Count of Frankenburg, the Baron
-Grünthal, limping as usual with gout, and Heinrich entered the church
-together.
-
-
-
-
-CONCLUSION.
-
-They were all in evening costume--that sombre attire in which the
-modern gentleman may attend a funeral by day, and a ball by night,
-without change; and they all looked pale, harassed, and grave.
-
-'Oh, Herr Graf von Frankenburg, if you have a human heart----'
-Charlie was beginning, anxious to propitiate the father of her he
-loved so dearly, when the Count, waving his hand, interrupted him,
-and said:
-
-'Herr Lieutenant, I can well afford to forgive the past now, and your
-rash love for my daughter.'
-
-'Herr Graf, I thank you--I thank you!' exclaimed Charlie, with warmth
-and gratitude; for he expected high words, anger, and fierce
-reproaches.
-
-'Carl, my dear friend,' said Heinrich, taking his hand kindly in both
-of his, while his eyes filled with genuine emotion, 'you here!--you
-here after all!'
-
-'You got my letter and gave it to her--to Ernestine?'
-
-'To her--yes; but alas! Carl, it came too late.'
-
-'Too late!--too late! How?'
-
-'Do you not know? have you not heard? Poor Carl! poor Carl!' said
-Heinrich, in a voice full of sympathy.
-
-'What do you mean?' asked Charlie, in great perplexity.
-
-'He means, Mein Herr,' said the Count, in a broken voice, 'that our
-beloved Ernestine died at noon yesterday.'
-
-Charlie passed a hand across his brow, and looked wildly in their
-faces, as if doubting their sanity or his own.
-
-'Died!' he repeated mechanically.
-
-'It is incomprehensible your being here,' said the Count, in a still
-more broken voice, and few could have seen that old man weeping
-unmoved, 'as her last words were, "Meet me at Burtscheid--at
-Burtscheid, dearest Carl."'
-
-'And I _have_ met her, seen her, spoken with her not two minutes
-since.'
-
-'My poor friend,' said Heinrich, 'grief, or your wound, has turned
-your brain.'
-
-'What madness is this?' asked Charlie, with a kind of bitter laugh in
-his voice, as he felt in no humour for jesting. 'Herr Graf, Herr
-Baron, Heinrich, my friend, Ernestine has been here with me, in this
-lonely church, for fully two hours!'
-
-'And _spoken_ with you?' said the Count, in an excited tone. 'Oh, if
-it should be that she still lives!'
-
-'Lives!--great Heaven! Herr Graf--she was here with me, and I gave
-her a French cross with the bullet that wounded me.'
-
-'He raves!' said the Baron Grunthal, with anger in his tone.
-
-'She is there--in that room off the church.'
-
-'In that room sure enough. It is the Dead Chamber,' said the Count,
-approaching the door.
-
-'She fled there for concealment on hearing your approach.'
-
-'Man,' said the old Count, pausing, 'are you not mad to tell me that
-she is there now, and yet was here but a minute ago?'
-
-'As I have Heaven to answer to--she was!'
-
-'Follow me, then.'
-
-On entering the room, Charlie Pierrepont reeled, and would have
-fallen had not Heinrich supported him.
-
-We scarcely know how to write of the episode that follows, and can
-but tell the tale as it was told by those who were cognisant of it.
-
-In a purple velvet coffin, mounted with silver, and supported on
-trestles, the lid being open, lay Ernestine, dressed as we have
-described her--dead, stone-dead, cold and pale as marble, her lips a
-pale blue streak, her long eyelashes closed for ever.
-
-Dead, beyond a doubt, was the girl he had clasped in his arms as a
-living being, but a few minutes before living and full of volition
-and life, love and energy; the lips he had kissed closed thus for
-ever; the hands he had caressed, snow-white now, disposed upon her
-bosom, the upper one holding the cross he had given her!
-
-'Dead! What miracle of heaven; what magic of hell is here!' he
-exclaimed, as he staggered to the side of the coffin, pale as the
-girl who lay in it, the bead-like drops oozing from his temples as he
-grasped the locks above them. 'Speak! oh, speak, Heinrich!'
-
-How terribly now came back to memory some of the strange things
-Ernestine had said to him, and more than all, those dying words of
-the French captain in the Chateau de Colombey, which sounded like
-something between a prophecy and a curse!
-
-'Compose yourself, Carl,' said Heinrich, full of pity.
-
-'My letter to her--written after she was dead,' said Charles, in a
-voice like a whisper--'she--she----'
-
-'I placed it in her coffin ere she was brought here from the
-Schloss,' said Heinrich, who was now weeping freely; 'it is there
-now--and heavens, father! she _has_ round her neck the cross of which
-Carl spoke.'
-
-There are many things but imperfectly known in 'our philosophy,' and
-certainly this seemed one of them.
-
-'She died talking of you--not raving--the poor angel,' said the old
-Count, as he bent fondly over the coffined girl, 'but smiling
-sweetly, and saying earnestly, again and, again, that she would meet
-you at Burtscheid.'
-
-* * * * *
-
-The gloomy half-lighted chamber in which this scene took place, and
-where the dead girl lay, looking so sweetly placid in her coffin, was
-one of those, where, in conformity with the police regulations of
-Germany in general, the bodies of persons deceased are placed within
-twelve hours after death--there to await interment.
-
-In many places, more particularly at Frankfort, to guard against the
-chances of burial in cases of suspended animation, the fingers of the
-dead are placed in the loops of a bell-rope, attached to an alarm
-clock, which is fixed in the apartment of the attendant appointed to
-be on the watch.
-
-The least pulsation in the body would give the alarm, when medical
-aid would instantly be called in.
-
-Ernestine had a watcher in an adjoining room! but that worthy was
-found in the enjoyment of a profound slumber, and so had neither
-heard nor seen anything.
-
-This strange story found its way into the _Aix Gazette_ and the
-_Extra Blatt_.
-
-Some averred that Charlie Pierrepont, on discovering her body in the
-chamber of Death, had gone mad and had imagined the whole interview
-in the church; others, that it was really a case of suspended
-animation, and that she had recovered for a time, and actually kept
-her tryst; but the former idea was the predominant one.
-
-Certain it is that for many weeks after the event Charlie seemed to
-hover between life and death, sanity and insanity, at the Grand
-Monarque; and when he rejoined the Thuringianas before the walls of
-Paris, he had become so haggard, grey-haired, and old-looking, that
-his former comrades scarcely recognised him, so much had he undergone
-by a fever of the mind, rather than of the body.
-
-
-When these dreadful events were soothed by time, though not forgotten
-at Frankenburg, and when the summer flowers were blooming over
-Charlie's grave--a grave which he found under the guns of Mont
-Valerien--the young Graf Heinrich was married to his cousin Herminia
-by the Herr Pastor Von Puffenvörtz, in the church of Burtscheid,
-when, as if no sorrow had preceded the ceremony, all indeed went
-merrily as a 'marriage bell.'
-
-
-
-THE END.
-
-
-
-BILLING AND SONS, PRINTERS, GUILDFORD AND LONDON.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Dead Tryst, by James Grant
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The dead tryst, by James Grant</p>
-<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
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-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The dead tryst</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: James Grant</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: August 19, 2022 [eBook #68789]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Al Haines</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE DEAD TRYST ***</div>
-
-<h1>
-<br /><br />
- THE DEAD TRYST<br />
-</h1>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- BY<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t2">
- JAMES GRANT<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t4">
- AUTHOR OF 'THE ROMANCE OF WAR'<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- LONDON<br />
- GEORGE ROUTLEDGE AND SONS<br />
- BROADWAY, LUDGATE HILL<br />
- NEW YORK: 9, LAFAYETTE PLACE<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- 1883<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- JAMES GRANT'S NOVELS,<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- <i>Price 2s. each, Fancy Boards.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- The Romance of War<br />
- The Aide-de-Camp<br />
- The Scottish Cavalier<br />
- Bothwell<br />
- Jane Seton: or, the Queen's Advocate<br />
- Philip Rollo<br />
- The Black Watch<br />
- Mary of Lorraine<br />
- Oliver Ellis: or, the Fusileers<br />
- Lucy Arden: or, Hollywood Hall<br />
- Frank Hilton: or, the Queen's Own<br />
- The Yellow Frigate<br />
- Harry Ogilvie: or, the Black Dragoons<br />
- Arthur Blane<br />
- Laura Everingham: or, the Highlanders of Glenora<br />
- The Captain of the Guard<br />
- Letty Hyde's Lovers<br />
- Cavaliers of Fortune<br />
- Second to None<br />
- The Constable of France<br />
- The Phantom Regiment<br />
- The King's Own Borderers<br />
- The White Cockade<br />
- First Love and Last Love<br />
- Dick Rooney<br />
- The Girl he Married<br />
- Lady Wedderburn's Wish<br />
- Jack Manly<br />
- Only an Ensign<br />
- Adventures of Rob Roy<br />
- Under the Red Dragon<br />
- The Queen's Cadet<br />
- Shall I Win Her?<br />
- Fairer than a Fairy<br />
- One of the Six Hundred<br />
- Morley Ashton<br />
- Did She Love Him?<br />
- The Ross-shire Buffs<br />
- Six Years Ago<br />
- Vere of Ours<br />
- The Lord Hermitage<br />
- The Royal Regiment<br />
- Duke of Albany's Own Highlanders<br />
- The Cameronians<br />
- The Scots Brigade<br />
- Violet Jermyn<br />
- Jack Chaloner<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- CONTENTS.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- CHAPTER<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- I. <a href="#chap01">TWO COUSINS</a><br />
- II. <a href="#chap02">CHARLIE PIERREPONT</a><br />
- III. <a href="#chap03">THE DREADED MEETING</a><br />
- IV. <a href="#chap04">CHARLIE IN LOVE</a><br />
- V. <a href="#chap05">WHAT HAPPENED IN THE DOM KIRCHE</a><br />
- VI. <a href="#chap06">AN ALARM</a><br />
- VII. <a href="#chap07">AMONG THE BREAKERS</a><br />
- VIII. <a href="#chap08">CHARLIE'S VISITOR</a><br />
- IX. <a href="#chap09">FOR LIFE AND DEATH</a><br />
- X. <a href="#chap10">TO THE RHINE!</a><br />
- XI. <a href="#chap11">SEPARATED</a><br />
- XII. <a href="#chap12">THE BAPTISM OF FIRE</a><br />
- XIII. <a href="#chap13">THE DREAM IN THE BIVOUAC</a><br />
- XIV. <a href="#chap14">THE LETTER OF ERNESTINE</a><br />
- XV. <a href="#chap15">WHAT THE 'EXTRA BLATT' TOLD</a><br />
- XVI. <a href="#chap16">IN FRONT OF METZ</a><br />
- XVII. <a href="#chap17">FACING A BATTERY OF MITRAILLEUSES</a><br />
- XVIII. <a href="#chap18">IN THE ENEMY'S HANDS</a><br />
- XIX. <a href="#chap19">THE CHATEAU DE CAILLÉ</a><br />
- XX. <a href="#chap20">ERNESTINE</a><br />
- XXI. <a href="#chap21">AT AIX ONCE MORE</a><br />
- XXII. <a href="#chap22">AT BURTSCHEID</a><br />
- <a href="#chap23">CONCLUSION</a><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap01"></a></p>
-
-<p class="t2">
-THE DEAD TRYST.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER I.
-<br /><br />
-THE COUSINS.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-On an evening in summer before the late siege of Paris,
-three ladies&mdash;one a matron of mature years, the other two
-both young and handsome girls, a brunette and a blonde&mdash;were
-seated in one of the lofty windows of a stately room
-on the first <i>étage</i> of the Grand Hotel Royal, which
-immediately overlooks the Rhine at Cologne.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The senior of these&mdash;Adelaide, Countess of Frankenburg,
-a woman grey-haired now, and with features somewhat of
-the heavy German type&mdash;had just received a letter, and was
-intent upon it, while her daughter Ernestine, and her orphan
-niece Herminia, watched her face with interest, and forgot
-the little Tauchnitz editions over which they had been
-idling.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What does my brother Heinrich say?' asked Ernestine.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'That he has got extended leave of absence from Potsdam,
-and next week will arrive at Frankenburg, to spend some
-time with us. He brings with him a young English friend,
-Carl Pierrepont, an officer of his regiment. I trust,
-Herminia, you will receive my dear boy with all the affection he
-so justly merits.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But Herminia made no reply, so the Countess repeated
-what she had said, and fixed her eyes steadily and inquiringly
-upon her. She only sighed, opened, and then tossed aside
-her Tauchnitz edition of an English novel. The Countess's
-ideas of propriety would not permit her to allow her girls
-to peruse any other light literature; but having an idea that
-a married woman might read works of a higher-flavoured
-nature, she sometimes read the works of MM. Dumas and
-De Kock, to 'keep up her French,' as she phrased it
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The cousins&mdash;known as 'the Belles of Frankenburg'&mdash;were
-alike in stature and delicacy, but very dissimilar in
-style of beauty and in complexion. Herminia was dazzlingly
-fair, of a pure Saxon type, with hair of that lovely
-brown tint which seems shot with gold in the sunshine, and
-soft eyes of violet-blue, that seemed almost black at night,
-and though brown her tresses, and wondrously fair her skin,
-her eyelashes and eyebrows were dark, almost black; but
-her pretty little nose bordered rather on the <i>retroussé</i>.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Ernestine was a dark beauty, with black hair and clear,
-but thoughtful and dreamy hazel eyes, which she inherited
-with the blood of some Hungarian ancestor; her whole style
-was more classic than that of her cousin. Her nose was
-slightly aquiline, with dark straight eyebrows that nearly
-met over it, imparting a great degree of character to her
-face, which was suggestive of decision of mind and firmness
-of purpose&mdash;a little self-willed and opinionated, perhaps;
-for Ernestine was not without her faults. She was fond of
-admiration; but what pretty girl is not? She liked dress
-and gaiety, and would dance all night if her partners pleased
-her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Countess carefully folded her son's letter, and fixing
-her keen grey eyes on Herminia, said, somewhat sententiously:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Though an old man now, the father of my Heinrich was
-as brave a soldier as ever trod the soil of Germany, and his
-name is yet venerated among the Uhlans of the Archduke;
-and I am proud to say, Herminia, that his son is worthy of
-such a father.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Were my cousin the Archduke himself,' said Herminia,
-wearily, for she was pretty well used to hear these encomiums,
-'he would be totally indifferent to me.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Herminia!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Totally, I repeat. Pardon me, dear Aunt Adelaide;
-but he has no particular claim on my regard.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'He is your cousin, your own blood relation&mdash;near almost
-as a brother!' said the Countess, impatiently.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But still, mamma, as I have said a hundred times before,
-he can have no claim upon her hand,' urged Ernestine, who
-had not yet spoken on the subject.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Do you, Grafine, wish to abet Herminia in her strange
-contumacy?' asked the Countess, severely.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I speak but my thoughts, dearest mamma.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Her father, the Staats Rath, gave her away to him as a
-child; but you, as well as I do, know the arrangement made
-by our family; they were betrothed when she was in her
-cradle, and he a schoolboy at Bonn; and now he comes to
-claim her hand, in virtue of that betrothal,' added the
-Countess, who, though a German, had considerable nobility
-and dignity in her bearing and aspect.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Such foolish arrangements may have been made long
-ago, Aunt Adelaide, when robber-barons lived in those ruined
-castles which look down from every rock upon the Rhine;
-but such would be absurd in these days of ours, when its
-waters are ploughed up by steamers, and the lurlies and elves
-have all been put to flight.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Herminia,' said the Countess, with increasing severity,
-'do you revere the memory of the Baron and Privy
-Councillor your father?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I do, indeed, Aunt Adelaide; my father's memory is
-very dear to me, even as that of my dead mother, whom I
-never saw,' replied the girl, with her eyes growing moist;
-'but I decline to admit the right of either to give me, while
-yet a helpless child, away to anyone in marriage. The idea
-is eccentric; it is more, it is odious and preposterous!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You use somewhat strong language, Grafine.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Surely not stronger than the situation merits?' replied
-Herminia, her soft voice trembling with agitation and
-annoyance. 'If my cousin Heinrich is unmanly enough to
-insist upon the fulfilment of this most absurd family
-compact, I shall ever deem him most unworthy of my regard,
-or, indeed, that of any woman!' added Herminia, whose
-tears now began to fall.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Then it is your resolution to violate, to trample upon, to
-utterly disregard the affectionate contract made by your
-parents and by his?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But I have never seen this&mdash;this most tiresome cousin,
-Aunt Adelaide!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'That has been a misfortune caused by your being educated
-in England, while he was at the university, and then with
-the army.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Hence he is to me a stranger, and must be greeted and
-received as such.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I think my brother Heinrich is acting foolishly in bringing
-the English friend (of whom he writes so frequently) to
-Frankenburg,' said Ernestine.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why?' asked the Countess.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Because Herminia, in the very spirit of opposition, may
-fall in love with <i>him</i>.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'My father could not have taken a surer way to make me
-shun and loathe my cousin, and even do something more
-dreadful still, than by forming this arrangement.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Something more dreadful still!' repeated the Countess,
-raising her voice, and surveying her niece through her gold
-eyeglass. 'In Heaven's name, what <i>do</i> you mean,
-Herminia?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'By compelling me to marry a man I don't love; for
-what happiness could follow a union with a total stranger?
-Besides, I don't want to marry.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Your own cousin a stranger?' persisted the Countess.
-'But though we have discussed this subject a thousand
-times before, there is one feature in it to which I have never
-referred, and which, consequently, will be <i>new</i> to you.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I am glad to hear <i>that</i>,' replied the contumacious little
-beauty, shrugging her pretty shoulders and almost yawning.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I mean a clause in your father's will, by which, if you
-do not marry our Heinrich, your fortune will be divided
-between him and your cousin Ernestine,&mdash;leaving you, in
-fact, without a silver groschen.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I would not have a kreutzer of it&mdash;neither, I am sure,
-would Heinrich!' exclaimed Ernestine, emphatically.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Neither of you would be consulted in the matter. But
-now, Herminia, will you brave the prospect of poverty&mdash;a
-life of utter dependence&mdash;go back to England as a governess,
-perhaps?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes,' said the girl proudly; 'I would brave anything.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You love some one else!' exclaimed her aunt.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I have never said so,' replied Herminia, with a perceptible
-tremor in her sweet voice; 'but no doubt it is this
-fortune of which you speak that Heinrich wants.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Did he want it when you were in your cradle, and he
-was carrying his satchel at Bonn?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I should think not; but he may want it now, after some
-years spent in the army.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Shame! you forget yourself, Herminia&mdash;forget that you
-speak of your own cousin&mdash;of <i>my</i> son. It is much more
-likely that some adventurous friend, some acquaintance,
-whom you have picked up here is thinking of your fortune,
-than my dear Heinrich.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The old lady's eyes were actually filled with tears, and
-after a pause she said:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I regret, Herminia, that I ever sent you to England.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why, dearest aunt?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Because those English girls, your school companions
-there, have indoctrinated you with preposterous ideas of
-female independence&mdash;right of choice, and so forth; and
-now that I think of it, <i>who</i> is that gentleman with whom you
-waltz so frequently?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Waltz, aunt?' said the girl, in a low voice.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And who gave you, last night, that rose which you now
-wear in your breast?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Last night, aunt?' faltered Herminia, now blushing
-deeply, while Ernestine laughed mischievously.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Don't repeat my words, please. Yes, last night, when
-the band of the Uhlans was playing in the garden of the
-Prinz Carl?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Herr Ludwig Mansfeld.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And how came you to know him?' asked the Countess,
-severely, adding, 'I hope he is not an officer from the
-barracks?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-(Such dreadful fellows 'those officers from the barracks'
-seem to be all the world over, from Canterbury to Cabul!)
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I met him first at a ball in the Kaiserlicher Hof, where
-the Master of the Ceremonies introduced him to me when
-you were playing cards in the ante-room. We dance
-frequently; and the introduction was unnecessary, according
-to our German ideas.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'In&mdash;deed!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Is there any harm in all that when he dances so
-delightfully?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And oh, how handsome he is!' exclaimed Ernestine.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I fear some harm has been done already; and I do not
-think that any gentleman should dance with a young lady
-before he has obtained the permission of her chaperone.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was now a pause, after which the Countess said:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The Count urges our return before Heinrich arrives; so
-we shall take the train to Aix-la-Chapelle to-morrow.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'So very soon, aunt?' said Herminia, growing pale.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'My dear, I am sorry to spoil your pleasure here; but
-to-morrow morning <i>we go</i>,' said the Countess, rising
-haughtily; 'come with me, Ernestine. I need your assistance
-with my correspondence.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The mother and daughter swept out of the room, their
-dresses&mdash;the rustling moiré of the Countess and the
-maize-coloured silk of Ernestine&mdash;gliding noiselessly over the
-varnished floor, and Herminia was left to her own sad
-reflections.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ich bin sehr böse!' (I am very angry) she heard the
-Countess exclaim, as the door closed, and then she heard
-her cousin make some laughing response.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How can Ernestine be so heartless?' thought the girl;
-'but, alas! she knows not what love is! To-morrow,' she
-exclaimed aloud&mdash;'to-morrow, I shall lose him, and perhaps
-for ever, my dear, dear Ludwig!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her handsome eyes were now welling over with hot, salt
-tears. She had her arms above her head, with her white
-slender fingers interlaced amid the coils of her beautiful
-brown hair; her eyes were cast mournfully upward; then
-she tore her fairy fingers asunder with a sob in her throat
-and let her hands drop by her side as she sank back in her
-chair.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Would to Heaven that I had never known him&mdash;that we
-had never, never come to Cologne,' she exclaimed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She felt that she must see Ludwig once again; but this
-dreadful cousin, how was he to be avoided?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-These two ideas filled her whole soul as she sat, silent and
-motionless, looking out on the view that lay before the hotel
-windows: the broad waters of the famous Rhine, shining
-redly in the light of the setting sun, covered with sailing
-vessels and steamers shooting to and fro, its great pontoon
-bridge, through which the current surged, the wilderness of
-roofs that formed the city&mdash;that Rome of the north which
-Petrarch apostrophized to Colonna&mdash;stretching far away,
-with the great masses of the unfinished cathedral, the dome
-of St. Gereon, with its three galleries, and the stately tower
-of St. Cunibert rising high in the air and casting mighty
-shadows eastward. But Herminia surveyed them all as one
-who was in a dream, and kept repeating to herself, as she
-drew the rose from her breast and pressed it to her trembling
-lips with all a young girl's fervour:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes&mdash;yes&mdash;I must see him once again, and then all will
-be over&mdash;over for ever!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She glanced at her watch, took her hat and gloves from a
-console table close by, and hastily and noiselessly quitted the
-room. Descending the great staircase of the hotel, she
-issued into the beautiful garden attached to it, and proceeded
-at once to a certain fountain, near which a gentleman was
-lingering. He hurried towards her, and took both her
-tremulous little hands within his own. He gazed tenderly
-into her eyes, and then scanned the windows of the hotel.
-Alas! too many overlooked them, so the longed-for kiss was
-neither given nor taken; and neither knew that at this very
-time, they were both seen by the Countess and the laughing
-Ernestine.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though in plain clothes, attired as a civilian, the soldier-like
-air of Ludwig Mansfeld would not conceal. He was
-dark-complexioned, especially for a German, with straight
-handsome features. He was closely shaven, all save a thick
-moustache, and he had tender brown eyes&mdash;tender, at least,
-when they looked into those of Herminia, who was now
-weeping freely.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Tears?' said he, inquiringly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, Ludwig, tears; I have much reason for them.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How, darling?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'We leave Cologne to-morrow.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ah! why so soon?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It is the resolve of my aunt.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And for where, darling?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Aix-la-Chapelle.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her lover's features brightened as she said this.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, my own one, I shall be there in a few days,' he
-whispered cheerfully; 'and if we are prudent, and watch
-well our opportunities, it will indeed be a very remarkable
-thing if we don't meet as often as we may desire.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But my cousin&mdash;this most odious <i>fiancé</i>&mdash;Heinrich von
-Frankenburg, joins us in a week from Potsdam, where, I
-understand, his regiment is stationed.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I have seen Frankenburg, and know that he has the
-reputation of being dangerously handsome; but I thought
-he was on leave of absence?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'So he has been. As for Aunt Adelaide, she is a tyrant,
-and I do believe would keep me in pinafores, if she could!'
-said Herminia bitterly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Herminia, dearest,' said the young man, while gazing at
-her lovingly, earnestly, and very keenly, 'you have never
-seen this wondrous cousin, to whom your family wish to
-assign you like a bale of goods?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, never even once, Ludwig; and to me he is an
-object of abhorrence!' she exclaimed passionately.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Excuse me, my love,' said Ludwig sadly; 'but I have a
-strange foreboding&mdash;a presentiment which comes to me
-unbidden, and seems to say that when you <i>do</i> see him, your
-present abhorrence may pass away, and&mdash;and a tender
-emotion take its place. The propinquity and charms given
-to a cousin are perilous for a secret lover like me.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Herminia now wept bitterly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ludwig, I could quarrel with you for such a cruel
-suspicion,' she sobbed out, 'but that we are, I fear me, now
-speaking together for the&mdash;the&mdash;the last time,' and, heedless
-of who might see the action, in the abandonment of her
-great grief, her head sank on his shoulder, and she nestled
-her sweet face in his neck.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Your tears, my own darling,' said he, 'are a rebuke, and
-more than a sufficient rebuke, for my suspicion; and bitter,
-indeed, would this parting-time have been to me, but for the
-knowledge&mdash;the sure conviction&mdash;that, even if a thousand
-cousins came, still we shall meet at Aix.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Herminia shook her head mournfully, and said, 'I pray to
-Heaven that it may be so, and with the hope these words
-inspire, I must now, dear, dear Ludwig, say&mdash;farewell!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And so they parted, with hearts that doubtless were aching
-sorely, for their future seemed dark and dubious. Yet he
-seemed more hopeful than her. He kissed her very
-tenderly, and, though his naturally brown cheek looked pale,
-she thought he smiled at their temporary separation&mdash;if
-temporary it was to be&mdash;more than she could account for.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But doubtless, lover-like, he had some bold plan in view.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yet it was a sad, sad smile my darling gave me,' thought
-the girl, as, with her veil closely drawn, she slowly and
-wearily ascended the great oak staircase to the <i>étage</i> off
-which her bed-room opened; 'but no doubt he only
-thought of cheering me.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Next morning the Countess's carriage took the trio to the
-Eisenbahnhof for Aix-la-Chapelle; and as Herminia from
-the swift-speeding train looked back to the sinking spires of
-Cologne, a curtain seemed to have fallen between her past
-and present existence.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And oh! how weary was the night that followed, when
-tossing restlessly, defiantly, and petulantly on her laced
-pillow, she lay in broken slumber, with tears matting her
-long and lovely eyelashes.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap02"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER II.
-<br /><br />
-CHARLIE PIERREPONT.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-A week after this, a drochski deposited a smart-looking
-young officer, in the uniform of the 95th Thuringian
-regiment&mdash;blue with red facings and silver epaulettes,
-spike-helmet and black belt&mdash;at the entrance of the Pariser Hof
-of Cologne, a comfortable and moderate hotel, suitable to
-that style of economy continental military men are usually
-constrained to practise.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though wearing the well-known uniform of the Prussian
-army, it was impossible not to recognize in the new arrival,
-as he sprang lightly up the steps of the hotel, that he was an
-Englishman, a genuine Briton, for he was the Carl Pierrepont
-mentioned by young Frankenburg in his letter to the
-Countess. Carl&mdash;or Charlie, as he was known when he was
-wont to hold his wicket in the playing-grounds of Rugby
-against the best bowler in the three hundred, and to con
-his studies in the white brick Tudor school-house, or in the
-long avenue called Addison's Walk&mdash;was a great favourite
-with all his regiment, and already had the honour of being
-specially noticed on parade by our Princess Royal when
-her husband was reviewing the Prussian troops, and of
-receiving from his hand the much-coveted Iron Cross when
-almost in his boyhood.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-One great cause, perhaps, of Charlie's popularity among
-the Thuringians was, that as an Englishman he was destitute
-of that aristocratic hauteur which causes the well-born
-German officer to regard all under his command as an
-inferior order of beings, a style of bearing and sentiment
-unknown alike in the armies of Britain and France.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His face was fair, his features handsome, and he was
-verging on thirty years of age. His character, like his
-figure, was fully developed and formed; the expression of
-his eyes betokened intelligence and promise; while his
-lithe and manly form had all that muscular strength and
-activity that women often prefer to intellect in men, and
-which is frequently the result of the out-door sports in the
-playgrounds of Rugby, Eton, and Harrow, a portion of our
-English system of education.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though the son of a fox-hunting Warwickshire squire,
-who knew every cover in Stoneleigh, the Brailes, and the
-Edgehills, the head of an old but certainly embarrassed
-family, so far as mortgages and so forth went, he was barely
-deemed among the wohlgeborn, according to the Prussian
-standard; and poor Charlie had nothing as yet but his
-epaulettes and sword, his pay as a soldier of Fortune, with
-the privileges usually accorded to Continental officers, such
-as going everywhere at half-price in virtue of their being in
-uniform&mdash;privileges which ours would decline 'with thanks.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Charlie Pierrepont was everywhere a great favourite with
-the other sex; and perhaps there was no species of flirtation
-in which he was not a skilled hand, and he had carefully
-studied the whole 'scale of familiarities, the gamut of
-love,' as he was wont to call it, from a touch of the hand
-or the elevation of an eyebrow, upward, to the extremity of
-tenderness; and thus much of his time had been passed
-pleasantly for some ten years in every garrison town between
-the Elbe and the Vistula; but he had always come off
-scot-free, for he was possessed, as we have said, of but his
-epaulettes and sword, while many of the girls he met were
-as finished flirts as himself; and some, after a short
-acquaintance, would show their hands with a laugh, and, as it were,
-throw up their cards.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Kellner! let me have a room on the lowest <i>étage</i> that
-is unoccupied,' said he, as his portmanteaus were carried in
-by the hausknecht.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, mein Herr,' replied the oberkellner, or head-waiter.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Is the young Count Von Frankenburg here&mdash;an officer
-of the Thuringians?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes; he is now at the <i>table d'hôte</i>. The bell has just
-rung, so mein Herr is exactly in time for dinner.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Very good.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'This way, mein Herr,' said the waiter, bowing; 'but,
-though in the Prussian uniform, I think the Herr is an
-Englishman.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How do you know that I am so?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Because I myself am one, and I recognized you by your
-voice.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And, sooth to say, Charlie was very unlike a German in
-that respect, and had the pleasantly modulated voice of a
-well-trained English gentleman, and few voices are more
-agreeable to listen to.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He entered the stately speise-saal, or dining-hall of the
-hotel, where the landlord, in the kindly German fashion,
-sat at the head of the table, presiding over all his guests,
-more than a hundred in number, and already the waiters
-were busy. A single glance showed Pierrepont where his
-comrade sat&mdash;a smart and handsome young officer in
-undress uniform, who was caressing a dark moustache, and
-making himself agreeable to a lady beside him. He rose
-and beckoned to the new arrival.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Welcome to Cologne, Carl!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Thanks, Heinrich. How are you?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They shook hands simply, as Charlie had a genuine
-English repugnance to salute a man in the German fashion
-on the cheek. He then took the chair which his friend,
-the Count, had reversed and placed against the table, for
-service beside his own.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Kellner! die speise-karte!' The wine card was called
-for next, and the serious business of the meal began, amid
-all that noise and hubbub peculiar to a German <i>table d'hôte</i>,
-where Counts and Barons, with ribbons and orders, may be
-seen handling their knives and forks like English ploughmen,
-and pretty frauleins tugging away at chicken bones
-with the whitest of teeth, and the most perfect air of
-self-possession. The first conversation was, of course, about
-the expected war concerning the Spanish succession, the
-political sketches in the <i>Kladderadatch</i>, the official accounts
-in the <i>Staats Anzeiger</i>; how all Paris was brimming over
-with enthusiasm, rage, and vengeance; that crowds were
-always in the streets shouting, 'Down with Prussia!' 'To
-the Rhine! to the Rhine!' 'To Berlin!' How the
-'Marseillaise' was being sung, and the hotel of the Prussian
-ambassador was only saved from total destruction by the
-intervention of the gendarmerie; for the time had now
-come when the Prussians spoke exultingly of Leipzig, even
-as the French did of Jena, and also raised the cry of 'To
-the Rhine!' while the national songs of the Fatherland were
-constantly sung in hoarse but martial chorus.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Dinner over, the lighted candles came, as a hint for the
-ladies to retire, and rising like a covey of partridges they
-withdrew. The cloth was removed, and fresh bottles of
-wine, or lager-beer, with tobacco and cigars, were provided
-on all hands, and the conversation became more general,
-and, if possible, more noisy than before.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As the subject of the coming war was discussed, many
-eyes were turned to the two friends in the uniform of the
-95th Thuringians, for both seemed gentlemen and soldiers,
-and no troops in the world look more like our own in bearing,
-and in firm, manly physique, than the Prussians. Charlie
-Pierrepont had acquired many of the ways of the latter,
-and would join, when on the march, 'Was is des Deutschen
-Vaterland,' as lustily as if his father had been some Rhenish
-Baron, and not a hearty Warwickshire squire.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I am already sick of this subject of the war,' said Charlie,
-as he lingered over a cigar; 'one hears so much of it
-everywhere. By the way, have you yet seen your fair cousin,
-Heinrich?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And found her charming?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Beyond my fondest hopes; but she knew not that I had
-seen her, nor, in truth, did I care much to intrude upon
-her.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Intrude!&mdash;upon your intended?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'That is the word,' said the Count, with a strange smile.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why, Herr Graf?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Don't "Herr Graf" me. Call me Heinrich.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A deuced fellow, named Ludwig Mansfeld (I found it so
-in the <i>Fremden Buch</i>, at the Grand Hotel), has cut me
-out&mdash;quite.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Have him out in another fashion, and I am the man to
-measure the ground for you.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Thanks, Carl, but I would rather fire at my own figure
-in a mirror,' said Frankenburg, laughing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You are sure your friends expect me at the Schloss?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, at Frankenburg; they are familiar with your name
-there. I have written so often of you to Ernestine, my
-sister.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'She was educated in England, I believe?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'With Herminia at the west end of London; so you and
-she will get on famously together. As you are a musician,
-you will like her immensely, Carl.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I have no doubt of that.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Little indeed could poor Charlie Pierrepont foresee all
-Ernestine was yet to be to him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I am a bad fellow, I fear,' said the Count reflectively;
-'I have trifled with too many women in my time, and fear
-that I am not worthy of this sweet cousin of mine, even if
-she would have me.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nay, nay, Heinrich&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Somebody writes, that "if we were all judged by our
-deservings, there is scarcely a man on earth would find a
-woman <i>bad</i> enough for him."'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'That is taking a low estimate of mankind in general.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And of the 95th Thuringians in particular,' added the
-young Count, laughing; 'to-morrow we shall start for
-Frankenburg in an open britzka&mdash;it is only twenty-five miles
-from this; and now, one bottle more of St. Julian, and
-then we shall go and see the girls at the gardens of the
-Prinz Carl.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Half German and half French&mdash;some of them are, no
-doubt, very pretty.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nay, I hope they are wholly German now. It was in
-those gardens I first met my beautiful cousin, with that
-devil of a fellow, who, somehow, got introduced to her.
-Let us go then; the band of the 76th Hanoverians plays
-there every evening. This time to-morrow will find us at
-dear old Frankenburg, where, as I shall have the girl all to
-myself, I hope to turn the flank of this Herr Mansfeld. I
-am in love with my cousin&mdash;actually in love with her at last.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'My simple comrade, of what are you talking? Is this
-any age of the world in which to wear your heart upon your
-sleeve? Is this fellow Mansfeld good-looking?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Rather,' said the Count, twirling the points of his
-moustaches, and eyeing himself complacently in the depths
-of a great mirror opposite; 'but I wish I had your general
-success, Carl.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'In what&mdash;I took honours in nothing at dear old Rugby.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Indeed&mdash;not even in flirtation?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'In that I might have had the golden medal, had golden
-medals been given for such excellence.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They assumed their spike helmets and swords, which the
-Prussian officers wear through a perforation in the left skirt,
-as their belt is worn under the coat, and thus bantering each
-other, cigar in mouth and arm-in-arm, they proceeded laughingly
-towards the crowded gardens of the Prinz Carl Hotel.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Next day saw them off for Frankenburg in an open
-britzka. The day was a lovely one in summer, and the
-scenery around them grand. Charlie, of course,
-apostrophized the Rhine, and quoted Byron. They passed Düren
-and the valley of the Ruhr, with the picturesque hamlet of
-Riedeggen perched on its lofty rock; Merodé, the cradle of
-the Merodeur; industrious Stolberg, with its château
-crowning a hill, and the beautiful wood named the Reichswald.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Young Frankenburg was in excellent spirits, and bantered
-the driver, calling him schwager (brother-in-law), a singular
-title for post-boys, and so forth, the origin of which is
-unknown. He was rather too liberal to him in the matter of
-trinkgeld (drink money); thus the britzka was driven at a
-thundering rate down that basin of beautiful hills which
-surround Aix, while Heinrich waved his forage-cap, and
-sung verses from the war-song of Arndt:
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- 'My own Fatherland, my brave Germany on!<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;We'll sing them a terrible strain.<br />
- For what ages ago, their vile policy won&mdash;<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Of Strasburg, of Metz, and Lorraine.<br />
- They shall hand it all back to the uttermost mite,<br />
- Since for life or for death they compel us to fight.<br />
- To shout, "To the Rhine, to the Rhine, and advance!<br />
- All Germany onward, and march into France!"'<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap03"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER III.
-<br /><br />
-THE DREADED MEETING.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-A week had passed away at Frankenburg, and the subject
-of the young Count's return&mdash;that event so dreaded by
-poor Herminia, from motives of delicacy, perhaps&mdash;had not
-been resumed, till the evening which saw him and his
-comrade driving through the beautiful scenery just referred
-to.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Dinner had been delayed, as the Count had telegraphed
-from the Pariser Hof that he was coming, and both the
-young ladies had made most careful toilettes, and perhaps
-sorely tried the temper of their attendants&mdash;Herminia, to
-please her watchful and somewhat suspicious aunt; Ernestine
-to please herself, and perhaps with a secret desire to
-please her brother's boasted friend, who, being an Englishman,
-would, she feared, be rather critical and fastidious.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And still further to achieve the laudable end of subduing
-him, she was now at her piano, practising sundry vapid
-fashionable songs which she had learned in England, just
-as our English girls strum German and Italian, learned,
-perhaps, at second hand from some poor needy governess.
-Most warmly had Heinrich written to her again and again
-about his English comrade, who had once actually fought a
-duel for him at Altona, when he was too ill to fight for
-himself, so Ernestine was all anxiety to know, receive, and
-thank him; for she doted on Heinrich, her only brother, as
-a loving, tender, and devoted sister alone can dote.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-During all the past week, Herminia had but one thought,
-especially when riding, driving, or walking abroad. Her
-lover had confidently promised to see her again, and to
-follow her to Frankenburg; but she had seen nothing of
-him, and no letter or note, however brief, had reached her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Why was this? She could find no answer in her heart,
-and doubt and anxiety cost her many tears in secret.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There had been great bustle and anticipation all day long
-in the somewhat secluded mansion in consequence of the
-expected arrival of the young Herr Graf and his friend.
-The family were to be 'not at home' to any visitors.
-Already Grunthal, Rheinburg, and sundry other Grafs had
-called in their ramshackle old-fashioned coaches and
-droschkies, covered with coats-of-arms exhibiting the usual
-German infinity of quarterings; and certain officials of
-Aix-la-Chapelle, with their wives, who, like other wives all over
-Germany, insisted upon taking the titles of their husbands'
-occupation, had been day after day leaving their cards,
-having heard that 'the Belles of Frankenburg had returned;'
-but now all were to be denied, and this afternoon was to be
-devoted to the only son of the house.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Countess, who, though a modern lady of fashion,
-requiring her novels, cushions, Spitz lap-dog in a basket,
-and the <i>Kladderadatch</i> to get through the day, was
-nevertheless, on the other hand, as thrifty a German housewife
-as any of the old school, had bustled about overseeing the
-culinary preparations, while her husband, Count Ulrich,
-who was passionately addicted to the pleasures of the chase,
-spent only half that day in the woods, and was now, with a
-huge pipe (having a china bowl and tassel) in his mouth,
-watching, like a sentinel, from a terrace before the
-drawing-room windows, the road that wound away towards
-Aix-la-Chapelle.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The once smart officer of Uhlans, who had ridden on old
-Blucher's staff at Waterloo, on that eventful day when the
-'Iron Duke' wept with joy to hear the boom of the
-Prussian cannon&mdash;the smart Lancer, of whom the Countess had
-boasted at the Grand Hotel, was somewhat obese now. He
-was, in fact, a very stout, bald-headed, and rather coarsely
-featured old Teuton, with a red ribbon (of course) at his
-button-hole, and a thick plain hoop on his marital finger, as
-all married men wear one in Germany.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had been kept uninformed, so far as Herminia knew,
-of her aversion to his son, and her very decided preference
-for a certain obscure Herr Mansfeld, whose image was
-rising painfully before her, as she, too, from time to time,
-looked down on the distant view, to where the spires of the
-Dom Kirche of Aix rose darkly up amid the ruddy haze of
-evening.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Countess could detect in the face and deportment
-of her niece that which the preoccupied or uninformed
-Count did not. It was but too evident that Herminia had
-passed a disturbed night, a restless and feverish day.
-Indeed, Ernestine admitted that she had heard her sighing
-and moaning in her sleep, and Herminia had quitted her
-couch that morning resolving to appeal to the chivalry, the
-manhood, the charity, and honour of her cousin to release
-her from the yoke, the thraldom his family had placed
-upon her, even with the loss of her fortune.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Ignorant of this resolution, the Countess took her niece's
-passive hand&mdash;and a lovely little hand it was&mdash;in hers, and
-said kindly but firmly&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Meine liebe, I trust that when our dear Heinrich arrives,
-you will not exhibit any unpleasant coldness towards him.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Can you expect me to exhibit warmth? Is he not an
-utter stranger save by name? Would warmth in me be
-modest or becoming, aunt? Besides&mdash;&mdash;' she paused, for
-tears choked her utterance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Do not be alarmed, mamma,' said Ernestine, as she
-looked laughingly back from her seat at the piano; 'I know
-our Heinrich to be so handsome and winning, that he will
-soon obliterate all recollection of our friend at the Grand
-Hotel.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ernestine,' said Herminia reproachfully, while she glanced
-nervously at the portly figure of her uncle, who was still
-watching the Aix road from the lofty terrace, where the
-box-trees were cut into strange and fantastic shapes, like lions
-and egg-cups, and where some stately peacocks strutted to
-and fro.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Frankenburg is situated on the summit of a tall rock that
-towers above the line of the Antwerp railway. The actual
-castle is a ruined and ivy-mantled tower of unknown, but
-fabulous, antiquity, as it is actually averred to have been a
-hunting seat of Charlemagne. A more modern edifice has
-been engrafted on it, and this formed at the time the
-residence of the Count's family. It had all the usual comforts
-of a fashionable German household; but there was still
-attached to it a banqueting-hall of the seventeenth
-century&mdash;the pride of Count Ulrich's heart&mdash;with its black oak
-roof, its rows of deer skulls and antlers, with all the
-implements for fishing, shooting, and hunting, hung upon the
-walls, pell-mell with fragments of armour and weapons of
-every kind, from the great glaives of the middle ages to
-muskets and sabres gleaned up by the Count at Ligny and
-Waterloo.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And there, at Christmas time, a tall fir-tree from the
-Reichswald; covered with toys and cakes, grotesque masks,
-<i>papier-maché</i> dolls, candles and shining lights, gladdened the
-hearts of the little tenantry, who were cuddled and kissed
-up and down by the hearty old Baron acting Father Christmas,
-with a mighty white beard, a cowl, and long wand;
-while Ernestine and Herminia glided about like good fairies,
-dispensing viands and wine to the sturdy Teutons and their
-blooming fraus, when the trees of the Reichswald were
-leafless and bare, and the branches glittered like silver and
-crystal in the frostwork, and the first snowdrops of the season
-were peeping up in sheltered spots, and the brown stacks of
-the last harvest were mantled with snow.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And on these annual festive occasions there was seen the
-Countess Adelaide, as lively and jovial at fifty, if not so
-pretty, as she was at fifteen. There, too, were the grim
-ancestry, the men and women of other days and years,
-looking down from their garlanded frames, in ruffs and
-stomachers, in breastplates or fardingales, just as Hans
-Holbein, Rubens, and others had depicted them, and looking
-as demure as if they had never flirted, squeezed hands
-under the tablecloth, known the use of the mistletoe, or
-been like other folks 'world without end.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Hoch! hoch! Gott in Himmel! here they come&mdash;here
-is our dear boy at last!' exclaimed the Count, clapping his
-fat pudgy hands, as the open britzka, drawn by a pair of
-sparkling bays, came suddenly in sight, with two officers in
-blue uniforms occupying the back seat. One of
-these&mdash;Heinrich, no doubt&mdash;was waving his forage-cap, and the
-vehicle was driven straight to the grand approach. The
-enthusiasm of the old veteran of Waterloo swelling up in his
-breast when he saw the uniform of the 95th, for
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- 'He thought of the days that had long since gone by,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;When his spirit was bold and his courage was high.'<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Herminia grew deadly pale, and took advantage of the
-Countess hurrying out upon the terrace to retire to her
-own room, whither, however, her watchful aunt almost
-immediately followed her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Dearest Aunt Adelaide, oh! spare me this great
-mortification!' intreated the trembling girl.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Spare you?' repeated her aunt, now seriously angry, in
-expectation of a public scene before Charlie Pierrepont, a
-stranger.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, I implore you to spare me the horror of this
-meeting. Oh, Ludwig!' she moaned in her heart, 'my own
-Ludwig!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I do not know whether you are most weak or defiant,'
-replied her aunt. 'I give you a quarter of an hour to recover
-your composure and to make your appearance properly in
-the drawing-room, with such a bearing as will not be an
-insult to my son, to the memory of your father, and our
-whole family.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And with these words the Countess swept haughtily away.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Herminia bathed her face and hands with eau-de-cologne
-and water, gave a finishing touch to her hair, kissed the
-envelope which contained the now dry and faded leaves of
-Ludwig's rose, placed it in her soft white bosom as a charm
-to strengthen her for the purpose she had in hand, and
-descended noiselessly to the drawing-room, when the sound
-of several voices, laughing loudly, jarred sorely on her ears
-and excited nerves.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She entered with her heavy eyelids drooping, and advanced
-with her gaze bent on the oak planks of the polished
-floor; then she shuddered as some one approached and
-took her unresisting hand.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Herminia, dearest, look up! look upon <i>me</i>!' said a
-familiar voice.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ludwig! my own Ludwig!' she exclaimed in astonishment&mdash;almost
-terror, to see him there, and in the uniform
-of the Thuringians, as he said&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And now, cousin, let me introduce you to my dear
-friend, Herr Carl Pierrepont of ours.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ludwig?' said the thoroughly bewildered girl.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No Ludwig at all,' he replied, laughing, and embracing
-her; 'but your own cousin, my belle&mdash;Heinrich of
-Frankenburg.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Aunt Adelaide!&mdash;Ernestine!&mdash;what <i>does</i> all this mean?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It means, my dear child,' said the Countess, laughing
-heartily at her niece's perplexity; 'it means that it was all
-a plot of Ernestine's and Heinrich's, too. They had early
-learned your repugnance to the plan of betrothal, when you
-were too young to consent or refuse, and we all saw the
-folly of a constraint that seemed so heart-sickening to you.
-Thus we arranged that you should meet him as a stranger
-under an assumed name. You have met, and know and
-love each other, so the tie of that love alone binds you
-now.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, Ernestine, my sweet cousin, forgive and forget my
-reproaches!' exclaimed the blushing and trembling, but
-happy girl, as she laid her head on the bosom of the
-beautiful brunette, who laughed and kissed her, fondling her as
-if she were a child.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, Carl,' said Heinrich, 'what do <i>you</i> think of all
-this?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'That I wish you every joy; but I must own, that when
-proposing to "have out" this Herr Mansfeld, your reply
-about shooting at <i>yourself</i> in a mirror puzzled me,' said
-Pierrepont, laughing heartily at the whole situation, and
-enchanted with the happy scene amid which he was introduced
-to two such beautiful girls as the famous Belles of
-Frankenburg.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But now the bell clanged for dinner. The Countess took
-his arm, the Count leading with his niece, Heinrich and his
-sister following, all laughter and smiles.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The only silent one there was the radiant Herminia, who
-had been, as her affianced said, 'so pleasantly tricked.'
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap04"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER IV.
-<br /><br />
-CHARLIE IN LOVE.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-That night, at the very time the three gentlemen were in
-the smoking-room busy with their china-bowled pipes, and
-with silver tankards of beer before them&mdash;Heinrich full of
-happy dreams about his fair-haired cousin and the trick they
-had played her; the old Count full of memories of Waterloo
-and the coming war, French insolence, the Vaterland, and
-all the rest of it; Charlie thinking how divinely Ernestine
-sang and played, how sweet her downcast lashes looked,
-how bright her upward glances, how lovely were the white
-hands that wandered over the ivory keys, and made the
-said keys look very dark and yellow by comparison, and
-while to him and Heinrich it seemed that life at Frankenburg
-would be almost insupportable without the two 'belles'
-thereof. While all this was being thought of in the
-smoking-room, we say, the two young ladies were comparing their
-notes in their mutual dressing-room before retiring for the
-night to their beds&mdash;those most uncomfortable couches
-which, in 'the Vaterland,' are mere wooden boxes with
-pillows half-way down, and so arranged that one can neither
-sit nor lie at full length therein.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-That Charlie was handsome, agreeable, pleasant, and so
-forth, was voted and carried <i>nem. con.</i>, and Ernestine was
-full of fun and pleasure at the success of her scheme&mdash;for
-with her it originated&mdash;for luring Herminia into love with
-her brother by having him introduced to her as a stranger.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But oh, Herminia!' she exclaimed, 'to think of you
-getting the start of me!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'In what way?' asked Herminia, putting the whitest of
-feet into the daintiest of slippers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'In getting engaged <i>first</i>; it is most unkind!' continued
-Ernestine, laughing, as she let down the masses of her dark
-silky hair.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You forget, dear cousin, that I was engaged when in my
-cradle or berceaunette.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then the two girls, now nearly half-undressed, laughed as
-only young and happy girls can laugh, and with two snowy
-arms upheld, and dimpled elbows shown, Ernestine went on
-brushing out that thick, dark silky hair of hers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I declare, Herminia, I <i>do</i> think I am pretty,' said she,
-suddenly pausing and surveying herself in her laced
-night-robe in the long cheval glass.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You are too beautiful not to be quite aware of it,' replied
-Herminia.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I wonder if Carl Pierrepont admired me?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Because&mdash;I should like him to do so.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Who could fail to admire you?' responded the happy
-Herminia.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How sweetly he sang that song with me.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Heinrich tells me he is poor,' was the suggestive remark
-of Herminia.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Alas!' after a pause, the former said, smiling.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Herr Pierrepont scarcely took his gaze off you all the
-night; when you sang alone he seemed entranced, and
-when with you, in those duets, his voice became tender and
-tremulous.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Herminia, do you really think so, or do you jest?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I do not jest; hence my suggestion about his being poor,
-for that man is loving you at first sight.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Your own sudden happiness, and the revulsion of feeling
-consequent to the great <i>dénouement</i> of to-day, lead you to
-think so,' replied Ernestine, her smile brightening
-nevertheless, for she liked the idea.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nay, nay, his visit is to last some time; and time will
-prove that I am right,' persisted Herminia, twisting up her
-coils of golden brown hair.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Ernestine sat for a time toying with a velvet slipper half
-on and half off her pretty foot, and then suddenly she said&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, Herminia, how can such a man care for me?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why not, cousin dear? who would not, or could not,
-fail to care for you?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But he seems so proud and cold, and so very English.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You quite mistake, and only wish to hear me contradict
-you. He is much less so than your special admirer, Baron
-Grünthal, the Director of the Upper Consistorial Court.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A hideous old frump!' said Ernestine, tossing her head.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Old! He is only forty.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But that is more than twice my age. My husband must
-be young and handsome.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Like Carl Pierrepont?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, like Carl Pierrepont.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'He certainly seems to have impressed you,' said Herminia.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You forget how often and how much Heinrich has
-written of him in his letters to me. He seems quite like an
-old friend. How strange it would be,' continued the girl,
-while a dreamy expression stole into her beautiful dark
-eyes, as she sat with her slender fingers interlaced over her
-knees, 'how very strange it would, if in him I should have
-met&mdash;met&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What, cousin?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'My fate.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Let him take heed, that, in meeting you, he has not met
-with his own,' said Herminia merrily.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I have been longing to go to a wedding, and yours more
-than all, dear Herminia; for being aware of your betrothal,
-it was one to which I always looked forward. I shall be one
-of the bridesmaids, of course; and the two daughters of the
-Justiz-rath, and the two girls from Rheinberg, though their
-toilettes are odious, and Hermangilda's hair is always muffled
-up like a mop.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A golden mop, though; but, dearest cousin, how your
-tongue does run on! Does it never occur to you that no
-marriage can take place with this French war&mdash;oh, meine
-Gott!&mdash;before us?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And her eyes of violet blue suddenly filled with tears as
-she spoke, as vague images of death and battle rose before
-her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Forgive me, Herminia. Yet I was not jesting.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Forgive you, dear? Yes. I may as well do so,' replied
-the other girl, kissing her cousin on both cheeks; 'for to you
-and aunt I owe the love that Heinrich bears me&mdash;the love
-that I bear him.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And which Herr Mansfeld so nearly carried off!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And now, as we have our prayer's to say, good-night.'
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Herminia was right; the girl, indeed, a close observer,
-was seldom wrong in her deductions, for 'Herr Carl Pierrepont'
-was hopelessly smitten at last by Ernestine, who, like
-the lively blonde, her cousin, was rich in those charms, and
-mere than all, those pretty mannerisms, or tricks of women,
-that win and secure a man's love for ever.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Charlie was neither proud nor reserved&mdash;only a little shy
-at first; he had been engaged in many <i>affaires du coeur</i>,
-but a genuine attack of the tender passion was new to him.
-He soon found himself regularly installed and adopted, an
-<i>ami du maison</i>, with this delightful family at Frankenburg.
-As an Englishman, his natural love of hunting, shooting,
-and fishing won him the friendship of the old Count, with
-whom he drank as many flasks of Rhine wine and jugs of
-beer as he wished; but he had one blot in the eyes of the
-latter&mdash;he could never take cordially to <i>saur kraut</i>.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was a prime favourite with the Countess from his
-general <i>bonhommie</i> of manner; and with Ernestine&mdash;ah! well,
-with Ernestine&mdash;he speedily became more of a favourite
-than the girl would have dared to acknowledge even to
-herself.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Society at Frankenburg was narrow and monotonous;
-most of the visitors who came, especially Baron Grünthal
-and the Justiz-rath, spoke only of politics, of Bismarck's
-plans, and the coming war, which did not interest the ladies,
-save in so far as the 95th Thuringians were concerned.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The days were devoted to rides and rambles amid the
-beautiful scenery around the old Schloss; the evenings to
-music, to singing, and frequently to dancing when the
-daughters of the Justiz-rath, or those of Baron Rhineberg,
-were present; and then our two 95th men were always in
-full uniform, <i>à la Prussien</i>; and the ladies were all
-unanimous that Charlie looked <i>so</i> handsome.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Those epaulettes! those epaulettes! To many a young
-English officer the pride and glory of wearing them was
-only secondary to the kiss of the first girl he loved; and
-where are they <i>now</i>?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So Charlie was proud of his epaulettes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Heinrich had fairly won his lovely cousin&mdash;under 'false
-colours,' certainly; but, nevertheless, he <i>had</i> won her;
-perhaps, from the girl's peculiar temperament and pride, he
-might never have done so otherwise; but having so won
-her, he was compelled to be thankful, for with this odious
-French war on the <i>tapis</i>&mdash;a war which, but for his love, he
-would have hailed with genuine German ardour, and the
-95th under 'orders of readiness' for the Rhine&mdash;marriage,
-as Herminia herself had said, was not to be thought of: so
-they had but to trust to time and wait.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Countess being always busy about the management
-of her household, the Count having frequently to visit Aix
-about a lawsuit in one of the courts there, and Heinrich
-being usually much with his <i>fiancée</i>, threw Charlie and the
-young Grafine so much together that their hearts were
-hopelessly entangled; yet no word of love escaped the
-latter: he knew too well his lack of civil rank, and how
-many, or rather how <i>few</i>, kreutzers he had per diem as a
-Prussian lieutenant of infantry. He could but abandon
-himself to the witchery of her society, to dream of the joy
-of loving and being loved by her, and drift away on the
-tide, too well aware that the charm of such a life and the
-tender influences of such society could not last for ever.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With all their exalted and somewhat absurd ideas of their
-own family, their rank and antiquity, the household of the
-Count and Countess Von Frankenburg was a homely and
-kindly one; and, after his garrison life, there was, to
-Charlie, a wonderful charm in accompanying the cousins,
-Ernestine especially, to see the plough and carriage horses
-taken to water at a certain pond below the old Schloss, to
-feed the peacocks on the terrace, to throw corn to the hens,
-and watch them picking and pecking between the stones in
-the yard at the home farm.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And Ernestine was to him the Eve of this Eden!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But for the soft and gentle influences under which Charlie
-and his friend were at Frankenburg, they would certainly,
-like Prussian officers in general (though gaming is strictly
-forbidden in the army), have spent many an hour at the New
-Redoute, or Gaming House, in the Comphausbad-Strasse,
-where games of hazard, rouge-et-noir, roulette, and so forth,
-are played from morning till midnight.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In lieu of this dissipation, they had quiet walks in the
-woods or visits to old ruins in the neighbourhood; and
-Ernestine, who was German enough to have a strong love of
-the mystic, the ethereal, and the romantic, and a desire to
-dabble with the unseen world, told Charlie many a strange
-weird story; and though with all an Englishman's mistrust
-of such things, it was impossible not to be charmed by her
-earnestness, the modulation of her voice, the bright
-expression of the dilated hazel eye, and the occasional but
-perfectly innocent pressure of her pretty hand upon his
-arm, when she sought to impress him by some remarkable
-episode.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the old ivied tower at Frankenburg she showed him
-the window of the room in which the third wife of
-Charlemagne, Fastrada, daughter of Count Raoul, died,
-while the Emperor was absent at Frankfort; and told how
-he caused her body, which was so fair and beautiful, to the
-end that it might never decay, to be enclosed in a coffin of
-the purest crystal, which he kept in that chamber, and he
-never quitted it by day or by night, neglecting his empire
-and government, and forgetting all the concerns of war or
-peace, till Turpin the Wise resolved to cure him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Watching his opportunity, while the Emperor slept, he
-opened the coffin, and took the golden wedding-ring from
-the finger of Fastrada, and cast it into the lake below the
-castle, and thus broke Charles' spell of sorrow. From that
-day the great lake into which the magic ring was cast, and
-which quite surrounded the Schloss, began to shrink, and
-nothing of it remained but the tiny horse-pond already
-mentioned.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And while she was telling this legend, a little grey owl
-sat in the window of the ruin, winking and blinking in the
-sunshine, as if he was weary of having heard the story so
-often.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The ruin, too, was haunted by the spectre of a former
-Count of Frankenburg, who, resolving to get rid of his
-Countess, to the end that he might marry again, invited her
-to share a dish of love-apples with him. These he divided
-with a silver-knife poisoned on one side; but by some
-mistake, he ate all the poisoned halves himself, and so fell
-dead at the table; and there in the upper story of the
-tower, his cries of pain and despair were sometimes heard
-on the wind in the stormy nights of winter.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So, amid this sweet intercourse&mdash;like one gathering
-beautiful flowers on the brink of a giddy precipice&mdash;did
-Charlie Pierrepont drift into a deep and hopeless passion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He never spoke of it, but surely his eyes must have told,
-and his manner too, that he loved her. Oh yes, how he
-loved her, this earnest and warm-hearted young Englishman,
-yet was silent. He dared not seek to lead her into
-a promise to wait till the sun of Fortune shone on him, to
-waste her young and happy life till slow promotion came:
-and even were he a colonel, the Count might&mdash;nay, would&mdash;look
-for wealth or rank, or both; and while he&mdash;Charlie&mdash;was
-thus waiting, could he ask a girl so lovely to trust to
-the doctrine of chances, for a lucky spoke in the wheel of
-the blind goddess, and to grow <i>fade</i> and withered with the
-sickness of hope deferred?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yet the sweet face, the dark shining hair, the tender, bright
-eyes, the pretty winning ways&mdash;oh, those pretty winning
-ways, that twine so round the heart of a man!&mdash;haunted him
-in the waking hours of the night, and in his tormenting, yet
-delicious, dreams by day.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap05"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER V.
-<br /><br />
-WHAT HAPPENED IN THE DOM KIRCHE.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Strong though the sentiment of friendship that existed
-between him and Heinrich, Charlie shrunk from making a
-confidant of him, as he knew but too well that his
-aristocratic prejudices and native ambition would preclude him
-from having any sympathy with such a secret love, or giving
-it the least encouragement.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So the days of joy stole away at Frankenburg, till Charlie
-began to reckon sadly the few that yet remained, when time
-would inexorably separate him from Ernestine, and, too
-probably, for ever.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Did she suspect that he loved her?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A hundred times had Charlie asked this question of himself
-in doubt: he was not an egotist; but every glance of
-her soft hazel eyes&mdash;that seemed, he knew not why, something
-between a caress and a compliment, together with a dash of
-entreaty&mdash;might have told him that he was far, far indeed
-from being indifferent to her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the spirit of the old song, he often thought,
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- 'He either fears his fate too much,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or his desert is small,<br />
- Who dare not put it to the touch<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;To win or lose it all.'<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-If 'things did not turn,' in time&mdash;and for him how could
-they turn? it was torment to think of losing her by his own
-silence and diffidence; of seeing her, perhaps, won by
-another, far his inferior in bearing and spirit, while he
-hungered for her smile, doted on her shadow, and alternately
-blessed and <i>banned</i> the hour that brought him to the Castle
-of Frankenburg.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He thanked Heaven that there was this impending war
-with France before them. On the banks of the Rhine, or
-before the walls of Paris, if he ever reached it, a French
-bullet might end it all for him, and he would never have the
-horror and sorrow of knowing that she was the bride of
-another; and so on, and on, day by day, when by her side,
-talking with her and enjoying all the sweet charms of her
-society, did this honest fellow torment himself, for we may,
-in the matters of love and jealousy, torment ourselves far
-more than others can.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Of this, a terror of every possible <i>parti</i> who approached
-her was one element, especially if rich or titled.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was Baron Grünthal, who came about Ernestine
-more than Charlie relished. He was a man of great
-influence, and Oberconsistorial Director of the Court at Aix,
-not over forty, and rather good-looking. Even the daughter
-of a Count might be pleased to become Baroness Grünthal.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then one or two young Counts, friends of Heinrich, were
-among the frequent visitors, and Charlie gnawed his
-moustache viciously, as he pictured to himself, perhaps
-meeting her years hence, as the wife of one of these, when
-he was getting grey, weary of waiting for the promotion that
-never came; or if it did, he would value so little then: for
-with her, the glory of life would depart.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Getting grey? But she would be a matron then in years;
-and does not Jean Jacques Rousseau tell us that a pair of
-grey-haired lovers were never known to sigh for each other?
-But Charlie thrust that thought aside; he preferred to live
-in the pleasant present than to picture the gloomy future.
-No romantic incident, no runaway horse, no death averted
-from accident, or other melodramatic episode to draw
-largely on the young lady's gratitude, as in novels, led to
-Charlie's avowal of his love.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It all came about suddenly, in the most unromantic way,
-a quick outpouring of passion, a rush, as it were, of the
-heart to the lips, through the influence of which he told her
-that he loved her, her only, and craved her love in return;
-and it all came to pass in this fashion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-One day&mdash;Charlie Pierrepont never forgot it&mdash;they had
-contrived to get away alone, to visit the great Dom Kirche
-at Aix, the shady aisles and vast depths of which, with all
-its sequestered chapels, were as well calculated to lure them
-into sweet and earnest converse as the leafy alleys of a
-forest.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They had visited the tomb of Charlemagne, where, as
-Ernestine, while leaning on Charlie's arm, and looking up in
-his face, from under one of the prettiest of hats, told him
-with bated breath, that when it was opened in the tenth
-century, the Emperor was not found in the usual fashion of
-the dead, reclining in his coffin, but seated on a throne as if
-alive, clothed in imperial robes, a sceptre in his hand, and
-the gospels on his knee. On his fleshless brow was a crown,
-and by his side his famous sword, Joyeuse.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And now,' added his charming guide, 'I shall show you
-the throne on which he was seated; it stands in the Hoch
-Munster.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now the said Hoch Munster is a gallery running round
-the octagon, facing the choir, and to reach it a narrow stair
-had to be traversed. Charlie, who, strange to say, had
-drawn off his gloves, held out a hand to guide Ernestine,
-who, by another coincidence, had drawn off one of hers, and
-when Charlie's fingers closed on her soft and velvet-like
-little hand, the desire to press it naturally occurred to him,
-but a thrill, as if of electricity, went to his heart, when he
-felt&mdash;with the gentlest assurance in the world&mdash;the pressure
-returned!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The stair to the Hoch Munster was surely steeper than
-usual, they ascended it so slowly. Amid its obscurity, Charlie
-pressed to his lips twice the accorded hand, which was not
-withdrawn, and ere they gained the upper step that led to
-the gallery, the great secret of Charlie's heart had escaped
-him, and flushed and palpitating; Ernestine heard him
-with downcast eyes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The vehemence with which the avowal was made, though
-his voice was low and earnest, and the tender expression
-with which he regarded her, when they did emerge into daylight,
-bewildered her a little, which, perhaps, was the reason
-that she permitted Charlie to take prisoner her other hand;
-but after a time she regained her composure, and, looking up
-at him with a most bewitching expression in her tender
-brown eyes and pouting lip, said, as if she had doubted her
-ears, in a whispered voice,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You&mdash;you love me?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes&mdash;oh yes! Dearest Ernestine, you must have known
-from the first&mdash;from the very first hour I saw you, that I
-loved you.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I always thought,' she continued, in the same low and
-certainly agitated voice, 'that you preferred my society to
-that of Herminia or the Rhineberg girls.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Preferred your society&mdash;oh, Ernestine!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I did think that you were very fond of me&mdash;yes, very
-fond of me; but that you actually loved me, I could not
-conceive.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So the lovely little gipsy pretended, and cast her eyelids
-down, while her soft bosom heaved so much with emotion
-that her diamond brooch sparkled like prisms. After a
-pause, the tender eyes were again uplifted to Charlie, and
-as if she rather liked the sound of the avowal, she said
-timidly,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And so you love me&mdash;love me, Carl?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How Charlie's heart now leaped to hear his Christian
-name uttered by her lips for the first time!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ernestine, my own darling!' (et cetera, and so forth).
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They remained&mdash;as the sacristan who was patiently waiting
-for his fees said&mdash;quite long enough to have made an
-acute archaeological investigation of the whole place; but
-somehow their minds were otherwise occupied.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Singularly enough, they had forgotten all about the throne
-of Charlemagne, and actually descended&mdash;slower than they
-had ascended&mdash;the stairs of the Hoch Munster without
-having seen it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They were both very silent on the drive homeward, but
-their young hearts were brimming over with joy, and deep
-blushes suffused the face of Ernestine, and her lips were
-trembling; and as if her mother's eye might read how they
-had been occupied in the Dom Kirche, she hurried upstairs
-to her own room, to seek in solitude the power of reflecting
-over all that had passed, and her new position, for within an
-hour she had passed a certain rubicon in life.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Charlie, too, desired to be alone, and ascended into the
-recess of the ruined Schloss, where, among the owls and the
-ivy, he slowly lighted a cigar, and while his heart was full of
-love and happiness, and of gratitude to Ernestine for returning
-his passion, he began to consider what was to be done
-next.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He first abandoned himself to a dream of joy. In imagination
-Ernestine was with him still; her hands so soft and
-small yet lingered in his; her lips were still before him, and
-the perfume of her dark hair came back to him, as he
-rehearsed, over and over again, all that episode in the Dom
-Kirche.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The secret that had trembled so long on his tongue&mdash;the
-secret that cold prudence and dread of German pride withheld
-so long, had escaped him at last. His love had been
-avowed; that love was accepted and reciprocated.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But now, alas! there came home to Charlie's heart those
-thoughts that had occurred to him before&mdash;thoughts that
-had not, as yet, entered the mind of Ernestine. The
-future&mdash;how and what was it to be? How cold and miserable was
-reflection&mdash;miserable, but for a time only. Was not the fact
-of mutual love and perfect trust existing between them
-enough to make all seem glorious, and the path of life most
-flowery?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She loved him&mdash;that bright and beautiful girl! Beyond
-that love she might never be his; but with that love for him,
-she would never be the wife of another. Yet, as he before
-asked himself, was it just or generous that her young life
-should be wasted, and for him?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-If he suggested an elopement, in what light would such
-an episode place him with his friend Heinrich, with her whole
-family, with his regiment, and society, even, which was very,
-very doubtful, if she would accede to such a measure.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So long as he had not spoken of love to Ernestine, but
-lingered on the pleasant borderland that adjoins the realms
-of Cupid, Charlie felt that he was guilty of no breach of
-faith with her family, and no violation of the hearty
-hospitality extended to him. But <i>now</i> his position seemed
-entirely altered. Their love was a fact; he had won her
-heart without the consent of her parents, and that consent,
-in his subaltern rank in social and military life, he knew but
-too well would never be accorded to him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, well,' thought he, with something of grim joy, 'the
-war is before me, and who can foresee what honours I may
-win in defending Germany, or on the soil of France!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When the party in the Schloss met at dinner that evening,
-there was a conscious expression in the faces of Charlie and
-Ernestine that they alone could read, and to which their
-hearts had alone the key; and to both there was something
-novel, joyous, and inexpressibly sweet in this secret
-understanding between them. Each felt a delicious interest and
-right of proprietary in the other.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Among the visitors was Baron Grünthal, the Oberdirector
-of the Consistory Court at Aix, a stout and florid, but rather
-handsome man, in the prime of life, with an ill-trimmed
-moustache hiding his whole mouth, and the inevitable red
-ribbon at his button-hole, who mentioned incidentally that
-he had seen the Grafine and Herr Pierrepont leaving the
-Dom Kirche by the great door, on either side of which are a
-she-wolf and a fir apple in bronze. Ernestine stooped over
-her bouquet to hide her conscious blush.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You know, mamma,' said she, in a tone of explanation,
-though none was required, 'we drove into town, Herr
-Pierrepont and I, that I might show him the tomb and throne
-of Charlemagne.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ah! yes,' said the Baron, making his champagne effervesce
-with a piece of biscuit; 'did you think the marble slabs of
-a good colour, Herr Pierrepont?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Beautiful!' said Charlie. 'The finest black I ever saw,'
-he desperately added, at a venture.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Black?' said two or three voices. 'Why, they are of the
-purest <i>white</i>!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Exactly; that was what I meant to say. My German
-is not perfect, Herr Baron,' said Charlie.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And Ernestine, who had grown pale, now laughed and
-glanced furtively at her lover.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Dinner over, the Count and Baron retired to smoke and
-talk politics; but the latter, whose suspicions had been
-roused by the confused manner of Charlie, and the evident
-absorption of him and his fair companion when quitting the
-Dom Kirche, began to talk of something that might seriously
-affect their happiness.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Charlie and Ernestine betook themselves to the piano,
-where eye could look into eye, and finger touch finger
-occasionally in the duet, or soft whispers be exchanged amid a
-sonata of Beethoven; the Countess retired to doze in the
-boudoir, with her Spitz pug on her knee; while Herminia
-and her betrothed found sufficient attraction in each other;
-so the evening of this eventful day passed off peacefully and
-happily, as many others had done.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-During the protracted progress of the sonata, the two
-antiquarians from the Dom Kirche agreed that their
-engagement&mdash;for such they fully considered it now&mdash;should, as yet,
-not be divulged to anyone, not even to Herminia, from
-whom Ernestine had never before had a secret to withhold.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Outwardly, our hero and heroine seemed merely intimate
-friends who were soon to part; inwardly, they had their
-own happy thoughts, while the family had not the slightest
-suspicion of how matters stood, though that night all was
-on the very verge of discovery!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the recess of a window, whither they had gone to
-study the stars, Charlie suddenly pressed Ernestine to his
-breast.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, dearest, don't do that again!' she exclaimed. 'Aunt
-Adelaide may see us; and she has the eyes of a lynx!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After this night, matters progressed fast with the lovers.
-In the same house, they had a hundred means of meeting
-each other, were it but for five minutes at a time. Rings
-and locks of hair, of course, with coloured photos&mdash;the best
-that could be got in Aix-la-Chapelle&mdash;had been exchanged;
-promises were made and vows exchanged again and again,
-with other delicious tokens equally intangible.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the flush of his love, Charlie forgot for a time the cruel
-doubts that had at first oppressed him. Ernestine should
-be his wife at all risks, even if he carried her off to England;
-and, in the ardour of his imagination, he began to marvel
-whether his father's old place in Warwickshire would ever
-be free from those debts which drove him to become a
-wanderer, a soldier of fortune, and to feed himself by his
-sword in the ranks of the Prussian army.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap06"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER VI.
-<br /><br />
-AN ALARM.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Amid the pure satisfaction arising from the knowledge that
-Ernestine loved him, and the natural anxiety to discover
-how she was ever to be his wife, there was fated to come to
-Charlie Pierrepont the fear of greater opposition to his&mdash;as
-yet&mdash;secret hopes and wishes, in the person of a formidable
-rival, who, in a few weeks after the visit to the Dom Kirche,
-came suddenly into the field.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-One evening, when the Count, his son, and Charlie were
-seated cosily in a place which the former called his study
-(but which more resembled a harness and gun room, and
-littered with pipes of all kinds, as the literature there
-consisted of a few volumes on hunting, shooting, farriery), with
-their pipes and flasks of Rhine wine, which they drank from
-silver tankards, the Count startled our hero by a revelation
-which he made to him as a friend of the family.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A wealthy and great man&mdash;an intimate friend of the
-house of Frankenburg, who, though not noble, was nevertheless
-Hochwohlgeboren, had made proposals for the hand
-of Ernestine.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The cloud of smoke in which the trio had enveloped
-themselves perhaps prevented the father and son from
-seeing the sudden contraction of Charlie's brow on getting
-this unpleasant information.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Does it meet with your approval, Count?' he asked,
-with a violent effort to appear calm.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'In every respect.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And yours, Heinrich?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No, Carl.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Because the man is more than double her age,' replied
-the young Count.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'That is&mdash;&mdash;' Charlie was about to say 'unfortunate;'
-but the fib remained unuttered. Then after a pause he
-asked, 'And what says the Grafine?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'She dismissed him with kind words, certainly,' replied
-the Count, 'and well-bred wishes for his happiness. He
-then came to me, begging me to use my authority over her
-as a parent, which I shall certainly do.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Herr Graf!' exclaimed Charlie, who felt a keener interest
-in all this than his hearers imagined; for even Heinrich, in
-the absorption of his passion for his cousin, had not the
-faintest suspicion that his friend did more than admire his
-sister; 'Herr Graf, would you actually attempt to control
-your daughter's affections?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Der Teufel! attempt it? I shall do it!' replied the
-Count angrily, as he laid his hand emphatically on the arm
-of his chair.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So this was the first intimation Charlie had of the coming
-storm. A rival in the field, and his leave of absence on the
-verge of expiry! The situation&mdash;with all his trust in
-Ernestine&mdash;was, to say the least of it, alarming. Would
-she actually be torn from him after all? Fearing to speak,
-he remained perfectly silent; but, as his curiosity was
-irrepressible, he asked after a time&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'May I ask, Herr Graf, who this suitor is?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The Baron Grünthal, Oberdirector of the Consistory
-Court in Aix-la-Chapelle.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then Charlie remembered that the Baron had been at
-the Schloss that morning, and been long in the Graf's
-'study' in consultation, and that he failed to see Ernestine
-as usual, save at dinner, after which she had hastily left the
-table. It occurred now to Charlie, too, that she had
-seemed both disturbed and taciturn during the progress
-of the meal.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Such an offer was deemed flattering, even for a daughter
-of the house of Frankenburg. Ernestine had dismissed the
-Baron; but, backed by her father's authority, he returned
-to the charge, and came the following day to dinner; and
-until the bell rang for that meal, Charlie, to his perplexity
-and annoyance, could see nothing of Ernestine, who
-remained sequestered in her room. Had her mother any
-suspicions? thought he; but as yet the Countess had none.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On this day, in honour of the suitor, whose aspirations
-met with her full approval, her white hair was done over a
-<i>toupée</i> that was higher than usual, her train was longer than
-ever, and she wore the best of the family diamonds.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This was the most miserable meal ever made by Charlie
-Pierrepont. The Count was rubicund, smiling, and
-conscious. He had smoked many pipes and imbibed much
-beer over the idea of having such a son-in-law. The Baron
-had made a careful study of his costume, and was most
-gracious to the ladies, but more especially to the Countess,
-who addressed nearly all her conversation to him&mdash;the
-winner of one of 'the Belles of Frankenburg.' Herminia
-looked waggish, Heinrich somewhat provoked, as he
-deemed the suitor too old, and that his sister's wishes
-should be consulted; while Ernestine&mdash;whose toilette (a
-golden-coloured silk, trimmed with black lace), a most
-becoming one for a brunette, had been made under the
-critical eye of her mother&mdash;looked pale, 'worried,' and
-worn, and, like Heinrich, provoked too, for, as we have said
-elsewhere, she was a self-willed little beauty, and somewhat
-opinionated.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In spite of the desire of all to appear at their perfect ease,
-the meal passed off awkwardly; the conversation flagged,
-and was unequal; and if the eyes of Ernestine met those of
-Charlie, he would read in them an imploring and sad
-expression, and when they looked down, they seemed to
-sparkle with anger.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At last the meal passed over&mdash;and it proved the last that
-Charlie Pierrepont was to consume in Frankenburg; the
-ladies rose from the table to retire.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As Charlie opened the dining-room door for them, Ernestine
-contrived to be the last who passed out, and swiftly
-and unseen, she slipped into Charlie's hand a tiny scrap of
-folded paper. This he hastened to open and read covertly,
-on resuming his place at table. It contained but one
-pencilled line&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Be in mamma's boudoir to-night at eleven, when all are
-in bed.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He would have pressed it to his lips, but for the presence
-of those who were with him. Eleven o'clock? The hour was
-then eight, as a great ormolu clock on the side buffet
-informed him, and so he had three long hours to wait for this
-most coveted interview! And for two of those hours he
-would have to endure the society&mdash;or rather the presence&mdash;of
-this most obnoxious rival who had so suddenly started up
-in his path, and with whom he felt a violent desire to quarrel,
-but that such an episode would have been alike unseemly,
-unwise, and calculated to excite suspicion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They could meet in conversation on the neutral ground
-of the French war; but in everything he stated, Charlie
-could not suppress a keen desire to contradict the Baron.
-The latter asserted that King William would lead the
-Prussian army in person. To this Charlie gave a contradiction
-as flat as if he had it from the royal lips. Metz
-would be, undoubtedly, the chief base of the French
-operations. This idea he utterly scouted! England would
-take part in the war, through the influence of the Crown
-Princess. England would do nothing of the kind, said
-Charlie&mdash;what was the Rhine to her?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Baron began to elevate his eyebrows, and became
-silent. The Count looked uneasy; one glass more, he
-suggested, and then they would join the ladies. They did
-so; but on entering the drawing-room found the Countess
-asleep as usual, with the Spitz pug in her lap; Herminia
-idling over the piano, while longing for Heinrich; and that
-Ernestine was&mdash;which was never her wont&mdash;absent.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She had pleaded a headache, and retired to her own
-room. The Baron looked glum and disconcerted. He had
-been framing many fine speeches to make to his intended;
-but now they were no longer required. He should see her
-no more for that night.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Charlie fingered the little note in his waistcoat-pocket,
-and felt defiant and jubilant.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The truth was that the Countess and her daughter had
-almost had high words on the subject of the Baron.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Mamma,' the latter had said, 'the idea of such a thing is
-intolerable and absurd!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why absurd, Grafine?' asked her mother, with asperity.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A man of forty or more, getting bald already,' said
-Ernestine mockingly; 'a stout man in a blue coat and
-brass buttons, with a red ribbon, of course, at his lapelle; a
-man who, for twenty years, has never made up his august
-mind to marry, comes now to make a matrimonial victim of
-me. Thanks&mdash;no. I am the Grafine Ernestine of Frankenburg,
-and such I shall remain.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Do you prefer anyone else?' asked the Countess, her
-eyes glittering with sudden suspicion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No&mdash;none,' she falteringly said, with her cheeks aflame.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Is there not <i>one</i>?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What do you mean, mamma?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I mean this,' said the Countess, with grim asperity,
-hiding her suspicions, if she had any, 'my dear child, the
-regiment of Heinrich is under orders for foreign service! his
-leave is conditional, and may be cancelled by telegraph
-at any moment; so that if we wish his presence at the
-marriage, the ceremony must be performed without much
-delay.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It shall never take place with me,' replied Ernestine
-resolutely.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'To your room, Grafine,' said the Countess with hauteur;
-so her daughter gladly withdrew, leaving her to make
-excuses for her absence as she pleased, so the usual female
-ailment of a headache came at once into play.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap07"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER VII.
-<br /><br />
-AMONG THE BREAKERS.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-The Baron had been driven home to Aix in his britzka,
-promising to return for some final arrangements on the
-morrow, when he hoped to find the health of the Grafine
-restored; prayers were over; the household were all a-bed,
-or supposed to be so, and Charlie sat in his own room,
-looking sadly out upon the distant lights of Aix, which
-seemed to twinkle like the stars above them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had ample food for reflection. Fear of the Baron's
-influence on Ernestine he had none; but he had real fear of
-the influence her family, and long-trained habits of implicit
-obedience, might have on her, and genuine love and truth
-are commodities too scarce and valuable in this world to
-be wasted.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How much, thought Charlie, were Herminia and her
-cousin to be envied; they had been, and were, so successful
-in their love, and all through the fortunate little scheme of
-the Countess and Ernestine.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How he longed to show the latter to his sisters; for
-Charlie had three, in that dear old home in Warwickshire,
-all softly featured and gently mannered girls, such as
-England excels in, more than all the world besides. Would
-they love her? But could they fail to do so? Well, his
-father might, perhaps, oh, no! he could not look coldly on
-her, because she was a foreigner. Pure innocence and
-beauty belong to no country in particular; and Ernestine
-looked more thoroughly English than many an English
-lady Charlie had seen in Regent Street and the Row.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-What was to be the end of all this?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In spite of all his prudence and the suggestions of reason,
-Charlie had fallen madly in love, without considering what
-a costly whim a high-born wife would prove to a Prussian
-subaltern; or how the prize was to be obtained, the whim
-gratified.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Eleven was struck by the great old clock in the hall of
-the Schloss, and Charlie, who had been awaiting it, watch
-in hand, took his wax taper, and softly and swiftly
-descended the great staircase to the boudoir of the Countess,
-a small octagonal apartment that opened off the drawing-room.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was, of course, without a fireplace; but, in lieu
-thereof, in one corner stood the prettiest of little German
-stoves, a black iron cylinder, or column, surmounted by a
-large coronet of ornamental brass, and set on a block of
-white marble. Numerous statuettes under glass shades,
-and pretty bijou articles, littered all the marble and
-marqueterie tables, with Dresden china vases of flowers,
-gathered fresh that morning by Ernestine and Herminia in
-the garden at the foot of the castle rock. The furniture
-and hangings were all pale blue silk, trimmed with white
-lace or silver; water-colours decorated the wall, and, in a
-place of honour, hung a Berlin engraving representing
-the meeting of Wellington and Blucher at La Belle
-Alliance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A moderator lamp, upheld by a bronze Atlas, was
-suddenly flashed up, and Ernestine stood before Charlie
-Pierrepont. She had let all her hair down, probably
-previous to coiling it up for the night, and now its silky
-masses floated over her shoulders far below her waist, and
-out of their darkness, her pale, minute, and delicately cut
-face came with strong distinctness in the subdued light of
-the lamp. How lovely she looked just then; her form,
-though <i>mignonne</i>, round and full. She threw her arms
-round Charlie, and putting her head on his shoulder, in a
-way she had like a petted love-bird, placed her sweet face
-amid the masses of her hair on his neck, and her lover
-gazed at her for some seconds ere he seated her by his side,
-with a kind of adoration, for she was in all the pride of her
-beauty and purity; and, as a writer says, with truth, 'There
-is nothing in the universe so exquisite, so fascinating, so
-irresistibly alluring, as a young girl! A girl in the first
-dawn of earliest womanhood, fresh and fragrant as a flower,
-and, alas! as fragile, for that bloom of youth is as evanescent
-as it is lovely, and its loss is never, to my mind, compensated
-by any maturer charm. Let who will inhale the perfume of
-the opening rose, but the sweet shy mystery of the folded
-bud for me!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And some such thoughts ran through the mind of Charlie
-as he gazed upon her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the perfect confidence of this love, they did not at first
-speak of this sudden suitor (who had come like a thunder-cloud
-into their sunny summer sky), for rival he could
-scarcely be deemed by Charlie; but they referred to the
-last time they had been happy together in each other's
-society. Oh, <i>so</i> happy! and but two days ago!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They had ridden to Stolberg, after losing Heinrich and
-Herminia together in the wood (rather a common
-occurrence, by the way, when these four went out on
-excursions), and had taken shelter from a storm of rain in a
-village church, where a marriage ceremony had been
-performed before them, and they now recurred to this little
-episode.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How sweetly pretty the bride looked!' said Charlie,
-playing with her rippling hair.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And how happy the bridegroom!' she added, pulling
-Charlie's moustache, in her momentary joy, forgetful of the
-tears she had been shedding.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How I envied them, Ernestine! Will our day ever
-come?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'We can but hope.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And if it never comes?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I shall die&mdash;I shall die faithful to you, Carl. Faithful
-in life and in death!' said Ernestine, with passionate energy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You say this so often that you alarm me,' said Charlie,
-with great tenderness of tone.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How can my promises of faith alarm you?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nay. It is these references to death.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her eyes were tender, dreamy, and sad, yet full of love,
-as they looked into his. After a pause, he said,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I, Ernestine, am more in danger of death and peril than
-you, dearest.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, say not so! And yet, of course, it must be, Carl,
-my darling Carl!' she exclaimed, throwing herself upon his
-breast, in a passion of tears and affection.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Heaven and earth! So <i>these</i> are the terms on which
-you two are!' exclaimed a shrill, stern voice behind them,
-and a low wail of terror escaped from Ernestine, on
-perceiving the Countess, her mother, standing there in her
-<i>robe-de-chambre</i>, a wax taper in her hand, and her usually pale
-cheeks and cold grey eyes inflamed with indignation. On
-this night she had, unfortunately, forgotten her unlucky Spitz
-cur (who was quietly looking on the scene from his basket
-of mother-of-pearl) and had descended from her room in
-search of him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'So! so!' she exclaimed again, 'these are the terms on
-which you are; and such are the hopes in which you dare
-to indulge!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How long she had been there, or how much she had
-heard or seen, they knew not. They had but one common
-thought&mdash;that they had been discovered, and all was over!
-This <i>dénouement</i>, occurring immediately after the proposal
-of the Baron, was too much for the patience or equanimity
-of the irate Countess. Even Charlie's friendship for her son
-Heinrich, and the duel he had fought in defence of his
-honour, were forgotten now.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was a pause, during which they all surveyed each
-other with undisguised signs of discomposure. At last
-Charlie spoke, while Ernestine withdrew a little way from
-him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Gnädige Frau' (gracious madame), he began, 'blame
-not your daughter, but me, for all this; and pardon me for
-having so far forgotten my position in this house as to love
-her without your permission; but could I resist doing
-so&mdash;even without the hope of obtaining it? What can I say to
-mitigate your probable severity to her&mdash;your resentment to
-me? What am I to do?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Much!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, say it!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Leave my roof at once!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Mamma, it is close on midnight,' urged Ernestine piteously.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Silence, minx!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Charlie's face had flushed to the temples at a tone and
-command so unusual and so humiliating.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, mamma,' urged Ernestine, attempting, but in vain, to
-catch her mother's hand, 'spare me and pardon him!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Him? Who!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Carl.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You call him Carl already&mdash;and this to my face! This
-intruder, who, though in the king's uniform, is little better
-in the scale of society than a poor Handwerks-Burschen!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Charlie now grew deadly pale at this insulting comparison,
-but restrained his rising anger for the sake of Ernestine,
-who said, piteously:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Dearest mamma, I implore you not to adopt this tone
-to Heinrich's firm and tried friend. It is inhospitable! It
-is rude! It is cruel!' she added, amid a torrent of tears.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You are no judge, <i>now</i>, of what is rude or not rude&mdash;proper
-or improper&mdash;to a violator of our hospitality. Oh,
-Herr Pierrepont, how little could I have foreseen all this!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Unless the old lady had been as blind as a mole, she
-might, or ought, very well to have foreseen it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You know my views of all this matter, and I am certain
-they will be fully shared by the Count,' said the old lady,
-with intense hauteur. 'You also know the measures we
-expect you to take with as little delay as possible.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She made a brief and haughty half-contemptuous bow,
-and taking her daughter by the hand, and, without permitting
-her to give even one farewell glance, led her away.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Charlie stood for a moment as if rooted to the spot. He
-then very quietly extinguished the moderator lamp, in a
-mechanical kind of way, and, taking his taper, ascended the
-great gaunt staircase to his room, where, with his heart torn
-by the contending emotions of love and sorrow, rage and
-mortification&mdash;for the insult to which he, an English gentleman,
-had been subjected by that intolerant and insufferable
-old German woman&mdash;he sat for a time without thinking
-of undressing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Were she not the mother of Ernestine, he would have
-scattered a few pretty hard adjectives with reference to her.
-He then suddenly began to pack his portmanteau. He had
-but one desire and craving&mdash;to get as far away from Frankenburg
-as possible, though it was the cage that held his
-love-bird! And as if his wish had been anticipated, just as twelve
-o'clock was struck by the sonorous timepiece in the echoing
-hall, a knock came to his door.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It is Heinrich,' thought he; 'come in!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The visitor was not Heinrich, but the old family butler,
-who entered, bowing low, and looking very sleepy, cross,
-and very much surprised.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The Herr Graf's compliments to the Herr Lieutenant.
-At what time would he require the carriage to take him to
-Aix?' (He called it Aachen.)
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Now!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Now&mdash;at this hour, mein Herr?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Now, I repeat&mdash;instantly&mdash;thanks; you may go.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The old butler, who had served as man and boy in the
-Frankenburg family from shortly after the days of Waterloo
-and Ligny, who had attended Marshal Blucher when on a
-visit, and had made the fortunes and honour of the denizens
-of the Schloss his own, as hereditary retainers of the Caleb
-Balderstone type occasionally do, even in this age of iron,
-opened his grey eyes very wide, alike at the fierce energy
-and the order of Charlie Pierrepont, but vanished at once
-to rouse the grooms and comply.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So he was actually turned out of the house, however
-politely, at last; thrust out from <i>her home</i> as if his presence
-there degraded it. He thought of the old arms of the
-Pierreponts carved about his father's gate&mdash;the lion rampant
-<i>sable</i>, between two wings, the mullets <i>semée</i>, and the motto
-'<i>Pie repone te</i>,' though he had never valued such things
-much; and his anger boiled up&mdash;nor did it cool down till
-he found himself on the eve of departure.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Why did Heinrich not appear? for good or for evil? Had
-he also been informed, and, like his father, mounted a high
-horse? It seemed so. The carriage was duly announced,
-at last.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As Charlie descended to it, the silver-haired butler
-appeared again with a salver, on which were a decanter and
-glass, saying:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The Herr Graf requests that mein Herr will take a little
-glass of cognac, before leaving the Schloss; the night is
-cold.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To have declined to accept this last act of old German
-hospitality would have been churlish, and the cause of
-comment among the domestics; so Charlie, with the name of
-her he loved on his lips, drained a <i>petit verre</i>, and sprang
-into the carriage.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Aachen,' said the butler to the driver, as he closed the
-door, and bowing, said&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Gute nacht&mdash;leben sie wohl, mein Herr.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And Charlie, as he thought, turned his back on Frankenburg
-for ever.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Ernestine was as much, if not more, than any <i>only</i> daughter
-could be to Count Ulrich. He was selfish enough to have
-looked with stern, black, and utter discouragement on any
-swain who had no high rank; then how much more with
-anger on a penniless soldier of Fortune&mdash;a sub. of the
-Thuringians, like Charlie Pierrepont.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'All is at an end between the Frankenburgs and me,'
-thought the latter, as the carriage bowled on in the dark;
-'but the war once over, if I escape it, I shall carry her off
-at all hazards&mdash;by Heaven, I shall.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As a soldier accustomed to change of quarters, billets,
-camps, and barracks, Charlie could make himself at home
-anywhere; but nowhere (save his father's house) had he
-found himself so much at home as in that old German
-castle: a shrine he deemed it&mdash;a shrine of which Ernestine
-was the idol; and now he was exiled from it.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap08"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER VIII.
-<br /><br />
-CHARLIE'S VISITOR.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-The carriage deposited Charlie Pierrepont at an hotel in
-Aix-la-Chapelle, where he meant to remain for a little to
-make some attempt to see Ernestine once more&mdash;to arrange,
-if possible, about their future correspondence, and then to
-rejoin the Thuringians.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The dawn stole in over the city, and the Rhine began to
-glitter in light&mdash;the dawn of that day on which the Baron
-Grünthal was to return to Frankenburg, and 'the final
-arrangements' were to be made. What would they be?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Five o'clock tolled from the great bell of the Dom Kirche.
-But five hours since she had been in his arms, with her
-head resting on his breast; how long it seemed ago; what
-storm of alarm, bitterness, and mortification had agitated
-his heart since then! The bell of the Dom Kirche brought
-instantly back to memory that day in the stair of the Hoch
-Munster, when the returned pressure of her little hand,
-though ever so lightly, nearly put him beside himself with
-joy, and lured him to divulge the great secret of his heart.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So all their stolen glances and sweet daily intercourse were
-at an end now; all the quaint weird stories that she had
-been wont to tell him in their rides and rambles, of sprites
-and elves, of lurlies and knights, who had loved and been
-drawn thus into peril, all their mutual songs and music,
-would never come again!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Too probably their paths on earth might lie for ever apart.
-A chasm separated the past from the present; still more did
-it seem to yawn between the present and the future; so
-Charlie could but wring his hands, and wish, at times, that
-Heinrich had never brought him to Frankenburg.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Ah, those lovely eyes that were ever varying in expression,
-now dreamy and tender, and anon bright with mischief, or
-soft with inexpressible love; the pouting rosebud lips, that
-were so firm and delicately cut; the skin, smooth as satin;
-the hands, of velvet: the pinky tint on the rounded cheek;
-the winning ways and the quaint sayings of Ernestine&mdash;were
-they all, indeed, to be as things of the past to him?
-It was intolerable!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They would be all as air-drawn pictures&mdash;nothing more.
-To Pierrepont, it seemed as if all the brightness had gone
-out of his life; or, as if half that life had left him. Would
-time ever cure this, or must it be war or death? God alone
-knew! In his sorrow for the loss he had sustained, and for
-the terrible emotions which he knew she would be feeling&mdash;torn
-from him on one hand, and menaced by a hateful
-marriage on the other&mdash;he could almost have wept, and
-perhaps would have done so, but for a glow of wrath and
-indignation, at the manner in which the imperious Countess
-had treated him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had been bluntly turned out of the house! That was
-what the termination of his visit plainly amounted to.
-Charlie felt that his epaulettes had been insulted, and his
-native English pride revolted at the idea. He felt his blood
-boiling at times, but against whom? It could not be against
-the father or the mother of her he loved so tenderly. Oh
-no! for surely they would relent in time, on seeing how deep
-and tender was his passion for their daughter.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'<i>How</i> would it all end?' he asked of himself a hundred
-times.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The day without was bright and sunny, but to Charlie
-Pierrepont it seemed as if the hours stole dully, darkly, and
-drearily on. The guests in the Speise-saal were numerous
-and noisy. Their voices irritated him; and often he started
-to his feet with the intention of vaguely proceeding to the
-vicinity of Frankenburg, and as frequently relinquished the
-idea; for he dreaded lest he should meet the Baron, and be
-tempted into the commission of some wild outrage.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With much of the same gloom that Herminia had in her
-mind, when, from the windows of the Grand Hotel, on the
-evening our story opens, she looked dreamily down on
-Cologne, on city, church, and river, did Charlie, from a
-balcony of his hotel, opposite the new theatre, look down
-upon the strasse that leads to Borcette, and the crowded
-boulevard that now occupies the place of a levelled ditch
-and rampart, and is prettily laid out with pine trees, and
-many tiny sheets of water.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Dinner was set before him under the awning which shaded
-the balcony, and there was a bottle of hock. Yes; he had
-ordered the kellner, mechanically, to serve it up; but the
-dinner remained untasted, though the hock was drained in
-draughts, as if to drown the ever-recurring thoughts&mdash;would
-he never again see that sweet girl whose witcheries were
-entwined around his heart? should he never more look into
-her eyes, whose tender glances were magnetic; never feel on
-his lips those clinging kisses, while he pressed her hand to
-his breast?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Near him, under an awning in front of the hotel, seated on
-hard wooden stools, at a bare deal table, were some poor
-Handwerks-Burschen, or travelling workmen, in blue blouses
-and wooden sabots, smoking, drinking beer, and making
-merry with their wives or sweethearts, and singing&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- 'Draw the social chair yet closer;<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Vow by this full draught of mirth,<br />
- That all evil is forgiven,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Hell is banished from our earth.'<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-It was Schiller's beautiful 'Song of Joy' they were singing
-to the clanking accompaniment of their cans and wooden
-shoes. How happy those humble fellows seemed; and how
-much he envied them!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But Charlie was roused from his reverie by the Oberkellner
-announcing&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Der Graf von Frankenburg.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Which?' asked Charlie, starting; 'Count Ulrich?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No, mein Herr&mdash;Count Heinrich.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Very good&mdash;show him up.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Charlie would rather that the old father of Ernestine had
-come than her brother, whose errand would no doubt be a
-hostile one. That Heinrich, his friend and comrade, came
-on such an errand seemed horrible and unnatural. The
-wild justice of the pistol, as some one has named it, was
-ceasing to be appreciated even in Germany. The time had
-gone past when the pistols of skilled homicides were notched
-as registers of the lives they had taken, or had cards
-attached to them, with the names of the slain, the date and
-the place of meeting, and the distance of fighting, all neatly
-written thereon.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Let Heinrich taunt him how he would, a duel must not
-take place. 'In the battle-field,' thought Charlie, 'I shall
-cheerfully meet death, front to front and face to face; but I
-shall not carry there the mark of Cain, by perhaps shooting
-the brother of her I love&mdash;my brother in the spirit.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Charlie forgot that in the Heilinghaist-feld at Altona he
-had fought a duel for that brother, and winged an officer of
-the King's Grenadiers; and he was just remembering that if
-hostilities were contemplated, a messenger would have been
-sent by Heinrich, when the latter entered the room, and
-coming quickly forward to Charlie, grasped both his hands
-with his usual frankness.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, Sir Knight of the Rueful Countenance&mdash;' he was
-beginning, when Charlie said&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How can you jest, Heinrich, at a time like this?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I do not jest; but have come, in defiance of all family
-views and prejudices, to cheer you, and have some conversation
-over this wretched affair. Poor Ernestine! I wish
-you and she had taken me into your confidence. By our
-past and present friendship, I surely merited that from you,
-at least.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A bottle of wine, Heinrich?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Thanks&mdash;I have just galloped in from the Schloss, and
-had some difficulty in finding your quarters.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'There are cigars, and here is an easy-chair. I am thankful
-you did not come on a hostile visit. To decline would
-have been disgraceful, to accept might have been fratricide;
-but I should have fired in the air.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What stuff you are talking!' said Heinrich, as he manipulated
-and lit a cigar, while the waiter was pouring out the
-wine.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Now let us talk,' said he, when the latter had withdrawn.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And how are the ladies this evening?' asked Charlie,
-trying, with a swelling heart, to talk common sense.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'As you may suppose, the Grafine, my mother, is in a
-furious pet; and I knew nothing about your sudden
-departure till I found your place vacant at the breakfast
-table.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And&mdash;and your sister, Heinrich?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Has been all day fretting in her room.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And the Grafine Herminia?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'With her. I saw Herminia for a little time to-day, and
-she desired me to assure you of her fullest sympathy.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'God bless her!' exclaimed he, whilst his eyes became
-moist.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The poor little thing endured too much, when she
-believed me to be Herr Mansfeld, and knew me not in my
-proper person, to be without due sympathy for all afflicted
-lovers.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You do not speak of the Herr Graf.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, he is inexorable!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And our infernal Baron&mdash;no doubt he was at Frankenburg
-to-day, hoping to play the lover,' said Charlie
-viciously.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'He was not.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How so?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'His Excellency has a violent fit of the gout!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Long may it continue!' said Charlie fervently.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Amen!' added Heinrich, lying back in his chair and
-laughing heartily; 'the idea of an adoring swain having an
-ailment so unromantic! And now for the object of my
-visit. I have simply come to apologize for all that has
-occurred at the Schloss; but I might have foreseen it, had
-my own affairs not occupied too much of my attention.
-Ernestine is too enchanting a girl to have failed to attract.
-What is done cannot be undone. I do love you, Carl, and
-deplore all that has taken place.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The two friends shook hands warmly. With Charlie, his
-comrade, brother officer, and most particular 'chum,' was
-now the link between him and Ernestine&mdash;between him and
-Frankenburg&mdash;the Eden from which he had been banished,
-and without his Eve. How he loved the generous fellow!
-How gladly he would lay down his life for him; but in
-doing so, he would leave Ernestine, and, perhaps, to another.
-Another? Oh! that was not to be thought of! Heinrich
-began again&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Herminia says that Ernestine has never closed an eye
-since last night, which I am sorry to say, because if troubles
-can be slept upon they are curable. However, don't be
-alarmed about Ernestine,' he added, laughing, 'she's very
-low and sad, no doubt; but there is no chance of her
-drowning herself in Fastrada's pool below the Schloss&mdash;that
-odious pond where I used to puddle for many a day
-with a crooked pin and a string, catching many a cold, but
-never a fish.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why, Heinrich?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'For a very sufficient reason. There was none in it.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Do you think your mother will ever forgive me?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Heaven alone knows. Time will show. She has the
-most absurd ideas concerning alliances and family rank.
-As for my father, he storms and gets into rages that I call
-apoplectic ones; but he'll sit in his study among the
-saddles, dogs' collars, and so forth, and smoke himself into
-quietude ere long. He is a wonderful hale and hearty old
-fellow for his great age; but he married late in life, and has
-only had a silver wedding, when his comrade, old
-Field-Marshal Wrangel, has had a golden one. And, then, you
-are a soldier, Carl&mdash;and to be a soldier is always a trump
-card with him. You have heard how he saved Blucher's
-life at Ligny?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Only vaguely.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It is a matter of history: Prussian history, at least; and
-was one of those impulses, or inspirations, which, if not
-acted on instantly, may never come again. It was at Ligny
-where the Prussians and French were engaged on the 16th
-of June, on that dreadful day of tempest; rain, and wind,
-when the British were retreating from Quatre Bras to their
-position at Waterloo. Victory was evidently declaring for
-the Emperor, when Blucher strove to arrest his success by
-consecutive charges of cavalry. In person he led on a
-regiment of Hussars, who were repulsed; his horse fell
-beneath him wounded, and the great Marshal could not be
-extricated, and the enemy were pressing on! The last of
-his flying Hussars had left the brave old man, who lay
-helpless on the ground; but his aide-de-camp, the Count, my
-father, resolving to share his fate, flung himself by Blucher's
-side, and covered him with his horse-cloak that he might
-not be recognised. Over them swept a brigade of Brass
-Cuirassiers, so named from the metal of their helmets and
-corslets. The routed Hussars rallied suddenly, wheeled
-about, and attacked their pursuers, and again passed their
-fallen leader, and the old Graf&mdash;a young Graf, then&mdash;in
-their pursuit of the French, whom they routed. My father
-instantly seized the opportunity. He dragged Blucher
-from under the fallen charger, mounted him on a dragoon
-horse, and thus saved his life!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-While Heinrich, with something of exultation, was detailing
-this episode of the Count's early life, the thoughts of
-Carl were very far away from the events of Ligny and
-Waterloo.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Next week will see us on the march for France,' said he,
-'and I may cross the purposes of your family and the path
-of Ernestine no more! You, Heinrich, who are so
-successful and so happy in your love, might surely pity us.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I do, Carl. A fellow feeling makes us wondrous kind.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Arrange for me,' continued Charlie, with great earnestness,
-'that Ernestine and I may have one more interview.
-Our last farewell&mdash;our separation, was so cruelly abrupt.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A meeting! When and where?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'When and where you choose. See her once again, I
-must at all hazards; and you alone can arrange this for
-me. Dear friend, don't deny us this last melancholy
-pleasure!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Where, then, think you?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Settle that with my darling; and may God bless you,
-Heinrich!' said Charlie, in a choking voice, as he patted
-his friend on the epaulette.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I shall write you to-night, to-morrow at the latest; for
-we must not lose time while the Baron's gout lasts.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And Heinrich ordered his horse and departed, leaving
-Charlie Pierrepont in a more contented mood of mind than
-he had been in since he left the boudoir of the Countess.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So he should <i>see</i> her once again!
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap09"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER IX.
-<br /><br />
-FOR LIFE AND DEATH.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Eagerly did Charlie Pierrepont await the arrival of the
-Brieftrager, or letter-carrier, who brought him a brief note
-from Heinrich, saying that he meant to take his sister for a
-drive that evening, and that Charlie would find her in the
-little church at Burtscheid at the hour of seven. The note
-was signed, as usual, '<i>Ihr treuer Freund</i>, HEINRICH.' After
-all that had occurred, how delightful and encouraging
-it was to find her brother signing himself 'Your devoted
-friend,' as of old!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The little church of Burtscheid?' said Charlie, after
-perusing the note for the third or fourth time; 'it is a
-strange place to choose.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But Ernestine was a strange girl, and, with regard to this
-farewell meeting, had that in view which Charlie could not
-foresee. Ten hours had to elapse before the appointed one
-came; and to Charlie, who passed the day almost watch in
-hand, the time seemed interminable. Evening came,
-however, at last; and the shadows of the church spires were
-falling eastward when Charlie set out for the trysting-place,
-which is a mile and a half from the gates of Aix, and
-connected therewith by a handsome avenue of trees. The
-village is now chiefly celebrated for its mineral waters; but
-'the abbey of Burtscheid,' says Forster, a writer at the
-close of the last century, 'is beautifully situated, and
-finished with all ecclesiastical splendour. Close by, a small
-wood runs towards a large reservoir, and as you advance
-you come to a narrow valley enclosed by woody hills, where
-several warm springs are soon discovered by the vapour
-that rises from them, and the large reservoir is quite filled
-with hot water. As you walk along a series of beautifully
-shaded reservoirs you see the romantic ruins of the old
-castle of Frankenburg.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thus the trysting-place selected by Ernestine was quite
-near her home. The church was an appendage of the
-abbey mentioned by Forster. It was a lonely place,
-surrounded by a burial-ground, where, as usual in German
-cemeteries, the inventions of the mason and carpenter
-rarely go beyond an urn, a cross, or a broken pillar in
-fashioning a tombstone, and where, for reasons to be
-afterwards mentioned, few came to promenade, as the public
-usually do in public burying-grounds.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At the gate stood a handsome britzka, with a pair of
-horses, the reins of which were held by Heinrich, who was
-without groom or other attendant.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ernestine?' said Charlie, grasping the hand of his
-friend.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'She is in the church. We have not been here three
-minutes. Do not detain her long, Carl, as I would not
-have suspicion excited. Meantime, I shall smoke a cigar.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Charlie hastened into the edifice, for the Herr Pastor of
-which, in happier times, Ernestine and Herminia had worked
-many altar-cloths, pen-wipers, slippers, and smoking-caps.
-It was a plain, whitewashed edifice, ancient Gothic in some
-parts, patched with modern brickwork elsewhere; and a
-subdued light stole through the windows on the portraits of
-certain defunct Herr Pastors hung upon the pillars, the
-oaken pews, and the rows of black iron spittoons in some,
-with kneeling hassocks in others. Before the rail of the
-altar, Ernestine was kneeling, in prayer apparently.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was no one else in the church, and on hearing
-Charlie approach, she threw herself into his arms, and for
-some time could but sob passionately and utter his name in
-a choking voice, while he patted her cheek and kissed away
-her tears. Then she became more composed, and taking
-Charlie's face between her soft and ungloved hands, gazed
-into his eyes with a tender smile.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You will yet love me, Carl, in spite of all that mamma
-has said?' she whispered.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Love you!' he exclaimed, 'what on earth could make
-me cease to love you?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How enchanting it is to be with you again, my own Carl!
-You will write to me from&mdash;from France, when Heinrich
-writes to me or Herminia, and I can reply in the same
-manner.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Thank you, darling, for the delightful promise.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No power on earth must separate us, Carl. I have
-resolved that such cannot, shall not be.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The Baron&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ah, don't speak of him at this precious time,' said she,
-contemptuously; 'that odious Grünthal&mdash;such a mouth he
-has! When he laughs you can almost see it behind him.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Behind him, darling&mdash;how?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The corners of his mouth might meet behind his head.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This was somewhat of an exaggeration, but as it was like
-some of Ernestine's speeches in merrier times, she made
-Charlie laugh.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yet, to such a man <i>they</i> would assign you!' said he.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'If they dare!' she replied, with a little gesture, peculiarly
-her own, as it was partly imperious and partly child-like.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her tears began to flow again, and she said:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It is in vain that the Graf storms, and that mamma tells
-me every vow that has passed between us must be forgotten,
-that when you left Frankenburg you lost all claim on me,
-and I was, and am, perfectly free. I am not free, Carl; I
-have promised to become your wedded wife, and no other
-shall have my heart or hand while I live!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She spoke with strong passion, and as she lay in the arms
-of her lover, her whole delicate form was trembling violently.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But for this war, I would implore you to take me away
-with you, and make me your wife in spite of them all&mdash;your
-dear little wife, Carl. Wherever you went, there Ernestine
-would be with you, and we should live but for each other,
-and love each other as we have always done.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And this war once over, if God spares me, I shall come,
-at every risk, at every hazard, and take you away&mdash;on this I
-had already resolved, darling.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'When that time comes, dearest Carl, I will live on your
-smiles by day, and rest my head on your bosom at night.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was a smile on the eyes and on the lips of the girl
-as she spoke, though her heart was torn by the misery of
-the coming separation. Suddenly she said:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Kneel with me before this altar, ere some one interrupts
-us. Let us make a promise to be true to each other in life
-and in death&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Death, darling?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'In sorrow and joy, peril and safety; sickness and health,
-in death and in life! Repeat after me, what I say.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Clasped hand in hand, and kneeling face to face, they each
-promised to be faithful, loving and true to the other, under
-all circumstances, exactly as if they had been wedded, till
-death parted them. The words she dictated were strangely
-nervous and solemn&mdash;solemn even to being fantastic&mdash;chilling,
-yet somehow charming, and they were never forgotten
-by Charlie, who repeated them after her as one in a
-dream.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the usually tender eyes and soft face of Ernestine there
-was, for a time, a sad yet stern expression of resolution and
-self-mastery, which Charlie failed to analyze, though the
-memory of it long haunted him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'We have forged our spiritual chain, beloved Carl,' said
-she, 'and cannot break it now.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nor shall it ever be broken!' he replied, caressing her
-tenderly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'<i>For life and death</i> our bond be recorded in Heaven!'
-said the strange romantic girl; 'kiss me, Carl, kiss me&mdash;I
-feel much happier now.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Surely Heaven will spare me for your sake, my love.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'If not, we shall meet there, Carl&mdash;for I should not be
-long behind you, there, where there are no harsh parents,
-"where there is neither marriage, nor giving in marriage,"&mdash;then
-we shall be re-united, Carl, and live our dreams of love
-over again.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The girl's manner was exquisitely tender, yet sad, and so
-earnest that there came a time when Charlie remembered it,
-occasionally with terror. The voice of her brother was now
-heard.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Heinrich is very impatient,' said Charlie.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'One moment, Carl. If I were to come to you when
-dead, would you fear me?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'When dead?' said Charlie, looking down on the sweet
-upturned face that lay on his shoulder; 'what <i>do</i> you mean,
-Ernestine?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I scarcely know; but I should not fear <i>you</i>, love. I have
-some strange emotions in my heart this evening. I do not
-think even the grave would keep me from you; but would
-it keep you from me?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I fear it would, darling,' said he, with a half smile, though
-rather bewildered by all this; 'battle trenches are often
-pretty deep and full.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, horror, Carl; don't talk of such an end as that!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He regarded her anxiously, fearing that sudden sorrow
-was affecting her mind. Again the voice of Heinrich was
-heard. She drew down the veil of her hat to conceal the
-redness of her eyes, and Charlie led her out to the britzka.
-All was over now, and they were separated till Fate or
-Chance should enable them to meet again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Those who saw Ernestine looking back from the britzka,
-and Charlie lift his hat more than once, as he walked slowly
-down the avenue that led to Aix, could little have imagined
-the strangely solemn betrothal that had just taken place
-between these two, in the little church of Burtscheid.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap10"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER X.
-<br /><br />
-TO THE RHINE!
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-'To Paris! To Paris! Hoch Germania!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Such were the cries that rang along the line of march,
-when on the 1st of August the various columns of the
-German army began to meet those which left Paris shouting
-'To Berlin!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After detailing much that savours of what may seem
-romance, we have now to borrow a paragraph or two from
-the history of Europe.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Perfect in organization, the forces which the Prussian
-Government were able to bring to the frontier a few days
-after the declaration of war against France were divided
-into three great armies, making a grand total of four
-hundred and twelve thousand infantry, and forty-seven
-thousand eight hundred cavalry, with one thousand four
-hundred and forty pieces of cannon.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The first of these three armies was commanded by Major
-General Steinmetz, the second by Prince Frederick Charles,
-and the third by the Crown Prince&mdash;the whole being under
-the orders of the King of Prussia, assisted by General
-Count Von Moltke, a distinguished Dane, as chief of his
-staff.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Strong reserves were posted at Hainau, Frankfort, at the
-old electoral city of Mayence, and amidst the vast defences
-of Coblentz between the Rhine and the Moselle. Another
-army defended the north, under Von Falkenstein; so taken
-altogether, including the Landwehr, Prussia, with her million
-and a quarter of well-drilled soldiery, seemed impregnable.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Charlie Pierrepont's regiment was formed in brigade with
-the 7th, or King's Grenadiers, and the 37th, or
-Westphalians. The war establishment of a Prussian regiment is
-never less than 3,006 men, with 69 officers. His brigade
-was among the first troops actively employed, with orders to
-occupy the line of the Saar, resting its right on Saarbrück,
-with advanced posts at that place and in the schloss of the
-Princes of Nassau, at Saarlouis, which had been fortified by
-Vauban, at Bliescastle, where the Prussians and French
-fought a great battle in 1793, and at Merzig.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The second army, with the royal headquarters, crossed
-the Rhine at Mayence, and took a position on the left of
-General Steinmetz, occupied Zweibrucken (which the
-French had named Deux Ponts), and Pirmasens, with its
-main body echeloned along the line of railway from the
-ruined castle of the Counts of Sickingen at Landstuhl to
-the strong fortress of Landau.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The third army came on by the way of Mannheim and
-Germesheim, and formed to the left of the second, at the
-latter place, Speirs, Neustadt, and Landau. All these
-formidable columns could communicate with each other by
-railway, and were well secured in the rear in case of having
-to retreat. But no thought of retreating was in the Prussian
-ranks.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From the suddenness and efficiency of these arrangements,
-it was clear 'that Count Bismarck and his master had been
-long and actively preparing for war, and had not been
-entirely absorbed in peaceful and innocent designs, as we
-were constantly assured by certain writers in this country,
-who desired to present France to the world as a crafty
-and ravening wolf, and Prussia a meek and inoffensive
-lamb.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Something of this kind was said by Heinrich to Charlie,
-as their brigade approached Saarbrück. But the latter
-would scarcely admit it, as his love for Ernestine, and his
-high military enthusiasm, made him, for the time, 'German
-all over&mdash;German at fever-heat,' as he said.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And splendid was the aspect of the strong brigade, with
-the King's Grenadiers in front, the Westphalians in the
-centre, and the 95th Thuringians in the rear, as it defiled
-across the bridge that led to the suburb of St. Johann, each
-battalion with its carts of reserve ammunition, drawn by six
-horses. After each battalion, also, came thirteen baggage
-and one canteen waggon, all the brass drums beating smartly
-to make the men step quick. The colours of the King's
-Grenadiers, black and white; of the other corps, black,
-white, and red&mdash;the standard of the North German
-Confederation&mdash;were floating in the wind, above the long lines
-of spiked helmets, and of bright bayonets and brighter
-musket barrels sloped in the sunshine, for the Prussian arms
-are not browned as ours are now, but pure, white steel.
-Hence the glitter over all the column was great, though the
-uniforms were sombre and blue.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Anon the brass bands struck up between the echoing
-streets of Saarbrück; but amid all the enthusiasm of the
-time, the crash of the martial music, the measured tramping
-of thousands of marching feet, Charlie's mind could not help
-reverting to those happy moments in the stair of the Hoch
-Munster, and the sadder ones in the quiet little church of
-Burtscheid, and, in memory, he still saw the rosy, trembling
-lips of the girl he loved, and the full bosom that rose and
-fell with sobs and sighs.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When would he be marching home, and what might
-happen then? Would it come to pass that he might never
-return, but find a grave in the soil of France? They were
-now within thirty miles of Metz. He cast a backward
-glance to where the rearguard was descending a slope, and,
-as if to reply to his surmises, there came marching with it a
-corps of grave-diggers, for a force of this kind was attached
-to every column, while 'by an arrangement characterised by
-a grim horror, yet unquestionably useful,' every Prussian
-officer and soldier was ordered to wear round his neck a
-label, to establish his identity in case of his being killed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-These reflections were but momentary, so Charlie's spirit
-rose again, and his heart beat responsive to the sharp and
-regulated crash of the drums; for there is much elasticity of
-mind in healthy twenty-eight or thirty years, and Charlie's
-were no more.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The enthusiasm all over Germany was unquestionably
-great at this time, and as a specimen of it, Heinrich told
-Charlie, exultingly, how his father's old comrade and brother
-officer, Field Marshal the Count Von Wrangel, then in the
-eighty-fourth year of his age, on seeing his old regiment, the
-3rd Cuirassiers, marching through Berlin, had petitioned the
-king for leave to join them as a private, as he was now too
-aged to lead; but the king declined the offer of the brave
-old man, and requested him to remain in Berlin, and make
-himself useful in a more peaceable way.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the early morning of the 2nd of August, Charlie
-Pierrepont was subaltern of the out-picket posted on
-the road that leads direct from the open town of Saarbrück
-towards Metz, where then the Emperor Napoleon III. commanded
-in person. He had returned from visiting his
-line of advanced sentinels, all of whom stood motionless,
-with musket ordered and bayonet fixed, with their faces
-turned in the direction of Metz, each longing, no doubt,
-for the relief and a pipe. Stiff, and chilled with the rain
-and dew of the summer night, Charlie shook himself, as a
-dog might do, and proceeded to light a cigar and look
-around him, as the dawn brightened, little foreseeing that
-this would be one of the most important days in the new
-current of events.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He could see the Saar winding in and out at the foot of
-a chain of hills, covered to their summits by beautiful oaks
-and beeches. Here and there the red precipices started up
-from the bed of the stream; for the rocks and the soil
-were red, and even the river was red, too, for rain had
-fallen overnight.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The scene looked lovely and peaceful. Red stones,
-spotted with orange-coloured lichens, lay plentifully in the
-bed of the Saar, where a solitary kingfisher wound about
-among the water-weeds. Here and there at the narrower
-parts of the stream, an occasional peasant was fishing with
-a tub and sink-net, and beyond lay the plain, where Saarlouis'
-ramparts rose above the swampy fields, where herds
-of cattle plashed disconsolately about.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Guten morgen, Carl!' cried a familiar voice, and on
-looking up, he saw Heinrich hurrying towards him. 'I have
-news for you.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Are the enemy in motion?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'As your post is an advanced one, you should be the
-first to know of that. My news is from the rear.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'From the rear!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How dull you are, Carl&mdash;from Frankenburg! Here,
-take a pull at my bottle; your own is, no doubt, empty by
-this time.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Thanks!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Charlie took a few mouthfuls from the metal flask of
-brandy-and-water that Heinrich wore slung over his shoulder
-in a belt, and said&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Now for your news, friend; it is not pleasant, I fear,
-when you fortify me thus.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Anything must be pleasant that comes to us from the
-girls we love. The field-post has just come. I have a
-letter from Herminia, Carl, with a little enclosure for you.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was a note&mdash;merely a note, on scented and tinted
-paper, for Ernestine was not above these feminine prettinesses,
-written in her graceful style and lady-like hand&mdash;to
-say that he was never absent from her thoughts, and how
-she and Herminia had wept and prayed in secret on the
-night the army crossed the Rhine.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I fear, Carl, that I am looking ill and pale,' she
-continued, 'but sunny-haired Herminia seems to thrive on her
-grief; but you know she is ever all dimples&mdash;dimples on
-her white elbows and chin, cheeks, and hands&mdash;soft jolly
-dimples. Mamma, tired of knitting&mdash;she always knits as if
-her livelihood depended upon it&mdash;has dozed off to sleep,
-with her Spitz pug under her lace shawl in the boudoir.
-(The boudoir! Do you ever think of it, and that horrible
-night when she surprised us while searching for that miserable
-little cur?) Papa, as dinner is over, is smoking in his
-study, among his fishing and shooting gear, pistols, guns,
-whips, collars, and whistles, no doubt drinking to the health
-of the Kaiser and studying the <i>Staats Anzeiger</i>. All is
-unchanged since you left Frankenburg, from whence my
-heart goes with this to you, my dearest Betrothed of
-Burtscheid.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Charlie was perusing this for the third time, Heinrich
-was lolling beside him on the grass, humming '<i>Du du</i>,' and
-idly playing with his silver sword-knot, while watching the
-bright morning sunshine stealing along the wooded hills
-and winding river, when suddenly there was the report of a
-needle-gun in front. Another, another, and a third
-followed, as the whole line of advanced sentinels opened fire,
-and the out-picket rushed to their arms and fell in their
-ranks.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Sapperment!' exclaimed young Frankenburg, springing
-to his feet; 'it has come at last! This is war! The French
-are in motion in front; there will soon be work for the
-grave-digger corps!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So opened the day on which the young Napoleon was to
-receive his 'baptism of fire.'
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap11"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XI.
-<br /><br />
-SEPARATED.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-For a time the preparations for her marriage had gone on
-openly&mdash;though Ernestine, in her tenderness of heart and
-reluctance to wound one she loved so well, made no reference
-to this in her short letter&mdash;so openly that there were
-times when she contemplated flight; but whither could she
-fly? and then she shrunk from the dreadful <i>esclandre</i> of such
-a proceeding; so settlements were made and deeds signed,
-and from time to time she found beautiful ornaments and
-jewels, the gifts of the Baron, on her toilette tables; but
-she never wore them, and the morocco cases remained
-unopened; till at last a serious illness, or sickness of the
-heart, in fact, supervened, and the espousals were delayed,
-and the Count cursed the hour that his thoughtless son
-had brought his troublesome English comrade to Frankenburg.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She was no longer <i>espiègle</i>, as of old; the piano remained
-unopened now, and no entreaties on the part of her father
-could lure her into playing 'Die Wacht am Rhein,' the
-war-song of Arndt, or any of those stirring and patriotic airs
-with which all Germany was resounding now. The very
-sound of the instrument fretted her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Times there had been when she had tried over some of
-those songs she had loved to sing to Charlie Pierrepont&mdash;the
-same that she had been rehearsing on the evening of
-his arrival (how much had happened since then!)&mdash;but
-she fairly broke down and made the attempt no more.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A summons from Prince Bismarck, for the Baron Grünthal
-to attend at Berlin, in consequence of some affairs
-connected with the Oberconsistory Court at Aix, gave poor
-Ernestine a temporary respite from the annoyance of his
-presence and clumsy attentions; and as she was at times
-easier in mind, and more content to wait the issue of events,
-after that remarkable and somewhat solemn interchange of
-promises at Burtscheid Church, her parents began to hope
-that all was at an end between her and the Herr Lieutenant
-of Infantry, and that she would be content to receive the
-Baron as her husband in time, perhaps when Heinrich
-returned, if God spared him ever to return.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This was satisfactory to her on one hand, while on the
-other she had the pleasure of sharing her secret sorrows and
-hopes of future joy with Herminia, with whom she had now
-a double link and bond of sympathy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They led but a dull life now in the old Schloss.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Baron Rhineberg, 'a beer-bloated Teuton' of the first
-class, came occasionally to talk politics with the Count, over
-a pipe and flask of Rhine wine; the two daughters of the
-Justiz-rath, and a few other visitors, dropped in, but Ernestine
-found it weary work to talk commonplaces with these people,
-not one of whom had any vital or particular interest, beyond
-a national one, in the army now in the field; and to chat of
-music and books, of Berlin wools and soup for the poor,
-when, perhaps, <i>at that very moment of time</i>, the bullets might
-be whistling about him she loved; or when he might be
-stretched wounded, dying or dead, upon the bloody sod&mdash;to
-talk, we say, of aught that was frivolous, with such fears in
-her heart, was impossible.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Strong, yet tender, was thus the bond of sympathy between
-the cousins; for those whom they loved&mdash;the one openly,
-the other secretly&mdash;and to whom they were affianced, were
-facing side by side the foes of Germany, and risking the
-same perils and toils.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Once only did she rouse herself thoroughly and feel
-startled when the portly Baron Rhineberg, taking his vast
-pipe out from his bushy moustaches, asked her abruptly if
-she 'ever visited the church of Burtscheid.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Sometimes,' said she, colouring deeply for a moment,
-and then becoming pale as before; 'but why do you ask,
-Herr Baron?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Because Herr Pastor Puffenvortz is preaching a series of
-stirring sermons there just now.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Poor Ernestine, who had begun to fear that her interview
-there with Charlie had been overheard or overseen by some
-eavesdropper unknown, felt greatly relieved by the Baron's
-simple reply; but her sudden change of colour was not
-unnoticed by the Countess, who drew certain conclusions
-therefrom, though she could scarcely give them any form.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The sudden and blunt reference to the church at Burtscheid,
-the scene of her last and farewell interview with
-Charlie, gave her so sudden a shock&mdash;her sensibility had
-become so delicate now&mdash;that she had to retire to her
-room.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Burtscheid! All the scene then came again before
-her&mdash;when words were spoken that were known to Heaven and
-themselves alone! He was gone&mdash;torn from her, the first
-and only man she had ever loved, so the girl pined in her
-heart. So now she sat, as she had been wont to sit for
-hours, listlessly, as if without consciousness of thought;
-yet her mind was keenly active and full of images of the
-absent one.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To the latter, variety of occupation, change of scene in a
-foreign land, the activity of a military life, the incessant stir
-and alarms of war, would, in spite of love, separation, and
-fear of rivalry and of her family, draw in fresh moods of
-thought and afford thereby a certain healthy relief; but she
-was left amid the scenes of her departed joy, with the
-additional affliction before her of domestic persecution and the
-odious addresses of a would-be lover!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How eagerly she hoped that he would be detained for
-months at Berlin!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, Herminia!' she would sometimes say to her cousin;
-'I was so happy&mdash;so happy, that it is a sin to make me so
-miserable!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Be calm, darling, be calm; Heinrich will bring him to
-you once again,' replied the girl, embracing her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It will be miraculous if they <i>both</i> escape the dangers of
-this mighty war.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Do not speak thus, I implore you,' said Herminia,
-passionately, and somewhat scared by her cousin's tone of voice
-and expression of eye.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'My sufferings are indeed great, Herminia. Do you
-remember,' she asked, with a sad smile, 'all you endured
-at Cologne, when you only knew Heinrich as Herr
-Mansfeld?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Never, never shall I forget them, and the agony that I
-suffered on one particular evening, when I heard you laughing,
-and deemed you heartless, dear cousin. How I then
-loathed the name of Heinrich&mdash;it seems wonderful now!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'So now do I loathe that of the Baron. Oh, Herminia, few
-like me have to endure misery without the prospect of relief!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the evening after Rhineberg had withdrawn, the
-Countess, whose mind was still running on her daughter's
-evident emotion at the name of Burtscheid, gave vent to the
-anger and suspicion that excited her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Did you ever <i>go</i> to Burtscheid with Herr Pierrepont?' she
-asked abruptly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Never, mamma,' replied Ernestine, blushing again, but at
-her own quibble rather than the question of her mother,
-who, after eyeing her narrowly, almost sternly for a minute,
-said&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You still pine for that insolent young man. I can see it
-in your face, Ernestine!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, mamma!' said the girl, with a wonderful tenderness
-of tone, 'is it a crime to love?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Not if it is a proper love.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Then why, mamma darling, are you so severe on <i>me</i>?'
-asked Ernestine, nestling in her mother's neck in the most
-endearing manner.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I wish to protect and guide you, and to teach you that
-you must not love one who is beneath you.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But, dear Carl&mdash;&mdash;' (The adjective escaped her unconsciously.)
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Grafine!' exclaimed the astonished Countess.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, mamma, Carl Pierrepont is not beneath me.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'This is new to me&mdash;how?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Because, even if he were so, love makes all equal.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By kisses and caresses she strove to win over her mother;
-but the latter almost thrust her back, saying:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'This is folly&mdash;worse than folly; crush, forget, dismiss
-such thoughts. They are unworthy of you,
-Ernestine&mdash;unworthy of <i>my</i> daughter!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And of mine, too,' added the Count, who had come
-unnoticed upon the scene. 'Der Teufel! much as I liked
-that English lad, I hope some French bullet may rid us of
-him for ever.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, father,' implored Ernestine, 'spare me such terrible
-remarks. Think of his old father and his three sisters in
-England. Think that our Heinrich shares his dangers.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'True&mdash;true; God forgive me the thought; but go to
-your room, child, and let us have no more scenes like this,'
-replied the old Count, who had long outlived the memory
-of what a young love was, and Ernestine gladly obeyed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The expression of her face changed at times; its softness
-seemed to pass away, and then contempt and anger
-mingled with sorrow on her white lips. She was a spirited
-yet a gentle girl; she felt that she had been insulted, and
-treated like a child; that her natural freedom had been
-trampled on, her wishes ignored, and in the long waking
-hours of the silent night, when no sound was heard but the
-hooting of the owls in the ruined tower close by, she
-brooded, almost revengefully, upon the pride and tyranny
-of her parents, and the gross insolence&mdash;for such she
-justly deemed it&mdash;of the Baron Grünthal, seeking her hand
-without her affection&mdash;her hand in defiance of herself and
-her avowed love for another!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then it was, in times such as these, that wild and
-impotent schemes of flight and freedom occurred&mdash;schemes
-from which she shrank when daylight came.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Ernestine looked ere long careworn and became ill; her
-physician recommended the baths at different places, and
-the mineral waters elsewhere; but they were resorted to in
-vain. One little enclosure from Carl, received secretly in
-the letters of Herminia, was worth all the baths and wells
-in Germany to Ernestine.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-One evening Baron Rhineberg came galloping to the
-Schloss, and from his vast rotundity was ushered into the
-drawing-room when on the verge of an apoplectic fit. His
-features were purple, his eyes rolled wildly in their sockets,
-and from mingled excitement and enthusiasm, the burly old
-Teuton could only splutter and utter some incoherent
-sounds, while the Spitz pug barked furiously.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ach Gott!' exclaimed the Count; 'what is the matter?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Have you not heard the news, Herr Count?' he gasped.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'News!' repeated Frankenburg, changing colour, and
-mechanically, or by use and wont, playing with the pipe
-that dangled at his button, for even he did not smoke in
-the drawing-room, though a thorough German.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But of course you could not, for I have just come from
-the city,' said Rhineberg.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Der Teufel!' said Frankenburg, angrily, 'and what
-may the news be?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The advanced column of the German army has come to
-blows with the French at last.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'At last!' said the Count, with something of pride
-mingling in his irritation; 'I don't think the Kaiser has
-lost much time.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Our troops were attacked, at least so the telegram says,
-by the French, led by the Emperor Napoleon in person.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Where&mdash;where?' asked all his listeners, while the three
-ladies grew very pale indeed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'At Saarbrück.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The devil!' exclaimed the Count; 'that is actually on
-our Prussian ground.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Saarbrück?' re-echoed the Countess and Herminia, in
-faint voices, for they both knew that Heinrich was with the
-advanced column there.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Ernestine knew that her Carl was there too; but no
-sound left her white and quivering lips.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And what were the results of the conflict&mdash;the
-casualties, and so forth?' asked the old Count, his mind
-flashing back to the days of Ligny, Wavre, and Waterloo.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Unknown as yet. The first man killed is said to be an
-<i>Englishman</i>.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Gott in Himmel!' cried the Count, 'my girl has
-fainted!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So at Frankenburg, as at many other places, where the
-hearts of the people were with the flower of Germany, they
-could but wait and pray&mdash;pray and be patient till true
-tidings came.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap12"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XII.
-<br /><br />
-THE BAPTISM OF FIRE.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-It was no false alarm that, as related in a preceding chapter,
-made the advanced sentinels of the 95th, all hardy fellows
-from the Thuringerwald, open fire in quick succession.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Emperor Napoleon, who had recently arrived at
-Metz, looking old and ill, with his head sunk on his breast,
-and who, on the 28th of July, had issued that famous bulletin,
-'Soldiers, the eyes of the world are upon you! The fate of
-civilization depends upon our success. Soldiers, let each
-one do his duty, and the God of armies will be with us!'&mdash;the
-Emperor, we say, finding that the time had come when
-something must be done to stimulate the spirit of those
-troops whom he had massed in and about Metz, as well as
-to appease the fiery impatience of the French people, being
-aware that Saarbrück was of importance to the Prussians,
-who there had command of three lines of railway for the
-conveyance of troops and stores, resolved to carry the place
-by storm.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Hence, about nine o'clock on the morning of the 2nd of
-August, the gleam of bayonets was seen on some heights
-that overlook the town, and the dark columns of the French,
-in their long blue coats, and red or madder-coloured breeches,
-became visible, and by that time the whole Prussian force in
-and about Saarbrück was under arms, and their cannon
-went thundering to the front.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Over the brass-spiked helmets, the brass-pointed pickel-haubes,
-with the spread eagle, rose forests of bayonets, a
-steelly sea flashing in the sunshine, the Uhlans riding with
-pennons furled and lances down on the flanks of the massed
-close columns. Anon the drums beat sharply, then the
-hoarse German words of command rang out on the clear air,
-the colours rustled on the morning breeze, and rays of light
-seemed to pass over all the force as the columns deployed
-into line, elbow touching elbow, loosely, and the order was
-given to load&mdash;to load those terrible needle-guns which
-carried death and destruction into the Austrian ranks in the
-war of 1866. They are simply breech-loading rifles, in
-which the charge is exploded by the projection of a piece
-of steel, called 'the needle,' on the detonating powder. The
-Prussians, whenever they encountered the French, allowed
-them to exhaust the fire of their chassepots at long range;
-then they poured in their own with deadly accuracy; and
-next came the bayonet charge&mdash;and those who have seen
-the Prussians charge will never forget the impression
-conveyed by their levelled ridge of steel, the shining helmets,
-the hoarse hurrahs, the flushed, yet resolute faces, the whole
-physique of the rushing infantry, and the roar of the
-trumpets as the Uhlans went thundering on their flanks,
-whirling their tremendous spears, as if impatient to close
-with the foe.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All this did Charlie Pierrepont see on this eventful day at
-Saarbrück.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Ere the Prussians formed line, the booming of their
-artillery was heard in front; a great deal of wood surrounded
-the town, and from this, as from an ambuscade, their cannon
-were fired, and high in the air rose the white smoke above
-the green foliage* With shouts of '<i>A bas la Prusse!</i>' the 2nd
-French corps, under General Bataille, came rushing on, only
-to be checked and decimated by the biting cannonade; the
-grassy slope that led to the heights was soon dotted by
-killed and wounded, and the stretchers and ambulance
-waggons made their appearance along the whole line of
-route.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What is the meaning of those cheers on the right?'
-asked Captain Schönforst, a tall soldier-like fellow of the
-95th, of Charlie, who was busy scanning the enemy through
-his field-glass; 'are those dragoons coming in from Forbach?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'By Heaven, I think it is the Emperor in person, surrounded
-by a brilliant staff, with a little boy riding by his
-side!' was the excited response of Pierrepont.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And the Emperor it was, accompanied by the Prince
-Imperial, then in his fourteenth year.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Tell the officer commanding that gun near us who these
-new arrivals are,' said Schönforst, a veteran of the
-Austro-Prussian war,' and desire him to send a few doses of grape
-in their direction.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Charlie promptly delivered the order; the direction of
-the gun was altered, and thus it was that the young prince
-received what was popularly known as his 'baptism of fire.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'He was admirably cool,' wrote the Emperor to the
-Empress; 'we were in front of the line, and the bullets fell
-at our feet. Louis has kept one which fell close to him.
-Some of the soldiers shed tears on seeing him so calm.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Filled with enthusiasm by all this, General Froissard
-despatched two battalions of the 67th regiment, under Colonel
-Theobaudin, to attack the hamlet of St. Arnaul, which was
-occupied by our friends the Thuringians, and was further
-defended by batteries of guns on the right flank of the Saar.
-The 15th French regiment made a rush at those batteries,
-and captured them with great bravery. Theobaudin's
-battalion, supported now by the 40th and 66th regiments, and
-some mitrailleuses&mdash;those horrible weapons, now for the
-first time tried in active warfare&mdash;made a furious attack on
-the village of St. Arnaul.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Shoulder to shoulder stood the resolute Thuringians&mdash;the
-lineal descendants of the ancient Hyrcinian foresters&mdash;volleying
-over wall and bank and hedge with their deadly
-needle-guns; but the French came rushing up the slope
-with glorious <i>élan</i>, though hundreds went rolling down, dead
-or dying, and choking in blood.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With those dreadful showers of balls, the mitrailleuses,
-'those master-pieces for death and carnage,' were heard amid
-the roar of the musketry by the strange noise of their
-discharge, which was dry, shrieking, and terrible!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Their balls in continuous streams tore thtough the Prussian
-ranks, mowing them down as scythes mow a field of corn.
-Everywhere the smoke was dense. Heinrich had an epaulette
-torn off by one bullet, and the spike of his helmet by
-another, while Charlie was twice on the point of being taken
-prisoner, when his company was skirmishing in front, at the
-time when the 8th and 23rd French regiments were also in
-skirmishing order through some thickly wooded ravines.
-Two powerful soldiers attacked him&mdash;in fact, he had run
-against them in the smoke&mdash;and he must inevitably have
-been killed or taken had he not rid himself of one with his
-revolver, while Captain Schönforst passed his long straight
-sword through the body of the other.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But the Prussian drums were now beating a retreat. It
-was impossible for the small force in Saarbrück&mdash;a mere
-weak advanced guard&mdash;to withstand the many battalions
-sent against it by the Emperor, especially as the attacking
-force was supported by an entire battery of mitrailleuses.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The affair was a skirmish rather than a battle, and ended
-by the town being set on fire, and the thick columns of smoke
-from the burning houses rose from amid the trees, rolled
-along the railway embankments, and added to the obscurity
-and confusion. Amid this rang the roar of the red flashing
-musketry, and the horrible shrieking of the mitrailleuse. The
-latter we may describe for the information of the reader is a
-four-pound gun, divided into twenty-five compartments by
-as many rifle barrels, all loaded at the breech by cartridges,
-and all discharged at once, the loading only requiring five
-actions, by which seven thousand eight hundred balls can be
-discharged in one hour into a circle of twelve feet in diameter.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was by the fire of one of these that Charlie saw an event
-which was one of the most touching scenes in the war. His
-skirmishers had been driven by the French 23rd close to
-the railway bank, and near them lay a Zouave, terribly
-wounded in the lungs apparently. The poor man's agony
-was frightful. He was past speech, and could only clasp his
-hands in prayer, cross himself, and point imploringly to his
-mouth.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A kindly sergeant of the 95th uncorked his water-bottle,
-and raising the Frenchman's head, was about to slake his
-thirst, when the shrieking sound was heard amid the smoke
-close by. Out of that smoke came the leaden storm of the
-mitrailleuse, and the Prussian and the Zouave were literally
-blown to fragments.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Over the railway bank the Thuringians were now driven,
-and everywhere the whole Prussian line was giving way!
-The moment the Emperor became aware of this, with
-generous humanity he ordered the mitrailleuses to cease
-firing, and thus arrested the useless carnage.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As yet Charlie Pierrepont had escaped without a scratch,
-though frequently the very sod beneath his feet was torn
-and sowed by balls. Though the French obtained possession
-of Saarbrück&mdash;the last troops out of which were the
-Thuringians&mdash;the Prussians still continued to lurk in the
-village of St. Johann, on the further side of the Saar, and in
-the thick woods beyond it, from whence the white smoke
-spirted out in incessant puffs as their well-concealed
-skirmishers kept up a galling fire on the enemy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This gradually ceased, and the shadows of evening began
-to deepen over Saarbrück, and on the faces of the dead and
-dying who lay by the sedgy banks of the once peaceful
-river. The fishers had fled, abandoning their tubs and
-baskets; no figures were seen moving on either side now
-save those of men in various uniforms; and terrified by the
-unnatural din that then had seemed to rend the sky, the
-little birds were seen to grovel amid the reeds and grass, as
-if too scared to seek their nests in those thickets around
-which the tide of carnage rolled.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The advanced sentinels were posted for the night, and
-under the shelter of a shattered cottage wall. Charlie
-Pierrepont, Heinrich, and Captain Schönforst congratulated each
-other that they all escaped untouched, and sat down amid
-the <i>debris</i> of what had once been a cabbage-garden, to enjoy
-an humble repast, some German sausage, a few slices of bread,
-and the contents of their water-bottles, dashed with cognac.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The telegram which, on that same evening, the Baron
-Rhineberg so duly reported at Frankenburg, thereby
-piercing, as with a poniard, the heart of Ernestine, was
-correct in some of its details, as the <i>first</i> man killed in the
-Franco-Prussian war was an Englishman&mdash;but not Charlie.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Prior to the affair at Saarbrück, twenty Baden troopers,
-led by a Mr. Winslow, made a dash into France at Lauterburg,
-and galloping on as far as Niederbronn, in open daylight,
-cut all the telegraph wires along the line of railway
-there. They halted next morning to breakfast at a French
-farmhouse, when they were surprised, and, in the combat
-that ensued, Winslow was cut down and slain.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The terror and anxiety of Ernestine were, however, short-lived,
-as Heinrich's letter, written next morning, contained
-an enclosure for her that gave her a blessed relief.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap13"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XIII.
-<br /><br />
-THE DREAM IN THE BIVOUAC.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-In talking over the stirring events of the past day, Captain
-Schönforst sat drawing out his fair fly-away whiskers to their
-full length, and then stuffing them into his mouth, as if to
-stifle his indignation at the Emperor Napoleon, for, like
-many other German officers at this time, he was loud in
-condemning him for bringing the Prince Imperial, a mere
-boy, under fire.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You forget, Herr Captain,' said Charlie, 'that princes
-have a great political game to play in this world, and that
-the heir of a throne should always be a soldier.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But a boy&mdash;a mere boy&mdash;to be brought into action!'
-persisted the Captain.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well. The sooner his nerves are strung, the better, I
-think; and we must remember that boys are employed in
-navies as well as in armies, and it is no more inhuman to
-have a prince under fire than a midshipman or drummer boy.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So the worthy captain was convinced, though much against
-his will.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We have no intention of afflicting the reader with a
-history of the terrible Franco-Prussian war; but we cannot
-omit the details of some of those events in which Charlie
-Pierrepont and his comrades, the Thuringians, bore a share.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Serious disasters followed the slight success won by the
-French at Saarbrück, when the Crown Prince of Prussia,
-two days after, made a furious attack on their right flank,
-which rested on a high hill called the Geisberg, just within
-the frontier of France and a little south-east of Saarbrück.
-All round the Geisberg the country is hilly and woody, with
-cultivated fields, detached cottages nestling among vines
-and flowers, and here and there pretty little hamlets.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Just as grey dawn stole in on the morning of the 4th of
-August, and when the French troops on the Geisberg
-were cooking their breakfasts and drinking their coffee
-quietly between their piles of arms, and looking from time
-to time into the beautiful pastoral valley, suddenly a storm
-of shells burst over them. The air seemed alive with fire
-and falling bombs, while, at the same moment, the whole
-town of Weissenburg, close by, burst into flames.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Unseen by, and unknown to the French, the Crown
-Prince of Prussia had established a terrible battery of guns
-on the heights of Schweigen, a village on the other side of
-the river, and these guns were supported by a vast force,
-variously estimated from 50,000 to 100,000 men.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On and about the Geisberg were only 10,000 French
-troops.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The country on the Bavarian side of the Lauter is so
-thickly wooded, that the approach of the Crown Prince's
-army was quite concealed; not a bayonet flashed out from
-amid the foliage; not a standard was seen to waver; hence
-the men on the Geisberg suddenly found themselves
-confronted by a vast host that crossed the river at various
-points, the first to plunge in being the Thuringians, with
-stentorian shouts of
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Vorwarts! Vorwarts! Hoch Germania!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A young fähnrich (or ensign), a mere boy, carrying the
-King's colour, was shot through the head, and was being
-swept down the stream with the pole in his grasp, when
-Schönforst wrenched it away; and the standard, all bloody
-and dripping, was shouldered by another subaltern.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Pierrepont could see nothing of what was being done at
-any other point than where his regiment crossed; but in a
-few minutes he found himself out of the water, and into
-clouds of smoke, through gaps in which, when made by the
-morning breeze, he could see the dusky columns of the
-enemy&mdash;the red-breeched Zouaves in their variegated
-Oriental costume, their necks bare, and their bearded faces
-dark and brown, and a corps of Voltigeurs in blue faced
-with white.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Up the Geisberg went the Prussian troops, cheering, and
-with a rush&mdash;up so fast that the mounted officers were
-cantering their horses&mdash;and with a rush the hill was carried,
-after a short, sharp hand-to-hand conflict, though here the
-dark, savage Turcos fought with desperation and incredible
-bravery, charging many times with the bayonet, though their
-ranks were torn to pieces by grape-shot.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-General Douay, commanding the French, was here killed
-by a shell. His fate was a very melancholy one, and a noble
-instance of self-sacrifice.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On seeing the battle hopelessly lost, he stood sadly apart
-on a little mound, watching the last desperate struggles of
-his fast-falling infantry. He then issued some final orders
-to the officers of his staff, and began to descend the slope of
-the mound alone. At its base he dismounted, and slaying
-his horse, as Roland did at the battle of Roncesvalles (but
-with a pistol), he drew his sword, and began to ascend the
-opposite slope of the Geisberg.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Where are you going, Monsieur le General?' cried some
-of his soldiers, in astonishment.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'To meet the enemy,' he replied, through his clenched
-teeth.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They continued to dissuade him, but in vain. Sword in
-hand he continued to advance, calmly and alone, till a
-passing shell struck him dead.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-General Montmarie, and many other brave officers, fell at
-the head of their men; and, on this day, was inaugurated
-that series of rapid disasters to France that never ended till
-the Prussian drums woke the echoes of the Arc de Triomphe
-at Paris.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The troops were considerably broken as they fought their
-way up the hill, and some of the King's Grenadiers got
-mingled among the 95th. Carl missed Heinrich from his
-place on the left of the company. 'Heavens!' thought he,
-'has he fallen?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Looking round, even at the risk of being struck by a
-bullet from behind, he saw him about fifty yards in the rear,
-in the grasp of a savage-looking and powerfully built Turco,
-whose left hand was on Heinrich's throat, while, with his
-unfixed bayonet, the socket of which he grasped dagger-fashion
-in his right, he was making vain efforts to stab and
-thrust&mdash;we say vain efforts, for, though Heinrich had lost
-his sword in the fray, he had firm possession of the Turco's
-right wrist.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-While the two were wrenching and swaying to and fro,
-the black eyes of the swarthy Turco flashing fire, and his
-teeth glistening white as he hissed and muttered curses
-through them, a second Turco, not far off, took aim at
-Heinrich with his chassepot, and fired, but missed. He
-threw open the breech of the weapon to insert another
-cartridge; but ere he could close it, Pierrepont, quick as
-thought, snatched a needle-gun from the nearest soldier,
-took steady aim at him, and fired. The ball pierced the
-left side of the Turco, who bounded three feet from the
-ground, made a kind of half-turn in the air, and then fell flat
-on his face motionless.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When the smoke cleared away, Charlie saw his friend
-with a breathless and half-strangled expression hurrying
-towards him, having been freed from the Turco by the
-bayonet of a Westphalian. He had saved her brother; and
-from that gory field, his heart&mdash;his thoughts&mdash;flashed home
-to Ernestine.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was now two o'clock p.m.; by this time the French
-were in full and rapid retreat, followed by the Prussian flying
-artillery, as they fell back upon the line of Bitsch. The
-Geisberg was won, but the slaughter on both sides was
-terrible. The French fought nobly. Fourteen men of the
-24th regiment were all that were left <i>alive</i> of that corps at
-the close of the day; and even those refused to surrender,
-but kept fighting on at the point of the bayonet until the
-Prussians, not liking to kill them, rushed upon them in a
-body and threw them down by wrestling.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the corpse-encumbered Geisberg the glorious old
-valour of France was conspicuous as ever; but her troops
-were badly officered and badly led.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Night came down on the field; the quiet stars were
-reflected in the placid bosom of the river, and heavy were the
-moans, and loud sometimes the screams of anguish from the
-wounded. The sisters of charity began to flit about like
-good angels, and the bells were rung in Weissenberg to
-muster the firemen for the burial of the dead.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To follow the 96th in detail through all the subsequent
-operations would be foreign to our story; suffice it that
-after the attack by the Crown Prince on the 6th of August,
-and the outflanking of Marshal MacMahon, after the
-desperate battle at Worth, Charlie Pierrepont and young
-Frankenburg found themselves still without a wound, hurrying
-in pursuit of the fugitive French, who were in full retreat
-towards Strasburg.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Their brigade halted for the night, and bivouacked among
-some vineyards near a little village.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now that he had been so often under fire, Charlie Pierrepont
-looked back with surprise to the days when, in Frankenburg,
-he had hoped that a French bullet might kill him!
-But that was before he had told his love and had been
-accepted; before that happy day in the Dom Kirche.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Life seemed very different now; it was both precious and
-valuable!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The staff officers occupied all the cottages in the village,
-so Charlie, like other regimental officers, had to sleep among
-his men; and thus, weary and worn, Charlie muffled himself
-in his ample blue cloak, and with his sword and revolver
-beside him, went to roost under the shelter of a haystack.
-Undisturbed by the falling dew, by the occasional beat of a
-drum or sound of a trumpet, as the field-officers of the night
-paraded and inspected the out-pickets, the hoarse challenges
-of the German sentinels, and the clatter of ambulance
-waggons carrying wounded to the rear, he slept soundly, yet not
-so soundly as not to have after some strange rambling flights
-about old Rugby, and a delicious dream of Ernestine,
-which from its vividity made a great impression on him
-then, and was to make a still greater, when a future episode
-came to pass.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the visions of the night she came to him as distinctly
-as she had ever appeared to him in reality, and bent over
-him tenderly and pityingly, as he lay there in that miserable
-bivouac, with a bundle of hay under his head, and he heard
-her murmuring softly&mdash;oh, so softly, in his ear&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
- 'My darling, my own darling!'<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Then, as a gush of her nature, which was ever passionate,
-deep, and earnest, came over her, she knelt by his side
-ere he could rise, and drew his head lovingly and caressingly
-on her soft breast, with her hands clasped under his
-chin&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, my Carl, how weary and how worn you look!' she
-continued, kissing his cheek, on which her tears were falling,
-while the light of love, triumph, and joy shone in her
-beautiful eyes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I think of you by day and night, my love, my wife, my
-own wife that is to be,' murmured Carl in his sleep; 'you are
-indeed my guardian angel.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He pressed her to his breast, and starting, awoke, to find
-it all but a <i>dream</i>; that the clock of the French village was
-striking the hour of <i>three</i>, and that around him were the
-weary Thuringians, sleeping in their blue greatcoats and
-spiked helmets, between their piles of loaded muskets, but
-to his half-awakened senses her voice seemed to linger in his
-ear, and he still felt her soft warm kiss on his lips.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He closed his eyes and strove to sleep, in the hope of that
-dear vision coming back again; but he strove in vain: he
-was thoroughly awakened now; so dreams or slumber come
-no more to Charlie Pierrepont.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The dawn of the 7th August came in, and the Prussian
-troops began their march on Forbach.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap14"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XIV.
-<br /><br />
-THE LETTER OF ERNESTINE.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-The events of the war succeeded each other with frightful
-speed. Marshal MacMahon's spirited address to the army
-and his promise, 'with God's help, soon to take a brilliant
-revenge,' failed to inspire with courage the troops of France,
-whose military prowess seemed gone. The excitement in the
-army and at Paris grew terrible. Saarbrück was retaken by
-the Prussians; the French were again defeated at Forbach;
-vast bodies of prisoners taken in battle or by capitulation
-began to pour through the towns of Germany, where they
-were kindly received; the once great Empire of France
-seemed tottering to its fall, and on the 13th of August the
-Prussian scouts were at Pont-à-Mousson, on the Moselle.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then, more fully to cut off MacMahon's communications
-with Metz, the 95th Thuringians, now greatly reduced in
-strength by fighting, and other troops, took post in the
-pleasant valley where the river divides the town in two
-parts. The town was soon filled by Prussian troops, but the
-hardy Thuringians pitched their tents near a village on the
-bank of the river, on a pretty wooded slope; and there on
-the first evening of the halt, Charlie received some
-intelligence from Frankenburg, which caused him much perplexity
-and thought.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Most of the furniture from the village had been brought
-into camp; before the tent of Captain Schönforst stood a
-table and chairs, and there he, with Charlie, Heinrich, and
-two other officers, sat smoking and drinking, and making
-merry, while their servants prepared a repast for them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The aspect of the camp was very picturesque; it was now
-the beginning of evening, the August sun was sinking behind
-a wooded mountain range, the 'blue Moselle' looked bluer
-than ever between its green and fertile banks, and the rooks
-were cawing noisily overhead in the stately old beeches, amid
-which the tents of the 95th were pitched.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A single day's halt had enabled the officers to remove
-all the mud of the march; parade suits of uniform with fresh
-lace had been donned in lieu of old 'fighting jackets;' boots
-were polished and spurs burnished, and Schönforst wore a
-sword of which he was justly vain, as he had received it from
-the hands of King William after a battle in the campaign of
-1866, when he was but a feldwebel, but won his silver
-shoulder-straps by bravery.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On all sides the men were cleaning their muskets, cutting
-wood, lighting fires, carrying water from the stream, singing
-merrily, and many of them in chorus.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, Schönforst,' said one of his guests, Herr Donnersberg,
-a thoughtless young fähnrich, 'I feel that I have an
-appetite&mdash;what is your speise-karte for to-day?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The bill of fare shows rather an omnium gatherum,' replied
-the Captain, thrusting nearly half a pound of tobacco
-into the bowl of his pipe; 'but the chief feature in it is a
-goose, now broiling on ramrods. One of our foragers gave
-it to me this morning for a couple of kreutzers and a bottle
-of cognac.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Excellent!' replied the other, 'though it is a bird, which
-an English gourmand said "was too much for one, but not
-quite enough for two."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Here is my contribution to the repast,' said Heinrich,
-producing from his tent a square case bottle of prime
-Geneva 'per Johann de Kuy, Rotterdam,' which he had
-picked up somewhere on the march.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'So, as we have nothing better than Geneva and beer,'
-said the Captain, 'it will be useless to discuss the question
-as to the aroma of Veuve Clicquot, as compared with that of
-sparkling hock or Sillery.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Hock!' cried the other; 'wait till our drums are ringing
-among the vineyards of Champagne!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The goose was pronounced excellent, and soon disappeared
-with all Schönforst's own viands; the bowled pipes
-were again resorted to, and when Charlie produced a bottle
-of cognac from his tent, the serious business of the evening
-began, with the usual amount of rough military joking; and
-Schönforst was making them all laugh noisily and heartily,
-with an account of how Herr Major Rumpenfalz, just before
-the Westphalians marched, had married the frolicsome widow
-of a Hofrath, and on waking in the morning found his
-bride's golden hair on the toilette table, and her pearly teeth
-in the tumbler out of which the Herr Major was about
-to take his matutinal draught of cold water. While they
-were still laughing at this, or rather at the manner in which
-Schönforst related it, an officer who was passing suddenly
-paused, and&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A glass with you, gentlemen!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'With pleasure,' replied Schönforst, handing him a bumper
-of brandy and water.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The Kaiser!' said the stranger, on which all started to
-their feet and drank the toast, standing with their caps off.
-Though wearing the usual spike-helmet, a plain blue surtout,
-with silver shoulder-straps, and a little eight-pointed cross at
-his neck, in the closely shaven face, the resolute mouth and
-square jaws, the stern grey eyes and aquiline nose of their
-visitor, they all recognised the Count Von Moltke&mdash;the
-spirit of the war, 'that embodied fate who prepared in
-mystery and gloom the blows that were to fall on mighty
-armaments, and in a few weeks to reduce great military
-powers to ruin and humiliation.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I have news for you, gentlemen,' said he. 'The Emperor
-has resigned the command of the French army to Marshal
-Bazaine, so he will have to make the great stand at Metz,
-where he has one hundred and forty thousand men, with
-two hundred and eighty pieces of cannon.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He then put two fingers to the peak of his helmet, and
-walked slowly away, leaving them to discuss the probable
-turn events might take now; but jollity was soon resumed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Charlie was rather silent and thoughtful; for sooth to say,
-the vivid nature of his dream still haunted him; and
-Heinrich, who knew well where his thoughts were, gave him
-a clap on the epaulette, and began to sing a verse of an old
-love song:
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- THE CARRIER PIGEON.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- 'They that behold me little dream<br />
- How wide my spirit soars from them,<br />
- And, borne on fancy's pinions, roves<br />
- To seek the glorious form it loves.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- 'Know that a faithful herald flies<br />
- To bear her image to my eyes,<br />
- My constant thought for ever telling<br />
- How fair she is, all else excelling!'<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-'Pass the bottle, Carl,' he added; 'let us be merry; weep
-when you must, but laugh when you can. Vive la bagatelle! as
-these Frenchmen have it.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At that moment a Uhlan came spurring into camp with
-letters for the brigade from the field post; those for the 95th
-were soon distributed: there was one for Heinrich from
-Herminia, with another for Charlie enclosed, and both became
-at once deep in their contents by the last light of the
-sun. Ernestine's letter was very long, and so crossed and
-recrossed that the perusal of it occupied a long time. Ere
-he had read a few lines, Heinrich said:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I do not know whether I should show you this, Carl.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A passage in Herminia's letter.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'About whom?' asked Charlie anxiously.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ernestine&mdash;my sister.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Read it, pray; anything is better than suspense.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Herminia writes, "Poor Ernestine seems to fret fearfully.
-There is a flush on her cheeks such as often precedes but
-more often follows pallor; and all her actions, figure, and
-manner are indicative of listlessness and ill-health."'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'My poor darling!' said Charlie, in a low agitated voice.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"Surely her mamma will have some pity upon her,"
-continued Herminia; "the Baron Grünthal has returned to Aix,
-and though his gout still continues&mdash;&mdash;"'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Praised be Plutus!' commented Charlie; 'I wish the
-nasty old beast was at the bottom of the Red Sea.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"And though it does not improve his temper, he has
-become very anxious and importunate."'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Curse him! I hope the gout may get into his
-Excellency's stomach.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"The Count and Countess begin to hint now that as the
-war will too probably be a protracted one, it was unwise to
-wait for Heinrich's presence at this odious marriage. How
-Aunt Adelaide pores over the <i>Gazettes</i>&mdash;those dreadful
-<i>Gazettes</i>!" And now, Herr Carl, all that follows are little
-<i>bon-bons</i> for my own perusal.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Innocent Herminia little knew that her aunt watched the
-war <i>Gazettes</i> with the double hope that Heinrich's name was
-not in them, and that Charlie's <i>was</i>&mdash;or might be.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Poor Charlie! Her ladyship was to be gratified one day,
-however.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What news from Ernestine?' asked Heinrich, when
-Charlie had finished the perusal of <i>his</i> letter; 'I feel as
-anxious about these girls at Frankenburg, as if I was Rip
-Van Winkle after his long snooze in the Sleepy Hollow.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But Charlie made no reply; he sat with the letter in his
-hand, and lost in thought.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What is the matter, my friend?' asked Heinrich. 'There
-is something more in your letter than there is in mine?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'There is, indeed!' replied Charlie, in a strange voice, as
-he drained his glass.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Good news?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No, Heinrich.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Bad news, then?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No, thank Heaven!' replied Charlie fervently.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What, then, agitates you?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'That which I cannot tell you. That which you cannot
-understand.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Carl!' exclaimed Heinrich.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Pardon me&mdash;another time, and I may tell you. Oh,
-Heinrich, your sister, Ernestine, is indeed the world's one
-woman to me!' he exclaimed, with deep emotion; and,
-heedless of Schönforst and the rest, he rose from the table,
-walked into his tent, and threw himself on the pallet which
-was his couch, to re-peruse the letter of his betrothed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The following was the passage at the end of her letter
-which caused him so much thought and bewilderment:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, Carl! Carl! what is separation but a living death&mdash;a
-blank in life&mdash;a place vacant?' ('How prone the girl is to
-speak of death!' thought Charlie.) 'But I am ever and
-always with you in spirit, my love. Do you ever dream of
-me, Carl? I ask this because last night I had such a
-delicious dream of <i>you</i>.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'<i>Last</i> night,' thought Charlie, glancing again at the date
-of her letter&mdash;'7th' August; 'last night must have been the
-6th, when we bivouacked in the stackyard, and I had such a
-vivid dream of her.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I imagined, love, Carl,' continued the letter, 'that I
-came upon you suddenly, when you were lying on the cold
-earth in your cloak, as I fear you too often are compelled to
-do. A great horror seized me! I thought you were dead,
-you looked so white and wasted; but a sudden joy came into
-my poor heart when I found you were but asleep. I drew
-your dear head upon my bosom, as a mother might do her
-baby's, and caressed you, calling you "My darling!" "My
-very own darling!" so distinctly that Herminia heard me
-speaking in my sleep.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And then you kissed me, Carl, with such tender and
-passionate kisses as you gave me on that dear day in the
-Hoch Munster, and called me your little wife and your
-guardian angel. I was then startled by the great hall
-clock striking three in the morning, and awoke to weep on
-finding that it was all a dream, but a dear, dear dream to
-me.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-These were the actions and words of Charlie's dream,
-and he remembered that when he awoke the hour of <i>three</i>
-was tolled in the village spire!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What can it mean?' he exclaimed, tossing his thick
-curly hair back from his forehead, impatiently&mdash;a way he
-had; 'the mystery of dreams is unfathomable; they are,
-indeed, "strange&mdash;passing strange!" The same dream, yet
-we are miles upon miles apart! The same words spoken
-and heard!&mdash;the same night!&mdash;the same hour and moment
-of time!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Was there some magnetic influence at work? Some
-spiritual affinity, born of this great love, between these two?
-It almost seemed so.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Charlie Pierrepont, a matter-of-fact young officer, knew
-as little of the famous Dr. Emmerson's theories of polarity
-and odic force, as he did of the Philosophy of the Infinite,
-or any other abstruse speculation of the present day.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though bewildered and perplexed, as we have said, it
-gave him a thrill of strange delight to think how strong, and
-yet how tender, must be the tie of love between him and
-Ernestine to produce a spiritual intercourse like this; and
-lest they might be laughed at by the heedless Heinrich, it
-was not until some days subsequent to the arrival of her
-letter that he revealed its contents to her brother, to whom,
-fortunately for the corroboration of the story, he had told of
-his vivid dream on the morning it occurred, before the
-regiment marched from the village.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap15"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XV.
-<br /><br />
-WHAT THE 'EXTRA BLATT' TOLD.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-A few days after the Thuringians and others advanced
-from the Moselle, the quiet family in the old Schloss of
-Frankenburg assembled as usual at breakfast. The old
-butler had cut and aired the morning papers&mdash;the <i>Staats
-Anzeiger</i>, the <i>Cologne Gazette</i>, the <i>Extra Blatt</i>, and so forth,
-and laid them beside the Count. The two young ladies
-were there in most becoming morning toilets, and there,
-too, was the Herr Baron Grünthal. The hour was an
-unusual one for his Excellency to be at Frankenburg, but he
-had been dining there the evening before; a storm had
-come on, and, to the infinite annoyance of Ernestine, he
-had accepted the Count's invitation to remain all night.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With the single exception of absurd family pride and the
-consequent tyranny over Ernestine, the general tenor of the
-Count's household presented a fair example of German
-domestic life.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The serious character of a people,' says the translator of
-Schiller's poem 'The Glocke,' 'who begin the common
-business of everyday life with prayer, who attach importance
-as well to the manner of performing an action as to the
-action itself, the custom of travelling, either in their own or
-in foreign countries, in the interval between the completion
-of their education and their settlement in life, the
-domestic manners, where great attention is paid to the
-minutiæ of domestic economy,' are all, he maintains, peculiar
-to the German people.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As southerns, the family of Frankenburg were more gay
-and lively in manner than Germans usually are, for being
-nearer the Rhine they had been for generations insensibly
-under French influences; yet they were all German, to the
-heart's core.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Ernestine was looking crushed and pale. The self-conscious
-air that a really beautiful girl usually possesses
-had nearly left her now; while Herminia, happy in her love,
-and having but one anxiety&mdash;the safety of Heinrich&mdash;looked
-bright and radiant as ever.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In a letter from Heinrich to her, Ernestine had been
-told the story of the strangely coincident dreams; and to a
-romantic and enthusiastic girl like her&mdash;one deeply imbued,
-too, with German mysticism&mdash;the idea that she had thus
-communed and met, and might again commune with and
-meet her lover in the spirit, was a source of the purest joy.
-Every night she laid her head on the pillow in the hope
-that her soul might fly to him; but as yet no more such
-visions had come.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And this brave-hearted and handsome young Englishman&mdash;Carl,
-her own Carl&mdash;he was risking wounds and death,
-enduring toil and suffering for the Kaiser, for Germany,
-and for <i>her</i>; for well she knew that Charlie Pierrepont
-identified her image with the Fatherland. Then how cruel
-it was of the Countess to view him so, and to treat him as
-she did; and again and again she asked in her heart&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Is it a crime to love?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But rank was the <i>joss</i>, the idol that was worshipped in
-Frankenburg.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-However, she had Charlie's ring on her finger, and a
-curly lock of his hair in a gold locket, reposing in the cleft
-of her white bosom, all unknown to the Herr Baron, and
-to all, save Herminia, who could now see the blue ribbon
-at which it hung encircling her slender neck; and in her
-bosom, too, she had his last letter, a mere scrap, but full of
-love and truth and great tenderness; and yet he wrote of
-pay and poverty. Ob, how hard it was when youth alone
-should be money, beauty, wealth, and everything.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ernestine, meine liebe,' the Countess would say from
-time to time, 'attend to the Herr Baron&mdash;assist him with
-your own pretty hands. Dear girl! she is always so bright
-when you are here, Grünthal. She must be doubly happy
-to see you this morning, after only leaving you last night.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But poor Ernestine looked anything but happy or bright
-either, and the Baron, though a lover, was middle-aged;
-hence his raptures did not spoil his appetite, and he made
-genuine German breakfast, demolishing steaks, potatoes,
-rolls, eggs, and coffee, in the most unromantic way in the
-world.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His hair was turning iron-grey, and on his pericranium
-was a bald spot the size of a Prussian dollar. He limped
-a little in his gait&mdash;there was no concealing that devilish
-gout&mdash;yet he looked surprisingly young. He was attired in
-an elegant morning-coat with pale-coloured trousers, a
-scarlet flower as well as a red ribbon at his button-hole. His
-hair was brushed up into a stiff bristly pyramid in front; but
-his face looked flabby now, and his coarse moustache, like
-that of a walrus, overhung his mouth.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though suspicious, as we have said elsewhere, concerning
-that visit to the Dom Kirche, and the mistake about the
-colour of the marble of Charlemagne's throne, he had not
-the slightest idea that he had a rival so formidable as Charlie
-Pierrepont, or that he, Herr Baron Grünthal, Oberdirector
-of the Consistory Court, could have any rival at all!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yet there was one thing he could not help remarking&mdash;that
-of all the many handsome presents he had sent Ernestine,
-from Berlin and elsewhere, not one was ever to be
-seen on her slender wrists, her fairy-like hand, or round her
-delicate throat.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This surely boded ill for him as a lover! He found
-himself, however, highly acceptable to her family, and the
-marriage once over, all that was necessary would be sure to
-come after. Whenever he was present or expected, the
-Countess always seemed, somehow, unusually large and
-rustling, and on this morning was especially so, in white
-lace over back moiré, with her high <i>toupée</i>&mdash;it was quite an
-evening costume she had donned.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The meal was taken somewhat silently, for at times:
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- 'When great events were on the gale,<br />
- And each hour brought a varying tale;'<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-and when newspaper correspondents were often fallacious
-and fallible, the gazettes were unfolded with fear and
-trembling, and the arrival of a telegram was quite sufficient
-to terrify the quiet household at Frankenburg.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Count and Baron, with spectacles on nose, had
-skimmed over the papers, which contained nothing to alarm
-them in the way of friends' names among the lists of killed
-and wounded in the action of the 14th of August; but the
-Baron read aloud, with peculiar unction, some of those
-barbarous reports and stories with which the French and
-German papers then teemed of cruelties perpetrated on
-both sides. No one knew then whether they were false or
-true; but they served to fan and inflame the hatred of the
-adverse parties to fever heat.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Baron read that many of the dead Arabs and Turcos
-at Freshweiler were found with fragments of human
-flesh&mdash;torn from the German wounded&mdash;between their jaws; that
-a Saxon officer, who had been struck by a bullet, and taken
-shelter in the house of a peasant, where he fainted from loss
-of blood, had his eyes torn out by a woman armed with a
-fork. These and many other details of atrocities, which
-actually found their way into the London papers, he read
-for the edification of the ladies, while Ernestine and
-Herminia exchanged glances of horror and commiseration, as
-much as to say how awful it was to think that those they
-loved so dearly had to run the risk of perils such as these!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Even the Countess forgot her Spitz pug, and a piece of
-mysterious crochet, that seemed endless as the web of
-Penelope, while listening to the news, and far away from her
-peaceful home her thoughts followed her son, to where in
-the fields, the lanes, the valleys, and pretty hamlets of
-Alsace and Lorraine, and in places then rendered deserts,
-there lay in hundreds&mdash;yea, in thousands&mdash;the hopes of
-families, the heads of homes, the source of many a broken
-heart!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Suddenly the Baron raised his voice, and a strange gleam
-passed over his face.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Der Teufel!' he exclaimed; 'here is the name of a
-friend of yours&mdash;in the <i>Extra Blatt</i>?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Of mine&mdash;who?' asked the Count.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'We regret to learn by a recent telegram from the seat of
-war that a party of the 95th Thuringian Regiment met with
-a severe misfortune, and lost two officers. Herr Lieutenant
-Pierrepont fell, it is believed, mortally wounded&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Baron paused and changed colour; the Countess
-grew pale, but with a smile of grim satisfaction on her lips;
-the Count said:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Poor fellow&mdash;poor fellow!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A low cry escaped Ernestine, who fell forward with her
-face on the table, and her arms stretched upon it at full
-length; but this emotion failed to avert the attention of the
-Baron, whose eyes, now dilated, were fixed on the
-newspaper. He was very pale, and shook his head slowly, as he
-said to the Count:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ach Gott&mdash;the worst is yet to come. Compose yourself,
-my dear friend.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Read&mdash;read&mdash;it is the name of my son&mdash;my Heinrich,
-that you see,' said the Countess, in a breathless voice.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It is, madam. "Herr Lieutenant Pierrepont fell, it is
-believed, mortally wounded&mdash;&mdash;"'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You read that already; what matters it to me?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"And the Herr Graf Von Frankenburg was taken prisoner,
-and <i>hanged by the Francs Tireurs</i>!" Oh, my friends,'
-added the Baron, 'I beseech you to suspend your grief for
-a time; it may all be some terrible mistake, to be cleared up
-in the end.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'We seem fated to have startling tidings here!' groaned
-the poor old Count, as his wife flung herself in a passion of
-tears upon his breast.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap16"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XVI.
-<br /><br />
-IN FRONT OF METZ.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-And now to relate that catastrophe which caused such grief
-and horror to the hearts of all in that hitherto peaceful
-German home.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We have said that on the 13th of August the Prussian
-advanced guard was at Pont-à-Mousson. The following day
-saw them defiling, with drums beating, colours flying, and
-bayonets flashing in the sun, across the great bridge which
-there spans the Moselle, and gives its name to the town.
-This was on a Sunday morning, after the Herr Pastor of
-the 95th had preached on the text of 'Peace on earth and
-goodwill to all men'&mdash;French excepted, apparently&mdash;as the
-Colonel, while the regiment was yet in a hollow square, issued
-special orders as to the cleaning of the needle-guns and
-mode of carrying the ammunition in the pouches.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-General Steinmetz having orders to make a demonstration
-against the French troops lying between him and the great
-fortress of Metz, at two o'clock on the afternoon of Sunday
-ordered his seventh corps, including the Thuringians and
-Westphalians, under General Von Zastrow, to proceed to
-the attack.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As if inspired by one of those presentiments of coming
-evil that come unbidden to many, and at times to the
-bravest of soldiers, on this day Charlie Pierrepont was
-unusually taciturn, thoughtful, and sunk in reverie.
-'Rouse yourself, Carl, rouse!' Heinrich said to him,
-cheerfully; 'you have had a little romance that is not yet
-ended. The enemy is before us, and war brings promotion
-and glory.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'To some.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And to others, Carl?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Death, perhaps.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why so gloomy in an hour like this?' asked his friend.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Life, Heinrich, is, alas! so full of the unforeseen!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Of course; but life has pleasant things in store for you
-yet. You have been having some gloomy dream of our
-Ernestine again.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I have not,' replied Charlie, with a sad smile.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'All will yet be well and happy for you both. <i>My</i> sister
-does not require to look for wealth or position. These she
-had already, and the Baron of Grünthal is lower in rank
-than a Grafine of the family of Frankenburg,' he added so
-proudly, that there was much in his tone and bearing which
-reminded Charlie of the Countess, his mother.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'This brigade will deploy into line, and throw forward
-skirmishers from the flank of each regiment,' were now the
-orders of General Von Zastrow; 'the other brigades will
-deploy in succession.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And, on the spur, his aides-de-camp went skurrying hither
-and thither to the commanders of battalions to have the
-requisite formation completed with as little delay as
-possible.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Take courage, Carl,' said Heinrich; 'my dear sister
-shall yet be your wife&mdash;or the wife of no one else.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You forget that, save my pay, I am all but penniless.
-A terrible crime in the eyes of the Grafine Adelaide.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Penniless girls are often married for their beauty,' said
-young Frankenburg, laughing; 'why should not a penniless
-man be married for his talents or bravery?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And, as the subdivisions were somewhat apart, those two
-brothers in heart shook hands, saluted each other with their
-swords, and took their places in the new <i>alignement</i>.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The day was a bright and beautiful one. Over all
-Lorraine the green woods and vineyards seemed to be
-sleeping in the glowing summer sunshine, and the scared
-peasant near Courcelles Chaussy paused in his work with
-the sweat on his brow, and spoke with bated breath, as the
-marching troops went past to death and slaughter, and his
-honest sunburnt face grew pale, perhaps at the thought of
-what might be.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Around Ars and Grigy, Borny and Colombey, and many
-other hamlets and picturesque chateaux, the cattle, rich in
-colour and sleek in hide, were chewing the cud among the
-knee-deep pastures; the fresh blue streams ran on their
-course as if rejoicing to escape the scenes of blood that
-were about to ensue; the blue kingfishers flitted about, and
-the sparrows twittered in the green hedge-rows, the branches
-of which were matted and intertwined with gorgeous wild
-flowers. The corn was waving in the ripening fields, the
-swallows skimmed in the air, and from their cottage doors
-the buxom peasant girls, their cheeks dusky with southern
-blood and their black eyes sparkling with tears and terror,
-stood by their mother's side and watched in sorrow and
-terror the forward march of the Prussian troops to conquest
-and carnage, and the village bells, from more than one
-Gothic spire, rang out the hour that was to be the
-death-knell of thousands closing in the shock of steel.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The moment the formation of the infantry in line was
-complete, the cavalry scouts went galloping to the front,
-and in a few minutes a green ridge in front of the Prussian
-infantry was studded by Uhlans, with their figures and tall
-lances clearly defined against the pure blue of the sky.
-Anon, these weapons were slung, and pistols were resorted
-to, and a sharp cracking of these announced that the enemy
-was in sight.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In a cloud of dust, a body of dragoons in close column of
-troops now poured along the broad highway, with swords
-and helmets flashing in the sun. There were the escort of
-the artillery, which came rumbling along, with rammers and
-sponges ready for use, the limber-boxes unlocked, the
-gunners ready to leap down, and wheel their muzzles to the
-enemy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When deploying from close column into line, the companies
-marched over everything, treading to mud and mire
-the golden grain&mdash;the hope of the husbandman and farmer;
-while the horses of the cavalry ate it standing in their ranks.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Resolutely marched on the Prussian infantry, each man
-with his blue greatcoat rolled over his right shoulder, the
-deadly zundnadelgewehr with bayonet fixed, sloped on his
-left shoulder, the chain of his helmet down, lest it should
-fall off in the mêlée. The Uhlans fell back round the flanks,
-and then the French were seen lurking in rifle-pits, which
-on one hand afforded them protection, and, on the other,
-enabled them over the little earthen banks to take sure aim
-at the invaders.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-These rifle-pits and other defences extended over a
-considerable space of ground, from Colombey, with its fields of
-scarlet poppies, to Ars-sur-Moselle (so famous for its red
-wines), including Laguenxey, Grigy, and Borny, all pretty
-little hamlets. The firing first began at the village of
-Ste. Barbe, within seven miles from the walls of Metz, in front
-of which were the principal corps of the French army under
-Marshal Bazaine, according to the Prussian account.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The fire from the chassepots was deadly, and in their
-eagerness to come to close quarters, the Prussian officers
-were seen brandishing their straight-cutting swords and
-heard crying&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Vorwarts! vorwarts! Hoch Germania!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the other hand the French were not slow in crying&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'En avant! en avant! à bas la Prusse, et vive la France.' For
-they were ceasing to shout the Emperor's name now.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The whole of the villages had to be stormed by the
-Prussians in succession. The French resisted nobly; hence
-the slaughter was terrible. In one rifle-pit alone there lay
-seven hundred and eighty-one corpses; the chateau of
-Colombey was taken and recaptured three times at the
-point of the bayonet.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The livelong day the battle lasted over all the ground
-before Metz, seven and a half miles in length. The air was
-loaded with the smoke of cannon and musketry, enveloping
-alike the dead and wounded, who lay everywhere, in fields
-and gardens, under hedgerows and hayricks, in vineyards
-and rifle-pits.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Prussians were every moment receiving fresh reinforcements,
-and the troops of Bazaine, unable to check their
-advance, fell slowly back upon Metz, but fighting every foot
-of the way.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The 95th were at the third capture of the Chateau of
-Colombey, out of which the French Voltigeurs were driven
-in a fair hand-to-hand conflict, leaving behind them a vast
-number of wounded and slain. Among the former, supporting
-himself against a fragment of the shot-shattered wall,
-was a French captain bleeding profusely from a wound in
-the breast.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The fähnrich of Charlie's company, young Donnersberg,
-approached and offered him his handkerchief to staunch the
-bleeding, when the Frenchman, inspired by some sudden
-gust of national hate and rancour, uttered 'a good garrison
-oath,' and with all the strength that yet remained in his arm,
-ran his sword through the body of the German, and killed
-him on the spot.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Both fell nearly at the same time, as two or three bayonets
-clashed in the body of the Frenchman, who lay over a pile
-of dead, bleeding from several wounds. A few minutes
-after, Charlie chanced to pass where he still lay in the
-courtyard of the chateau, to all appearance dead. On his
-breast was the handsome white enamelled Grand Cross
-of the Legion of Honour, conspicuous among his Crimean
-medals.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A present for my Ernestine!' thought he; 'and it is no
-use now to this treacherous fellow.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Not yet, not yet,' muttered the Frenchman, while his
-white lips quivered and his blood-shot glazing eyes turned
-slowly on Charlie; 'accursed Prussian, I am not yet done
-with it.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Charlie drew back. He would have taken it from the
-dead man without compunction, but shrank from touching
-the living.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A little time&mdash;a little time,' moaned the Frenchman,
-'and I shall indeed be done with it, and all&mdash;earthly
-things.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Pardon me,' said Charlie, and was about to pass on, when
-the Frenchman spoke again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Water,' said he, in a low piteous voice, like a sigh; 'one
-drop of water on my lips, for the love of God!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Charlie glanced for a moment at the body of young Donnersberg
-that lay close by, with the Voltigeur's sword nearly
-up to the hilt in his breast; and then, inspired by pity,
-placed his water-bottle to the lips of his slayer, whose face
-was ghastly now and covered with the dew of death.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'<i>Merci! Merci!</i> I am dying!' said he. 'Take my cross,
-or less worthy hands will soon do so,' he added, trying with
-a feeble and fatuous hand to detach the ornament from his
-breast; 'but what will you do with it?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Hang it round the neck of her I love,' replied Charlie,
-who spoke French fluently, and hoping its destination might
-please a Frenchman's love of gallantry.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Take it, then. Take it,' replied the latter, as he rent the
-cross from his breast by a last effort; 'take it, accursed
-Prussian!' he hissed, through his clenched teeth, 'and when
-you hang it round the neck of her you love, may she be
-like&mdash;like me!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What mean you?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'<i>A corpse!</i>'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With this dreadful and inhuman wish, the vindictive Gaul
-sank back; a deadlier pallor overspread his features&mdash;there
-was a terrible sound in his throat, and all was over. For a
-moment Charlie stood bewildered, with the cross in his hand,
-and half-tempted to cast it from him. But he changed his
-mind, and carefully placed it in his breast-pocket as a
-<i>souvenir</i> for Ernestine of the battles before Metz, and
-hurried to join the shattered remnant of his regiment, now
-hurrying with others, double-quick, to take part in the attack
-of the orchards of the farm of Bellecroix, where two batteries
-of mitrailleuses made dreadful havoc among the assailants,
-sweeping whole ranks away.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By the time the batteries were taken, the French, after
-losing <i>nineteen</i> thousand men (and the Prussians fully an
-equal number), were in rapid retreat for Metz. Charlie
-Pierrepont's work was over for the day, and like his friend
-Heinrich, he still found himself untouched.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The sun was setting, and the shadows were darkening in
-the orchards of Bellecroix, when the 95th were ordered to
-pile arms and take a little rest; and a singular
-scene&mdash;singular by way of contrast, and yet terrible&mdash;did these
-orchards present. The trees were still in full foliage and
-bearing, and thickly among the green leaves the apples,
-golden and red, the yellow pears, the downy peaches, and
-the purple plums were all mingling on the branches above;
-below lay the dead and the dying, some of whom in their
-agony had burrowed their faces into the very earth; others
-had torn it up in handfuls. A few, who had been wounded
-early in the day, lay dead now, with their hairy knapsacks
-under their heads, and many with sweet smiles on their waxen
-faces, as if their last thoughts had been of home, and those
-who loved them there.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Some had died with their fingers clasped in prayer, others
-with their hands clenched, as if in rage or pain, and with
-their faces terribly contorted. Everywhere lay knapsacks,
-shakos, kepis, helmets, arms, and water-bottles. Pierrepont
-gladly quitted these dreadful orchards of Bellecroix, and
-retired to a grassy bank by the side of the highway to Metz,
-where a few of his brother officers, apart from the rest, were
-sharing the contents of their havresacks and comparing notes
-on the dire events of the day.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There he found young Frankenburg mounted on the horse
-of the adjutant, who had fallen in the attack on Bellecroix,
-and whose duty he had been ordered to take in the
-interim, an office that was nearly costing him very dear
-soon after.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As the troops were to halt on the field pending those
-operations which led to the battle of Gravelotte, a chain of
-out-pickets was detailed for the night, and Charlie Pierrepont,
-as many of his seniors had been killed off or wounded
-in that day's strife, had command of one of these, consisting
-of two non-commissioned officers and thirty men, with whom
-he was ordered to take possession of a little chateau nearer
-Metz than Bellecroix, to use it as his picket-house, and
-post his sentinels as to him seemed best.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He accordingly marched for this place, the Chateau de
-Caillé, belonging to a French gentleman of that name. It
-was a quaint-looking little place, with latticed windows of
-iron, two or three little stone <i>tourelles</i>, with conical roofs
-and vanes, and it was quite buried among masses of ivy,
-jasmine, and clematis, and embosomed, among rich fruit-trees.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Having posted ten sentinels, equidistant and in communication
-with those of the adjacent pickets, with orders to
-stand on their posts and keep their faces steadily turned in
-the direction of Metz, the dark mass of the citadel which,
-together with the spires of the churches, could be traced
-against the now moonlit sky, he approached the chateau
-with the main body of his picket, never doubting that they
-would find it deserted, and that the family of M. de Caillé
-had fled.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Passing down the little avenue which led to the front
-door, brilliant lights were visible in the lower rooms; loud
-and noisy voices were heard. Charlie ordered his men to
-look to their cartridges. As for the bayonets, they were
-never unfixed now; but a loud, hoarse German chorus that
-rang out upon the night showed that the place was already
-in possession of friends, and on entering the dining-room of
-the chateau, a curious scene presented itself.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was a handsome apartment, with an elaborately
-polished floor, and modern furniture in the fashion of the
-time of Louis XIV. Wax candles in great profusion were
-burning on the elaborately inlaid table, on which were
-spread in great confusion dishes, plates, glasses, and bottles
-with viands and fruit of every kind. M. de Caillé, as he
-proved to be, a fine-looking old French gentleman, with
-hair and moustache white as the thistle-down, was there
-tied hand and foot with a rope, the end of which was
-secured to the knob of a shutter, compelling him to look
-helplessly on at the desolation of his dwelling, into which a
-dozen or so of stragglers from some Bavarian regiment, as
-they appeared to be, as their helmets were crested with
-black bearskin and not spikes, had broken, and were now
-making merry, eating, drinking, singing, and roughly pulling
-about Mademoiselle de Caillé, her terrified <i>bonne</i>, and
-other female servants; and it was only too evident that but
-for the timely arrival of Charlie and his picket, something
-very disastrous must have ensued, as these fellows were
-fast maddening themselves by drinking all kinds of wines
-and spirits in succession.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On Charlie's entrance, sword in hand, such is the influence
-of the epaulette, that they all started to their feet;
-their noise died away instantly, and every man raised his
-right hand to the peak of his helmet. Believing they were
-utterly lost now on the appearance of this fresh arrival, the
-young lady uttered a cry of despair, and shrank to the side
-of her father, who was unable to put forth even a hand to
-shield her, and who eyed Charlie Pierrepont with a
-half-piteous, half-defiant expression.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was considerably reassured, however, when he heard
-the latter announce the duty which brought him there, and
-ordered the Bavarians, on pain of being treated as mutineers
-or deserters, at once to return to their quarters. They
-hurried to obey with more alacrity than goodwill, one alone
-venturing to explain that they had been fighting all day
-without food or drink, and were in an enemy's country.
-By a wave of his sword, Charlie cut him short, and ere he
-had shot it into the sheath, the chateau was empty of all
-but his own men, who crowded into the kitchen, and there
-certainly made free with all that the cook's pantry
-contained.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Charlie now apologized to M. de Caillé for the conduct
-of the Bavarians, and hastened to cut the cord that bound
-him. He was so weak and faint from all he had undergone,
-that he could only stagger into an arm-chair, when
-his daughter caressed him and chafed his hands, and while
-the <i>bonne</i> poured out some wine for him and Charlie, to
-whom she curtseyed, and tendered her thanks again and
-again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After a time all became more composed, and the conversation
-naturally ran on the events of the day, and the
-dreadful din of cannon and musketry which had been ringing
-for miles around the little chateau; and somehow, while
-chatting over their wine, and Charlie received again and
-again the heartfelt thanks of the old Frenchman, the latter,
-by some word or exclamation that escaped him, discovered
-the nationality of the former.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Thank God, monsieur is an Englishman!' he exclaimed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes,' said Charlie, with one of his pleasant smiles.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And yet you fight for those horrible barbarians, the
-Prussians?' exclaimed the young lady.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I am a soldier of fortune, my dear child,' said Charlie,
-laughing, for the girl was only in her fifteenth year,
-apparently, and he could not but remember that Ernestine was
-one of those 'horrible barbarians.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I could have guessed as much,' said the girl.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How, Mademoiselle?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'By a certain boldness in your bearing, and by something
-in your eyes that tells of&mdash;&mdash;' she paused shyly and
-coloured at her own impetuosity.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'An expression that tells of what?' asked Charlie.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I don't know, unless it is of&mdash;sorrow.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You are an acute observer, Mademoiselle,' said Charlie,
-bowing. 'I have indeed undergone much sorrow but
-lately.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The girl had a pretty, innocent, and most lovable little
-face. She was, probably, half German in blood; her eyes
-were bright blue; her cheeks delicate and peach-like; her
-lips a ruddy red, though cheek and lips were ashy white
-with terror when Charlie first saw her, being pulled about
-roughly by the Bavarians, who had boisterously dragged her
-from one another, under the eyes of her helpless and
-agonized father.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She nestled up to Charlie's side, and shaking the masses
-of her rich brown hair&mdash;hair that in its tint reminded him of
-Herminia&mdash;she put a pretty hand on each of his epaulettes,
-and looking into his face with pure childish confidence,
-said&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I shall like you. I am sure I shall. I am so happy you
-are not one of those barbarians, though you do wear a
-spike-helmet!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why? How should you like me?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Can you ask me <i>why</i>, Monsieur, after saving our lives?
-In gratitude, I can love you and pray for you.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Charlie laughed, and said&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'<i>Ma belle</i>, I am, indeed, thankful that we were in time to
-turn these marauders out of doors.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And then he thought of his three sisters at home, and
-what his emotions would be if such a scene, as he had just
-interrupted, had taken place in his father's quiet house in
-Warwickshire.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What is your name, Monsieur?' she asked, 'as I must
-never forget it.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Carl&mdash;Charles Pierrepont.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She repeated it two or three times, and laughing, said:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It sounds very droll!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Charlie could not help laughing at the girl's <i>naïve</i> manner,
-and thought that the old Warwickshire squire, who was fond
-of deducing his descent from Robert, who received the
-manor of Hurstpierpoint, in Sussex, from the Conqueror,
-would have found nothing 'droll' in it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And what is yours, Mademoiselle?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Célandine&mdash;Célandine de Caillé.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, I cannot say it is <i>droll</i>. I think it very pretty.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Your little rebuke is a just one, Monsieur,' said the
-smiling old gentleman, who, had Charlie been a genuine
-Prussian, would little have relished all this conversation
-between him and his daughter.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'We shall be very good friends, I doubt not, for to-night,
-at least, Monsieur.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Only for to-night?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'To-morrow shall relieve you of our hateful presence, as
-we shall probably move against Metz.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Don't say "hateful," Monsieur, when we owe you so
-much, and esteem you so much,' urged Célandine.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ernestine will never have a rival, even here,' thought
-Charlie, as he begged them to excuse him, as he had to go
-his rounds, and, with his sergeant, post fresh sentinels.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-That duty done, he undid his belt, but without undressing,
-threw himself on a sofa, and, utterly exhausted and
-worn out by the whole events of the day, oblivious of the
-presence of Mademoiselle de Caillé and her father in the
-dining-room, he slept as soundly as Hood's old woman,
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- 'Who might have worn a percussion cap,<br />
- And been knocked on the head without hearing it snap.'<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap17"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XVII.
-<br /><br />
-FACING A BATTERY OF MITRAILLEUSES.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-The night passed over quietly, and without alarm; but
-with dawn of day came an officer of Uhlans, attended by a
-trumpeter, flying at full speed along the line of advanced
-posts, calling in all the out-pickets, while the King was
-probably already telegraphing to Berlin as usual:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Another new victory! Thank God for His mercy!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Referring to the official pietism of the Prussian monarch
-at this crisis, a very impartial historian of the war says
-thus:&mdash;'How little his armies were controlled by regard for
-humanity&mdash;the most essential element of any religion&mdash;will
-appear in lurid colours. Abu Bekr, the successor of
-Mohammed, enjoined his soldiers not to kill old people,
-women, or children; to cut down no palm-trees, nor burn
-any fields of corn; to spare all fruit-trees; and slay no
-cattle but such as they could take for their own use. But
-the Prussians made a desert of France, burned villages and
-small towns, and treated old people and women with
-horrible barbarity. But they were prodigal of religious
-words, and words with many have too often a greater
-weight than facts.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But with all this, it should be borne in mind, from past
-experience of French invading armies, how would those of
-the Emperor have behaved had they reached Berlin?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-One of a thousand of such episodes, as were daily occurring
-along the frontiers of Alsace and Lorraine, would no
-doubt have desolated for ever the household of M. de Caillé
-but for the timely arrival of Pierrepont and his twenty
-Thuringians.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Aware of this, when the Uhlan trumpet sounded, Célandine
-de Caillé, like most young girls, a light sleeper, heard
-it before the war-worn Charlie, and pale and startled, came
-forth in the prettiest of morning robes to bid him farewell,
-and to stuff his havresack, and the havresacks of his men
-(though they were Prussians), with all that the Bavarians
-had not consumed last night.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Charlie thought how fresh and radiant the young girl
-looked in her white morning dress, with blue breastknots,
-and a ribbon of the same colour in her hair, a soft light
-shining in her blue eyes, and a little colour in her peach-like
-cheek, that reminded him of Ernestine; but, ah! who was
-like Ernestine?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A soldier fresh from one battle and going forth to fight
-another is an object of interest to all; but a handsome,
-frank, and free-hearted young fellow, like Charlie Pierrepont,
-was doubly so to an impassionable girl like Mademoiselle de
-Caillé; thus her blue eyes filled with tears as he kissed her
-tremulous little hand, which, like her taper arm, came so
-delicately forth from the wide-laced sleeves of her dress.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why are there tears in your eyes, Mademoiselle?' asked
-Charlie, with a kind smile.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Because, Monsieur, I pity you.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Pity me!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Indeed I do, Monsieur. Most earnestly.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And why?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Because you are too young, and too good and kind, to
-be killed. Oh!' continued the girl, looking up in his face,
-'I implore you to go home&mdash;home to your own England&mdash;home
-to your mother, if you have one, and leave these
-odious Prussians to fight their own battles.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It is too late, my pretty friend.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How so?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The die is cast that makes me&mdash;Prussian.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Will another horrible battle be fought to-day?' asked
-Monsieur de Caillé, who now made his appearance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I am sure of it, Monsieur,' replied Charlie.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'<i>Mon Dieu! Mon Dieu!</i>' exclaimed Célandine, clasping
-her hands, and looking upwards; 'and you will be in it?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Undoubtedly, Mademoiselle.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She drew very close to Charlie, and said, in a low voice,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Pardon me, <i>mon ami</i>&mdash;but&mdash;but when were you last at
-mass or confession?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'We don't attend to either much in the 95th,' was Charlie's
-evasive reply; 'besides, our Herr Pastor is a Lutheran.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The sweet French girl eyed him wistfully.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You are too good and humane thus to die like a heathen!'
-said she, 'and many more will die to-day. Promise me,
-Monsieur, that you will wear this.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And from her white neck she took a little holy cross and
-medal, suspended by a blue ribbon, which she passed over
-Charlie's head.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'For your sake, then,' said Charlie gallantly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'For your own, rather. Whether you believe in such
-things or not, it will do you no harm to wear it.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'<i>Très bon</i>, my child!' said the old gentleman; 'but
-Monsieur has a cross already,' he added, patting the iron
-one at the breast of Charlie's blue tunic.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And now I must go,' said he, putting on his helmet;
-'there sounds the trumpet again.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As he bade them adieu and left them, the French girl, with
-a quick pretty action, flicked some holy water in his face
-from a Dresden china font that hung inside the door of the
-dining-room, and the glittering drops fell on his moustache
-and silver gorget, which the Prussians still wear, or at least
-wore then; and father and daughter stood sadly in the
-porch, looking after their protector as he marched off at the
-head of his men, for Charlie, though a thorough English
-gentleman, was, as some say, 'the soldier all over, but the
-soldier adventurer&mdash;the soldier of fortune, rather than the
-soldier of routine.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Charlie, we fear, and are ashamed to admit it, did not
-pray often. 'It wasn't much in his line; besides, what was
-the Herr Pastor paid for?' but as he marched back to headquarters
-on the Bellecroix road, at the head of his picket, he
-prayed in his heart that no harm&mdash;no perils, such as those
-of last night&mdash;might ever again menace that frank, engaging,
-and innocent young girl at the Chateau de Caillé.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But he had not seen the last of that old mansion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By this time, a considerable portion of the German army
-had penetrated so far to the west and north-west of Metz, as
-to be almost already between Marshal Bazaine and Paris!
-The line of the invading forces was thus so greatly extended
-that the French generalissimo dared not make any offensive
-movement against them, but was compelled to retreat along
-the highways that led from Gravelotte to Verdun.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Charlie had barely rejoined his regiment, and exchanged
-a few words with Heinrich, Schönforst, and other friends,
-when the order came for the line to advance, as the French
-were in position at Vionville, covering the whole southern
-road to Verdun, with a front extending to the village of
-Gorz, eight miles south-west of Metz; and in their martial
-ardour to meet the enemy, many of the Thuringians, as
-the march forward began, struck up the fine war-song of
-Arndt.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the ranks of this regiment, as in others of the Prussian
-army, were many well-born and gently nurtured young men,
-bred to professions or businesses, and who could speak
-several languages, and take their place in good society, but
-were dragged away from their avocation, hearth, and home,
-by the Prussian military system. There were others, again,
-grey, brown, and hardy men, who could digest sutler's beef
-and eat such ammunition bread as the Kaiser's commissariat
-supplied, sleep in their spike-helmets as soundly as in a
-velvet night-cap, feel, by a bivouac fire, as comfortable as if
-in the Grand Hotel at Cologne, and march to be maimed or
-massacred, to wound and to slay, with genuine Teutonic
-taciturnity and phlegm.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-The battle of the day began on some wooded hills above
-the pretty red-tiled village of Gorz, near a pleasant stream
-that meanders between fields and beautiful coppices from
-Mars-la-Tour to the Moselle.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By sheer force of numbers, the Prussians, while giving
-and receiving a storm of musketry, pushed into the woods,
-driving the French skirmishers before them. Those who
-were spectators saw the little scarlet kepis of the latter
-dispersing in succession amid the white smoke and green
-foliage; then the dark-coated Prussians, with their
-spike-helmets and goat-skin packs, disappeared also in pursuit.
-What happened in this part of the battle no one knows, or
-ever will know, as it was entirely in the dense woods and
-deep valleys, and thus no general view could be obtained;
-yet it is to this part of the field we have to refer, for there
-fought the 95th regiment.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From one wooded slope to another the French fell back,
-fighting desperately. In the valleys, the din of war rang
-with a hundred reverberations. Shrieks, cries, and hoarse
-cheering shook the very woodlands, and the smoke curled
-up from the latter as if they were on fire. White puffs and
-red flashes seemed to burst from every bush and tree. Now
-and then the bayonets flashed, or a tricolour appeared amid
-the foliage; but on, almost without check, went the Prussians,
-over ground strewn with the terrible <i>debris</i> of men,
-gun-carriages, limbers, and horses, in many instances blown
-literally to pieces, for the whole ground was ploughed by
-shot and shell, and sown with rifle bullets.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Charlie's regiment, with the 40th, 67th, and 69th, was
-ordered to surround and storm a cottage mid-way on the
-Gorze road. The reason of four battalions being sent to
-storm a mere cottage was that it was held by a half-battery
-of French mitrailleuses, which did frightful execution in
-their ranks as they advanced.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Forward they went at a rush, the living tumbling over the
-fast-falling dead, these dreadful cannon belching death and
-destruction from amid the foliage in front, with that horrible
-shrieking sound peculiar to their discharge, and Charlie felt
-the <i>streams</i> of shot as they passed him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A wild cry of agony, amid many others, made him look
-to his right. There lay Schönforst and half his company
-writhing or dead in one bloody heap; and the next moment
-it was Charlie's turn.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He felt as if a hot sword-blade had entered his breast&mdash;there
-was a heavy blow, a sharp tearing of the body, an
-emotion of rage or anger&mdash;a loud cry escaped him, and he
-fell on his face, enduring terrible agony. He staggered up,
-just as the attacking force swept over him to assault the
-battery, but fell over on his side, and lay with the blood
-pouring from his chest.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Wounded at last&mdash;perhaps mortally! was his first reflection;
-for he could feel that the bullet was in his body still.
-Life, death&mdash;the past, the future&mdash;'the possible heaven, the
-impending hell'&mdash;all flashed upon him, with thoughts of his
-own misery in lying there dying, helpless, and so far from
-Ernestine!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A faintness came over him, from which he was roused by
-feeling some one opening his tunic.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Where are you wounded?' asked a familiar voice, and
-Charlie found the doctor of the regiment&mdash;with all of whom,
-we have said, he was a great favourite&mdash;bending over him
-kindly, with the hospital attendant of his company.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'In the breast,' he gasped.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The doctor had but little time to lose, and the bullets
-were <i>pinging</i> past him and his patient in every direction.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The bullet is lodged near the spine,' said the doctor,
-'and it must be cut out, but not here.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Is&mdash;is the wound dangerous?' he faltered.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Not very; but great care will be requisite.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Whether on the part of himself or his medical attendant
-Charlie did not inquire; the tone in Which the doctor said
-'very' lessened his hopes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'God's will be done,' said he; and there flashed on his
-memory all that little Célandine de Caillé had said to him
-that morning about religion; while the doctor put a pad on
-the wound, bandaged it, and hastened to look at Schönforst,
-but he was long since past all aid, and stone-dead.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Save the moans, cries, and interjections&mdash;pious, fierce,
-or despairing&mdash;of those around him, Charlie heard little
-more but the occasional boom of the heavy guns as the
-tide and din of the battle rolled away towards Gravelotte;
-and great faintness, like a kind of sleep, stole over him.
-From time to time the acute agony of his wound roused him,
-and amid his terrible thoughts, ever present were the images
-of Ernestine and his family.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The emotion of faintness increased as the day wore on
-and evening came. He saw many around him die, and
-thinking that his own time would soon come too, he thought
-once more of the French girl's words, and strove to fashion a
-prayer or two, but they were little else than pious invocations.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Dying, as he certainly deemed himself to be, his thoughts
-flashed incessantly to her he loved; her whose soft hand
-might too probably never be in his again; anon to his
-boyhood's home in Warwickshire; the voices of his father and
-of his dead mother came drowsily to his ear; the soft
-English faces of his sisters floated before him. Oh, how
-hard it was to lie there bleeding, and too probably dying,
-when they were all making merry, perhaps, in that drawing-room
-which he remembered so well, and many of the pettiest
-details of which, even to a crack in the ceiling, came
-strangely back to memory now, with scraps of songs and
-forgotten airs.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Would the Krankentrager never come to take him away?
-Had the doctor and hospital attendant both forgotten him,
-or had been killed? The latter, too probably.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So the long, long day of anxiety, thirst, and agony passed
-away, and sunset came on. Charlie watched it fading on
-the distant woods and green slopes of those lovely Lorraine
-valleys, till the mellowing haze of twilight blurred all the
-landscape into gloom, and the silvery moon and the evening
-star came forth in their beauty to light up the carnage of
-the past day.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Neither the doctor nor the hospital attendant of his
-company had forgotten poor Charlie; but strange to say, when
-they came to look for him with a party about midnight, no
-trace could be found of him save a pool of blood on the
-grass where he had lain.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So the Countess, perhaps, had her wicked wish fulfilled
-at last, and fate had removed 'the intruder,' as she named
-him, for ever from the path of Baron Grünthal!
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap18"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XVIII.
-<br /><br />
-IN THE ENEMY'S HANDS.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-We must now devote a short chapter to the fate of young
-Frankenburg.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Ignorant that his friend Pierrepont had fallen&mdash;and a
-knowledge thereof would have served the latter but
-little&mdash;Heinrich, in his present capacity of adjutant, had to keep
-at his post and go on with the regiment, which, like the
-others, carried all before it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The French, aware of the vital importance of keeping
-possession of a hill on their right, as soon as their troops
-began to fall back before those battalions sent forward by
-General Steinmetz, threw up some earthen works, in rear
-of which their 62nd regiment of the line lay down, while
-several batteries of artillery fired over their heads, raining
-grape and shell upon the fast-advancing Prussians.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For three hours the fighting was desperate there&mdash;the
-slaughter on both sides woeful! Again the French fell back,
-and the Prussians brought up battery after battery of Krupp
-guns to the summit of the abandoned height, the gunners
-using their whips and spurs, the officers brandishing their
-swords and shouting, 'Vorwarts! vorwarts!' with their
-horses at a gallop.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the ardour of the pursuit, or in terror of the dreadful
-sounds which shook the air, the horse ridden by Heinrich,
-having got the bit of the bridle firmly wedged between his
-teeth for a time, darted with his rider to the front at racing
-speed, and fairly carried him through the line of the
-retreating French!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Shot after shot was fired after him, but he escaped them
-all, and ere long found himself in a village, the main street
-of which was crowded by Francs-Tireurs, who seemed to
-have expended all their ammunition, as they pursued him
-simply with fixed bayonets, yells, and ferocious maledictions;
-for, as the Prussians gave no quarter to this species of
-volunteer force, they were not disposed to give any in
-return, so Heinrich began to give himself up for lost.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-An alley opened on his right, and by it he hoped to gain
-the open country. He spurred his horse and shouted; he
-urged it with leg and hand and voice, and forced it to the
-right down the alley, followed by a shout of fierce derisive
-laughter, the source of which he soon discovered to be the
-fact that the alley had no outlet, and that he was fairly
-entrapped in a narrow <i>cul-de-sac</i>!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To take a pistol from the holsters, to leap from his horse,
-make a dash into the nearest house, was to Heinrich but
-the work of an instant; but he had barely closed and
-secured the door, ere the human tide of the Francs-Tireurs,
-intent on revenge and bloodshed, came surging
-wildly down the alley against it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The house had been abandoned by its owners. He
-sought for the back-door, but there was none. He could
-only drop from an upper window into a garden; but his
-uniform would cause him at once to be recognised, and
-instant death was sure to follow. Not a moment was to be
-lost! He looked wildly round him. On a peg there hung
-a loose, coarse peasant blouse of blue cloth. He tore off
-his uniform, threw it and his helmet aside with his weapons,
-donned the blouse, and was just in the act of dropping from
-the window, when his exulting pursuers, who had soon forced
-the door, burst into the room, with cries of:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Tué, tué!&mdash;justice, revenge!&mdash;revenge for the Francs-Tireurs!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The garden-wall was uncommonly high, the gate securely
-locked; outlet there was none; and in another minute
-Frankenburg found himself in the hands of a score of these
-French volunteers, so many of whose comrades had been&mdash;no
-doubt, barbarously&mdash;put to death by the Prussians,
-simply for being found with arms in their hands, so that to
-look for mercy was vain. Their grasp was upon him; and
-in their desire to destroy him, they actually impeded each
-other, and for a second or two it seemed doubtful whether
-he was to perish by the charged bayonet or the whirled
-butt-end of the chassepot, as he was hustled and dragged
-hither and thither from hand to hand.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Checkmated&mdash;cornered!' thought he, as the faces of
-Herminia and all at home came before him; 'to die thus&mdash;and
-at the hands of these rascally French
-peasantry.' Suddenly one exclaimed:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Un espion&mdash;un mouchard! A Prussian disguised in a
-blouse&mdash;he was about to become a spy!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'L'espion, l'espion!&mdash;a rope, a rope!' cried the rest,
-catching at the new idea with extreme fervour. 'No,
-no&mdash;bayonet him!' cried one.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'They hanged my brother at Borny,' said another;' so, by
-Baalzebub, let us hang him&mdash;hang him, Etienne!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Heinrich's blood ran cold at this horrible suggestion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I did but seek to escape, messieurs, in exchanging my
-uniform for this dress,' said he.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, of course&mdash;of course!' they cried, with fierce mockery
-and cruelty flashing in their eyes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I did it but to save my life,' he urged. 'Diable&mdash;of
-course!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I am but one man among hundreds,' he continued.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And so shall die&mdash;tué! tué!' cried they altogether.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You are a band of cowards!' exclaimed Heinrich,
-defiantly; 'I do not fear to die. Hurrah for Germany!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Hah, ha! hah, ha!&mdash;à bas le Prussien!' they chorused.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-One now appeared with a rope, which he had procured
-somewhere, and a cold perspiration burst over the brows of
-Heinrich.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I am the Graf Von Frankenburg,' he urged, almost, but
-not quite, piteously. 'I am an officer of the Thuringians&mdash;let
-me die the death of a soldier, not that of a felon.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You are the Graf Von Frankenburg?' said one; 'be it
-so. The higher the rank the greater the disgrace in dying
-the death of a spy; so, coquin, hang you shall.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Resistance was vain; the iron grasp of many was on each
-of his arms, and he was as helpless in their hands as an
-infant. His father, his mother, his love&mdash;the bright-haired
-Herminia!&mdash;what horror would the story of his fate cost
-them! It was too dreadful to think of; it was madness!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh,' thought he, 'that I had but died on yonder field,
-and not thus&mdash;not <i>thus</i>&mdash;in the hands of wretches such as
-these!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He disdained to ask for mercy, and resolved to die with
-dignity even the horrid death to which they had doomed
-him. But little time was given him for reflection, and none
-for prayer; yet a cry certainly escaped him, and a nervous
-shudder, when he found a corporal actually adjusting the
-hastily constructed halter about his neck. An involuntary
-effort he made for resistance or escape, and then stood still
-and passive.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Throw the end of the rope over that apple-tree,' was the
-command of the corporal; and after one or two efforts it
-was thrown over a suitable branch, 'Stand aside,
-comrades,' was the next command; 'whip him up now, and
-make fast the rope to the branch below.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-While a mocking shout burst from the band, and many
-brutal and irreligious speeches were made, some crying
-piteously, 'Bon voyage, Monsieur le Comte&mdash;bon voyage,
-mon Prussien,' the noose closed and tightened round the
-neck of Heinrich. His eyeballs seemed to start from their
-sockets, dark purple overspread his face, and he was swung
-up to the branch, where he dangled in convulsive agony,
-swinging and swaying to and fro, with a hoarse, rattling,
-gulping sound in his throat, and with his feet about eight
-feet from the ground.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The other end of the fatal rope was made fast to a lower
-branch, and then the Francs-Tireurs rushed away, with
-mocking shouts, to join their comrades, and left the unhappy
-Heinrich&mdash;the 'Prussian spy,' as they falsely affected to call
-him&mdash;to his miserable fate.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap19"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XIX.
-<br /><br />
-THE CHATEAU DE CAILLE.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-And now to account for the mysterious disappearance of
-Charlie Pierrepont, which the Herr Doctor could only
-account for by supposing that in the restlessness of his
-agony, or desire to procure water, he had crawled away
-into some obscure corner to die. But such was not the
-case.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was still dusky night, or lighted only by the moon,
-when Charlie, lying where we left him, began to surmise
-whether the morning sun would evermore gladden his eyes,
-that were staring upward at the stars, as they twinkled
-through the branches of those trees amid which the battle
-had been partly fought, and the stems of which, in places,
-were barked and whitened by the passing whirlwinds of shot
-from the mitrailleuses.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'If I die,' thought he, 'the label at my neck will tell the
-burial party who I am&mdash;or was.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And as the slow hours of the night stole on, he thought
-of the ghastly face of the French captain who killed the
-young ensign Donnersberg, and the peculiar hatred and
-inhumanity expressed by his dying wish. The sound of
-wheels coming slowly along now roused him. A party of
-the Krankentrager, picking up the wounded, were passing
-near. He tried to call aloud, but his voice had failed him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How high the moon is to-night,' said one.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How bright, you mean; for I don't suppose she is
-higher up than usual,' replied another.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But it would be a lovely night for having another turn
-with the French schelms, in their long blue coats and red
-kepis.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'There has been slaughter enough, for one day, Rudiger;
-ugh!&mdash;how thick the corpses lie here, where the horrible
-mitrailleuses have been playing.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The waggon was stopped, and the soldiers looked about
-them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Suddenly one said&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'There is young Herr Pierrepont, the Englander of the
-95th. How in his heart he loved the crack of the
-zundnadelgewehr, or the click of steel on steel! So he is gone,
-too!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'He is worth a dozen dead men yet!' exclaimed one of
-the Krankentrager, leaping off the seat of the ambulance
-waggon, on seeing Charlie's eyes and hand move.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Some brandy-and-water was given him as a reviver, and
-he was lifted into the waggon, which was already full, and
-was hence driven from the field; and here we may mention
-that the Krankentrager is one of the best-organized corps
-in the Prussian army, and its special duty is to carry the sick
-and wounded.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In this Franco-Prussian war, it is to be recorded that to
-their immortal honour, the Sisters of Mercy were always on
-every field of battle <i>before the firing ceased</i>, and they went
-on foot, each little company preceded by a Catholic priest
-or Lutheran pastor.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Luckily, as it proved in the end for Charlie, he had
-fallen into the hands of Landwehr men alone, for ere long,
-conceiving him to be dead, they took him out of the waggon
-and left him at the door of a mansion, which proved to be
-the Chateau de Caillé.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Prior to this, as the waggon was driven slowly and tortuously,
-to avoid mutilating the killed and wounded, who lay
-thickly everywhere, in literal heaps in some places, in ranks
-in others, the moon went down, clouds overspread the sky,
-and, to add to the miseries of the helpless, rain began to
-fall. In the action of the previous day, the canopy of the
-waggon in which Charlie Pierrepont lay had been destroyed
-by a passing shot. No other had been substituted, so
-there he Jay, with seven others, packed closely side by side,
-some dying, some actually dead, with the rain of heaven
-pouring into their open months and eyes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Some there were who stirred restlessly from side to side,
-constantly requesting their position to be shifted, as the
-agonies of death came on; and when they died they were
-lifted from the waggon and laid by the side of the way.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To the grim corps of grave-diggers was assigned the duty
-of noting the neck-labels, and doing what was necessary
-then!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As Charlie lay very still and motionless with eyes
-closed, sunk indeed into a species of stupor, the unskilled
-men of the Landwehr concluded that he was dead, and
-lifting him from the waggon, laid him near the gate of the
-chateau, and drove off, just as grey dawn began to brighten
-on the wooded hills that look down, the Moselle, and the
-great spire of the distant cathedral of Metz.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So there he was left to be killed, perhaps outright, by the
-first vindictive peasant of Lorraine who might be going
-a-field to his work; but there was too much gunpowder in
-the air about Metz just then to permit other work to be
-done than 'the harvest of death.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now, before those terrible fellows in spike-helmets came
-into that peaceful part of pleasant Lorraine, where the old
-chateau lies embosomed among vineyards and apple-bowers&mdash;the
-Lorraine that whilom belonged to the mother of Mary
-Queen of Scots&mdash;it had been the wont and custom of
-Célandine de Caillé, at the hour of seven every morning, to
-go to early mass in a little chapel near the highway that
-leads to Metz. She dared not venture so far now; but by
-mere force of habit, she was saying the prayers for mass
-among the dew-drops in the flower-garden, when something
-caused her to peep out of the front gate, and then she
-saw&mdash;&mdash; What? Oh, it could not be!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Was this pale, ghastly, sodden, and blood-stained creature
-the handsome young soldier who, but yesterday morning
-about the same hour, after being startled by the Uhlan
-trumpet, had marched away so proudly at the head of his
-Thuringians, with his silver epaulettes glittering in the sun,
-and had yet in his havresack&mdash;soaked with his own gore&mdash;the
-food so kindly placed there by Célandine?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It seemed incredible, yet so it was!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A shriek escaped the startled girl, and she rushed indoors
-for her father, her <i>bonne</i>, and everybody else; assistance was
-soon procured, the sufferer carried indoors, placed in bed, his
-uniform hidden, for the Francs-Tireurs were hovering about,
-and medical aid was procured from the nearest village, in
-the person of a young doctor, Adolphe Guerrand, on whom,
-as an admirer of Célandine, they could rely for silence and
-secrecy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The thunder of war was an awful event to the inmates of
-that little secluded chateau, to none more than to Monsieur
-de Caillé, whose days were usually spent in dozing about
-his flower-garden, plucking off a faded leaf here and there,
-or training vines and sprays, and whose evenings were
-passed over a bottle of vin ordinaire with the Curé, or
-listening to Célandine's performances on a&mdash;well, it was <i>not</i>
-a grand trichord piano, because it had been her grandmother's.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Some days and nights elapsed&mdash;strange, drearily days and
-nights to Charlie Pierrepont, who only knew at times where,
-by a strange coincidence, he was. They were passed by
-him in a chaos or confusion of thought, in dreams of Ernestine,
-of the day in the Hoch Munster, and the evening in the
-church at Burtscheid, of battle-fields, with lines of red kepis,
-fierce bearded faces, and hedges of bristling bayonets
-looming through the smoke, of the roaring shriek of those
-dreadful mitrailleuses&mdash;the veritable invention of Satan;
-yea, even the scowl and curse of the French captain were
-not forgotten; but after a time Charlie's thoughts became
-coherent; he knew fully where he was; that a conical rifle
-bullet had been cut out of his back, near the spine, by the
-skilful hands of Adolphe Guerrand; that he had a narrow
-escape from death; that he was recovering, and had, as
-nurses, Célandine de Caillé and her kind old <i>bonne</i>.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ah! Célandine&mdash;Mademoiselle Célandine,' said he,
-taking the girl's tiny hand within his own, and just touching
-it with his lips, 'neither your holy water, nor the consecrated
-medal, acted as a charm. In what a condition have I come
-back to you!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But for my medal and the holy water, perhaps a cannon-ball
-might have taken off your head,' retorted little
-Mademoiselle de Caillé.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'True,' replied Charlie, as he kissed her hand again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Three weeks had elapsed since the battle in which Charlie
-had fallen wounded; two days after, as Célandine told him,
-Gravelotte had been fought, and then the French had been
-defeated after a dreadful struggle, and driven back to Metz.
-Strasbourg was besieged, Phalsburg bombarded, the
-Prussians were daily everywhere victorious.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And, alas! monsieur,' said the little maid, clasping her
-pretty hands, and lifting upward eyes that were suffused
-with tears, 'France is lost! The glory of my France is
-gone! And surely now the cries of Melusine will be
-heard!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Melusine?' asked Charlie, with surprise. 'Who is she?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Don't you know, monsieur? Have you never heard of
-the "<i>Cris de Melusine</i>?"'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Never.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It is an old legend believed in by most of our peasantry.
-Brantôme says she is a spirit that haunts the old castle of
-Lusignan, where, by loud shrieks, she announces any
-disasters that are to befall France.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'She must have been shrieking pretty loud and long of
-late,' said Charlie, smiling at the earnestness of the girl,
-who, in her love of the legendary, reminded him, he thought,
-of Ernestine, and he liked her the better for it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So Charlie continued to be attended daily by the young
-Doctor Guerrand, and nursed by Célandine in secret, as it
-would have been perilous for Charlie had the exasperated
-peasantry learned that a Prussian officer was concealed in
-the chateau. The heart of the young French doctor
-Guerrand was full of bitterness for the disgrace that was
-falling on his country, and, were it not that by his practice
-he supported an aged mother, he would have cast aside the
-lancet and betaken to the chassepot.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'<i>Sacre!</i>' said he, on one occasion, to Charlie; 'in this
-war the French seem to make more use of their feet than
-their hands; but we won't talk of politics.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why, Doctor?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Because I always lose my temper. I am a Republican
-now. I have become so in the bitterness of my heart.
-But, thank Heaven, we shall soon be rid of our Emperor, as
-you will, ere long, of your Kaiser; for what are kings,
-emperors, and princes, but a crowned confederacy against
-the freedom of the world? <i>Sacre!</i>'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And the young Republican ground his teeth in his fierce
-energy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Charlie had Ernestine's photo, done and coloured at
-Aix-la-Chapelle. It was one which, so far as these sun pictures
-go, represented her to the life, and he had seen her in that
-particular posé, and with that expression on her soft face,
-many, many times. He kept it beneath his pillow. Never
-did he tire of gazing on it; thus, more than once, his
-active little nurse caught him with the blue velvet case in
-his hand.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ah! It is monsieur's mother?' said she, trying to get a
-peep at it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It is not,' said Charlie, with a fond smile.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A sister, then? I have seen that it is a lady!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No, Célandine.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Something as dear as both would be?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I cannot say.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How so, monsieur?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I scarcely ever saw my mother. And when I left home
-to soldier in Prussia, my sisters were mere children; but
-dear she is, indeed.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ah,&mdash;a <i>fiancée</i>?' said Célandine, laughing and clapping
-her hands.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, mademoiselle.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ah, show me the likeness, monsieur,' she entreated; so
-Charlie gave her the case. 'How sweet, how lovely she
-looks! Do let me kiss her! Monsieur Pierrepont, I
-congratulate you. And when are you to be married?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Alas!' muttered Charlie, as his countenance fell.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Surely she loves you?' asked Célandine, with her blue
-eyes dilated.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Loves me?&mdash;dearly! so each of us has one secret of the
-heart to treasure.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What have I?' asked the girl, demurely.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You have Adolphe.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ah!&mdash;yes; M. Adolphe loves me, I believe, and&mdash;and
-perhaps I may learn to love him in time. I am not sure.
-I may marry some one else, and learn to love that some one.
-Mon père will arrange all that for me, and it will be so kind
-of him.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Charlie looked puzzled; but ere long, in the case of
-Célandine herself, he was to see how matrimonial matters
-are arranged in the land of the silver lilies.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her question, 'When are you to be married?' opened up
-no new train of thought to Charlie; that important <i>when</i>
-had been a source of frequent and painful surmise; but a
-new idea was ever before him now.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-What had Ernestine heard of his fate?&mdash;that he was
-killed, wounded, or missing? He had no means of
-communicating with her now, and thus sparing her that which
-he would gladly have done&mdash;a single sigh, a single throb of
-pain.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was no one at the chateau could tell him where the
-95th were, whether in front of Metz, besieging Strasbourg,
-or fighting at Phalsburg. But, oh, how to relieve the grief
-of his betrothed! He would not, for worlds, have cost that
-warm, wilful, and impassioned heart one pang!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yet there he lay on his back, with a closing wound,
-helpless.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Like an iron weight it bore on his heart, the remoteness
-and dubiety of their meeting again; and when all thought
-of his personal danger passed away, this reflection weighed
-more heavily on him than ever, while his very career as a
-soldier made the future more uncertain and gloomy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had but one fixed, yet vague, idea&mdash;that, at the risk
-of his life, he would see Ernestine before he returned to the
-regiment in which he was, as yet, unfit to serve, and assure
-her of his all-unaltered love. Times there were when he
-thought he would ask Célandine to write to her, but in
-turn was afraid to do so&mdash;to Herminia, or to Ernestine,
-over whose postal correspondence, doubtless, the Countess
-kept a strict vigil&mdash;or, if she did write, there was no other
-post than the field one between France and Prussia now,
-and that was with the German army.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So Charlie could but lie on his bed and writhe, though in
-the kindly hands of the sweetest of little nurses.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Would the Countess Adelaide, he sometimes asked himself,
-feel any compunction for her proud severity, any pity for
-her daughter's honest lover, on hearing of his probable fate?
-Alas! it seemed more likely that she would exult at it as a
-barrier, a bramble, removed from her path. The Count was
-an old soldier; perhaps he might relent and prove generous;
-and so, on and on, Charlie hoped, surmised, and pondered,
-till his very brain ached.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Célandine knew that Charlie was English by birth, yet
-Prussian by sympathy, which she deplored&mdash;they were such
-barbarians, those men in the spiked helmets. Thus when
-she played or sang to him, which she did with great taste
-and sweetness, with good taste she only chose neutral airs
-and songs, such as those from the Trovatore, etc., and in
-these Adolphe Guerrand frequently joined her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As she was in her mere girlhood, it appeared that she was
-too young to marry, nor had ever thought of it; and more
-than all, as Adolphe was poor, having only his practice as a
-hard-working village practitioner, Monsieur de Caillé was
-by no means disposed to look upon him, even in the future,
-as an eligible suitor for his daughter, till a letter reached
-young Guerrand from Paris by which one morning he found
-himself rich by one of the most extraordinary chances in
-the world.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It happened that just a week before the Prussians crossed
-the Rhine, Adolphe Guerrand had been at Blankenberg
-with a patient, to whom he had prescribed sea-bathing, and,
-when walking on the beach there, had found a carefully sealed
-bottle among some sea-weed. Holding it between him and
-the light, he saw that it contained a written document, and
-conceiving naturally that it was a message from the sea&mdash;the
-last farewell from some sinking ship, he drew the cork, and
-perused the damp paper, which was properly signed and
-dated, from on board a French vessel, which had sprung
-a leak, and was going down in the middle of the Atlantic.
-And thus it ran on, in French:
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-'About to perish by drowning, I commend my soul to
-God, the Blessed Virgin, and all the saints. I hereby constitute
-my sole heir the finder of this will, which I enclose in a
-glass bottle. The labour of years, my fortune amounts to
-two hundred and twenty thousand francs, and I am without
-a relation in the world. I wish the house I have resided in
-at Paris to be converted into a chapel of St. Dominique, my
-patron saint. The fortune is deposited in the hands of the
-notary, M. Vantin, in the Rue St. Honoré. <i>Ora pro me</i>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-'DOMINIQUE SOURDEVAL.'
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-The letter was from Vantin, the notary, to the young
-doctor, who thus found himself suddenly rich, so all
-obstacles were removed to a union with Célandine, when she
-was a few years older, though the family of Adolphe
-was of humble origin and that of De Caillé ancient, and
-shone at the court of Louis XIII. It was of a Madame de
-Caillé that we are told, how when that monarch was once
-playing at shuttlecock with her at Versailles, it fell into her
-bosom, on which she desired his majesty to take it; but such
-was his royal delicacy that, to avoid the snare laid by the
-charming Lorrainer, he discreetly extricated the toy with the
-aid of the tongs.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thus, on the first day of Charlie's convalescence, the
-formal betrothal of the daughter of the house took place; and
-to him it seemed a very cold-blooded affair to the wild,
-passionate, and solemn episode between himself and Ernestine
-in that lonely church at Burtscheid.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Adolphe was in his twenty-fifth year, naturally sanguine
-and enthusiastic; his clear-cut features and thoughtful eyes
-were now full of light and brightness; there was a greater
-springiness in his step, born of the knowledge that he was
-now rich and the inheritor of a fortune&mdash;the fortune of
-M. de Sourdeval, so mysteriously cast at his feet by the waves
-of the sea.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A well-bred French girl, of course, expects one day to be
-wedded, but chiefly looks forward to the event as an
-opportunity of displaying her presents and trousseau, and is
-supposed to have no preference in the matter. To Célandine
-it seemed only natural that she should accept her father's
-choice, just as he had done the choice of <i>his</i> parents in
-espousing her mother.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yet in her heart of hearts, the girl&mdash;though very young&mdash;had
-grown fond of Charlie Pierrepont, her helpless charge,
-who was always so gentle and grateful, so sad, too, and who
-looked, withal, so manly and soldier-like. And with this
-sentiment in her heart, the girl was to contract what we
-must call a French marriage. So full of cross-purposes,
-hidden currents of thought, and secret springs of action, is
-this work-a-day world of ours!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She knew that it is understood and accepted in her native
-country that unions cannot, as in England, be contracted
-on the impulse of love or romantic notions, but upon
-principles of cold and practical utility, as mere transactions
-between parents; but they are sometimes equally so on this
-side of the Straits of Dover.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So, on the day referred to, M. de Caillé said to his
-daughter, with his eyebrows elevated as if he had quite
-made a discovery, while kissing her on the forehead, 'I have
-found you a husband, my love.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Merci, mon père&mdash;who is he?' asked Célandine, as if she
-had not the slightest guess on the subject.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The time will come anon&mdash;but here he is,' and he led in
-Adolphe, who approached Célandine, whose eyes were fixed
-on Charlie, pale, wan, and propping himself on a cane of
-M. de Caillé's.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At such a crisis, Adolphe Guerrand had vague ideas&mdash;from
-what he had read in novels and seen at the theatre of
-the Porte St. Martin, when he was a student in Paris, at the
-Ecole de Medicin&mdash;that he should drop on his knees, or at
-least on one knee; but the floor was very slippery, and
-Célandine not being much in love with him, and very much
-inclined to laugh, he didn't attempt a melodramatic posé at
-this betrothal, which Charlie saw as in a dream; for his
-thoughts were at Burtscheid, and the heart-stirring parting
-words of Ernestine were lingering in his ear.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap20"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XX.
-<br /><br />
-ERNESTINE.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-As the reader may suppose, some time elapsed ere the quiet
-little household at Frankfort realized&mdash;they could not for
-long recover from&mdash;the catastrophe recorded by the German
-papers; but when it was actually stated that a prisoner taken
-in a skirmish, a captain, was roasted alive, nothing seemed
-too horrible to happen now. That Heinrich might be
-wounded unto death, or slain outright in battle, seemed but
-a too probable contingency; but that he should be taken
-prisoner, and suffer an end of such enforced ignominy, was
-beyond the category of all their speculations.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The whole family were utterly prostrated by an event so
-inexplicable, and Ernestine felt the shock in her own peculiar
-way. She loved her only brother dearly, and all the more
-dearly that he was the friend and defender of her lover
-Carl&mdash;her betrothed husband, for as such she always viewed
-him. Now that her beloved Heinrich was gone, the links
-between her and Carl&mdash;the means of communication&mdash;were
-broken, and she could hear of him no more.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And, meanwhile, where was Carl? Alive or dead?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The <i>Gazette</i>, so grudging in words, so meagre in detail,
-had simply said that he was severely wounded. Where, and
-in what fashion, was he wounded? By steel or lead? Was
-he mutilated, disfigured for life? Perhaps he had since
-perished in his agony, or when undergoing some terrible
-operation!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So, for days and nights, the girl tormented herself till she
-became seriously ill with agonizing conjectures, over which
-she was compelled to brood in silence and tears.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At last, to the astonishment, to the wild joy of all, there
-came a letter from Heinrich himself&mdash;a letter dated ten days
-subsequent to the catastrophe recorded in the <i>Extra Blatt</i>!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was dated from a village somewhere near Metz, and
-briefly recapitulated what has been detailed in Chapter
-Eighteen, and added that a humane peasant woman, who,
-from a hiding-place, had witnessed the terrible scene in the
-garden, the moment the Francs-Tireurs retired, had rushed
-forth and cut him down. She had quickly and adroitly
-released his neck from the odious cord, chafed it with her
-hands, given him water, and thoroughly revived him, though
-animation had never been quite suspended.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Moreover, she had concealed him in her house for two
-days, and enabled him to join the regiment before Metz;
-but the shock to his system was such that the military
-surgeons advised his return home for a time, and that,
-doubtless, he would spend his Christmas with them all at
-Frankenburg.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They had all mourned so deeply over his supposed terrible
-fate, that the account this letter contained&mdash;the assurance of
-his perfect safety and speedy return in his own
-handwriting&mdash;seemed like a resurrection from the tomb! All the
-family embraced each other and shed tears of joy, and a
-new and sudden happiness was diffused over the whole
-household, even to the grooms in the stable, for all loved
-the handsome young Graf.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-An enormous amount of beer was consumed on the occasion,
-and in 'the study,' the Count and Baron Grünthal
-over their pipes, and certainly more than one bottle of
-Rhenish wine, grasped each other's hands ever and anon,
-and shouted, in the melodious language of the Vaterland,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Hoch, Heinrich! Ich habe die Ehre, auf Ihre Gesundheit
-zu trinken!' (I have the honour of drinking your good
-health.)
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In his letter there was no mention of Carl Pierrepont, and
-no enclosure for <i>her</i>, thought Ernestine; but then, as
-Heinrich wrote to the Countess, he could not make a communication
-concerning him; so the girl, though her joy for her
-brother's safety was somewhat clouded by that circumstance
-and the wish that Heinrich had written to Herminia; could
-but wait and hope&mdash;hope and pray.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A little time, and my dear brother will tell me all,' she
-said to herself; 'but, oh! this suspense&mdash;this mystery
-concerning the fate of my Carl, is intolerable!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And now, in the excess of their happiness, the intended
-marriage of her and the Baron was revived in greater force
-than ever. Heinrich was returning, and his presence would
-make the happiness of all complete. Daily, Ernestine,
-while scanning the papers with keen and haggard eyes for
-intelligence of the lost one, heard the marriage arrangement
-schemed out; the projected breakfast; the cake which was
-to come from the most celebrated confectioner in Aix; the
-<i>trousseau</i>, which was to come from the most fashionable
-Putzmacherin (or <i>modiste</i>) in Berlin; the feast in the hall,
-and who were to be invited; whether the honeymoon was
-to be spent at Wiesbaden, at Carlsbad, or Bruckenau, and
-the girl listened to them as if she had been turned to stone.
-But there is a writer who says, 'Age legislates and youth
-trespasses; but the tide of love no more recedes at a
-<i>bidding</i>, than King Canute's waves.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Only once, however, did the sympathizing Herminia
-think her pale cousin was about to yield, when one night
-she laid her head on her bosom, and said with a gasping
-shudder,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, how terrible it is to give one's hand to the living
-when one's heart has been given to the dead!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But your dear Carl may not be dead. Heinrich is
-returning.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Other times there were when she would not believe that
-he was dead, yet how many brave hearts were growing cold
-in death then all over Northern France! How many men
-yet were to perish among the blushing vineyards of
-Champagne, and under the beleaguered walls of Paris!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The cruel <i>Blatt</i> had only said he had been wounded.
-But how had he disappeared?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'He will return&mdash;oh, yet he will return! Kind God, you
-would not take him from me!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And in the fervour of such a moment she would lift her
-streaming eyes upward with a trustful and angelic expression.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Like Charlie, when in many a comfortless bivouac under
-the sky and dew of heaven, under canvas when the summer
-rain pattered on the tent roof within an inch of his nose, of
-when in his bed tossing restlessly at the Chateau de Caillé,
-how many wild, strange, and impracticable plans and
-schemes did the busy mind of Ernestine frame, to reconstruct
-and hopelessly destroy again! Time, possibility, and
-the usages of life&mdash;and especially of her position in life, she
-overleaped with wonderful facility, so impulsive was she, but
-to fall back panting, as it were, and without one ray of hope,
-till she became, as we have said, like a stone, yet love
-lived on.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Times there were when she imagined, or strove to imagine,
-that she had eloped with Charlie; that he had cast
-epaulettes, sword, and military reputation to the winds, and
-all for her sake; and that she was rambling with him among
-those lovely woods and sylvan scenes he had so often
-described to her, the scenes of his native home in Warwick.
-They did not require a huge schloss; they could be so
-happy in a little cottage, and she was certain that she could
-milk a cow, if she tried.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Charlie she must and would see again at all hazards!
-Were they not each other's unto death&mdash;vowed in life and
-death? Even now <i>where</i> he was, she knew not, wist not;
-but in imagination she felt his arm pressing her hand to his
-side; she saw his brave and tender gaze of love into her
-eyes till they seemed to droop beneath the magnetism of it;
-she felt his kisses on their snowy lids, on her hair and on
-her brow, and all his soft uttered whispers come to memory
-again. And as she thought over all these things, the girl
-clasped her hot white hands in agony by day, and tossed
-feverishly and restlessly on her pillow by night.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At last Heinrich returned, to the increased joy of all
-and the thoughts of Ernestine went back to that evening
-when, from the terrace, she had watched Carl, driving in the
-britzka towards the Schloss&mdash;her Carl, then a stranger to
-her save by name, but who was now so dear! Heinrich
-looked well and strong, sun-browned and bold-eyed, and as
-the Count said, after kissing him on both cheeks, and giving
-him a kindly thwack on the back, 'not a whit the worse for
-his hanging!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And now utterly regardless of what her parents might
-think or say, oblivious alike of their anger and their absurd
-pride, Ernestine, in her, usual passionate way, threw herself
-into her brother's arms, and cried in a piercing voice:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, Heinrich, what news of <i>him</i>, of Carl? tell me, my
-brother&mdash;my brother, lest I die.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I have no news, dear sister; the regiment has heard
-nothing of him since the battle of the 14th of August, before
-Metz,' replied Heinrich, speaking with great reluctance, being
-alike loath to wound his tender sister, or in that moment of
-their happiness to offend his parents. But now her father
-spoke, and calmly too.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The <i>Blatt</i> stated that the Herr Lieutenant was wounded?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, when we were storming a mitrailleuse battery.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Did you see him fall?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No, Herr Graf. The smoke was thick, and I was on
-the left of the line, he on the right, in Schönforst's
-company. Poor Schönforst&mdash;he fell there, literally torn to
-shreds!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What certainty is there that Here Pierrepont was
-wounded at all?' asked the Count, very desirous to learn
-that it was all over with poor Charlie, while Ernestine hung
-on her brother's words in agony.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'His company saw him struck. He was leading them
-bravely on after Schönforst's death. Our doctor patched
-up his wound in some fashion; but on returning at night,
-could find no trace of him.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Where was the wound?' asked Ernestine, with quivering
-lips.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'In the breast&mdash;we shall hear all about it ere long,'
-continued Heinrich, putting an arm kindly round his sister.
-'He is doubtless in some of the many hospitals that are near
-the fields where we have been fighting.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Bah! the Herr Englander has probably tired of fighting,
-gone home to his own country, and will trouble Prussia no
-more!' said the Countess.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Heinrich thought it much more probable that he had
-crawled away somewhere and died unseen, or, to judge from
-his own experience, been murdered by the peasantry; but
-he kept these ideas to himself. On the first opportunity
-when they were alone, Ernestine had a thousand questions
-to ask Heinrich; but to the fate&mdash;the disappearance of
-Pierrepont, he could not give the faintest clue, though to
-feed her hopes, when he had none, he drew largely on his
-imagination; for he knew that unless Charlie were dead, or
-most severely wounded indeed, and quite helpless, which
-we have shown him to be, he would have put himself
-in communication with the nearest Prussian military
-authorities.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So, from the day of Heinrich's return, the health and
-spirits of Ernestine sank painfully and visibly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Summer had passed away, and the tints of autumn, brown
-and yellow, russet and orange, stole over the woodlands
-around the old Schloss and the beautiful dingles of the
-Reichswald. In vain were daily drives in the open carriage
-resorted to, and in vain were doctors consulted; the cheek
-of Ernestine grew paler and thinner; her roundness of form
-was passing away, and the once lovely hand becoming all
-but transparent. Had sure tidings come that Charlie had
-been killed outright, and, was actually dead, she might have
-got over the shock; but the suspense of not knowing where
-he was, how circumstanced, how mutilated, whether in his
-grave or still lingering in the land of the living, proved too
-much for a girl so sensitively organized as Ernestine.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-One fact was certain, as Heinrich's letters from the
-Thuringians assured her, that nothing had been heard of
-him by the regiment as yet. Owing to her state of health,
-the Countess's favourite topic and plan of the marriage was
-abandoned for the time, and in that matter she obtained
-some temporary relief.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The poor girl really was, to all appearance, in a rapid
-consumption; but in all her family, hale, hearty, and strong on
-both sides, such an ailment had never been known. The
-whole tenor of her ways was changed. Even her pets&mdash;and
-she had many&mdash;were forgotten now.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The winter would come, and with it Christmas, and to
-that festival Ernestine looked forward with a kind of horror
-now. Would it be jovial as usual in the old ancestral hall
-of Frankenburg? Doubtless the glittering Christmas tree&mdash;a
-pine from the Reichswald&mdash;would be there as of old, as
-it had been for generations; and there would be the venison
-pasty, and the brown shining boar's head to be solemnly
-cut and jovially eaten; speeches would be made, and toasts
-drunk with many a merry 'hoch!' while her heart would be
-with the German army before beleaguered Paris, or in the
-grave, where she feared her Carl lay; so she hoped as
-Christmas came that her place in Frankenburg would be
-vacant.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The girl's mind was a prey to suspense and fear, sorrow
-and love&mdash;love, the strongest of all human passions.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We have said that her nervous organization was delicate;
-hence these mental affections, together with incessant anxiety,
-threw her into a species of rapid consumption, which the
-presence and restoration of 'her Carl,' as she always called
-him, alone could cure or arrest. She had a dry cough, a
-quick small pulse, a burning heat in her hands, a loss of
-strength, and sinking of the eyes, and her state became such
-at last that the Countess begged the Baron to absent himself
-from the Schloss for a time, as his visits there were a source
-of perpetual annoyance to Ernestine, though, for some time
-past, she secluded herself in her own room.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now her mother began to wring her hands, and pray that
-Heaven would find for her this Herr Pierrepont, if his presence,
-even if tolerated for a time, would restore her sinking
-child.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Again and again did Heinrich write and telegraph to the
-head-quarters of the Thuringians concerning Charlie; but
-nothing had been heard of him there, and all were certain
-that he must have been killed in the action on the 14th of
-the preceding August.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Poor Ernestine! Her case was soon pronounced
-hopeless. Her beauty remained; but it was of a strange
-and weird kind. On each cheek was a hectic spot; her
-eyes, sunken in their sockets, had an unnatural brightness;
-she spoke little, and laughed never.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A little time more, and she was confined to her bed, where
-she lay for hours with her hot hand clasped in that of
-Herminia's, who bathed her temples with Rimmel and eau de
-Cologne, and fanned and petted her, while she tossed on her
-pillow, and muttered 'Carl! Carl!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was always Carl.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Often when she spoke, her dark eyes flashed up, like the
-momentary flicker of a lamp about to go out for ever&mdash;on
-earth, at least.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, Herminia, darling!' she said on one occasion; 'life
-has no charms, and death has no terrors for me now.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Carl will return.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Never! Or it may be that he will come <i>too late</i>. Yet,
-even then,' she added, with a strange bright smile, that
-terrified her weeping cousin, 'even then I may see him, for it
-is among the possibilities of this world that the dead may
-return again!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Strange weird words! What does she&mdash;what <i>can</i> she
-mean?' thought Herminia.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Some days after this she became almost speechless; yet
-she was quite conscious, and looked so lovely with the
-dishevelled masses of her dark hair floating over her laced
-pillow and delicate neck, as she smiled tenderly on her
-mother, Herminia, and all who hovered about her. Yet
-ever she whispered to herself, 'Carl! Carl!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On his last visit the doctor looked very grave as he
-departed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Can nothing be done to save her?' implored the
-Countess, in a tremulous voice.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nothing in my power, Grafine. Her disease is of the
-mind&mdash;the mind alone. Your daughter&mdash;I deplore to say
-it&mdash;is dying!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Of what, Herr Doctor? Of what?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'To me, it seems&mdash;of a broken heart!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Impossible!' replied the Countess; 'people do not die
-of broken hearts, and grief does not kill.'
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap21"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XXI.
-<br /><br />
-AT AIX ONCE MORE.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-So, like Heinrich, Charlie had fallen into the 'enemy's
-hands;' but fortunately for him, they were the soft and
-gentle ones of little Célandine de Caillé.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The passage of the ball had seriously injured him internally;
-thus he was long in recovering, and the winter of the
-year was almost at hand ere he could venture to travel;
-but it now seemed imperative to Charlie that he should
-trespass on his host and hostess no longer.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You would spoil any man with kindness, Mademoiselle
-de Caillé,' said he, one day; 'or any dog, too.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Often the most loving animal of the two,' replied the
-French girl, laughing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-During that protracted convalescence how often, in the
-waking hours of the night, had he thought of Ernestine, and
-strove to sleep in the hope to dream of her; of their
-moonlight walks in the garden of the old Schloss, when she had
-held his arm, with her little hands interlaced so confidingly
-on his sleeve, and he used to pet and caress them as she
-leant with all her weight upon his wrist; or of the mad
-gallops they were wont to have through the glades and
-dingles of the lovely Reichswald, when the green woods
-seemed to sleep under the dusky purple of the summer sky;
-but one night he had a dream that startled, and, like that
-one in the bivouac, made a deep impression upon him by its
-vividness and the sense of pain it left.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In imagination she bent over him sadly and caressingly;
-her dark eyes were tender and beautiful as of old; but the
-rose-leaf tint had left her cheeks, as if for ever. Her smile
-was full of sweetness. Then a change came suddenly over
-her; the soft light died out of her eyes; her cheeks became
-hollow, her lips pallid; her whole expression and aspect
-painful and ghastly; the grasp of her hands became cold
-and chilling, and her voice grew faint and husky, as she
-said,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'At Burtscheid, dearest Carl; meet me at Burtscheid,
-where last we met.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then she seemed to melt away from before him, and
-Charlie started and awoke, to find it was happily but a mere
-dream, born too probably of his nervous and enfeebled
-condition, yet one so vivid, we have said&mdash;so terrifically vivid
-and painful, that he was trembling in every limb, a cold
-perspiration covered his whole frame; and by some strange
-association of ideas, the dying curse, if curse it was, of the
-French captain came rushing on his memory.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And now the time came when he was to leave the Chateau
-de Caillé.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And you go, you go to her,' said Célandine, making a
-great effort to appear calm, on the day of his departure.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'To her whose miniature I showed you, dear friend yes.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, may you both be happy&mdash;very, very happy!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I thank you, dear Célandine; you will ever have her
-gratitude, as well as mine; but there are many things to
-oppose, many interests to thwart our happiness.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Alas!' said the French girl, sadly; 'but remember that
-nothing is <i>impossible</i>.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And so when Charlie Pierrepont left his kind friends and
-that charming part of Lorraine, he little knew that he left
-behind a warm girlish heart that yearned for him, and him
-only, and thought nothing of Monsieur Adolphe, with all his
-thousands of francs, her father's choice; and keenly she
-envied her&mdash;the unknown lady&mdash;whose miniature was in
-Charlie's heart.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From the surgeon of a Prussian regiment at Saarbrück,
-Charlie Pierrepont got a medical certificate, to the effect
-that he was incapable of rejoining the Thuringians, or of
-serving for some time. Leave was given him by the general
-in command, and he took the train from Saarbrück to Aix,
-to be near Frankenburg and her, of whom he had heard
-nothing for all those months, that seemed like so many ages
-now; for Charlie was so much of a lover, that to breathe the
-same atmosphere with her was a source of joy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yet it was a cold and frosty atmosphere now, for Christmas
-was close at hand, the time when Christmas trees are
-lighted, when arcades and toyshops, fruiterers and pastry-cooks
-drive a roaring trade, when circles long separated are
-reunited, and happy parents sit at the head of happy tables
-surrounded by shining faces.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Reichswald was leafless and bare now, and a mantle
-of snow covered all those heights that surround Aix, which
-seems to lie in 'a fertile bowl surrounded by bold hills;'
-and ice lay in masses about the boats of the pontoon
-bridge of the Rhine. It was on the evening of the third
-Thursday before the great festival of the Christian year that
-Charlie found himself in the brilliant speise-saal of the
-Grand Monarque.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was now within a very short distance of Frankenburg;
-but how was he to communicate with Ernestine? See her
-he must before Christmas-eve, or she could not meet him
-then; and the hunger, the craving of his heart, was too
-great to be endured long. He feared to write to Herminia,
-lest his handwriting might be recognised by the Countess,
-and to write to Ernestine would too probably be useless, as
-her correspondence was too probably under her mother's
-supervision.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-What if she should now be the Baroness Grünthal? For
-months no one had known anything of his existence. All
-might have believed him to be dead, and she, perhaps
-yielding to the influences around her; but no, no&mdash;he thrust
-that thought aside, and recalled the solemnity of their vows
-interchanged at Burtscheid.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Had she not then, and on that eventful night in the boudoir,
-promised to be faithful to him in life and death? and Charlie
-smiled at his momentary doubt.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How many people there are in this world who treasure up
-and con over and over again an impossible day-dream that
-may never come to pass! Charlie thought of this as, from
-the hotel windows, he gazed moodily into the snow-covered
-street, with all its bustle and lamps, and shrank from the
-passing fear that his aspirations after Ernestine might only
-be an impossible and unrealizable longing; but see her
-again he must, even if he went to the Schloss&mdash;but no, that
-would never do after the treatment he had experienced
-there, and the epithets applied to him by the Countess.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Suddenly he observed near him, while lingering over his
-wine in the speise-saal, which had emptied of guests, the
-Baron Rhineberg and, of all men in the world, Baron
-Grünthal, busy with their meerschaums and tankards of
-beer. Both seemed very quiet and taciturn; they had been
-speaking very little, which perhaps was the reason that, in
-his abstraction, they had hitherto been unnoticed by Charlie,
-who now held up the <i>Staats Anzeiger</i> between them and him,
-as he had no wish to be recognised by either. However, they
-were a link between him and Frankenburg, so he could not
-help listening intently to whatever they said.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They were talking at slow intervals of some recent sorrow
-they had sustained; but so great was the slaughter of the
-French war, that everyone in Germany then was wearing
-crape or mourning for the loss of some friend.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ach Gott&mdash;yes,' said Rhineberg; 'it is certainly a great
-calamity even to the city of Aachen.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'When I saw the black flag flying on the old Schloss,'
-responded Grunthal, 'and the hatchment with its sixteen
-quarters over the gate, I&mdash;I knew that the dreaded event
-had taken place at last.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'That we had lost a dear friend?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes. The poor old Graf!' said Grünthal, with a sigh.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Charlie felt startled&mdash;almost inclined to speak and discover
-himself, but restrained the inclination, and listened
-intently, thinking, 'Well, the poor old veteran of Ligny and
-Waterloo could not be expected to live for ever.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'He has never suffered more, I think,' said Rhineberg,
-after taking a long pull at his pipe, and watching the smoke
-thoughtfully as it ascended in concentric rings towards the
-lofty ceiling of the speise-saal, 'never, since that morning
-when the devilish <i>Extra Blatt</i> had in it the mutilated
-telegram concerning the capture of Heinrich by the
-Francs-Tireurs.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And the severe wounding&mdash;was it not mortally?&mdash;of the
-Englander, Herr Pierrepont,' added Grunthal, with something
-in his throat that sounded, as Charlie thought, exceedingly
-like a chuckle of satisfaction.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But Heinrich, his dear friend and comrade, had been
-taken by the Francs-Tireurs! Knowing, from experience,
-how the Francs-Tireurs and the Prussians were in the habit
-of handling each other, this was an event to cause him
-anxiety, but, as it happened, only for a few minutes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Would the death of the Count in any way release Ernestine
-from parental thraldom? Though he felt genuine
-sympathy for her natural grief, he could not very much
-regret the event; 'and yet,' thought Charlie, 'the poor old
-fellow was always kind to me.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It is most fortunate,' said Rhineberg, after a little pause,
-'that the young Graf Heinrich is at home during such a
-terrible crisis.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Most fortunate for his mother, and all.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So Heinrich was at Frankenburg, and not with the old
-95th before the walls of Paris! This was indeed most
-welcome news for Charlie! More than once he had been
-on the verge of speaking, as his curiosity had been keenly
-excited, but repressed the inclination; he did not wish that
-his presence in Aix should be known to the Countess, and
-to address Grünthal, his acknowledged rival, or competitor,
-rather, was altogether an intolerable idea, so quitting the
-speise-saal softly, he hastened to his own room.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then he wrote rapidly a long and explanatory letter to
-Ernestine, full of all the deepest, most tender, and passionate
-thoughts of his heart, telling her of his presence at
-Aix, and beseeching her to meet him. He recalled the
-dream in which she had asked him to meet him at
-Burtscheid.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'At Burtscheid, be it,' he wrote, 'at the same hour, dear,
-dear Ernestine, when last we met there; and I shall give
-you a strange souvenir of the war&mdash;the bullet that pierced
-my breast, and has been the means, perhaps, of keeping me
-so long from you. At Burtscheid, then, my darling.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This letter he despatched under cover to Heinrich, and
-felt more happy and composed than he had been since last
-he saw her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He knew that his letter would be delivered by the post at
-Frankenburg in the morning.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Probably Heinrich would visit his hotel during the day,
-and he knew that at all risks&mdash;unless something most
-extraordinary intervened&mdash;Ernestine, who had such strength of
-will, would contrive to meet him in the old church.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All the following day Charlie lingered about the Grand
-Monarque, but Heinrich never came; doubtless the business
-or calamity to which the Barons referred had detained
-him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then a fear came over Charlie that the same event might
-prevent Ernestine meeting him, as she might be deprived of
-her brother's escort.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But if she failed to come, a messenger of some kind
-might meet him at Burtscheid.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap22"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XXII.
-<br /><br />
-AT BURTSCHEID.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-'In five hours&mdash;in four&mdash;in two,' and so on he reckoned, 'I
-shall see her again&mdash;my darling! my darling!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At last the wished-for time came when he was to set
-forth on that walk which&mdash;he fondly, ardently, and tenderly
-hoped&mdash;was to end in <i>her</i> presence; but, as he walked
-down the leafless avenue from the city, he felt his heart
-become tremulous, almost sick with anxiety and fear, lest she
-should be unable to meet him, even after all the months of
-separation undergone; yet his was a heart that never
-quailed, even when he faced that battery in the wood&mdash;a
-battery that was not of cannon, but mitrailleuses!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Anon as he proceeded, something of Ernestine's high and
-strange enthusiasm gathered in his breast.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Even if he were fated never to wed her, he felt that she
-was the one great passion of his life, a worship almost
-spiritualized, and that beyond the trammels of this material
-world, he would follow her, faithful and unchanged, into
-that to come.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then he almost smiled to think how German the tone of
-his mind was becoming.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The evening sky was cloudless, and wore a kind of pale
-violet tint, amid which the stars sparkled out brilliantly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The trees of the avenue between the city and Burtscheid
-were covered with rimy frost, which made their branches
-seem to coruscate and glitter in myriad prisms. Frost was
-on the pathway; it shone on the stems and twigs, on the
-stalks and blades of the wayside plants; snow covered all
-the district, yet the air was far from being cold.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At last the old church of Burtscheid rose before him
-again. In another minute or two, he would have clasped
-her to his breast, where he had clasped her last&mdash;at the
-altar-rail&mdash;when those sad and sweet and solemn vows were
-interchanged.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In that moment the campaign in Alsace and Lorraine,
-danger, duty, wound, and suffering, were all forgotten;
-nothing was in his mind but the intense happiness of the
-event to come.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was conscious enough of the tombs and cypresses, the
-pillars and obelisks, standing grimly up from the snow-clad
-graves; of the dusky outlines of various distant buildings;
-of red lights streaming from windows out upon the gloom;
-and he could see the pale silver crescent of the new moon
-peeping sharply up above the black outline of the Schloss of
-Frankenburg.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He heard the faint whisper of the ivy leaves on the old
-wall; but all as one might do in a dream.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He threw away the end of his cigar, and thought,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I should not have been smoking when coming to meet <i>her</i>.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-No britzka or other carriage stood before the gate.
-Heinrich was not there as escort; neither was the old
-butler or any other servant there in attendance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So, as the evening was clear and fine, she must have come
-alone to meet him, that they might have the joy of walking
-back to the Schloss together!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He entered the church. It was gaily decorated for the
-coming Christmas-eve.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-No one was in the church, and Charlie's heart began at
-once to sink, when there was a sound behind him, and
-coming down two steps, from a door that he had not
-observed before, was his own Ernestine.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Carl! Carl! It is thee! Thee, at last!' she exclaimed,
-in a piercing voice, and, with innocent self-abandonment
-and a tenderness that was irrepressible, but peculiarly her
-own, she flung herself into his arms, as on that night in the
-boudoir.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She was dressed as if for a ball or some great festival;
-but Carl remembered that this was Christmas-time, always
-a season of gaiety at Frankenburg as elsewhere.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her dress was white silk, covered with waves of the finest
-white lace. A great veil of the latter material enveloped
-her head and shoulders.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She wanted but a white wreath to make her look like a
-lovely bride, and Charlie's heart throbbed with pride and
-joy to think that she was his own.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He thought she looked pale and tired. It might be&mdash;nay,
-doubtless, it must be&mdash;that the months of past anxiety
-had told upon her system as on his own.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yet her eyes had all the tender purity of an angel's in
-them, though when she became excited there came over
-them a strange glitter, a restless flashing, a sparkling
-animation, that contrasted strongly with the languor of her form
-and actions; but happily there was no fever flush on her
-cheek, which was pale&mdash;paler than of old, as Charlie
-thought.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Long and silent was their embrace ere they spoke in
-broken accents of all they had mutually undergone; and,
-while speaking, her head nestling as it used to do on
-Charlie's neck, she shuddered sometimes, for she seemed
-to be sorely chilled by the damp cold atmosphere of the
-old church.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Are all well at the Schloss?' asked Charlie suddenly,
-after a pause, as the last evening's conversation recurred
-to him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'All! Thank Heaven!' replied Ernestine.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And your father, the Herr Graf?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, too.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Charlie was puzzled. He must have been in a dream, or
-have misunderstood the remarks of the two barons.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Is Heinrich with the regiment?' he asked.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No,' she replied, 'dear Heinrich is at the Schloss, and
-this morning put your letter into my hand; and then, after,
-to tease or please me, in my bosom. See, it is there now!'
-she added, in the most engaging manner.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You found no difficulty in coming to meet me, dearest?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'None.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How fortunate&mdash;how happy we are!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'My poor Carl!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why poor? I feel to-night the happiest man in Germany.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I was resolved to meet you, at all risks, my darling. A
-faith plighted&mdash;a promise made is holy, Carl&mdash;holy to God
-and man. I promised to be here, Carl, in a dream that I
-had of you; and by a strange chance I have been permitted
-to come&mdash;to be here, to see you, feel your strong
-but tender arm round me once more. Oh, Carl, kiss me
-once again, as you did on that day in the Hoch Munster
-when first you said you loved me.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ernestine, what do you mean?' asked Charlie, eyeing
-her with some anxiety, and impressed with a strange fear
-by the solemnity of her manner.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I belong no longer to myself.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'To whom, then? Heavens!' he added, starting, 'you
-have not become the wife of that man!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Who?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Baron Grünthal.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, no; how could you think of such a thing for a
-moment, Carl?' she said, with a bitter smile, while looking
-down and playing with a ring he had given her in other
-days.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Then to whom do you belong?' he asked, fondly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'My love&mdash;to you!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She put up her little face tenderly to his, and then looked
-away, with the weary, wistful expression of those who have
-long lived in some world of their own, and can never seem
-to see out beyond the present.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'We were betrothed together for life and death, Carl.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Were&mdash;<i>are</i>, you mean, Ernestine.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, beloved Carl; but time presses&mdash;alas! I fear that
-I must leave you now.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But to meet again&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Very soon.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I have brought these for you from Lorraine. This is
-the bullet that struck me down, and this cross is a trophy
-of the war.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How pretty&mdash;nay, it is beautiful and interesting, too,'
-she exclaimed, with something of her old gleeful way, as he
-clasped round her slender throat a gold necklet he had
-procured in Aix, and now the white enamelled cross hung
-thereat.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She shuddered when she looked at the chassepot ball
-and took it in her hand.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And this actually pierced you, my Carl?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nearly through and through, love. For five days it was
-in unpleasant proximity to my lungs.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It is indeed a relic,' said she, while placing it in the
-bosom of her dress.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'So&mdash;so,' said she, sadly, disengaging herself from his
-arms, 'our love has been sanctified by danger and death.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Great Heavens!' thought Carl, 'sorrow has turned her
-brain!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It has <i>not</i>,' she said; 'do not think so.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What is not? I did not speak,' said Carl.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No, but you thought; and I know what you thought,
-and there is no living grace or glory like a love so sanctified
-as ours, Carl.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He regarded her with a bewilderment not unmixed with
-alarm.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was a strange wild and weird beauty in her pale
-face&mdash;a radiance in her eyes, a brightness all over her such
-as Charlie had never before witnessed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Whence did it come? From the altar-lights?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They were too dim.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-What did it mean? Was it her natural beauty only,
-magnified by the force of his imagination, and enhanced
-by his great love for her?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Somehow Charlie was perplexed and startled by her,
-amid all the transport and joy of the time.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Suddenly there was a sound of wheels and horses' hoofs
-without, then of several feet ringing on the hard and frozen
-churchyard path.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Ernestine started, and exclaimed in a voice husky, as it
-seemed, with alarm&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'They are coming&mdash;my father and that dreadful Baron!
-I must leave you, beloved Carl&mdash;but only for a time;
-we shall meet again where even they can separate us no
-more!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She turned, and flying like a phantom, hurried through
-the little door by which she had entered the church; and
-Charlie Pierrepont, feeling certain that their interview had
-been discovered&mdash;that they had come in pursuit of her in
-ire and indignation, and that there would be a scene which
-he was most anxious to avoid&mdash;looked hastily round the
-little church for a place of concealment.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was none; so he resolved to make the best of it,
-and turned to the doorway just as the portly old Count of
-Frankenburg, the Baron Grünthal, limping as usual with
-gout, and Heinrich entered the church together.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap23"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CONCLUSION.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-They were all in evening costume&mdash;that sombre attire in
-which the modern gentleman may attend a funeral by day,
-and a ball by night, without change; and they all looked
-pale, harassed, and grave.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, Herr Graf von Frankenburg, if you have a human
-heart&mdash;&mdash;' Charlie was beginning, anxious to propitiate the
-father of her he loved so dearly, when the Count, waving
-his hand, interrupted him, and said:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Herr Lieutenant, I can well afford to forgive the past
-now, and your rash love for my daughter.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Herr Graf, I thank you&mdash;I thank you!' exclaimed
-Charlie, with warmth and gratitude; for he expected high
-words, anger, and fierce reproaches.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Carl, my dear friend,' said Heinrich, taking his hand
-kindly in both of his, while his eyes filled with genuine
-emotion, 'you here!&mdash;you here after all!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You got my letter and gave it to her&mdash;to Ernestine?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'To her&mdash;yes; but alas! Carl, it came too late.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Too late!&mdash;too late! How?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Do you not know? have you not heard? Poor Carl! poor
-Carl!' said Heinrich, in a voice full of sympathy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What do you mean?' asked Charlie, in great perplexity.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'He means, Mein Herr,' said the Count, in a broken
-voice, 'that our beloved Ernestine died at noon
-yesterday.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Charlie passed a hand across his brow, and looked
-wildly in their faces, as if doubting their sanity or his
-own.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Died!' he repeated mechanically.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It is incomprehensible your being here,' said the Count,
-in a still more broken voice, and few could have seen that
-old man weeping unmoved, 'as her last words were, "Meet
-me at Burtscheid&mdash;at Burtscheid, dearest Carl."'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And I <i>have</i> met her, seen her, spoken with her not two
-minutes since.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'My poor friend,' said Heinrich, 'grief, or your wound,
-has turned your brain.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What madness is this?' asked Charlie, with a kind of
-bitter laugh in his voice, as he felt in no humour for jesting.
-'Herr Graf, Herr Baron, Heinrich, my friend, Ernestine has
-been here with me, in this lonely church, for fully two
-hours!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And <i>spoken</i> with you?' said the Count, in an excited
-tone. 'Oh, if it should be that she still lives!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Lives!&mdash;great Heaven! Herr Graf&mdash;she was here with
-me, and I gave her a French cross with the bullet that
-wounded me.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'He raves!' said the Baron Grunthal, with anger in his
-tone.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'She is there&mdash;in that room off the church.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'In that room sure enough. It is the Dead Chamber,'
-said the Count, approaching the door.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'She fled there for concealment on hearing your approach.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Man,' said the old Count, pausing, 'are you not mad to
-tell me that she is there now, and yet was here but a minute
-ago?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'As I have Heaven to answer to&mdash;she was!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Follow me, then.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On entering the room, Charlie Pierrepont reeled, and
-would have fallen had not Heinrich supported him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We scarcely know how to write of the episode that follows,
-and can but tell the tale as it was told by those who were
-cognisant of it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In a purple velvet coffin, mounted with silver, and supported
-on trestles, the lid being open, lay Ernestine, dressed
-as we have described her&mdash;dead, stone-dead, cold and pale
-as marble, her lips a pale blue streak, her long eyelashes
-closed for ever.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Dead, beyond a doubt, was the girl he had clasped in his
-arms as a living being, but a few minutes before living and
-full of volition and life, love and energy; the lips he had
-kissed closed thus for ever; the hands he had caressed,
-snow-white now, disposed upon her bosom, the upper one
-holding the cross he had given her!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Dead! What miracle of heaven; what magic of hell is
-here!' he exclaimed, as he staggered to the side of the coffin,
-pale as the girl who lay in it, the bead-like drops oozing
-from his temples as he grasped the locks above them.
-'Speak! oh, speak, Heinrich!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How terribly now came back to memory some of the
-strange things Ernestine had said to him, and more than all,
-those dying words of the French captain in the Chateau de
-Colombey, which sounded like something between a
-prophecy and a curse!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Compose yourself, Carl,' said Heinrich, full of pity.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'My letter to her&mdash;written after she was dead,' said
-Charles, in a voice like a whisper&mdash;'she&mdash;she&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I placed it in her coffin ere she was brought here from
-the Schloss,' said Heinrich, who was now weeping freely;
-'it is there now&mdash;and heavens, father! she <i>has</i> round her
-neck the cross of which Carl spoke.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There are many things but imperfectly known in 'our
-philosophy,' and certainly this seemed one of them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'She died talking of you&mdash;not raving&mdash;the poor angel,'
-said the old Count, as he bent fondly over the coffined girl,
-'but smiling sweetly, and saying earnestly, again and, again,
-that she would meet you at Burtscheid.'
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-* * * * *
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The gloomy half-lighted chamber in which this scene took
-place, and where the dead girl lay, looking so sweetly placid
-in her coffin, was one of those, where, in conformity with
-the police regulations of Germany in general, the bodies of
-persons deceased are placed within twelve hours after
-death&mdash;there to await interment.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In many places, more particularly at Frankfort, to guard
-against the chances of burial in cases of suspended animation,
-the fingers of the dead are placed in the loops of
-a bell-rope, attached to an alarm clock, which is fixed in
-the apartment of the attendant appointed to be on the
-watch.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The least pulsation in the body would give the alarm,
-when medical aid would instantly be called in.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Ernestine had a watcher in an adjoining room! but that
-worthy was found in the enjoyment of a profound slumber,
-and so had neither heard nor seen anything.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This strange story found its way into the <i>Aix Gazette</i> and
-the <i>Extra Blatt</i>.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Some averred that Charlie Pierrepont, on discovering her
-body in the chamber of Death, had gone mad and had
-imagined the whole interview in the church; others, that it
-was really a case of suspended animation, and that she had
-recovered for a time, and actually kept her tryst; but the
-former idea was the predominant one.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Certain it is that for many weeks after the event Charlie
-seemed to hover between life and death, sanity and insanity,
-at the Grand Monarque; and when he rejoined the Thuringianas
-before the walls of Paris, he had become so haggard,
-grey-haired, and old-looking, that his former comrades
-scarcely recognised him, so much had he undergone by a
-fever of the mind, rather than of the body.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-When these dreadful events were soothed by time, though
-not forgotten at Frankenburg, and when the summer flowers
-were blooming over Charlie's grave&mdash;a grave which he found
-under the guns of Mont Valerien&mdash;the young Graf Heinrich
-was married to his cousin Herminia by the Herr Pastor Von
-Puffenvörtz, in the church of Burtscheid, when, as if no
-sorrow had preceded the ceremony, all indeed went merrily
-as a 'marriage bell.'
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-THE END.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t4">
-BILLING AND SONS, PRINTERS, GUILDFORD AND LONDON.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
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