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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #69029 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/69029)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Genevra; or, the history of a
-portrait,, by Genevieve Genevra Fairfield
-
-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: Genevra; or, the history of a portrait,
- by an American lady. A resident of Washington City.
-
-Author: Genevieve Genevra Fairfield
-
-Release Date: September 22, 2022 [eBook #69029]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Charlene Taylor and the Online Distributed Proofreading
- Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from
- images generously made available by The Internet Archive)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK GENEVRA; OR, THE HISTORY OF A
-PORTRAIT, ***
-
-
-
-
-
-
- GENEVRA;
- OR, THE
- HISTORY OF A PORTRAIT,
-
- BY AN AMERICAN LADY.
- A RESIDENT OF WASHINGTON CITY.
-
- COMPLETE IN ONE VOLUME.
-
- Philadelphia:
- T. B. PETERSON, No. 98 CHESNUT STREET.
- ONE DOOR ABOVE THIRD.
-
- Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1851, by
- T. B. PETERSON,
- In the Office of the Clerk of the District Court of the United States,
- in and for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania.
-
-
-
-
- TO
- MARIE DE CARVALLO,
- MINISTERESS FROM CHILI;
- AS A SLIGHT BUT SINCERE TOKEN OF ADMIRATION AND ESTEEM, THIS
- WORK IS RESPECTFULLY DEDICATED, BY
- THE AUTHOR.
-
-
-
-
-GENEVRA; OR, THE HISTORY OF A PORTRAIT.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-
-“Clarence, my dear fellow, pray ring the bell, and let us know when that
-confounded dinner will be ready; the carriage will be here before we are
-ready for a drive to the Campagna.”
-
-I felt out of spirits and in an ill mood; but mechanically I rose
-and rang the bell. Our Italian attendant soon made his appearance.
-“Peppo,”—demanded my friend, the Hon. Augustus Morton, in a mixture
-of bad Italian and French, which he had learned during our two weeks’
-sojourn at Rome,—“Peppo, when will dinner be ready? Don’t you know I told
-you this morning to prepare for us a nice English dinner, and have it
-early too?”
-
-“Si Signor,” replied Peppo, standing with his toes bent in, twisting a
-dirty velvet cap in his hand, ornamented round the edge with tarnished
-gilt lace, “ma Signor Inglese, say cinque bra, non rolamente che tre ora
-adesso.”
-
-“O, it’s only three, eh—how came I to make such a mistake?” He looked
-at his watch: it had stopped. “Well, Peppo,” he continued, in Italian,
-“can’t you tell them to hurry their operations, and let us have our
-dinner now. We have an engagement. Go and see if they cannot serve it at
-once.”
-
-Peppo made his obeisance, and disappeared through the low, narrow door.
-“It is unfortunate that I did not think to set the time. We need not have
-returned from Tivoli for an hour.”
-
-“I am not at all sorry, for my part,” I rejoined. “I take but little
-interest in broken columns, decayed monuments, and old ruins, places of
-assignations for owls and bats; in fact, one half the persons who visit
-Rome care no more about these remains of Rome’s ancient grandeur than the
-doves who make their nests amid the ruins. It has become fashionable of
-late years to visit Rome, and carry home from the city a collection of
-antique relics, busts, and every variety of curiosities, all of which are
-treasured as rare trophies of travel in classic land; a feeling I cannot
-at all sympathize with. You have the enthusiasm of the grandeur of Rome
-almost entirely to yourself, my friend. I assure you I have had but few
-attacks of the fashionable epidemic since my arrival.”
-
-“You are in an ill humor to day, I see, Clarence,” goodnaturedly replied
-Morton, as he walked to and fro in our dingy dining-room with his hands
-under his coat tails; “but it is not Rome that vexes you, half as much as
-the comfortless dreary way in which they manage everything here. If we
-could only transport our English neatness and comfort to this beautiful
-climate, it would be a heaven on earth.”
-
-At this moment Peppo returned with the intelligence that the cook
-absolutely could not serve dinner a moment before the time appointed.
-
-“Well, what can’t be cured, must be endured,” responded Morton, with a
-shrug of the shoulders. “But since we have two hours on our hands, and
-nothing to amuse us in-doors, suppose we take a walk toward the Coliseum,
-and take another look at it. It bears observation more than once. There
-is a fine artist, Signor Carrara, who lives in that vicinity, and, with
-your leave, we will drop in at his studio, and examine his gallery of
-paintings.”
-
-“As you please, Augustus,” I answered; for Morton being five years my
-senior, naturally took the lead. We had graduated at Oxford together; and
-on leaving England for a two years’ jaunt to the continent, my father had
-particularly recommended his darling son to Morton’s fraternal care. We
-had spent some time in Paris, flirting with the prettiest women we saw;
-but that’s not saying much for them, after all; for the French women do
-not depend for their attractions on beauty. They are sprightly, piquant,
-and witty generally, but they do not possess that native beauty of form
-and face, we meet with so frequently among the higher classes of the
-German and English women. Taste in dress and the arts of coquetry, so
-well understood and practised by the French women, supply the place of
-greater personal beauty. While in Paris, Morton had purchased and shipped
-for England a perfect cabinet shop of curiosities; but I, being less
-influenced by the mania for everything foreign, bought but little.
-
-We had descended the Rhine together, and together admired the wild
-majesty of its scenery. And sometimes as our bark glided past one of
-those perpendicular mountains, whose summit seems to kiss the clouds,
-on top of which, you frequently see perched the ruins of one of those
-castles built in the olden days of feudal war and terror. Sometimes, I
-say, I felt a desire to fix my abode, and pass my days in solitude, far
-from the busy haunts of men, on the banks of that noble river. But then,
-the thought recurred to my mind: A life spent in dreamy abstraction is a
-useless one. A life without action, is like a body without a soul. The
-busy world; the cares, disappointments, and numberless vexations one
-meets with, all tend to develope many faculties of mind, which, buried in
-the depths of solitude, might remain forever undiscovered.
-
-We had visited Vienna, the seat of elegance and learning; and after
-spending sometime in the smaller towns of Germany and Switzerland, we
-found ourselves one bright day at Rome. During a fortnight we had been
-occupied every day in sight-seeing; visiting the Vatican, Saint Peter’s,
-his Holiness the Pope, and all the wonders of the eternal city; and
-eternal to me, in sober truth, it seemed, as, entering the ancient town
-by Romulus’ gate, the city dawned upon my view like a vast ocean before
-me.
-
-But where did I leave my friend? Oh, he took his hat, and so, cautious
-reader, will I take mine, and follow him. We traversed several grass
-grown streets, faced on each side, by old houses, built in the Italian
-style, now fast tottering to decay. Before one of these, stood a company
-of street singers. A man advanced in years, whose gray hair was illumined
-by the bright rays of the sun, stood playing on a hand-organ, while a
-sweet little girl of eight or nine years, with light hair and fine blue
-eyes, jingled a tambourine at his side. There was something in the sad
-subdued look of the child, as she timidly advanced toward us, perceiving
-we were strangers, that almost called the tears to my eyes, as Morton
-and myself simultaneously threw a gold piece into the old tambourine she
-extended to receive it.
-
-We passed on, and the next corner hid them from our view. “What a pity
-such a pretty child should be trained to beggary,” remarked I, as we
-walked on.
-
-“Yes, it is; but such things are so common in this country, they have
-ceased to astonish me: indeed, it would be difficult to say what had best
-be done for the amelioration of the Italians; like everything else, they
-have had their day; and now night and darkness are hanging over them.”
-
-I scarcely heard him; for now we came full in view of that massive
-structure, the Coliseum. One side of it is much decayed and crumbled
-away, and forms a gap in the round outline. We entered through one of
-the ivy-hung arches, and found ourselves in the vast interior. Several
-little shrines, the devout offerings of humble superstition, occupied
-the vast space, where, so many hundred years ago, the gladiators had
-fought in the yearly games. At one of these, covered with a white cloth,
-on which were placed a crucifix and bottle of holy water, knelt a young
-woman with her hands clasped in prayer. She wore the picturesque costume
-of the Neapolitans. The attitude of devotion contrasted strangely with my
-recollection of the scenes of which that place had once been the theatre
-of action.
-
-“This is a most extraordinary structure, so immense!” exclaimed Morton,
-whose ideas were of the most matter-of-fact description.
-
-I made no reply. My mind was abstracted, it had flown back to the olden
-times. I thought I saw the dying gladiator leaning on his sword, while
-the arena rung with shouts of triumph for his conqueror. I saw start
-up from all parts of the old ruin, that vast wall of human faces, all
-gazing upon the dying man; but what mattered it to him, the world and all
-its cares was vanishing fast from his view; his glazed eyes close, his
-clenched hands stiffen, and his spirit leaves its earthly tenement with
-the last shout of applause for his conqueror.
-
-I started from my day-dream, and looking for my friend, saw him standing
-at the other end of the amphitheatre, gazing wistfully up at the sky,
-through the gap which yawned above us. As I approached him, he exclaimed,
-“We had better go, or we shall not have time to see Signor Carrara’s
-paintings before dinner, as we have been here an hour.”
-
-“An hour! impossible, it is not more than ten minutes.”
-
-“I know it seems no more than that to you; but it is, nevertheless, an
-hour since we entered here; and I am afraid of taking cold from the
-dampness of the ground; but you were dreaming of the ‘Sorrows of Werter,’
-or some other sentimental subject, and of course, thought not of time.
-Come, mon ami, let us depart.” He linked his arm in mine and we passed
-out into the street, leading to that part of the city he had designated
-as the abode of Signor Carrara.
-
-After a few minutes’ walk, he stopped before an old mansion, built in the
-Venetian style, with a balcony and latticed windows, jealously closed.
-The appearance of the house was antique and gloomy, even more so than
-any of the private mansions I had yet seen in Rome. Morton ascended
-the door-steps, and vigorously rang the bell. The sound seemed to echo
-through the whole house, as though it were deserted. A moment after I
-heard the grating of bolts being undone, the door swing back heavily
-on its hinges; and, standing on its threshold, I saw an old domestic,
-with a grave, sad countenance, and dressed with greater neatness than
-the generality of Italian servants. He smiled gaily, and greeted Morton
-with a respectful obeisance, saying something in Italian, which I did
-not understand; for Morton was an old friend of the Signor’s, having
-visited Rome four years before. His question, “Was the Signor at home?”
-he answered, “Yes,” and requested us to follow him. We traversed a
-long gallery, then ascended a lofty staircase, ornamented with fine
-paintings and statues, placed in niches along the wall. At the end of
-another gallery, the Italian stopped at a door, and knocked. An elderly
-man, whose hair was slightly tinged with gray, attired in a plain suit
-of black velvet, opened the door, and, upon seeing Morton, shook him
-heartily by the hand, and welcomed him back to Rome, in terms of the
-most polite affability. His manner seemed to partake more of English
-cordiality than of the grave distant manner the Italians generally
-preserve to strangers. To my surprise, he spoke to me in good English,
-upon Morton’s presenting me as Mr. Mowbray of London. Augustus entered
-the room with the air of one perfectly familiar to its precincts, and
-seated himself in a crimson velvet arm-chair, near the artist’s easel.
-Persia’s carpets covered the floor; curtains of crimson velvet fell in
-heavy folds from the windows; but the splendid paintings with which the
-walls of the studio were hung, constituted its greatest ornament. There
-were the faces of youth, and the faces of age. Side by side they hung.
-There were Cardinals in their black velvet hats, and the heavy folds
-of their black robes. There were the handsome faces of many of Italy’s
-proudest sons, and the fair, unfurrowed brow, the black eye, large and
-languishing, of many a one of its fair daughters.
-
-“You have not been long in Rome, I presume, Signor,” remarked Carrara, as
-he returned to his easel, with his palette in his hand.
-
-“But two weeks.”
-
-“Two weeks! indeed, you owed an old friend a visit sooner,” addressing
-Morton.
-
-“I should have done myself the pleasure of calling on you before this,
-but I have been engaged in such a continual round of business, that
-I really could not snatch time.” What a confounded lie, thought I to
-myself, as I stood with my back to them, attentively regarding a picture,
-which hung encased in a magnificent frame, opposite me. But Morton would
-say anything as an excuse, to avoid offending a friend, and Signor
-Carrara, as I afterward discovered, had been to him a very kind one.
-
-The picture upon which I gazed, was the portrait of a lady in the dawn of
-youth. I felt certain that it was, or had been taken as the resemblance
-of some earthly object. She was young and very beautiful. She could not
-have numbered more than twenty summers when that was painted. She sat,
-inclining forward, as if to speak. Her finger pressed to her rosy lip,
-as though she said ‘beware.’ Her robe hung in light folds over the full
-bust, and was confined at the waist by a scarf. A circlet of gems clasped
-the small aristocratic head, and sparkled on the auburn hair. The hair,
-put smooth back from the face, was gathered in two long braids behind,
-which fell below the waist. The complexion, white as alabaster. The
-eyes, so deeply beautifully blue. All these attributes combined to form
-an expression of angelic purity and sweetness, such as I had never seen
-expressed in any human countenance before.
-
-“Of whom is this a portrait, Signor?” I inquired of the Italian,
-interrupting his conversation with Morton.
-
-Carrara’s black eyes rested sadly upon the picture a moment, then turned
-suddenly away.
-
-“It is the portrait of an Austrian lady. A Viennese,” he answered
-abruptly.
-
-“Is she living still?” I asked.
-
-“No, she has been dead many years.”
-
-“Is it not flattered? was she as beautiful as this?”
-
-“She was far more beautiful than I have been able to portray her.”
-
-“How long since it was painted?”
-
-“More than twenty years ago.”
-
-“What picture is it you are talking about, Clarence?” demanded Morton,
-looking up from a portfolio of prints which lay upon the artist’s table.
-
-“This one,” I replied, pointing to it.
-
-“Ah, yes. I see a very handsome woman. I admire your taste. Pray, may
-I ask her name, Signor Carrara, unless, indeed,” he added archly, “she
-happened to be a beau ideal of yours; in that case, I waive the question.”
-
-The Italian blushed to his very eyebrows, and looked almost angry for an
-instant; but he answered immediately,
-
-“You are welcome to ask the name of that or any other portrait in my
-studio. Her name was Genevra Sfonza.”
-
-“I like the style in which it is taken. Very fanciful and airy. She
-almost seems to be floating on a cloud,” observed my friend, as he came
-and stood by my side before it. “If I had a wife and were going to have
-her portrait taken, I should choose such an attitude. But I am thankful
-to be a bachelor, untrammelled and free. A single man can visit, seek
-lady’s society, if he wants it; in short, do what he pleases, without
-having some jealous Juno tearing after him, if he happen to look at any
-other set of features than his ‘cara spanta’s.’”
-
-Carrara smiled, and I laughed, as I always did at my friends’ drolleries.
-“Come Clarence,” he exclaimed, seizing me by the arm, “let’s take a
-general look at all the pictures, and then, if you are willing, return
-home. Dinner will be waiting for us.”
-
-“We took a general survey of the rest of the paintings, among which were
-some valuable originals, by the old masters. But none of them, in grace
-of attitude, or beauty of expression, could compare with that of the
-lovely Viennese.
-
-“I am quite in love with this picture,” I remarked to the artist, as I
-again stopped before it; after looking at all the politicians, warriors,
-sculptors, artists, and beauties portrayed on canvass.
-
-“Almost every one who visits my room, admires it,” responded Carrara.
-
-I felt almost jealous, as he said this, that any one but myself should be
-allowed the pleasure of gazing upon that sweet face. I wished to have it
-exclusively to myself, where I alone could come and look upon its beauty.
-What selfish creatures men are.
-
-The kind hearted Italian offered us a collation of Smyrna figs, grapes,
-oranges, and light Catalonia wine. We partook slightly, and then took our
-hats to depart.
-
-“I hope to have the pleasure of seeing you frequently, during your stay
-in Rome,” was his parting invitation, as he accompanied us through the
-long galleries, and down the lofty stair-case we had ascended.
-
-“We shall certainly trespass frequently on your politeness, Signor,” was
-our parting response, as we passed into the street and wended homeward.
-
-Arrived at our hotel by the same route we came; we entered our
-comfortless dingy saloon, which served in the double capacity of
-dining-room and parlor. The table was set for dinner, but no dinner
-served, and Morton impatiently pulled the bell. Peppo answered the
-summons, bearing in his hands a dish of roast beef, burnt almost black,
-while treading close on his heels, came his female colleague, Jeannetta,
-her hands loaded also with plates of different sizes, and looking as if
-she bore the fate of Cato and of Rome upon her shoulders, attired in
-all that dirty finery, for which the lower classes of the Italians are
-distinguished. Peppo deposited, what he considered, this elegant repast,
-upon the table, with the air of a conqueror offering his mistress the
-spoil of foreign lands.
-
-“Here, Signor, here be one English dinner, la veritable chose, tout
-entierement l’Inglese,” exclaimed Peppo, who valued himself upon his
-acquirements in the languages, understanding about a dozen words of
-English, French, and Spanish; but like many another fool, if he was
-happy in his ignorance, and imagined himself wise, why it was just the
-same—at least to him the same. I have often wondered, whether it were not
-better to slumber on in ignorance, rather than make some little progress
-in knowledge, and after all, discover (even should we reach the highest
-point of earthly wisdom) that all is doubt and conjecture.
-
-“Come Mowbray, my friend,” cried Augustus, as he drew a chair to the
-table, “come let us commence operations, for I am nearly famished. Peppo
-where are the wine coolers and goblets, make haste and bring them. You
-can go Jeannetta. Clarence what will you take?”
-
-I requested a piece of the before-mentioned burnt beef, and helped myself
-to some peas, which looked as if they had been grown beneath the burning
-suns of Syria, dashed over with some description of Italian sauce; as
-for potatoes, they are an eatable unknown in Italy; nature, however, has
-kindly supplied the place of many of our northern vegetables, by the
-luxurious fruits of the country; one scarcely needs any other food beside
-the luscious champagne grape, the yellow orange, pine-apple, zapota, and
-a dozen other fine fruits, the names of which escape my recollection.
-
-“Here, Peppo, come take away this elegant English dinner of yours, and
-serve dessert,” said Morton laughingly, after having tried in vain to
-masticate some of the tough meats, and dried up vegetables. “Don’t make
-another attempt in the English style, I beg of you, for really this one
-is quite killing.”
-
-“Le diner no good,” ejaculated Peppo, holding up both hands in amazement,
-“apres tous les soins que j’ai pris; je vous assure, Signor, que c’est
-une diner a l’Anglaise.”
-
-“I assure you, my good fellow, that it is perfectly uneatable; here
-take it all away, and hand the fruit and wine. I am sorry I told you to
-attempt any thing in English style. I might have known we should get
-nothing to suit us; however, make haste, for our carriage is at the door,
-to take us to the campagna.”
-
-Peppo, in great agitation, at the failure of his attempt, removed
-the dishes, and as soon as we had dispatched dessert, we entered our
-Stanhope, and drove to the campagna.
-
-I kept my promise, and often visited Signor Carrara. I liked him more,
-the better I became acquainted with him; there are some characters who
-only show their fine traits upon a close acquaintance. We all of us,
-more or less, feel an attraction of sympathy, or repulsion of antipathy
-at first sight, an indefinite presentiment that we shall either like or
-dislike; there was something in Carrara’s manner, so different to the
-giddy light-heartedness of the generality of his countrymen, calculated
-to inspire one with confidence in his integrity: his calm countenance
-expressed benevolence, patience, and philosophical indifference. I might
-have sought in vain for those deep traces of satiety and discontent,
-which pleasure imprints upon the faces of her votaries. He seemed to be
-at peace with all mankind, and among all his extensive acquaintance in
-Rome, I never once heard him unkindly spoken of. I frequently passed
-hours in his studio, while Morton was engaged in a continual round of
-pleasure.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-
-Carrara inhabited but two apartments in his stately mansion, besides his
-elegant studio, and a large exhibition room of magnificent paintings.
-All the other apartments were locked up, and left untenanted, although
-the old domestic, who had been a household fixture for more than
-twenty years, informed me they were all splendidly furnished; although
-uninhabited, and seldom opened, except twice a year, to be cleaned; I
-could not help wondering that any man, especially a bachelor artist,
-should keep a large, vacant house to himself, of no use to him, without
-letting it to some one, as an Englishman would have done; unless, indeed,
-he were a man of rank and fortune, but this Carrara, I presumed, was not,
-and I had seen enough of him to be convinced of his unassuming mind, and
-simple mode of living. Perhaps he had accumulated a comfortable fortune
-by his unwearied application, and economy, and having secured sufficient
-means for the future years of his life, thought it unnecessary to make
-money by his house. Of his private circumstances I knew nothing, and,
-therefore, dismissed the subject from my mind.
-
-“How many different faces, and what varieties of character you must see
-in the course of a year,” I one day remarked to him, as he stood at his
-easel, a large bunch of brushes in his hand, busily employed in painting
-a naked nymph, bathing in a limpid stream.
-
-“Yes,” he replied, “an artist has ample opportunity, if he is capable of
-doing so, of observing characters, as well as faces.”
-
-“Are you a physiognomist?”
-
-“I make no pretensions to being one.”
-
-“Can you tell an honest man from a rogue?”
-
-“I think I can.”
-
-“Then tell me, my friend, tell me truly, what do you think of my face?”
-
-I pushed back my hair from my forehead, as I asked the kind old Italian
-this odd question; and he looked at me rather quizzically for a second,
-as if to ascertain whether I was in earnest, or seeking to make game of
-him; being assured, I suppose, by the grave expression of my countenance,
-that I was serious, he answered:
-
-“You have a frank, talented, amorous expression of face, such as many of
-your countrymen, whom I have seen, possessed.”
-
-“Amorous, is it possible you have made such a dreadful mistake?—you, a
-man of so much penetration, to say such a thing as that; why my dear
-Signor, I am as cold as the eternal snows of Russia’s mountains. I follow
-the fashionable plan, and invariably treat all womankind with polite
-rudeness; in fact, I think I hate women: the sexes are, of course,
-natural enemies to each other.”
-
-“You cold, about as cold as the crater of Mount Etna; how can you sit
-there, and presume to tell me such shocking stories?” Carrara laughed;
-he seldom laughed, or even smiled, but when he did, his face lighted up
-with a sunny glow. I was about to deny this accusation flatly, merely for
-the sake of a laughing argument, when, in looking for a stray engraving I
-was copying, which had fallen on the floor, I knocked down an unfinished
-picture, which stood with its face to the wall; I glanced at it, and was
-about to replace it in its original position, when Carrara observed,
-glancing at it as he spoke,
-
-“Talking of variety of character, that woman certainly was an oddity in
-her way: I never saw a more singular person.”
-
-“The original of this picture, do you mean?” I asked, as I set it back
-again.
-
-“Yes,” replied the artist; “she was the friend of Prince Monteolene.
-I painted a half length portrait for her, and began this one, but the
-prince parted from her, after having lived with her three or four years,
-and she left the city, leaving this picture unfinished on my hands.”
-
-“She was handsome,” I remarked, as I looked at the face more
-attentively—“a voluptuous, not a pure, or spiritual beauty.”
-
-“Such was her character; she possessed some fine traits of disposition,
-however, which, had they been accompanied by a well balanced mind,
-trained to virtue, she might have been an ornament to society. She took
-an interesting little girl from one of the nunnery schools, had her well
-educated, and taught the science of vocal music thoroughly, then placed
-her on the stage, through the influence of some of the professors of
-music, who felt interested in the child; where she now is, a brilliant
-star in the musical world. That action, certainly showed a kind, generous
-disposition.”
-
-“Such incidents of character, are extraordinary, even among the best of
-human beings, leaving the immoral out of the question,” and, I added,
-“you artists have every facility, here in Italy, in regard to obtaining
-models.”
-
-“We have more applications from poor girls, some reputable, some
-disreputable, than we wish or require; many have offered themselves to me
-as models, without price, and the very prettiest can be had for a small
-sum.”
-
-“Are any of these models virtuous?”
-
-“I have known many who were correct in their behaviour, and, on the
-contrary, many who were dissolute. A person, whether man or woman, reared
-to all the comforts and elegancies of a luxurious life, can scarcely
-conceive the many temptations to which these poor girls are exposed;
-living in miserable huts, feeding upon the coarsest food; while men of
-fashion and fortune, attracted by their pretty looks, frequently make
-them liberal offers of protection, which they sometimes refuse, but
-generally end by accepting. Besides, the standard of female virtue, does
-not rank as high in our country as in yours; therefore, their departure
-from the paths of virtue, is looked upon more in a philosophical point
-of view, as a foible, incident to all humanity, and tolerated with more
-leniency.”
-
-“I sometimes think the Italian plan the best.”
-
-“It may not be best, as regards the mass of the population, but
-considered individually, I cannot but prefer it.”
-
-“Do you never feel sad, Signor?”—I asked suddenly, after having been
-silent some minutes, absorbed in thought—“do you never feel sad
-sometimes, when you reflect upon the frailties and miseries of poor human
-nature?”
-
-“You are now, my young friend,” answered Carrara, “just on the dawn
-of manhood, when, having indulged ideal dreams of what the world
-_ought_ to be, you are gradually awakening to a perception of the vast
-difference between the ideal and the actual; what now appears to you so
-sentimentally sad, will gradually become a matter of course, and you
-will grow fond of the world as it is; as your freshness of feeling,
-and ideality of mind wears away, habit becomes a second nature; we
-may dislike our habitation, but we dislike a change, because we are
-accustomed to the old abode. Middle age and the decline of life, which
-lessen our sense of enjoyment, increase our love of life for that reason;
-and you will find, as you journey on, the longer you live, the more
-tenaciously will you cling to life.”
-
-“I presume you are right, and if I live long enough to realize your sage
-prediction, then I will think of your words.”
-
-I took my hat as I said this, considering that I had bored my kind friend
-long enough, by a visit of three hours, and left the studio, with his
-repeated invitation ringing in my ears, that I should come very soon
-again, and pass every morning, if it pleased me, at his house. I directed
-my steps toward modern Rome, and the Piazza del populo; as I passed along
-the principal streets, I saw the shops adorned with every description of
-masquerade dresses, and immense quantities of bonbons, in anticipation of
-the approaching carnival; many of the giddy throng were already attired
-in masquerade, passing each other; and all unlucky foot passengers, with
-the “corfette” the Italians make such liberal use of during the carnival,
-their animated gestures, and sprightly looks, forming a picturesque
-scene. While above my head shone the cerulean sky, dotted with golden
-clouds, and the horizon’s verge reflected the brilliant red of the
-setting sun’s declining fires.
-
-The happy dispositions and buoyant temperaments of these Italians, enable
-them to bear misfortunes, and even the squalid poverty, to which they are
-frequently subjected, with a serenity of temper, and happy confidence
-in the future, unknown to the colder inhabitants of northern climes. A
-proud Englishman would put an end to his existence, were he obliged to
-encounter half what an Italian would endure with philosophic indifference.
-
-I found the Piazza del populo crowded with equestrians, pedestrians, and
-every description of equipages, giving a brilliant, showy effect, to this
-classic and beautiful square. How many recollections of happy hours and
-days, are connected in my memory, with the name of Rome; of weeks and
-months, that sped like hours, borne only too rapidly away upon the wings
-of Time.
-
-The ladies talked, laughed, and flirted with the gentlemen, as they
-promenaded up and down, just as we do in England, or any other civilized
-land; the liveried footmen stood together in groups, and chatted, perhaps
-of scandal transpiring in their little world of action; monks glided past
-me, their heads bowed down, telling their rosarys while they stealthily
-eyed the women; the peasant girls in their tasteful costume, the red or
-blue woollen petticoat, ornamented with black horizontal bands, exchanged
-love tokens with their lovers; the military rode through the square, with
-much display; the nobility bowed and smiled to each other, as they drove
-swiftly by in their stately carriages; all nature, and almost every face
-wore a smile.
-
-Leaving the gay scene, I passed out at the gate opposite to that through
-which I had entered, and was standing gazing upon the lofty dome, and
-magnificent colonnade of Saint Peter’s, which rose towering above all
-other objects in the distance, when I felt my arm suddenly grasped, and
-a stentorian voice exclaimed, “Why, good heavens, Clarence, is this you?
-where in the name of wonder have you been all day? I’ve been wanting you
-to accompany me to a hundred and one places, and here you are dreaming
-about the Persian invasion, perhaps in the Piazza del populo. I’ve met
-some very fine people here,” he continued, as he linked his arm in mine,
-and gently turned me in the direction of our hotel. “Among others,
-there’s a Countess Dettore, who having heard what a fine, agreeable
-fellow you are, sends you an invitation, through me, to her grand party,
-to-morrow night; come now, do be civil, and say you’ll go; I am going;
-really, you have grown so desperately sentimental since your arrival
-here, there’s no doing anything with you; you should go into society, be
-gay, and enjoy yourself.”
-
-“All people don’t have the same mode of enjoyment,” I replied. “I enjoy
-myself in my way, and you in yours; but who is this Countess of whom you
-speak; how came she to hear of me, and send me an invitation to her ball?”
-
-“Oh, I knew her when I was here before, four years ago; she’s a pleasant,
-chatty kind of person, gives nice balls, and that, you know, is the
-principal thing; I dare say you’ll be pleased with her, however, when
-you get acquainted; she’s often heard me speak of you since my arrival,
-and so, being about to give a ball, took the liberty of sending you an
-invitation, both verbal and written,” and he handed me a delicate little
-note, superscribed in a small, feminine handwriting.
-
-“You’ve been with Carrara, I suppose, the principal part of the day?
-you seem to have become great friends in a very short space of time.
-Carrara’s a kind-hearted, eccentric creature: I never knew him to take
-so sudden a fancy to any one, as he has to you. I went to Tivoli again
-this morning, after you left me,” added my rattling friend, without
-waiting for an answer. “I was charmed; such pure air, delightful scenery;
-met Coningsby, he’s just from home, says he’s coming down to see you
-to-morrow; he’ll return before we do, so we can send letters by him, if
-you like, to your parents.”
-
-We passed the magnificent arch of Constantine, and I paused to admire
-the exquisite fluting of the corinthian columns, and the statues of
-Dacian warriors, with which its front is adorned; while Morton strolled
-on ahead, picking wild flowers from the turf at his feet, and commenting
-upon the absurdity of old ruined arches, and sentimentalizing on ancient
-times.
-
-We found, on reaching our hotel, that my valet Henri, had been passing
-away the time during my absence, by getting up a slight row with another
-fellow of his own stamp, in which he seemed to have got the worst of it,
-for he made his appearance with a black eye, and numerous other small
-wounds, in the shape of sundry scratches and knocks in the face from his
-assailant’s fists. He had a long and grievous complaint to make me, of
-the ill usage he had received, and finished his speech by cursing Rome
-and everything Roman, wishing himself safe back again in the land of his
-nativity, the green mountains of the Tyrol. I interrupted him, however,
-by my stern commands and solemn adjurations, not to implicate himself in
-another such a fracas, hinting the fact, that upon a second repetition of
-the same thing, he would be obliged to enter the service of some other
-individual than myself, as I could not tolerate such disgraceful conduct
-in a personal attendant. The poor fellow looked remarkably foolish on
-hearing my stern rebuke, and promised obedience for the future, adding in
-extenuation of his behavior, “that he had not sought the row: Gustave had
-provoked him beyond himself; when others let him alone, he let everybody
-else alone.”
-
-I afterward discovered, to my great amusement, that the whole affair
-had originated from Gustave’s having taken a fancy to the same girl,
-of whom my valet Henri was also desperately enamored; the result was,
-Henri in a fit of jealous rage at her manifest preference for his rival,
-said some insulting things to Gustave, which the latter would not take,
-and they ended the matter by a personal encounter; not after the style
-of the renowned knight of La Mancha, but in the genuine old fashion
-of pummelling each other with their fists. Gustave possessing a more
-athletic form and stronger muscles than my unfortunate valet, succeeded
-in gaining a complete triumph over his rival in the courts of love.
-The whole affair was vastly ridiculous, and Morton and myself laughed
-vehemently at the discomfiture of poor Henri.
-
-“After all,” laughed Morton, “isn’t it ridiculous to see what a devilish
-fool a man will make of himself for love of woman: it’s all the same
-thing from a king to a beggar; the feeling is the same, the manner of
-showing it alone, is different. Now I really do wonder if any woman could
-excite me to the pitch I’ve seen this poor fellow wound up to, to-day?”
-
-“I dare say,” was my reply, “you and I are both human, and possess
-passions and feelings in common with every one else.”
-
-“Well, I haven’t lost _my_ heart since I’ve been here; that’s to say, if
-I really possessed any when I made my advent into this confounded old
-ruined place; as for you, I believe you’re in love with an inanimate
-picture. I prefer the real Simon pure flesh and blood myself; this
-falling in love with senseless canvass I consider quite absurd.”
-
-“You need not take the trouble to tell me that, Morton,” I ejaculated,
-bursting into a fit of uproarious laughter; “one need only look at
-your face, to be assured that your feelings are not by any means _too
-Platonic_.”
-
-He laughed most heartily, although the jest was at _his_ expense; and
-chancing to turn our eyes toward the door, we saw Peppo, who stood there
-bowing with all his might, like a chinese mandarin, and he informed
-us, after many demonstrations of respect and divers flourishes, that
-dinner awaited us in the new saloon, which had just been completed a few
-days previous. The saloon, which poor Peppo considered such a perfect
-chef-d’œuvre of architecture, proved to be a large, barn-like room, built
-of rough beams, stuccoed over with a coarse, inferior sort of plaster,
-very cold and comfortless looking, destitute of carpeting, and furnished
-with a long dining table, chairs set round it, and an iron lamp suspended
-from the ceiling, on this grand occasion of inaugurating us into our new
-dining-room; the dinner was extraordinarily fine, although everything was
-covered with oil and cayenne pepper in abundance, and Peppo officiated
-with becoming dignity.
-
-This was Friday; the next day, Saturday, began the carnival, the great
-annual fête of Rome. We breakfasted earlier than usual, and Augustus
-joined the gay throng which crowded the streets in the direction of the
-Corso, where I agreed to join him, after having paid a morning call on
-Signor Carrara. Augustus declined accompanying me, as he said he wished
-to observe the populace and the different costumes before the sport
-began, and I, therefore, proceeded to Carrara’s house alone.
-
-At the street door, I learned from his old attendant Guiseppe, that the
-Signor had not yet risen, being somewhat indisposed from a slight cold
-and sore throat; I sent in my card, and was about leaving to rejoin my
-friend, when Guiseppe came running back, saying the Signor “would be
-happy to see me in his room, if I would honor him.”
-
-I followed the old man up the lofty stair-case, through the long
-galleries past the studio, when he turned down a short passage and
-ushered me into a small elegantly furnished room, where lay Carrara in a
-black velvet gown and cap, reclining upon a sofa.
-
-“So you are too sick to accompany us to the gay Corso to-day, my kind
-friend?” I asked, after having cordially shaken hands with him and drawn
-my chair close to his sofa.
-
-“I do not feel well enough to venture out,” he replied; “nevertheless,
-I thank you most sincerely for your politeness in calling for me; this
-is a mere transient attack of sore throat, I presume; I have had many
-such before, I shall be recovered from it in a day or two; I regret
-not being able to see the horse races and the ball to-night, as I have
-been an annual spectator for the last twenty years. You will attend the
-masquerade ball this evening? of course, I need not ask, every one goes
-to the carnival ball.”
-
-“I have not yet made up my mind, perhaps I may: it will be a gay affair I
-suppose?”
-
-“Very: one sees such variety of costume, and variety of faces, it forms
-altogether an interesting sight, especially to a stranger.”
-
-“I should think,” I remarked, glancing around the quiet room, “I should
-think, my dear Signor, that you would sometimes feel lonesome, shut up
-alone in this spacious house of yours, especially when sick, with no
-female relative or friend to nurse you?”
-
-“Guiseppe generally answers all my purposes as nurse and attendant; he is
-faithful and constant; when very ill I sometimes employ a hired nurse;
-but as for other higher attentions, what is there about my person, a
-poor, ugly old man, already tottering on the brink of the grave, what is
-there about me to attract beauty’s gentle care? No, no, my dear young
-friend, myself has sufficed thus far, and myself will suffice to the end;
-my own thoughts and recollections of the past, are society enough for me.”
-
-I had never heard Carrara speak so sadly before, for although philosophic
-in his tone of mind, he was generally cheerful, sometimes even gay. I
-attributed it to his slight indisposition and his solitude, and took my
-leave, promising to call on the morrow, and bring an entertaining English
-novel to read aloud to him.
-
-As I mechanically traversed the long distance which intervened between
-his house and the Corso, I soliloquized upon the lonely life a man
-leads without wife or children. He seems to hang, as it were, a loose
-disjointed member upon society, disconnected from the rest of his fellow
-beings, by all those household ties, which seem to form the connecting
-links of life. I thought of myself, and then my thoughts reverted to the
-beautiful portrait in Carrara’s studio, and I ardently wished that I
-might see the original of that picture. “Suppose you should see her this
-day,” reason said, “will not time have changed her? where would be the
-rosy hue of health and beauty’s bloom?” I suddenly remembered, Carrara
-had told me she was dead. “She receives naught now, then, but the clammy
-embraces of death; better that, however, than live to become a withered
-hag, after having being so gloriously beautiful.”
-
-I reached the Corso, and sought diligently for Augustus, amid the dense
-crowd there; but nothing could I see of him in that multitude, moving
-to and fro like the gigantic waves of the ocean. I tried several times
-to pass over to the other side of the street, but was pushed back at
-every movement I made; I gave up the attempt at last, in despair, and
-was about fixing my temporary abode upon a large sign post, commanding
-an extensive view of the street and the course where the horses were to
-race, when I felt myself gently plucked by the sleeve, and turning, saw
-a young peasant, who quietly requested me to follow him; he had spoken
-to me in broken English, supposing, I presume, that I did not understand
-Italian, but I boldly demanded in his native tongue, what he wanted of
-me. Some recollections flashed through my mind of stories I had heard,
-about strangers in Rome being entrapped at carnival time by brigands in
-masquerade; but a single glance at the face of this unsophisticated child
-of nature reassured me, and I felt that my suspicions in this instance
-were absurd. He uttered a joyful exclamation at hearing me speak Italian,
-and said that my friend, seeing me in the crowd, had sent him to find
-me, and requested me to come to him on the balcony of one of the old
-Palazzo’s fronting the Corso.
-
-My peasant elbowed his way through the multitude to the steps of the
-Palazzo; he then conducted me up stairs, through a splendid suite of
-rooms, and out upon a balcony, where I was received by Augustus, who
-anxiously inquired about the good old artist; and hearing that he was
-too sick to accompany me, we mutually turned our attention upon the
-gay scene at our feet. The Corso was already filled with coaches, and
-persons on foot of every nation under the sun; but I saw but few masks.
-A ceremony of some kind or other took place, I heard, at the Capitol,
-which we did not see; in which a deputation of Jews formally petition
-the governor of the city for permission to remain in it another year,
-which he grants them upon condition of their paying the expenses of the
-races. The military swept through the streets in their showy uniform; and
-presently came the governor and senator (Rome’s fallen grandeur boasts
-but one now) in a grand procession of gilded coaches, while behind them
-came a great number of men, showily dressed, on horseback, bearing in
-their hands beautiful banners, some of them elegantly embroidered and
-presented by the ladies of Rome; after these had passed, the fun and
-merriment began.
-
-A general pelting commenced from the windows of showers of sugar nuts,
-which were exchanged by those in coaches as they passed. The whole
-street presented a scene of childish gayety and confusion, perfectly
-indescribable, and, absurd as it appeared to me at first, I became much
-interested in the sport, and filling my pockets with “corfette,” began
-pelting as manfully as the silliest among them.
-
-The windows and balconies were hung with rich silks and velvets, which,
-waving in a gentle breeze beneath that glorious sunny sky, mingled with
-the rich dresses, and often lovely faces beaming with smiles, as they
-surveyed the animated multitude from the windows and balconies of their
-homes. The loud laughter and sprightly movements of the crowd, all
-combined to present a brilliant scene.
-
-The amusements of the day concluded with the horse race; a trumpet was
-sounded, and fifteen or sixteen ponies made their appearance, led by
-grooms very gayly dressed; who, after some difficulty, arranged the fiery
-little steeds behind a rope stretched across the street. At a given
-signal the rope was dropped, and away they flew down the Corso, as if the
-evil one was at their heels; at their sides were suspended leaden balls,
-filled with needles, which lashed them as they spurred forward, and the
-wild shouts of the crowd as they closed in behind them, sent them on with
-the fleetness of the wind; they ran furiously for about a mile, to the
-end of the street, where they were stopped by a large canvass, suspended
-across the way; not more than half reached the goal, and three or four,
-I noticed, who seemed to dislike these kinds of operations, ran off,
-knocking down everything and everybody who obstructed their progress. The
-races are repeated every evening near sunset, during the carnival.
-
-The day’s sport being over, gradually this odd medly of human beings
-left the Corso. I watched the different faces and forms as they slowly
-disappeared; the women looking tired and languid, like drooping water
-lilies; the robust peasant, and languid nobleman in his carriage; the
-horse jockeys, and confused assortment of all sorts of vehicles, in the
-course of a few moments had vacated the square.
-
-Augustus and I also left our position on the balcony, he, rather
-reluctantly, for he seemed to have been quite enchanted by a young
-beauty, stationed upon the balcony of a large house next door to the
-Palazzo, who had been making love to him with her lovely dark eyes
-during the morning; he said he should like to know who she was sighed,
-and seemed to feel the premonitory symptoms of one of those attacks of
-sentiment he had so often deprecated in me.
-
-A grand masquerade ball was to be given in the evening at one of the
-theatres, for this purpose the pit was covered over, and the whole
-establishment thrown open. One could wear costume or not, as they chose;
-we preferred the civilian dress, and notwithstanding our preconceived
-notions of its absurdity, and determined to be mere lookers on, we had
-not been long there, before we became involved in the giddy whirl of fun
-and nonsense, and talked and laughed as foolishly as any there; almost
-all wore costume, but there were but few masks, many of the costumes
-were tasteful and costly, others were wretched, and would have disgraced
-the wardrobe of one of our strolling circus companys. I saw his satanic
-majesty sipping ices with a Polish lady, while close behind them stood
-a beautiful Aspasia, in another part of the room Achilles was savagely
-flourishing his sword, and Venus sat at the feet of her Mars. Brother
-Jonathan knocked against me, trying to make a first rate bargain; and
-Paul Pry was there, attending to everybody’s business but his own. I was
-deserted by Morton, who dashed after a blue domino, whom he took to be
-his beauty of the balcony; he was disappointed, however, for although
-the lady’s face was beautiful, it was not she. I saw many long-bearded
-Turks, fops of a hundred years ago, and exquisites of the present day,
-mad poets, quack doctors; and lastly, I saw what recalled to mind many
-early associations—two handsome young persons, evidently lovers, in the
-costume of Petrarch and his Laura; the girl’s face was fair and sweet
-in its expression, she was a fine impersonation of that interesting
-character, the records of whose life have been so blended with romance,
-that we can with difficulty distinguish the real from the fictitious;
-certain it is, however, that such a being as Laura once existed, and
-that Petrarch, enamored of her real or fancied beauty, addressed to her
-those eloquent sonnets, which are an ornament to the literature of his
-time. I remembered to have read them when a boy, by a favorite sister’s
-side, beneath the linden trees in the park of my father’s country seat;
-now that sister slept the dreamless sleep of death, under the shade of
-those very trees where in childhood she had played. The costume of these
-lovers, and the recollection of the sonnets, and my companion in their
-perusal, revived many a forgotten reminiscence of by-gone years.
-
-Aurora had already begun to display her golden banner in the East, when,
-fagged out, and nearly stupified by our potations of champagne, we left
-the ball-room; daylight had begun to force its way into the salon de
-dance, displaying to no very fine effect, the tinsel finery, glazed
-muslins and pasteboards, of which the generality of the costumes were
-composed.
-
-“A ball is a stupid thing anyhow,” said Morton, yawning, “particularly
-when its all over, and one has talked and danced one’s self nearly to
-death.”
-
-I felt too stupid myself to make any reply to this philosophical
-observation, as I followed my friend into our carriage.
-
-In such scenes passed off the gay carnival during eight days. Punch’s
-performance, the gay masquerading, the odd tricks performed by itinerant
-mountebanks, and divers absurdities of the populace themselves, formed
-the daily routine, usually concluded at night by a ball. On the last
-day, at night, after the races, the Corso appeared illuminated as if by
-magic, with thousands of lights carried by those on foot, in carriages,
-and displayed at all the windows; those are indeed unfortunate who
-cannot afford a light on the occasion. It is every one’s business to
-extinguish his neighbor’s light and preserve his own as long as he can;
-it is impossible to give an idea of the effect produced by such an odd
-scene, the glitter and confusion as they each endeavor to extinguish each
-other’s torches and preserve their own, when viewed from the commanding
-position we occupied on the balcony of the Palazzo, the effect was
-singular and beautiful; gradually the lights became fewer and fewer,
-until at last they disappeared, the noise of the multitude died away, and
-the carnival was over.
-
-The next morning, after breakfast, Augustus absolutely persisted
-in making me promise to accompany him to Tivoli, to pay a visit to
-Coningsby, who had hired a villa there; and although I cared little about
-going, yet to oblige him I consented. I sent the novel I had promised
-Carrara by my valet, with my compliments and inquiries about his health,
-but we had started for Tivoli before Henri returned with an answer.
-
-We remained a week with our friend, who, delighted to see us, entertained
-us with noble hospitality. The tasteful arrangement of his villa, the
-salubrious air and charming scenery of the surrounded country, over which
-was scattered many an ancient ruin, successively claimed our attention
-and admiration. Time spent agreeably flies rapidly away, on the contrary
-moments passed in pain or sorrow, are anxiously numbered. When our
-stanhope again stopped before the door of our hotel, it seemed but a few
-hours since we had left it.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-
-It wanted two hours of dinner, and, leaving Augustus to scold the
-servants and make whatever domestic arrangements he choose, I took my
-hat and sought the way to Carrara’s house; the windows facing the street
-were bolted and barred as usual; I knocked loudly at the street door,
-but no one came; and after waiting a few minutes I knocked again, still
-no answer; I concluded Carrara must be out of town, perhaps on a visit,
-and was about going away when I saw old Guiseppe coming slowly toward the
-house; I waited until he reached me, and then asked if his master was
-well?
-
-The old man looked at me with grave surprise, and mournfully exclaimed,
-“Ah, Signor! I see you have not heard the sad news. Master died the
-second day after you left for Tivoli, and was buried yesterday.”
-
-“Carrara dead!” I shrieked, rather than spoke; “you or I must be
-dreaming; it is impossible he could have died so very suddenly; he was
-living a week ago when I left for Tivoli.”
-
-“He had been sick, you know sir, all carnival time; it was only a simple
-sore-throat, to be sure, but he neglected it, he said it would get well
-of itself; but he grew worse instead of better, and gangrene had taken
-place before he would allow me to send for a physician. It was then too
-late; master became delirious, and talked constantly about you, and
-somebody whom he called “Genevra.” He got his senses a little, just
-before he died, and calling me to his bedside, told me to give you a
-packet, which he placed in my hands. I told him you had gone to Tivoli
-for a few days, and that when you returned I would do so. He said he was
-very sorry you were not here to see him die; that he never should see
-you again in this world. Shortly after, he became speechless, and the
-second day after your departure, in the afternoon, he died; a relative
-of his came to town just in time to witness his death, and attend to his
-funeral. He had written upon the back of the will, that it was not to be
-opened or read until your return, and Signor Terra told me to request you
-to call upon him as soon as you could after your return to town.”
-
-I scarcely heard him: I felt as if oppressed by a frightful nightmare.
-The idea that that kind old man was dead, whom I had so lately seen in
-good health and spirits; and dead so suddenly, so unexpectedly, was too
-strange and unaccountable for me to realize. Mechanically I followed
-Guiseppe into the house, and entered the studio, in which I had passed
-so many pleasant hours since my arrival in Rome; nothing was displaced
-from the position in which he had left it, when first taken sick; and
-notwithstanding the consciousness of his death, I momentarily expected
-to see his tall thin form, and benevolent face, appear at the open door.
-Guiseppe had left the room, and I fell into a reverie, in which were
-blended my sad regrets at this unexpected loss, when the old domestic
-returned, and handed me the packet his master bequeathed me as a legacy,
-together with the address of the lawyer who wished to see me. I put them
-both in my pocket: and then turned to the old man, who stood by my side,
-with his arms folded.
-
-“And you, my good Guiseppe, what do you intend doing, now the good Signor
-is dead, where do you think of going to?”
-
-Tears startled in the old man’s eyes, as he replied—“I hardly know
-myself, sir, what I shall do; I think I will return into the country with
-Signor Carrara’s cousin; I only liked Rome, because I could live with my
-dear, kind master; and now he’s gone, I would rather go than stay.”
-
-“If you conclude to remain, Guiseppe, and if my influence can be of
-service in obtaining you another situation, call on me, and I will do
-whatever I can for you.”
-
-“I thank you a thousand times, Signor,” answered the grateful Italian;
-and I sadly retraced my steps to our hotel. Augustus was almost
-as surprised as I had been, on hearing of the sudden death of his
-artist-friend; he could scarcely believe it, so unexpected had been the
-sad event, and expressed some curiosity to learn what I had to do with
-Carrara’s will.
-
-I had not spoken of the packet to Augustus: that was my own little
-secret; and when night had assumed her reign, I took a “bougie” and
-established myself in my chamber, with the door locked to prevent
-intrusion, and proceeded to the examination of this mysterious package.
-After taking off the paper wrapper, I saw a small silver casket, locked,
-and the little gold key belonging to it, lying within the paper; upon
-unlocking it, I saw a bundle of manuscript, and a letter addressed to
-myself in Carrara’s handwriting. Some of the papers of the diary had
-already become yellow from age. I hurriedly opened the letter, anxious
-to learn what this singular present meant; it was dated some days back,
-during carnival time; the contents were thus:—
-
- “MY DEAR YOUNG FRIEND,
-
- “I feel a presentiment of my approaching dissolution; already
- the angel of death fans me with his wings, he beckons me to
- come to that unknown shore; he invites me to drink of the cup
- of oblivion, and forget all things in the quiet sleep of death.
- I am now an old man; I have experienced all that I shall ever
- experience of pleasure; the world is no longer either pleasing
- or new to me. Death, therefore, so far from appearing an enemy,
- seems like a dear friend, who comes to release me from future
- decrepitude and imbecility.
-
- “You will recollect you one day asked me, while gazing upon the
- portrait of the beautiful Countess Calabrella, what had been
- her character, and her destiny in life? you seemed to admire,
- and love to look upon, that picture; when living, no man ever
- looked upon her without loving her; the manuscript enclosed
- within the casket is a diary of her own life, which she,
- confiding in my discretion, promised, and sent to me, previous
- to her final departure from Rome.
-
- “The perusal of these sad recollections of her childhood,
- I feel confident, will interest you; they will, at least,
- exemplify the virtuous struggles of a noble soul, and that
- determined will, and perseverance in the paths of rectitude and
- morality, which sooner or later rises triumphantly over the
- transient contingencies of fortune.
-
- “Farewell my friend, farewell; a mist seems gathering around my
- eyes. Oh, it is nothing, I—”
-
-This unfinished letter was scarcely legible from blots and blurs; my poor
-friend had evidently indited it but a little while before his death,
-when his mind, as well as his body, enfeebled by illness, was becoming
-confused. He could not have bequeathed me a “memento” more acceptable to
-myself than this autobiography.
-
-I opened the papers, which were written in a bold free hand; snuffed the
-candle, and began to read; as I did so, a small alabaster time-piece upon
-my mantle struck nine.
-
- THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY.
-
-“While sitting to you for my portrait, you have often paid me compliments
-upon my beauty. I will not say that the language of compliment is
-unknown to me; yet, could you have seen me fourteen years ago, a ragged,
-houseless, wandering orphan child, you would never be able to recognize
-in my present self the same creature. My earliest recollections do not
-extend beyond the age of six years; but I still retain an indefinite
-remembrance of a tall, slender woman, who used to walk the floor with me,
-and hush me to sleep in her arms; it seemed to be in the country, for
-I remember hearing the mournful sighing of the winds, as they whistled
-through the trees, and of being frightened at the sound; these may be,
-however, merely the fancies or dreams of childhood.
-
-“My first distinct remembrance, is of being a ragged, dirty child,—the
-protegé, or rather the slave of an old hag, the inhabitant of a wretched
-hovel; when not subjected to her abuse and savage tyranny, I was
-generally the companion of any little vagabonds I chanced to meet playing
-in the streets. What right that old woman had to my person, or how she
-ever obtained possession of me, I never knew; chance or fate, whichever
-it is that rules the actions of mankind, removed me so soon from her
-pernicious influence, and depraved example, that I never learned how our
-destinies came to be united. She sometimes sent me out alone at night, to
-the most public squares in the city of Vienna, and commanded me not to
-return without a certain number of _sous_, under penalty of being whipped
-with rods, till the blood ran down my back; frequently she beat me from
-sheer malice, merely to exercise her ill humor. In winter, my bed was
-a heap of dirty straw, in the loft of this miserable hut, where I lay
-and shivered with cold, while my Hecate-like protector, crouched in the
-chimney corner of the only room the house contained, dozed, and muttered
-over the embers of her fire. During summer I played about the streets, or
-grown bold from habit, boldly asked pennys from the passers-by, while the
-old woman performed her daily routine of thieving or begging in different
-parts of the town.
-
-“Thus passed two years, in this depraved and wretched way; I was then
-eight years old, and reason began to shed some glimmering rays of light
-upon my benighted mind. I saw that hundreds of other children did not
-live as I did: some were beautifully dressed, their hair combed smoothly,
-their faces and hands clean, while mine were as dirty as the rags I
-wore. All this was a perfect mystery to me; I could in no way explain it
-to myself, that other children, no prettier than myself, should revel
-in luxury, while I was left a neglected beggar child; alas! knowledge
-of the ways of the world has since then taught me the reason why. I
-always experienced a sorrowful regret, when I saw other children gayly
-dressed, smiling and happy. I did not envy _them_, but I wished to be so
-situated myself. The old woman, whom I called Granny, sometimes imposed
-upon the credulity of the vulgar, by telling fortunes; her wild eyes,
-of a greenish color, and straggling gray hair, accompanied by strange
-mysterious gestures, would not have disgraced the queen of the witches
-herself; and I presume she would have taught me the same nefarious trade,
-had not an unexpected event changed the whole course of my life.
-
-“It was on a cold, dark evening in December; the air was keen and raw,
-and flakes of snow came driving along on the wind, when, after having
-treated me with unusual severity during the day, the old woman dismissed
-me to one of the principal squares, and forbade me to return until I had
-obtained ten _sous_.
-
-“I took a little paper lantern, lighted by a bit of tallow candle, to
-guide my steps through the dark and lonely streets, and went to the
-square. I had been there sometime, and had collected but five _sous_,
-from the unwilling charity of the passers-by; some of them, when I
-timidly asked them for a _sou_, looked at me harshly, and passed on,
-making me no reply; others gave it me in a contemptuous manner; and
-one woman, as she swept past me, her long robe trailing the pavement,
-remarked how absurd it was for the police to allow pauper children to
-annoy people by their importunity. I felt so degraded and unhappy, that
-unconsciously the bitter tears ran down my cheeks, and leaning my head
-upon my arm, which rested on one of the iron seats of the piazza, I wept
-bitterly; I longed to go home, but I dreaded the severe punishment which
-I knew awaited me, if I did not return with ten _sous_.
-
-“I heard heavy steps coming up the gravel walk, and rose upon my feet; it
-was a tall, stout man, enveloped in a large cloak; I could not see his
-face; my little lantern was extinguished, and the moon had hidden herself
-beneath the snowy clouds. I extended one of my cold little hands, and
-falteringly asked him for a _sou_.
-
-“‘I haven’t a single _sou_ about me, my little one,’ he replied, in a
-rough, kind voice, ‘nothing but a bank note.’
-
-“He was about passing on, when trembling and animated by a sort of
-desperation, I seized his cloak with both hands, and was beginning to
-entreat him once more, when tears choked my utterance, and I sobbed
-piteously; the man seemed touched by my grief, he stopped, and raising me
-off the ground, exclaimed jocosely,
-
-“‘What, all this weeping about one _sou_, come with me across the piazza,
-and I’ll get a bill changed and give you a hundred, if that will dry your
-tears, poor little one;’ and then, inquiring, ‘In what part of the town
-do you live, and who is it that sends you out such cold, stormy nights as
-this, to beg; have you a father or mother?’
-
-“‘No sir.’
-
-“‘Who takes care of you?’
-
-“‘An old woman.’
-
-“‘Is she kind to you?’
-
-“‘No; she sends me out to beg, and beats and abuses me, if I don’t bring
-her as many _sous_ as she bids me bring.’
-
-“‘Why don’t you run away?’
-
-“‘I can’t: there’s nobody to take care of me if I did.’
-
-“‘Come with me, and let me see how you look.’ He took my hand, cast his
-ample cloak around my shivering shoulders, and I walked by his side to a
-small fancy shop, the other side of the square. He began singing an air
-as he walked along; it sounded perfectly celestial to my ears.
-
-“A pretty girl stood behind the counter, serving customers; she looked
-like an angel to me then; and I thought that poor little shop must
-certainly contain every beautiful thing on the face of the earth. After
-getting a bank note changed, my new friend pushed back my matted hair
-from my face, and attentively surveyed me from head to foot. I now saw
-_his_ face; he was a tall, well made man, and his countenance bore
-a good-humored expression; the result of his investigations seemed
-satisfactory; for, turning to the shop girl, he said to her:
-
-“‘Mademoiselle Marie, can you oblige me by having this child’s face and
-hands washed clean?’ and pointing to a child’s dress of blue merino,
-hanging on the wall; ‘fit her, if you please, with a robe of that
-description, with suitable clothing, and I will pay whatever you may
-charge.’ The young girl looked astonished at this; but her amazement
-in no way equalled mine. To be presented with, what appeared to me, a
-princely gift, from an utter stranger, seemed too beautiful to be true. I
-imagined he must be my guardian angel, who had assumed humanity to watch
-over me; I was too young to perceive that the man had any _motive_ in
-doing this benevolent action.
-
-“I followed the girl, whom he called Mademoiselle Marie, to a small, neat
-chamber up stairs; where by dint of perseverance, and some strength, she
-succeeded in restoring my face, neck and hands, to their original color;
-she then took a comb and smoothed my tangled locks, put clean shoes and
-stockings on my feet, clean under-clothing, and lastly, the pretty dress.
-I walked across the room to a large mirror, and struck with astonishment,
-contemplated my metamorphosis. I beheld a tall, slender child, with
-an oval face, whose large blue eyes and auburn hair, gave a pensive
-expression to the countenance; my complexion would have been a delicate
-white, had it not been turned by constant exposure to the sun. Was it
-possible that this interesting child was myself? I concluded it must be
-an agreeable dream.
-
-“Mademoiselle led me down stairs again, to my new protector. ‘She looks
-much better now, sir; don’t you think so, now she’s dressed nice and
-clean?’
-
-“‘Wonderful,’ cried my new friend, ‘I should scarcely know her. Now, my
-child, I’ll tell you why I give you this pretty dress; I want you to
-leave the old woman who has you now, and come with me and learn to be an
-actress; would you not like to be a great actress, rather than beg in the
-streets?’
-
-“‘I don’t like to ask money of people; I don’t like that way of living at
-all; but I don’t know what you mean by an actress; what do they do?’
-
-“‘Poor child,’ ejaculated Mademoiselle, ‘how dreadfully ignorant.’
-
-“‘Oh, it is the most charming life in the world; perfectly delightful;
-you may yet become a great actress, and a happy woman.’
-
-“I could neither appreciate, not understand what greatness was; but
-I felt a vague comprehension of the word happy, for I had never been
-anything but unhappy. After paying for my new clothes, my protector asked
-me to show him the house where I lived. I dreaded to return to the old
-woman, lest she should deprive me of my new clothes, and replace them
-with rags; I, therefore, earnestly begged him not to take me back to
-her; told him she would beat and abuse me, and take away my clothes; he
-laughed.
-
-“‘Do you suppose,’ he answered, ‘that I care for an old hob-goblin witch.
-I am merely going to see how much she will sell you for, and relinquish
-all future right to your person; were I to take you without doing so, she
-might trouble me hereafter.’
-
-“‘Oh, I don’t want to be sold for a slave,’ I cried; struck with a sudden
-fear; that perhaps he intended to make some kind of merchandise of me.
-
-“‘A slave, my child; I have no intention of making a slave of you, or
-any one else I know of, at present. You don’t understand, my little one;
-therefore show me the way, and be silent.’
-
-“I led him to the old woman’s house; she did not recognise me at first,
-as I entered, followed by the man, and placed her withered hand over
-her eyes, to shade the sudden light, and distinguish who I was; for my
-companion carried a large lantern in his hand, which he raised high above
-my head, as he came in behind me.
-
-“‘It’s you, is it, you little devil; where have you been so long? where
-did you get those new clothes; you stole them, didn’t you? I know you
-did; oh, I’ll beat you, I’ll beat you.’
-
-“She started, when she perceived my protector, who quietly closed the
-door, and came toward her.
-
-“‘What do you want here, fellow?’ she sharply demanded; ‘what are you
-doing alone at night with my girl? I sent her out to beg, and you bring
-her back to me with fine clothes on; she shan’t keep them; I’ll strip her
-of every piece; she shall be a beggar, a hag like I am.’
-
-“‘Look here, my good woman,’ said the man, in a low quiet tone; ‘look me
-straight in the face, and let us talk quietly.’ She obeyed; and taking
-her pipe from her mouth, fixed her gaggle green eyes on his. His cool
-determined manner seemed to exercise a novel influence upon her unsettled
-mind.
-
-“‘This poor girl can be of little use to you; I should think, on the
-contrary, she would be in your way?”
-
-“‘Oh, yes, she’s a deal of trouble to me; so bad, I can’t—’ She left the
-sentence unfinished, and began smoking her pipe again, as she bent over
-the fire.
-
-“‘I’ve taken a fancy to the child,’ he continued, ‘and came back with her
-to-night, to offer you whatever sum you should ask, if you would give her
-to me; I wish to bring her up, and educate her to the stage.’
-
-“‘It’s satan’s own home; no, I’ll never consent that she shall be made an
-actress. I mean to bring her up as I was brought up, to be a wandering
-gipsy girl.’
-
-“‘She is not your child, that is quite certain?’
-
-“‘No, she is not mine.’
-
-“‘How did you obtain her? did you steal her?’
-
-“‘I shall not tell you.’
-
-“He took a purse of gold from his pocket, and shook it between his hands;
-the old woman eyed it eagerly; ‘come my good woman, you had better
-consent to let me have the child; you may one day have the satisfaction
-of seeing her a distinguished woman, and of knowing that it is the same
-being you once took care of.’
-
-“‘Great satisfaction will it be to me, when I shall be rotting in a
-pauper’s grave; and great gratitude will she owe me for the kicks and
-cuffs I’ve given her.’ The old woman laughed, a sneering, devilish laugh.
-‘No,’ she continued in a low muttering tone, as if to herself; ‘my sand
-is nearly run, almost gone; I see it in the embers; I feel it in my
-bones. What difference does it make when you’re dead, whether you’re
-buried in the ground, or burnt up? I’d as soon have a hole in the ground,
-as a fine tomb.’
-
-“During this dialogue I had remained silent, in a distant corner of the
-room. The fitful gleams from the decaying fire, and the muffled light
-of the lantern, partially illumined this witch-like apartment, and cast
-fantastic shadows along the wall; in one corner was thrown a straw bed,
-upon which the old woman slept; a table, two or three ricketty chairs
-and a few pieces of broken crockery, constituted its sole furniture;
-a ladder, placed against the wall, led to my sleeping place, to which
-I nightly ascended through a hole in the ceiling. At length, arousing
-herself from her reverie, she said,
-
-“‘You may have the girl for ten louis; if you’ll give me that, you may
-have her.’
-
-“‘Will you sign a paper I shall draw up; promising never to seek to see
-her, or speak to her after she leaves you, as I wish to change her turn
-of mind, and teach her better things.’
-
-“‘Oh, yes; the girl hates me, and what should we want to see each other
-for. As for me, I hate the whole world; yes, I hate it, I have had my
-revenge; I have robbed, I have stole, and begged; and steal and beg I
-always will, until I’m put in the ground. The world owes me a living for
-the troubles I’ve had. No, I shall never want to see her again, if she
-leaves me.’
-
-“In the meantime, my new friend took a piece of paper from his pocket,
-and wrote something upon it in pencil mark. I did not even know my
-alphabet then; it is therefore impossible for me to say what were the
-contents of that paper. I presume it was merely a legal technicality,
-transferring all her rights over to himself. When he had finished, he
-handed it to her to sign.
-
-“‘I can’t write,’ said she, ‘but I’ll make my mark.’
-
-“‘Well, make a cross, that will do.’ She obeyed, and scrawled two lines
-across each other; he took the paper from her hand, and put it in his
-pocket-book; then counted ten louis from his purse, and placed them in
-her withered claws. She carefully counted them over after him, and being
-satisfied that the number was correct, deposited the money in a piece of
-rag, torn off one of her garments, tied a string around it, and laid it
-in her bosom.
-
-“The man rose, and gathered his cloak around him.
-
-“‘Come my child, my business with her is done; let us depart.’
-
-“Strange anomaly in human nature; I, who one hour previous had desired
-nothing so earnestly as to leave this wretched hag, now, on being offered
-an opportunity of leaving, even for a new bright home, felt an undefined
-sentiment of regret at doing so; perhaps it was the result of old
-associations and habits, which we all of us, more or less, find difficult
-to shake off.
-
-“I timidly advanced toward her, to say farewell, for I had ever stood in
-awe of her violence, and savage nature; but she sullenly turned her back
-upon both him and me, and began chanting, with her eyes fixed on vacancy.
-
-“‘You need not take the trouble of saying good bye, child,’ remarked
-my self-appointed guardian, as he pushed open the latchless door—‘she
-wouldn’t care a farthing if you were to die to-night. Come, little one,
-are you ready?’ I took one hand; he grasped the lantern with the other;
-she did not turn her face toward me as I went out. When my feet left the
-threshold of that hut, I bade adieu to beggary forever, and entered upon
-a new career in life.
-
-“I felt shy, and almost afraid, as I walked quickly along to keep pace
-with him; for now that all ties were forever severed between old Granny
-(as I was wont to call her) and myself, I looked upon him as my saviour
-and protector; he traversed many streets, turning now to the right, now
-to the left, in parts of the city where I had never been before; I wished
-he had taken me back to the little shop and Mademoiselle Marie, but we
-went nowhere in the direction of the piazza. At length, he stopped before
-some building, and knocked at the door; I could not judge of the size of
-the house, or its appearance, the night was too dark; the door was opened
-by a male servant, holding a heavy silver candlestick, with a wax candle
-in it, in his hand; my protector said something to him, in a language
-I did not understand, and the man shut the door after him, and removed
-his cloak from his shoulders. I now saw, by the light of a large globe
-lamp suspended from the ceiling, that we stood in a spacious hall, or
-vestibule, off which opened on either side beautifully carved, mahogany
-doors; from the farther end ascended a lofty stair-case. My new friend
-opened one of these doors, and I followed him into an elegant apartment,
-where a bright coal fire burned cheerfully in the grate; the walls were
-hung with costly paintings and mirrors; numerous instruments of music lay
-scattered round. Such a place I had never seen, scarcely even dreamed of;
-surely this must be fairy land.
-
-“‘Now child,’ said my friend, as he rolled a costly arm-chair before
-the fire, and seated himself in it, ‘you must be hungry; have you had
-anything to eat to-day?’
-
-“‘Only a crust of bread this morning, sir.’
-
-“‘Well, you shall have some supper, and then go to bed, and to-morrow we
-will talk of your future prospects.’
-
-“I had no idea of what ‘future prospects’ meant; but the idea of getting
-something to eat delighted me; he rang a bell, and when the same domestic
-answered the summons, who had opened the door for us, he again spoke to
-him in the same unknown tongue. It was not German, or rather a degenerate
-dialect I had always been accustomed to hear; it was a softer, a more
-liquid language; he told me, in German, to go with the man, whom he
-called Jean, and he would give me my supper, and if I wanted anything to
-address him in German, and he would understand me.
-
-“I followed Jean across the hall to an immense room, opposite the
-drawing-room, extending the whole length of the house, beautifully
-carpeted with Brussels; while up and down the apartment, on either side,
-were placed stationary seats of scarlet velvet, fixed to the wall; a
-magnificent chandelier hung from the ceiling; eight large windows on each
-side, set with mirror plate, reflected and multiplied every object in
-this handsome and commodious saloon.
-
-“In a distant corner stood a small table, set with supper for two
-persons, all sorts of cakes, preserves, dried fruit, and bread; on a side
-table sat two silver urns, one containing coffee, the other tea; a warm,
-delightful heat seemed to pervade the room; but I saw no fire, and could
-not imagine whence it came; the atmosphere of peace and repose, which
-seemed to reign within this house, so different to the scenes of strife
-and destitution, to which I had alone been accustomed, shed a soothing
-influence upon my mind. In the course of the last three hours, I had
-thought more than I ever had during my whole dark, blank existence.
-
-“Jean waited on me, while I ate ravenously. A comfortable meal was
-something I had never enjoyed before; it is not, therefore, astonishing
-that I was attentive to its merits; my usual repast had generally been a
-few crusts of dry bread, sometimes the old woman gave me a bit of tough
-meat, frequently tainted; this constituted my ordinary fare; yet, I was
-then healthy and cheerful, notwithstanding my disconsolate condition.
-I did not know for what purpose this man had taken me from the street,
-this dark, tempestuous night, and placed me in so splendid a home; had
-I been older, and wiser, I should naturally have suspected that he had
-_some_ motive or object in this strange act of benevolence; as it was,
-I enjoyed, with a keen sense of pleasure, the fine supper, and many
-glittering objects I saw around me, without thinking, knowing, or caring,
-what became of me hereafter. When I had finished supper, Jean reconducted
-me to my protector, who still sat by the fire reading a newspaper;
-he asked me if I had had supper enough; and upon my answering in the
-affirmative, and gratefully thanking him for his kindness, he took me up
-stairs to a little room in the second story, where he gave me in charge
-to a neat-looking woman, dressed in black, with a white, frilled cap upon
-her head; after telling her to attend me, and put me to bed, he returned
-to the drawing-room. It was now past ten o’clock; and, fatigued by the
-exciting events of the evening, I began to feel stupid and sleepy; the
-waiting maid undressed me, and after seeing me comfortably wrapped up in
-bed, left the room, and I fell speedily in a profound slumber.
-
-“The waiting maid, whose name I learned to be Marguerite, came early to
-dress me; and I found my friend already at his breakfast, in a small
-breakfast room back of the drawing-room; he drew a chair to the table,
-told me to help myself, and went on eating and singing at the same time;
-I needed no second invitation, and complied. When he had completed
-his breakfast, he leaned back in his chair, and producing a large
-handkerchief, vigorously rubbed his face; then turning to me, who sat
-quietly beside him, drinking my coffee, he asked:
-
-“‘Did you sleep well last night, child?’
-
-“‘Yes sir, very comfortably indeed.’
-
-“‘It is awkward speaking to you, without calling you by name; by what
-name did that old woman call you?’
-
-“‘I don’t know that I ever had a name. Granny used to call me Nancy.’
-
-“‘Nancy, that sounds harsh, I don’t like it;’ he seemed to think a
-minute, and then said,
-
-“‘Genevra is a pretty name: I will call you that, since you are
-unprovided with one; hereafter, remember to answer to the name of
-Genevra.’
-
-“‘Yes sir, I will.’
-
-“‘Now come here, and sit upon my knee; I want to tell you what I intend
-doing for you.’ I obeyed, and he placed me on his knee.
-
-“‘Now, Genevra, I call you by your right name; you remember hearing
-me say last night to that old woman, that I intended educating you
-for the stage, if I took you from her; you are too young yet to know
-what that means, but you will learn in time. I have already adopted
-two little girls, situated much as you were, and mean to educate them
-also as actresses. I hope time will show that you possess a tractable
-disposition, and sweet temper, without which no accomplishments can be
-of advantage to you. You are to be placed at the same school with these
-girls, who will, doubtless, be friends and companions to you in your
-studies; in the course of five or six years, if you live, you will be
-prepared, by dint of hard study and application, to make your _debut_.’
-
-“One half of these remarks I had not understood; I only comprehended,
-that I was required to perform something very difficult to be done; I
-presumed a sort of punishment, which was to prepare me for some future
-eclat; but after having experienced so much of destitution, slight
-privations seemed light as air, and I joyfully welcomed the idea of, as I
-thought, going to work.
-
-“He told me to run up stairs, and ask Marguerite to find me some sort of
-hood, or bonnet, to wear out in the street. After an active search, she
-at length discovered a gingham hood, which I hastily tied on, and ran
-back to my protector; he took my hand, and we passed out into the street;
-it was a fine clear day, I remember; the sun shone bright, although the
-air was somewhat cold; how different I felt in spirit, as I gayly trotted
-along by his side; I did not feel the same acute sense of degradation
-I had always felt with that depraved old hag; the happy buoyant sense
-of being, which is the principal of happiness in youth, was gradually
-springing up again in my heart, which had been, as it were, stunted and
-depressed, by a malevolent genius.
-
-“At a short distance from his own house, he stopped before a gloomy
-looking dwelling, chequered alternately on the front, with red and
-black brick; he knocked at a large gate, which seemed to form the only
-mode of entrance to this convent-like abode; it was slowly unbarred
-and opened by a stout german woman, dressed in the usual style of the
-peasantry; my friend passed her without remark, and we ascended a heavy
-stone stair-case, which wound upward from the court-yard; at the first
-landing place he led me into a large parlor, furnished plainly, but
-tastefully; the floor was uncarpeted, but waxed and rubbed till it shone,
-and reflected every object like a mirror; a piano stood in one corner,
-and all the chairs were covered with cushions, elegantly embroidered in
-German worsted; two sofas were also ornamented with the same beautiful
-work; there was no fire in the grate, however, and the room had a cold,
-comfortless air about it; one mirror, inserted between the windows,
-and opposite the door, as we entered, afforded me a full length view
-of myself, and I started with astonishment at seeing the pretty form
-reflected there; very different did it look from the ragged, dirty child,
-I was accustomed to see reflected in the shop windows as I passed.
-
-“We had been seated scarcely a moment, when the door opened, and a small
-thin woman, with a sharp, bright expression of face, wearing a calico
-dress, and wrapped in a red shawl, came tripping in; they spoke together
-for some time, in the same unintelligible language I had heard the night
-before; at length, turning to me, the lady said in German, ‘So my dear,
-you are to be a pupil of mine, I hear; I trust I shall find you obedient
-and diligent.’ They resumed their conversation, while I sat quietly
-by the side of my new-found guardian; holding his hand in mine, for I
-felt sad, at thus being obliged so soon to part from him. I heard the
-sound of mirthful laughter, and noisy whispering, which seemed to be in
-the vicinity of the parlor, and looking down the stone-paved gallery,
-I saw at its farthest extremity a door open, and within the room many
-young girls seated at desks, studying. The house, in its architecture,
-resembled more one of those old gothic cathedrals, I have since seen
-in my travels, than anything else I can compare it to; it was lofty,
-antique, and gloomy, one almost felt like the ghosts themselves, as one
-walked through its stone galleries, and heard one’s steps resound with a
-hollow echo.
-
-“When my guardian and the lady had finished their conference, which
-lasted more than half an hour, he took his hat, preparatory to departure.
-At the idea of losing this kind man, and being left in a strange house,
-to form acquaintances with people whom I neither knew, nor cared for, I
-burst into tears; the lady endeavored to console me, patting me on the
-head, telling me I should be her little favorite, and she was sure I
-would be contented and happy. Monsieur Belmont (I heard her call him so)
-shook me repeatedly by the hand, saying he should see me regularly twice
-a week; that I must obey Madame Deville in all things, and study hard,
-that I might become an accomplished girl.
-
-“‘I have no doubt she will be both happy and satisfied, when she becomes
-a little accustomed to the pupils and myself,’ observed Madame to
-Monsieur Belmont, as she stood beside me, pressing my hand in hers.
-
-“‘I hope so,’ was his reply, ‘it will be at least three months, I
-presume, before I can begin to give her instruction in music, she is so
-totally uninformed.’
-
-“‘Oh yes,’ cried she, with the sharp, quick intonation of a French
-woman: ‘it will require at least that length of time to instruct her in
-the rudiments; I shall try and do my best, Monsieur, I assure you, with
-your protegé; before you go, would you not like to have Inez and Blanche
-called from the school-room, that they may be introduced to their future
-companion?’
-
-“‘Yes,’ answered Monsieur, ‘if it is convenient, I should like to see
-them.’
-
-“Madame rang a small bell, which stood on a table beside her; a moment
-after, a tall mulatto made his appearance. I had never seen any of the
-negro race before, and was much astonished at, what I considered, the odd
-color of his skin; he received her message, delivered to him in French,
-and directed his steps toward the room at the end of the gallery, from
-which he returned in a few minutes, leading by the hand two young girls,
-both older than I; the one a brunette, the other a blonde; their manner
-was lady-like, gentle, and winning. Inez’s hair was raven black, her eyes
-large, voluptuous, and star-like in their expression; Blanche, on the
-contrary, was timid as a fawn, in her look and ways: there was a dreamy
-languor in her sad blue eyes, which seemed to tell of love’s present
-or future reveries—a love, however, of a more spiritual kind than Inez
-would ever be capable of feeling; a profusion of pale flaxen hair shaded
-her sweet face, and hung nearly to her waist in long curls; they were
-both dressed alike, in frocks of cheap calico; they bowed respectfully
-to their teacher on entering her parlor, and upon Monsieur Belmont’s
-presenting me to them as one who was to become a companion in their
-studies, they politely kissed me on each cheek, and bade me welcome to
-their school. I could not realize, while contemplating the refinement of
-these two girls, that they had been taken, a few short years before, from
-the same position in life, from which this philanthropic man had rescued
-me but one day previous; truly, it is education, and the society in which
-we mingle, which impress in youth that bias of mind for right or wrong,
-which only leaves us when life does.
-
-“‘You three will occupy the same room,’ said Madame. ‘I hope you will
-be good friends. Inez and Blanche soon cultivated a friendship for each
-other after they came.’
-
-“The tears still flowed from my eyes; my heart in after days, became too
-hard and dry to allow me to weep often; but then the fount of feeling was
-a fresh, pure spring, uncontaminated by the mud and refuse of inferior
-streams. I often look back, through the heavy mist time has left lowering
-upon those early days, and regret the loss of those fallacious hopes;
-those splendid castles built in air, which always crumbled into dust
-whenever I attempted to approach them.
-
-“Monsieur Belmont, after speaking to Inez and Blanche a moment, in
-French, shook hands with me, bade me not cry, and departed. Madame
-Deville reassuming the school-mistress deportment, and her gravity, which
-had been laid aside to entertain a visitor, led me to the schoolroom,
-and the two girls returned to their desks, their silence, and their
-studies. It was a very large room, lighted by two enormous windows, one
-at each end; the walls hung, not with superb paintings like Monsieur
-Belmont’s elegant house, but with charts and maps; rows of desks were
-ranged each side of the apartment, and more than a hundred girls, of all
-sizes, shapes, and ages, were seated at them, busily engaged in coning
-over their lessons for recitation. Upon my entrance, being a new scholar,
-all eyes were bent on me, and a subdued whispering ran through all the
-ranks of girls. Madame put me at a desk between Inez and Blanche, and
-then taking her seat upon an elevated dias at the head of the room. She
-struck her desk with a ruler, and called one of the classes; the girls,
-who were called loudly, all rose, shut their books, and placed themselves
-before her in a row. This class was composed of large girls, neatly
-dressed, some of them were passably pretty; no two in the room, however,
-could be compared to Inez and Blanche. They all stared at me as they
-passed; it was a lesson in ancient history they were to recite. Madame
-taking one of the books in her hand, asked the questions in a loud, clear
-tone; and the pupils replied, some well, some wrong, according as they
-had learned their lessons; the recitation ended, Madame marked those who
-had missed upon a large day-book, which always lay open upon her desk
-before her. Several smaller classes were heard, and Inez and Blanche left
-my side for a while, to recite their lessons; then I heard the sound
-of a deep-toned bell, rung for several minutes: it was now recess for
-an hour; all the girls clamorously rushed from the school-room, seized
-their sun-bonnets, and poured themselves into the court-yard. It was a
-gloomy spot for a play-ground; there were no trees, no flowers, which we
-are ever wont to associate in mind with children’s gambols. Nothing but
-the square flag-stones, flanked on all four sides, by the brick walls of
-the house, met my view. Inez and Blanche put up their books, and turning
-to me, Blanche said, ‘Come, Genevra, come with us to the yard, and play
-hide and seek.’ Inez also pressed me to go and play with them, for I
-felt shy and strange, and would have preferred remaining where I was.
-Blanche evidently was a favorite with Madame, for as she went out of the
-school-room, to rest herself a few minutes in her parlor, before the
-pupils returned to their studies, she kissed me, saying I must laugh and
-play, and enjoy myself with the other children; and then said to Blanche,
-‘Well, my dear, how is that fine soprano voice of yours, have you
-practiced well this morning?’ Blanche smilingly replied she had; there
-was a sweetness about that smile of hers, and an expression of guileless
-innocence in her lovely eyes, I could never forget.
-
-“How little did we three inexperienced girls imagine what the future
-had in store for us. Could a magician, at that period of time, have
-shown us in a magic mirror, our several destinies in life, would we have
-believed, that the fatal sisters had allotted to us so chequered and sad
-a career? I am certain _I_ would not. How grateful should we be to Divine
-Providence, that all insight into futurity is forbidden us; how unable
-would we be to contend with the many trials and difficulties, which
-constantly assail us in the rough pathway of life; could we foresee the
-sacrifices which are so frequently demanded of us as we journey on.
-
-“Inez, Blanche, and myself, descended hand-in-hand to the court-yard; the
-girls were all joyously at play. I always was a grave child; I cared but
-little for the sports and amusements children so dearly covet, but on
-this occasion I forgot my usual sadness and joined them in an animated
-race, which lasted several minutes, when the bell again was rung; and
-the girls arranging their disordered dresses, and composing their faces,
-returned to the school-room in pairs, as they had left it.
-
-“Order was restored, and the rest of the afternoon spent in recitation
-and writing; I saw several teachers, whom I had not seen during the
-morning, having been absent in different parts of the house, giving
-lessons in music and dancing. They were all thin, and had a starved and
-hungry look, excepting Miss Jones, a fat, good-humored English teacher.
-I became quite fond of her during my long residence at the school. I
-learned from Blanche, that Monsieur Belmont, was a Frenchman, from Paris,
-manager of the Royal Italian Opera, and considered the most splendid
-singer in Vienna; he also gave lessons in vocal music to some of the
-pupils at the school, among whom were Inez and Blanche; the girl dwelt
-with touching sadness upon the humble condition, from which this kind man
-had taken both Inez and herself, what advantages of education had been
-afforded them, and how grateful they felt towards him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-
-“Blanche had just finished her little story, related with an air of
-childish simplicity, which gave infinite interest, when the loud sound
-of a gun reverberated through the house. I had never heard one then, and
-imagined it was thunder. Twilight’s dusky hue had stolen into the room,
-before we were aware of its approach. Madame Deville commissioned my
-future instructor, Madame Schiller, to attend to me, and, following her,
-we went to the refectory; it was a long, low ceiled, narrow room; two
-long tables extended almost as far as my eye could reach, covered with
-snow-white table linen, and scanty portions of bread and butter; a glass
-of water stood by each plate; weak tea was handed to the teachers, who
-stood together in a group, apart from the girls, and chatted of their own
-affairs. I could not help mentally comparing this meagre fare, with the
-delicacies I had eaten the night before at Monsieur Belmont’s. It may
-seem surprising, that a beggar girl should regret a style of living, of
-which she had only caught a passing glance; but luxury is infinitely more
-attractive than want; we sooner become accustomed to it, and lament its
-loss when deprived of it. Very few would conscientiously prefer, had they
-their choice, a life of rigorous self-sacrifice, to one of wealth and
-splendor. It is generally a matter of compulsion and self-love induces us
-to advocate that which we cannot change.
-
-“An unbroken silence was preserved during the meal; nearly two hundred
-girls were gathered around the tables; they ate their slices of bread
-and butter quietly, and scarce a sound was heard in the room, save the
-whispered conversation of the teachers. At its conclusion, Madame Deville
-said grace, and we all proceeded up stairs, through a long gallery, paved
-with stone, as were all the vestibules in the house, to the study room;
-this was a large apartment, near the dormitories, fitted up in much the
-same style as the saloon at Monsieur Belmont’s; the monthly exhibitions
-of the pupils, Inez told me, were held here. Every evening, for two
-hours, the girls studied their lessons for the following day; the two
-hours seemed an eternity to me, while the scholars industriously applied
-themselves to their books. Madame sat at the head of the room in a sort
-of pulpit, and with her finger pressed to her lips, might have passed for
-the goddess of Wisdom herself. The expression of her features, when in
-repose, was somewhat stern, still there was a kindness blended with it,
-which showed she possessed a benevolent heart. I still think of her with
-love and respect, although the remembrance of those days is faint and
-dim. Another bell rang; the movements of the whole household seemed to be
-regulated by bells; bed-time had arrived; a certain number of girls were
-allotted to each dormitory, over whom presided one of the teachers. I was
-to become one of Madame Schiller’s little flock. A shrine, tastefully
-decorated, was placed at the head of each sleeping room, and the ceremony
-of the office was read every night before the girls retired to rest.
-Madame Schiller, with her hands clasped, knelt upon the floor, and we
-all gathered around her; the low and solemn voice with which she read
-the ‘office,’ made a deep impression on my mind. Inez and Blanche, with
-their heads bowed down, devoutly told their beads. The ceremony occupied
-perhaps half an hour, then the girls hastily undressed themselves, and
-hurried to bed; the beds were small, but the bedding neat and clean; they
-were arranged like the desks in the school-room, in two rows each side
-of the room; mine was next to that of Blanche. I heard Madame ask, ‘Are
-you all in bed, children?’ Some one answered ‘yes;’ she extinguished the
-lamp, and silence and darkness reigned. I fell asleep and had a singular
-dream. I thought I saw myself grown to be a woman, a tall handsome woman.
-I stood upon the deck of a ship, driving furiously before the gale,
-upon a stormy sea; the dark clouds lowered above my head, the waves ran
-mountains high: a crowd of helpless frightened beings lay around me. I
-alone seemed the only one on board this doomed vessel who fearlessly met
-my fate. We were rushing fast on the rocks off the coast. I stood with my
-arms folded on the forecastle; onward dashed the ship, the masts shivered
-to splinters, and sails flying like ribbonds in the wind. As we passed a
-high black rock, which rose menacingly above our heads, I looked upward,
-and upon its summit, saw a man, who stood with arms folded like myself,
-calmly contemplating the unhappy bark. He looked like an angel stationed
-there, that after the pangs of death were past, he might convey to heaven
-our souls; instinctively I extended toward him my hands, and cried, ‘Save
-me, oh save me!’ He also opened his arms to receive me, and answered,
-‘Come.’ At this moment, the vessel struck the breakers; one wild
-unearthly yell I heard, and was engulphed amid the waves; I struggled
-violently, but in vain, to reach the shore; the water filled my mouth and
-my ears. I was suffocated, and lost my senses. I awoke, covered with a
-profuse perspiration, trembling with fear; it was not yet day, all was
-quiet in the dormitory, every one asleep. I lay still for a few minutes,
-and gradually realized the conviction, that it was all a dream. I went to
-sleep again; this time I dreamed nothing, and was awoke by Blanche’s hand
-being laid on mine. Madame was calling the girls; she said it was time to
-rise. I rose, dressed myself, and washed my face and hands at Blanche’s
-‘toilette,’ there being none yet provided for me. When all were dressed,
-prayers were said. Day had just began to dawn, it was not more than five
-o’clock, and very cold in the dormitory, sleeping without fire; I felt
-chilled and stupified by the raw atmosphere; we descended the stairs
-again, and traversed the long vestibules through which we had ascended
-the night before; the girls looked almost like shades from the tomb, as
-they flitted along, and their pattering steps reverberated as they passed.
-
-“They went to the music room, where every morning, from five till seven
-o’clock, the pupils in music practised in little cabinets, within each
-of which was placed a piano; a glass window inserted in the door of each
-room, enabled the teacher to observe whether they were attentive to their
-duty. Not being a music scholar, I left Inez and Blanche to pursue their
-practising, and went with Madame Schiller to the school-room; it was
-dreary and cold. I sat down at my desk, and wished I knew how to read,
-that I might entertain myself with a book. Several girls were in the
-room, busily occupied with their lessons; having nothing to do, I leaned
-my head on my desk and fell into a sort of doze; the time whiled slowly
-away: at last I was startled by the loud sound of the gong; I started up,
-sought out my two new friends among the crowd of girls in the gallery,
-and having found them, went into the refectory to breakfast; the table
-presented no novelty; the same slices of bread and butter, arranged as I
-had seen at supper; a cup of weak coffee placed at each plate, instead of
-the glass of water, constituted the only variation. I tasted mine, it was
-execrable; yet ‘to the hungry man every bitter thing is sweet,’ and being
-hungry myself, I ate my bread and butter, and drank my coffee, without
-paying much attention to the taste of either; breakfast over, we returned
-to the school-room, and I took my first lesson in my native tongue, by
-beginning the alphabet. Madame Schiller was my teacher; Madame Deville
-was also very attentive; she frequently said many kind, encouraging
-things to me. I have described the routine of one day, so it was every
-day, monotonous and regular as the ticking of a clock; at first I thought
-it inconceivably dull; but gradually becoming accustomed to the school,
-and being occupied and interested in my own mental culture, Time, which
-at first dragged wearily along, flew more rapidly away, and I became
-happy in my new home. I made several acquaintances among the pupils, and
-these childish friendships added to my love of the school.
-
-“Two days after my advent at Madame Deville’s, a trunk, containing
-several complete suits of clothing, was sent me, labelled ‘Genevra
-Sfonza,’ from Monsieur Belmont; Blanche read the superscription, for
-I could not; while I, delighted, contemplated the contents of this
-unexpected gift; how kind, I thought, to send me such pretty clothes; the
-dresses were of worsted, made high and plain, suitable to the cold season
-of the year, and my school occupations; how I longed to see my good
-benefactor, that I might thank him for all his care and attention to me.
-
-“The following day I saw him; he came to give Inez and Blanche their
-singing lesson; I was called to the music room; I found Monsieur Belmont
-there, talking to the two girls; they were the only tenants of the room;
-at seeing me, he extended his arms and smiled; I ran in to them, with the
-joyful glee of an infant re-united to its parent, for indeed, he seemed
-to me more like a protector and friend, whom I had known for years,
-than the self-constituted patron of a beggar-girl. He asked me if I was
-an attentive, obedient pupil; if Inez, Blanche, and myself were good
-friends, and if I were happy at the school. To all these questions I most
-sincerely answered ‘yes,’ for the few days I had passed there, had been
-the only happy ones of my whole life.
-
-“‘Don’t you wish you were far enough advanced in music, to be able to
-sing with your two friends?’ asked Monsieur, as Blanche took her seat at
-the piano, and arranged her music before her.
-
-“‘Indeed, I should like to sing very much; how long will it be before I
-can begin to learn?’
-
-“‘In the course of two or three months, if you are studious;’ and he
-turned his attention to Blanche as she commenced her song. It was a
-sweet melancholy air from one of the Operas; the words impassioned, and
-reproachful. The clear, harmonious voice of Blanche, rose gradually from
-a low, quiet tone, to a wild, bird-like burst of passion. She executed
-the most difficult passages, with apparently, the greatest ease; higher
-and higher, rose her tones; then slowly depressing them, they died
-imperceptibly away. The song had ceased, and I had fallen into a reverie,
-seated close to the piano, by Monsieur Belmont’s side; one might wonder
-what I could have found to muse about, at that juvenile period of life;
-but I always was a dreamy child, and still am a dreamy woman, with
-this difference alone; my dreams now, are sorrowful regrets over the
-past; then, they were the fanciful speculations of youth; my visions,
-then, transported me to some sort of fairy, etherial existence, my
-spirit seemed to leave my body and rove through infinite space; lovers,
-or passion, had no share in those dreams of mine. I have since then
-endeavored, but in vain, to recall those visions of fairyland; time, and
-the bustle of an active life, have obliterated them from my mind.
-
-“Monsieur praised her improvement, and bade her be diligent at her
-practising; then Inez came to sing her piece: her voice was a fine, rich
-contralto, deep and melodious in tone. She sang a bold naval song, with
-great spirit and effect. The next monthly exhibition was approaching, and
-all the music pupils were preparing their pieces for the occasion. Inez
-and Blanche were considered the two best musicians at the institution.
-Monsieur Belmont advanced them more rapidly, it was said, than he did
-the other pupils; probably he wished to perfect them more thoroughly for
-their future debut on the stage.
-
-“Each took a lesson on a new piece, then our teacher departed.
-
-“‘Don’t you ever get tired of singing and practising, Blanche?’ I asked,
-as she stood leaning thoughtfully against the piano, her eyes downcast,
-while Inez gazed from the window upon the dreary street below.
-
-“‘Sometimes, yes; yet we know it is our duty to obey Monsieur, and if he
-tells us to practise extra hours, we must do so.’
-
-“‘How long do you practise each day?’
-
-“‘Four, often five hours.’
-
-“‘Oh, that must be very dull!’
-
-“‘I am sure I think it is,’ exclaimed Inez, who was the most petulant of
-the two; ‘I often wish I were a woman, and an actress; I should at least
-be my own mistress, and obtaining money for myself; here I have been for
-the last three, and you for the last two years; the same old monotonous
-round of school duties to perform every day; no change, no home to go to
-in vacation, always here. I don’t believe I shall ever live to get away;
-when you have been here as long as we have, you will be tired of it too,
-Genevra!’
-
-“‘I don’t know; I hardly think I shall grow very tired; I like the
-school; I love you and Blanche, and I am glad and grateful to have some
-one to take care of me, and a home to stay in.’
-
-“‘In a few years,’ said Blanche, ‘we shall leave the school, and go out
-into the great world, to make our own way alone; then, perhaps, we may
-look back and wish we were at school again.’
-
-“At this moment one of the teachers made her appearance at the door,
-and called us to our studies. Time passed quietly and regularly on for
-two weeks; I learned my alphabet, and began to spell in words of two
-syllables; the girls became used to my appearance, and no longer stared
-and whispered when they saw me, as girls always do upon the advent of a
-new scholar at a school. Inez was fourteen, Blanche twelve, and I eight
-years old. In the course of a year or two, Monsieur Belmont intended
-withdrawing Inez from Madame Deville’s, to teach her the art of acting,
-preparatory to her entree into the gay world. That world, of which she,
-nor any of us, as yet knew anything, and from which, in after years, I so
-often turned away, disgusted with its heartlessness and insincerity, and
-wished myself buried amid the inaccessible solitudes of Mount Lebanon.
-
-“It wanted but a few days of the monthly ‘soiree;’ the servants were
-cleaning and arranging the saloon, where it was to be given. Inez,
-Blanche, and myself, had been running furious races together during the
-recess; I felt fatigued, from the violent exercise, and sat down where a
-strong current of air, from a door, blew full upon me for some minutes;
-when we returned to our desks in the school-room, my cheeks burnt like
-fire, and my head felt heavy; I could not take my usual interest in my
-lesson; for anxious to improve, I diligently applied myself; the letters
-seemed to turn red, blue, and yellow, and swam before my eyes; late in
-the afternoon, noticing my languor, as I sat leaning my head on Blanche’s
-shoulder, Madame Deville asked me, if I felt unwell; I answered, ‘no, I
-did not, but my head ached.’
-
-“‘You don’t look well, my dear; I am afraid you are going to be sick;
-you must go to the infirmary to-night, and be attended to. Wilhelmina,’
-addressing a tall, stout, flaxen-haired German girl, ‘take Genevra to the
-infirmary, and tell Miss Jones to attend to her, and put her name on the
-sick list, at least till to-morrow, when I will see how she is. Go my
-dear.’
-
-“The infirmary was a large, gloomy room, at the other end of the house,
-where the pupils were sent, to be nursed, when the least indisposed, if
-it was only a headache, or ordinary cold, and Madame happened to notice
-a heavy eye, or listless demeanor, among any of her flock, they were
-immediately dismissed to the sick room.
-
-“I did not want to go; it was only a slight cold I had taken from
-over exercise, but Madame’s word was law, and must be obeyed, and
-I, therefore, reluctantly followed my conductress to the infirmary.
-Wilhelmina repeated her message to Miss Jones, and then returned.
-Twilight was stealing over that vast city, not the unclouded twilight of
-a summer’s eve, but winter’s dusky clouds, mingled with the clear blue of
-the atmosphere.
-
-“Miss Jones, although English, spoke German well; she asked me if I felt
-sick, and what ailed me? I replied, ‘only a slight headache and vertigo;
-that I would have remained at my desk, but Madame, imagining I was ill,
-had told me to come to the infirmary.’
-
-“‘Madame is right, of course, my child; for all you know, these may be
-the premonitory symptoms of a fever,’ and Miss Jones, with a learned air,
-felt my pulse. I could scarcely help smiling at the comical expression
-of assumed wisdom in the good-natured little woman’s face. ‘Your head is
-hot,’ placing her hand upon my head, ‘and your eyes look heavy; sit down
-quietly here; the doctor is coming soon, to prescribe for Miss Clarendon,
-and then I’ll ask him what I shall do for you?’
-
-“The little woman bustled about the room awhile, and then went out to
-order some gruel made for one of the sick girls. I sat still, where she
-had left me, in an arm-chair, near the window, and looked around the
-room. Some half dozen girls were its occupants, all sick, and with the
-exception of one, all in bed; my eyes dwelt more particularly upon her
-than any other, being the most beautiful and conspicuous one among the
-invalids, it was the young girl the teacher had called Miss Clarendon.
-I afterwards learned from one of the pupils, that she was the daughter
-of a widowed English nobleman, who had placed her at the institution to
-complete her education, while he pursued his travels alone in the East.
-She sat in a large fauteuil, nearly opposite me, on the other side of
-the room; her whole person, except her etherial looking face, enveloped
-in an enormous cashmere shawl. Her maid, a mulatto woman, stood by her,
-bathing her pale face with eau de Cologne; her large blue eyes, heavy
-and listless from ill health, and probably low spirits, were gazing on
-vacancy; a slight, bright tinge of pink illumined each cheek, and gave a
-brilliant expression of evanescent bloom to the countenance of this dying
-beauty.
-
-“For dying she evidently was, of that most insidious and deceptive of
-all diseases, consumption; far away from the home and associations of
-her childhood,—alone, in a land of strangers. I thought, while looking
-at her, that I had never seen any one half as lovely. Inez and Blanche
-were beautiful, but they were not to be compared to her; they did not
-possess that elegant bearing, that innate consciousness of superiority,
-which showed itself in the very looks of this girl. She looked so calm,
-so lady-like; at intervals she pressed one of her small, delicate hands
-to her mouth, as if to stifle the hacking cough, which seemed to convulse
-her frame. Her attendant offered her a lozenge; she took it mechanically,
-put it in her mouth, and still gazed on. I walked across the room and
-took a seat near her; she looked at me languidly, but made no remark.
-
-“‘Are you sick, Miss?’ I asked, curiously, for I wanted to hear her
-speak. ‘Are you one of Madame Deville’s pupils? I have not seen you
-before.’
-
-“‘You are a new pupil, I suppose, and I have been sick for many weeks,’
-she replied, in intelligible German, but with a marked English accent;
-her voice was sweet, and intonation very clear, ‘Are you on the sick
-list?’ she asked.
-
-“‘Yes, Madame says so; she sent me here because I had a bad headache and
-vertigo, but I don’t like the room, it’s so still and gloomy.’
-
-“‘I wish I had nothing but a headache, I should not complain of the
-gloomy room.’ Tears started in those soft blue eyes, and ran down her
-cheeks. ‘Oh my father,’ she murmured in broken tones, ‘if you only knew
-how desolate and lonely I am, I am sure you would come to me.’
-
-“‘Don’t cry,’ I exclaimed, moved at her grief, and wishing to console
-her, ‘I am sure you’ll get well yet.’
-
-“‘Go away, child, you worry me; you cannot bring me what I long for, my
-dear father.’
-
-“‘Where is your father, is he very far from here? why don’t he come to
-see you, when you want to see him?’
-
-“‘He don’t know that I am ill, that I am dying; if he did, oh how quickly
-would he fly to me.’
-
-“‘Why don’t you write to him, and ask him to take you away from the
-school?’
-
-“‘I have written several times, but I know my letters are never sent, if
-they had been, he would have been here long ago; I know I shall die soon;
-it is now two years since father placed me here, and I have been sick for
-more than a year. He went to Greece and Sicily. Oh, how I wish I were
-with him. It must be a dreadful thing to die,’ she continued, after a
-moment’s pause; ‘did you ever think about dying, child?’
-
-“‘No, I never thought much about it; I always thought about being happy,
-and wished to be so.’
-
-“‘At home in dear England, I was happy, with all dear friends around us;
-but to be ill in a strange country, among people I care nothing about,
-and who care nothing for me, oh how dreadful it is.’ She hid her face in
-her hands, and sighed, and sobbed. I wished I had been better acquainted
-with her, I would have thrown my arms around her neck, and kissed her,
-but I did not like to take such a liberty with an utter stranger. Miss
-Jones stole suddenly upon us, followed by the physician, and I glided
-back to my former position. He talked for sometime to Miss Clarendon in
-a low voice, and she replied in the same subdued tone; I could not catch
-any of their conversation. Then he passed to the bedsides of some of the
-other invalids, and paused for some time at that of a little girl, who
-was raving deliriously with typhus fever; her little hands lay outside
-the coverlid, and she sometimes clasped them frantically above her head,
-and demanded her golden crown. Poor little innocent, I hope she obtained
-it in a better, brighter sphere; for, a few days after, I saw the same
-slight form arrayed in its grave clothes, and she was borne to her last
-and silent resting place.
-
-“The physician prescribed for me abstinence for twenty-four hours, and
-a dose of Epsom salts, both of which recipes I considered entirely
-unnecessary, as fasting was a virtue which we, from necessity, were
-constantly obliged to practise, and as for the salts, I really did not
-need it. It was now quite dark, and two lamps, shedding a dim light, were
-placed by the nurse on tables at either end of the room. I saw the young
-English girl undress, and her servant assisted her into bed; she coughed
-continually, and the traces of tears were still on her cheeks; how sorry
-I felt for her, if I had been a carrier-pigeon, how willingly would I
-have flown to Sicily, or anywhere on earth, to have told that beloved
-parent of her sad condition, and restored him to her.
-
-“I was permitted to remain up an hour longer, as it was only seven
-o’clock; my head still felt heavy, and objects seemed to swim before my
-eyes; in the background of the room, the nurse, in her austere dress of
-black, stood by the side of one of the patients, pouring some drops of
-liquid into a spoon, while the faithful mulatto, seated in a chair at
-the bedhead, watched the uneasy slumber of her beautiful mistress; Miss
-Jones walked quietly backward and forward. As I grew older, and became
-more capable of observation and reflection, I often wondered how those
-poor teachers managed to support life, dragging on from days to months,
-from months to years, their monotonous, stupid existence: no prospect of
-brighter days dawning on the future, nothing but a continual repetition
-of school duties, repeated to an infinitude of times; habit, however,
-becomes second nature, and constant occupation frequently prevents us
-from dwelling with too much sensitiveness on personal misfortunes.
-
-“After taking the medicine, a gentle, soothing influence came over me,
-and I dropped asleep in my chair. I awoke during the night, I was
-still in the same position. Miss Jones had left the room, and the nurse
-slumbered with her head leaning on a table; I felt benumbed from my erect
-attitude, but sleep again overpowered me, and daylight found me locked in
-the arms of Morpheus. I don’t remember what happened afterward; for nine
-days I lay deliriously tossing on a sick bed, with an attack of fever;
-at the end of that time I began slowly to recover. Inez and Blanche,
-my beloved little friends, spent every moment they could snatch from
-their studies by my side, telling me stories to amuse me, and exercising
-their ingenuity in a thousand artless ways, to beguile away the tedious
-hours of convalescence. Madame Deville and Monsieur Belmont, during my
-illness, had often visited my bedside; they said he had been apprehensive
-lest my disease should prove mortal. Madame, in her bustling, active
-way, came every day to the infirmary, encouraged the sick ones, ordered
-what she thought proper for them, and then bustled away again; there
-was no difference in her manner toward either rich or poor girls: all
-were treated alike. I loved her for that trait of character; she only
-showed perhaps, a slight partiality in favor of those who made the most
-rapid progress in their studies. This induced the pupils to emulate
-each other in improvement, that they might deserve the approbation of
-their directress. When I was sufficiently recovered to observe what was
-passing around me, I looked for Miss Clarendon, but she was no longer in
-the room; Inez told me she was a parlor boarder, and had gone to Madame
-Deville’s private parlor, where she took private lessons, and amused
-herself as she chose; she spoke of her sweet disposition, and various
-accomplishments, and said that she was generally beloved by all who knew
-her in the school.
-
-“It was a week after the fever had left me, before I was able to return
-to the school-room; when I did so, Madame Schiller, and several of my
-new acquaintances greeted me as if I had been an old friend; after
-that I applied myself with energy and perseverance, and my improvement
-was rapid. At the expiration of three months, Monsieur Belmont began
-instructing me in vocal music; time, and intense assiduity at practising,
-slowly developed my voice; he was a kind, but a severe and exacting
-master; he obliged us to perform our allotted tasks, with punctuality and
-exactness; if we did them well, he praised us quietly, but even slight
-commendation from his lips was very gratifying.
-
-“The musical soiree had occurred during my illness. Inez and Blanche, I
-was told, had sung charmingly. Poor little girls! the momentary praise
-bestowed at a school exhibition, but poorly repaid them for the many
-hours of labor spent in acquiring those bird-like tones. Several months
-elapsed before I was sufficiently advanced in music, to be able to sing
-at one of Madame’s ‘evenings.’
-
-“One morning I was directing my steps toward the music room, to practise
-my lesson, when I saw Miss Clarendon come running down the gallery, and
-with a wild, passionate expression of joy and surprise, threw herself
-into the out-spread arms of a grave, elegant looking man, who stood
-quietly awaiting her approach.
-
-“‘Oh my dear father!’ she wildly exclaimed, as she impressed kiss after
-kiss on his lips and forehead, ‘you have come at last to see your poor
-sick child: I had expected to die without ever seeing you again.’
-
-“‘You had expected to die! my darling child, what do you mean? I have
-only this morning arrived from Greece: I have come to take you home to
-England. Why do you speak in this sad way? Have you not been happy here?’
-
-“‘I have been ill for several months,’ she sadly replied; ‘the doctor
-says I have consumption; I have been so unhappy, too, away from you. How
-happy I feel to be with you again, dear father!’
-
-“The gentleman fondly stroked his daughters silky hair, and gazed with
-paternal fondness upon that grief-worn, delicate countenance. She now
-seemed happy and at rest, by the side of that parent, for whose presence
-she had longed so earnestly; the surprise and pleasure of this re-union,
-had lit up her face with an expression of feverish joy almost unearthly.
-I remained a moment at the door of my cabinet and looked at them.
-
-“‘You are really going to take me away from here, are you not, dear
-father? we shall return to dear old England.’
-
-“‘Yes, my beloved child, you shall go with me; could I have foreseen your
-ill health and unhappiness, I never would have left you; I have been
-thinking of you, my love, during my whole journey, in Athens, at Mount
-Etna, everywhere you were constantly in my thoughts.’
-
-“‘I wish I could have ascended Mount Etna with you: how I should like to
-see it.’
-
-“‘It would have been too tiresome a journey for you, my darling; now go
-and pack up your clothing, while I speak to Madame Deville before our
-departure.’
-
-“He went into Madame’s parlor, and his daughter walked toward the
-staircase with a quick light step; she was going to leave the school; in
-all probability I should never see her again: I was determined to say
-farewell, and, therefore, ran after her.
-
-“‘Are you going away, are you going to leave us, Miss Clarendon?’
-
-“She stopped and looked around; her face brightened with a sweet smile,
-when she saw it was I who spoke to her. ‘Yes, Genevra, I am about leaving
-you; my dear father has come to take me home to England.’
-
-“‘Are you very glad to leave the school?’
-
-“Yes, I am glad, because I am going to see many beloved friends, and
-because I have suffered much since I have been here from ill health; but
-I regret losing some of my school companions, and among them is yourself;
-when I am gone, you must sometimes think of me, Genevra, and keep this in
-remembrance of me.’
-
-“She gently placed a small gold ring upon my finger, kissed me, and then
-ran up stairs; I watched her till she disappeared, and then returned to
-my piano, with the saddening reflection that we should never meet again.
-
-“An hour afterward I saw, from the window of the music-room, a dark
-blue barouche, drawn by four dapple gray horses, standing before the
-entrance to the seminary. Lord Clarendon was buttoning up his great-coat,
-and speaking to a servant, while a liveried footman assisted the young
-lady into the carriage, presently the gentleman followed also. As the
-equipage whirled away, she glanced up at the house, and observing me at
-the window, bowed, and waved her small white hand; they were quickly out
-of sight. The recollection of that sweet young lady remained fresh in
-my memory for years; I often wondered whether she ever lived to reach
-England, or whether death’s iron grasp had seized her in a strange land,
-and I often wished to see her, but my wish was never gratified.
-
-“Two years glided away: Inez had become a beautiful blossom; Blanche
-was yet but a half-blown bud; I was a tall, slender child. During this
-length of time I had made quiet, but steady progress in English, French,
-and Italian, together with my native language; I had gained the love of
-my preceptors, and I was happy, because I was occupied. We had become
-a happy trio of firm friends, and notwithstanding women seldom agree,
-we continued, from first to last, devotedly attached to each other. It
-was, perhaps, my first grief of the heart, when Inez was withdrawn by
-Monsieur Belmont from the school. True, I had suffered many privations in
-early childhood, but they affected more my physical than mental system;
-moreover the uncultivated mind of a child is incapable of reflection; but
-now, from the beneficent influence of education, I could think—in after
-years, I learned to reason too. Blanche and myself dwelt with sentiments
-of regret upon our approaching separation from Inez; we seemed to love
-her more, now she was about to part from us. I presume it was the
-perversity of human nature, which enhances the value of those objects we
-are about to lose.
-
-“It was the morning of her departure. Inez stood with her shawl and
-bonnet on, in our preceptress’ parlor; Madame was also there, conversing,
-and gesticulating with French vivacity to Monsieur. Inez had bidden
-farewell to all her acquaintances, and tears dropped heavily from her
-large black eyes. It was a lovely summer day; I heard the chirping of the
-birds; the sun shone brilliantly; all nature seemed to wear a gala dress;
-we kissed her in silence, and stood by her, each pressing one of her
-hands in ours.
-
-“‘So, children, you are about to be separated,’ cried our mutual master;
-‘you all look very sad about it, but Inez will be very happy, I know,
-when she becomes a gay woman of the world; with her splendid voice, she
-will make a sensation, and a fortune too. As for you, you will soon
-forget your grief. Blanche’s turn will come next, and then you will be
-left alone, Genevra.’
-
-“‘Yes, sir, I know it,’ I mechanically replied, for I was thinking of
-Inez.
-
-“‘Genevra has improved much in looks of late. Do you not think so,
-Madame?’ asked the gentleman.
-
-“‘Yes,’ answered she, glancing at me momentarily. ‘I always thought her
-a pretty child; she is obedient and polite, and very studious; but all
-the pupils look better in warm weather, than during the cold inclement
-season of the year; they will miss their schoolmate at first, I suppose,
-but then they will soon grow reconciled to her absence, for children soon
-forget.’
-
-“Time demonstrated to me the truth of Madame’s observation, that
-children, and sometimes men and women, ‘soon forget.’ Oh, beloved
-companions of my childhood! how often have my thoughts reverted to the
-innocent hours of pleasure, passed at that school. Where are now the
-brilliant anticipations of the future? where are the devoted lovers, the
-unfailing friends we fondly pictured to ourselves? Alas! like the shades
-of Ossian’s heroes, they have faded into air, thin air.
-
-“Our adieus to Inez were weepingly paid, and we saw her depart with our
-teacher; he promised to send us an account of her debut, and kept his
-word. A few months subsequently a literary Gazette was sent to Madame,
-who, after reading it, showed it to us; a paragraph, marked with ink,
-indicated an eulogium upon the personal appearance, and exquisite voice,
-of the beautiful young cantatrice, Mademoiselle Inez Fontana. She had
-made her debut at Berlin: this was a Berlin newspaper. How delighted she
-must feel at her triumph. For the first time, it occurred to me that it
-must be a fine thing to have the world’s applause. Blanche and myself
-were pleased at her success; almost as well pleased as we would have
-been at our own. One is generally gratified at hearing of a friend’s
-celebrity; it flatters our self-love, since it is _our_ friend who has
-obtained renown.
-
-“The days and weeks, and months, still sped onward. At first, the loss
-of Inez seemed almost irreparable; in all our amusements we had always
-formed a little party among ourselves, now our ‘set’ was broken, and we
-missed her joyous ways; different to my beloved, confiding Blanche; she
-was apparently more impassioned, but in reality less so; there was an
-under-current of strong, deep feeling, in the disposition and character
-of my fair-haired favorite, her more volatile companion never possessed.
-
-“At length Blanche also was removed by M. Belmont, and I was left alone;
-rumors of her success, and of the popularity Inez had acquired, often
-reached me in my retirement from the busy scenes, in which they now
-occupied so conspicuous a position, and I felt happy in knowing that
-they were admired; and morning and evening, when I knelt in prayer, with
-my heart filled with devotion towards that one all-wise, all-creative
-Influence, I never failed to breathe a prayer for their future happiness
-and prosperity.
-
-“My own turn came next, four years after; the time had dragged along
-drearily since the departure of my two friends, and I longed to go;
-eight years had now elapsed since my advent at the institution. I had
-perfected myself in three languages, all of which I could speak fluently,
-and translate well. Madame Deville, and dear Madame Schiller, were both
-tenderly attached to me, and I bore toward each the most respectful
-regard.
-
-“‘I trust, my dear Genevra,’ said Madame Deville to me one day, as I sat
-in her room, making for her some wax flowers; ‘now that you are about to
-be removed from my protection, I most fervently trust that you will ever
-bear in mind the principles of integrity and truth, with which I have
-ever endeavored to inspire you; and never, I beg of you, allow yourself
-to be deceived by the skilful tongue of flattery. A beautiful actress
-is invariably exposed to many temptations, which other women, occupying
-a more private position in life, are seldom subjected to; you possess
-accomplishments, and personal attractions, which will procure you the
-admiration of men, and the envy of women; but if you pursue a virtuous
-course in life, and place your trust in God, I doubt not you will be
-rewarded.’
-
-“‘I hope I shall ever remain true to the principles of honor and virtue,
-which have been taught me by you, Madame, since I have been your pupil,’
-I responded. I admired and respected my good preceptress; but her
-knowledge of life had been circumscribed, during twenty-five years, to
-the narrow limits of her school. She drew her conclusions of what the
-world ought to be from her own thoughts, and she supposed that honesty
-and virtue are ever rewarded, because she had read in some half-dozen
-moral novels I had seen her peruse, that such was the case. Had she
-mingled in the gay vortex of society, she would have seen that unblushing
-assurance, combined with knavery, passes with the multitude for genuine
-talent; that unassuming merit is never appreciated, and generally
-descends to the tomb unsought for, and unknown. All these things I
-learned from experience; a harsh, yet at the same time a just master; the
-only one, perhaps, who can practically convince us of the truth of an
-hypothesis.
-
-“‘My child,’ suddenly exclaimed Madame, ‘you are composing a
-parti-colored lily: I want a white one.’
-
-“In fact, absorbed in thought and dreams of the future, I had arranged a
-lily of red, blue and white leaves; I smiled at the odd effect and began
-another.
-
-“‘Monsieur Belmont informed me, the other day, that he intended taking
-you to Naples, to make your first appearance there at the San Carlo,’
-observed Madame, as she turned a page of the book she was reading.
-
-“‘Ah! indeed,’ for this was unexpected news. ‘I thought I was going to
-rejoin Inez and Blanche; I should like to be with them.’
-
-“‘I thought so too, but it seems not; neither are they with each other at
-present. Inez still performs at Berlin, where, it seems, she is a great
-favorite; and Blanche is at Munich; the journals speak of her as warbling
-like a nightingale. It scarcely seems four years since she left us; you
-were all dutiful, obedient pupils, and have done honor to the school by
-your great musical talents.’
-
-“Madame closed her book, and left the room; I laid the bouquet of wax
-flowers which I had just completed, upon a table, and rose to go also;
-as I did so, my eyes unconsciously rested upon the enormous mirror, in
-which eight years ago, I had seen my tiny person reflected, the first day
-I came to school. I again saw myself reflected on its smooth surface;
-instead of a small, delicate child, I beheld a well developed girl, whose
-long hair fell in ringlets to her waist; the expression of her features
-was thoughtful, almost sad. While gazing upon this inanimate image of
-myself, I fell into a reverie; every little incident that had ever
-happened, during my long residence at the house, seemed to be vividly
-revived by memory. I looked around upon the parlor and its furniture; I
-wished to impress the appearance of that room upon my mind, that I might
-be able to recall it, perhaps for my amusement; at some future day. I
-was going into the world, to enter into a new sphere of life, among new
-faces, and new scenes. Inez and Blanche had before this been initiated
-into its mysteries; perhaps too, they had changed and become women of the
-world, but I trusted not.
-
-“The loud ringing of the bell, which was always rung at twilight, to
-assemble the pupils for study, aroused me, and I joined my companions.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-
-“The following day I departed, Madame Deville kissed me several times,
-and warmly embraced me. She seemed to feel more regret at parting from
-me, than I had seen her manifest upon the similar occasions of bidding
-adieu to Inez and Blanche; for myself, I felt sorry to leave, and yet
-glad to go. To spend one’s existence in an automaton-like performance of
-fixed rules, laid down for us by others, is surely not a life of action;
-and action is the object and purpose of our being, that each should bear
-his share of the joys, cares, and responsibilities of existence, is
-evidently the intent of our being sent upon earth.
-
-“Monsieur Belmont placed me in the hackney coach, which was to take us
-to the post-house, whence we took the diligence, to one of the principal
-towns on the road to Naples; my luggage was strapped on behind; my
-teacher placed himself by my side and closed the carriage door; the
-driver cracked his whip and we started. As I heard the rumbling of
-the coach wheels on the rough stones of the pavement, a feeling of
-loneliness, of isolation, stole over me. I, a simple schoolgirl, had left
-the abode of years, and was about to be cast forth upon that great chaos,
-the world; still I hoped that the invisible hand of some angel-guardian,
-would guide me safely through the dark clouds of obscurity, even unto the
-bright sun of the most perfect day. Since that day I have travelled over
-half the inhabited world, but I never experienced a sadder feeling, than
-on the day I bade farewell to the boarding-school at Vienna.
-
-“It was a sweet morning in the month of May. Inez had left us in the
-summer time, Blanche, when autumn’s yellow leaf strewed the ground;
-but a fresh spring day heralded my departure. The brisk trot at which
-we travelled soon carried us beyond the suburbs of the city, and the
-magnificent metropolis of the Austrian empire, its monuments, splendid
-churches, beautiful gardens, and glorious works of art, were left behind.
-My eyes dwelt upon them admiringly, as they gradually receded from my
-view; I was proud of the country, and place of my nativity; and in that
-great city I had lived for so many years, and yet was as ignorant of
-its gayeties, its vices and its crimes, as any poor countryman from the
-neighboring mountains.
-
-“Our road lay along a fertile plain, bordered on the right by a lofty
-chain of mountains, on the left a small stream ran gurgling by; the
-gentle murmur of its waters sounded like the regular sonorous breathing
-of a sleeping child. Monsieur pulled out of his pocket a newspaper, and
-went to reading politics. It was evident that beautiful scenery had no
-charms for him. He left me undisturbed to my meditations, and I followed
-them; I looked down on the long green grass at my feet, interspersed
-with wild flowers, and I looked up at the blue heavens above my head,
-traversed here and there by fleecy white clouds, and I felt thankful
-to the beneficent Creator of all things, that he had placed me in so
-beautiful a world. I glanced across the plain at the lofty dark blue
-mountains, and then turned to the opposite side, where groves of tall
-poplars and graceful lindens waved their dark green foliage in the
-sunshine.
-
-“Gradually, as we journeyed on, the scene changed; the plain was
-distanced, and we ascended a hill and rode through a thick forest. I
-listened to the mournful cooing of the doves, the chirping of the birds,
-and the hollow sound of the breeze, as it whistled through the trees;
-the snake glided through the brushwood and vanished at our approach, and
-the deer ran startled away, little partridges ran about on the ground,
-calling each other in the unintelligible language of the brute creation.
-I enjoyed everything I saw with that untarnished freshness of feeling,
-the attribute of early youth. Man becomes accustomed to anything, and
-everything, and a continued repetition of the same thing, even if it be
-beautiful, becomes tiresome. To love or appreciate a person or thing
-long, we must throw around it, or them, an air of mystery, of reserve,
-for undisputed possession sooner or later brings satiety. Poor frail
-human nature! why is it, destined child of dust, that thou canst only
-love ardently while the object of thy passion is unattained? A lover
-will run all risks, do anything to obtain his mistress; yet when once
-his own, grow weary of her in a month; the fervor of his passion will
-cool down to positive indifference, sometimes degenerate into neglect or
-personal abuse.
-
-“Monsieur still sat coning over the news; he had journeyed that road
-a hundred times before, and consequently did not care for trees, nor
-flowers, nor green grass. Towards evening the driver drew up before the
-door of a small, dirty-looking post-house, situated in a deep ravine,
-surrounded by steep precipices; a waterfall ran bounding down the rocks,
-with a wild, musical sound. The situation was picturesque and grand;
-two women, upon their knees, on the edge of the stream, washing their
-clothes, chatted to each other, and their faces wore the expression of
-smiling content. Upon the steps of the house sat a beautiful girl, sewing
-some ribbonds together; on which she was placing glass beads of different
-colors. She smiled to herself as she did so, probably anticipating the
-effect this piece of rustic finery would have upon the heart of some
-village lover. A princess, while contemplating a tiara of diamonds, could
-not have felt happier than did this cottage girl with her head-dress of
-ribbonds. There is something charming in nature, and in rural life; it
-is so natural, so pure, so unalloyed by the manœuvering, the hypocrisy,
-the turmoil of social existence; it is the primitive state of being our
-first parents led, and to its peaceful shades has many a hackneyed man
-and woman of the world returned, as a tired child to its mother’s arms,
-to seek for peace and repose.
-
-“After waiting sometime the diligence made its appearance; we got into
-it, ourselves the only passengers, and the carriage returned from whence
-it came; the postillion winded his horn as we flew rapidly away. We
-followed the course of the Danube; it was a dark night, the sky only
-illumined by the stars; I could not obtain a distinct view of this
-majestic river, still as we rolled along upon its beautiful banks, I
-thought of the lessons I had so often repeated about the invasion of the
-Goths and Vandals, and how they had crossed the great river on their way
-to Rome.
-
-“Our journey occupied the space of four days; we travelled without
-stopping, and long before we reached Naples, my strength was nearly
-exhausted from fatigue. When the boundaries of Italy were passed, and we
-had entered upon the fertile plains of Tuscany, my eyes dwelt delighted
-on all they saw. The peasantry in their fanciful costume, the blooming
-vineyards, and pretty cottages, all, by turns, enraptured me. Monsieur
-Belmont sometimes talked to me about Naples and my future career;
-sometimes read the everlasting newspapers, in which he seemed to take so
-lively an interest, and sometimes dozed away the time.
-
-“We passed several beautiful villas, and fine plantations; in the latter,
-numerous male and female peasants were at work in the fields. Their
-care-worn faces, begrimed with sweat and dirt, bearing testimony to the
-labor they performed; from my heart I most sincerely pitied them. To
-stand for hours under the burning heat of the sun digging, ploughing, and
-gathering the grape when harvest-time arrived, could be no enviable task;
-the women were frightful, the sun had turned their naturally dark skins
-to a copper hue; their short petticoats exposed their sinewy legs and
-bare feet, large and ugly, from never having been compressed in shoes.
-They scarcely looked like human beings, and my gaze wandered quickly away
-in search of more romantic objects to dwell upon.
-
-“We stopped an hour at Pisa to dine; and as everything is hurry and
-confusion at an Italian Inn, upon the advent of a stranger, Monsieur,
-learning that our dinner would not be ready for a quarter of an hour,
-took me down the street to look at the celebrated Leaning Tower of Pisa.
-We paused before its graceful front, and I looked up at the eight tiers
-of white marble arches, each different from the other in architecture,
-and each beautiful. We ascended to its summit by a circular stairway,
-which wound round and round within the building, till my head became
-confused; from the top I obtained a fine view of this ancient, and once
-powerful city. I looked down upon its broad, well-paved, but almost
-deserted streets, and recalled the warlike days of the republic. The
-tranquil Arno still ran swiftly past, as it did then; the plain on which
-the town stands was just as smiling and lovely, as in the days of yore,
-but the spirit of enterprise and commerce, which had once animated and
-enriched this classic town, had forever passed away.
-
-“Dinner was ready when we returned. The excitement of the journey, and
-visit to the Leaning Tower, had almost deprived me of appetite, but
-my teacher made amends for my bad taste, by eating with the greatest
-voracity; he seemed to wonder at my indifference to the viands set before
-us.
-
-“‘Why don’t you eat, child,’ he suddenly demanded, while masticating some
-oranges, ‘are you not hungry? I should think you would be after such a
-long ride; you had better eat something, for you will need nourishment
-before we stop again.’
-
-“‘I don’t want anything to eat at present, sir,’ I answered, ‘and I have
-some biscuits in my pocket; if I feel hungry, I can eat them.
-
-“Once more we were off; we now had company, in the shape of two Italians,
-young students from one of the universities of Pisa, returning home to
-Naples; they were handsome, talkative young men. The usual civilities
-having been mutually exchanged, Monsieur and they soon became involved in
-a long political discussion, interesting, I have no doubt, to them, but
-tiresome enough to me, since we take but little interest in that which
-we do not understand. Their conversation was sustained, apparently with
-much animation on both sides, for some hours. Monsieur Belmont talked
-well, he had seen a great deal of society, in all its different phases,
-and was a perfect man of the world; he did not look upon it with the same
-feeling of satiety, with which a _roué_ views this fair earth; he had not
-the refinement, the elegance of mind necessary to form that character;
-his was merely the worldliness of a business-like mind. The young men
-with whom he conversed, were evidently inexperienced and unsophisticated;
-their views of life, and society in general, were certainly more
-theoretical than practical.
-
-“It was the fourth day of our journey, we were rapidly approaching the
-enchanting Parthenope, the far-famed Eldorado of Italy. Already I could
-see the distant summit of Vesuvius, vomiting forth clouds of smoke. The
-majestic castle of San Elmo, upon the hill, and that of Castle Nuovo,
-by the harbor, looked like two faithful sentinels, watching over their
-beloved city. Innumerable vessels, from all quarters of the globe, and of
-all sizes and shapes, rode quietly upon the azure bosom of the beautiful
-harbor. The domes and spires of its gothic churches rose high in air,
-glittering in the sunshine. The character of the scenery had changed as
-we neared the town; the dense, gloomy forests of Austria, and the wild
-mountainous scenery of northern Italy, had given place to the rocky,
-volcanic soil, and level plains of the environs of Naples, adorned with
-grapevines and fruit trees, while far away in the distance I saw the
-dark-blue tops of the Appenines. Well may the Neapolitan exclaim, with
-patriotic ardor, ‘See Naples and die;’ he thinks it a piece of heaven
-fallen upon earth, the garden spot of the world, and, with justice, may
-he cherish this opinion.
-
-“The coach horses dashed down the hill leading into the city, as if the
-prince of darkness was at their heels, dragging the diligence after them
-at furious speed. Our travelling companions left us as we entered the
-gates; and after dashing through the fashionable thoroughfare, the street
-called Toledo, the postillion drove in various directions, up one street,
-and down another; now through broad, handsome streets, now through dirty
-crooked lanes, until at length, he stopped before the door of a cottage,
-built in gothic style, of gray stone; it faced upon a quiet, pretty
-piazza, adorned with trees and flowers. Honeysuckle, myrtle and cypress
-vine, hung gracefully around the latticed windows of this sylvan abode. I
-wondered where my guardian was taking me to.
-
-“At the noise of the coach wheels, the street door opened, and a woman
-who had once been handsome, but whose interesting countenance now bore
-the traces of age, attired in gray silk, stood upon the threshold. She
-bowed and smiled to Monsieur as the diligence drew up; he undid the coach
-door, jumped out, assisted me to do the same, and then presented her to
-me as Madame Bonni.
-
-“‘This is my little protegee, Madame, whom I wrote you I should bring
-on to Naples this year to make her debut; we have had a long, and dusty
-travel from Vienna.’
-
-“‘I am delighted to see you, my friend, and you also, my child; but pray
-enter my parlor, and I will order refreshments for you; you must feel
-very much fatigued after so long a journey.’
-
-“The good lady took my hand and led me into her parlor. Monsieur, after
-giving some directions to the servants about the luggage, followed also.
-It was really a fairy little room, hung with fine paintings on the
-walls, damask curtains at the windows, several marble statues placed on
-pedestals, while a melodious musical box, and a beautiful canary bird in
-a cage, seemed to vie with each other in harmony. I took a seat near a
-window, the lady sat opposite me, and Monsieur threw himself on a sofa,
-and complained of the hot weather and trouble of travelling.
-
-“‘So this is the young lady who sings so splendidly; but I understood
-that you had three protegees to bring out: where are the other two?’
-inquired the lady, after having attentively surveyed me for a moment.
-
-“‘This one is the youngest of the three; they were all educated at the
-same school together—Madame Deville’s, at Vienna—but Inez and Blanche
-completed their education first, being the oldest, and have been
-performing four or five years. Inez is making a fortune for herself at
-Berlin, and Blanche I left at Munich.’
-
-“‘I should like to hear the young lady sing, if she will oblige me with
-a song; I have a fine piano here.’ She crossed the room, uncovered an
-enormous German instrument, and ran her fingers over the keys.
-
-“‘Certainly my pupil will be happy to do so,’ said my teacher, answering
-for me. ‘She has no need to be afraid of singing: her voice is
-magnificent; she will make the greatest singer of the day. Come, Genevra,
-sing something from Norma for my friend.’
-
-“I placed myself at the piano; I was confident of my own abilities, and
-therefore felt no hesitancy in complying with the request. I chose an air
-from Norma, and sang it. I recollected many years before how astonished
-I had been at the power and compass of Blanche’s voice, but now my own
-tones far excelled hers. I was almost surprised at myself, as I rose from
-the piano.
-
-“‘Magnificent!’ cried the lady, ‘I never heard such a voice, not even
-among our best songstresses; so much sweetness and power combined; she
-will make a great sensation in our city, when she makes her appearance.’
-
-“Monsieur smiled; he looked pleased, but said nothing; I presume he was
-afraid of spoiling me by too much praise. At this moment, a domestic
-entered, bearing a tray of refreshments, and conversation for the moment
-was postponed.
-
-“Madame took me into her pretty garden, and showed me her birds and
-flowers. She gathered me a bouquet of choice flowers, which I afterwards
-placed in water. When I went to my room at night, she told me she was the
-widow of an Italian army officer, and now lived upon an annuity paid her
-by government; she never had any children, and felicitated herself upon
-my visit, as that of a companion and friend. She was not intellectual,
-nor pretty now, but kind-hearted and sincere, and sincerity and goodness
-are certainly attractive. I did not in return confide to her the details
-of my childhood, for I could not have done so without humbling myself in
-my own, and in her esteem, and my pride would not allow me to do that,
-but I spoke on general subjects; of the city, its beautiful scenery, and
-splendid buildings, and of the beauty of the peasantry I had seen as I
-journeyed toward it. On these subjects the enthusiastic Italian was at
-home, for the Neapolitans are desperately enamoured of their own lovely
-land. We passed an hour in pleasant conversation, then returned to the
-parlor, where tea was served; my teacher favored us with a song; he sang
-magnificently; and I also sang a duet with him, which elicited Madame’s
-raptures. At ten o’clock, we retired to rest, I felt almost worn out
-with fatigue; the lady conducted me up stairs, to a neat little chamber
-opposite her own.
-
-“‘I hope this room will suit you,’ said the kind-hearted woman, as she
-followed me into it; ‘if you want anything, pray ring the bell and my
-servant will attend you; I know you must long to go to rest, after so
-long a journey, so I will not tire you by conversation. Good night, my
-child.’
-
-“‘Good night,’ I replied. The door closed, and I was left alone; I set
-my little lamp in the fire-place, and after I had undressed and repeated
-the rosary, I stepped into the pretty bed, draperied with white, and drew
-its curtains close around me. I could scarcely realize that I was not in
-Madame Schiller’s dormitory; and, at dawn, I started suddenly from my
-slumber, imagining I heard her voice calling the girls to rise. Finding
-myself wide awake, I thought I would get up, and did so; all was quiet in
-the house, no one stirring; faint hues of morning sun were rising slowly
-in the East. I heard the sound of deep, sonorous breathing, as I passed
-a door at the head of the stairs, which I justly concluded were the
-nocturnal tones of my guardian. I went into the parlor, and finding on a
-table an interesting novel, took it in my hand, and sought the garden;
-under a wide-spreading Acacia tree, I sat down upon a rustic bench; I
-saw an old female domestic making a fire in the kitchen, and beginning
-to prepare breakfast; I looked at her as she moved about, and wondered
-if I should ever live to become as old and ugly as she; if my cheeks,
-now so round and firm, should become shriveled and hanging like pieces
-of dried skin; my form, attenuated and hideous; my hair turn gray and
-fall out, and my eyes watery and blinking, like those of a sick lap-dog;
-yet it was natural to suppose, that in the course of nature all those
-things would come to pass. We see those who have once been handsome and
-intellectual, grow ugly, old, and stupid; their beauty fades away like
-a fleeting dream; their intellect declines with the vigor of body which
-supported it. If mind is soul, and if the soul is immortal, should we
-not reasonably suppose, that this etherial principal would preserve
-itself bright and untarnished from the gathering gloom of years; that
-time, instead of dimming, would only add new glories to its spiritual
-splendor; but these thoughts were then too metaphysical for my youthful
-comprehension.
-
-“While thus I mused, the sun had risen high, and his bright rays fell
-across the gravel walk where I sat; I heard footsteps in the vestibule,
-and looking up, saw Madame Bonni attired in a white muslin wrapper; she
-perceived me, and came into the garden.
-
-“‘Why, my child, you are indeed an early riser,’ was her morning
-salutation; ‘I expected you would sleep late after your journey; but you
-look refreshed, and I am happy to see it.’
-
-“‘At school, we always rose at dawn of day; from habit, I awake early,
-and prefer spending the sweet morning hours in reading, rather than waste
-them in slumber.’
-
-“‘You are right in doing so; when I was young I was fond of reading
-too, but since I have advanced in life, its busy cares have banished
-literature and romance from my mind.’
-
-“The old woman whom I had observed, now came to her mistress, and
-announced that breakfast was ready; I followed Madame to the dining-room;
-we sat down to a comfortable breakfast, served with exquisite neatness.
-Monsieur joined us in a few minutes: he was yawning, and expressed
-himself as feeling very dull; and, in fact, his appearance fully
-corroborated the assertion.
-
-“After breakfast, I accompanied him to the San Carlo Opera house, where
-he took me, he said, that I might see the actors rehearse, and observe
-stage trick and manner. Since then I have seen tricks enough played off
-upon the stage of life, independent of the drama. We need not go to the
-theatre to see actors and actresses. We ascended through the basement
-story, the passage obstructed by old rubbish, stage furniture, to the
-green-room—a miserable looking apartment, draperied with green baize;
-several actors and actresses stood in groups, conversing, in their
-ordinary dress; I looked out behind the scenes; I saw on all sides the
-rough boards of the theatre, and the large open spaces through which
-the actors went upon the stage, and the scenes were shifted backward
-and forward; everything looked unfinished and bare, it looked like the
-skeleton frame of a house, and in no way realized my romantic visions of
-a theatre. Several of the actors held Opera books in their hands, which
-they appeared to be studying; Monsieur went around the room, bowing, and
-shaking hands with all, receiving, and paying compliments in return.
-
-“‘Ah, my dear fellow,’ exclaimed a tall, dark-complexioned man, seizing
-him by the arm, ‘when did you arrive? Glad to see you among us again. I
-did not expect to see you for a year to come; thought you intended going
-to Paris to perform. I was at Munich a few weeks ago, where I heard of
-the brilliant success of a protegee of yours, a Mademoiselle Blanche
-Ricorsi; I went several nights to see her play; a beautiful girl, she
-sings divinely.’
-
-“‘And here is another pupil of mine,’ said Monsieur, drawing me toward
-him, ‘whom I intend shall astonish the fashionable world of Naples.’
-
-“‘Ah, Mademoiselle, charmed to see you; hope you will do credit to so
-distinguished a preceptor; you must sing something for me this morning;
-I should like to hear your style of voice; we are now going in to
-rehearsal. Come, ladies and gentlemen, are you ready? Allow me to escort
-you, Mademoiselle.’
-
-“With French politeness and volubility, he offered me his arm; at
-that time, unacquainted with the ways and usages of society, I felt
-momentarily surprised; but mechanically I accepted it, and the others
-following behind, we stepped out upon the stage; it was an enormous
-platform, and I felt, and looked, almost like a little child, as I walked
-across its smooth boards. I wondered how I should feel when I should be
-the most conspicuous object on that floor, when I should see before me
-those successive walls of human faces, so terrifying to a novice,—the
-eyes of all bent upon me.
-
-“The actors walked toward the front of the stage; part of the orchestra
-was in the musicians’ box, and accompanied their voices with instrumental
-music; they were rehearsing for Norma; some of the voices were sweet and
-thrilling, others grated harshly on my ear. The woman who was to perform
-the part of Norma, was neither young nor pretty: she did not look the
-beautiful stately priestess. The man who was cast for the character of
-Polelio, was as ugly a person as one need wish to see. I stood leaning
-against one of the side scenes and listened to them as they ran through
-the Opera. When ended, the French manager requested me to sing a song,
-which he chose. I felt somewhat diffident at exhibiting my voice before
-so many strangers. I wished to refuse, but a look from Monsieur Belmont,
-which spoke a command, changed my purpose, and I complied. I began almost
-falteringly at first, but gathering courage as I went on, I forgot those
-who were listening to me, and became absorbed in the sentiment of the
-song. I think I can say without egotism, that I sang well; when I had
-ceased the manager approached with a surprised air:
-
-“‘Good heavens! Mademoiselle, you are a perfect nightingale, your high
-notes are exquisite; I shall be proud to constitute you prima donna of my
-troupe, when you are ready to appear; you must have applied yourself with
-unceasing assiduity to have formed your voice.’
-
-“‘I have been learning for six or eight years past, under the tuition of
-Monsieur Belmont.’
-
-“‘Your execution has indeed astonished me, in one so young; and I was
-equally amazed when I heard Blanche, another pupil of my friend’s, sing
-at Munich.’
-
-“‘How is Blanche now? is she well? is she happy?’
-
-“‘You know her, then?’
-
-“‘Oh yes, we were educated at the same school.’
-
-“‘I cannot answer you in regard to her happiness; but she looks
-beautiful, and sings like a bird.’
-
-“‘Did you ever see my other friend, who was also a pupil of Monsieur’s,
-Inez Fontana?’
-
-“‘A year ago, I saw her at Dresden; she left the following day to fulfil
-an engagement at Berlin; she is a charming woman, handsome, dark; has a
-deep, sweet, sonorous voice, but not the power or execution of yourself
-or Blanche. There was a rumor afloat in town of her being about to marry
-and leave the stage; it may be only report, however; I cannot vouch for
-its truth.’
-
-“‘It would seem very strange to me, to see my old school mate married.’
-
-“‘Why, is it not natural to suppose, that a handsome young woman, with a
-good reputation, should marry, and make some worthy man happy?’
-
-“‘It is natural that women in private life should do so, but actresses
-seldom do.’
-
-“‘But when they have the opportunity, should they not embrace it?’
-
-“I was about to reply, when my teacher, having finished his
-confabulations with his acquaintances, approached me.
-
-“‘Well, my friend,’ cried he, ‘what do you think of my little pupil, I
-see you have been conversing with her?’
-
-“‘I am afraid Mademoiselle would think I flattered her, if I spoke my
-real sentiments,’ answered the gallant Frenchman, with his hand upon his
-heart.
-
-“Monsieur laughed; for compliments seemed to him, as they always seemed
-to me, mere nonsense; things which are said without being felt, and
-therefore valueless. The actors had now all left the stage; after
-inviting his old friend to call upon him, Monsieur and myself returned
-home.
-
-“I pass over the space of four months, during which time, I was occupied
-in learning the part of Norma; my preceptor gave me lessons every day
-in acting, in a large unoccupied room, Madame Bonni appropriated to my
-use for that purpose; determined to succeed, I studied with ardor and
-assiduity, until at length, I perfected myself in my part, to his and my
-own complete satisfaction.
-
-“It was the night of my appearance: large placards announcing that fact,
-with my name printed upon them in immense capitals, had been posted
-in front of the theatre for several days previous; Monsieur said they
-anticipated a crowded house. I had been in a state of feverish excitement
-all day, which increased rather than diminished as evening drew near;
-the costume of Norma I had prepared sometime before, and sent it to my
-dressing-room at the theatre to await my coming. Madame Bonni, desirous
-of hearing me sing, had engaged seats in one of the stage boxes for
-herself and a gentleman friend.
-
-“‘You do not feel apprehensive of a failure, do you, Genevra?’ asked
-my teacher, as he, Madame, and myself, sat conversing together in the
-parlor, in the afternoon.
-
-“‘Not in the least, sir; I feel perfectly confident of success.’
-
-“‘I am glad to hear you say so; I hope you will make a sensation; if you
-feel self-possessed, you will act so, and consequently succeed. I expect
-Blanche here in a few weeks to fulfil an engagement, and then you can
-sing together.’
-
-“‘Is Blanche coming to Naples? how glad I shall be to see her again, and
-Inez, does she never come here to play?’
-
-“‘Inez has often sang here since she left your school; you know it is six
-years ago; but she generally prefers playing, alternately at Dresden or
-Berlin, where she is extremely popular.’
-
-“‘Is it true, what the manager told me, that she thought of marrying, and
-leaving the stage?’
-
-“‘I am not conversant with any of her matrimonial plans; you can ask
-Blanche when she arrives; I presume they are each other’s confidants.’.
-
-“Monsieur resumed his conversation with Madame about old times, and I
-went to my favorite seat in the garden, to while away the time till
-six o’clock. The air was soft and balmy; the delightful sea breeze,
-which blows off the coast every morning and evening, was now refreshing
-the air; under that clear, tropical sky, everything looks beautiful;
-the flowers seem to be of brighter hue; the turf more verdant; the
-people happier, than under those cold northern climes, where the bleak
-winters, and cloudy skies, seem to chill and contract men’s souls.
-The kind-hearted Neapolitan lives only in the present; he enjoys the
-pleasures of to-day without thinking of the future; he is willing to
-share what little he has, with any fellow creature less plentifully
-endowed than himself; and is it not better to live and feel thus, than to
-spend one’s lifetime in amassing treasures, which, when we die, we are
-obliged to leave for others to enjoy; since nothing is truer than that,
-man brings nothing into the world with him, neither can he carry anything
-away. Death is a market place where all men meet; the king, noble, and
-peasant, are all equal, when they meet in the bosom of mother earth. As
-I soliloquized, twilight gathered upon the face of things animate and
-inanimate; it is charming to watch the shades of evening gray descend
-upon a land like that; to see the mellow hues of dusk come slowly on, and
-the bright sun disappear, till finally they fade away into indefinite
-night. I should have liked to have staid and watched the sky, but
-Monsieur called me; it was time to go, he said; in fact, I had actually
-forgotten all about my theatrical engagement.
-
-“I went to my room and put on my bonnet and shawl, we got into a hack and
-drove off; Madame would not come for an hour, as the curtain did not rise
-till half-past seven.
-
-“Entering, as I had done before, through the basement, my teacher went
-to the green-room, where many of the actors were already assembled, and
-I to my dressing-room, passing on the way numerous princes, grand dukes,
-and nobles; who, like too many of their titled brethren, could boast no
-other wealth than the insignia of their order. They all stared at me as I
-hurried past them; curious, I suppose, to observe the new singer.
-
-“I quickly arrayed myself in the long white robes, and mysterious girdle
-of the priestess; scarcely had I completed my toilet, when there came a
-knock at the door: I opened it, and saw the manager.
-
-“‘Are you ready, Mademoiselle? It is time to go on; you know the part
-perfectly, do you not?’ he continued, as we approached the side scene,
-where I was to enter.
-
-“‘Perfectly, Monsieur. Entertain no apprehensions on my account.’
-
-“The gentleman smiled, bowed, released my arm, and I entered alone. I saw
-an immense crowd of human faces and forms before me; the house presented
-a brilliant array of fashion and beauty; the light of the chandeliers
-was dazzling; far from feeling intimidated, I felt perfectly at home. I
-had been fearful lest I should forget my notes, but they remained firmly
-impressed on my mind; a tumult of applause shook the house as I came
-forward to the foot-lights; when it had subsided I began to sing, almost
-forgetful that there was any audience there, and thinking only of my
-part. I acted naturally, and, therefore, pleasingly—for nature is ever
-pleasing. At the conclusion of the first act, a round of applause again
-greeted me; and when I went behind the scenes, Monsieur and the manager
-warmly congratulated me on my self-possession, in the song Dele Conte,
-a duet between Norma and Adelgisa; I was encored, and sang it twice;
-my cheeks were flushed like crimson, and I felt elated at my manifest
-triumph. At the conclusion of the Opera, a shower of bouquets and wreaths
-were thrown at my feet; one splendid wreath of exotic flowers, which
-struck my hand as it fell on the floor, was thrown from one of the stage
-boxes; happening to uplift my eyes, as I was singing the last song of the
-Opera, my gaze met that of a magnificent looking man, who stood quietly
-contemplating me. There was something in the magnetic attraction of those
-large languid black eyes, which sent a new thrill of life, a feeling
-I had never experienced, rushing through my veins; what could that
-inexplicable sensation mean? it was probably that man who had thrown the
-wreath at my feet. One of the actors gallantly picked it up, and placed
-it upon my head. Once more I heard myself applauded; delightful sound of
-approval, and the curtain fell.
-
-“I felt exhausted from my violent exertion of voice, and sat down in
-the green-room, while the manager fanned me, and the other actors
-complimented me. Monsieur Belmont seemed well pleased with me and
-himself, and was in his best humor.
-
-“‘You have made a decided hit, Mademoiselle,’ said my faithless husband
-of the play; ‘although you are not yet perfect in stage trick and manner,
-yet you have done wonders for the first time.’
-
-“‘I am obliged to you for the compliment, Monsieur,’ I replied.
-
-“One of the servants of the theatre came into the room, bearing an armful
-of bouquets (the beautiful wreath still remained upon my head). When
-deposited in my lap, the jewels amid the flowers sparkled in the lamp
-light. ‘What do you intend doing with all these flowers, petite enfant?’
-asked my guardian.
-
-“‘Oh, I shall carry them home to Madame Bonni, as trophies of my triumph:
-are they not beautiful, Monsieur?’
-
-“‘Yes, very beautiful; some of those jewels among them I should think
-were valuable; but it is time to depart. Let the servant carry your
-flowers to the carriage.’
-
-“The manager politely attended me to the door of the carriage, and placed
-me in it.
-
-“Madame Bonni had reached home before us, and we passed an hour in
-discussing the events of the night. Good little woman! the world still
-seemed fresh and new to her, although she had long since passed the
-zenith of life. Even so trivial a thing as a visit to a theatre could
-afford her pleasure. Happy are those, I say, who can be pleased by
-trifles. What is our whole existence but a composition of trifles?
-
-“I went to bed, but not to sleep for many hours. When I entered my room,
-and stopped before the mirror, the diamonds among the flowers of my
-wreath glistened like stars. I took it from my head, and after removing
-the jewels, and a beautiful ring hanging to it, I placed it in water with
-my bouquets. Sleep seemed to fly my eyelids. However, for long after I
-had gone to bed, the plaudits of the audience, and the languid eyes of
-the gentleman in the stage box, seemed alternately to ring in my ears,
-or swim before my eyes. At last, the angel Sleep kindly weighed down my
-eyelids with her rosy fingers, and I forgot the opera, the gentleman, and
-the bouquets.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-
-“I awoke in the morning, persuaded that it was all a fairy dream,
-when, glancing at my toilet table, I was convinced of the reality of
-my adventure, by seeing the flowers still lying where I had left them.
-I examined the jewels, and found them as radiant by daylight as they
-had been the night before, wondering at this unknown and munificent
-gift. I laid them carefully away in my dressing-case, and descended to
-the breakfast table, where I found my guardian and Madame Bonni busily
-engaged in discussing the merits of my performance; both were praising
-me—she with a woman’s impulse and enthusiasm, Monsieur in a man’s quiet,
-reasoning way.
-
-“‘How do you feel after last night’s effort?’ inquired the gentleman.
-
-“‘Very well, sir, but rather fatigued,’ I answered.
-
-“‘How sweet you looked in the last act, my dear; those white lace robes
-were so becoming to you; and when the flowers were thrown on the stage,
-and the actor placed that superb wreath upon your head, I thought the
-effect exquisite,’ observed Madame, with feminine admiration of dress.
-
-“‘I am glad you were pleased with me.’
-
-“‘You sing again to-night, do you not, in the same opera?’
-
-“‘Yes, for five nights in Norma.’
-
-“‘I should like to see the morning journals, to know what they say of
-you.’
-
-“‘So should I,’ said Monsieur, as he rose from the table; ‘and as it is
-unnecessary for you to attend rehearsal this morning, I will go out and
-look in the newspapers, to see what is said about you, and when I return,
-bring them to you.’
-
-“He departed, and I spent the morning in practising some of my songs. At
-noon he returned, and I had the satisfaction of reading a long panegyric
-on my personal appearance, manner, and singing. They called me the
-Austrian nightingale, a name which I was afterwards known by for many
-years. That night, I played again, to a house crowded to overflowing. The
-applause was as great as the evening previous, and flowers were again
-thrown me, but when, as on leaving the stage, I timidly glanced upward to
-the stage box, my eyes encountered, instead of the beautiful orbs which
-had enchanted me the night before, an impertinent opera-glass directed
-at my face. I felt disappointed, I scarce knew why; for what reason had I
-to suppose that the same stranger should not be there again?
-
-“A month after my first appearance, I received an invitation, through
-Monsieur Belmont, to sing at the private soiree of a lady of rank, the
-Countess Bramonti; and although the idea of being merely a singer for the
-entertainment of others, was not gratifying to my sensitive pride, still,
-to oblige my kind benefactor, who had been to me a perfect saviour, I
-consented to go. I had suddenly become the rage of Naples. ‘I awoke one
-morning,’ as a great poet has since said, ‘and found myself famous;’
-numerous gentlemen had called on me, attracted, I suppose, by rumors of
-my youth, my isolated position, and my good looks, for I can say without
-vanity that, at sixteen, I possessed personal attractions. I only repeat
-what others said, and one cannot remain long ignorant of that which is
-universally known: we seldom appreciate the value of beauty, and the
-great influence it exercises upon the minds of men, until it is on the
-decline, and then we cling to and treasure its wrecks with jealous care.
-
-“I dressed myself for the party in a white satin robe, and placed an
-artificial wreath of silver oats in my hair. I had arranged it in smooth
-bandeau, the heat of the weather rendering ringlets uncomfortable. When
-attired, I glanced at myself in the mirror, and feeling satisfied with
-my appearance, was, consequently, in a good humor; for it is said, that,
-when pleased with one’s self, one is always pleased with others.
-
-“Seeking for my gloves on the toilet table, my eyes rested momentarily on
-the withered wreath, which I still preserved. The leaves hung lifeless;
-the bright hues of the flowers had faded. Alas! poor ephemeral flowers,
-is not your brief but beautiful existence a type of woman’s life also?
-When young and lovely they are loved and cherished; led forth like
-queens to be admired and adored, every wish anticipated, every caprice
-gratified; but when Time’s rude hand has robbed these charms of their
-pristine glory, lovers gradually disappear like twinkling stars at dawn
-of day, and woman is left alone in the evening of her days, to think and
-dream over the past.
-
-“The Countess Bramonti resided in a noble mansion at the court end of
-the city. To the marble steps of this aristocratic abode our carriage
-whirled on the night of which I speak. The moon shone brightly; and as I
-stepped from it, I saw, by its light, long lines of carriages, extending
-from the house each way down the street. The liveried servants in the
-grand hall escorted me to the dressing room, where I left my hood and
-shawl. Several beautiful women, some of them of the nobility of Naples,
-were dispersed about the apartment, conversing in subdued tones, and
-arranging their dress before the long mirrors. Monsieur came for me at
-the door, and, leaning on his arm, I entered the grand hall of reception.
-At the head of this magnificent room, upon an elevated dias, covered with
-crimson velvet, stood the Countess herself, a large, finely-formed woman,
-perhaps forty years of age, becomingly dressed in full, flowing robes
-of scarlet velvet, and ostrich plumes waved majestically in her dark,
-luxuriant hair. She received me with that urbanity and politeness which
-is ever the result of good breeding, and the attribute of an elegant mind.
-
-“As I passed through the gay and apparently happy crowd of smiling,
-lovely faces, many turned to look after me; but I felt the attention my
-presence excited, was paid rather to my sudden notoriety as a cantatrice,
-than to myself. Actresses, however virtuous, proud and talented they
-may be, will always, from their false position, experience a feeling of
-humiliation when introduced in private circles of society. They see and
-feel how much more beautiful and attractive woman is when sheltered from
-the rude gaze of the world, illumining only one mansion with her beauty,
-and diffusing love and kindness only to her own family and friends.
-Such a life is evidently, both from her mental and physical formation,
-more suitable for her than the empty plaudits of a gaping mob, or that
-applause of the world which exhilarates momentarily, and leaves an aching
-void when gone. But we are all mere creatures of circumstance, and the
-noblest souls are most frequently subjected to the stings and arrows of
-outrageous fortune.
-
-“These thoughts glanced across my mind, as the gay waltzers whirled
-past me, and the fine band stationed in the gallery poured forth its
-bewitching strains of music. The Countess had descended from her
-position, and mingled in the crowd, attended by several gentlemen. As she
-swept past me, gracefully supporting the train of her dress upon her arm,
-a tall, handsome young man, of elegant bearing, who walked at her right
-hand, bent his expressive blue eyes upon me for an instant, and then
-appeared to inquire of her who I was. The lady had passed me, but she
-looked back over her shoulder, as if to ascertain of whom he spoke, and
-then whispered something in reply. He again turned, and looked at me, not
-impertinently, but observingly. Numerous persons now intervened between
-me and my lady hostess, and I lost sight of her and the gentleman. After
-several quadrilles and waltzes had been danced, the music paused for a
-while, and the Countess resumed her seat upon the throne. My guardian
-told me she wished to hear me sing. I wondered how I should sing with no
-instrument to accompany me; but that difficulty was soon solved; he led
-me through the crowd, and ascended the dias, where I saw a grand piano,
-which had been provided for the occasion. Monsieur Belmont seated himself
-at it, and I stood by his side. We sang a duet from Lucia de Lammermoor.
-I could not help observing that, during the whole song, the eyes of the
-gentleman who had been previously observing me, and who still stood by
-the Countess, were fixed upon me steadfastly—his earnest gaze almost
-annoyed me. At its conclusion, the Countess, apparently at his request,
-presented him to me as Monsieur de Serval.
-
-“‘I have, then, the pleasure of seeing our new star in the world of song;
-this is to me an unexpected pleasure,’ said the gentleman, as he inclined
-his graceful form toward me. I bowed, and my eyes fell before his; no
-reply was needed.
-
-“‘We have to-night a gay assemblage,’ he continued, ‘and yourself one
-of the fairest among us. During the last week, almost nothing has been
-talked of but your personal appearance and your exquisite voice; and I
-trust, Mademoiselle, you will confide in my sincerity, when I say that
-the reality has not disappointed my ideal expectations.’
-
-“I felt that this was an extravagant compliment, yet it was so
-delicately, charmingly paid, I wished to accept it as truth. From early
-youth, I have ever observed physiognomy, wishing to draw conclusions
-from the countenance as to the mind, and now I attentively regarded
-Monsieur de Serval. He was tall and delicately formed; his complexion
-was fair, like my own; his eyes were large, deep blue in color, with an
-expression of pensive thoughtfulness in their silent depths. This air
-of pensiveness, almost melancholy, pervaded his whole appearance. When
-speaking, his face would suddenly be lit up with a smile; then this look
-of joyousness would as quickly die away; it was grave, severe, and gay;
-it wore all expressions, it seemed to me, all at once. He was evidently
-a singular man, different to any one I had yet seen in life; there was
-a nameless something about him different to any man in that brilliant
-assembly of rank and fashion; yet he was not by any means the handsomest
-man there. When in repose, all expression seemed to vanish from his
-face, to return as quickly when he spoke again. How many indescribable
-nothings go to form a perfect whole. During ten minutes’ conversation on
-indifferent topics, I had made up my mind that Monsieur de Serval was a
-charming person.
-
-“‘I perceive the company are wending their way to the banquet hall, will
-you allow me to escort you?’ said he, after a moment’s pause.
-
-“I assented, took his arm, and we joined the gay crowd which was pouring
-through the parted leaves of the folding doors, into the gallery; this
-gallery was elegantly adorned with statues and paintings; at the opposite
-end another folding door stood open, and we entered a superb hall. The
-choice and tastefully arranged supper, ornamented with flowers and
-festoons of gold and silver tinsel, together with the dazzling light
-of the chandeliers, the gay dresses and jewels of the guests, their
-sprightly tones of conversation, and merry laughter, all formed a bright
-and exhilarating scene.
-
-“The Countess stood at the head of one of the long tables, chatting,
-laughing to her beaux, and displaying her white teeth; while the diamond
-necklace which adorned her neck, reflected a thousand prismatic rays.
-The undulating motion of waving plumes, rich head dresses, and beautiful
-necks and arms, alternately entranced my eager gaze.
-
-“‘The Countess is looking well to-night; she is considered a fine looking
-woman, do you not think so?’ asked the gentleman, as he handed me a dish
-of ice cream.
-
-“‘Yes, she is a handsome lady.’
-
-“‘And no less benevolent and talented, than good looking.’
-
-“‘Of the two, I would prefer being talented and benevolent without
-beauty, to possessing beauty without them,’ I observed, almost
-unconsciously.
-
-“‘Ah, indeed, that is singular; young girls generally value their
-personal attractions, far above the attributes of mind.’
-
-“‘I must be very different to other women, then.’
-
-“‘One need only look at your face, and hear you speak, to perceive that,
-Mademoiselle Genevra.’
-
-“‘Different in my oddity alone, I presume.’
-
-“‘No, not in your eccentricity, but in your superiority to any girl of
-your age I have ever seen; but of course you know this, and I am merely
-repeating a trite compliment, which you will not thank me for, as you
-must have heard it a hundred times before.’
-
-“‘Indeed, you mistake me, sir, the language of compliment is entirely new
-to me; and in fact, I am a perfect novice in the world’s ways; this is my
-first appearance in the gay world, as my preceptor not long since removed
-me from the boarding-school, where I was educated, at Vienna.’
-
-“‘You say you are inexperienced in the world’s ways; well, remain so if
-you can, young lady, for they are not a desirable acquisition.’
-
-“A cloud seemed to gather over his face, as he said this; I was confirmed
-in my indefinite presentiment, that he was a singular man. We seemed to
-be conspicuous objects to the gay assembly, for the eyes of hundreds
-were directed at us; they were probably commenting and wondering, how
-the elegant man of fashion should be so pointedly attentive to an opera
-singer. I had learned a great deal within one week of active life; my
-fairy dreams were rapidly fading away; the world, I saw, was not what I
-had imagined it. I saw no where those benevolent hearts, and generous
-actions, which I had fondly dreamed of; and here, at this very ball, how
-many bitter envies, rivalries, and antipathies, were agitating the hearts
-of those very people, masked on the surface by smiles.
-
-“‘Who is that Monsieur de Serval is with?’ I heard a voice, immediately
-behind me, inquire of another.
-
-“‘Ah, do you not know the new opera singer? the Countess invited her here
-to-night to sing; do you like her voice?’
-
-“‘Yes, well enough; but do you think her beautiful?’
-
-“‘No, I do not, but every one to their fancy; the men have been raving
-about her angelic looks for the last week.’
-
-“I looked at Monsieur de Serval; a significant smile sat upon his firm
-and finely chiseled lips, and I saw by the expression of his features,
-that he had also heard this little by-play. The banquet hall gradually
-thinned of its occupants; the guests returned to the ball room; we also
-went thither. Shortly after my teacher came for me to depart.
-
-“‘Permit me to see your pupil to the carriage,’ said Monsieur de Serval,
-still retaining my hand upon his arm.
-
-“‘I am extremely obliged for the civility, Monsieur,’ answered my
-teacher. He led the way down the grand staircase, through the marble
-hall, into the street; it was late, past two o’clock; the moon had
-disappeared, and dark masses of heavy clouds overhung the deep blue vault
-of heaven. Our carriage was ordered, and while it was driving up to the
-pavement, Monsieur de Serval said to me in a low tone, my teacher being a
-little in advance.
-
-“‘I hope you will not deem me impertinent, Mademoiselle, if I ask
-permission to visit you at the house where you now stay with your
-preceptor.’
-
-“‘I should be happy to see you, Monsieur.’
-
-“‘Well then,’ said he, as he handed me into the carriage, ‘I will do
-myself the honor of calling to-morrow; good evening, Mademoiselle; good
-evening, Monsieur Belmont.’
-
-“The musical tones of his voice rang in my ears, as the carriage drove
-away.
-
-“‘It was a splendid affair, was it not, my child? and the Countess is a
-fine noble lady?’ said Monsieur, as we rattled over the stones.
-
-“‘I admire her much,’ I replied.
-
-“‘I perceive you are becoming a star here, a perfect magnet of
-attraction; every one speaks of you in praise,’ was the next observation
-of this worthy man, who was somewhat slow in making discoveries of any
-kind, unless some one else had previously enlightened him.
-
-“I made no reply to what he said; for by a train of ideas in thinking of
-Monsieur de Serval, and what he had said to me, my thoughts reverted to
-Blanche, and I wondered, and wished for her arrival in Naples; it was a
-long time since I had seen her; she must have altered much; I wondered
-if she still loved, and thought of me. My teacher had not specified any
-particular day for her arrival, but merely said, he expected her in a few
-days, or weeks. I longed for the society of some gentle one of my own
-sex. I began to perceive the brilliance, but isolated loveliness of my
-position; cut off from all social intercourse with other women; an object
-of admiration in the eyes of men; of indifference, envy, or contempt to
-women; I, therefore, longed to see my school-girl friend. Inez’s mind
-had never so well assimilated to my own; there was too much of earth
-about her; her feelings were too sensual, to suit my dreamy, abstract
-speculations of an ideal love. Visions, I then had, in those fresh
-young days of platonic sentiment, before my soul was rendered practical
-by earthly passion; still Inez had grown a fine, handsome woman; and,
-from what I had heard, notwithstanding the many temptations to which an
-actress is ever exposed, had sustained an unblemished reputation. How
-often have I seen individuals of both sexes, who possessed cultivated
-minds, personal attractions, and elegant manners; the world considered
-them irresistible; and I acknowledged, and appreciated their perfections,
-yet their fascinations never reached my heart. It is a sympathetic tone
-of mind which mutually attracts us; for does not every one think the
-object they love beautiful? ‘Beauty is only in the gazer’s eye;’ and
-the vanity of human nature induces us to believe that the object of our
-preference must be charming.
-
-“In the afternoon of the following day, as I sat alone in the parlor,
-Madame Bonni being employed in domestic affairs, and Monsieur gone out
-on theatrical business; Arla, a pretty female attendant of the house,
-ushered into the room Monsieur de Serval. I was sitting by the window,
-dressed in a sky blue tissue; my arms and neck bare. When he entered, I
-was amusing myself by singing to the canary bird; and the winged warbler
-hopped about his gayly gilded prison, and almost looked amazed, probably
-imagining he heard a free brother of the forest. I scarcely heard the
-light step of the gentleman, and he had already taken a seat near me, ere
-I looked around. I had unconsciously fallen into a reverie, and I presume
-my face wore an expression of sadness, for the first observation he made
-in his sweet low voice, was,
-
-“‘Your face wears a sadder expression by daylight, Mademoiselle, than it
-did last night, at the brilliant ball.’
-
-“‘That is its natural expression, Monsieur; the other was a momentary
-exhilaration.’
-
-“‘Ah, it is strange that one so young should ever feel sad; sadness
-generally comes with experience and satiety.’
-
-“‘But it seems to me that there is such a thing as living years in
-advance of time, and so I feel sometimes; an indefinite presentiment of
-unhappiness seems sometimes to hang over me, and so I have felt this
-afternoon.’
-
-“You should struggle against such feelings; they only render one morbid
-to no purpose; they make us dissatisfied with the present, and skeptical
-of the future; it only requires a slight effort of the will to overcome
-these presentiments; if you indulge in them, Mademoiselle, they will
-wither your freshness of heart, and impart to your gentle face an
-expression of gloom.’
-
-“A pause succeeded for a moment; Monsieur de Serval bit his lip, and
-looked down at the floor; he appeared to be absent in mind and thinking.
-I could not help admiring his elegant appearance, and classical face; he
-was the first handsome, accomplished man, I had ever seen, secluded for
-so many years within the walls of my school. The men I had seen there at
-the monthly exhibitions, were generally commonplace and unattractive,
-although many of them were of the nobility of Vienna. Elegance and grace
-are indeed rare attributes, and almost as rarely to be met with among the
-nobility, as among the commonalty.
-
-“How fascinating is beauty, and the winning ways some persons possess;
-how frequently it conceals a depraved heart and bad disposition. Oh,
-had I known at that moment of time, what I now know, how many days of
-sorrowful unhappiness might I have been spared the misery of enduring;
-but youth is presumptuous, self-confident, and conceited. Knowledge of
-the heart is only acquired by experience, and that generally comes too
-late to be of use to one; but let me not anticipate: everything has its
-time.
-
-“Glancing around the room, Monsieur de Serval observed the canary bird,
-who resting upon his perch, seemed to regard us attentively.
-
-“‘Is that little feathered songster yours, Mademoiselle?’
-
-“‘No, Monsieur, it is Madame Bonni’s little favorite.’
-
-“‘Madame Bonni,’ he repeated, abstractedly.
-
-“‘The lady to whom this house belongs, with whom my teacher and I board.’
-
-“‘Ah, yes, I think I recollect having seen her once; she is a pleasant
-woman, and companionable for you sometimes, I presume.’
-
-“Since my arrival she has been extremely kind and attentive.’
-
-“‘And how do you feel upon being thus suddenly brought forward, a bright
-star in the etherial world of song?’
-
-“‘The same as I did when a simple school girl; the change, although an
-agreeable variation to school monotony, has made but little alteration in
-me.’
-
-“‘You are too philosophical to allow anything to disturb your equanimity
-of mind, I suppose.’
-
-“‘I do not know that I am a philosopher; I think the elevated tone of
-mind, necessary to form such a character, is beyond my powers of thought;
-but I endeavor to take the world as I find it, and quietly glide through
-my lot in life.’
-
-“‘A wise conclusion, Mademoiselle; the very remark shows you possess
-a fine mind, and, if you follow your precepts, you will doubtless be
-as happy as any human being ever is,’ he sighed, and a cloud seemed
-to gather over his face. It struck me that he possessed himself a
-considerable share of that morbidness of feeling, which he had a moment
-before criticised and reproved in me; he seemed melancholy; perhaps, I
-thought, he has been slighted in love; women invariably attribute any
-sadness of look or manner, to some affair of the heart. I have grown
-wiser since then, and now, with more truth and justice, trace back this
-depression and gloom to an abuse of the affections, and consequently
-satiety.
-
-“An alabaster vase of rare exotic flowers, stood upon a small chinese
-table, by my side; mechanically I had plucked one of the beautiful
-camilla japonicas, and was twirling it between my thumb and fore finger;
-the large blue eyes of Monsieur de Serval seemed to be attentively
-contemplating this pretty vegetable beauty.
-
-“‘I wish I were that flower, Mademoiselle,’ said he.
-
-“‘Why, Monsieur?’ I asked, rather astonished by the abrupt remark.
-
-“‘That I might experience the delight of being played with by those fairy
-fingers.’
-
-“‘I know of no enchantment by which I can metamorphose you into a flower;
-but since I cannot turn witch, at least allow me to offer you the one
-which elicited your compliment.’
-
-“Playfully, I handed him the japonica; he took it with a smile, and
-placed it in the button hole of the dark blue coat he wore.
-
-“‘I shall preserve this as a precious souvenir, Mademoiselle Genevra.’
-
-“‘A very trivial keepsake.’
-
-“‘Ah!’ he replied, ‘it is our recollection of the donor, not the absolute
-value of a gift, which endears it to our memory.’
-
-“What a just remark: how often have I treasured valueless things with
-loving care, from gratitude and love to the one who had bestowed them.
-Shortly after, Monsieur de Serval took his leave. ‘Adieu, Monsieur,’ said
-I, as he was about leaving the room, ‘a bientot.’
-
-“‘Those words, ‘a bientot,” recall “la belle France,” and old
-associations. Farewell, Mademoiselle.’ His tall and graceful form
-disappeared from my view; unconsciously, I fell into a chair, and mused
-upon the singularity of my new acquaintance, and his many fascinations,
-when Madame Bonni joined me. She appeared surprised when I told her of
-the visit of Monsieur de Serval.
-
-“‘My dear child, he is a fascinating, attractive gentleman; but do you
-know his reputation?’
-
-“‘No, he is an utter stranger to me; I was introduced to him at the
-Countess’ party. I know nothing of him.’
-
-“Well, I must tell you, to warn you against these gay men of the world,
-who are in fact not unfrequently like birds of prey; he has for many
-years been considered a profligate man of fashion; he has run through
-with a large fortune of his own, and draws largely upon an aunt of his,
-for means to support his expensive way of living. He is said to have
-squandered his money in gambling; among women of improper character; in
-horse racing, and divers other fashionable vices. Knowing your virtuous
-character, I take the liberty of cautioning you, Mademoiselle. You will
-not be offended at me, I trust, for thus speaking?’
-
-“‘On the contrary, I feel grateful for your kind admonitions; but it
-seems strange to me that so interesting and graceful a gentleman can be
-so depraved.’
-
-“‘You may depend upon my veracity, I assure you; I know this to be a
-fact; he is a man of seductive manners, and has always had the reputation
-of being eminently successful among women; and I should suppose from his
-gentle ways that he would be a favorite. I would not have mentioned this,
-but your beauty, your isolated position in life; having no protector but
-your innate sense of virtue, and Monsieur Belmont, who looks upon these
-things in a philosophical point of view, and would care little what you
-did; your great musical abilities, and the celebrity you are rapidly
-acquiring, all these conspire to render you a conspicuous object of
-pursuit to these gay men of fashion. Had I a daughter, as young, and as
-beautiful as yourself, I should wish that some matron, experienced in the
-world’s ways, might advise her of the snares of life; and, since you have
-been here, I feel toward you almost the same affection a mother feels
-for a child; you possess the sentiments and character of a lady; you
-should have been born the daughter of some noble house, in which position
-you might have passed your life in luxurious elegance, without being
-subjected to this laborious and disagreeable profession.’
-
-“I felt the truth of the good woman’s remarks, and thought upon them long
-after she had left me; still I could not consent to believe _all_ that
-she had said concerning Monsieur de Serval; perhaps he had been wild,
-most young men are, and he was yet under thirty, perhaps extravagant; but
-that he was a systematic, practised _roué_, I really could not think of
-believing. The expression of his features was so sweet, so sincere; his
-manner was so amiable; Madame might have been misinformed, or personal
-prejudice had blinded her. Thus ever do we cheat ourselves where our
-affections, or predilections are interested, we use every possible
-sophism to convince ourselves, that those whom we fancy, are everything
-our fond imaginations picture them as being; determinately closing our
-eyes and ears against facts which speak to the contrary.
-
-“I had not been to church since my arrival in Naples, so entirely had my
-new profession engrossed my attention; my conscience almost reproached
-me for this neglect of what I had been taught to consider so important
-a duty. In Naples, I perceived that religion was regarded by the higher
-classes as a matter of custom and form; few, save among the humble
-peasantry, went to church from sincere faith, or love of prayer; the
-poor, humble worms of earth, believe with blind confidence, whatever
-their priests tell them; they are generally contented and happy, amid
-the humble pursuits, the lowly joys, of their restricted sphere in life;
-and sometimes, when contemplating these unsophisticated children of
-nature, I have wondered whether they are not after all, wiser than those
-great philosophers, who propel their minds into the regions of science,
-and yet ultimately discover that we can learn nothing positive of that
-futurity, which no mortal has the ability to comprehend; no one can doubt
-but that they are happier, if not wiser than those learned skeptics,
-however humble the former, or great the latter may be; and surely
-that belief, be it Protestant or Catholic, which teaches us to bear
-patiently the misfortunes and ills of life; to confide and trust in that
-beneficent Spirit, the creator, from the beginning of time to eternity,
-of all things; that abstract and immaterial principle which we, without
-understanding, can only venerate and adore. Surely that wrapt devotion,
-that blind reliance, is better than skepticism, in which we have nothing
-to console us in regard to futurity, and yet are satisfied with our own
-conclusions.
-
-“Pardon me, my kind friend, these many digressions and reflections; yet I
-cannot forbear making them, when I recall those old days.
-
-“Madame Bonni had repeatedly invited me to attend mass with her: until
-now I had declined; but on the Sunday following the conclusion of my two
-weeks’ engagement, which had ended with much eclat for me and profit to
-my teacher, I promised to go with her to early mass, at the French church
-of Sacre Cœur.
-
-“We rose with the dawn, and together bent our steps to the house of
-prayer, which was situated perhaps half a mile from home. She attired in
-her usual dress of gray silk, wearing a mantilla, thrown over her head,
-without a bonnet. I in spotless white, a scarf of blue crape around my
-shoulders, and a white chip pamela bonnet, then in vogue. Even at that
-early hour, the streets were alive with pedestrians, summoned by the
-bells to their devotions. Splendid equipages and humble calesso’s jostled
-each other as they rattled along. Ladies, attended by their footmen,
-carrying their prayer books, passed the poor sempstress; the lady’s maid;
-the Neapolitan peasant, with her madonna-like coiffure, and classic face;
-the pretty attendants of shops, hurrying to their devotions before they
-began the business of the day; the gay, happy-looking peasant beaux,
-dressed in their holiday clothes, sauntered along; and, in contrast to
-them, the dignified, grave Italian noble, glided past with quick and
-quiet pace.
-
-“The enormous leaves of the bronze-gilt doors of the church were opened
-wide, and a crowd of devotees were entering the edifice, as we also
-went in. We walked up the great middle aisle, where, kneeling upon its
-polished marble surface, were numerous worshippers, devoutly telling
-their beads, and murmuring their prayers in whispered tones. Madame Bonni
-walked to the foot of the sanctuary, and kneeling before it, repeated
-her rosary. The bright sunlight began to cast a thousand different rays
-through the stained glass of the gothic windows. Leaning against one
-of the corinthian pillars of the centre aisle, I looked around; all was
-still as the chamber of death; the sun had not yet fully illumined the
-beautiful church; the distant corners, and niches, wherein statues were
-placed, remained in dim twilight; even the sanctuary would not have been
-clearly distinguishable, had it not been lighted by an alabaster lamp,
-suspended over the altar. The priests had not yet made their appearance,
-nor had the choir began to sing.
-
-“Near me, inlaid upon the wall, was an oblong marble tablet; and engraved
-upon it, I read the epitaph of one of the deceased cardinals of the
-church. I do not know why, but the sight of that tablet, the associations
-of time and place, the early hour of day, the solitude and silence of
-the church, brought home more vividly to my mind than I had ever felt
-before—the thought of death. I had seen grave stones and epitaphs a
-hundred times before, but had always glanced at them carelessly, without
-fully realizing that they were actually the abodes of the dead; of
-beings who, when living, had been animated with the same hopes, fears,
-and passions as myself; but who now slumbered on unheeded and unheeding.
-Yet why should we mourn for the dead, even for those we most love and
-cherish? to die in this life, is only to begin a new existence in
-some other state of being; and since we cannot penetrate beyond that
-dark abyss, the boundary of life, we must look forward with hope, and
-confidently trust in our Creator.
-
-“I had stood facing the sanctuary, and absently gazing upon it, when the
-door of the vestry opened, and the train of priests and boys entered;
-at the same moment the music began. In looking at the splendid robes
-which the priest wore, as the representative of Christ, I could not help
-recalling to mind the manner of _His_ life, who, when he was upon earth,
-had not where to lay his head. His holiness, his self-denial, his purely
-spiritual life, so poorly exemplified by the modern Italian priesthood;
-the most miserable among whom fares sumptuously every day, compared to
-the life his Master led.
-
-“The mournful chant of the officiating priest re-echoed from
-vaulted-ceiling to paved aisles, filling the empty space with the sad
-sound; and alternately the thrilling tones of the voices in the choir,
-sang the hymns of the service. Madame Bonni, in an attitude of wrapt
-devotion, her head bowed down, still knelt at the sanctuary, and I at
-the base of the pillar. A magnificent painting of the crucifixion, hung
-over the altar; and upon the inanimate image of the Divine sufferer,
-I fixed my eyes. During the service, the incense had been offered
-before the altar; the priest and boys had disappeared, bearing with
-them the consecrated host; and the last sweet cadences of the voices in
-the gallery were hushed, ere I aroused myself from my reverie. There
-was something beautifully solemn about that mass, celebrated at dawn;
-the classic interior of the church, built in the grecian style; its
-silence, the dim twilight which reigned, the sweet voices, concealed
-from view by the crimson silk curtains of the gallery, the elegant robes
-of the officiating priests and their attendants, and the grateful odor
-of frankincense and myrrh, with which the altar was perfumed, together
-formed a scene of impressive solemnity.
-
-“One by one, the people stole away; we also departed. It was now bright
-day: two hours had elapsed during mass. Madame Bonni proposed, before
-returning home, to pay a visit to the convent of Sacre Cœur, to which the
-church belonged. I willingly assented, and accompanied her.
-
-“It was an antique mass of brick, of almost shapeless form; so many
-different additions had at various times been made to the original
-edifice. The little iron-grated window, set in the middle of the strong,
-iron-barred gate, was opened by a small, thin-faced nun. She looked at
-us with a quick sharp glance; after Madame had spoken to her a moment,
-she turned away within the portal, leaving the window open, through
-which I was enabled to see the interior. It was a small anti-chamber,
-furnished with nothing, save the floor, the four walls, and three heavy
-oaken chairs, chained to the wall. After several questions had been asked
-by another nun, and responded to by the first, two or three bells rung,
-and other mysterious preliminaries gone through with, our nun devoutly
-crossed herself, and admitted us. Madame asked for the Lady Superior;
-we were conducted through several long narrow passages, to the convent
-parlor, where the nun left us, and went to summon her Superior. The room
-was small and dark, very plainly furnished with a waxed floor of dark
-wood, pictures of the saints on the walls, and an enormous crucifix in
-one corner. The chairs were chained to the walls, as in the anti-chamber;
-everything wore an air of monastic serenity. I heard the rustling of
-silk, and looking round, saw a tall, slender woman, thin, almost to
-attenuation. She wore the sombre dress of the order; the expression of
-her features was at once benevolent and austere; her eyes were blue,
-quiet, and grave; her face was of an oval form, and full; there was at
-once, shrewdness, benevolence, and sternness, all expressed and impressed
-upon that face.
-
-“She greeted Madame Bonni with cordiality; me, with politeness; in her
-right hand she carried a rosary of ivory beads, which, from time to time,
-she passed mechanically through her small white hands. Having seated
-herself upon a chair, she quietly regarded us.
-
-“‘We have called thus early, Mother Cecilia,’ began Madame, in
-extenuation of our unseasonable visit, ‘that we might obtain of you a
-permit to go through the convent on Wednesday next, my young friend being
-desirous of seeing it.’
-
-“‘Ah!’ said she, fixing her eyes upon me, ‘is she a stranger in Naples?’
-
-“‘She has been here but a short time.’
-
-“The holy mother would probably have been horrified, had she known I
-was an actress. Ah, blind bigotry of party faith, of sectarianism; ye,
-who look at the occupation, the condition in life, without regarding
-the honesty, the character, the heart; the mind’s the standard of the
-man or woman, and not the accidental contingencies of fortuitous or
-disadvantageous circumstances.
-
-“I will with pleasure give you a permit, and you need not apologise
-for the earliness of the hour, as we have long since begun the duties
-of the day; the sisters attend mass at three o’clock, in the chapel of
-the convent,’ she continued, still looking at me. ‘This young girl so
-forcibly reminds me of one of my beloved ones, who is now, I hope, in a
-state of beatitude, among the blessed around the throne of God. So great
-a resemblance do you bear to her, I almost thought when I entered, that
-it was herself revisiting earth; may I ask your name, Mademoiselle?’
-
-“‘Genevra Sfonza.’
-
-“‘Genevra,’ she absently repeated, ‘what a singular coincidence; it was
-under that name she took the veil and left the world; yes, she was a holy
-child; one of the few pure spirits which seem to emanate immediately from
-the bosom of our Heavenly Father: may she rest in peace, and her soul be
-made happy in the true faith.’
-
-“She crossed herself; her lips moved: perhaps she murmured a prayer for
-her favorite.
-
-“‘Who was the young lady of whom you spoke, mother Cecilia?’ inquired
-Madame Bonni.
-
-“‘She was Signorina Lavona Carraggi, daughter of Prince Carraggi, one of
-the oldest and noblest families in Naples: from early infancy she was
-ever pious, very attentive to her devotional exercises, and absented
-herself, as much as her high station would permit, from the vanities
-of the world: at sixteen, her father, yielding to her solicitations,
-consented she should take the white veil, which she did, but died of
-consumption within the first year of her noviciate; but although she
-is gone from us for ever, her memory still lives in the hearts of the
-sisterhood, by whom she was tenderly beloved, and with justice, too, for
-surely she was an admirable being.’
-
-“‘I heard that it was some disappointment in an affair of the heart,
-which induced the Lady Lavona to leave the world,’ observed Madame Bonni.
-
-“‘Ah, no!’ replied the Abbess, with a pious shudder at the frightful
-imputation upon the character of her deceased favorite; ‘that is mere
-report; she left the world for the solitude of the cloister, because she
-knew that its vanities and frivolities are incompatible with the practice
-of true religion, and she wished to become worthy of being the bride of
-Christ.’
-
-“‘What a mistaken notion of religion,’ thought I, as I listened;
-‘surely, the simple fact that the beneficent Creator has placed us here,
-sufficiently demonstrates that the world of society is our proper sphere
-of action, and not the seclusion and austerities of a convent.’
-
-“‘How long has the young lady been dead?’ asked Madame.
-
-“‘It is now a year ago: she died on the Eve of the Annunciation, at
-midnight; while she was expiring in her cell, the nuns were celebrating
-midnight mass in the chapel; suddenly her apparition appeared unto them,
-standing in their midst, and then as suddenly vanished away; by this
-miracle they knew that her spirit had departed, and it would seem as if,
-lingering on the verge of eternity, it came back to take a last farewell
-of that sisterhood by whom she was so much beloved. Upon going to her
-cell, I found her quite dead, sustained in the arms of the nun who nursed
-her. She is buried in the garden of the convent, and on reception days
-numerous visitors come to see her grave.’
-
-“My faith was not of sufficient india-rubber-like expansion to embrace
-the miraculous apparition; but I could easily understand and appreciate
-the fact, that the young lady had been beautiful and lovely, and that her
-death was regretted by those who knew and loved her.
-
-“After a few remarks, mutually exchanged, upon indifferent topics, the
-Superior wrote a permit for Wednesday, and we rose to go. At parting, she
-pressed my hand in hers, and again exclaimed,
-
-“‘Ah! what resemblance; I should think it was herself: farewell, my
-daughter, and if, in after years, the world and its frivolities satiate
-and disgust you,—if your soul becomes weary with the cares of life,—come
-then to the peaceful shade of the cloister; here you will find quiet and
-repose.’
-
-“‘I am too young, yet, to have become tired of a world which I am only
-beginning to see.’
-
-“‘So thought I, at your age; not so do I regard it now; and I look back
-with regret upon those years spent in idle pleasures, which I should have
-dedicated to the service of God. Few young people possess sufficient
-self-denial to practice the austerities of religion. Lady Lavona was a
-brilliant exception: she left a high station, the pomp and glitter of
-nobility, to bear her cross and follow her Saviour.’
-
-“There was something solemn and impressive in the look and manner of the
-Abbess, as she spoke these grave words of advice; her face, marble-like
-when in repose, lit up when she spoke, like those beautiful Chinese
-vases, which only show the flowers painted upon the exterior when filled
-with water within.
-
-“‘Good morning, mother Cecilia.’
-
-“‘Farewell, daughter: the peace of God be with you.’ The attendant nun
-conducted us back the way we came, the heavy portal opened and shut
-behind us, and we directed our steps homeward.
-
-“The appearance and conversation of the Superior made a deep impression
-on my mind. All the way home I thought of what she had said about the
-lady whom I resembled; her description of her loveliness and purity of
-life had interested me, still I had no desire to emulate her example
-of sanctity, and become a nun; I have always thought the life of a
-religieuse a useless one; to be pure, virtuous, and truly religious,
-it is not necessary to seclude oneself from society within a convent’s
-walls, perform penance and say prayers a hundred times a day; the duties
-of a sincere, upright and active life, are the best offerings we can make
-our Almighty Father, and, I feel confident, the most acceptable him.
-
-“Monsieur Belmont had breakfasted and gone out, when we reached home; we
-took ours; then Madame left me to attend to her domestic affairs, and I
-went to my room to practice my part in a new opera. I had been engaged
-thus two or three hours, when, looking out of my window, I saw a calesso
-drive up and stop before the door; my teacher got out, accompanied by a
-female, dressed in white, and enveloped in an enormous black lace veil. I
-caught a glimpse of her tiny feet as she lightly tripped out. Something
-familiar struck my memory as I glanced at that veiled form, an indefinite
-association of something or some one, I could not tell which, or what.
-They quickly entered the house, and I continued my musical studies,
-imagining it was some visitor of Madame’s, when Arla requested me to
-come to the parlor, a lady wished to see me. Many gentlemen had visited
-me since my arrival in Naples, but possessing not a single female
-acquaintance in the city, I puzzled myself in conjecture.
-
-“Wondering who it could be, I descended the stairs; the sound of merry
-voices and laughter greeted my ears from the parlour: on entering it, I
-saw a group of three, standing in the middle of the room, their backs
-toward me. The lady I had seen from the window, was playfully arranging
-upon Monsieur’s broad shoulders her large lace veil; my guardian was
-gayly conversing, while Madame stood by talking and laughing with Italian
-enthusiasm. They formed a happy-looking, graceful trio. I paused a moment
-to look at them. The lady, happening to turn her head, saw me, uttered
-an exclamation of surprise, dropped the veil, and we rushed into each
-other’s arms;—it was Blanche!
-
-“‘Ah!’ cried Monsieur, still trembling with laughter, from some unknown
-cause, ‘now I know Genevra will be happy; she has been wishing and
-longing for your arrival. Are you not mutually glad to see each other?’
-
-“‘Ah, yes,’ answered Blanche, as she raised her head from my shoulder,
-and uplifted her beautiful dewy eyes to mine. ‘Genevra knows as well,
-better than I can tell her, how very happy I am at seeing her once more,
-after so many years of separation.’
-
-“I said nothing myself, for it has ever been my nature to say the least
-when I feel most. And now, after the first congratulations were over, I
-looked at Blanche, to see what effect Time had wrought on her. She had
-grown much taller, and her form was rounder in its voluptuous beautiful
-outlines; her face still preserved its old expression of infantile
-innocence and sweetness, yet there was something altered about it:
-and, on attentively criticizing that fair face, I perceived a slight
-expression of scorn in the almost imperceptible curl of the delicate
-upper lip, and a melancholy languor, bordering on gloom, in the blue
-depths of those large eyes. Had some disappointment crossed her, or
-was she already weary of the world’s applause? She was a very handsome
-woman,—no wonder she should be admired.
-
-“Her laugh was the same as ever; her merry, child-like laugh; how often
-had that joyous sound amused me amid the monotony of school discipline!
-
-“Oh, my beloved friend! my beautiful Blanche! years have rolled their
-dark mists on my soul since that re-union. I have lived to weep over thy
-solitary grave: thy only mourner the hoarse resounding waves of the sea.
-That graceful form has long ago been food for worms: those lovely eyes
-glazed in death, and those long ringlets rotted to decay;—yet, whenever
-I recall thy gentleness, thy winning ways, and lofty soul, tears will
-start from their briny bed, to consecrate with grief thy sweet memory.
-Yes, if there be ‘a land of pure delight’ beyond this terrestrial sphere,
-I feel assured thy blest shade has entered beatitude.
-
-“We went up stairs together to my room, and there she gave me a
-description of the principal events in her life since leaving Vienna. She
-was too sincerely unaffected and devoid of egotism to entertain me with
-her own conquests or matrimonial offers; but she spoke with tenderness
-of Inez; her well maintained popularity; her good temper; her still
-cherished fondness for myself; and, lastly, her approaching marriage with
-a wealthy merchant of Berlin, and consequent withdrawal from the stage.
-
-“‘It is really true, then,’ I remarked, ‘that she is to be married.
-I heard so, but did not know how true the report might be. And you,
-Blanche, have you any idea of following her example?’
-
-“A rose-tint, like the delicate hue of one of ocean’s shells, lingered
-for an instant on the snowy cheek of Blanche. It quickly disappeared, and
-she gravely, I thought, almost sorrowfully, replied:
-
-“‘My dear Genevra, I seldom bestow a thought on matrimony. To say that I
-_never_ think of marrying, would be an absurdity. All women _must_ think
-sometimes of that which is most certainly their manifest destiny; but
-my thoughts dwell but seldom on that subject. Single life presents no
-terrors to me: and you know actresses scarcely ever have an opportunity
-of marrying any save a professional character. Inez is an extraordinary
-instance of virtue and beauty being rewarded; and most fortunate is
-she in having obtained so generous and fine a gentleman for her future
-husband.’
-
-“‘Monsieur Belmont told me your beauty and your voice has set all Naples
-wild,’ she continued. ‘Is it so, dear? But I need not ask; the journals
-informed me of that fact. And does the applause that greets you in public
-fully satisfy your heart? Do you never come home to the solitude of your
-own room, from these grand triumphs, and there, safe from the observation
-of others, sit and dream, and long for something, you scarce can divine
-what yourself; and _then_, do you not feel how brilliant, yet how
-isolated, are the lives we actresses lead? Have you never felt so?’
-
-“‘Often,’ I replied, staring at her in amazement, at the sympathy of mind
-there evidently existed between us. ‘Yes, I have often felt so, although
-I am as yet on the outset of my new career. But I imagined I alone had
-this misanthropy;—I little thought you shared it; but let us banish all
-these gloomy reflections, which can do no good, and only tend to sadden
-us, and speak of something more cheerful; and now I want to ask about
-Munich, as I never was there. What sort of town is it?’
-
-“‘A very beautiful, delightful place, to those who fancy it. It contains
-many very splendid buildings, fine gardens, and much good society. I was
-so constantly engaged in my profession, however, I scarcely noticed what
-it was; and in truth, since I left you I have been in so many places,
-that they seem all alike to me, and one town is as agreeable as another.’
-
-“Here our conversation for the moment was suspended, and Blanche, at our
-hostess’ request, went to take some refreshments after her journey, but
-I plainly perceived, both from the words and looks of my friend, that
-there was something wrong at heart; either the gay world had wearied her,
-or else some disappointed or clandestine love was gnawing at her heart.
-Which it was, I could not decide; so I trusted to events to develope this
-mystery.
-
-“Blanche became completely domesticated with us, and we were to each
-other as sisters; yet she did not confide to me the cause of this
-concealed sadness. In the meantime, Monsieur de Serval became a regular
-visiter of mine. I presented him to Blanche,—he seemed pleased with
-her, yet I perceived that, although he treated her with respectful
-admiration, his eyes never rested on her with the same expression of
-love and tenderness as they always did when wandering after me. They say
-‘that love begets love.’ To a certain extent I think the saying true;
-and perhaps the eager admiration of Monsieur de Serval quickened my
-perception of his merits, and gave him additional interest in my eyes.
-Be that as it may, my feelings had not as yet shaped themselves into
-a downright sentiment of love. They were as yet in embryo, quiescent
-friendship, when a strange and unexpected event turned the current of my
-destiny.
-
-“I was sitting alone in the little parlor before mentioned. Blanche had
-a headache, and was in her own room. Monsieur was away somewhere,—he
-generally spent his evenings out; and Madame Bonni had left the
-apartment. I sat alone: it was now midsummer; the weather was extremely
-hot; but I recollect on the evening of which I speak, a brisk north
-breeze had sprung up at twilight, and blown steadily off the shore for
-several hours, rendering the air quite chill and cool. The wind sighed
-drearily around the little cottage, and seemed to dwell momentarily in
-the tall poplar trees of the garden.
-
-“One wax candle, from its silver candelabra, shed a subdued light
-around, in its immediate vicinity, leaving the rest of the room in
-shadow, and the full moon, from a window opposite me, darted long streaks
-of silver rays along the floor; my book had fallen from my hand, being
-unable to read by the feeble light, and with my hands folded together in
-my lap, I was lost in contemplation, when a knock came at the door, and
-without waiting for permission, it was opened, and Monsieur de Serval
-entered. He did not look as well as usual, nor was his toilette as
-carefully made. He scarcely returned my salutation, and drawing a chair
-near me, seated himself in it, and leaning back, with his small right
-hand, pushed back from his forehead the glossy waves of his flaxen hair.
-
-“I spoke of several things: the opera, political debates, fashionable
-literature; he answered abstractedly in monosyllables, and then relapsed
-into silence. Suddenly starting from his chair, he began pacing the room
-with rapid strides; his face looked flushed and strange. I had always
-felt toward him an indefinite fear, arising probably from the magnetic
-influence of his stern temper, and now the same sensation came creeping
-over me as I sat, and wonderingly gazed upon the singular behaviour of
-my visiter. Suddenly pausing in his walk, he came toward me, and again
-seated himself at my side. He grasped both my hands in his, and bent the
-stern gaze of his lustrous eyes on mine. I now began to apprehend what
-was coming, and to tremble.
-
-“‘Genevra,’ said he, in the low, deep tone of impassioned feeling, —and
-as he said this, he took both my hands in his left hand, and with the
-other he played with the curls of my hair—‘Genevra, I am about leaving
-town, perhaps for some months; perhaps from contingency or fatality I
-may never return to Parthenope. I have come to say farewell. I could, I
-think, almost feel happy at going, could I for a moment suppose that a
-heart so pure as yours, would cherish towards a forlorn, unhappy being
-like myself a single sentiment of kindness or regret. Say, Mademoiselle,
-may I hope I shall not be forgotten?’
-
-“He grasped my hands fiercely as he said this, and looked closely in
-my face. I felt frightened, and scarcely knew what to say. At last I
-stammered out,—
-
-“‘You have my best wishes, Monsieur, for your future happiness.’
-
-“‘Best wishes! Is that all? Yes, I see I was a fool to suppose—’ He
-stopped abruptly, and bending down his stately head to a level with my
-eyes, riveted his gaze on mine. I could feel his warm breath hotly fan
-my cheek, and the beams of moonlight showed his broad full chest as it
-rose and fell with contending passions. Nearer and nearer did he draw me
-to him, till his head sank upon my shoulder, his beautiful mouth sought
-mine, and with his arms tightly clasped around my waist, I felt myself
-irresistibly drawn into an embrace, which, by a strange paralyzation of
-all power of will, I had no strength to avoid. He drew me forcibly off
-my chair upon his lap, and there imprinted on my lips a hundred kisses
-before I could summon strength and determination to break away. I forced
-myself from his iron grasp and ran to the other side of the room. He
-followed me, his beautiful face distorted by passion, and falling on his
-knees, again seized my hands in his, and exclaimed,—‘Pardon me—oh! pardon
-me, beautiful Genevra! but I love you with a wild, intense passion.
-Forgive me if I have offended your pride or modesty. Take pity on me,
-Genevra, and encourage me to hope that my love may meet with a return.’
-
-“‘Monsieur de Serval!’ I cried, at length recovering breath to speak,
-‘your conduct is incomprehensible, inexplicable:—what _can_ you mean
-by it? Is it gentlemanly—is it honorable, thus wantonly to insult the
-modesty and wound the pride of a defenceless girl?’
-
-“‘By Jupiter, you misconstrue me!” he vehemently exclaimed; and starting
-to his feet, he again traversed the room with rapid strides. ‘Has my
-bearing toward you ever been anything save respectful?’
-
-“‘Does not this look marvellously like insulting familiarity?’ I
-indignantly demanded.
-
-“‘I forgot myself for a moment. And are you so remorseless as to refuse
-forgiveness for an unintentional fault? Yes, here in this very room, bear
-me witness, all ye gods and goddesses, all ye saints and angels:—I do
-swear I love you, and you alone. With a crazy passion have I adored since
-our first meeting at the countess’;—till now I have stifled it, concealed
-it as much as possible from your observation; but now, on the eve of
-departure from Naples, I tell you how I love you, and honorably offer
-you my heart and hand in marriage. If you will accept me, I will return;
-otherwise, I presume, I never shall.’
-
-“I had sunk into a chair, overpowered by this strange scene. Again, as if
-impelled by some invisible influence, he came and put his arms around my
-waist, and kissed me as before. This time, after what he had just said, I
-did not resist him.
-
-“‘I have sometimes thought,’ he whispered, ‘from the expression of your
-eyes, that you loved me. Say, dearest, is it so? Put your beautiful arms
-around my neck, and say, ‘Dear Rinaldo, I love thee!’
-
-“Unconscious, almost stupefied, I mechanically complied, and whispered
-after him, ‘Dear Rinaldo, I love thee!’ Then he remained motionless for
-some minutes, seeming to have lost all recollection in a delirium of
-sense, his arms tightly locked around my waist, his head resting in my
-lap. His wild, impassioned manner had in some degree magnetized, and
-inspired my naturally cold temperament with something like a return of
-the volcano-like passion which animated him.
-
-“‘Monsieur de Serval,’ I said, finding he made no effort to rise,
-‘recollect yourself, I beg of you. Come, seat yourself here on the sofa,
-and let us talk quietly. Why should you rage and storm thus? What is it
-disquiets you? You say you love me; but surely love is a gentle feeling.
-Where is the necessity of these tempestuous emotions? These bursts of
-passion alarm me. Be composed, and tell me why you are miserable and
-unhappy, as you just said you were. Explain your grief; and at least let
-me endeavor to console you.’
-
-“My quiet manner served to soothe him. He rose from his knees, and sat
-reclining on the sofa, still holding my hands in his, while I wiped the
-perspiration from his agitated countenance. I was not exactly in love
-with him then, but my disposition always prompted me to compassionate the
-sorrowful. He appeared to be unhappy, and I would have given much to have
-known, shared, and alleviated his sorrow.
-
-“‘You never heard, I suppose,’ he began, ‘anything of my private history?’
-
-“‘No,’ I hesitatingly replied, ‘I never did.’
-
-“‘You are not used to equivocating; I see that, Genevra. I am certain
-that you _have_ heard from envious tongues, every thing that is bad
-concerning me,—that I am a _roué_; a gambler; a worthless, reckless man
-of fashion. My faults I do not pretend to conceal. Not to acknowledge an
-error, is only worthy of a knave or a fool. I trust I am not either. Sit
-nearer me;—let me hold your hand and see my eyes riding on the balls of
-yours. Now I will begin. I will go back in imagination—thank God I am not
-obliged to do it in reality—to childhood.’
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-
-“My father was descended from an ancient and noble family; one of the
-most aristocratic in France. Our family chateau was in Normandy; there
-we spent the principal part of the year, with the exception of visits to
-Paris at distant intervals of time.
-
-“Our chateau was beautifully and romantically situated on a gentle
-plain. From its fine grounds I have often watched the sun decline behind
-the distant mountains, which bordered on the east our valley-home; on
-the west a gentle river glided by: along its flowery banks, oft, when
-a child, have I, my two brothers, and little sister, played. I shall
-never see its quiet waters more,—nor would I: they would revive too many
-painful associations. Yet sometimes in fancy I transport myself back to
-its loved shores; and again I see Francois, Pierre, myself, and Lelia,
-all animated by the same childish love of fun, playing hide and seek, or
-running races.
-
-“Francois was the eldest, myself next, then Pierre, then our sweet
-sister Lelia. My beloved mother, to whose memory I have ever retained,
-through all my dissipations and frivolities, so great a veneration, was
-in declining health. She was a tall, beautiful blonde; her gentle face
-was the index to her soul,—all purity, sweetness and sincerity; were I
-to live a thousand years, never could I forget my mother’s amiability,
-her true nobility of soul. I was her favorite child, her ‘dear Rinaldo.’
-At my birth, in a fit of romantic admiration of the fabulous Rinaldo,
-of Italian story, she named me after him, and with woman’s romance,
-fondly pictured to herself the great deeds I should one day perform. In
-emulation of this poetical demi-god, what would not children become were
-they to realize their parents’ wishes and expectations.
-
-“My father and mother lived together in the greatest love and unanimity
-of feeling, until the advent of a governess, when Lelia was eight years
-old, to superintend her education. This woman, as sly and insinuating, as
-she was bold and unprincipled, soon sowed the seeds of contention between
-my parents, and alienated from the forsaken wife the lawful affections of
-her husband. She was not handsome, but she succeeded by art, in acquiring
-over my father’s mind an almost unlimited control. He forsook my mother’s
-society, and surrendered himself to the fatal influence of Mademoiselle
-Desportes. My mother was left to linger on and die alone, in her own
-solitary apartments of the chateau.
-
-“Little Lelia became fonder of her governess than of her mother, and
-preferred at all times being with Mademoiselle, than with the desolate
-and despairing Madame de Serval. Francois and Pierre, seduced by presents
-and unlimited indulgence, grew to love her. I alone, of the whole family,
-remained firm in my allegiance to my best parent. I alone spent hour
-after hour, day after day, by her lone bedside, endeavoring to soothe
-the saddened spirit, and calm its approach to eternity. My unfailing
-devotion to her, gained me the bitter enmity of our governess; but I
-defied and despised her malice. My father from that time henceforward,
-till his death, regarded me with an eye of distrust; but for that too I
-did not care: I felt convinced that he had forfeited all claim to the
-title of husband or father; that he had debased himself by a vulgar,
-dishonorable connection; disgraceful alike to himself and the ancient
-name he bore. I owed my first duty to the deserted, not to the deserter;
-I saw that this disgrace to her sex, aimed at my father’s hand; that she
-wished to establish herself firmly in a high position; who the man was
-mattered little to her, so long as he possessed rank and wealth; and,
-unfortunately, for my opinion of women, I have seen but too many others
-like unto her. My mother was a stumbling block to her ambition; I saw
-all the manœuvring that was constantly going on through this woman’s
-influence; yet what could I do, a young boy, without money or influence
-in society? If a man chooses to turn against his own wife, the mother of
-his children; abuse, neglect her, and take instead, a bad, intriguing
-woman, as confidant and companion, what can the world say or do? nothing,
-it is their own affair: every one says, let them settle it between them:
-the public have nothing to do with family quarrels.
-
-“Thus defenceless and unprotected, her parents dead, her relations
-far away, my mother became a victim to this vile creature. Her health
-declined with amazing rapidity during the first year of this woman’s
-arrival; her hectic cough increased daily; her pale and hollow cheeks,
-glassy eyes, and shrunken form, like a scroll of shriveled parchment,
-showed the ravages of disease and gloom, preying upon both mind and body.
-A little incident first gave me a horrid suspicion of the secret cause of
-this decay.
-
-“A physician from the village, and a mysterious looking monk from a
-neighboring convent, regularly visited my mother twice a week; the one to
-attend to her spiritual welfare, the other to administer to her wreck of
-mortal frame. Father Ignatius I never liked; no love was lost between
-us; my sentiments were freely returned; his step, gliding and noiseless;
-his large eyes, always downcast with mock humility, and hands clasped
-upon his breast, always inspired me with a presentiment of the vicinage
-of some evil genius. Mystery, I have observed, is generally the cloak
-of ignorant or knavish minds; in this case it was the latter. I felt
-relieved when I saw his draperied form leave the chateau, as if some evil
-influence had been withdrawn. Notwithstanding my dislike, he seemed to be
-a favorite of my mother’s, and to please her I forbore saying any thing
-to his disparagement. His conversation seemed to amuse and momentarily
-enliven her; his voice was soft and low, and manner insinuating and
-jesuitical. I said nothing against him to her or any one else, though
-secretly distrustful, for I would not have added to her gloom, around
-whose soul were gathering fast the shadows of the tomb.
-
-“I was retiring to my mother’s room one evening at dusk, when as I
-neared the anti-chamber, I heard voices within conversing, and my own
-name mentioned; pausing at the door, and concealed by its deep shadow, I
-listened; the speakers were Doctor Theodori, and Father Ignatius; they
-appeared to have met accidentally.
-
-“‘Well, Doctor,’ was the jocose salutation of Ignatius, ‘how fares thy
-patient?’
-
-“‘And may I not ask the same question of thee, oh, physician of the
-soul?’ was the laughing reply of the fat, shrewd-looking Theodori.
-
-“‘Between us two,’ said the monk, glancing round the anti-chamber, as if
-to observe they were free from notice; the dusk of twilight far advanced,
-reigned, and they could not see me; ‘between us, I say, she is failing
-fast: the last few months have wrought a great change.’
-
-“‘I plainly perceive it,’ was the cool reply of his worthy colleague;
-‘she will not cumber the earth long, nor be in the way of Monsieur and
-Mademoiselle Desportes.’
-
-“‘You should be careful not to give the powders too often,—their effect
-will excite suspicion,’ was the next remark of the holy father.
-
-“‘Trust me, I know what I am doing; this is not the first case of the
-kind I have managed; there will be no outward sign except the usual
-appearance of disease; what has been promised you as reward, may I ask?’
-
-“‘His influence at Rome with the college of cardinals, to obtain me
-the position of the nuncio to the court of Vienna, and yours, _worthy_
-Theodori?’
-
-“‘When all is over, I shall accompany the naval expedition to Algiers;
-in truth I scarcely feel safe in this affair; I sometimes catch myself
-feeling my head, to ascertain if that important member still performs its
-functions.’
-
-“‘No matter, ejaculated the man of prayer, penance and fasting, so long
-as we are rewarded for our services, and get safe out of the country,
-which I am very desirous of leaving. But does not his infatuation appear
-strange to you?—to me it is a riddle.’
-
-“‘A problem, in my opinion, which I could never solve; but these sly
-women do sometimes, you know, obtain great influence; he is weak and
-infatuated; but men have been fooled before his time, and will be so for
-ages yet unborn.’
-
-“‘How long do you think she will live?’ asked the monk; and he drew his
-cowl over his dark visage, and took a step forward toward the door, where
-I stood concealed.
-
-“‘Not longer than three months, if I am anything of a physician.’ They
-both laughed, as two fiends may be supposed to laugh over a captured
-soul, and withdrew through a side door, leading to my father’s part of
-the mansion.
-
-“The last echo of their footsteps died upon my ear, ere I tremblingly
-emerged from my concealment; pale as a ghost from the tomb, and quivering
-like an aspen, I comprehended perfectly well that some dark plot was
-hatching to expedite my mother’s mortal doom. I tried to think of some
-means to counter-work this devilish intention; but at that time almost
-a child, my mind was not fertile in expedients, and even had I equaled
-Mephistopheles at planning, what is the use of invention without the
-power to execute. I determined to watch and endeavor to detect any
-attempt this triumvirate of wickedness should make upon her life. I
-childishly supposed I should _see_ something to expose; I did not know
-their secret wiles, though I watched constantly, and was always with my
-mother; yet I saw no powders given, nothing visible indicated _their_
-secret malice, and _her_ onward progress to the grave.
-
-“Mademoiselle Desportes, with cunning hypocrisy, came often with
-professions of regard, to see Madame de Serval. Could I have had my way,
-I would have kicked her out the room; but perhaps she chose the better
-part, in treating with contempt so unworthy a creature; for that pure
-soul, which was all harmony and love, could surely feel no rivalry with
-one so immeasurably beneath her.
-
-“My father seldom came to our apartment. I should have thought shame
-would have deterred him from brazenly insulting the deserted wife with
-his presence. I forgot that the man who could act thus, would of
-necessity be incapable of shame. Thus lingered for three months longer my
-gentle, lovely mother, and then she died, devoutly hoping to be reunited
-to her loved ones in a future state of being. She died at midnight; we,
-her children, and the nurse, her only attendants; it was in the autumn
-time, and the wind blew in fitful gusts around the isolated chateau; the
-mournful sound, as the blast rose and fell, and whistled through the
-forest trees, and through the cracks and crevices of the wainscotting,
-seemed in harmony with the sad departing soul.
-
-“She sat upright in bed, supported by pillows: her hands convulsively
-clasped on her sunken chest, her sad blue eyes fixed on vacancy, as if
-seeking to penetrate the impenetrable mysteries of eternity; her long
-hair, escaped from its confinement, strayed wildly around her shoulders:
-thus she sat, motionless and silent, for several hours, though not
-speechless; she retained her voice and senses to the last.
-
-“Little Lelia sat on the bed by my mother’s side, and with tearful
-eyes gazed wonderingly on her parent; my brothers and I stood by the
-bedside; I, speechless, tearless, from intense grief: they, sobbing
-in loud lamentation; and the old nurse sat in the chimney corner, an
-uninterested, yet sympathizing spectator of the death bed. My father had
-made an excuse of going on a hunting party, some days previous, to avoid
-witnessing his wife’s last sufferings; and his wicked favorite had shut
-herself in her own rooms: we, therefore, were the sole attendants. And
-the priest and his delightful friend had gone, I know not where—probably
-departed for their respective places of destination—apprehensive of
-discovery.
-
-“The old brass clock in the anti-chamber struck the midnight hour, and
-its hoarse, reverberating tone, had scarcely ceased, ere Madame de Serval
-aroused herself from her stupor; decaying life appeared to resuscitate,
-momentarily, in that attenuated form, like the spasmodic flicker of a
-lamp, whose flame is about to be extinguished. She extended her arms,
-as if beckoning to the shades—uplifted her eyes, as if praying for
-grace—then, suddenly breaking the portentous silence which had hung over
-us so long, she said, ‘Dear children, beloved little ones, come close to
-me.’ We gathered close around her. ‘Your poor mother is going the way of
-all the earth—she is going to leave you—and her memory will be as though
-she never had been. I entreat you to be kind to each other; to love and
-cherish each other’s friendship, practice virtue and good works, that ye
-may become worthy of heavenly rewards, and meet your mother above.’
-
-“Her face was animated with almost supernatural energy for an instant;
-she pointed upwards with her finger for an instant, then her clay-cold
-fingers shrank from my clasp: she fell backward on her pillow; her
-eyes were glazed in the mists of death; and they, hardened in their
-expression, became fixed and cold; her arms stiffened, and fell rigid to
-her side: her whole form collapsed and changed. Death had claimed its
-own; all was over: the wrongs she had endured, her joys, her sorrows,
-were like a tale that is told; they were lost in the womb of time—past
-and forgotten.
-
-“Petrified with fear to the spot—horror struck—we gazed upon the
-inanimate clay; then, after the first spasm of terror was past, we rushed
-to the nurse, and gathered round her, seeking consolation for that loss,
-which no power—mortal, or immortal—could restore to us.
-
-“We wept ourselves to sleep that night, in our respective chambers. I,
-more than all the rest, felt wretched. God alone knows how miserable I
-was. And when I recalled my mother’s gentleness, her forbearance, her
-enduring love for a worthless man, _and its reward_, oh! that added the
-last bitter drop in the cup of wo!
-
-“My father returned next day; he seemed neither surprised nor grieved
-when told of her death: how should he be, when he had planned, and
-premeditated it: ‘her health had been so feeble within the last two
-years,’ he said, ‘the event was not an unexpected one.’ Mademoiselle came
-not near us, and, absorbed in grief, I had forgotten her very existence.
-
-“When the corpse was laid out, we all went to take a last fond look of
-that loved form, and bid it a temporary, perhaps eternal, adieu.
-
-“She lay in state upon a costly bier, dressed as for a bridal. The white
-satin robe she was attired in, was not whiter than her marble face and
-hands: the wreath upon her hair scarcely outvied them in purity of color;
-and her face bore that expression of almost unearthly beauty, which rests
-upon the faces of the dead the first few hours after death. So calm,
-so pure and beautiful did she look, I almost thought her sleeping, and
-imagined I saw the grave-clothes rise and fall, with the respiration of
-life, upon that dead bosom. Oh, my mother! wert thou conscious of the
-tears I shed, thou wouldst have pitied me!”
-
-Monsieur de Serval paused; his voice was inarticulate from emotion.
-Dropping my hand, he covered his face with both his, and trembled with
-grief. A man is generally ashamed to show such feelings before a woman;
-but the recollections of his youth had completely unmanned him. I thought
-it indelicate to proffer words of condolence, and, therefore, waited till
-he became quieted, and went on.
-
-“The grief of my two brothers and sister partook more of wonder and fear
-than sorrow; but my soul was literally devoured with despair, and at that
-moment I most sincerely wished myself dead and buried with her. I had
-lost my best friend: the only one who could console my boyish vexations
-and advise my actions.
-
-“A splendid marble tomb was erected over the broken heart it enshrined,
-in the cemetery of the church belonging to the chateau, and an
-epitaph inscribed, testifying to the virtues of the departed, and the
-inconsolability of the bereaved widower. How I despised the man, even
-though my own father, who could thus add hypocrisy to villany!
-
-“Within three months after her death, he outraged even the usual
-conventional forms of mourning, and espoused the governess. From that
-time henceforth, completely throwing off the mask of affection she had
-previously worn, my brothers and sister, as well as myself, felt her
-iron rule. We were aliens and strangers in our own home: all obeyed the
-imperious will of the new Madame de Serval;—we were neglected and left
-alone.
-
-“Through her influence on the mind of her husband, he decided on
-sending me away to college. Me she most particularly disliked, and
-on all occasions treated me with studied contempt. There was a tacit
-understanding between us that we mutually understood each other. _She_
-knew me to possess penetration: _I felt_ that she was a vile intriguante.
-She saw it would be far better for her control over my brothers and
-sister, that I should be away. My elder brother, Francois, was never very
-bright. Pierre (younger than myself) was no more so than need be: he was
-extremely amiable and easily influenced; and Lelia, any one could manage.
-Of the whole four I was most capable of resistance; consequently it was
-most desirable to get me out of the way.
-
-“A celebrated college, in a distant district, was selected as my
-destination, and the day appointed for my departure. I asked if Francois
-could not be sent to the same college for the completion of his
-education, that we might be companions to each other in our studies. My
-request was sternly refused by my father, and I was bade attend to my
-own business, and not trouble myself about Francois’s movements. Thus
-silenced, I made a merit of necessity, and obeyed, because I could not
-help myself, resolving mentally, however, that, when grown to man’s
-estate, I would shake off the underhand tyranny of this woman, and enlist
-in the army as a foot soldier, sooner than submit to her petty malice.
-She planned this merely to annoy me, knowing the society of my brother
-would be pleasing to me. What my father intended doing with either
-him or Pierre, neither they nor I knew: Lelia would remain under the
-guardianship of her former governess.
-
-“Thus were we separated. I bade them farewell and departed, glad to be
-removed from the evil atmosphere of a depraved woman.
-
-“I soon became a favorite with my preceptors at the institution. Francois
-corresponded with me regularly the first year. Little Lelia, he said,
-was in delicate health; her stepmother treated her with harshness and
-severity; Pierre drooped in listless languor. He was in daily expectation
-of being ordered off to join his regiment,—father having bought him
-a commission in the 49th hussars. Of his own feelings, or the state
-of affairs between Monsieur de Serval and his wife, he never spoke;
-perhaps, I thought, he had forgotten our mother’s wrongs, grown politic,
-conciliated the kindness of his stepmother, and consequently was more
-tolerated; but I hoped not. I trusted the remembrance of the injuries of
-that angel-woman were too deeply impressed on his mind, to allow him to
-be so easily seduced into love or kindness to her betrayer. The tone of
-his letters was reckless and gloomy: these feelings I regretted seeing in
-one so young, and wished he were within the sphere of my influence, that
-I might win him to better things.
-
-“Subsequently I heard from him after his arrival in the Barbary
-States, whither he had been ordered. He described the climate as being
-insupportably hot, and a soldier’s life a hard one; yet, having entered
-the service, was determined to remain and fight his way to distinction.
-
-“The large patrimony my mother brought my father, had, upon her
-ill-starred marriage, been exclusively settled on herself (subject to her
-control alone), and, at her death, she bequeathed it to her children,
-divided equally amongst us. Upon the completion of my education, I paid a
-short visit home, to claim my share of the patrimony, and see my brother
-and sister. Lelia, grown tall and graceful, welcomed me with joy; my
-father, with cold civility; the ex-governess, with haughty coldness.
-When I inquired for Pierre, they directed me to the church-yard where my
-mother reposed, and where her youngest son now slumbered by her side, in
-the blessed sleep of forgetfulness. I did not weep over his grave with
-the same wild lamentation with which I had bewailed her loss: on the
-contrary, as I stood over the little mound which held the human earth, I
-almost felt a secret satisfaction that the boy had been taken away from
-the evils to come; that his pure young mind had not remained here to
-become contaminated by mingling with inferior, less elevated souls.
-
-“Lelia told me how he died of a fever, and how he had wished to see me;
-but was ungratified in the wish in his dying hour. Father had commanded
-that no word should be sent me of his illness or death; thus I had
-remained in ignorance of either. When she told me this, a suspicion
-flashed across me, that, perhaps, he had been dealt with like his poor
-mother; but reflection convinced me that his stepmother could have had no
-object in putting him out of the world. He was an amiable, inoffensive
-boy; he interfered with her in no way; and as she was a woman of strong
-mind and good reasoning faculties, it was not probable she would have
-committed a deed, the execution of which could in no way have benefited
-her. At any rate he was dead; and as I looked on Lelia, her youth, her
-beauty, and the atmosphere of innocence and grace which seemed to hover
-round and adorn her, I wondered what destiny had in store for her, and I
-prayed that the angel-shade of our mutual parent—or some other invisible
-inhabitant of a better land—might preside over her future years, and
-shield them from all evil.
-
-“But the halls of my ancestors were no longer a home for me, and I felt
-it strongly during the few days I spent there. The absurd spectacle of
-the blind infatuation of a man, already on the decline of life, who fed
-and cherished his vanity into the ridiculous belief that he was still
-loveable and beloved by a young and artful woman, was—had I been an
-uninterested spectator of the farce—more laughable than anything else;
-but, as it was, indignation, instead of merriment, stirred my feelings,
-and I wished to be out of sight of so disgraceful an exhibition of
-superannuated folly; and my father, while doting upon his minion, and
-squandering his fortune upon her in every description of extravagance,
-actually believed himself to be as attractive and fascinating as any
-young man of twenty-five. When I recurred to this portion of my father’s
-life in after years, I always thought of what a young Parisian girl once
-said to me: ‘Are not those two words, man and vanity, synonymous?’ That
-young and handsome men should be vain of conquest is not astonishing; but
-that old men, hackneyed and worn, from misuse of the senses, possessing
-all the vices of the young, without their personal attractions or their
-virtues,—that _such_ men should be candidates for the affections of young
-women, or dare to suppose they can obtain or possess them, is scarcely
-more reprehensible than ridiculous. The world has always seemed to me a
-perfect farce—a play: a stage on which all act, and those who play the
-best are thought the best in the eyes of the undiscriminating world.
-What part my father and his favorite would have taken in the drama, I am
-unable to say; but my own opinion is, that a fool’s cap for him, and the
-symbol of knavery for her, would have suited to a charm.
-
-“Lelia was liberally provided with many attendants, teachers for various
-languages, and every thing the child could wish in the way of dress or
-equipage. Being satisfied that her welfare and comfort was attended to, I
-arranged with father to draw upon his banker in Paris for my means; and,
-bidding Lelia farewell—who sobbed and wept grievously at my departure—I
-glanced good-bye to the turreted towers, the lofty archways and imposing
-battlements of the homes of my forefathers, and took my way to the
-capital of France, intending to pursue the study of the law.
-
-“But, alas! for the self-promised virtue of youth and inexperience! I had
-not been in the gay city many weeks before the giddy vortex of Parisian
-society had enthralled me, and overcame many of my stoical resolves: so
-little do we know what we shall do until tasked by practice. I at first
-wondered at the wild and unrestrained dissipations of the youth of the
-metropolis; but, insensibly, by degrees this wonderment ceased, as I
-became accustomed to, and shared in these frivolities.
-
-“An old lawyer—in former years a devoted friend of my father—now, in
-turn, performed the offices of friend to me; _i. e._ gave me good advice
-on the temptations and snares of life; the dangers of love affairs,
-particularly illicit ones; the beauty of propriety of demeanor; the
-respectability of religion—at least its external appearance, no matter
-about the _sincerity_ of the heart; and, lastly, the propriety of placing
-myself under his guidance, and steadfastly following his counsels.
-Fortunately, I did not take advantage of the kindness extended me; for,
-had I followed his counsels—or, rather, what one might suppose _would_
-have been his counsels, twenty years before—I should have been engulphed
-in ruin long ago. I followed the dictates of a young, and, at that time,
-pure heart; and pursued my own way, naturally enough concluding, that
-every man has a right to his own way of thinking, and his own rule of
-action, provided he interfered with no one else.
-
-“I studied law with my _moral_ friend for some time; and might at this
-moment, perhaps, have been an advocate, had not unforeseen events changed
-the current of my life otherwise.
-
-“While in Paris I became acquainted with a lady of noble rank and ancient
-family; and, since I am giving you a faithful chronicle of my days,
-Genevra, I will not conceal from you, that once, and once only, have I
-loved, in by gone years, a lady, as beautiful, though not as virtuous, or
-talented, as yourself—loved, I say, as fondly, as blindly, as I now love
-you.
-
-“Her name was Madame Anacharsis Valliere; and she was the youthful wife
-of an old banker; she was then one of the most fashionable and admired
-of any in Paris. I first met her at a ball, and afterwards visited her
-at her house constantly. I cannot describe the artlessness and playful
-witchery of her ways, nor that light and play of feature which allured
-and captivated me—even though I saw the risk I ran, both for myself and
-her: the remembrance of her haunted me for years after the love had died
-away, and both passion, and the reciprocity it had met with from her
-confiding fondness, had faded from my mind.
-
-“That was my first ‘grande passion!’ The woman who pleased me then, would
-not please me now: so do our tastes and habits change as we go onward:
-but then, young and warm, yet shy, I required to be led on to love: now,
-I would rather seek it myself: consequently, I prefer one who rather
-shrinks from than advances to me.
-
-“Her husband, absorbed in business, and money speculations could not
-find time to devote much attention to his fair wife; and, trusting to
-her honor, her sense of duty, and shrinking modesty, to preserve her in
-the right way, he allowed her to do as she pleased, and go with whom she
-pleased; it often pleased her then to go with me. He had great confidence
-in me; I am sorry to say it was misplaced; but undesignedly, at least,
-I can with conscience say that, I did not intend to love the wife, or
-injure the husband. When I first became acquainted with them, little by
-little she grew to love me; if I did not come at the appointed hour,
-Madame Anacharsis, forgetting her embroidery, music, flowers, visitors,
-everything, would sit at the window facing the street, whence she
-regularly expected me, and muse and watch for me; then the sudden start,
-the smile of welcome when I came, the tears which suffused her eyes when
-I departed, by all these tokens, and a hundred others, I knew as well as
-words could speak it, that she loved me; what man is virtuous enough to
-slight the manifest love of a beautiful woman? I saw my triumph and I
-felt happy, for my feelings echoed hers.
-
-“I then became her constant visitor, her devoted admirer; I was with her
-continually, at her morning concerts, her evening soirees: I was ever at
-her side. The old husband, infatuated in his idolatry of his young wife,
-saw nothing, suspected nothing; thus we went on till passion crowned
-the whole; nothing was left for me to wish for. Was I happy then? In the
-possession of all that I had thought so admirable, so angelic, I have
-often asked myself that question, and never have been able to answer it
-satisfactorily. I lost myself then in the mysteries of love, and forgot
-everything but her.
-
-“We had been wrapt up, bound up in each other for the space of three
-months, and the old man still blundered on in confidence, though I was
-ever at his wife’s side like her shadow. He frequently consulted me on
-business matters, and both in public and private, expressed the highest
-opinion of me. I could not but regret the moment when he would be
-undeceived, and perceive the _real_ state of things; yet the whole affair
-had been involuntarily on both sides. Society, which always decides so
-arbitrarily in these matters, would at once have pronounced that either
-I was a rake, or she a bold, frail woman. Neither was the case, a woman
-possessed of more true modesty and integrity than Madame Anacharsis I
-have never seen; her fault was over self-confidence, and reliance on me;
-and I, not dreaming of love, cherished to maturity the germ of a passion
-with which I had already inspired her.
-
-“We had been planning a fête champêtre, and one evening I bent my steps
-to her house, with a portfolio of beautiful costumes; one, handsomer than
-the others, I had chosen, and wished to induce her to adopt it for the
-occasion.
-
-“The attendants were absent from the anti-chamber, and I entered the
-salon de reception unannounced; Madame was there, alone. She sat upon a
-low ottoman, her profile toward me; she wore a blue satin dress, made
-so low in the neck that half her fair bosom was exposed; but it was the
-fashion then, and when fashion countenances an impropriety, it no longer
-seems one. She seemed absorbed in thought, for she had slid half off the
-stool, her small hands clasped, and brown eyes upward fixed in thought,
-or absentness.
-
-“She started, and rose up on hearing my step, and I now saw that her
-cheeks were wet with tears; surprised at these unwonted tokens of sadness
-in one usually so gay, I asked the cause.
-
-“She wiped the tears from her eyes, and seating herself by my side,
-placed her little hands in mine, (where they had often been before,) and
-looking me straight in the face, suddenly addressed me thus,
-
-“‘Rinaldo, my husband has discovered our love: he knows all.’
-
-“‘Good heavens, how could he, how should he?’ I cried.
-
-“‘Indeed he has: this very afternoon he told me that he has watched you
-and me for sometime past, without our knowing it. He spoke so gently, so
-kindly to me of my fault, that his very leniency made me feel a hundred
-times more miserable than all the reproaches in the world could have
-done; he said he knew I was young enough to be his child,—that so great a
-disparity of years must preclude much happiness; but when he reminded me
-of the unlimited indulgence with which I had been treated, the tenderness
-with which all my wants, and even my most fantastic whims had been
-anticipated; _then_, indeed, I felt how unjustly I had served him. He
-told me too, how much confidence he had ever reposed in me, allowing me
-to go with whom I liked, and where I liked, without question; and turning
-my eyes inward, I saw how far I had fallen from my own high standard of
-female virtue.
-
-“‘I said nothing in extenuation of my fault, and in silence acquiesced
-to guilt; but when my husband took me to his arms again, and told me he
-would forgive me, even though he became the laughing stock of Paris, on
-condition I would solemnly swear never to commit the same offence again;
-and also to send you away, and never more to see your face; then I saw
-how magnanimous he was in his love, how infatuated in his devotion to me,
-unworthy me.
-
-“‘And now we must part, dear Rinaldo, I mean to say, Monsieur de Serval,
-we must never meet again, or if we do meet in public, as strangers. It
-will be a very hard task for me to tear your image from my heart, but I
-_must_; I ought to love my husband: has he not been so kind to me? Oh,
-yes, I must forget you, and of course you will forget me: very soon some
-other will usurp my place. Oh, I wish I were dead and buried.’
-
-“She fell down upon her knees and wept: it seemed to be so difficult for
-her to surrender me; and it was equally severe for me, for I was tenderly
-attached to her. The husband’s discovery had been startling news: I had
-not dreamt that Valliere had suspected us; it only remained for us now to
-say farewell,—a sad word to be spoken at any time, but most particularly
-in an affair of the heart: it was some minutes before I could calm
-her sufficiently to speak, and then she only spoke of her fault, her
-unhappiness, and her jealous dread of my loving some other better than
-herself.
-
-“‘Oh, you will not entirely forget me, will you, Rinaldo? Although
-hereafter we shall never see each other, you will sometimes think of me;
-think how unhappy I am; how unwise I have been; but do not despise my
-weakness; do not think of me with contempt, perhaps, at some future day,
-when you may love a woman of sterner virtue than myself.’
-
-“‘Dear lady, I can never think of you with any other sentiment than
-admiration. What is there to contemn in one so beautiful and amiable?
-We have erred unwittingly; if any is to blame, it is myself, not you.
-May God, who sees all things, forgive me if I have caused you a moment’s
-pain.’
-
-“‘It is very hard to say farewell forever,’ she kept repeating, as
-she hung upon my hand; ‘but it must be said,’—and after mutual sighs,
-regrets, tears, and kisses, I sorrowfully tore myself away. She fell
-fainting on a sofa as I left the saloon, and I brushed tears from my own
-cheeks as I rushed down the marble terrace steps of her elegant abode.
-
-“My feelings were wild, incoherent, and bitter,—yes, bitter as wormwood,
-for none but honorable loves yield satisfaction and repose to the soul.
-I regretted ever having come to Paris, or ever having crossed the bright
-pathway of so young and innocent a creature; but her husband would still
-countenance and love her. She was not abandoned or cast away to neglect
-or shame; that was a great consolation to me; and trusting that her gay
-and child-like disposition would interest itself in the world, and that
-new associations would obliterate me from her memory, I became calmed,
-and returned to my ordinary pursuits.
-
-“Not long after, I received news of my brother’s death, at Tunis. He had
-been shot in a duel. The cause of the encounter was not explained. My two
-brothers were both dead, and I became heir to my father’s estate.
-
-“Francois and myself had never been sufficiently alike in disposition to
-become tenderly attached. Nevertheless, I regretted his death, as one
-is in duty to the laws of nature bound to do. Rumor said the charming
-Madame Anacharsis Valliere had withdrawn from all gay society, and lived
-entirely in the country. Her health was said to be declining. This
-was some months after our separation; and possessing the clue to her
-new love of solitude, I was vain enough to attribute her ennui to sad
-reminiscences of me.
-
-“I had now been in Paris two years, when I suddenly resolved, one day, to
-go home, and if my father treated me with such incivility as to render a
-long residence disagreeable, I could, in that case, return to Paris. I
-had lost much of the wildness I had brought to the city, and had sobered
-down. My old friend, the lawyer, had proved himself to be a real friend
-to me, notwithstanding some lingering traces of youthful vanity. Small
-foibles are, however, forgiveable when counterbalanced by other good
-qualities; and I was grateful to him for his kindness. He advised me to
-stay and pursue the practice of the law. But yielding to some strange
-presentiment, which bade me go, I promised him soon to return, and set
-off.
-
-“I arrived at the castle after twilight had deepened into sombre night.
-A dense forest of lindens surrounded the old homestead of my childhood,
-on one side of the building, for more than a mile; and riding through
-the thicket of trees had, perhaps, pre-disposed me to sadness, for I
-certainly felt so, when I arrived. No porter was, as usual, at the
-lodge, and the gardens bore evidence of neglect. I rode on; passed the
-drawbridge, and dismounting, left the horse to find his way alone to the
-stables. I went into the inner court of the castle, through the massive
-gateway, and after traversing that, into the servants’ hall. None of
-the domestics were there. I was amazed at this; for among the numerous
-attendants my father was want to keep around him, surely some of them
-would be at their posts. Everything looked so familiar, that even the old
-wainscotting seemed to welcome me back.
-
-“I went up stairs into the enormous banquetting hall, where in the olden
-time, had often been heard sounds of uproarious conviviality, the coarse
-jest, and loud song, and shone beauty’s gentle presence; but it was now
-silent and deserted; cobwebs wandered unmolested on its walls; and the
-rich crimson drapery of the window curtains was thick with dust,—the
-result of years of neglect. No one was here either; and I began to
-conclude that I had in truth come to the abode of death, when suddenly
-recollecting the day of the month, I remembered that it was the annual
-holiday, on which servants had permission to visit the village for the
-day. This explained _their_ absence; but where was Lelia, my father,
-and step-mother? Had they deserted the house; or were they all dead? I
-began to feel infected with superstitious gloom. I went up the grand
-staircase, and sought the different bed chambers of the family. They
-were tenantless. In Lelia’s, several articles of wearing apparel lay
-scattered about, and a miniature of our mother—an exquisite painting set
-in gold, and adorned with pearls and emeralds—was lying on her toilet
-table, entangled with other trinkets, as if thrown down in haste; but the
-presiding nymph of the boudoir was not there.
-
-“As I stood in the centre of the room staring around me, and wondering
-what had become of them all;—as I stood thus, a wild shriek of fear,
-revenge, agony, despair,—it sounded like a compendium of all these
-emotions—burst startlingly upon my ears. Amazed, I listened intently. I
-heard no more: all was still, save the flapping of the venetian blinds,
-as they swung to and fro in the wind, and the mournful cooing of the
-doves. A curse seemed to have come and laid its blight and ban upon
-this unhappy domicile. The living appeared to have deserted it;—perhaps
-celestials, mayhap demons, had substituted themselves in their place. I
-determined to ascertain what that strange sound meant, and directed my
-steps to the quarter whence I thought it proceeded.
-
-“I had forgotten to look in my step-mother’s drawing room. It was on the
-same floor with Lelia’s room. The scream seemed to have come from there.
-Thither I went. As I neared the door, I heard a low hissing laugh. The
-house must be haunted. Surely devils were here. Three steps brought me
-full before the open door, and, oh, great God! I saw a sight that froze
-my heart with horror!”
-
-Monsieur de Serval here started to his feet, as if he still beheld what
-he described. He stared wildly before him a moment; then recovering
-himself sat down, and continued:
-
-“Yes, there, in the middle of the room, stood the accursed priest,
-Father Ignatius; his arms folded, and sinister features expanded into a
-demoniacal smile. Yes, he who hastened my mother’s death, was there; and
-he now contemplated with the eyes of cold contempt, the death agonies of
-two other unhappy beings.”
-
-“Who were they?” I suddenly demanded, breaking in upon the thread of the
-narrative.
-
-“My miserable father and his wife. She lay stretched upon the floor, the
-red life-blood gushing in torrents from a deep wound in her neck; and she
-shook her clenched fists in impotent revenge at her husband and murderer.
-Her face, hands, and hair were smeared with blood, and with the energy of
-death and despair, she muttered curses on his head.
-
-“And he, unhappy being, I could not help feeling some pity for him;—he
-was my father. In him life seemed quite extinct. He had fallen on a
-sofa, and lay to all appearance dead: his gray hair fallen back from his
-death-pale countenance, and his arms hanging listlessly down from his
-side; marks of blood were also on his person.
-
-“Horror-struck I gazed. This was my welcome home. Then animated by a
-strange desire to add a third to this goblin group, and kill that vile
-priest, I strode up to him, and seized him by the arms.
-
-“‘Vile, degraded wretch,’ I cried, ‘and is it you who has done this? Have
-you added downright murder to the indirect means you used to accomplish
-my mother’s death? Say, say!’ I gasped, ‘is it _your_ deed?’
-
-“The monk turned black with rage; but he controlled himself, and said
-quietly:—
-
-“‘My son, I am as innocent of their deaths as yourself. Only a few
-minutes ago I arrived here, having just returned from Vienna. Finding no
-one about the castle, I came in here seeking for your father and madame.
-Approaching, I heard loud words, and on entering, saw your father stab
-your step-mother, then turn the weapon against himself, when they both
-fell as you see them now. The cause of his conduct I am unacquainted
-with.’
-
-“I did not credit him, and was about to inflict summary vengeance upon
-him, or compel him to tell me the truth, when the dying woman, raising
-herself half way on her elbow, after several attempts at speech, feebly
-articulated:
-
-“‘Not he, but he,’ pointing to my father; ‘_he_ did it.’
-
-“A frightful convulsion of pain distorted her face. She pressed her hand
-to her neck, whence the blood issued, and falling back on the floor,
-after a slight spasm, expired. All this happened in a much shorter space
-of time than it requires to tell it you. It seemed as if the invisible
-hand of fate had conducted me there to behold this horrible spectacle.
-What insanity could have urged my father to such a deed?
-
-“This abandoned woman was dead—stone dead. Her career of deceit and
-extravagance was ended, and my martyred mother’s manes appeased. After
-looking attentively at the corpse, to see if life was entirely extinct, I
-turned my attention to my father; but he was already dead. Her features
-retained in death their expression of lowering darkness, and his the same
-look of concentrated iron will they had worn in life.
-
-“‘Oh, most gracious God!’ I ejaculated, sinking on my knees in earnest
-prayer;—‘Oh, vouchsafe to have mercy on their souls; grant them thy
-grace.’
-
-“‘Amen,’ said the monk; and he had glided from the apartment before I
-could arrest his departure. I wished to detain him, at least till I had
-procured a physician and coroner, and had an inquest on the bodies; but
-he was gone. Had the devil sent him there also to witness the death
-of his accomplice? or accident, or what? There was none to answer my
-questions, but the solitary castle itself;—but could walls have spoken,
-I presume they would have told me many a strange tale, of strange scenes
-that had happened since I had left them.
-
-“Assistance must be had, and as none of the servants had yet returned, I
-mounted my horse and rode to the village, whence I soon returned with a
-physician and magistrate.
-
-“Their unaccountable deaths puzzled the man of law much; but when I had
-explained all the circumstances to the sensible, quiet physician, he
-appeared perfectly satisfied that they had come to their deaths as I
-surmised,—she from his hand, and he from self-infliction.
-
-“‘And you have no clue, no idea of the cause of this terrible event?’ he
-said, after I had told him all.
-
-“‘None whatever. I found them as you see them now,’
-
-“‘It is most unaccountable,’ said the magistrate. ‘I cannot imagine of
-anything so despicable, as a man to commit suicide. This is not only
-suicide, but murder, too; perfectly atrocious. I never could have thought
-your father capable of such a deed.’
-
-“‘We know not what we shall do till we are tried. Let us pray God to
-preserve us from temptation,’ said the wise physician; and we left the
-room, locking the door, until some one should come to lay out the bodies.
-
-“The physician and magistrate stayed an hour with me in the banquetting
-hall, discussing the strange affair. At least _they_ discussed it, with
-professional indifference. For myself, I was stupified, satiated with
-horror, and said almost nothing. Then some of the domestics returned, and
-the gray-haired butler, the male nurse and companion of my childhood,
-listened with stupid surprise to my account of his master’s death.
-
-“‘Why, sir,’ stammered he, as if in doubt of his own identity, ‘I left
-them both well, and together in madame’s parlor. How could master so
-suddenly have taken it into his head to kill her, and then kill himself?’
-
-“‘Have there ever been any violent quarrels between your master and
-mistress, that you have been aware of?’ I inquired.
-
-“‘Oh! yes, sir, a great many: for the last two years they have scarcely
-done any thing but fight. I’ve often heard him tell her he would send
-her off, and call you back, and make you master here. Miss Lelia fretted
-much about you; she wished to see you; and madame always abused her.
-Master seemed to take a great dislike to his wife in the last two years;
-whenever he spoke of you, she always got into a perfect fever; she
-really seemed wild; and she would dare him to do something which he said
-he would do, if she did not do as he told her. Oh! we’ve had a deal of
-trouble since you went away.’
-
-“‘I see the whole affair plainly now,’ said the magistrate; ‘they had
-become involved in one of these quarrels; words ran high; he probably
-struck her; and then, becoming infuriated as his anger rose, murdered
-her; and, either from dread of discovery, or disgust of life, killed
-himself: thus it must have been; and a most deplorable affair it is, too.’
-
-“‘Where is my sister Lelia?’ I asked of Juan.
-
-“‘She went some days ago to spend a week with some lady friend of hers.’
-
-“‘How far is she from here?’
-
-“‘Some six miles, sir.’
-
-“‘Take one of the fastest horses and go after her: say only her brother
-has arrived, and wishes to see her—nothing more.’
-
-“‘Yes, sir:’ the servant departed.
-
-“Some lay sisters were sent for, and came from the neighboring convent to
-lay out the bodies. Scarcely was their mournful task completed, when Juan
-returned with Lelia. The beautiful girl burst into tears as she rushed
-to embrace me; and her grief redoubled when I told her of that day’s sad
-events.’
-
-“‘My brother, dear, you little know the many lonely days I’ve passed
-since you left us, and how often I have wished for you; that bad woman
-always treated me with contempt, and father never cared for me; I have
-passed my days alone, always alone, dreaming and regretting: father
-changed much, however, in his opinion of you, and would have had you back
-again, but madame always opposed it; but I little thought, when I left
-here a week ago, that I should find them both dead on returning.
-
-“I consoled poor Lelia as much as possible, and promised her many future
-years of happiness; and so far as that happiness depended on myself, I
-kept my promise. When shown the dead body of her father, she burst into
-torrents of tears, and fell fainting over the corpse. We removed her
-to her own room, and the bodies were consigned to mother earth without
-her again seeing them. With pious care my sister had tended on her
-mother’s grave: and flowers of all hues, all species, grew there in wild
-luxuriance: and a spirit of holiness seemed breathed around it, as if
-the pure soul that had animated that mortal clay, still hallowed, still
-guarded the casket the immortal gem had once inhabited, and preserved it
-from evil influence.
-
-“They were then all gathered together in death: my legitimate father and
-mother, the bold usurper of her just rights, and my gentle brother. The
-governess I buried without a tombstone; she was not worthy of any; the
-common earth I could not refuse her, but even that I thought too good for
-her: but I will no longer speak of her, nor trouble you with my personal
-animosities, but will hasten to the conclusion of my tale.
-
-“I took possession, as sole and natural heir, of the remnant of fortune
-and estate left me; but finding the castle so deeply mortgaged, that
-it was more trouble to keep than it was worth, I sold it; I was partly
-induced to do so from Lelia’s nervous dread of remaining in the house
-where so terrible a murder had been committed, and partly from my
-incapacity to sustain so expensive an establishment with such small
-means. I felt much regret at parting with the halls of my ancestors,
-but the desolate castle would have made a gloomy home for so young a
-creature as Lelia; she was now at an age when society and gay life would
-please and captivate; and I determined to take her to Paris with me.
-The prospect of leaving the solitude and isolation, to which her whole
-lifetime had been alone devoted, charmed her.
-
-“The home of my childhood passed into stranger-hands. Previous to our
-departure I caused diligent search to be made in the vicinity for the
-wicked father Ignatius; but he had disappeared as strangely as he came,
-and left no trace of his coming or exit. I was convinced, however,
-from numerous circumstances, traced to their cause, that he was not
-concerned in or any way accessory to my father’s and stepmother’s death.
-Judging from what the domestics told me, and from what I gathered from
-the neighboring gentry whom my father visited, I surmised that remorse
-had at last seized upon that man of iron nerve: becoming tired of the
-governess, or else conceiving a hatred to her, from recollection of the
-evil deed she had induced him to commit, violent quarrels, crimination
-and recrimination, was the natural result of alienation of affection;
-when under the influence of anger we lose our self-consciousness, and
-know not what we do: in a fit of rage he killed her; and, dreading the
-consequences, and disgrace, added the last act to this tragedy of sin,
-and committed suicide. That death scene I shall never forget; no, not
-if I were to live a thousand years: it haunts me yet with frightful
-vividness.
-
-“I took Lelia with me to Paris, where she afterwards married, well and
-happily, the man of her choice, and lives there still.
-
-“I resumed the practice of the law, and became distinguished in that
-profession. From association with the gayeties of the metropolis, I
-confess I contracted habits I regret having acquired: my disposition
-was ardent and excitable, and it carried me too far. I played high,
-and was seldom fortunate,—almost invariably losing. From mixing with
-society of a certain class, I acquired the reputation of a _roué_ in many
-instances; that, also, was undeserved; although at that time young and
-vain, I was more easily caught in love snares than at present. Thus, for
-some three years longer, I led a gay, wild, yet unhappy life. Then I
-began to weary of this futile way of spending time. My health had become
-impaired by excess, and satiety had taken the place of levity. I wished
-to find some woman in whose integrity I could confide, and marry her, and
-become a better man; but among all the gay, the rich, the talented, the
-beautiful women with whom I was acquainted, none suited me, none equalled
-my expectations. Sometimes I saw a woman whose _personelle_ pleased
-me; but, on acquaintance, I always discovered something wanting in the
-mind,—something I could wish added or taken away. I could no where find
-my Psyche. I gave up my profession, although it yielded me a fine income,
-and came here to Naples.
-
-“Here I have been living since, unhappy and listless amid pleasures,
-longing for something I have never yet found, and have thought, till I
-saw you, I never should find; but at the countess’ ball, where first I
-saw your gentle face, I felt irresistibly attracted toward you: nor has
-acquaintance disappointed the illusion of fancy; but, on the contrary,
-strengthened it, and I now love, where first I admired: your upright
-principles, your beauty, your unblemished reputation and pure heart, have
-won my love and esteem. Nature evidently designed you for private life,
-cultivated and elegant society. Let me then be that faithful friend,
-lover, and husband,—three principles in one person—who shall guard and
-guide your steps through the quick-sands of life. Consent to redeem me
-from past errors: teach me to shape my course more worthily in future.
-Woman’s influence, when she exerts it in the right way, is great; do
-you then become my Mentor, and I will be as docile and obedient as
-Telemachus.”
-
-Monsieur ceased. Meanwhile the bougie was extinguished, and the rays of
-moonlight, as they tremblingly broke through the clouds, alone illumed
-the room. I did not like to be sitting there so late at night, and with a
-gentleman alone.
-
-“It is late: I know I am intruding upon you,” said he, and he rose upon
-his feet; “yet, before I go, say that I may hope—say, dearest Genevra,
-that you accept me.” He pressed my hands in his. I heard him; but did not
-take the sense of what he said. I was in a dream: one of those delightful
-waking dreams of fairy land, in which I have so often indulged.
-
-“No answer still, Genevra. Are you angry?”
-
-“Oh, no! Monsieur, not with you.”
-
-“With others?”
-
-“I don’t know.”
-
-“A woman’s answer, which means you do: give me the legitimate right to
-be your champion? Ah! let me be your husband and defender?”
-
-“I am afraid that, if I marry you, you will some day regret your
-condescension and your love, which induces you to descend below your rank
-to marry an actress.”
-
-“No, never!” cried he, in an indignant tone, “do you take me for a
-child—a fool, who knows not his own mind; for none but fools act without
-pre-consideration.”
-
-“You have my consent then, Monsieur: may I prove worthy of you and your
-expectations.”
-
-Joyously he kissed me. “Now, at last, I hope to realize my dreams of
-domestic happiness and love. Good night then, my pet; to-morrow I shall
-see you again, before I leave on my journey to the north of Italy, where
-business demands my presence.”
-
-“How long will you be gone?”
-
-“One or two weeks only: I shall hasten to rejoin you. Good night.”
-
-Reluctantly he departed. I withdrew to my own room, and, when in bed,
-endeavored to analyze his memoir. I tried to be impartial, and judge
-by reason alone, if he were worthy of my affection; but love confused
-reason, or rather the mischievous god construed everything in his own
-favor, and demanded blind faith, which, like charity, covers a multitude
-of sins. Inexperienced, too, in the ways of men, I knew not of that
-seductive eloquence which dazzles the mind through the heart; besides, I
-was so young and confiding—it was so charming a thing to be loved—that I
-did not care to inquire too closely into cause and effect, and crediting
-all, and happy in the belief, I fell asleep.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The next day my lover came and spent two hours with me. He brought me a
-beautiful diamond ring, the token of our engagement—the gems set in the
-form of a star,—and a miniature of himself, which he placed around my
-neck.
-
-“This will serve to recall me to your memory sometimes, while I am gone,”
-he remarked, playfully.
-
-“If a woman loves a man, she needs nothing to recall him to mind, and if
-she does not, where is the use of a portrait?”
-
-“Ah! you little logician;—little philosopher, you confute me at all
-points.”
-
-“Am I not right, though?”
-
-“Yes; you are always right, at least in my opinion.”
-
-“I shall sing in the Opera of Somnambula to-morrow night; will you be
-there to hear me? but I forget, you will leave this evening, and of
-course cannot come.”
-
-“Yes, I go this afternoon. The time will seem tiresome and tedious until
-re-united to you. If it were possible, I would excuse myself from this
-journey: it must absolutely be performed, and I must tear myself away
-from you and happiness for the present.”
-
-“And I shall feel lonely, too, until your return: it is so new, so
-strange and delightful to be loved, I hardly can realize its truth.”
-
-“I trust many bright years to come, we shall experience its happiness,
-and time will convince you of its reality.”
-
-After he was gone, I hastened to Blanche, to confide my secret to her—for
-a woman must have a confidant of some sort. I found her sitting musingly
-at an open window, her fair face pillowed on her hand. She listened with
-kindness and interest to my relation of Monsieur de Serval’s sudden and
-unexpected offer, and appeared gratified at the seeming good fortune
-which awaited me, when I asked her if she thought him an honorable man
-and serious in his intentions. She replied:
-
-“It is difficult to tell, my dear Genevra, who is _really_ honorable and
-who is not, for many possess the outward semblance to perfection, without
-the quality; but that he wishes and intends to marry you, I question
-not. What object could he have in formally proposing and making these
-presents, if he did not intend it? The first time I saw him in your
-society, I discovered that he loved you. It is a fortunate event which
-enables you, thus early in your professional career, to marry, and leave
-this disagreeable business.”
-
-“Don’t you wish to marry and leave it also, dear Blanche?”
-
-“I don’t know what I wish, my dear: I wish I was dead sometimes,” sighed
-my friend.
-
-“Come, cheer up, dearest,” said I, kissing her; “don’t give way to
-melancholy. You who are so young, so admired and beautiful,—what have you
-to grieve about? Let me persuade you to be gay: you know we are to sing
-together to-morrow; is your costume ready?”
-
-“Oh, yes! I always have everything prepared in advance.”
-
-“What can I do to amuse you? Oh, Blanche!” I exclaimed, a thought
-suddenly striking me, “there is an old fortune-telling witch living out
-on the Posillippo road, let us take a walk out there this evening and
-hear our destiny; it will be at least amusing, if not instructive. Will
-you go with me?”
-
-“Yes, certainly, if it will oblige you; but I have no faith in
-fortune-tellers.”
-
-She quickly dressed, and we set out. After ascending the steep hill of
-the Castle of San Elmo, we took the shady road—bordered on each side by
-linden trees—which led to the pretty village of Posillippo. I had been
-told that old Acte inhabited, sybil-like, a cavern in the rock of a steep
-hill, about half way to the village. We examined all the rocks as we went
-along; but no traces of fairies’ haunts, or witches’ caverns did we see.
-After walking on some distance, we reached the brow of a rising hill,
-and as I gazed staringly up its steep sides, endeavoring to discover the
-celebrated abode of the prophetess, I saw a deep cavity in the rock—the
-opening half overgrown with ivy and wild flowers; a small foot-path
-wound up to it amid the grass. It had a wild, mysterious appearance, and
-conjecturing that must be the place, we ascended to it.
-
-“Dear Genevra!” cried Blanche, tremblingly, as I stooped at the small
-aperture on entering, “pray be careful. Are you sure this is old woman’s
-abode? you may be mistaken;—this may be a wild beast’s den.”
-
-“This is the place, I know, from description. Don’t be afraid: give me
-your hand; I will assist you in.” Grasping my hand from fear, Blanche was
-dragged by me through the opening. When fairly through, we rose upright
-upon our feet, and looked at our localities.
-
-We stood in a large chamber, excavated from the solid rock;—no light of
-day penetrated this haunted dungeon home; but in the far corner, opposite
-me, an immense chimney and fire-place illumined with a blaze of fire
-light the singular apartment; and, sitting before the fire, her back
-toward us, was a strange form crouching on the floor of the cavern: its
-gray hair was matted, and hung straggling down its back,—and it wore a
-long black garment, something like the gown of a priest; every instant
-one of its thin, skeleton-like hands, or rather claws, was projected
-from its lap, depositing something (I could not tell what) in a large
-vessel hanging over the flame,—so gathered up and misshapen was the
-form, I could not distinguish whether it was man, woman, or beast;—the
-appearance of the place, and this _outré_ figure, forcibly reminded me of
-my childhood, and the old woman I called Granny. Blanche had turned pale
-as a ghost from fear, and I regretted having come.
-
-The figure did not at first perceive us; and we had stood some minutes
-unobserved spectators of its singular operations, when, pausing, it
-turned its head, and I beheld a human face,—but so wild, so wizard-like,
-it scarcely resembled a woman’s countenance. She rose to her feet, and
-confronted us. She was tall in stature, and the long, straight robe
-added to her height. She regarded us with a piercing glance, and then
-beckoned our approach.
-
-“Be seated,” said she, pointing to two stools near her; “you have come to
-consult me. I knew I should have visiters this evening; the signs said
-it.”
-
-“We had some difficulty in finding you,” I observed; “your home is so
-secluded.”
-
-“So much the better,—it keeps fools from troubling me,” was the sharp
-reply. As she spoke, she stepped toward a dark corner of the cave, and
-after stooping, and apparently feeling about a moment, came back with a
-bottle, filled with water, in her hand. She resumed her position on the
-floor before the fire, and then abruptly demanded,—
-
-“Which will learn their fate first?”
-
-“Blanche, do you.”
-
-“Oh, no, dear; let her tell you first, and then I will try,” answered
-Blanche, falteringly.
-
-“Well, then, good mother, tell mine.”
-
-She turned the bottle of water slowly head downwards; then raising it,
-apparently contemplating something she saw in the liquid, shook her head,
-and said,—
-
-“A short lived happiness; then clouds, darkness, and sadness await you;
-yet out of this sadness shall come a lasting, quiet joy; durable, because
-it shall be based on proper feelings; and love shall crown all, in future
-years.”
-
-“But, mother, your words are mysterious, incomprehensible to me. Pray
-tell me in plain language what awaits me. I cannot understand your
-symbols.”
-
-“I have said all I can say; recollect my words,—their meaning will be
-clear as sunlight, when they shall be verified in times to come. Now
-you,” to Blanche. Again the bottle was reversed, and she pored over its
-hidden meaning.
-
-“A short but bright career; an ill-fated love; a sudden and violent
-death, and a solitary grave;—this your fate,” and she glared at Blanche
-with those wild eyes.
-
-I noticed the sudden start of surprise, and glowing blush which
-overspread the face of my friend at these words. Had she in secret
-conceived an “ill-fated love?” or was it the unexpectedness of the
-prophecy caused that start?
-
-“Is my destiny then so sad;—is there nothing brighter in store for
-me;—are none of my fair visions to be realized?” said she, pensively.
-
-I placed but little reliance on what she said, considering it the
-mummery and trick of her trade; but Blanche, although she had expressed
-incredulity on the subject of fortune-telling, for the moment seemed
-saddened by the prophecy. Wishing to divert her mind from the subject, I
-began talking to the old woman.
-
-“Have you lived here long, mother?”
-
-“Eighteen summers have been and gone since I first came here.”
-
-“You have seen, then, many changes in the city during that time.”
-
-“Yes, many have been born, and many have died since eighteen years ago.”
-
-“And do you like to live in this old damp cavern? could you not find a
-better home?”
-
-“No; I desire no better home than a cave among the rocks nature made, and
-it is not for me or any other mortal to disdain her works. I have been as
-happy here as I should have been in a fine house.”
-
-“Have you many visiters?”
-
-“Not as many as I used to have. I am growing old and dull, and those who
-have their fortunes told generally go for amusement and ridicule; and now
-that age and disease have made me severe and grave, they seek others who
-can entertain them better.”
-
-I was about to propose other questions, but observing that Blanche had
-gone to the entrance, and was beckoning me, I placed a gold piece in the
-woman’s hand, and joined her. Acte followed me to the door of the rock.
-
-“I shall see you again, I feel I shall. At some future day you will find
-me a true prophet, although now you disbelieve my words. Farewell to both
-of you.”
-
-We descended the hill whence we came; Blanche thoughtful and depressed,
-and I somewhat influenced by Acte’s mysterious predictions. The shadows
-of evening gathered round us as we entered the fashionable street,
-Toledo, now thronged with the beauty and fashion of Naples, enjoying
-their daily rides, drives, and promenades, along the beautiful shores of
-the bay.
-
-As we walked along the street toward our own home, ourselves observing
-and observed, an elegant English phæton, driven by a footman, in blue
-and orange, and occupied by a young man, lovely as an angel, indolently
-lolling against its cushions, came gliding by. As it passed us, the
-gentleman stared long at Blanche, and then bowed; her face flushed to
-crimson, as she returned the salutation. I noticed also he leaned out of
-the carriage, and looked after her.
-
-“What a splendid looking man,” I involuntarily exclaimed; “who is he?”
-
-“The Lord of Glenfells; a Scottish nobleman. I saw him at Munich,”
-answered she, hesitatingly.
-
-“Are you well acquainted with him?”
-
-“Yes, he has visited me.”
-
-“Oh, is he not handsome!”
-
-“Yes, very; I always thought him fine looking.”
-
-Blanche evidently did not wish to speak further about him; and with that
-strange intuition with which woman divines woman, I surmised that it was
-from something of a secret partiality.
-
-Madame Bonni was waiting tea when we reached home.
-
-“My two nightingales, where have you been to? I have been waiting an
-hour for you; and the French manager has called to see you. He stayed
-sometime, but finding you did not come, went away, saying he should call
-in the morning. He has something particular to say to you.”
-
-“We have been taking a long walk toward Posillippo and Virgil’s tomb,
-which detained us longer than we had intended,” said I, not wishing to
-tell her our real adventure.
-
-“Ah! have you? Did you go within it?—is it not an interesting sight?”
-
-“No, we did not extend our walk so far as to reach it; but some day,
-soon, I intend visiting it for that purpose.”
-
-My thoughts reverted to Monsieur de Serval, and wondering and wishing he
-were back again with me, I spent the evening in my room, leaving Blanche
-to entertain our kind hostess.
-
-When alone, I always thought of my lover, as lovers generally do, I
-believe. I admired and loved him, but this love was so sudden, so
-incomprehensible;—men seldom court women on the instant of acquaintance,
-propose and marry them, especially actresses. Then I recalled what
-Madame Bonni and rumor had said of his character; his extravagance and
-bad conduct: but then had he not frankly, and with sincere contrition,
-admitted his faults, and promised amendment in future? What could be
-sadder, more touching than that history itself? related so charmingly,
-in his graceful way. His childhood had been soured by a bold, bad woman,
-and subsequently thrown upon the sea of life, like a bark without a pilot
-or rudder to steer it. Temptations, in their most attractive forms, had
-beset him, and he had done only as other men would have done, not even
-as bad as that. Much allowance should be made for his youth and beauty,
-and lonely position in life. But my excuses for my lover were endless. I
-cannot follow them all. When love amounts to infatuation, it is useless
-to reason; and it was foolish for me to attempt it. I wished he were with
-me;—I counted the hours and days as they passed.
-
-The other gentlemen who visited me, no longer pleased me. I did not want
-to see them;—their society only bored me. I usually deserted the parlor,
-leaving Blanche to do the honors, while I nursed my reveries alone; and
-she, so gentle and amiable, was willing to do anything to oblige another,
-and always anticipated and gratified my wishes,—even my strangest whims.
-
-The next morning after our visit to Acte, we were summoned to the
-parlor to see the manager. We found that worthy individual intently
-engaged in self-admiration of his own person, reflected in one of the
-long mirrors. He started on perceiving that _we_ had discovered _him_
-in this interesting employment, which might seem to indicate, perhaps,
-some slight vanity, (a foolish quality, however, never possessed by the
-sterner and wiser sex!) Advancing toward us on tip-toe, he smilingly paid
-the salutations of the day, and then said:
-
-“Mesdemoiselles, the object of my visit is to inform you, that a new
-opera has been written by a distinguished musician of this city, and I
-wish to secure your services for its representation. I wish to produce
-it within a fortnight; new scenery and costumes have been added to the
-Opera house, and everything which can add to the splendor of effect, I
-intend shall be done; may I hope to have the co-operation of the two
-nightingales?” he bowed and chasseed before us.
-
-“What is the name of the new opera, Monsieur?” I inquired.
-
-“It is called Ajesha, or the Maid of Kars, a magnificent production of
-genius; the plot is romantic and beautiful, the music divine; some of the
-songs are exquisite. Stay, I will sing you one of the men’s, that you may
-form something of an opinion about it.”
-
-He seated himself at the piano and sang a spirited, sweet thing,
-beginning with, ‘My home is on the storm-bound deep.’ We listened
-intently, and admired it.
-
-“That is one of the gems of the opera, and there are many others equally
-beautiful; some of the women’s songs are exquisite, and you, fair ladies,
-I know will do them justice. I wish to bring it out within two weeks. In
-the course of that time the royal family return to the city, and will
-grace the theatre with their presence; may I consider your services
-engaged, Mesdemoiselles?”
-
-“Blanche is free to decide for herself, Monsieur,” I replied; “but for
-me, my guardian must decide.”
-
-“Ah, yes, but Belmont of course will be perfectly willing. I shall see
-him this morning and ask him, but you Mademoiselle Ricorsi, you are
-independent and can choose for yourself,—will you be the Ajesha?”
-
-“I have never yet played in Naples; you know my terms, monsieur; are you
-willing to pay me what I have been in the habit of receiving at Munich?”
-
-“Of course, Mademoiselle, your price is my price.”
-
-“Then I shall be happy to sing, monsieur.”
-
-“All is agreed then, and I shall be happy to see you at rehearsal to
-morrow, ladies, when we will run through the opera, and cast your parts,”
-and the polite Frenchman bowed himself out of our presence.
-
-I omit the rehearsals, the confusion of preparation, and getting ready
-the costumes for the occasion, and pass to the night when this beautiful
-opera was produced for the first time on the Neapolitan boards.
-
-It was a tragedy; the plot is a singular one: Ajesha, the Maid of Kars,
-is a Circassian, as her name denotes; she is sold into slavery from her
-native land, and carried to the town of Kars, where she becomes the
-property of a Turkish Emir; he loves her intensely, and of course is most
-intensely jealous. She, a beautiful, spiritual creature, does not love
-this illiterate Turk, distinguished for nothing, but his immense wealth
-and brutality.
-
-A noble and handsome Englishman is taken prisoner by this Turkish
-commander, the English and Turks then being at war; he is imprisoned in
-a house opposite the harem of Ajesha; news of his youth and beauty is
-brought to the lady; he becomes ill from the severity of his treatment,
-and Ajesha, in the disguise of a page, visits, and nurses him. The
-consequence is, they conceive a mutual and desperate love for each other.
-
-At first their meetings are undetected by the jealous Mussulman, but
-Ajesha dreading future discovery, appoints the cemetery, the city of the
-silent, as their rendezvous. A treacherous slave betrays her confidence
-to the Emir; he surprises them one evening, and stabs her in the arms of
-her lover; then attempting to punish the Englishman, he himself is killed
-by the enraged lover, and dies by the side of his fair slave.
-
-This is the outline, as well as I remember it, of one of the most
-exquisite things I ever saw performed. The character of Nina I was cast
-for, voluntarily resigning the principal character in favor of my friend;
-and oh, how beautiful, beyond the power of description, did she look the
-night she played it.
-
-She first makes her appearance in the Circassian costume, when she is
-sold from the home of infancy, and carried to a strange land; and the
-dress Blanche wore, was of white silk, ornamented with gold lama lace; a
-turban of tissue, spangled with gold stars, surmounted her flaxen curls
-waving on her shoulders; the graceful trousers gathered into a gold
-bandelette at the ancle, exposed fully to view her tiny feet, encased in
-their little Circassian slippers. The affectionate, sad farewell to her
-parents and young acquaintances, and the song she sings, ‘My native land,
-farewell,’ shook the house with applause. Every one had heard of, but
-none had yet seen the Munich nightingale; curiosity had been on the alert
-for some time, to witness our combined appearance, and glancing out from
-the side scenes I observed the royal box occupied, and the queen leaning
-forward with an air of rapt attention.
-
-I personated the friend and companion of Ajesha. Nina accompanies her
-into captivity, but is finally redeemed by her friends, and returns
-home. The music of the farewell scene between Ajesha and Nina, was very
-sweet; when they bid each other adieu, and sing, ‘We have been friends
-together in sunlight and in tears;’ and we mutually felt indeed we had
-been friends together. The queen enthusiastically applauded, clapping
-her hands like a girl; and bouquets were promiscuously showered upon us
-from all parts of the house: two wreaths were cast at our feet by the
-king and queen. The coincidence struck me, it was on a similar occasion,
-the night of my debut in that theatre, that the wreath had been thrown
-me; not by royalty, but by one whose gemmed, singular face had strangely
-haunted me since, and as we both uplifted our eyes to the royal box, who
-should I see gazing on me behind their majesties, but the same face, the
-same large liquid eyes that had magnetised mine two months before. My
-astonishment was so great, I could scarcely recollect myself enough to
-step backward as the heavy drop curtain fell.
-
-Who could that man be accompanying the royal family? and apparently on
-familiar terms with them. I could not doubt it was the very same one, the
-donor of the diamonded wreath, those beautiful flowers I had preserved
-for so many days with so much care, who seemed to regard me with an air
-of so much interest.
-
-I had no time for reflection, Monsieur Belmont hurried us to our
-dressing-rooms, to dress for the palace scene, when Ajesha and Nina are
-first presented to the Emir.
-
-I could not help mentally contrasting the absurd difference between
-the acting on the stage, and the motley confusion behind the scenes;
-the heaps of stage furniture, costume, old scenery, the scene shifters
-running hither and thither, black mutes, soldiers, noblemen, the women of
-the harem, in the most charming stage of negligee, nearly approaching to
-that of genuine nature, and above all other tones, I heard those of the
-worthy manager, who was directing the men how to arrange the grand salon
-de reception, into which we were to be carried in close litters.
-
-“Here,” shouted he, “make haste; what are you all about? where’s the dias
-for the salon? place it here, spread out the carpet; now, is that done?
-arrange yourselves in a row behind the throne, to the guards; light the
-lamps; get the instruments of music.”
-
-I entered the little room, where I dressed amid his reiterated
-injunctions and commands to the assembled court.
-
-What an empty show, thought I, as I hastily attired myself in the rose
-colored satin petticoat, and black velvet boddice, and placed a waving
-plume of white feathers in my hair.
-
-The Count Godolpho, an old _roué_ and _habitué_ of the “scenes” for years
-back, stopped me with a fine compliment, as I was getting into the veiled
-litter by the side of Blanche.
-
-“What! Mademoiselle Sfonza, is it you? fair as a star-lit nymph of
-air!” This was a poetical fancy of his own: I never met with the like
-expression in print. “Our pet child of song, stay a moment, let me look
-at you.”
-
-“I cannot now, Marquis, indeed, see they wait our entry.”
-
-“Where then can I see you, wilful fay? one never gets a sight of you
-except at the play: then only for an instant, and you are gone; where do
-you live?”
-
-“On earth now, in heaven I hope some day,” I smartly answered,—making
-a faint attempt at wit, to rid myself of this worn out old coxcomb, as
-I had no wish or intention to receive his visits; and the black mutes
-raising the litter, we were borne past him on the stage.
-
-Although conscious it was a mere show, still in the last act, the death
-scene of Ajesha and her lover, the touching pathos of Blanche’s acting,
-her dreamy, etherial tones, melted me to tears; and I almost cheated
-myself into the delusion that it was reality. Her death song, ‘Beloved, I
-die,’ seemed indeed like the last breathings of a dying spirit, and oh,
-merciful heaven, was it not prophetic of her future fate?
-
-When the curtain fell on the last act, we were loudly called for, and our
-teacher, proudly elated at this great triumph, led us before the curtain,
-where we made our curtesies, kissed hands to the audience and passed off.
-
-The morning papers were filled with praises of our performance, and the
-plot, music, and libretto of the new opera. I laughed myself to sleep
-that night when I thought of the discomfiture of the count, and his
-absurd manner; then again, unconsciously and mysteriously, my thoughts
-reverted to the gentleman I had seen in the royal box—you will think,
-perhaps, I did not love my affianced lover, since my attention and
-thoughts could be so easily distracted to another, but in truth I did;
-I loved him with my whole soul; every wish, every thought was his; this
-interest in a stranger, a casual spectator of my performance, was not
-love, nor curiosity; it was a prophetic, a magnetic attraction, a feeling
-that seemed to tell that in future—but no matter, I will no longer
-digress; let me strictly adhere to the tenor of my tale.
-
-Blanche had long before fully compensated monsieur for his care of her
-childhood, and presented him beside with a handsome sum of money. Her
-industry had accumulated quite a small fortune, within the four years she
-had been performing for herself; the receipts of our joint acting each
-night were enormous, and Monsieur Belmont had no reason to regret his
-patronage of the Viennese beggar girl.
-
-He often said, himself, that we three poor girls had gained him more
-money and celebrity than any pupils he ever had. As I said in the
-beginning of my memoir, there is always a _motive_ in these apparently
-beneficent actions. His motive was to feed, clothe, and educate us
-brilliantly for the stage; for this purpose it was much better to select
-girls from the lowest walks of life, friendless, uncared-for ones,
-unprotected and unprovided for, over whom he could have absolute control.
-True, he had saved us from starvation, but then he had realized a fortune
-from our exertions, and I was anxious to absolve myself from my debt of
-gratitude and obligation, and become mistress of my own actions, which
-every sensible rational being desires and ought to be.
-
-My teacher knew nothing of my secret engagement. I had not told him, and
-wondered, when told, what he would say and think of it. Of course he
-would be astonished at its suddenness, and, in a worldly point of view,
-at the condescension of Monsieur de Serval. I did not even know that
-he would give his consent, as he had a right to command my services. I
-trusted, however, to his uniform kindness to me, to arrange that matter.
-I felt sure he would not force me to do any thing I did not wish to do;
-that he would allow me to discontinue my theatrical career if I felt so
-inclined.
-
-We were visited daily by many of the fashionable men of Naples; we were
-escorted to and from the theatre by numerous beaux, and the gay cavaliers
-vied with each other in their attentions; yet the compliments, the
-civilities paid to actresses, are of a different tone to those rendered
-to ladies of private life. There is a tone to all expression, a gradation
-to every human feeling; there is an imperceptible something in expression
-which we can feel but cannot describe; and it was this something that I
-felt, but could not describe, when I regarded the opposite of attentions
-to a lady of rank, and compliments to an actress.
-
-I endeavored to console myself for all regrets in philosophy, but
-sometimes _feeling_ triumphed over even that, stoical as I thought
-myself. Sometimes attributing every thing to fate, sometimes believing in
-chance, I surrendered myself to the current of life’s troublous stream,
-and blindly glided on.
-
-Among other visiters to the house, there came the beautiful Lord of
-Glenfells. I say beautiful, because handsome, manly, fine-looking, are
-not terms to express his ideal, his exquisite, shadowy, captivating
-loveliness. He often visited Blanche. I never obtruded on their
-interviews; and, save the ordinary civilities of etiquette, never had any
-acquaintance with him; yet, though I saw him frequently, the impression
-of his personal attractions ever seemed new to me. I know not if he were
-intelligent or otherwise. I once or twice spoke of him to her, but the
-embarrassment and rosy blush told of interested feeling, and perceiving
-she did not wish to converse about him, I ever afterwards waived the
-subject.
-
-Busy gossiping tongues, however, with which the world is filled, who make
-it their business to attend to every body’s but their own, reported him
-as a man of immense wealth, travelling for amusement, or pleasure, which
-with the rich, and great, and fashionable, means the same thing. This was
-all I gathered concerning him; yet from what I saw of him, I considered
-him a man of dangerous attractions; artful, without appearing to be
-so, possessing a mournful tenderness, an abandon of manner, peculiarly
-attractive to a woman like Blanche. Though younger, I was superior in
-perception of the realities of life. I was not so dreamy, perhaps not so
-pure as she, my embodied concentration of the great, the beautiful, the
-good. God bless her! Let me not dilate upon that purity, that goodness. I
-feel my praise is inadequate to her merits; my commendations cannot add
-to the halo of immortality that surrounds her in the Elysian shades.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-
-The three weeks’ absence of Monsieur de Serval, was occupied in
-fulfilling our engagement in Ajesha, which was performed twenty nights,
-and obtained great popularity for itself and glorious fame for us. Upon
-the return of my lover, my comet-like career was to terminate into
-marriage and retirement into private life. Blanche still adhered to her
-resolution of remaining unmarried, though many good offers had been made
-her; and of the opinions of Inez in that particular, we had been duly
-informed by a letter from herself, describing her happiness, and pleasant
-home, and husband’s love.
-
-The prophecy of old Acte lingered in my mind and constantly haunted me,
-and Blanche also seemed painfully impressed by her words. I observed
-for some days before M. de Serval’s return, that she would sit for
-hours—often all day—in absent thought, noticing no one, answering no
-one, if spoken to. Wondering at this neglect of my kindness in her,
-who had always from childhood manifested so much attachment to me, I
-felt a reproach to this coolness rise to my lips; but when I glanced at
-that calm, sweet face, and saw the pre-occupation of sad thought, all
-anger vanished, and quietly coinciding with her wish, I left her to her
-meditations.
-
-The night before the day on which my lover returned, I sought my pillow
-early; but sleep fled my eager embrace. Restlessly I tossed: I could not
-rest. Madame Bonni had a library of select works fitted up in a little
-room on the ground floor; I remembered this, and wanting to amuse me
-till repose should come, I arose, slipped on an opera-cloak of blue
-satin, which happened to be lying near the bed, and thrusting my feet
-in slippers, descended the stairs: all the household were retired. I
-got my book from the library, and was about returning, when passing
-the door which led into the garden, at that late hour I was surprised
-to see it open. The resplendent moonlight streamed brightly through,
-disclosing my favorite seat beneath the blooming Acacia and those beds
-of roses so odorous, and that pretty garden looked so inviting, that I
-stepped out in the moonlight and looked around. All nature was hushed to
-repose,—that delightful calm which, unlike death, tells of prostrated
-strength presently to be revived. As I stood upon the porch, gazing
-vacantly around, voices struck my ear. Who could be there at that late
-hour? I thought of robbers, and trembled with fear. A moment’s listening
-re-assured me: it was a woman’s sweet tones I heard, and then those of a
-man in reply.
-
-Far down the gravel-walk, at the extreme end of the garden—by the margin
-of a little fountain which had once played there, but whose source was
-now neglected and obstructed by weeds and stones—I thought I perceived
-two forms. Determined to ascertain who and what they were, I stole
-noiselessly down the walk, to the shade of my favorite tree, which now
-cast its deep shadow far down the way, and concealing myself behind the
-broad trunk, peeped from around it, and beheld, to my astonishment, Lord
-Glenfells and Blanche!
-
-I saw her leaning on his full chest, her arms encircling his neck, her
-little mouth united to his, her soft eyes fixed on his, and he was gazing
-into hers with the same fondness—only more animal passion added to it.
-Tears fell like pearly dew from her eyes, and I saw him pause, as he
-spoke, and wipe them away with his small hand. I listened to hear their
-voices speak again, unable to explain to myself this singular scene.
-
-“Is not love the same? Can an empty ceremony—said over two lovers—render
-more binding the greatest, best, and noblest sentiment of our nature.
-Say, Blanche!—my beautiful one, my ocean pearl!—could the words of the
-matrimonial service make me more constant,—make me love you more than I
-now do? You, my heart’s worship, my idol! shall I not give you my whole
-soul; and what more can I do? If an unhallowed, a conventional form into
-which I was persuaded—forced; if that wretched link of earth binds me,
-in earthly form, to another,—what matters it? Consider, love, it is the
-same, so long as we are constant to our attachment: that constitutes the
-perfidy. Oh! listen not to the world’s prudence—to the cold calculations
-of a prudish moral. Let feeling usurp its place, and that I know will
-triumph—will plead my cause. Come with me this night—now; beneath the
-light of yonder bright silver. We will seek some other land, or a distant
-part of this country, where your fault—if that can be called fault which
-consumates my bliss—will be unknown, unheard of; and we will live in
-blest harmony and love. Come, dearest; come?”
-
-“No, no!” and her voice was choked by tears. “My love is all wrong: it is
-unhallowed. You are a married man. If I fly with you, disgrace follows
-me: you have a wife in England: you must forget me, and I, you. Even were
-you free, would you marry me? Consider your rank, and _I_ an actress.”
-
-“Blanche, you mean not what you say, when you tell me to forget you. Do
-you really wish me to return to England to my dull wife—ten years my
-senior—and the stupidity of home—a home like that? Do you really wish it?
-If so,—farewell.”
-
-He made a movement to turn away; but she clung still closer to his bosom,
-and buried her head there.
-
-“Cruel! oh, cruel! I do not want you to go.”
-
-“Consent, then, to go with me. Come now, this moment? I will get a
-carriage, and morning light shall find us far away. Decide, Blanche,
-between my loss and my happiness. No answer? Blanche, are you dreaming,
-love?”
-
-“No; I was thinking of Genevra, my faithful friend. What will she think
-of my conduct! How mysterious it will seem to her: how ungrateful! but I
-love her,—oh, so dearly! She is the only woman who ever loved me, and I
-return her feelings with usury, too. Let me at least run up to her room,
-and, as she sleeps, kiss her farewell. I feel, for the last time, and
-here,—while the moon shines so bright above—while I consent to forfeit,
-for your sake, my good name, inviolate till this moment,—here let me
-gaze upon those starry spheres, and call down upon her young head their
-resplendent blessings. Oh, Heavenly Spirit! preserve her as she now
-is—beautiful and pure as the lily of the valley. Preserve her from that
-error of the heart which I now commit, which leads me to sin—knowing
-that sin. Grant that, in some future state, our souls may meet—may hold
-communion with each other, and be conscious of affinity. Holy influences
-of heaven! spirit of night and air! grant my prayer.”
-
-I saw her sink upon her knees, clasp her hands on her white neck, and
-fix her eyes on the starry firmament. Thus she remained a moment, in a
-breathless ecstacy of thought, when Lord Glenfells gently raised her, and
-once more folded her to his bosom.
-
-“Why this tumult of passion, dearest? What agitates you so?”
-
-“Get a carriage: bring it round to the garden-gate: I shall soon be ready
-for you. Meanwhile, let me go and kiss her good by?”
-
-I saw her break away from his fond arms; and, quick as thought, I
-retreated to my chamber, unobserved as I had come. I would not for worlds
-that she should have known that I had overheard her. I got into bed
-again, and closed my eyes. She passed my door, and ascended to her own
-room. Her hasty steps sounded overhead for some time,—hurriedly packing
-up, I suppose,—then she again descended, and paused at my door.
-
-The lock turned, and her sylph-like form glided to my bed side. She
-stooped over me—imagining I slept—and smoothed my hair beneath my cap
-with her tiny hand; then she kissed my forehead, and murmured,—
-
-“Genevra! dear Genevra! dear friend! when you awake in the morning you
-will seek me, but find me not: perhaps you may miss me for a little
-while,—may sometimes think of me with love and kindness: I hope so. I go
-to a new life—the life of love! I go to accomplish my destiny.”
-
-Once again she kissed me, then glided from the room. I heard her tell
-Lord Glenfells to bring the carriage to the garden-gate. My room looked
-on the street. I rose again from bed, and directed my steps to a little
-back room, near my own, which overlooked this gate. I wanted to see her
-go, though she knew not I was a witness of that departure. Her behaviour
-was an enigma I could not solve, and the reasons for which ever remained
-a mystery. If she was determined to become the associate of this man,
-why not go to him in broad daylight: what prevented her? She was her own
-mistress: no one did, or had the right to control her. She had long ago
-emancipated herself from her teacher’s guardianship; what, then, was the
-reason of this secret flight? I knew not then: I know not now.
-
-I had stood watching at the window of the room for some time, when I
-saw Lord Glenfells and Blanche emerge from the shadow of the porch, and
-pass through the gate; he put her in the landau, saw the baggage placed
-behind; seated himself by her, and, like lightning, they vanished from my
-sight.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The amazement of our hostess can better be imagined than described, when,
-on going to her room next day, she found it unoccupied—the stage and
-personal wardrobe of its fair proprietress gone also: and whither had she
-taken her flight? how strange the gifted child of song should yield to
-a momentary infatuation; and, listening to impulse, forgetting reason,
-abandon herself to such a life: what demon possessed her?
-
-I had expected a violent storm on the part of M. Belmont; but, to my
-astonishment, he received my recital of the night’s adventure with
-perfect indifference: and remarked, with imperturbable phlegm, that “it
-was her own affair; she ought to know best what she was about.” I had
-expected some surprise, sorrow, or at least an emotion of some sort; but
-I forgot that my teacher had been hardened in the ways of the world; and
-births, deaths, marriages, seductions, and every other evil thing, was a
-matter of course to him. He always maintained that every sensible person
-should be the best judge of their own conduct: like a true Frenchman, he
-did as he pleased, and allowed every one else to do the same, unmolested,
-undisturbed by criticism or advice.
-
-After breakfast, Madame Bonni and I sat together speculating and
-mystifying about Blanche’s strange behaviour: the problem, however, could
-not be solved by us. It was past elucidation, and the more we talked,
-the farther we got from the point—the motive of action. While we were
-discussing, I was called away; my lover had returned.
-
-I found him standing on his feet, hat in hand, facing the door, where
-I entered—his face calm and happy in expression—and it warmed and
-brightened when I came towards him; catching my hands in his, he pressed
-them fervently, and, kissing me, asked,
-
-“Have you missed me, darling?”
-
-“Oh! very much, dear Rinaldo.”
-
-“And I have been dreaming of you during my whole journey; I scarcely
-had sense enough left from reverie to attend to my business, and I have
-hurried back, leaving it half incomplete, to be arranged by lawyers.”
-
-“But where is it you have been to, dearest?”
-
-“Genoa and the frontier of Austria: an estate left me I was in danger of
-losing, through the perfidy of relations; but, thank heaven! their malice
-is defeated, and I am safe: now, love, come sit here by me on this sofa,
-and tell me all you have been doing. I left the night Somnambula was to
-be performed: tell me about it; did it succeed?”
-
-I described the opera, and singing: its success, and subsequently the
-disappearance of Blanche with Lord Glenfells, the night before.
-
-“Gone with Lord Glenfells! what an unwise action: but who is he?”
-
-“A gay young Englishman, travelling on the continent for amusement;
-dear Blanche, who would have dreamed, after all the temptations she has
-evaded, who would have thought she would have acted thus?”
-
-“No one in truth; it is very strange: your friend appeared so gentle,
-so indifferent to men’s society, and fond of solitude; of all women, I
-should have thought her the very last one to commit so rash an action.”
-
-“Blanche is one of those strange, impulsive beings, who, if you can only
-thoroughly warm and interest, will go all lengths to love and please
-you. Lord Glenfells has acquired a great influence over her, and she has
-consented to forego respectability, society, everything for him. Oh, how
-I wish she had not done so; how I regret her loss.”
-
-“She may repent this imprudence some day, and return to propriety;
-and you, do not grieve about her; summon your stoical philosophy, and
-practice your favorite aphorism. Never regret that which is past.”
-
-“Yes, I know I ought to practice my precepts: philosophy triumphs over
-past and future ills, but present troubles overmaster philosophy.”
-
-“True, love: a wise remark.”
-
-“We were engaged to sing five nights yet, to complete our engagement; now
-she is flown, I shall have to finish alone,” I observed, absently; for,
-notwithstanding my joy at seeing my lover again, my thoughts reverted to
-the absent Blanche.
-
-Monsieur de Serval drew me gently toward him, as he sat upon the sofa.
-
-“Come hither dearest, come sit close by me, your presumptive and future
-lawful protector; do not look so sad; cheer up, and let us talk of
-happiness and love, and delightful scenes, and conversations, all in
-store for us in times to come.”
-
-But I could not feel my usual cheerfulness, even for _his_ sake, and
-after a slight conversation he went away, and I retired to my own room
-and my solitude; and then I wept for Blanche’s loss, and Blanche’s shame.
-
-Nothing is sooner dried than a tear; and, as de Serval had said, my
-regrets could not restore her, could not undo her behaviour; and the
-deprivation of her sweet society, made me fonder still (if that could be)
-of that of Monsieur de Serval; my whole heart now exclusively centered in
-him. I performed my last engagement on the Neapolitan boards, and bade
-adieu to the distinguished patronage of royalty, and the humble, yet
-heartfelt admiration of the people. The journals doled forth newspaper
-sentiment and lamentations at the dramatic loss; and private circles
-wondered at my good fortune. For myself I did not think whether it was
-good fortune or not. I only knew, I only thought I loved him, and was
-willing to go any where, do anything, make any sacrifice for him. I
-will not describe the few weeks of courtship that intervened before my
-marriage; such scenes can only be felt, be experienced, they cannot be
-told; they are sad, yet sweet episodes in my memory, and though painful
-to recur to, yet mentally I treasure them, for that was my _first_ love.
-
-Signor, I married him; my wedding was simple, and celebrated with but
-little display; his noble friend, the Countess Bramonti honored it with
-her distinguished presence; and my guardian, teacher, and benefactor,
-Monsieur Belmont, gave me away. I was united to him in the pretty church
-of Sacre Cœur, where, some weeks before I had attended mass with Madame
-Bonni; it was filled with spectators, every one wishing to see the new
-singer married; and my kind hostess kissed me at the conclusion of the
-ceremony, and wished me happiness, with tears in her eyes, and smiles on
-her lips.
-
-“May many blissful days and years be thine, fair girl,” said the countess
-in her deep tones, as she swept her majestic form toward me, and clasped
-me in her arms; “may you love each other, and in that love be happy.”
-
-Monsieur Belmont conducted me to the carriage, which was to bear me
-away to my future home, in a valley, amid the cloud-capt Appenines.
-Immediately on arrival there, I promised to write to him, and regularly
-maintain a correspondence. My husband, (how strange the word sounded
-to my ears,) joined me, and I was whirled away from the scene of my
-short-lived, yet brilliant triumphs.
-
-Our journey to his mountain home occupied two days; and during the time
-my husband exhibited a frenzy of emotion, which terrified more than it
-pleased me. But the ways and loves of men were then Isiac mysteries
-to me, and you know their translation of the word love, is rendered
-differently to ours.
-
-On the evening of the second day of our travel, he told me we were
-approaching the “Chateau of the Ravine,” for that was the traditionary
-name of the castle. The scenery was sublime, and lost in contemplation
-and thought, reposing my head on his shoulder, I silently admired it.
-
-Stupendous rocks, rising perpendicularly in the air, to an immense
-height, faced the smooth road on either side for some distance; as these
-declined away, a broad vista of the dark blue mountains far in distance,
-and a beautiful level plain, such as I had seen when first I came to
-Naples, met my gaze. Like a panorama these swiftly disappeared, and we
-entered on a broken chain of the Appenines themselves; the carriage
-slowly wound round and round the upward ascent of the rocky pass, barely
-wide enough to allow the vehicle room to roll along; then we descended
-as rapidly as we had come up, and thus continued on for some miles, when
-the ridge of mountains suddenly terminated, and I looked down from the
-great height on which we stood, and beheld at my feet the ravine, and in
-the midst of it, presenting an imposing appearance of grandeur and decay,
-the chateau. It had been built, my husband said, in the ancient times of
-feudal splendor, but its successive possessors, either for want of means
-or inclination, had suffered it to moulder away, as time, year after
-year, diminished its magnificence. He said he intended refitting it, and
-renovating the antique style, and I was pleased to hear the promise that
-so fine a structure should be rescued from decay.
-
-A few minutes brought us to the gates, which were thrown wide open to
-receive us, and the carriage rumbled into the great court-yard. M. de
-Serval alighted, lifted me out, and leaning on his arm, I ascended a
-marble staircase, and entered a pretty salon, tastefully furnished, where
-I sat down, quite wearied by fatigue. He left the room for a moment, to
-order lights and supper to be prepared, for twilight was stealing over
-us, and leaning back on the couch, I languidly closed my eyes, and was
-almost dropt asleep, when a heavy footstep startled me; looking up, I saw
-standing before me, and fixedly looking at me, an old woman; there was
-nothing strange in the simple fact of her being old, for old women are
-plentiful as stars; but this one was peculiarly singular in appearance;
-she wore a scarlet woollen petticoat, black stockings, and a little cap
-of green; her long, thick, and coarse black hair, fell below her waist in
-tangled braids; her eyes were piercing in expression, and they seemed to
-sparkle and glance fire as she fixedly stared at me. She appeared to be
-beating time to her own thoughts, for she repeatedly struck her breast
-with her right hand. Perceiving that I saw her, she curtesied, and in a
-lofty tone said,
-
-“Welcome to your home, fair mistress; welcome to the ‘Chateau of the
-Ravine.’
-
-“Do you belong to the household of Monsieur de Serval?” I asked,
-strangely impressed by her manner and appearance.
-
-“Yes, madame: I came here a long time ago, in the service of the first
-lady.”
-
-“The first lady! who was she?”
-
-“You know, madame, of course, the Lady Isodore, Monsieur’s—”
-
-Abruptly she paused; and, turning, I saw my husband’s stern gaze fastened
-on her: she cowered beneath that look; and well she might, for even I
-could not have met it unabashed.
-
-“Pasiphae, you can go; your young mistress is tired; she needs repose
-after her long travel.”
-
-Silently she retreated.
-
-“Who is that old woman, dearest? her strange ways surprised me.”
-
-“An old domestic I have retained in my service, though almost useless;
-come Genevra, your chamber is prepared, and supper arranged in the
-banqueting hall.”
-
-Thither we went: the apartment was magnificent, and one of the tables set
-with dainties that might have delighted an epicure; the lamps, shrined
-in vases of alabaster, shed a sweet, soft light; the hush of stillness
-and repose reigned within and without; and, more than all, my husband’s
-accents of tenderness, and the tumult of love that had usurped the place
-of gentler emotions in my breast, have impressed that scene in indelible
-traits on my memory.
-
-After supper we returned to the salon, and entertained ourselves, till
-the clock struck the hour for retiring, with a conversation in which
-_words_ had all to do, not thoughts: _they_ were differently employed.
-
-Then, at ten o’clock, we retired to our bedchamber; the same old woman
-stood at the door of the room as I entered: an ominous smile sat on her
-lips; she opened her mouth, as if to speak; but, perceiving my husband
-close behind me, she went away without expressing the thoughts which
-seemed to tremble on the point of utterance.
-
-Then, when the door closed behind us, suffocated with joy, we fell into
-each other’s arms—let me draw a veil over that night, and pass to other
-scenes.
-
- * * * * *
-
-I wish I could make you realize the ecstatic rhapsody in those first days
-of wedded love: such emotions as I experienced one can only experience
-once in a lifetime: for the novelty wears away; they also disappear.
-I wish I could make you feel as I felt, as we roved together, like
-children, hand in hand, through those flowery glades, and through the
-blooming gardens of this old castle—sometimes reading, sometimes talking,
-always loving, and picturing a continued increase of happiness, and
-everlasting bliss.
-
-Alas! poor frail human nature! Poor frail, inconstant mortals! What a
-strange mockery does it not seem to our own hearts to look back after
-years have changed these delusions of fancy, and stripped them of their
-false lustre; what a mockery does it not seem to think over what we once
-thought—and see the folly of dreaming of affections unaltered, and hearts
-that never could grow cold?
-
-Old Pasiphae was my attendant. I preferred her to another, a younger
-girl, who had come to the castle to engage in my service. She was a
-very odd woman, and strongly infected with the popular superstitions of
-that section of the country. She was avoided by the other domestics as
-a half lunatic: for low, ignorant, or vulgar minds, always attribute
-eccentricity of mind or manner to mental perturbation; and, surely, the
-wise have every inducement to become insane, if they pay attention or
-depend for happiness on the stupid fools of which the greater portion of
-mankind are composed.
-
-The chateau was built with two wings each side of the main building: the
-right wing was always closed, bolted and barred. I had been married two
-months, when curiosity induced me, one day, to ask Monsieur de Serval
-the reason why that part of the mansion was unopened, unoccupied, and
-neglected. He answered carelessly, that the castle was so large, he had
-not thought it necessary to refit that side of it;—it was more decayed
-than the rest. This reply satisfied me for the moment, but woman’s
-curiosity was on the alert, and I wished, I scarce know why, to see the
-interior of that gloomy side of the chateau.
-
-Six months had glided swiftly on since my marriage. Oh, days of hope! oh,
-hours of happiness! with what mournful pleasure do I retrace your flight!
-and with what lingering sadness detail the strange contrast which time
-developed all too quickly to my wondering eyes!
-
-I had heard several times from my worthy teacher. No tidings had reached
-him of Blanche. He had heard nothing; knew not if she were dead or alive.
-This distressed me, even amid my own joy. Madame Bonni was well, and
-often sent her love; and the theatrical world, they said, still mourned
-my irreparable loss;—the journals still dwelt upon my merits.
-
-It was at this moment of time that Rinaldo left me for three days, for
-a hunting party, to come off some fifty miles from the castle. He bade
-me farewell with great tenderness, and departed. This was a favorable
-opportunity, I thought, for the execution of my long-cherished project of
-gaining admission to the closed and, I imagined, haunted rooms. The key
-my husband always kept locked up in a small casket, and I knew where the
-key of that was to be found.
-
-Having unlocked the casket and obtained the key, I took a lamp from my
-dressing table, and directed my steps to that quarter of the house. The
-quivering flame was often nearly extinguished by gusts of wind, and the
-shaking of the great oriel windows reminded me of the tread of ghosts.
-My feet often faltered from fear; but I continued on, and reached the
-great door in the centre of the long gallery, which gave admission to the
-interdicted apartments.
-
-When I inserted the key in the lock, and unlocked the door which gave
-entrance to these deserted rooms, my heart quite failed me, and I
-regretted my curiosity. What was there to see about old unfurnished,
-desolate apartments? How foolish of me to pry into nothing! Yet an
-impulse I could not overcome bade me go onward; and accordingly I pushed
-open the door, which opened harshly. I went in; the first room was a
-large anti-chamber, like that on the other side of the house, naked and
-lonely. Crossing this, I opened another door, which led, as I supposed,
-into a similar apartment, when, to my utter amazement, I beheld what
-struck me dumb with astonishment.
-
-The salon in which I stood was well furnished. A Grecian couch occupied
-one corner; books, and toys, and instruments of music were scattered
-round, and reclining on this couch lay a woman of handsome form, but
-wild, haggard features, and insane expression; and on a low stool at her
-feet sat Pasiphae, my attendant.
-
-Hearing the door open, she glanced around, and seeing me, shrieked, and
-covered her face with her hands:
-
-“Gracious heavens! madame, how came you here? what brought you to these
-fated rooms?”
-
-“What does this mean? speak, I command you! Who is this woman?—what are
-you doing here?”
-
-“Ah, madame, why did you come here? Alas! alas! how unhappy; how
-unfortunate,” was the only reply she made, as she rocked herself to and
-fro.
-
-“Tell me! tell me quickly,” I cried, seized with a horrible suspicion of
-the truth. At this the strange woman raised herself to a sitting posture,
-and regarding me with a countenance of melancholy wildness, said,
-clasping her hands together as she spoke:
-
-“Oh, ask him, won’t you, to take me out of this;—I will be good, indeed I
-will: I never will come near him, if he don’t want to see me, if he will
-only take me away. Oh, do ask him: pray do?”
-
-I went toward her mechanically, so stunned and stupid was I with
-astonishment. I sat down beside, and more closely observed the poor
-lunatic. I could plainly see fine traits in that blurred face; traces
-of mind, now scarred and erased, like a blotted crimpled page. Love,
-jealousy, humanity, and disgust, all told me that in this unhappy one I
-saw my husband’s victim. What could he mean by shutting her up there?
-Old Pasiphae still sat with her head bowed between her hands, and she
-momently exclaimed,—“What will master say? oh, how he will curse me!”
-
-“No, no, Pasiphae; you shall not be blamed. Monsieur de Serval shall
-never know of my visit here. Get up, and tell me what this strange scene
-means.”
-
-The maniac stared at me with her great black eyes, and then continued on
-in her sad tones. “No, no ball to-night; I cannot dance: he is coming
-for you to-morrow,—I cannot dance when I expect him; take away the
-dress; send away the carriage; I am going to sleep to dream of him,”
-and languidly closing her eyes, she sunk back on the couch, and lay
-perfectly still. Thinking the poor creature had fainted, I uttered an
-expression of fear, when Pasiphae, motioning me to silence, bent over her
-watchfully. Presently the sound of her regular breathing assured the old
-domestic that she slept. Smoothing back from her forehead the tangled
-masses of her hair, and covering the thin form with a large shawl,
-Pasiphae composed her delicate hands upon her breast, and then rising,
-took my hand in hers, and said mournfully:
-
-“Come, dear lady, this can be no pleasant sight for you;—if you will
-return to your own room, I will tell you all. I have been on the point of
-doing so several times, but fear of master’s anger prevented me; and I am
-old and broken down, and were he to discharge me, might suffer and die
-from want. Come, lady, ere she awakes. Poor thing; she will soon be dead
-and far away. She has been very troublesome of late,—I could scarcely
-manage her; but now she sleeps quietly—the first time in many days.”
-
-I silently contemplated the fitful repose of the madwoman for a moment
-before going, and in that instant I saw the whole fabric of delusive
-happiness I had erected on unstable air, shattered to the earth. I
-gazed on the neglected, cast-off victim of my lord’s caprice, in whose
-emaciated form and desert mind I saw the records of long mental and
-bodily suffering.
-
-Pasiphae interrupted my reverie by twitching my robe; and, after she had
-arranged the light on the antique mantel-piece, and adjusted her window
-drapery, taking my lamp in her hand, we left the salon, locking the door
-upon her insane ward.
-
-The outer door of the anti-chamber she also locked; and, satisfied
-that if awaking she could not follow us, I returned to my chamber,
-and overwhelmed with sickness of the soul, threw myself despairingly
-into a chair, and burying my face in my hands wept bitterly. I felt
-disappointed—heartbroken;—disappointed that the man in whom I had
-centred all my hopes, should so utterly have ruined them;—heartbroken at
-the melancholy sight I had seen. Sobbing like a child I sat and wept,
-forgetful of my own identity, or Pasiphae’s presence. At length my grief
-in a slight degree abated, and wiping my eyes, I looked up and perceived
-the poor old woman sorrowfully looking at me.
-
-“I know, dear Lady Genevra, how sad you feel at this proof of your
-husband’s infidelity; and sorry am I that you should have come to those
-rooms and seen my poor charge,” said Pasiphae; and sympathy almost
-rendered her voice sweet, and almost metamorphosed that weatherbeaten
-face into one of youth and beauty.
-
-“How long has she been insane?” I asked, my voice almost choked with sobs.
-
-“This autumn coming will be two years.”
-
-“Who was she? how came she here?”
-
-“She was always called the Lady Isodore, that is the only name by which
-I ever knew her. Four years ago master brought her here one night in a
-fine carriage, and commanded us to treat her the same as if she were our
-lawful lady: we always did so, and she ruled the household: master seemed
-very fond of her; and, although he never took her travelling with him,
-and no one visited her, yet her great love for him appeared to supply
-the place of all other society. Two years after she came, he seemed to
-grow tired of her, and they often had furious quarrels; one night, in a
-difficulty of this sort, forgetting himself, he struck her violently with
-the butt end of a pistol he held in his hand; she fell upon the floor,
-and when revived, from that hour was mad. In vain did my unhappy master
-use every endeavor to restore her: reason had fled—never to return. Since
-then she has been sometimes wild and gay, sometimes sad—as this evening
-you saw her. Master, at first, was nearly mad himself with remorse and
-despair; but, after a while, he recovered from his grief; and, having
-fixed those rooms up for her, consigned her to my care, and no longer
-troubled himself about her. From habit I have acquired great influence
-over her; and even in her wildest moods she will obey me. I think, dear
-lady, that crime will always meet its just reward, even here on earth;
-and when I look at master sometimes, I think within myself, ‘the hour of
-retribution for thy sin will surely come some day.’”
-
-“When he came down to the castle some months ago, and told me to have
-it cleaned and fitted up for the reception of its future lady, I could
-scarcely credit my ears; and wondered who would marry, and risk her
-happiness, with a man like him: and when he brought you here, and I saw
-how beautiful and innocent you were, I trembled for the future. I never
-intended to tell you this; and master trusted to my fidelity to him,
-that you should never discover the secret of the uninhabited wing of the
-castle. You are not more grieved than I that chance or curiosity should
-have directed you there; your trust in monsieur I know is broken; but,
-dear lady, I feel it my duty to tell you, that you lean upon a broken
-stick if you depend on him for faith.”
-
-“Hush! Pasiphae; oh! be still; don’t say any thing against him: how
-miserable I feel! I cannot believe that my Rinaldo can be so depraved;
-that he, whom I trusted to reform, to render a better, wiser man, could
-act with such brutality towards a woman.”
-
-My soul sickened with horror at such an inhuman action; and I
-soliloquized, “This was the man whose glowing description of the wrongs
-and troubles of his childhood had so interested and beguiled me; this
-was the man who had begged me to exert my influence to reform and purify
-his heart; who had promised, were I his Mentor, to be as gentle as
-Telemachus; who had entreated me to be his guardian angel, to warn him
-from the evils he had committed, yet deprecated: this was the man.”
-
-Truly, reason might have reproached me with over self-confidence, and
-blind trust in the boy-god Cupid, who had so cheated me. And I had
-dreamed of future years of tranquil happiness and companionship, after
-the first flush of love had faded, and that profiting by past errors,
-virtue hereafter should be his patroness; and this was the man on whom I
-purposed working these miracles. He, who could wantonly inflict personal
-violence on a woman, and then keep a senseless idiot housed like a dog in
-an uninhabited part of the house. The veil which shrouded my eyes, was
-being lifted off, like the mysterious veils of Isis, which conceal the
-grotesque absurdity of the image adored.
-
-Perceiving Pasiphae still standing before me, her eyes filled with
-sympathetic tears, I said, “Pasiphae, my good woman, you can go; I would
-rather be alone; I feel very sad; you had better return to the room; she
-may awake and miss you.”
-
-“You look very unhappy, dear lady, had I not better stay a little while
-with you?”
-
-“No, no, I prefer being alone; go.”
-
-She departed; and then thought usurped her sway; I wished my husband
-were there then, at that moment, to have told him what I thought of his
-conduct; but when I reconsidered it, I saw it would do no good; for to
-reproach a man with his vices, only alienates his affections, and gains
-his dislike; it does not convince his understanding, for that will not
-be convinced; nor better his heart, for he always thinks that could
-not be bettered; and indeed, I think they are quite right, not often
-being troubled with any. A roar of words is generally the only result,
-and contempt and hatred the inevitable consequence. I was determined,
-however, to speak of it to Monsieur de Serval on his return. Then,
-distressed in mind, caring not if I died that night, I sought my pillow,
-and wept till lost in the oblivion of slumber.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-
-Two days afterwards, my husband returned from his hunting party, bringing
-some game with him. It was now late in the fall, and the forest trees
-were tinted with many and various dyes, but the charms of nature had
-no charms for me then, it was all dark and desolate, like my soul.
-This strange, unlooked for event in my new married life, carried back
-my thoughts to the miserable days of infancy, and the lonely hours I
-spent as a wandering beggar girl in the streets of Vienna; the ideas the
-speculative mind of childhood then indulged in, again returned to me, and
-I began to take an inverted view of everything, and to look on nature and
-human beings with an abstracted gaze.
-
-The evening of my husband’s return, I was standing on the balcony of the
-castle, when he rode up to the gates, followed by his grooms; he rode
-well, and his appearance was distinguished on horseback; seeing me, he
-lifted his hat, and smiled, then disappeared under the gateway.
-
-Knowing he would expect me to meet him, I slowly dragged myself to the
-banqueting hall, for so entirely were my feelings toward him changed,
-that now I would have avoided, where formerly I should joyfully have
-sprung to his arms.
-
-He stood surrounded by his dogs and servants, giving directions to the
-grooms: saddles and housings, and game were lying about.
-
-“My love, excuse me a moment; I will see you in your drawing-room
-presently,” said Monsieur de Serval, as I came toward him. Seeing him
-occupied with his retainers and servants, and glad to be alone, I went to
-my salon, and sat down to my piano; I began a sweet air from one of the
-operas I had formerly performed; it was Norma’s reproach to Polileo, and,
-as I sang it, I felt how applicable it was to my own case. A heavy hand
-was laid firmly on my shoulder, and turning, I saw Pasiphae.
-
-“My lady, Monsieur de Serval has come back; I saw him just now in the
-hall.’
-
-“I know it, Pasiphae, I have just seen him; how is she, is she quiet?”
-
-“No, my lady, rather wild and noisy this evening; oh, you had better not
-let him know what you have discovered.”
-
-“I shall tell him the truth; I am not afraid to speak the truth,
-Pasiphae; it should at all times be spoken; no blame shall fall on you;
-be quieted, you are safe.”
-
-The sudden entrance of my husband interrupted us, as I was about
-asking some question about the unhappy Isodore. At the sight of him,
-notwithstanding the injury I was satisfied he had done that poor woman,
-the thousand fascinating remembrances of the last six months crowded
-fast upon me; and, in looking on his fair face, whatever wickedness that
-face concealed, I felt I loved him still. It was a delusion, when I
-imagined I could so quickly learn to hate him. In fact, the transitions
-of human feelings are like the seasons of the year, so gradually do we
-pass from one line of feeling to the other extreme, that we are ourselves
-unconscious when the end is attained. Thus it was with me; I did finally
-consummate the climax of indifference and contempt towards my husband,
-but not then: I had not reached it then.
-
-Pasiphae made a low obeisance to her stern master, and left us alone.
-
-As usual, Rinaldo kissed me; I submitted to the caress without returning
-it: noticing my coldness, a cloud gathered on his brow.
-
-“You receive me very indifferently, Genevra, on my return from a perilous
-bear hunt.”
-
-“I feel indifferent at this moment, Rinaldo.’
-
-“Pray, may I inquire, signora, the cause of this change?” said he, and
-drew his stately figure to its full height, and regarded me searchingly.
-
-“I can easily explain it, monsieur: I have been in the right wing of the
-castle, and have seen the lunatic you keep shut up there, Lady Isodore.”
-
-He started back, as if shot; then rage shone in his eyes, and he angrily
-exclaimed,
-
-“You have been to those deserted apartments: how dared you go there, what
-took you there?”
-
-“My feet, of course, were the mechanical operators on the occasion,
-monsieur,” answered I, derisively; “but curiosity was the only motive I
-had at first, till gaining access, I beheld the victim of your cruelty.”
-
-“You, Genevra, _you_, to pry into my secret affairs: you, whom I have
-taken from a disgraceful profession, and elevated in rank to any lady in
-the land, to talk to me of cruelty;” and foaming with rage he tore up and
-down the room like a madman.
-
-“Would, monsieur, for my peace of mind, my happiness, that you could
-undo what you consider so great an honor, and restore me to that
-‘disgraceful profession,’ which I have every reason to regret having
-left for the arms of a libertine; and a home that has been desecrated
-by wanton violence. Yes, when the night before last I went to those
-rooms, and gazed with feelings of intense pity upon that forlorn being, I
-plainly beheld the life you have hitherto led, and to which you will of
-course return, after the novelty of my love has worn away. Oh, little did
-I think, when I pledged you my whole heart and soul at the altar, little
-did I dream that my affection would be thus requited by living witnesses
-of shame and horror like this.”
-
-I felt excited to a terrible degree: the recollection of her injuries,
-and my own shame, had excited me to a point I should, ordinarily, have
-believed myself incapable of: with his arms folded and head depressed, my
-husband contemplated me.
-
-“If you have finished, signora, I should like to take the liberty of
-speaking,” said he, ironically.
-
-“No, I have not done; I never could find words sufficiently strong to
-express my disgust and horror of such actions. Other women, perhaps,
-creatures of sensual, vulgar souls, might feel jealous of the husband’s
-love, forgetting the villany extended to the betrayed one; but I do not.
-I blame you, not her—whoever she may have been, whatever she may have
-done.”
-
-“Will you hear me, lady?” again demanded he, in the same cool tone as
-before.
-
-“Yes, monsieur; speak on. I have expressed my thoughts: now speak yours.”
-
-Haughtily I flung myself on a couch, and, looking him in the face,
-awaited his remarks.
-
-“The unfortunate woman you have seen,” said Monsieur de
-Serval—endeavoring to compose his features and his voice to
-calmness—“that unfortunate is a Spanish woman, from Madrid—her name is
-Lady Isodore Dosamados—she was of a noble, but impoverished family: when
-I first became her lover, I never enticed her from habits of morality;
-she voluntarily became my companion. When I passed through Spain, on my
-return to Italy, she attached herself to me, and I brought her here: it
-was her own jealous temper, exasperating my irritable one, which brought
-her to her present condition. If she chose to excite me to a quarrel, and
-work upon my feelings until, losing all consciousness, I inflicted a blow
-that crazed her, it was her own fault; I did not intend to harm her; but
-immoral women, when enraged, are more like wild beasts than human beings:
-thus it was with her. I have provided for her during her insanity, and
-will continue to do so as long as her wretched life continues.”
-
-“I do not believe all you wish to impress me with as truth, in regard to
-your moderation and kindness to her,” I replied, as he paused, evidently
-expecting me to say something. “I don’t believe all you say; for
-Pasiphae”—I stopped abruptly, remembering my promise not to implicate her.
-
-“What of her?” cried he, sternly.
-
-“Nothing.”
-
-“I know what you would say: that she has told you many delightful tales
-of my cruelty, as you call it; well, let the old woman have her say:
-women and children should never be contradicted; her crazy ward will
-not live long; I only retain her now because she can manage her better
-than any other. When Isodore dies she shall go quickly: and as for you,
-signora, learn that I take neither reproof nor advice from my wife
-however much I love her: and beware how you provoke my anger thus a
-second time.”
-
-He stamped out of the room, and his heavy tread re-echoed along the
-corridor. Amazed at his temper, I sat still, thinking over what he had
-said, and wondering if he had spoken the truth: which, in that case,
-would have been some extenuation of his fault, when Pasiphae came rushing
-into the room, her face expressing the greatest terror, and frantically
-wringing her hands, she threw herself on her knees before me, and stared,
-without speaking.
-
-“What is the matter, Pasiphae? what has happened? what ails you?” I cried.
-
-“Oh, terrible! my lady. When I went back to the rooms, an hour ago—when I
-left you here with master—I found Lady Isodore had got out of her room.
-Frightened nearly to death, I went to hunt her. It seems she had wandered
-along the corridor, which is dark and gloomy in the evening, and not
-seeing the great staircase, tripped over it, and fell from top to bottom,
-fracturing her skull, and bruising her body dreadfully. I found her lying
-senseless at the bottom of the steps, and got the men to carry her up to
-bed. Oh! come with me, dear lady; come quickly? she may be dead even now.”
-
-I needed no urging to fly through the dim galleries, to the deserted
-apartments: Pasiphae following as fast as her legs would carry her.
-There, stretched on her couch, apparently lifeless, her wild face cut
-and gashed with wounds, blood streaming from her head, lay poor Isodore.
-The physician was already in attendance, bathing the blood from her face
-and head, and two or three of the household domestics, in astonishment,
-beheld what they had never dreamed of before,—that the deserted wing
-of the castle was tenanted by a lunatic. Her existence there, during
-the period of her insanity, had always been a mystery,—known but to one
-or two, who carefully guarded the secret,—and they now stood gaping in
-stupid wonder.
-
-I assisted the physician in bandaging that poor head, and applied
-aromatic vinegar to her hands and nose. The esculapius eyed her with that
-peculiar expression physicians bestow on those whose case they consider
-hopeless. For an hour, perhaps, she lay insensible. I stood rubbing her
-hands, while tears fell fast from my face on that poor distorted one.
-
-Presently a slight shiver ran through her frame, her eyes opened
-spasmodically, then closed again: she opened and shut her hands like one
-in intense pain, then she groaned sorrowfully. Old Pasiphae buried her
-weeping countenance in the pillows of the bed.
-
-“Doctor,” said I, “tell me the real truth; will she recover from these
-terrible wounds?”
-
-“My dear signora, to be candid with you, I must say, judging from the
-severity of the fracture on the skull, she never will. She may linger a
-day or two; but I scarcely think she will survive that length of time;
-the poor woman has killed herself.”
-
-This announcement, delivered with the habitual coolness of gentlemen of
-that profession, was a thunder-bolt to me.
-
-“Going to die, do you say? Oh, heavens! how dreadful.”
-
-After leaving a potion to be taken at a certain hour, the physician went
-away, promising to call at day-break, and we were left with the sufferer
-alone. Monsieur de Serval had been informed of the sad event. Pasiphae
-said he made no remark, but strode past her to his room, and locked
-himself in. Probably if he felt any sentiment at all, it was one of joy
-at the prospect of release from his illicit tie. Oh! how selfish are men
-where their pride or vanity is touched, or their vices exposed.
-
-All night I watched beside her. She remained in a state of stupor,
-manifesting no life, save by a feeble groan now and then, and sometimes
-opening those great eyes, and then relapsing into lethargy.
-
-The physician was punctual to his promise, and the gray dawn had scarce
-been born ere he came. He administered something which momentarily
-revived her, and in the course of the day she spoke. Oh! strange
-problem,—spoke sanely! with that singular precision we frequently see
-in the insane restored to mind. Her memory reverted and dated from the
-fatal moment when the blow was given which shattered that fair temple of
-reason.
-
-I had not seen Rinaldo since the hour of ten, the night before, and as
-he was acquainted with the sad disaster, I wondered at his indifference
-to what the physician too prophetically foresaw—her death-bed. Alas!
-thought I, as I leaned over her and watched the slow dawning of mental
-consciousness, and the confused look and air of intense agony her face
-showed,—alas! it seems to be my fate to be connected with the worthless
-and unhappy. My husband, whom I thought so perfect—so repentant of former
-follies and determined to amend in future—has sadly disappointed me.
-The world I imagined so beautiful an Elysium, I find the abode of fair
-deceit, and corrupt and rotten at the core. Oh, life! where are thy
-pleasures unmingled with the alloy of pain? or is it thus in everything?
-No sooner do we possess it, than we discover it to be like those lovely
-apples of the shores of the Red Sea, very fair to look upon; but, when
-tasted, bitter as wormwood—rotten as dust.
-
-Pasiphae disturbed the sad tenor of my thoughts, by directing my
-attention to the door, at which stood Monsieur de Serval. Thinking his
-presence the indication of a better mood,—of a feeling of compassion
-toward his unhappy mistress,—I sprang toward him, and, forgetting our
-quarrel, caught his hand in mine. He looked melancholy; and I thought I
-could trace remorse on those delicate features.
-
-“Oh, Rinaldo!” I cried, “you see what has happened. Last night, while
-the nurse was absent from the room, she left the apartment, and not
-seeing the great staircase, stepped off it and fractured her skull. The
-physician says she cannot survive. How terrible it is—is it not—to see
-one die who has led such a life? Come close to her; she is regaining her
-senses—her right mind.”
-
-My husband started. He evidently expected to see her crazed still, and
-did not want to meet face to face, with reason restored, the woman he
-had brutalized; but as she lay there and looked at him, intellect shone
-in those dark oriental eyes,—not the quick, sharp, wandering stare of
-insanity. She recognised him, and feebly beckoned with her hands. I
-gently drew him to the bed-side. She made a motion as if to be raised,
-and I lifted her in my arms and laid her head on my breast. The blood
-had oozed out from the bandages, and her hair was clotted with it: her
-face was deadly pale, and the mists of death had already settled there;
-her eyes were growing languid and dim, and hands and feet very cold.
-My husband looked at her with that expression of self-consciousness of
-having inflicted wrong which alone can impress the human features, ere
-the heart is altogether hardened and depraved. As I have said, her
-memory flew back four years before, and she thought the quarrel and the
-deed had just occurred.
-
-“Nevermind, dear Rinaldo, I forgive you. Don’t grieve, though I die from
-it. I know I am high tempered; I provoked you to do it; I did not mean to
-make you angry: don’t grieve. Here, Pasiphae, bandage my head; put me to
-bed: when I recover I will try and be a better woman—more deserving of
-your love.”
-
-In agony I glanced at the physician; she had no idea of her real state;
-she knew not that death, in a few hours, would take her for his own. The
-good man eyed her with an air of interest, for this was a strange case.
-
-He approached her, perceiving my wish; and, taking one of her hands in
-his, said quietly,
-
-“My good lady, listen to me. You are not aware of your condition at
-present; you are only this moment regaining your mind; you have been
-insane for several years, till last night, escaping from the room, you
-fell down stairs, and that sudden concussion has been the means of
-restoring your mind. It is my duty to tell you that a very few hours will
-close your life; you cannot live longer than to-morrow.”
-
-“Been insane,” repeated she, with a scornful, indignant air, “you are
-dreaming, man; it was only a moment ago Rinaldo and I were quarrelling,
-and, enraged, he struck me with a pistol. I am very sorry; but, oh! how
-strangely my head feels: oh! how painful! what ails me? why am I lying
-here surrounded by people? how dim everything looks. I cannot distinguish
-anything: why is this? Get lights: I must arise and dress. I must find
-Rinaldo: where is he?”
-
-She pushed me violently away from her, and with the last effort of
-strength, sprung from her bed to her feet. Seeing my husband, she threw
-herself on his neck, and wildly sobbing, kissed him. It was an awful
-sight, to behold that woman, already in the embraces of death, hugging
-and clinging to what had once constituted her joy of existence. I felt
-no jealousy, for I ever possessed this peculiar trait; the moment an
-object of affection disappoints me, that moment affection and infatuation
-disappear. I felt a sentiment of bitter shame and regret that I had given
-myself to such a man;—that is what I experienced as I witnessed this
-strange scene.
-
-He looked annoyed,—not grieved; and once or twice tried to lay her down
-on the bed, but her personal strength, to which was added additional
-power by the strong excitement under which she labored, frustrated
-his endeavor. Her disordered hair hung down her back; the bruised and
-bandaged head, covered with blood, presented a ghastly sight. Her thin
-hands, which clasped his neck, scratched and wounded; and the long night
-robe she wore dabbled with blood.
-
-“No, no, no,” she cried; “I have you; I have you: now you shall not go
-till you promise to love me, and forgive me my anger.”
-
-“Take her away, Pasiphae: rid me of the mad woman,” shouted my husband.
-“Why do you stand there, stupidly inactive, when you see me thus annoyed?
-Take her off my neck: put her in bed.”
-
-At the sound of his loud vindictive voice she relapsed her hold,
-staggered back, and mournfully gazing on his enraged face, shivered,
-turned, if possible, more pale,—then fell flat on the floor!
-
-“Oh, miserable man!” I exclaimed, as the nurse raised the death-stricken,
-inanimate form, and laid it on the bed, while the doctor darted looks of
-contempt at him. “Oh, apology for humanity! and have you no pity for the
-unhappy sufferer from your vices?”
-
-“Why did you summon me here, madam, to witness this mummery? We all must
-die some day, it matters not how. Do I wish to behold the death-bed of a
-lunatic? Can _I_ assist her final departure? Why have you called me?—to
-anger me, I suppose.”
-
-“Well, monsieur, if you think it too great a condescension to see her
-die, go; leave the room,—I will attend the poor dying creature.”
-
-Without replying, save by a look of scorn and anger, he departed. I could
-easily understand that he felt doubly angered when he reflected (as he
-must have done) that my discovery of his illicit connexion necessarily
-would weaken, if not wholly obliterate, my love for him. It was this
-that inspired his rage, and made him hate the unfortunate object of it.
-His love for me was still unabated;—not so mine. A bar of ice seemed
-placed between us. In this respect women and men differ greatly, for
-though a man may indulge himself in many loves, yet he generally returns
-to the lawful one. On the contrary, when a woman’s affections are
-once thoroughly alienated, they seldom return to the first object of
-attachment.
-
-I cannot think of that woman’s death-bed without bitter regret, nor
-write this portion of my memoir without dropping tears upon the page.
-Recovering from the stupor into which she had fallen when he repulsed
-her,—her eyes roved anxiously round in search of him. Not seeing him, she
-closed them again, and remained motionless. An hour passed by: finding
-she did not stir, I felt her hands and feet,—they were growing colder and
-colder, and her eyes more dim. She was an hour nearer death.
-
-“She will be dead before twilight, lady,” said the physician, having
-felt her pulse. “Poor thing! her death is very painful; she has suffered
-much.”
-
-“Yes, I have suffered much,” was her audible reply, to our astonishment,
-and she uplifted her eyes and joined her hands as if praying. I
-remembered Monsieur de Serval’s description of his mother’s death-bed,
-and wondered how he could treat thus the last moments of his neglected
-mistress. So easy is it to express fine sentiments which one does not
-feel, and never practise! Fine words cost nothing, and may be equally
-well said by a bad as a noble soul; but fine actions _must_ result from a
-good heart.
-
-Gradually twilight drew near, and she was sinking momently. Raised on my
-breast, I held one hand in mine;—she seemed laboring to say something. I
-stooped to the level of her ear, and tried to catch the sound. Her voice
-was low, faint, and broken.
-
-“Dear lady,” at last I thought I heard her say; “I thank you for your
-kindness, whoever you may be, and—,” she paused, as if to reflect, “tell
-him I forgive him the injury he has done me.”
-
-Backward she fell from my supporting arms on her pillow: slower and
-slower came her breath; more fixed grew her eyes; her hands grasped
-convulsively at the bed clothes. I heard a rattling sound from her
-throat; then the eyelids remained half closed, the mouth half open;
-the hands released their hold, and the physician, bending over her,
-said,—“Madame, she is dead!”
-
-I burst into tears, and fled from the chamber of death to my own room,
-and there wept long and bitterly, both for her and for myself.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Pasiphae told me, some days after, that the corpse had been buried in
-a cemetery two miles from the castle,—that M. de Serval had gone to
-the room and looked at the dead, and she saw, or fancied she saw, him
-shed tears. The old woman, now her insane charge was dead,—so strong is
-habit,—really seemed to regret the loss, and continually talked of her.
-For myself, I felt wretched, and wept at early dawn, at bright noon, and
-again when dark night came on. I thought of my husband: I regretted his
-behaviour; and notwithstanding all, I wished—oh, I don’t know what I
-wished; but one thing I know is certain, that death, had he come then,
-would not have found me unwilling to go.
-
-For two weeks after Isodore’s death, I remained alone in my apartments.
-The communication between them and monsieur’s having been, by my order,
-closed, lest he might intrude upon me. I neglected my dress, and my long
-ringlets hung in wild disorder around my face. I wore a black dress,
-as if in mourning, for my soul was mourning; and thus attired, and thus
-lonely, I sat opposite a mirror, in which I beheld myself,—not the joyous
-bride of six months ago, but pale, dejected, and melancholy; and thus I
-sat and mused to no purpose, when my waist was clasped by a well known
-hand, and a mouth, whose kisses I can never forget, imprinted one on my
-cheek, as Rinaldo’s voice murmured in my ear:
-
-“Genevra, I am miserable, living thus without you. Let the past be
-forgotten and forgiven: let us love each other as we did before this sad
-affair. You cannot so quickly have learned to hate me, have you?”
-
-I hesitated a moment, I confess: then love triumphed over every other
-feeling, and throwing myself into his arms, we fervently kissed each
-other, and he promised to lead a better life. Of that, however, from what
-I now comprehended of my husband’s character and habits, I had little
-hope; for any habit, when once confirmed, be it _rouéism_, gambling, or
-drinking, obtains such fascinating influence over the mind, that it is
-rarely, if ever, relinquished. Still I endeavored to cherish a fondness,
-which I felt his outlandish behavior would soon oblige me to abandon.
-
-The novelty of possession had now worn off, and he began to wish for
-other society than mine; accordingly he resumed his acquaintance with the
-neighboring nobility, and frequently the banqueting hall resounded with
-their boisterous conviviality to a late hour of night. Then my husband
-would be carried in the arms of his grooms in a state of drunkenness to
-bed, while his guests were borne off in a similar condition to theirs. At
-first, when I gently reproached him with his excesses, he seemed grieved,
-listened to me quietly, and answered sorrowfully, that he knew he did
-wrong; but soon this gentleness changed to roughness, and if I spoke
-reprovingly, he sternly bade me be silent, and not presume to admonish
-him, of what he was the best judge of. Thus in alternations of coldness,
-reproaches, quarrels, and reconciliations, a year of married life passed
-away.
-
-As I became more estranged from him, I missed the gayeties and pleasures
-of Naples, which his affections had for a few months compensated me for
-the loss of. I often thought of Blanche, of my teacher, and the kind
-Madame Bonni. Monsieur Belmont had heard nothing of Blanche, though
-within the year, inquiry had often been made by him concerning her.
-My kind hostess had not forgotten me, and her love was often sent; my
-teacher’s letters I carefully treasured, and read each one with double
-care; they seemed like tidings of life: for the quiet chateau, the
-rustic neighborhood, could scarcely be designated by that name; and my
-regular existence, systematic as a clock, partook largely of lifeless
-monotony. Rinaldo, it is true, made amends to bacchus for my dullness,
-for night after night found him at the gaming table, playing high, or
-carousing with his noisy companions. When, sometimes, I saw him excited
-with wine, I could with difficulty realize that it was the same refined
-man, whose sweet voice, and gentle ways had won my virgin heart, on
-the beautiful shores of Parthenope. Guilo, my husband’s valet, said
-that although his master had always lived high and been very gay, yet,
-during the first months of our marriage, he had behaved much better than
-formerly, and the worthy domestic appeared astonished to see him return
-to his old habits; but he did not reflect, that the object for which this
-good behavior was cultivated was attained, and there was no longer any
-need of playing a part.
-
-I sometimes took long walks through that fair valley, and among the lofty
-hills which majestically surrounded it. I amused and entertained myself
-with the observation of nature, in its many different, yet all beautiful
-modifications; I saw the birds, as they floated on the wing; I saw the
-waving of the foliage of the forest trees, and the clouds as they moved
-through the dewy atmosphere, for an eternal mist ever hung over those
-mountains and that valley. The shepherds tended their flocks there, and
-thither in harvest and vintage time came the pretty village girls, and
-the hardy mountaineers, to gather the fruitful grape. Sometimes sitting
-beneath some lofty tree, I reflected on the sottishness of the heart,
-which, the more it possesses, the more it wants; I wondered if there was
-any such thing as happiness, in what it consisted, and where to be found;
-and then I wondered if it was exemplified by the epicurean belief, that
-happiness must consist in banishing from the mind all painful thoughts,
-and wholly surrendering oneself, spiritually and bodily, to pleasure:
-or if the doctrine of the stoics was true, that happiness or misery,
-pleasure or pain, was a principle of the mind, and could not be affected
-by external objects; that if the mind was properly tutored, it would be
-incapable of any other feeling than that of rational, quiet contentment;
-it would be insensible to the cares and sorrows of life, regarding all
-things with the proud eyes of ethereal, idealized philosophy. I inclined
-towards the stoics, and resolved, if possible, so to school my mind, that
-no earthly disappointment should surprise or vex me; but, unfortunately,
-it is much easier to make resolves, than to keep them.
-
-Sometimes I extended my rambles to Isodore’s grave,—a simple mound of
-earth, unmarked by tablet or tomb-stone. She had now been dead several
-months, and the grass and wild flowers grew luxuriantly above the mound.
-I often sat down on it, and fixing my eyes on the starry worlds over
-head, at twilight time, sought to penetrate the secrets of futurity, and
-read my destiny in their eternal light. I thought of the thousands and
-thousands of years that had passed into eternity since first they were
-hung there. “Why! oh, why?” I cried aloud from the fulness of my heart;
-“why is it that the beautiful, the great, the good, all moulder back
-to dust, and are forgotten, while these shine on, bright as when first
-placed there, coeval with the Great Spirit, from time to eternity?—while
-we die, and, oh, worse than all! know not what is to come hereafter!”
-Such gloomy thoughts occupied my mind, as I slowly returned home after
-twilight had deepened into sombre night, my clothes damp with dew.
-
-“Pasiphae,” said I, as I flung myself into my fauteuil, tired and
-sorrowful; “get me some dry clothes, and arrange the fire. Where is
-Monsieur de Serval? is he at home?”
-
-“Master was inquiring for you, my lady, this evening, and I sought for
-you, but could not find you, when Guilo told me he saw you go out the
-castle gate, and take the forest road. I told master, and he went away to
-his shooting gallery.”
-
-As she spoke he entered the room, in his hunting dress, looking very
-pale after his night’s carouse. We kissed each other; but the salute had
-little of the fervor of former days.
-
-“I was looking for you this evening, Genevra, but you were not in your
-apartments.”
-
-“No; I went to take a walk in the woods.”
-
-He began whistling as he walked up and down, evidently wishing Pasiphae
-gone. Anticipating his wish, after I had changed shoes and stockings, I
-dismissed her.
-
-“I wished to see you,” said he, after she had gone, “to tell you that I
-am going away again, a hundred miles back into the country, on a hunting
-party, to be absent a week. When I return I shall bring a friend with me,
-the Count Calabrella, to spend some days.”
-
-“Yes,” said I, mechanically.
-
-Continuing his walk, he looked at me as I sat.
-
-“You don’t look well of late, Genevra; your face has lost its freshness;
-your eyes their brightness.”
-
-“I feel altered externally and internally.”
-
-“I think I am something changed myself within the last year. Let me
-see,” said he, reflectively; “yes, this is the anniversary of our
-marriage:—the year has been an eventful one to me.” He seemed to expect
-some remark, and I determined to touch him to the quick.
-
-“Yes,” I replied, as if unconsciously; “it is five months since Isodore
-died: how sad her death-bed was!”
-
-His face flushed, and he exclaimed fiercely:
-
-“Why do you speak of that woman? why do you remind me of her? She
-is dead; well, let her rest in peace, and cease to torment me with
-recollections of her.”
-
-But I wished him to hear of her. I thought it only an act of justice to
-her injured memory, and I continued quietly:
-
-“You feel, then, no remorse for your past conduct toward her, monsieur?
-no regret, yet she loved you much; and if she erred, it may have been
-through unhappy circumstances, or through an overweening attachment to
-you.”
-
-“She sinned through nothing of the sort,” cried he sharply,—“her affair
-with me was not the only one she ever had. She had been a notorious
-woman long before I ever saw her. As for the deep regrets you talk of, I
-feel none. I consider I acted honorably in taking care of a lunatic, and
-suffering myself to be frequently annoyed by the antics of a crazy woman.
-She is better off where she is.”
-
-I saw my husband was impenetrable to any feeling on the subject, and
-feeling misanthropic myself, I cared not to enter into a wordy war.
-Relapsing into silence and thought, I sat motionless. One thing I plainly
-perceived, that he was piqued that I pitied the dead Isodore, and
-manifested neither anger, contempt, nor hatred for her memory; he would
-rather have seen me furiously jealous, retaining the recollection of her
-error, and hating her name. But I had lost all hatred for anything and
-everything, and was sinking into a listless apathy.
-
-“Well, farewell till we meet again,” said Monsieur de Serval, abruptly,
-after a moment’s pause.
-
-“Farewell, monsieur.”
-
-We shook hands, and he departed. I watched from my window, and saw his
-close travelling carriage rolled into the court-yard. Guilo placed
-numerous packages, boxes of cigars, and comfites on the front seat; then
-my husband entered it, his hat slouched over his eyes, and enveloped in
-his great coat. Guilo mounted behind; the postillion huzza’d, and they
-rattled away down the valley road.
-
-I did not miss him; his society was no longer necessary to my very
-existence. We could live apart for days, weeks, months, without the
-same regrets and longings we should have experienced during the first
-months of married life. During his absence I busied myself in household
-affairs, rode on horseback, played and sang, and endeavored to kill time
-as fast as possible. I was very young, and my tastes and habits still
-bordered closely on girlhood—I might almost say childhood. Pasiphae,
-with her weird-like countenance, as she sat over the fire in the
-banqueting hall on those chilly autumnal nights, and told me strange
-ghost stories, often laughed at the childish alarm I showed at her tales.
-She was my confidante, and, in fact, only friend, in that wild region.
-To her I confided all my thoughts, my griefs, and fears, and hopes. She
-sympathized with, but could not advise me.
-
-The week of his absence passed quietly away: nothing of moment occurred
-worth relating, and I was sitting in my salon reading a romance, when
-Pasiphae entered, saying Guilo had arrived in advance of his master, and
-announced that Monsieur de Serval would be with me within half an hour.
-Upon the delivery of his message I consulted my mirror. Pasiphae declared
-herself satisfied with my appearance. I remember with vivid distinctness
-the dress I wore: it was a dark, deep crimson velvet, made high in the
-neck, and long sleeves concealed my arms: the rich, heavy folds of
-the robe swept the floor; a Grecian head-dress of lama lace formed my
-coiffure, and my hair fell in long ringlets to my waist.
-
-“Ah, my lady; I never saw you look so beautiful,” said the faithful
-creature, in an ecstacy of delight; for the slightest thing will throw an
-Italian into a fit of enthusiasm. “That head-dress is so charming, and
-the robe so handsome! Ah, if fine dress only made people happy, it would
-be worth wishing for.”
-
-“Pasiphae, I think I heard monsieur’s carriage driving into the
-court-yard. See if it is him.”
-
-As I spoke, I heard voices and heavy steps in the hall, and before she
-could reach the door, it was opened hastily, and my husband entered,
-followed by a figure so wrapped up in coats and shawls, that I could
-scarcely discern what it was. Pasiphae hastened to relieve this muffled
-form of its encumbrances, after disburdening my husband: and when the
-stranger, stepping toward me, bowed,—the first glance at his face told
-me that I beheld the stranger of the opera. The same beautiful eyes were
-bent upon me, and the low deep tones of his voice struck my ear as he
-said:
-
-“Madame, I am happy to make the acquaintance of the wife of my friend.”
-
-I felt the blood rush to my brow, my neck, my very hands, as I
-tremblingly replied:
-
-“Count, you are most welcome to our home.”
-
-Rinaldo did not notice my embarrassment; he was occupied in giving orders
-about the luggage, the game, and a hundred other things; and when he
-had completed these commands, turning to me, who had been saying some
-confused nothings to the visitor, he said:
-
-“Come, count, and you, madame, let us proceed to the supper room, and
-after we have rendered our duties there, we will return hither for
-conversation.”
-
-All my husband’s movements were abrupt and singular, otherwise I should
-have been astonished at this sudden interruption. Count Calabrella
-offered me his arm, and leaning on that strong arm, and looking on that
-handsome, energetic face, which afterwards became, oh! how dear to me,
-I followed my stern lord, who strode before, to the banqueting hall.
-Rinaldo sat at the head of the table, myself and his guest at each side.
-By the brilliant light of the lamps around us, I could more fully observe
-the stranger. The count was opposite in appearance to my husband; he was
-taller, of an athletic form, strong, and manly. His eyes, large, languid,
-yet sparkling, sometimes flashed fire, sometimes were the impersonation
-of repose. His hands, and feet were rather large, not so delicate as
-Monsieur de Serval’s. His whole appearance was rather massive, not
-feminine or soft, as was the look, the whole person of my husband.
-
-Rinaldo’s face was flushed from wine, and he talked loudly and gayly,
-not to me, but to his friend. He talked most of his ill success on the
-bear hunt, cursing the ill attendance of the servants and grooms. He
-drank glass after glass of wine, and his evanescent spirits grew higher
-and higher under the influence. I regarded him with feelings of painful
-regret, but he seemed not to observe my earnest looks, save by a return
-glance of scorn.
-
-The count appeared embarrassed. I saw he felt for me and for his friend,
-and looked relieved when the repast was over, and we returned to the
-salon. He must have seen the coldness existing between my husband and
-myself, for he also seemed infected by it, and after several efforts
-at a general conversation, asked me to favor him with a song. I did
-so with alacrity, to relieve the tedium which seemed to pervade the
-drawing room: yet though I sang, I did so mechanically. One idea dwelt
-in my mind—who was this Count Calabrella, this man, whose beautiful eyes
-had so long before haunted me, like a foreshadowing dream of futurity?
-How strange that he should so unexpectedly cross my path now, when a
-married woman; now, when his acquaintance could be nothing to me. Still,
-the same presentiment haunted me, that my destiny in future would have
-something to do with him; and as I glanced around at him, as he sat near
-my husband, listening to the song, leaning on the arm of the sofa, his
-strongly marked features distinctly shown by the glancing firelight, what
-a contrast did that manly form, so energetic, breathing, living,—speaking
-of nobility of soul,—what a contrast did it not present to my fair, yet
-dissipated, reckless husband! He had thrown himself in an attitude of
-ease upon a sofa, and with his eyes closed, seemed half asleep. That was
-scarcely polite to his guest, but Rinaldo cared not what any one thought;
-he cared more for his own comfort, than for fixed rules of etiquette.
-
-The count drew his chair towards me, and remarked, “Your castle, madame,
-is delightfully situated here, in this beautiful ravine; I have often
-heard Monsieur de Serval speak of his mountain home, but never, till now,
-had an opportunity of seeing it.”
-
-“Yes, the castle is a charming summer residence, though rather dreary in
-winter.”
-
-“I have never,” continued he, “been so far north before; my attendance
-on his majesty has hitherto prevented me from travelling to any great
-extent; and Naples and its environs, you know, do not afford any great
-variety to one who has been accustomed to it a lifetime.”
-
-“You are, then, from Naples, beautiful Naples!” Numerous recollections
-were recalled by that name; and I looked down, and almost unconsciously
-sighed. When I raised my eyes, I met those of the stranger, bent
-curiously on my face: he seemed endeavoring to read my thoughts; and I
-blushed as I met that look, though I scarce knew why myself.
-
-“Yes,” said he, in reply to my remark, “beautiful Naples was my
-birth-place; and there I have lived the principal part of my life.”
-
-Here Rinaldo, raising himself from his recumbent posture, joined us, and
-began turning over the music leaves on the piano.
-
-“My wife sings one of these songs magnificently, count,” said he, as he
-sought among the other music for it. “Oh! here it is: oblige us madame,
-by singing it.”
-
-It was the song for Ajesha: ‘We have lived and loved together in sunlight
-and in tears;’ and I felt the tears gush into my own eyes, as I executed
-it. It brought back, bright as yesterday, the night of its first
-representation—Blanche’s spirited acting—the presence and applause of
-the royal family. The tones lingered on my lips, as if they obeyed the
-impulse of my heart, and by remaining, could recall bygone hours more
-forcibly to mind.
-
-“That is a charming melody,” said the count; “and it is needless to
-admire that voice, whose far-spread fame has roused all Italy.”
-
-I felt weary, and, as it was growing late, on a look from my husband, we
-retired; he, accompanying his friend to a bedchamber, and I returning to
-my cheerful apartment; where, by the blazing fire, I sat down to dream
-and reflect, on what, alas! on what too many mortals while away existence
-in—dreams, unsubstantial, unreal dreams.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-
-I had for some weeks remarked the visits of several mysterious looking
-strangers, who came often, and were closeted long with Monsieur de Serval
-in his studio. These men were dressed in the costume of the peasantry,
-but they all wore brown cloaks, with cowls drawn over their faces,
-which they jealously preserved from sight, perhaps from pity to those
-unfortunate hearts on whom they should bestow their glances. There was
-something very strange about them; and as none of the domestics knew from
-whence they came, or whither they went, I determined to ask my husband
-their business at the castle.
-
-The morning after his arrival I rose early. I heard my husband move about
-his room till a late hour, when silence proclaimed he had gone to rest.
-We no longer sank to rest, cradled in each other’s arms—and sometimes
-when my lonely, impassioned heart, fairly ached for companionship, I
-compared our present estrangement with the joyful hours we had formerly
-spent together; and then the midnight hour saw convulsions of passion,
-I should have been ashamed any one should witness, save that faithful,
-silent monitor, time; but it was no fault of mine: the gay _roué_, whose
-fickle fancy was momently caught by my beauty and virtue, had wearied by
-possession; the same face, the same enduring love, no longer attracted
-him; he had not known his own heart when he promised fidelity: he was
-incapable of it. I sometimes felt disposed to forgive him the wild life
-he had led during the past year, could I have seen any indications of
-a reformation; I could have returned to my old love, and have been
-happy once more, would he have acted differently, but he would not: to
-reproaches, alienations, and recriminations, had succeeded a polite
-coldness, which, between husband and wife, means far more than the
-alternations of hot and cold feeling.
-
-I often wept myself to sleep, hugging my pillow to me for company; my
-mind dwelt in the past, or speculated on the future: it was void and
-empty, for it is only when we are with one we love that we live in the
-present, and who loved me now, who save old Pasiphae?
-
-I sought the salon, where, to my surprise, I saw the count seated.
-On entering, he rose, placed a chair for me, and made some general
-observation on the beautiful day. I replied, seated myself, and fixed my
-eyes on the fire, for there was a magnetic attraction in those orbs that
-influenced me strangely when I met them;—the gentleman suddenly remarked,
-
-“Madame, you are much improved since I first saw you, the night of your
-first appearance at Naples.”
-
-“Ah! you saw me then at that time?”
-
-“Yes, and I shall never forget your look, your manner, your acting and
-whole appearance: the tones of your voice, indeed the whole scene is
-engraven on my mind.”
-
-The _tone_ in which he said this, made the expression, and sent the blood
-to my cheek. How true it is, that looks and tones give the sense to
-conversation, far more than the words themselves; I knew not what reply
-to make to this extravagant compliment, and bowed in silence.
-
-“I never thought my friend would ever marry,” he continued, I thought to
-relieve my obvious embarrassment,—“he used to be so volatile and gay; but
-I am glad he has, and that the correction of youthful errors has fallen
-to the guidance of one so gentle.” And as he looked at me, the same light
-shone in his eyes. “We have been almost like brothers for many years; at
-one time he was aide-de-camp to his majesty, and during that period we
-were constantly together; being older than he, I naturally advised and
-guided him; but now I see how much better he is tutored by that power
-that rules the world, the influence of love.”
-
-The arch smile that played upon his lips, called the blushes to my
-cheeks, while my mournful heart, alas, too truthfully denied the
-assertion.
-
-At this moment a servant announced the breakfast, and the count rising
-offered me his arm, and we went in together; Rinaldo was not there: I
-sent to request the honor of his presence, while the count entertained
-me delightfully, with a description of his journey to the shores of the
-Dead Sea, and travels in Arabia. His descriptive powers were fine,
-and I listened eagerly; we were thus engaged when Rinaldo entered; the
-lassitude and dissipated air my husband had acquired of late, from
-negligent habits, had never so forcibly struck me before, as then,
-when he came towards me; his eyes were sunken, his form thin, and the
-expression of his features cadaverous; he looked worn out: he smiled on
-his friend, said ‘good morning’ to me, then sat down on the other side of
-the table.
-
-“The morning is fine, count,” he remarked, as the attendant handed him a
-cup of coffee; “it is a charming day for rambling, and I will show you
-over the grounds.”
-
-“I shall go with pleasure,” answered he, and then continued his
-description of Mecca, and the grave of the Prophet.
-
-“Of what are you speaking?” asked my husband.
-
-“My travels in Arabia,” said the count, “I have been there within the
-last three years. Since we parted at Naples, I travelled through the
-East.”
-
-“Ah!” said Rinaldo, “I did not know that; how desolate those countries of
-the Levant are now: what a contrast they present when we recall the olden
-time.”
-
-“Desolate enough, and the means of travelling miserable, and stopping
-places filthy.
-
-“All life, all commerce, all enterprise seems progressing onward to the
-North of Europe, leaving the East, and even us, far behind; we are on the
-decline, never probably to be revived again.
-
-“Thus it is with every thing on earth, every thing has its beginning,
-its zenith, and its fall. But do not let us involve madame in a didactic
-controversy, we will continue our philosophies when alone, my friend,”
-said he, bowing to me, as I accepted his escort to my salon, when my
-husband and himself departed for their walk.
-
-As I crossed the corridor to my bed chamber for my tapestry, to amuse
-myself during the morning, I again met some of those shrouded forms which
-seemed to haunt, like ghosts, the castle. One of them, pushing partially
-back the cowl he wore, disclosed to my view a remarkably sunburnt,
-repulsive physiognomy, whose harsh dark features appeared to me the index
-to a harsh dark soul.
-
-“God save thee, lady, but I wish to see the master, Monsieur de
-Serval,—is he at home?”
-
-“No, my good fellow,” said I, in a gentle tone, wishing to ascertain what
-these men wanted; “what is your business with him, tell me, and I will
-communicate it to him when he returns?”
-
-“We have orders, lady, from our chief,”—at that one of the others
-frowned on him, and he confusedly went on, “that is—I mean to say—it is a
-private matter of business with the master, I cannot tell any other than
-him.”
-
-“Well,” said I, “you can go to the lower hall and wait for him, he
-will return soon;” and calling Guilo, I bade him conduct them thither,
-and added, in a whisper, an admonition to watch and not permit them to
-depart till my husband returned. They seemed unwilling to remain, and the
-chief said he would come again at a more convenient season, but I gently
-detained them, bidding them wait monsieur’s return; reluctantly they
-followed Guilo, who regarded them with suspicious glances.
-
-An hour afterwards I was walking on the terrace, when I saw Rinaldo
-approaching, with Count Calabrella; he was speaking with great
-earnestness, and peering with penetrating eyes into those of his friend;
-they were evidently engaged in some deeply interesting discussion, in
-which the count, from his cloudy brow and downcast eyes, did not seem to
-acquiesce.
-
-As they ascended the stone steps, at the summit of which I stood, both
-became silent, and the count, lifting his hat to me, made some remark
-about the beauty of the grounds. I hastened to tell my husband about the
-strangers.
-
-“Monsieur de Serval,” addressing him by his surname, as was most polite,
-“three strangers of very mysterious appearance, whom I have often seen
-here before, now await you in the lower hall. As you were out, I asked
-their business, but they declined telling, and preferred waiting your
-return.”
-
-“In the lower hall did you say?” said he abruptly, and with a disturbed
-look. “Why did you not send them to the studio? It must be him,” he
-added as if to himself; “what can have happened? how strange!” and,
-without saying another word to me, he walked rapidly away, and entered
-the castle. I looked after him with surprise, for by his startled
-looks and distorted manner, I plainly saw that this was some affair of
-importance, and could not refrain from wondering what it was. I had a
-vague presentiment that his conversation with the count in some way
-related to these men. I could have wished to have asked the count what
-had been the subject of their conversation, but he was almost a perfect
-stranger. I could not do so with propriety, and so, silently, he and I
-retired to the salon. There was something so inexpressibly delicate and
-gentle in his manners, in his looks, in every thing he said or did, that
-it threw a charm around him, and this magic influence soon extended to
-those of his acquaintance. He had sojourned with us but two days, and
-yet had ingratiated himself into the good graces of the domestics, and by
-his fine conversational powers had whiled away some of the many lonely
-hours I daily passed. My husband too possessed, at first sight, the most
-attractive and winning ways, but these soon gave place to capricious
-variations of feeling, which soon ended in complete indifference, like
-all _roués_ the difficulty constituted the charm; that overcome, the
-graces, the charms soon vanished.
-
-I often regretted—as I sat alone, gazing on the fickle fire-light—often
-regretted having left the stage and having exchanged the certainty of a
-brilliant fame, unbounded admiration, and a fortunate perspective, for
-the uncertainty of love.
-
-My husband had been closeted with his visitors two or three hours when I
-saw them depart, and he came from the room, pale and anxious; with hasty
-strides he reached the court-yard, and having ordered one of the fleetest
-horses to be saddled, mounted, quick as lightning and rode off.
-
-I pulled the bell, and Guilo answered the appeal.
-
-“Guilo, where in the name of heaven has Monsieur de Serval gone to? I
-this moment saw him depart on horse-back.”
-
-“I know not, madame. He seemed very angry at something: he swore and
-muttered to himself as he mounted. I supposed you knew where he was
-going, my lady.”
-
-“No; I know not. I have no idea.”
-
-“I wish I could tell you, my lady; but master has acted so singularly
-lately, I am not surprised at anything he does. I never saw him seem so
-queer.”
-
-“Did the strange men take the same road your master did?”
-
-“No, my lady; they went away before him and took the opposite direction.”
-
-“Very well, Guilo, you can go.”
-
-“Will you be pleased to have dinner served now?”
-
-“What is the hour?”
-
-“Five o’clock, Madame.”
-
-“Well, serve it, and announce it to the count.”
-
-Guilo did so. When I went to dinner, my guest had preceded me: he looked
-very thoughtful. When I said that we must excuse Monsieur de Serval, he
-having been called away by a matter of business, his face clouded; but it
-passed quickly away, and he was as entertaining as usual.
-
-That night, after I had retired to rest, the clattering of horses’ hoofs
-sounded on the valley road; they neared the house; now they were beneath
-my window; then stopped: then I heard the stamping of heavy boots, and
-loud voices in the hall; then I distinguished Rinaldo’s piquant voice—for
-he had a bright voice, soft and cheering; and next I heard him enter
-his own room. Satisfied that he had returned safe, I composed myself
-to sleep, wondering what this mystery could mean,—longing to ask, yet
-restrained by pride.
-
-Next day Rinaldo appeared to have recovered himself entirely from his
-temporary agitation, and I ventured to inquire, indirectly, the cause of
-his sudden journey. He carelessly replied, that it was a small matter of
-business which demanded his presence, and avoided the subject. I was not
-satisfied, however; I knew better; but I also waived the subject, as I
-could elicit nothing by questions.
-
-A fortnight of dubious calm succeeded. Three gentlemen of the
-neighborhood, my husband’s friends, came to visit him. The same old
-scenes of riot and late hours were enacted over again; but I observed
-that the count avoided, as far as was consistent with politeness, all
-participation in these midnight revels, and often retired early to his
-chamber to avoid them. This added to his attractions in my eyes; and
-meeting me one evening, as I was gliding past the banquet-hall,—whence
-I heard the drunken revels, the noisy songs and clamorous uproar of my
-husband and his friends,—he came to my side, and, quietly placing my arm
-in his, silently conducted me to my salon, closed the door, to shut out
-those noisy sounds, drew my fauteuil to the fire, then placed another for
-himself, and looking at me very sadly, said in mournful tones:
-
-“This behaviour of your husband is very distressing to you, I know.”
-
-“Yes, it saddens me much to see him wasting his life in such
-dissipations.”
-
-“Has he always led this sort of life since he married you?”
-
-“The first months of our wedded life we spent happily. He acted
-differently then.”
-
-“Rinaldo always was very wild, very unprincipled in his views of women,
-yet the first day or two of my arrival here, I confidently thought you
-had reformed him.”
-
-“Alas! that is not so. I wish it were.”
-
-“Marriage is a mere lottery at best,” said the count, thoughtfully.
-“I have always viewed it in that light, and my observation of its
-unhappy results, has deterred me from choosing a wife. Some frequently
-draw prizes; most get blanks. You, dear lady, have unfortunately—” He
-paused, and did not complete the sentence, probably fearing to wound my
-feelings; for so strange it is, though you may despise your husband, yet
-to hear him depreciated, will wound.
-
-“In a month from now, I shall probably be at Epirus. I only feel happy in
-continual motion: travelling, war, politics—something to excite. Onward,
-seems to be my watchword; onward, as we on our little planet continually
-whirl round, and other worlds follow us, unceasing, eternal, in the
-sublime organization of nature.”
-
-I had never seen my guest so animated before; his eyes sparkled, his
-alabaster face lit up with the warm glow of feeling and enthusiasm. The
-announcement of his intended departure, somewhat surprised me, as we had
-expected to retain him for several weeks.
-
-“We shall regret your departure, count,” said I, trying to force a smile,
-but it was a sad one. “Monsieur de Serval intimated that we were to have
-the pleasure of your society for some time to come.” As I spoke, my eyes
-met his, and their expression of intense interest riveted mine: those
-beautiful, sad eyes,—those eyes of love, of ingenuousness, of truth and
-fidelity. He sighed, and withdrew them, and I resumed my contemplation of
-the carpet of the salon.
-
-A long, loud laugh, from the apartment where my husband was revelling,
-startled me. I thought I heard footsteps coming, and not wishing to see
-him in his present condition, I rose to return to my room.
-
-“Good night, dear lady,” said the count. “Remember me in your prayers,
-for I need them.” Glance met glance, but I tore mine away, and I felt, as
-I sought my repose, that my fluttering heart, and crimsoned cheek, told
-sad tales against me.
-
-Rinaldo was ill next day from excitement, and his friends in much the
-same condition. Monsieur D’Artagnan, and Monsieur Porthos, were men of
-middle age, corpulent and lazy; high livers, high drinkers, fond of
-all sorts of rural sports, and all sorts of amusements. They generally
-favored, or rather bored, me with their compliments and society every
-day after dinner, when Rinaldo usually lounged about a little while,
-ere he and they disappeared together, to arrange their plans for the
-evening. The count spent hours and hours with me, reading, singing,
-conversing, receiving and imparting information. These consolations,
-these sympathies, between a married woman and a handsome male friend,
-are dangerous. The loneliness of heart, the isolation a woman who has
-been slighted in her affections feels, strongly induces her to love the
-society, and the self-deluding friendship of an interesting man. This
-friendship soon becomes love, and then—where are they?
-
- * * * * *
-
-Some evenings after this, twilight found me in the beautiful garden of
-the castle, seated beneath a widespreading palm tree, that threw far
-before me its blooming branches. From beneath this natural bower, lulled
-to repose by the beautiful scene before me; by the sweet, balmy air that
-played around me, and the glorious sky above me, I contemplated the
-landscape.
-
-The sun went down behind a veil of heavy purple clouds, whose ragged
-edges were tinted with his parting rays; his smile dwelt lingeringly
-along the mountain’s brow, as if he _must_, yet wished _not_, to say
-farewell. The warm, oriental light illumined the summits of the trees,
-and showed forth more distinctly the tall gothic turrets of the castle.
-Part of the building remained in shadow, and the rising ground of terrace
-behind me concealed my view of the court-yard and its marble fountain.
-
-The grounds, disposed in flower beds of divers shapes and patterns,
-were thickly planted with exotic flowers, which, as if tired of their
-admiration of the god of day, now drooped their heads in mournfulness
-at his departure;—the golden butterfly flew gayly from flower to
-flower; his purple and gold wings glittering in the glowing light;—the
-grasshopper hopped on the tall thick grass; and the birds sang in the
-trees, carrolling their love-notes so thrillingly, I almost envied them
-their joy. Their songs were the only voices of the hour, and in listening
-to them I felt soothed, consoled: sweeter, calmer thoughts came over
-me,—etherealized feelings,—and leaning my head against the rough bark of
-the trees, I fell into a gentle slumber.
-
-Cracking of brushwood, breaking of boughs, aroused me from my dreamy
-trance. I started, looked around;—I heard the sound of coming feet, and
-presently my husband emerged from the copse. The sun had disappeared,
-and the mellow dusk was gathering her dusky veil around me. Arousing
-myself from dreams, I spoke to him as he seated himself by me. He
-looked absorbed with melancholy preoccupation, as was his wonted air of
-late:—his dress was disordered.
-
-“What an exquisite evening!” he observed; “how gloriously that sun
-declines along the hills.”
-
-“Yes, it is indeed beautiful. I have been watching his departure for the
-last hour.”
-
-“I have been on a long hunt through the forest: some of the people said
-they thought they had discovered a bear’s trail; but I sought in vain;—I
-found no traces of one.”
-
-“How can you like those bear hunts; they are so dangerous?”
-
-“They are exciting:—I like excitements.”
-
-“We mutually became silent, watching the clouds drifting across the sky,
-and the different hues of eve, as they blended into one. The air began to
-distil dew heavily. I rose, apprehensive that my health would be injured
-by exposure to it. As I rose upon my feet, a strange sensation came over
-me. Earth, air, mountains, clouds,—all objects seemed to swim before my
-eyes. I felt as if falling, I knew not where, and stretching out my hands
-for support, instinctively, I was received into my husband’s arms, and
-lost all consciousness.
-
-“When I recovered life, I found myself in my salon, my husband and
-Pasiphae anxiously bending over me: my bodice was unloosed, my hair
-undone. I gasped for breath, and partly raising myself, leaned on
-some one’s shoulder;—it was Rinaldo’s. Everything in the room seemed
-indistinct, confused.
-
-“Dear lady, what ails thee? what has happened?” I heard poor Pasiphae
-say, as she bathed my face and rubbed my hands.
-
-“Your mistress fainted as we sat in the garden together,” was my
-husband’s reply, rendered inarticulate by tears. He kissed me repeatedly,
-smoothed my hair, and manifested by his emotion the grief he felt, not
-only at my illness, but his own incomprehensible, cruel, conduct.
-
-When strong aromatics had thoroughly brought back to earth my truant
-senses, Pasiphae watched that night my fitful slumber, broken only by
-strange starts and convulsive movements that half affrighted her: my
-husband tenderly attended me. For days (they said) my life hung on a
-thread: and when exhausted nature resuscitated to life and health once
-more, I had a beautiful, a lovely boy!
-
-My health for weeks after his birth continued delicate. I seldom left my
-room: that cherished infant, whose life had so nearly been purchased by
-my own, my constant companion. And Rinaldo was kinder in those days; if
-our old feelings were not renewed, at least our child formed a connecting
-tie,—we seemed drawn more nearly to each other. Pasiphae manifested, at
-seeing the child, the joy of a child itself at seeing a new toy: she
-would carry the little thing in her arms, admire its undefined features,
-and playfully caress its tiny hands.
-
-Count Calabrella, at my husband’s urgent entreaty, prolonged his visit,
-and often came to pay his compliments; the charms of his conversation and
-manners won daily upon my esteem; I never could look upon that animated
-face, nor listen to that melodious voice, which distilled such noble
-thoughts, such chivalrous sentiments, without wishing that Rinaldo was
-more like him,—that he did not desecrate to unworthy uses the abilities
-with which nature had endowed him. Time fleeted, and I again resumed
-my walks in the castle garden, and on the terrace, in which Pasiphae
-sometimes followed me, bearing the child.
-
-We named him Raphael, a fancy of his father’s it was to bestow on the
-little one the name of the great painter. As day by day developed his
-senses and he became conscious of the difference of persons, and would
-extend his baby hands toward me, and weep if I left him, I realized in
-this love a mother’s pride, a mother’s joy; often when caressing him I
-imagined I saw him grown to manhood, noble in his principles, handsome in
-appearance, and that he would reward me by his tenderness and duty for
-all the mental anguish I should have to endure before that time came.
-When he pressed his little hands on my face, or tried to bite my finger
-as infants do, I always kissed that sweet little mouth, and sometimes
-tears followed the kiss and fell upon that face.
-
-On one occasion when I was passing through the corridor, on my way to
-take my daily promenade, the door of my husband’s studio was suddenly
-thrown open, and the mysterious stranger who had accosted me before in
-that corridor rushed violently passed me, and disappeared down the marble
-staircase. The sight of that shrouded form inspired me with a vague
-foreboding of horror. I had never been able to gather from my husband the
-object of their frequent visits, and I often attributed his dejection and
-gloom to his communications with them.
-
-“Who can that man be, Pasiphae? and what can he and his companions want
-with monsieur?”
-
-“Indeed, my lady, I know not; they come very often I know, and I dislike
-them much.”
-
-“God grant they bring no ill fortune here; but I feel as if contaminated
-by their vicinage,” I devoutly exclaimed, as we stepped from the oriel
-window out upon the terrace. We did not walk much that day, the wind
-blew hard; the infant gasped for breath and hid his face on his nurse’s
-shoulder: we went in.
-
-The next day I was occupied in my apartment with my tapestry, when Guilo
-abruptly entered, without knocking, and with a countenance pale and
-troubled, requested me to come immediately to his master: he wanted me.
-Laying aside my embroidery, I left Pasiphae with Raphael, and went. What
-was my amazement, when entering the banqueting hall, I found it filled
-with strange men, wearing the uniform of state officers, and seated
-in their midst, Monsieur de Serval and Count Calabrella; my husband
-affrighted and shrinking, the count self-collected and calm as usual.
-I moved hastily toward my husband, and seated myself at his side; the
-officers making way for me as I passed them.
-
-“What does this mean, Rinaldo? what do these men want?” I cried, seized
-with a strange presentiment that their presence in some way related to,
-or was concerned with the visits of the mysterious strangers.
-
-“Be composed, poor child,” replied Rinaldo. “I will tell you; I must
-leave here, I must go away.”
-
-“Leave your castle, go away! Wherefore? for God’s sake, explain?” I
-demanded, perfectly bewildered.
-
-“It is a dreadful thing to tell, but it must be told; I am arrested
-by these men for high treason; they have come to take me before my
-sovereign; I am utterly ruined; my castle is no longer mine; I am a
-bankrupt.”
-
-“Oh God!” I exclaimed, as if struck by a sudden blow. I fell down upon my
-knees, burying my face in my hands.
-
-“It is but too true. I have suffered myself to be engaged in a piratical
-expedition against the government; it has been discovered, destroyed, and
-I am commanded to answer the charges laid against me; I am to leave here
-to day in company with these men.”
-
-“Engaged in a piratical expedition against the government; to be
-arrested; perhaps imprisoned for life; and where are they to take you?
-cannot I also go?”
-
-“_You_ go with me to ignominious disgrace, to a prison’s walls; oh no,
-that cannot be: and yet you cannot stay here. This house will pass into
-other hands; I know not what to do with you, where to send you. I must
-return to Naples, but I do not wish you there, amid the general contempt,
-the disagreeable publicity that will attend me; no, you will be far
-better off away; I want you to go to Baie; you can remain there until the
-issue of affairs is known; then, if favorable, you can come to me.”
-
-“I will obey you; I will go there if you wish it; but tell me one thing,
-Rinaldo, I entreat you; are not those singular men who used to visit you,
-the cause of this?”
-
-“Yes,” said he, hesitatingly, “they are.”
-
-“I knew it. I felt they came for no good purpose.”
-
-“Gentlemen,” said my husband, addressing the king’s officers, “will you
-allow me a private conversation with my wife before I go?”
-
-“Certainly, monsieur,” replied the principal of the officers; and with
-their officials they filed slowly from the apartment. The count, who had
-not spoken during our dialogue, following them with a dejected air. When
-the great door of the banqueting hall shut heavily behind them, Rinaldo,
-as if overcome by this sudden, unlooked for misfortune, threw his arms
-around me, and, weeping, kissed me.
-
-“Genevra, my poor Genevra, we are about to separate, and it may be you
-will never see your unhappy husband again! I have not been to you the
-kind husband I should have been; my conduct has often been harsh and
-cruel: my love for you has been an enigma to myself. I have not acted
-rightly towards you; and now, a strange fatality—as unlooked for as
-strange—is about to tear me from you and that dear child.”
-
-Sighing, he kissed me again.
-
-“Let the past be forgotten and forgiven,” I answered, as I folded my arms
-around his neck: “let it go; it is done; it is nothing; I have forgotten
-it: only let me accompany you now. Why should sorrow separate a wife from
-a husband? I can share imprisonment with you, and take Raphael with me: I
-fear not its isolation, nor its gloom.”
-
-“No, no; do as I wish. What could be more brutal than to enclose in
-prison walls a young woman and her child—shut out from God’s air and
-human society! Go to Baie; you will not be far from me; you shall hear
-from me often. Perhaps this unfortunate affair will be happily ended:
-then, reunited, we will seek some new home—since this will no longer
-acknowledge me as master; some sweet, quiet place, where our days shall
-be spent more happily than the best part of our married life has been.”
-
-“But that prospect is far distant; perhaps it may never come; you may be
-convicted of high treason; oh, heaven! you may be decapitated.”
-
-“Well, if that is my fate, I shall meet it bravely: I am not afraid to
-die, let death come in what shape it will.” And he laughed recklessly.
-“No, Genevra, I fear no such catastrophe; I shall be able to clear
-myself: tremble not for me.”
-
-“How unfortunate this has been; how disastrous for you to have embarked
-in this ill-omened business. Why did you do it?”
-
-“Talk not of that which is past, Genevra,” said he, with something of his
-former sternness; “but come with me; the officials wait: let us bid each
-other farewell at the bedside of my child.”
-
-He took my hand in his: the officials stationed without the door
-respectfully made way for us; we ascended to our bedchamber, where,
-slumbering in his oaken cradle, lay Raphael—his rosy hands crossed upon
-his bosom, which rose and fell with his gentle breathing; his long night
-robe hung without the cradle, and the calm little face, so innocent, so
-passionless, expressed the unconscious happiness of infancy. A large
-lamp, the shade depressed, to shield the glare of light from his eyes,
-sat on a table near; and his nurse sat by the cradle side and watched
-him—her strongly marked features of dusky hue, and fantastic dress,
-thrown strongly into relief by the effect of the lamp.
-
-I sent her away, not wishing a witness of this scene; and my husband,
-kneeling by the cradle, gently took up the child in his arms, but did
-not awaken him; he still slept on. He looked at the babe long and
-wistfully: his very soul seemed gushing into his eyes as he contemplated
-the features of his son. He seemed looking forward into future years; he
-seemed inspired; he took one of the little hands in his, and kissed it:
-the child, with a slight start, withdrew it, and recrossed his arms on
-his bosom.
-
-“Sweet little lamb, as yet innocent of guile, pure as thy Maker: of such,
-if there is a heaven, should it be composed; sleep on, and mayst thou
-ever remain as innocent as now.”
-
-His thoughts appeared too deep for words; he replaced the babe, laid its
-satin coverlid over it, and rose on his feet, once more he wistfully
-regarded it, then turned to me.
-
-“Let us kiss each other; adieu here, Genevra. You had better not come
-down stairs again; those officials are rude sometimes, and I, being under
-arrest, cannot protect you against whatever they choose to extend to
-you. Farewell! you shall hear from me soon; be comforted, you know your
-religion teaches you that out of much tribulation shall arise joy; be
-comforted, all is not lost.”
-
-But I would not be put off with that abrupt farewell. I went down with
-him into the lower hall, where, standing around on the marble floor, in
-various attitudes, were the king’s functionaries. Count Calabrella had
-offered large sums of money to the chief, making himself responsible for
-Monsieur de Serval’s appearance for his trial in any state they should
-name, but the men were inexorable. Their commands from government were
-to bring him in person to Naples. No influence, no money could shield
-him. The count was traversing the hall with hasty strides, and gloomy
-expression of countenance, his steps resounding as he walked; seeing me
-approach on Rinaldo’s arm, on which I leant heavily, he came towards us,
-endeavoring to conceal his uneasiness by a forced smile.
-
-“This is a most singular affair. How came Alcantara to be detected?” he
-inquired, speaking in a low tone.
-
-“The stupid fool had the impudence to boast of what we were doing in the
-coffee houses, some persons informed the government, which led to my
-exposure.”
-
-“I have been trying to persuade them to return alone, naming some day for
-your appearance, promising to come with you myself, but they will not
-consent,—what is to be done, my friend?” he anxiously inquired, looking
-sorrowfully at Rinaldo.
-
-“What is to be done? why I am to go, of course, my dear Alfieri. Don’t be
-annoyed, don’t be alarmed at this: you know I told you weeks ago I was
-prepared for the worst: all that troubles me is the welfare of my wife
-and child. This old castle, though partly ruinous, is still a home, but
-even this I am obliged to part with. I sold it some days ago to a friend,
-to raise money for this expedition; and that is also gone. She and the
-infant must leave here; I wish you to attend her to Baie, where she will
-be not far from Naples, and can hear from me often. Promise me to see her
-safely there to-morrow.”
-
-“I will do all that mortal man can do for Madame de Serval, you may be
-sure; whatever she wishes I will perform,” said the count, with fervor.
-
-“Thank the fates, then, I do not leave them friendless,—utterly uncared
-for,” ejaculated Rinaldo.
-
-The chief of the officers now came out of the banqueting hall, and
-whispered to my husband.
-
-“Very well,” said he in reply, “in an hour I shall be ready, if you wish
-it, to start.”
-
-“In an hour! are you going in an hour?” I cried. “Oh cannot they stay
-till to-morrow? do make them stay till then.”
-
-“To-morrow, child, to-morrow I shall be far away from you.”
-
-We three continued to walk up and down: I tearful, desponding; the count
-abstracted, silent; Rinaldo with a sort of affected reckless gayety,
-assumed, doubtless, to conceal his real feelings. The men were sent away
-into the servants’ hall, and what little luggage my husband was allowed
-to take with him, brought down. I imagined I had a world of things to say
-in that hour, yet, when I went to speak, they escaped my recollection. I
-could think of nothing but the suddenness of this separation, and my own
-sad situation. The hour elapsed, it fled,—the man came to summon Rinaldo,
-the carriage was ready, the luggage was placed behind, the officers got
-into their carriages, the chief came to escort my husband to his!
-
-“I regret extremely that it should be my misfortune to convey such
-disagreeable tidings, and to be the cause of bringing sorrow to such a
-lady,” said the man, politely raising his cap to me.
-
-“It is not your fault; we excuse you; you merely act officially. If the
-carriage is ready, I am. Proceed, sir.”
-
-I walked with him to the court yard, notwithstanding he cautioned me
-not to do so, saying I would catch cold. Four carriages contained the
-inferior men, and their principal occupied the same carriage with
-my husband. He did not kiss me farewell there before others, but
-relinquishing my hand with stoical energy, he entered it with his
-companion, and closed the door. He shook hands convulsively with the
-count, who went round to the carriage window to bid him adieu. I did not
-move; I was riveted to the spot where I stood. The carriage started, it
-whirled through the avenue, it passed the lodge, it was gone, the others
-following it. When my eyes could no longer discern any traces of it; when
-I was fully convinced that it was reality, no dream, but reality, stern
-reality; I turned within the hall, went up stairs, fell upon my knees by
-the child’s bedside, laid my cheek by his, and wept bitterly.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-
-Reason almost failed me, when I awoke the next day. I wandered into the
-banqueting hall, calling for Rinaldo. The count followed me, entreated me
-to recollect myself, to bear misfortunes with calmness, with fortitude;
-asked what he could do for me. I answered not: I began to doubt my own
-identity. I only remembered distinctly that I was to leave that day, to
-go to Baie: every thing else seemed blank, intangible.
-
-I summoned Guilo to my salon, and told him that the castle was sold
-by my husband to another, who would come in a few days to claim it. I
-offered to pay his expenses to any city he chose to go, or he might stay
-in the vicinity of the castle, and endeavor to obtain employment of the
-new owner. He thanked me for my kindness to him, and said he preferred
-remaining. The other domestics were sent away; my household was broken
-up. Pasiphae determined to accompany my precarious fortunes as the
-nurse of Raphael, and so all things being definitely arranged, Count
-Calabrella, myself, Pasiphae, and my beloved babe, started that afternoon
-for Baie. I, almost unconscious, allowed myself to be placed in the
-barouche, and without looking back at those proud turrets and massive
-walls, within whose confines I had passed two years of alternate joy and
-grief, I was borne away. We rode all day. The count, anxious to beguile
-me from sad thoughts, conversed charmingly, but though ever agreeable
-and fascinating, yet my mind was too pre-occupied to listen, and the
-object so kindly intended failed of its purpose; nor did my melancholy
-abstraction cease, when, on the second day of our travel, we entered Baie.
-
-Oh, Baie! classic, beautiful, time-honored Baie! when again shall I
-revisit thy tranquil, lovely shores? when again shall I gaze upon thy
-pellucid waters, or roam over thy gentle, verdant hills, once the home
-of happy thousands,—thrilling with life, hope, perhaps happiness,—now
-silent, deserted; the seat of ruins, the abode of solitary peasants, who
-lead their flocks over the spot where once rose stately Roman villas,
-temples, theatres, and all the haunts of what _was_ human vanity and
-life;—all which have faded into fragments, into dust, leaving those few
-remains to tell that the tide of human life had once passed there.
-
-“Why am I not also gone?” thought I despondingly, as the barouche
-rolled over the smooth road, among the ruins. “Why do I still live on,
-unfortunate, unhappy? my husband arrested for high treason; myself and
-child alone and desolate; our home lost to us forever! What has the
-future for me but disappointment, continued isolation and my child, my
-Raphael! what is to become of him?”
-
-The stopping of the carriage aroused me from my gloomy reflections. It
-paused at a small cottage kept as a place of accommodation for strangers.
-Tired, faint, and weary, I found myself in the parlor of this rustic
-abode, scarce knowing where I was. The apartments were comfortable and
-scrupulously clean, but in contrast to the elegant home I had just left,
-they appeared contemptible to me. An image of the virgin stood in one
-corner, under it a crucifix: some pictures decorated the plastered walls,
-and flowers were trained to creep outside the latticed windows;—a gaily
-colored parrot, in a gilded cage, mockingly imitated our words, repeating
-them after us in playful tones: the hostess, a peasant vinter’s wife,
-came courtesying in to receive us, wearing a Neapolitan dress, which
-reminded me forcibly of Naples. The domestics of the castle, wearing
-another style, embarrassed and awkward at the sight of one, so far
-superior in worldly station. Ah! how far happier, if they did but know
-it, are those lowly ones of earth! how quiet; how untinctured by ambition
-are their lives! Very little envy is theirs; very little of those fierce
-hatreds we see in society! Calm, peaceful, obscure, they walk to their
-graves, seldom known; seldom wishing to be known, yet often tasting much
-real, substantial happiness.
-
-The count explained that I wished apartments for myself, nurse, and
-child, and the woman left the room to prepare them.
-
-“And you, my friend,” I said to him, “you also are going to stay here?”
-
-“Until to-morrow I shall have that honor,” said he, “but after that I
-shall not have the pleasure of being near you.”
-
-“Oh!” I cried, “will you also desert me? shall I be utterly alone?”
-
-“Alone! oh, no! not all alone with the companionship of your own sweet
-thoughts and your lovely child. Do not grieve; to meet to separate is the
-inevitable law of nature. Why should we cavil at that we cannot change?
-Existence is, as I have often told you, a play, a farce;—do not let us be
-its most miserable actors. Your husband will doubtless be liberated soon.
-You will be restored to him;—life will put forth new buds and blossoms
-from its giant tree. In his renewed affection you will find new joys; and
-I shall pursue my solitary travels, rejoicing at your happiness.”
-
-“But if you were not there, the measure of our joy would be incomplete.
-If what you predict comes to pass, will not you partake of our joy?”
-
-“I! what shall I be to you but a strange dream, associated with unhappy
-circumstances, disagreeable to your memory? I shall have been but the
-witnesser of one of those vicissitudes of fortune, which always fall to
-the lot of the talented and beautiful. No! I had better be forgotten. To
-be forgotten! how mortifying is the reflection. Yet, has it not always
-been the law of destiny?”
-
-“Do not philosophize now; let us be matter of fact. I thought, when my
-husband was so cruelly taken away, that you, who have always been so
-kind, would be spared me—at least for some time—till I should recover a
-little from this violent shock; but I am disappointed in this, as in all
-other things.”
-
-“Lady,” said he, bending a piercing glance upon me from his expressive
-eyes, “the request you make would be as dangerous to myself (if granted),
-as it would be useless to you. The charms of your person, your judgment
-and talent, I appreciate to their fullest extent, and nothing could give
-me more delight than to revel in the sunshine of such presence; but that
-enjoyment would be as injurious to you as perfidious in me to my friend.”
-
-The sad tones of his voice and significant manner of expression, did
-not allow me to misunderstand him. In my careless innocence I never
-recollected the cruel interpretation malice would put upon such
-companionship.
-
-“My departure,” he continued, “will be all the more advantageous to
-you, since to-morrow I will proceed immediately to Naples, and perhaps,
-through intercession with his Majesty, be the means of liberating your
-husband. I shall, of course, see him immediately, wherever he is, and
-write you a description of affairs.”
-
-He became silent, and mechanically stroked my infant’s rosy, downy
-cheeks. The vinter’s wife came tripping into the room, saying she would
-attend me to the apartments. Pasiphae, sad and quiet, preceded me,
-carrying Raphael; the count remained absorbed in thought. The rustic
-stairs were climbed, and with many low courtesies I was ushered into a
-large chamber, in which I noticed nothing but an immense fauteuil, into
-which I sank mechanically, completely overpowered. After making numerous
-demonstrations of respect and duty, the hostess withdrew.
-
-In the meantime, Raphael, who had slept nearly all the way from the
-Chateau of the Ravine, awoke from the slumber in which he had been wrapt
-all day, and looked inquiringly for me. I took him in my arms and kissed
-him. The little one laid his tiny hands on my face and raised his large
-eyes wistfully to mine. He was too young to miss his father, or know that
-father’s fate,—that unhappy, wayward man who now inhabited, perhaps, a
-prison’s gloom: and as I childishly toyed with the ribbons of his dress
-and watched the light and play of his features, I wished—oh! what does
-not a mother wish?
-
-I did not go down stairs again that afternoon and evening; but I
-distinctly heard the footsteps of the count as he continued to pace the
-floor of the lower room till a late hour. My own heart was the prey of
-contending emotions—of conflicting thoughts. Raphael fell asleep on my
-breast—his tiny hand clasped in mine—with an expression of conscious
-happiness on his smiling countenance. I fixed my gaze upon a crucifix
-which hung in a corner, and invoked to my support that invisible
-influence whom we worship in an earthly form. I conjured up before me
-visions of persecuted martyrs, dying saints, nuns devoted alone to the
-service of God; but, in spite of myself, other thoughts came stealing
-over me, and the recollections of the happy days of love and sunshine I
-had passed during the first part of my married life, were mingled with
-regrets at my husband’s misfortunes.
-
-A glorious morning sun beaming through the lattice, awoke me at an
-early hour; a beautiful landscape met my eyes on going to the window;
-it commanded a view of the sea coast, which was not far distant; and I
-beheld with delight the blue rolling waves of the ocean, crested with
-foam, and swelling proudly as they rolled onward, and came and beat
-against the rocks on the shore, with a hoarse echoing sound; the high
-cliffs at the water’s edge, matted into quiet unassuming hills as they
-disappeared in the distance. The light fishing skiffs of the fishermen,
-chained to the shore, danced on the bosom of the blue waters, and the
-joyous song of the men as they drew in their nets, was wafted to my ears
-by the clear morning breeze. The shepherds and their flocks browsing on
-the hill tops, diminished by distance to the size of mice, were dimly
-visible. On that classic, quiet shore, silence and repose kept vigils
-gentle and imposing as such presence should be.
-
-When I descended I found the count below in the parlor; he said his sleep
-had been disturbed by dismal dreams, and his sad face bore testimony to
-his words. After breakfast, at which little was said, he proposed a walk
-on the beach; mechanically I consented, put on my bonnet and shawl, and
-we went forth together.
-
-We pursued a path through a small forest of palm, linden, and fir trees;
-their thick shade formed an impenetrable bower, relieved at their base
-by wild flowers of every description; the meandering course of numerous
-rivulets ran through the wood.
-
-We continued on, the count occasionally making some remark about the
-beauty of the scenery, to which I responded by monosyllables; my mind
-was too intensely absorbed to talk. The forest was passed: the sun broke
-brightly from a cloud, and the beach and the murmuring waves lay before
-us; a small schooner, contending against the tide, was drifting slowly
-along.
-
-“That bark, struggling for anchorage, is like your life, dear lady;
-now it rises, now falls amid the waters; the sails gathered in, the
-pilot endeavoring to gain a position of safety; presently she will rest
-quietly, securely anchored on the bosom of the bay; so will it be, I
-predicate, of thee.”
-
-“God grant it may,” I murmured.
-
-As he said, after many tacks and manœuvres, the little bark succeeded in
-gaining safe anchorage, where riding tranquilly it rested. The birds of
-the ocean surrounded it, flapping their wings, and making the air resound
-with their mournful cries.
-
-A road wound along the shore, bordered by a footpath: on this we wandered
-at random, stooping sometimes to pick the flowers strewing the way. The
-count philosophized on nature in his sweet voice, and nature smiled upon
-us wearing her fairest dress; at last, after we had gone some distance,
-he looked at his watch.
-
-“The hour has come, dear lady, I must go: the carriage will be at the
-house to bear me away, and your forebodings will be relieved when I shall
-arrive at Naples and write you.”
-
-Seeing that he was really bent on going, we retraced our steps to the
-house; the barouche which brought us was already there; he did not enter
-the dwelling, but pressing my hand with earnest fervor, stepped into it
-and drove away.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A week of quiet daily routine, and intense mental anxiety, succeeded the
-count’s departure; the days sped slowly in monotonous regularity; the
-nights were lonely, and would have been terrible had it not been for my
-child and faithful servant.
-
-The evening of the sixth day after he went to Naples, I was sitting at
-the window of my room abstractedly gazing on vacancy, when I saw a man
-rapidly approaching on horseback, urging his spurs into the animal’s
-sides, and moving his arms in such a ridiculous manner, that, had my
-mind been at ease, I should have laughed at his absurd gestures; but in
-my grief they were unnoticed; suddenly reining in his horse at the door,
-he handed a letter to the peasant, who was taking his siesta before the
-door, and rode away as rapidly as he had come; the man brought it to me,
-and I eagerly, yet tremblingly, opened it and devoured the contents; it
-was from my husband, superscribed in the count’s handwriting, and as
-follows:
-
- “_Barberinni Prison, June 11th._
-
- “DEAREST GENEVRA:—
-
- “Count Calabrella will find means to send you this. Were it not
- for him you would hear nothing of my condition, as I am under
- such close surveillance that nothing concerning me escapes
- suspicion. The principal agent in this sad affair exposed all
- by his blunders, and this has brought me, perhaps, to a felon’s
- death. It is not known when my trial will take place,—I hope
- soon, as I have secured powerful mediation in my behalf. These
- prisons are dark and cold—frightful from their solitude. I
- sit in one corner of my cell and write this by the light of a
- lantern, while the count waits to take it away. I wish I could
- see my boy again; but the strange inexorable fate which has
- pursued me from my earliest years will probably continue its
- malice to the close of my life. Farewell,—farewell,—take care
- of yourself,—remain at Baie till the result of this is known.
- You shall hear from me soon again.
-
- “Yours till death,
-
- SERVAL.”
-
-This strange epistle, written on a piece of paper evidently torn from
-some book, and almost illegible from blots and blurs, was too general
-and incoherent to satisfy me. Perhaps, for fear of being surprised by
-the jailor or some of the officials, he was unable to write more; yet he
-told me of nothing that had transpired. Perhaps it would have harrowed my
-heart too much had he told me all,—he wished to spare me the sorrow.
-
-Then came a note, within the other, from Count Calabrella.
-
- “MOST RESPECTED LADY:—
-
- “Immediately upon my arrival I asked permission to be admitted
- to see your husband, but was refused the favor, and only
- obtained it yesterday through the intercession of a cardinal of
- the church, a friend of mine. I then hastened to see Monsieur
- de Serval. I found him sad, but not as desponding as I had
- expected. Of course you can imagine what was said of you,—and
- I should be rude to repeat to you what you will have already
- anticipated. We then conversed upon this ill-fated affair.
- I told him that Alcantara was arrested, of which fact he
- was ignorant,—the minor confederates had fled. We conferred
- as to what was best to be done; and I decided on soliciting
- the intercession of the foreign ministers, and some of the
- cardinals, together with as many others as I could secure.
-
- “When I left him I hastened to the house of the French
- minister. I was admitted to an audience. He received me most
- politely,—listened attentively to my explanation of the facts
- of the case, (which it is needless to trouble you with,)—I
- entreated him to interest himself for his countryman. He did
- not definitely say he would, but deferred the question for
- reconsideration. I think, however, I shall be able to persuade
- him into doing something. I have secured the interests of
- several cardinals, and intend to do much more before the trial
- comes on. Believe me, every thing that is within the range
- of human possibility shall be done. I do not despair: and I
- entreat you, also, to be consoled,—to hope.
-
- “Yours in faith,
-
- CALABRELLA.”
-
-This letter partially revived my drooping spirits, for it breathed
-hope and elasticity of mind. My husband’s was gloomy, but that was
-attributable to his unhappy situation. I had expected an explanation,—I
-received only general assurances of brighter times, which to me seemed
-far distant,—dubious,—if not impossible.
-
-I resigned myself to the course of circumstances, and patiently abided my
-time. Beautiful sunny days, and moonlight nights, fell upon Baie at that
-time,—the warm, bright glow of the sun, and the calm sweet light of the
-moon was soothing as its rays. I often walked, beneath its light, up and
-down the road on which the house faced.
-
-One evening I started before sunset and walked in the direction of some
-curious ruins, situated on a cliff on the shores; the road diverged in
-a fork leading down to the beach. I preferred this walk and followed
-it; when I had walked some distance I reached the beach, the waters now
-quietly swelling and falling beneath the brilliant rays of the sun;
-the road was thickly strewn with shells, some of which I picked up and
-examined; then, my mind naturally running back to philosophy, I compared
-human life, human joys, human expectations, to those shells at my
-feet, and those ruins on the cliff before me. As the light played upon
-the broken archway, the desolate court-yard, the ruined chambers, the
-falling turrets, I felt my old feelings of gloom and morbid thought come
-wandering back.
-
-I ascended the hill by a beaten pathway, and wandered in and around the
-little temple; myself and my thoughts were the only inhabitants of the
-place. I gathered a bouquet of flowers and was preparing to return, the
-moon having now arisen: when, glancing up at the sky, I saw that which
-had been a few moments before so serene, dark and lowering; the horizon
-obscured by immense black clouds, which were rapidly spreading over the
-sky; heavy gusts were borne bellowing along, and the glaring foam of the
-waves was visible faraway.
-
-It was impossible to take the beach road under such circumstances, the
-tide having arisen, I was in danger of drowning; it was impossible to
-go through the woods the other side of the ruins, I was in danger of
-being lost in their density. I knew not what to do: meanwhile the sky
-continued to darken; the moon was completely overcast; the wind continued
-to howl around me; the only thing to do was to remain in the temple, and
-claim the precarious benefit of its shelter. I could scarcely see to
-re-enter the ruins, and seated myself on a broken column in their midst;
-everything was buried in stones and darkness; the gloom was so intense I
-felt it.
-
-The storm increased rapidly; the waves lashed to fury, broke against
-the rocks with a roaring noise; the waves in the distance shone with
-phosphoric light; the clouds swept hither and thither over the face
-of the sky; now in tremendous masses, now scattered, white, dim and
-ghostlike; such a scene as this, was calculated to inspire any one with
-horror, and the blood ran cold in my veins, as I sat and listened.
-
-Thus it raged for I know not how long: I could not reckon time in such
-a place. I thought it must be two hours. Then another sound was mingled
-with the gale: a strange crashing, a wild unearthly yell rang out on
-the storm; then all was absorbed in the rushing gale. Presently another
-interval of calm succeeded to the hellish sounds, when the waves and
-winds apparently paused to take breath, and gather their strength for
-another onset. The uproar of echoes, reverberating around me, was
-frightful; I almost thought demons from a lower world were playing their
-fantastic tricks within the old ruins. The weather during the day had
-been delightful, but the storm had rendered the air severe; and, as I sat
-shivering on the column, my hair standing on end, and teeth chattering
-with fear, the moon momentarily broke through the clouds, and disclosed
-the lurid landscape, strange and unearthly looking by the mysterious
-light. I could not express on paper the agony I suffered, till by the
-faint streaks of morning light in the east, I perceived day would soon
-dawn. The roar of the gale gradually subsided, the clouds became less
-strongly dark, the ocean’s waves less tumultuous; and an hour afterward,
-when I could fully perceive objects, I saw the light of day; and it shone
-upon a strange scene! When assured that the danger was over, I summoned
-strength to rise; my trembling limbs almost refused to support me. I
-wished to return to the house, anxious about my child. Walking down the
-hill towards the beach, my attention was attracted by pieces of spars,
-rigging, and a small boat stranded by the waves; this explained to me
-the horrid sound I had heard during the storm. A ship had been wrecked
-off the coast, which in that part abounded in breakers; numerous other
-objects now caught my astonished eyes: a little farther on a number of
-bales and some personal property lay scattered about; an object clothed
-in white, was stretched across my way; going towards it I knelt down and
-sought to distinguish what it was; it was a corpse, a female form; the
-drapery concealed the face. I raised the robe from the countenance, and
-beheld! yes,—no,—yes—it _was_ Blanche!
-
-Blanche! Great heaven! what could it mean? Yes, it was her! There she
-was dead: the same calm, sweet features; the same graceful form, dressed
-in white; the fair arms crossed on the breast. From the position in
-which I found her, she seemed not to have made the slightest effort to
-save herself: the angels of heaven seemed to have fanned her with their
-wings,—so innocently calm, so pure looked she. But how came she on board
-this unhappy bark? Where was she going to? I had supposed that when she
-fled from Naples, it was to some foreign land, not to remain in Italy.
-And where was her lover? I resolved to leave the body, and go to some
-fishermen’s huts on the cliff behind the ruin, and seek assistance, to
-have the body conveyed to town. As I prepared to do so, several other
-bodies presented themselves to my gaze, and in the corpse of a man,
-lying with his face exposed, I recognized Lord Glenfell. He was dressed
-in royal blue cloth, such as he had always worn (preserving his English
-customs) at Naples. One hand was buried in his bosom, the other hung
-stiff and cold by his side; and even in death he retained his perfect
-beauty. This unexpected, incomprehensible event, coming so suddenly upon
-me, after my own sorrows, and the fright from the storm, overpowered me,
-and sitting down on a fragment of stone, I wept over the bodies. Along
-the beach for a quarter of a mile the wreck was strewed in confusion:
-masts, cargo, rigging, luggage, all lay in different positions. The
-principal part of the passengers and crew probably had perished. One or
-two bodies came floating along as I franticly rushed up the hill again,
-in the direction of the fisher’s huts. They were not there when I reached
-them:—gone, an old woman told me, to plunder the wreck. She and a young
-girl were the only occupants of the tent, and I earnestly entreated
-them to return with me to the shore, and carry the body of Blanche to
-their house, to remain there till I could obtain assistance from Baie.
-They consented to accompany me, and we returned together, they talking
-incessantly about the storm and the wreck, wondering what the name of
-the vessel was, and whence it came. The bodies were undisturbed when I
-reached them. The woman, apparently used to such scenes, carelessly took
-up the inanimate form of my beloved friend, and strode away to the house
-again, while the girl remained to watch that of Lord Glenfell’s.
-
-Meanwhile the sun had fully risen, and threw his golden rays on the
-scene. The waves had subsided somewhat: they were growing calmer. The sky
-was bright and glowing: the hues of morning lit up the shores.
-
-The wreckers were busy at their plunder, wretchedly dressed; some of them
-in tatters, running here and there: even the dead bodies they spared not.
-The girl sat down on the sand near the gurgling waves, and I, standing on
-my feet, regarded the fair young Englishman. His eyes, which in life had
-been a soft brilliant blue, were wide open, and their unnatural glare
-startled me. The deadly pallor of his features, and the languid air his
-form and face bore, too surely showed that life was not there. Presently
-the old woman returned, and with the aid of her husband, an athletic
-peasant, they raised the corpse, and I and the girl following, went back
-whence we came.
-
-They laid the two beautiful, yet guilty lovers, side by side on a rustic
-bed, poor and lowly as the lot of them to whom it belonged. Then the
-woman began to wash away the sand which thickly obscured their faces,
-and gathered on their clothes, all the while uttering sad cries that two
-so beautiful should die. Wiping the tears from my eyes, I turned to the
-peasant, and asked him if he could proceed immediately to my house at
-Baie, and procure biers to take the bodies thither, and tell my maid and
-some of the peasants there to come also? He replied with alacrity that he
-would, and departed.
-
-When the sand and red clay of the shore was entirely cleared from their
-persons, I regarded the corpses more attentively. Two years had not
-changed my Blanche; she was as beautiful as in those times past, when we
-sang together at Naples. I remembered the night of her departure, and
-her nocturnal farewell—so sad, so strange. Where had she gone then, and
-whither was she going now in this ship? Perhaps again to Parthenope, when
-the scissors of the fatal sisters, cut short the thread of her days. Oh!
-unhappy fate,—sad destiny.
-
-Lord Glenfells then continued faithful to his vows of faith and love. Oh!
-marvellous instance of attachment in a man, that his love should last two
-years. Perhaps, if there were more women like her, their love would last
-longer. Together they had died, and now it was my sad task to see them
-buried amid the wild, romantic scenery of Baie.
-
-I was alone with the bodies for more than an hour, ere the peasant came
-back with my poor, astonished Pasiphae, accompanied by several men,
-bearing hand biers. News of the shipwreck had reached the town, and great
-fear had been entertained lest some evil had befallen me, as hour after
-hour passed away, and I came not, and the terrible storm arose. Great
-was their amazement when they beheld me watching two corpses, and when
-they saw the agony imprinted on my face. The sympathizing Pasiphae threw
-herself at my feet, and weepingly buried her face in the folds of my robe.
-
-“This is a most inexplicable affair, my poor Pasiphae,” said I. “I will
-tell you some other time. I could not return to you last evening. I spent
-the night in the ruins of the temple to avoid the storm. I wish to get
-home quickly.”
-
-“The sweet child wept much last night, my lady, but I hushed him to sleep
-at last,” said my faithful servant.
-
-I turned to the men, who had placed upon the bier Lord Glenfells and his
-beautiful Blanche, and after paying the women for their attention, the
-mournful cortege set out.
-
-We took the road along the beach to the fork, whence it diverged to the
-house; then following that, we soon arrived at home. The women came
-rushing to the door to see so strange a sight, and scarce believed their
-eyes when they beheld what I brought. They were carried up stairs into an
-empty room, next to mine, placed on a bed, covered with a white coverlid;
-and I left the room, locking the door and taking the key with me. I
-returned to my child.
-
- * * * * *
-
-I buried them at Baie. They have a lonely grave on that rock-bound coast,
-at the top of the cliff on which the ruined temple of fortune stands. The
-ocean’s waves wash the base of the rocks, and the flowers and trees are
-gathered thickly around it. No splendid monument marks the last repose of
-one of England’s brightest, handsomest sons;—no inscription tells of the
-fair, ill-fated songstress. Her death, like her life, was isolated. But
-her memory at least is still fondly cherished by one who knew and loved
-her well.
-
-When last I visited their graves, I found them overgrown with
-flowers,—odorous and beautiful as had been the character of Blanche.
-There the rose, the acacia, japonica, myrtle, and cypress, form unfading
-bowers, unfailing mourners, over their graves. When the sea is calm,
-the quiet murmur of its waves seems to utter unknown regrets. In storms
-their swelling tumult sounds like a requiem. Vain would it be for me
-to describe the many sad hours I passed there, silently offering as an
-ovation the grief of a sincere heart. During my stay at Baie, not a day
-elapsed but found me a visiter there. There the sadness of the scene
-taught me to moderate my own regrets,—taught me to uplift my heart to
-God,—taught me to be humble, thankful, and resigned.
-
-A month passed without my hearing anything farther from my husband or
-Count Calabrella. I was terribly anxious: I dreaded lest something of a
-frightful character had happened, and that they feared to tell me it. I
-sometimes walked half the night up and down my room, conjuring my brains
-to imagine the reasons of this mysterious silence; but I could bring my
-mind to no clear explanation. I could resolve on nothing; everything
-was dark to me. At length the dreaded, yet wished for explanation came.
-Another courier came with another letter, which I have still preserved.
-I submit it to you:—
-
- “I have made my escape. I have left Naples and Italy for ever.
- Had I awaited my trial, I know I should have been utterly
- lost. I jeoparded my life in getting out of prison; but am
- safe now. I release you from all faith, all allegiance to me;
- forget me: heaven never intended us for each other. Return to
- the gay world: may you be happy. Kiss my child for me. I had
- a presentiment, when I stood over his cradle, that I should
- never see him more: his baby-features are imprinted on my soul;
- they will only be obliterated when I shall cease to breathe.
- Remember me in those prayers you so fervently offer to your
- God, and may that God watch over you.
-
- “I go to seek a new fortune in some foreign land; as yet I know
- not where: everything in the future is dark and uncertain.
- Farewell! Farewell!
-
- SERVAL.”
-
-When I had read this strange epistle, and fully comprehended it, I
-remained petrified with amazement: the tone of it was so reckless,
-wild—almost incoherent—I scarcely believed it to be my husband’s. He gave
-me up; he told me to forget him; to return to the world I had quitted for
-him. He seemed to write without feeling any regret, any sadness at this
-eternal separation. His child alone elicited a sentiment of humanity; and
-this was all the reward I received for the forbearance I had manifested
-toward him,—the devotion I had practiced for more than two years to that
-unhappy man. I was thrown off—cast away!
-
-After reflection, I resolved to go to Naples to learn something definite.
-Our travelling arrangements were soon made, and the following afternoon
-we left Baie.
-
-The classic ruins, the ocean, the beautiful shore, and the graves of
-Blanche and Lord Glenfells, were soon lost to my longing eyes, in the
-windings of the road. The town, the mountains, sea, rivulets, ruins and
-all, were enveloped in the blue mists of heaven.
-
-The next day I again beheld the fair city of Naples rising on the hill,
-with her lofty towers, gardens, churches, castles and splendid private
-dwellings, rearing their superb height one above the other; and again I
-drove through the beautiful street Toledo. I hastened to the house of
-Madame Bonni; but two years had created changes in Naples. The good woman
-was gone, and another dwelt in her house. I secured apartments, however,
-in one of the most retired hotels, and then sent for the Court Guide, to
-ascertain the residence of Count Calabrella, whom I regarded as my only
-friend in this great trouble; it was brought, and after ascertaining his
-address, I sent mine to him.
-
-He came immediately. When he entered my parlour I rushed toward him, and
-showing him the letter I held in my hand, exclaimed:
-
-“Is this true? Oh! tell me, dear count, is it true?”
-
-“Be calm, dear lady, I entreat you; be composed; this is an unexpected
-meeting. I had intended coming to you at Baie to-morrow to tell you the
-strange news.”
-
-“But tell me, I entreat you, is it true? has my husband really escaped
-from prison? has he left me in this way?”
-
-“He has escaped, and gone I know not where. Three days ago I visited him
-to tell him some favorable news regarding himself; he seemed cheerful;
-spoke much of you, and confidently of the result of the trial. Yesterday
-it was noised abroad that he had fled from Naples; doubting whether it
-was not mere rumor, I inquired, and found it true: it astonished me much.
-Knowing your husband’s determined character, I had been actively engaged
-in obtaining all the influence I could in his favor. I doubt not, myself,
-had he awaited his trial, it would have terminated favorably.”
-
-“Gone! gone!” I cried—thinking only of the desertion—“for ever gone! and
-what is to become of me and the child?”
-
-“Don’t give way to grief, madame; be comforted; you will find numerous
-friends: those who have known and loved you before your marriage.”
-
-“Oh, count! I feel as if this were the acme of my misfortunes!”
-
-“I know life has had many changes for you; but sorrow will not last for
-ever; and destiny sometimes presents a pleasant face.”
-
-Thus for an hour he endeavored to divert my mind from dwelling with
-too much intensity on this inexplicable affair; but in vain did I try
-to talk or think of something else; and he, perceiving the abstraction
-of my thoughts, probably thought that quiet and repose would be the
-best consolers at that moment: and, after repeated adjurations to be
-calm, to hope, he went away. I appreciated the delicacy of his behavior
-in not reverting to any thing that could pain me: he had impressed me
-agreeably at first, and acquaintance had not dissipated that impression.
-I was determined, however, to learn more concerning my husband; and
-that day calling a calesso, bade him drive to the Barberinni prison. It
-was situated in an obscure quarter of the city, down near the harbor,
-surrounded by dark and dirty looking buildings on all sides, and itself
-presenting an appearance of dark, impenetrable gloom. I alighted and
-entered the keeper’s room, where he sat, amid old papers of all
-descriptions, reading from a great book, which looked to me like a
-ledger. Great bunches of keys adorned the smoked walls, dirty and old as
-their proprietor; and an old writing-desk stood in one corner, with a
-high stool before it.
-
-He rose civilly as I entered, and asked in what he could please me. I
-told him that I had come to ask the particulars of my husband’s escape;
-and then informed him that I was the wife of Monsieur de Serval. He
-seemed surprised at that; and, on my requesting to be shown my husband’s
-cell, immediately acquiesced, locking the door of his stronghold previous
-to accompanying me.
-
-We threaded several long stone galleries, off which, on either side,
-opened the doors of the cells. Then we descended a long flight of stairs;
-then came another gallery; then he paused, and unlocked an iron door, and
-ushered me into the dreary cell, lighted by one window, in which Rinaldo
-had written me the letter I received at Baie. One of the iron bars of
-the window was gone; the keeper pointed to it, and said: “Through that
-aperture your husband made his escape two nights ago. I know not how he
-obtained possession of the file with which he sawed apart the bar; but he
-did so, and swam probably to the opposite shore: at any rate, nothing has
-been learned of him, though government has sent spies every where to look
-for him.” I looked down at the stone pavement at my feet—and up at the
-dim light above my head—and soliloquized, that a month in a dungeon like
-that must be equivalent to ten years in the world.
-
-“Did no one come to see my husband during his imprisonment?” I asked,
-wishing to learn if any one besides Count Calabrella had visited him.
-
-“A tall, dark gentleman came often, and once another man came, but he
-wore a cloak, and I could not see his face; as he presented a permit, I
-admitted him.”
-
-“That must have been the man who was accessary to his departure,” thought
-I: and having nothing farther to say to the keeper, I left the cell and
-returned to the carriage, and was driven home to the hotel.
-
-All the inquiries I made were baffled; all my suppositions were useless;
-nothing further concerning my husband’s dubious fate was learned. I
-found myself once more thrown out on the world, obliged to resort to my
-musical talents for a support. The old manager of the San Carlo, hearing
-I wished to return to the stage, called on me, and I entered into an
-engagement with him to perform in one of my old operas. I cannot describe
-the heartaches I experienced at being obliged to resume the laborious and
-distasteful profession I had so gladly resigned: but something must be
-done;—I could not remain idle;—I knew of no other means by which I could
-maintain myself as well as by singing, and therefore decided on that.
-
-The night of my reappearance, a crowded house awaited me: and the
-Austrian nightingale, in her misfortunes, was more admired than had been
-the gay Genevra; yet could those brilliant crowds have looked into my
-heart, and have seen the bitter sadness imprinted there, even my rivals
-would have pitied me; but the world only beheld the celebrated beauty,
-the great singer, and my rivals could see nothing; their envy blinded
-them. My only joy was to return from those crowded houses; to run away
-from the plaudits of the multitude, the dubious admiration of the men,
-the patronizing envy of the women, and bury myself in the solitude of
-my own room; devote myself to my smiling, happy boy. It was generally
-understood that I denied myself to all visitors, consequently I was
-not annoyed by any of those disagreeable attentions so often extended
-to actresses. I even wished to deny myself to the count, dreading
-the consequences of such companionship; but gratitude forbade such
-incivility, and he came.
-
-One evening Raphael had fallen asleep on a sofa, after creeping about
-on the floor till sleep overcame him. His pretty mouth, like a blooming
-rose-bud, was half open, showing two new teeth, and his long white robe
-swept along the sofa as he lay;—as I sat near him, listening to his
-gentle breathing, I heard a light step on the carpet, and turning, saw
-the count. He sat down on the sofa, at the feet of Raphael, and looking
-at him, said:
-
-“How sweetly he slumbers; how innocent is the sleep of a child.”
-
-“Yes, their unsuspicious innocence is a charming attribute which they
-soon lose.”
-
-I never could raise my eyes when the count was present without
-encountering his fixed gaze, and I met it now as I looked up from my
-child. He turned his away as I did so, and turned his hat from one hand
-to the other with a confused air.
-
-“Can nothing be thought of? can nothing be done, to find out something
-more about Monsieur de Serval?” I suddenly inquired, reminded more
-strongly by the presence of the count of my unhappy lord.
-
-“Everything that the ingenuity of the government could devise, or I,
-or others, suggest to find him out, has been done, but in vain. He has
-baffled pursuit. Perhaps some day in future will find you reunited to
-him on some fair isle, of which you and your child will form the Venus
-and Cupid, your husband the Mars: then, in those days of sunshine, all
-recollections of unhappy hours will be forgotten: that will be another
-sphere of existence.”
-
-“It is very kind of you to re-assure me, but I am convinced that will
-never be.”
-
-“It is possible, and whatever is possible is probable; as for me,” he
-continued, “I wonder what fate has in store for me; a life of loneliness
-I suppose, as it always has been, travelling, wandering alone.”
-
-“Oh, say not so,” I cried, and anxious to soothe, I laid my hand on his;
-“not if you were near me, should you be lonely; friend to me and my
-husband, I would always cheer you.”
-
-“You,” he exclaimed, catching my hand; “oh, heaven itself would seem
-to dawn upon me, could I always be near you as I am now.” Then, as if
-amazed at the fervor with which he had spoken, he dropped my hand, and
-confusedly looked down. An agitated silence followed: this singular
-avowal had been so abrupt, it startled me into a tumult of thoughts I had
-not dreamed of for a long time past: my cheeks blushed carnation hues as
-I looked away; my confusion, however, did not last long, for the count,
-as if struggling against some feeling he wished to hide, rose abruptly,
-and ejaculated, as if with an effort,
-
-“I have alarmed you; I have acted foolishly; but God knows it was
-involuntary; I did not intend to wound your feelings; forgive me, dear
-Lady Genevra, forgive me; good night.” He extended his small, thin hand
-for mine; with my head averted, I placed mine within his. He shook it
-gently, and when I looked up he was gone. Oh, how fervently I wished I
-had a right ever to retain that hand, ever to lean on that arm, and gaze
-into those star-lit eyes; to feel that some one human being on earth
-cared for me, was true to me, would not desert me or disdain my love.
-Oh, how I wished for that faithful heart. And then to think I had found
-it, but under such circumstances that it was guilt itself to think of
-it! Had I not better determine never to see him again, to deny myself
-the siren-like attraction which was drawing me I know not where? Ought
-I not to think of my husband, to mourn his loss, regret his destiny?
-Yet he had himself bade me forget him, abandon all allegiance to him,
-be happy without him. What was to become of me? whither should I turn
-for consolation? Monsieur Belmont had gone to Paris, to direct the opera
-there; Madame Bonni had left the city; sweet Blanche was dead, and Inez
-far away. Oppressed with these thoughts, I sank into a reverie, when my
-child stirred, and turning, I took him in my arms.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-
-In my loneliness I reminded me of the words of the superior of the
-convent of Sacre Cœur, and resolved to visit her. The same nun admitted
-me, and I again found myself in the little convent parlor.
-
-Presently I heard the rustling silk dress, and the superior stood before
-me. Her features bore the same calm expression of severity; her manner
-the same impressive solemnity. She immediately recognised me, and
-pressing my hand, almost cordially said,
-
-“Well, daughter, I see you again; you have remembered me; and how fares
-the world with thee? has not its hollow-heartednesss already tired you?”
-
-“I feel tired of it sometimes, mother, and remembering the invitation to
-visit you, which you gave me two years age, I have come.”
-
-“You have done rightly, daughter: I am glad to see you. I think you told
-me you were a catholic; I hope you still remain faithful to our blessed
-faith?”
-
-“It has often been a consolation to me in much trouble.”
-
-I was about to enter into more general conversation, when other visitors
-came, and I took leave, the Superior cordially bidding me adieu, and
-inviting me to come to mass in the chapelle of the Sisters.
-
-Thinking upon the solitude of a convent life—the austerity of such
-an existence—I sought my room, where I found the count playing with
-Raphael’s baby-rattle to amuse him. He came toward me, as if doubtful of
-his reception after the incident of our last meeting; but forgetting the
-slight peak I then felt—thinking only of the happiness of seeing him—I
-smiled and extended my hand.
-
-“You see I have been endeavoring to amuse little Raphael during your
-absence.”
-
-“For which I am very much obliged;” and not knowing what to say—for his
-presence, of late, always embarrassed me—I sat down on the sofa, and as
-the infant began to cry, told Pasiphae to take it away, which she did,
-and we were left alone, I turned, momentarily, to look from the window on
-the busy street: an audible sigh fell on my ear, when I turned round, the
-count was at my feet.
-
-“Genevra! Let me call you by that name,” said he. “Why should I seek to
-conceal a passion which I know you must have already discovered? why
-should I hesitate to declare that, of all the women I have ever seen
-in all the lands I have ever been, I single you out as the fairest, the
-noblest of all; that when I first saw you in the opera, I was struck
-with your beauty, and afterwards in that lonely castle, where you led so
-isolated a life, a personal acquaintance did not dispel that illusion.
-Now, when I see you struggling against the adverse tide of life—forsaken
-by your husband,—surrounded by envy, with no happiness save the society
-of your child,—why will you not let me consecrate to your pleasure a soul
-which would be only too happy to dedicate itself to you? Why will you
-evade my sympathy? Why not let me be the sharer of those sorrows which
-you try to conceal?”
-
-“Oh, count!” I cried, bursting into tears, as he held my hands; “you must
-not talk thus to me; remember I am a married woman; respect my situation.
-Whatever may be my sentiments toward you, I must smother them, and you,
-for my sake, must do the same.”
-
-“I? No, never can I do that! your sweet image is too deeply impressed
-upon my heart: there shall it remain a sacred solace to me. Oh! why did
-we not meet before your marriage, when you first made your appearance
-here? why do we only understand each other when it is too late?”
-
-“Yes; ask the question of fate: in vain have I demanded it. Why do I
-continually long for a shade which eludes my grasp? Why does solitude
-ever haunt my footsteps?”
-
-“But I offer you society, happiness; everything on earth that I can
-command shall be yours. Has not your husband deserted you? what faith do
-you owe to him? If you returned my love; if you would honor me by your
-confidence, imagine, my Genevra, what days of happiness might be in store
-for us.”
-
-“Count!” I exclaimed, clasping both hands before my eyes, “forbear: I
-pray you forbear. I do like you, I acknowledge it; but this must be
-our last meeting. This must be the first, last, only expression of my
-feelings; and I feel I am doing wrong even in saying this. Consider,
-what happiness could I feel in doing anything that could reflect upon
-my character, hitherto so unblemished? What joy could I experience in a
-future clouded with shame? How differently should I regard you from that
-calm-abiding sentiment of security with which a wife regards her husband?
-What a tempest of emotions would succeed the happy quiet I have always
-enjoyed! And can you wish me to change even the uncertain life I now lead
-for such a scene? Depend upon it, dear count, we are better as we are.
-The feelings we now entertain for each other are pure; do not let us dim
-them by guilt.”
-
-“You love me then?” he whispered, still holding my hands; “you
-acknowledge it; say it again;—if we are to be hereafter separated, let me
-at least be sure of that,—say so, Genevra.”
-
-“Why, oh, why do you still tempt me? if you know I like you, you know it
-without my telling you: words are easily spoken: they might deceive you.”
-
-“Not words from your mouth, my Genevra. I distrust the world generally,
-but I know in whom to confide; and who could distrust you?”
-
-“Oh! if you only knew how miserable I feel, you would pity me,” I
-passionately exclaimed, comprehending the necessity of our separation,
-yet feeling wretched at that thought. “Let us talk of something else; let
-us try and remain friends only.”
-
-“Friends!” said he, vehemently, starting from his knees, dropping my
-hands, and rapidly walking the room. “My feelings could never answer to
-so cold a title, nor could yours if they are what I wish them to be. No,
-dear lady, we can never again be merely _friends_,” and he emphasized the
-word scornfully. He walked on for some minutes, then suddenly pausing
-before me, looked long at my face.
-
-“How beautiful, how truthful you are! how misplaced is your present
-position!” then, as if animated by a frenzy of feeling, he again caught
-my hands, and drawing me to the open window, said:—“Genevra, look there;
-look at that beautiful scene! see how the sun gilds the lofty domes; the
-tall trees, the gardens, the flowers! see how he warms whatever he looks
-upon, and his light might also warm two loving hearts, if my prayer was
-heard. Fly, Genevra, fly with me,” and he moved, drawing my hand toward
-the door; but I, though penetrated by a profound emotion, remained
-immovable, and suppressing all external indications of it, quietly drew
-him back to the casement, and pointing to the clear blue sky, now near
-twilight, said to him:
-
-“You spoke to me allegorically: I will answer you the same. As you said
-to me at Baie, when we together stood upon the shore, watching the little
-schooner struggling for anchorage, which it at last secured, and you
-predicted that thus would it be with me; so do I say to you now,—behold
-that heavy white cloud, obscuring the light of the sky; see it gradually
-moves away, and the light shines clear again: so will destiny alter for
-us; wait and hope;—everything is comprised in these words.”
-
-“No, Genevra, I have no hope now: this is not an occasion on which hope
-is permitted me. If this is our last meeting (and your refusal has
-signified it), give me one of those fair curls, that when I look upon
-it, I may recall the lovely head on which it grew: yes, give me one of
-them, and let me paint your beautiful eyes, your lips, your cheeks, your
-whole face, your whole figure, on my heart; but memory has been the
-artist: who could paint as well as she?”
-
-A pair of tapestry scissors lay upon the table; he took them up, and
-tremblingly severed one of my curls. It was soft and silky, and at least
-half a yard long. He smoothed the glossy tress, then laid it in his
-bosom, and turned from me as if to go. I saw nothing, felt nothing, but
-that he was going away.
-
-“Stay! stay! you are not going from me thus indifferently; not thus
-forever?”
-
-“Have you not said so? have you not bade me go? am I not obeying you?”
-
-“Yes, you are obeying me. I meant what I said: but stay yet awhile; I
-have something to say. I——,” overpowered by my own sadness, my head sank
-upon his shoulder, and with my hands pressed to my eyes, the tears forced
-their way through them. Suddenly he encircled me with his arms, and
-bowing that proud yet noble head on mine, smoothed the ringlets from my
-brow.
-
-“My beautiful Genevra—you will let me call you mine, will you not?” I
-bowed acquiescence;—I could not speak. “Since you refuse my love, decline
-my visits, I shall write you: you will not refuse me that pleasure, will
-you?”
-
-“No,” I stammered.
-
-“To-morrow then, a letter shall explain. Farewell, now,—farewell,
-beautiful one.”
-
-He went toward the door. I stood motionless. As he turned half round
-before opening the door, I involuntarily stepped toward him. He extended
-his arms,—I rushed into them, and clung convulsively to him, as a
-drowning man catches at a straw.
-
-“My God! how hard it is,” he ejaculated, as he tore himself away, and the
-echo of his footsteps died away on my ear. I still grasped at air, as if
-seeking him, and it was some moments before I could convince myself that
-he was really gone. Then I went to the windows, pushed back the curtains,
-admitted air and light, and sought to cool my burning forehead,—to recall
-my scattered thoughts,—but neither air nor light brought me relief.
-Objects were dim; nothing appeared as it had in the morning. The sound
-of voices and carts in the streets below sounded strange and unnatural.
-One only thought haunted me, dwelt in my mind, lingered in my ears,—he
-was gone—I had sent him away. I knew I had acted honorably, uprightly;
-that I had shown myself to be virtuous and high principled; but I was
-miserable,—utterly wretched. I recalled his winning ways, his lofty mind,
-his handsome person: I imagined my destiny united to his,—imagined myself
-his wife:—I could be his on no other terms. Then I revelled in ideal
-happiness,—then no invidious fate stood between us, but I stood lawfully
-by his side;—then I was happy.
-
-Thus pre-occupied, agitated and desponding, I sat till dusk had thrown a
-veil over the fair city. I did not notice, but dreamed on, and was only
-aroused from my meditations by the entrance of Pasiphae with lights.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The next morning, more dead than alive, I went to rehearsal. The
-performance was tedious—the theatre cold. I hurried through, glad to
-escape from the tiresome scene, and returned home, where Pasiphae handed
-me a letter. In haste and confusion I opened it. It was from the count:—
-
- “You have told me I cannot be to you what I wish to be. You
- have bade me be your friend, and as I cannot be that with
- safety either to you or myself, we must see each other no
- more; at least not now, as you say; but to me the prospect
- of a future lawful re-union is very dim and remote. But you
- have not denied me the honor and pleasure of writing you, and
- that shall be a slight link of friendship between us when I am
- far away,—for I intend leaving, a few days hence, for Epirus,
- having to-day resigned my commission as chamberlain to his
- majesty,—and I shall treasure the precious replies you send me
- as mementos breathing your own pure spirit.
-
- “I shall resume my lonely wanderings in the Levant, where two
- years ago, I spent many happy hours in silent contemplation.
- To those scenes I shall transport your fairy form, and in your
- imaginary society, the ruined grandeur of Athens,—the stately
- remains of Agrigentum,—the classic shores of Troy,—will acquire
- new beauties for me from association. Would that you were
- with me,—that your dreamy, philosophic mind, might conjure up
- visions of past magnificence, and revel in the recollections of
- what it was, contrasted with what it is.
-
- “But why do I wander into dreams again? Suffice it to say,
- that I must go while yet I have the will to do so, and in
- bidding _you_ farewell, I feel as if bidding adieu to life.
- But most generally in life so it is. No sooner have you found
- a sympathetic mind,—one in whose society existence would wing
- itself away only too delightfully,—than some fatal accident
- tears her away, as if Providence envied human felicity, so
- rarely is it found on earth. I know, however, that that angelic
- virtue which has so nobly sustained you thus far, will continue
- to do so to the end; and that it will, of itself, be a great
- reward. And that heaven may shower upon your pathway roses, the
- brightest, the most beautiful, is the fervent prayer of your own
-
- “ALFIERI CALABRELLA.”
-
-Below his signature, was written in small characters,—“I shall write you
-next from Epirus, and expect an answer there.”
-
-I read it again and again,—I kissed the words and examined the
-handwriting,—then I folded it, and carefully laid it away in an album.
-Within a week, then, he would be away on his journey to Epirus. Far
-away from me: I should only hear from him through the indifferent
-communication of letters; and how unhappy I should feel when I actually
-saw him depart. But I felt in my own heart that I had acted rightly, and
-the consciousness of moral rectitude upheld me.
-
-That night I played the part of Norma to a crowded house. Again the lips
-and eyes of royalty applauded me. Never did I look better: the excitement
-of my mind had sent the hot blood to my cheeks, and my long auburn hair,
-falling to my waist in spiral ringlets, relieved my face. An unwonted
-inspiration came over me that night, and my voice was unusually clear;
-the house was in an uproar of delight, but neither elated by my triumph,
-nor caring for the admiration I elicited, I was about leaving the
-stage, when the silk curtains of the lower stage box were drawn aside,
-and the beautiful, but pale and sad face of the count presented itself
-to my view. So sudden was the encounter of our eyes, so strange this
-unexpressed adieu, that I scarcely had recollection enough to leave the
-stage.
-
-Determined to avoid the crowd which always awaited me in the green-room,
-I requested the manager to hand me to my calesso, which he did, and I
-drove to my hotel.
-
-It was one o’clock. Pasiphae sat in the bedroom near an open
-window,—Raphael lay on his bed in a sweet slumber. I thought I saw
-something glitter on my dressing table: going towards it, I perceived a
-small Tripoli chain, with a tiny gold heart attached to it, and a slip of
-paper pinned to it, with these words written upon it:
-
- “Let the child wear this in remembrance of me.
-
- CALABRELLA.”
-
-I asked Pasiphae who had brought it. She said an African servant had left
-it an half hour before. It was a delicate parting gift to my child, and
-a souvenir for me: but no, I was mistaken—so slight a present was not
-intended indirectly for me. Three days after a small package was handed
-me. I opened it, and beheld an exquisite miniature of the count, set in
-brilliants. The beautiful black eyes seemed to smile on me with their
-languid fervor; the clear white complexion, the long nose, slightly
-aquiline, and waving black hair, were all detailed naturally; the
-blending and commingling of expression, which gave an air of haughtiness
-and benevolence to his countenance, was all there.
-
-That was his parting gift: that day he left Naples.
-
-If I had been unhappy in the struggle between love and duty, how much
-more so was I not when left utterly alone in that great city; when I
-looked forward and saw nothing, when I looked back on strange scenes, and
-at the present which was so unsatisfactory.
-
-I renewed my engagement, and continued to sing; from my unprotected
-position, I was necessarily exposed to covert attacks of the most
-dishonorable character; and one such I received from a Baron Reichstadt,
-in the shape of an impertinent note, which I answered as it deserved, and
-dismissed him. One or two other innuendos I met with, and although I bore
-them all with an outward calm of stoicism; yet within I felt the bitter
-humiliation of a proud woman, that such indignities should be put upon me.
-
-The stagnant calm of a monotonous routine, requires little detail; to
-rise early, attend to my child, then go to rehearsal as often as a new
-opera was to be performed; practise my favorite songs, then walk on
-the Toledo, and dine at six, completed my daily existence. I received
-a glowing letter from the count, dated Epirus, in which he thrillingly
-described the country, dwelt upon its associations, its desolate, ruined
-condition now; then delicately bringing the subject back to reality,
-spoke of himself, of me. I will not insert it here, nor the many others
-he sent me equally beautiful; my story is drawing to a close, my kind
-friend, and I am convinced its length must have already tired you.
-
-He continued his travels in the Levant and through the East, while I went
-to Florence, to fulfil an engagement there. The charming society of that
-fair town; the fine scenery of the city itself, and the air of repose
-so different to the busy activity of Naples, combined to cheer and calm
-me. There I remained a month, and when I left, it was with feelings of
-regret. I carried away with me (they said) the hearts and imaginations
-of all; but if I did so, it was unconsciously, for never had I exerted
-myself less.
-
-Genoa next claimed my attention, and it was three months ere I saw
-Naples again. The laurels I won seemed to me to adorn the head of a
-corpse, so listlessly did I regard my fame.
-
-Visions of my husband and the count haunted my dreams, and I always saw
-them under strange circumstances, in strange places, when I would seem to
-be trying to reach either one or the other, but could not get near them,
-some obstacle always interposed,—then in my despair, I would feel as I
-felt at parting with the count. From these tumultuous dreams I awoke in
-terror, thankful they were mere dreams; and my perceptions being rendered
-more acute by these nocturnal visitations, I would renew my anxious
-searches for my husband, and send new agents to endeavor to discover him;
-but in vain, I heard nothing more of him.
-
-Six months elapsed in the same quiet way, when one day, as I was walking
-up and down my parlor, leading Raphael by the hand, a servant announced
-that an old man wished to see me.
-
-“Show him in,” said I, and he presently returned, ushering in a tall
-man, attired in sailor’s clothes. He came towards me, holding his
-tarpaulin-hat in his hand, and apparently confused at my presence.
-
-“Is this the lady?” asked he, bashfully.
-
-“I am Madame de Serval, do you wish to see me?”
-
-“Yes, lady, I have a letter for you from Pondicherry.”
-
-“From Pondicherry,—who can it be from?—I know no one there. Give it me.”
-
-I extended my hand, and the sailor placed in it a letter, coarsely folded
-and sealed. I hastily tore it open, and read the following:
-
- “A gentleman giving his name as Monsieur de Serval, committed
- suicide in my house six days ago, by blowing his brains out
- with a pocket pistol. Having by accident seen a Neapolitan
- paper, containing a description of a Madame de Serval, a
- great singer, I address this letter to the lady in question,
- thinking, from the names, that there may be some relationship
- between the dead gentleman and the lady. If there is, I beg
- she will answer this, and tell me what is to be done with
- his effects, which consist of several large chests, heavily
- locked with padlocks, and four trunks, together with a toilette
- case of rare value, the interior being set with gold, and the
- utensils of the same metal, adorned with precious stones.
-
- “The gentleman was buried in the English burying ground, and a
- small sum of money in his purse paid for the interment.
-
- “JEROME TOBIA.
-
- “_Pondicherry, January 10th._”
-
-When I had read this fatal letter, I endeavored to look around for the
-man who had brought it, but I could not see him: the room darkened,
-and, with a wild shriek, I fell into Pasiphae’s arms, and lost all
-recollection.
-
- * * * * *
-
-I must carry you onward another year. When I had sufficiently recovered
-from the shock of this unexpected news, I sent to Pondicherry, and had
-the remains of my unfortunate husband brought to Naples. I thought I
-should have gone mad when I saw the body: and with bitter sadness did I
-consign it to mother earth. A marble tombstone was placed over him in the
-cemetery of the convent of Sacre Cœur. Of his adventures, or the cause
-of his going to Pondicherry, I never knew. All I learned was, that he
-came there, boarded at the house of the man who had written me, and was
-gentlemanly and reserved. They knew nothing of him. He told no one any
-thing concerning himself. He had been there some weeks at the period of
-his self-destruction; and it was merely from accident that the landlord
-had supposed, that perhaps there might be a relationship between two
-persons of the same name. Thus, through the merest chance, after six
-months of anxiety and sadness, did I once more, and for the last time,
-look upon my Rinaldo’s face.
-
-There is a feeling between husband and wife—that is to say, between
-husbands and wives of any sensibility, who have ever loved—there is,
-I say, a feeling of affection, which will sooner or later return,
-however alienated the parties may have become. As I stood over that
-lifeless form, and thought of his erratic career, and wayward, uncertain
-character; of his love for me, and subsequent desertion; his entering
-into a conspiracy against the government; then carried as prisoner of
-state to Naples; his escape and after-wanderings—all rushed through my
-mind. Why had he acted thus? Why had he not been honest, upright? Why? Of
-whom could I ask that question? The earth falling on the coffin was my
-only reply.
-
-Let me pass over those times.
-
-It was in the dawn of spring, I occupied a small Gothic cottage about
-a mile from Naples. Two domestics and my child—now a lisping, rosy
-boy—together with Pasiphae, were its sole tenants. The grounds of
-this sylvan abode were beautifully laid out, and the fairest flowers
-planted there. There, too, a marble fountain threw high in air its airy
-spray—cooling the air and adorning the garden by its beauty.
-
-Several rustic arbors, formed of the pliable bamboo, and shaped in
-Gothic turrets, were placed at intervals along the gravel walks, which,
-meeting in one broad attic before the porch ended there; the birds sang
-their sweetest songs in the day time; and, at night, the spiritual
-warbling of the nightingale was the inspirer of the hour.
-
-Here, one sunny afternoon, I sat under the shade of a tree, watching
-Raphael, and Zoe, his pet dog, running races. The frolicksome glee of the
-child, the graceful antics of the dog, as he sometimes ran after his baby
-master,—sometimes solicited pursuit in return,—amused and diverted me. As
-the child grew older I could trace his father’s lineaments in his young
-features: and the thoughts which were recalled by that resemblance only
-rendered me sadder than I was. I was reading Petrarch’s sonnets, a volume
-of which had been presented me by my husband during the first months of
-my marriage: their gloomy descriptions of love and beauty entranced my
-soul; and, absorbed, I read on, forgetful even of the playful cries of
-Raphael, when I saw Pasiphae coming towards me, her face lighted with
-more than usual animation: and with a gleeful voice she told me a man
-desired to see me in the salon.
-
-“Ask him to send me word what he wants, Pasiphae. I do not wish to see
-any one this morning. Why did you not deny me yourself? you know I do not
-want to talk,” was my reply; for I was indisposed to see visitors, or
-answer business engagements.
-
-“Do come, my lady; do come,” said Pasiphae, urgently, and joyfully;
-“indeed you won’t regret it; the person has something particular to say.”
-
-Thus urged, and wondering what it could be, I rose, leaving my book on
-the seat, and taking Raphael by the hand, followed by the dog, went into
-the house. The rooms were all on the ground floor; a broad hall ran
-through the house, and opening off it were four rooms; two were fitted
-up as salons, the other two constituted my bed-room and dining-room.
-They were furnished alike with red velvet drapery, Turkey carpets, and
-mirrors. Pasiphae regularly each day placed fresh flowers in the Chinese
-vases on the marble consoles, and their delightful perfume scented the
-rooms with oriental fragrance.
-
-I entered the room holding Raphael by the hand, and coming from the clear
-light of the garden into the crimson light of the salon, I could scarcely
-discern objects.
-
-A tall figure stood with its back towards me, facing the window. As I
-stepped forward on the carpet, it turned, and I beheld Count Calabrella.
-Animated with a supernatural joy, I sprang toward him.
-
-“It is you!” I cried; “oh, is it you? You have come! you have come!”
-
-“Yes, beloved one,” answered he, as he clasped me in his arms. “At last
-we are united: now the unstable dreams which have buoyed me up through
-this long separation, and my lonely wanderings are realized; now we meet,
-not to feel again the same sorrow we mutually experienced at our last
-parting.”
-
-“Oh, let me die now!” I answered, as I laid my head on his breast, “for
-now I am happy, and life cannot have many repetitions of such emotions
-for me.”
-
-“Instead of dying, let us picture long years of happiness, and be
-determined they should be verified,” replied my Alfieri, laughingly.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Naples once again saw me as a bride; not as at the first, blooming
-with health and joy, my mind in an ecstatic rhapsody of romance, but a
-woman chastened by experience, that best of monitors. Subdued, but not
-downcast, was my mien the morning of my bridal: the sobered happiness of
-my husband’s face was mirrored in mine, and surely I could not have had a
-more beautiful mirror.
-
-And in that marriage I was supremely happy; my life glided like a fairy
-dream away. The elegance of mind and manner which captivated at first,
-did not prove, on mature acquaintance, a fictitious dress, worn merely
-for ornament. Judgment, tempered by feeling, guided him, and in obeying
-such a guide, how could he fail to act rightly? The calm good sense, the
-nobility of soul, and sweet disposition of Alfieri, day by day, more
-completely gained my love and esteem.
-
-Before leaving Naples, on a journey we took, soon after our marriage, to
-the north of Italy, I chanced to meet in the suburbs of the town—while
-walking with my husband—old Acte, the sybil of the rock. She stopped my
-way, and looking at me with her piercing eyes, said, “Well, fair lady, we
-meet again: I knew we should; and the other, where is she? You need not
-tell me: I know already;—she is dead. She lies on the shore, where the
-winds howl and the waters beat. Say, lady, say, have not my words proved
-true?” demanded she, in her shrill tones.
-
-“Yes, good woman, you were right,” was my hasty reply, as I and my
-husband hurried away, anxious to avoid any farther conversation with the
-weird-woman.
-
-Soon after we took our departure on a tour through the north of Europe.
-Those magnificent cities, beautiful scenery, and the different nations
-we visited, acquired new interest in my eyes, when viewed in such
-society. Then, after we had satiated our eyes and ears with the wonders
-of other lands, we came finally to the Eternal City, where I have had the
-pleasure of forming your acquaintance; and I number it as one of the most
-agreeable episodes of my life: so, also, does my husband.
-
-My tale is done. You have asked it of me, and knowing your integrity, I
-feel no hesitancy in complying with the request. The hours I have passed
-in your studio have been among the pleasantest I have spent in Rome.
-
-Should the count and myself never have the pleasure of seeing you again,
-at least the copy of my portrait and this diary will seem to be an
-invisible link to the chain of thoughts between us three.
-
-Adieu, dear Signor Carrara: we shall leave to-morrow, and have completed
-this in haste to leave with you.
-
- GENEVRA CALABRELLA.
-
-_Rome_, _April_ 6th, ——
-
- * * * * *
-
-The latter part of this diary was very old, yellow, and much torn, from
-apparently repeated readings: I had some difficulty in decyphering it.
-Its perusal had deeply interested me, so I folded it up, and rose upon
-my feet. I saw my little time-piece indicated the hour of one, and a
-moment after there came a violent knocking at the door, and then Morton’s
-stentorian voice was fully audible.
-
-“Clarence, I say Clarence, are you within? if you are, for God’s sake
-answer; there’s some infernal thing in my room which has kept me from
-sleeping for the last hour. I don’t know what it is, and I can’t find
-out, for my light’s gone out; come here and bring a candle for pity’s
-sake.”
-
-I seized my expiring candle and rushed into his apartment, where stood
-in the middle of the floor my friend, apparently in a state of great
-bewilderment; the chairs were thrown about in confusion, and clothes were
-lying here and there; the curtains of the bed half pulled down.
-
-“What is it, Morton? what’s the matter?” I cried, bringing the luminary
-to bear upon the chaos.
-
-“What’s the matter? why that’s just what I want to know myself; for the
-last hour I have heard nothing but chairs upset, the hangings scratched
-at, and my own hair and face most delightfully scratched. When I
-stretched out my hands, seeking to discover the cause of the mischief, I
-grasped empty air; I could see nothing, all was darkness: and thus have
-I been bored; now take your candle and try and find out what it is.”
-
-I began a tour of the apartment, but saw nothing, except luggage piled
-on luggage, dressing cases, brushes, combs, &c., &c.; when going around
-the bed, I heard a sardonic laugh, and looking up, saw perched on the
-tester, a monkey; the property of a fellow boarder, who, by some means,
-had contrived to secrete himself in my friend’s room, and consequently
-annoy him by his tricks. Taking the mischievous animal by his fore legs I
-put him out the room, much to Morton’s relief, who exclaimed,
-
-“Is that the thing? well, it has been troubling me enough, the plague; I
-thought satan himself was here. Thank you, Clarence, my dear fellow; what
-time is it?”
-
-I told him, then went to bed.
-
-The next day I waited on Signor Ferra, the attorney; he lived in a dark,
-dirty street, in an old tumble-down house. Upon opening Carrara’s will,
-I found, to my utter amazement, that with the exception of the house in
-which he lived, and the gallery of paintings, he had made me heir to
-his considerable property in Rome and the environs, together with the
-beautiful portrait of Genevra. My kindness to the solitary old artist,
-had not been ill repaid; so impossible it is for us in this strange
-existence, to foresee the result of even the slightest action; and, which
-only more fully demonstrated to me the propriety of always being polite.
-
-A few days after, Morton and myself left Rome for Athens.
-
-
-THE END.
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK GENEVRA; OR, THE HISTORY OF A
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-<body>
-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Genevra; or, the history of a portrait,, by Genevieve Genevra Fairfield</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
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-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Genevra; or, the history of a portrait,</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:1em;'>by an American lady. A resident of Washington City.</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Genevieve Genevra Fairfield</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: September 22, 2022 [eBook #69029]</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: Charlene Taylor and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK GENEVRA; OR, THE HISTORY OF A PORTRAIT, ***</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_5"></a>[5]</span></p>
-
-<p class="titlepage larger">GENEVRA;<br />
-<span class="smaller"><span class="smaller">OR, THE</span><br />
-HISTORY OF A PORTRAIT,</span></p>
-
-<p class="titlepage"><span class="larger">BY AN AMERICAN LADY.</span><br />
-A RESIDENT OF WASHINGTON CITY.</p>
-
-<p class="titlepage">COMPLETE IN ONE VOLUME.</p>
-
-<p class="titlepage">Philadelphia:<br />
-T. B. PETERSON, No. 98 CHESNUT STREET.<br />
-<span class="smaller">ONE DOOR ABOVE THIRD.</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_6"></a>[6]</span></p>
-
-<p class="titlepage smaller">Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1851, by<br />
-<br />
-T. B. PETERSON,<br />
-<br />
-In the Office of the Clerk of the District Court of the United States,<br />
-in and for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_7"></a>[7]</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">TO<br />
-<br />
-<span class="larger">MARIE DE CARVALLO,</span><br />
-<br />
-MINISTERESS FROM CHILI;<br />
-<br />
-<span class="smaller">AS A SLIGHT BUT SINCERE TOKEN OF ADMIRATION AND ESTEEM, THIS<br />
-WORK IS RESPECTFULLY DEDICATED, BY</span><br />
-<br />
-THE AUTHOR.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_8"></a>[8]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_9"></a>[9]</span></p>
-
-<h1>GENEVRA;<br />
-<span class="smaller"><span class="smaller">OR, THE</span><br />
-HISTORY OF A PORTRAIT.</span></h1>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp100" style="max-width: 18.75em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/line.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I.</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>“Clarence, my dear fellow, pray ring the bell, and let us know
-when that confounded dinner will be ready; the carriage will be here
-before we are ready for a drive to the Campagna.”</p>
-
-<p>I felt out of spirits and in an ill mood; but mechanically I rose and
-rang the bell. Our Italian attendant soon made his appearance.
-“Peppo,”—demanded my friend, the Hon. Augustus Morton, in a
-mixture of bad Italian and French, which he had learned during our
-two weeks’ sojourn at Rome,—“Peppo, when will dinner be ready?
-Don’t you know I told you this morning to prepare for us a nice
-English dinner, and have it early too?”</p>
-
-<p>“Si Signor,” replied Peppo, standing with his toes bent in, twisting
-a dirty velvet cap in his hand, ornamented round the edge with tarnished
-gilt lace, “ma Signor Inglese, say cinque bra, non rolamente
-che tre ora adesso.”</p>
-
-<p>“O, it’s only three, eh—how came I to make such a mistake?”
-He looked at his watch: it had stopped. “Well, Peppo,” he continued,
-in Italian, “can’t you tell them to hurry their operations, and
-let us have our dinner now. We have an engagement. Go and see
-if they cannot serve it at once.”</p>
-
-<p>Peppo made his obeisance, and disappeared through the low,
-narrow door. “It is unfortunate that I did not think to set the time.
-We need not have returned from Tivoli for an hour.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am not at all sorry, for my part,” I rejoined. “I take but little
-interest in broken columns, decayed monuments, and old ruins, places<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_10"></a>[10]</span>
-of assignations for owls and bats; in fact, one half the persons who
-visit Rome care no more about these remains of Rome’s ancient
-grandeur than the doves who make their nests amid the ruins. It
-has become fashionable of late years to visit Rome, and carry home
-from the city a collection of antique relics, busts, and every variety
-of curiosities, all of which are treasured as rare trophies of travel in
-classic land; a feeling I cannot at all sympathize with. You have the
-enthusiasm of the grandeur of Rome almost entirely to yourself, my
-friend. I assure you I have had but few attacks of the fashionable
-epidemic since my arrival.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are in an ill humor to day, I see, Clarence,” goodnaturedly
-replied Morton, as he walked to and fro in our dingy dining-room with
-his hands under his coat tails; “but it is not Rome that vexes you, half
-as much as the comfortless dreary way in which they manage everything
-here. If we could only transport our English neatness and comfort
-to this beautiful climate, it would be a heaven on earth.”</p>
-
-<p>At this moment Peppo returned with the intelligence that the cook
-absolutely could not serve dinner a moment before the time appointed.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what can’t be cured, must be endured,” responded Morton,
-with a shrug of the shoulders. “But since we have two hours on our
-hands, and nothing to amuse us in-doors, suppose we take a walk toward
-the Coliseum, and take another look at it. It bears observation more
-than once. There is a fine artist, Signor Carrara, who lives in that vicinity,
-and, with your leave, we will drop in at his studio, and examine
-his gallery of paintings.”</p>
-
-<p>“As you please, Augustus,” I answered; for Morton being five years
-my senior, naturally took the lead. We had graduated at Oxford
-together; and on leaving England for a two years’ jaunt to the continent,
-my father had particularly recommended his darling son to Morton’s
-fraternal care. We had spent some time in Paris, flirting with the
-prettiest women we saw; but that’s not saying much for them, after all;
-for the French women do not depend for their attractions on beauty.
-They are sprightly, piquant, and witty generally, but they do not possess
-that native beauty of form and face, we meet with so frequently
-among the higher classes of the German and English women. Taste
-in dress and the arts of coquetry, so well understood and practised
-by the French women, supply the place of greater personal beauty.
-While in Paris, Morton had purchased and shipped for England a perfect
-cabinet shop of curiosities; but I, being less influenced by the
-mania for everything foreign, bought but little.</p>
-
-<p>We had descended the Rhine together, and together admired the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_11"></a>[11]</span>
-wild majesty of its scenery. And sometimes as our bark glided past
-one of those perpendicular mountains, whose summit seems to kiss the
-clouds, on top of which, you frequently see perched the ruins of
-one of those castles built in the olden days of feudal war and terror.
-Sometimes, I say, I felt a desire to fix my abode, and pass my days in
-solitude, far from the busy haunts of men, on the banks of that noble
-river. But then, the thought recurred to my mind: A life spent in
-dreamy abstraction is a useless one. A life without action, is like a
-body without a soul. The busy world; the cares, disappointments, and
-numberless vexations one meets with, all tend to develope many faculties
-of mind, which, buried in the depths of solitude, might remain
-forever undiscovered.</p>
-
-<p>We had visited Vienna, the seat of elegance and learning; and after
-spending sometime in the smaller towns of Germany and Switzerland,
-we found ourselves one bright day at Rome. During a fortnight we
-had been occupied every day in sight-seeing; visiting the Vatican,
-Saint Peter’s, his Holiness the Pope, and all the wonders of the eternal
-city; and eternal to me, in sober truth, it seemed, as, entering the
-ancient town by Romulus’ gate, the city dawned upon my view like
-a vast ocean before me.</p>
-
-<p>But where did I leave my friend? Oh, he took his hat, and so, cautious
-reader, will I take mine, and follow him. We traversed several
-grass grown streets, faced on each side, by old houses, built in the
-Italian style, now fast tottering to decay. Before one of these, stood
-a company of street singers. A man advanced in years, whose gray
-hair was illumined by the bright rays of the sun, stood playing on a
-hand-organ, while a sweet little girl of eight or nine years, with light
-hair and fine blue eyes, jingled a tambourine at his side. There was
-something in the sad subdued look of the child, as she timidly advanced
-toward us, perceiving we were strangers, that almost called
-the tears to my eyes, as Morton and myself simultaneously threw a
-gold piece into the old tambourine she extended to receive it.</p>
-
-<p>We passed on, and the next corner hid them from our view.
-“What a pity such a pretty child should be trained to beggary,”
-remarked I, as we walked on.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, it is; but such things are so common in this country, they
-have ceased to astonish me: indeed, it would be difficult to say what
-had best be done for the amelioration of the Italians; like everything
-else, they have had their day; and now night and darkness are hanging
-over them.”</p>
-
-<p>I scarcely heard him; for now we came full in view of that massive<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_12"></a>[12]</span>
-structure, the Coliseum. One side of it is much decayed and crumbled
-away, and forms a gap in the round outline. We entered through
-one of the ivy-hung arches, and found ourselves in the vast interior.
-Several little shrines, the devout offerings of humble superstition, occupied
-the vast space, where, so many hundred years ago, the gladiators
-had fought in the yearly games. At one of these, covered with
-a white cloth, on which were placed a crucifix and bottle of holy
-water, knelt a young woman with her hands clasped in prayer. She
-wore the picturesque costume of the Neapolitans. The attitude of devotion
-contrasted strangely with my recollection of the scenes of which
-that place had once been the theatre of action.</p>
-
-<p>“This is a most extraordinary structure, so immense!” exclaimed
-Morton, whose ideas were of the most matter-of-fact description.</p>
-
-<p>I made no reply. My mind was abstracted, it had flown back to
-the olden times. I thought I saw the dying gladiator leaning on his
-sword, while the arena rung with shouts of triumph for his conqueror.
-I saw start up from all parts of the old ruin, that vast wall of human
-faces, all gazing upon the dying man; but what mattered it to him,
-the world and all its cares was vanishing fast from his view; his glazed
-eyes close, his clenched hands stiffen, and his spirit leaves its earthly
-tenement with the last shout of applause for his conqueror.</p>
-
-<p>I started from my day-dream, and looking for my friend, saw him
-standing at the other end of the amphitheatre, gazing wistfully up at
-the sky, through the gap which yawned above us. As I approached
-him, he exclaimed, “We had better go, or we shall not have time
-to see Signor Carrara’s paintings before dinner, as we have been here
-an hour.”</p>
-
-<p>“An hour! impossible, it is not more than ten minutes.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know it seems no more than that to you; but it is, nevertheless,
-an hour since we entered here; and I am afraid of taking cold from the
-dampness of the ground; but you were dreaming of the ‘Sorrows of
-Werter,’ or some other sentimental subject, and of course, thought not
-of time. Come, mon ami, let us depart.” He linked his arm in
-mine and we passed out into the street, leading to that part of the city
-he had designated as the abode of Signor Carrara.</p>
-
-<p>After a few minutes’ walk, he stopped before an old mansion, built
-in the Venetian style, with a balcony and latticed windows, jealously
-closed. The appearance of the house was antique and gloomy, even
-more so than any of the private mansions I had yet seen in Rome.
-Morton ascended the door-steps, and vigorously rang the bell. The
-sound seemed to echo through the whole house, as though it were<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_13"></a>[13]</span>
-deserted. A moment after I heard the grating of bolts being undone, the
-door swing back heavily on its hinges; and, standing on its threshold,
-I saw an old domestic, with a grave, sad countenance, and dressed
-with greater neatness than the generality of Italian servants. He
-smiled gaily, and greeted Morton with a respectful obeisance, saying
-something in Italian, which I did not understand; for Morton was an
-old friend of the Signor’s, having visited Rome four years before. His
-question, “Was the Signor at home?” he answered, “Yes,” and requested
-us to follow him. We traversed a long gallery, then ascended
-a lofty staircase, ornamented with fine paintings and statues, placed
-in niches along the wall. At the end of another gallery, the Italian
-stopped at a door, and knocked. An elderly man, whose hair
-was slightly tinged with gray, attired in a plain suit of black velvet,
-opened the door, and, upon seeing Morton, shook him heartily by the
-hand, and welcomed him back to Rome, in terms of the most polite
-affability. His manner seemed to partake more of English cordiality
-than of the grave distant manner the Italians generally preserve to
-strangers. To my surprise, he spoke to me in good English, upon
-Morton’s presenting me as Mr. Mowbray of London. Augustus entered
-the room with the air of one perfectly familiar to its precincts,
-and seated himself in a crimson velvet arm-chair, near the artist’s
-easel. Persia’s carpets covered the floor; curtains of crimson velvet
-fell in heavy folds from the windows; but the splendid paintings
-with which the walls of the studio were hung, constituted its greatest
-ornament. There were the faces of youth, and the faces of age. Side
-by side they hung. There were Cardinals in their black velvet hats,
-and the heavy folds of their black robes. There were the handsome
-faces of many of Italy’s proudest sons, and the fair, unfurrowed brow,
-the black eye, large and languishing, of many a one of its fair
-daughters.</p>
-
-<p>“You have not been long in Rome, I presume, Signor,” remarked
-Carrara, as he returned to his easel, with his palette in his hand.</p>
-
-<p>“But two weeks.”</p>
-
-<p>“Two weeks! indeed, you owed an old friend a visit sooner,” addressing
-Morton.</p>
-
-<p>“I should have done myself the pleasure of calling on you before
-this, but I have been engaged in such a continual round of business,
-that I really could not snatch time.” What a confounded lie, thought
-I to myself, as I stood with my back to them, attentively regarding a
-picture, which hung encased in a magnificent frame, opposite me.
-But Morton would say anything as an excuse, to avoid offending<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_14"></a>[14]</span>
-a friend, and Signor Carrara, as I afterward discovered, had been to
-him a very kind one.</p>
-
-<p>The picture upon which I gazed, was the portrait of a lady in the
-dawn of youth. I felt certain that it was, or had been taken as the
-resemblance of some earthly object. She was young and very beautiful.
-She could not have numbered more than twenty summers
-when that was painted. She sat, inclining forward, as if to speak.
-Her finger pressed to her rosy lip, as though she said ‘beware.’ Her
-robe hung in light folds over the full bust, and was confined at the
-waist by a scarf. A circlet of gems clasped the small aristocratic head,
-and sparkled on the auburn hair. The hair, put smooth back from the
-face, was gathered in two long braids behind, which fell below the
-waist. The complexion, white as alabaster. The eyes, so deeply
-beautifully blue. All these attributes combined to form an expression
-of angelic purity and sweetness, such as I had never seen expressed
-in any human countenance before.</p>
-
-<p>“Of whom is this a portrait, Signor?” I inquired of the Italian, interrupting
-his conversation with Morton.</p>
-
-<p>Carrara’s black eyes rested sadly upon the picture a moment, then
-turned suddenly away.</p>
-
-<p>“It is the portrait of an Austrian lady. A Viennese,” he answered
-abruptly.</p>
-
-<p>“Is she living still?” I asked.</p>
-
-<p>“No, she has been dead many years.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is it not flattered? was she as beautiful as this?”</p>
-
-<p>“She was far more beautiful than I have been able to portray her.”</p>
-
-<p>“How long since it was painted?”</p>
-
-<p>“More than twenty years ago.”</p>
-
-<p>“What picture is it you are talking about, Clarence?” demanded
-Morton, looking up from a portfolio of prints which lay upon the artist’s
-table.</p>
-
-<p>“This one,” I replied, pointing to it.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, yes. I see a very handsome woman. I admire your taste.
-Pray, may I ask her name, Signor Carrara, unless, indeed,” he added
-archly, “she happened to be a beau ideal of yours; in that case, I
-waive the question.”</p>
-
-<p>The Italian blushed to his very eyebrows, and looked almost angry
-for an instant; but he answered immediately,</p>
-
-<p>“You are welcome to ask the name of that or any other portrait in
-my studio. Her name was Genevra Sfonza.”</p>
-
-<p>“I like the style in which it is taken. Very fanciful and airy. She<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_15"></a>[15]</span>
-almost seems to be floating on a cloud,” observed my friend, as he
-came and stood by my side before it. “If I had a wife and were going
-to have her portrait taken, I should choose such an attitude. But I
-am thankful to be a bachelor, untrammelled and free. A single man
-can visit, seek lady’s society, if he wants it; in short, do what he
-pleases, without having some jealous Juno tearing after him, if he happen
-to look at any other set of features than his ‘cara spanta’s.’”</p>
-
-<p>Carrara smiled, and I laughed, as I always did at my friends’ drolleries.
-“Come Clarence,” he exclaimed, seizing me by the arm, “let’s
-take a general look at all the pictures, and then, if you are willing, return
-home. Dinner will be waiting for us.”</p>
-
-<p>“We took a general survey of the rest of the paintings, among which
-were some valuable originals, by the old masters. But none of them,
-in grace of attitude, or beauty of expression, could compare with that
-of the lovely Viennese.</p>
-
-<p>“I am quite in love with this picture,” I remarked to the artist, as I
-again stopped before it; after looking at all the politicians, warriors,
-sculptors, artists, and beauties portrayed on canvass.</p>
-
-<p>“Almost every one who visits my room, admires it,” responded
-Carrara.</p>
-
-<p>I felt almost jealous, as he said this, that any one but myself should
-be allowed the pleasure of gazing upon that sweet face. I wished to
-have it exclusively to myself, where I alone could come and look upon
-its beauty. What selfish creatures men are.</p>
-
-<p>The kind hearted Italian offered us a collation of Smyrna figs,
-grapes, oranges, and light Catalonia wine. We partook slightly, and
-then took our hats to depart.</p>
-
-<p>“I hope to have the pleasure of seeing you frequently, during your
-stay in Rome,” was his parting invitation, as he accompanied us through
-the long galleries, and down the lofty stair-case we had ascended.</p>
-
-<p>“We shall certainly trespass frequently on your politeness, Signor,”
-was our parting response, as we passed into the street and wended
-homeward.</p>
-
-<p>Arrived at our hotel by the same route we came; we entered our
-comfortless dingy saloon, which served in the double capacity of
-dining-room and parlor. The table was set for dinner, but no dinner
-served, and Morton impatiently pulled the bell. Peppo answered the
-summons, bearing in his hands a dish of roast beef, burnt almost black,
-while treading close on his heels, came his female colleague, Jeannetta,
-her hands loaded also with plates of different sizes, and looking as
-if she bore the fate of Cato and of Rome upon her shoulders, attired in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_16"></a>[16]</span>
-all that dirty finery, for which the lower classes of the Italians are
-distinguished. Peppo deposited, what he considered, this elegant
-repast, upon the table, with the air of a conqueror offering his mistress
-the spoil of foreign lands.</p>
-
-<p>“Here, Signor, here be one English dinner, la veritable chose,
-tout entierement l’Inglese,” exclaimed Peppo, who valued himself upon
-his acquirements in the languages, understanding about a dozen words
-of English, French, and Spanish; but like many another fool, if he
-was happy in his ignorance, and imagined himself wise, why it was
-just the same—at least to him the same. I have often wondered,
-whether it were not better to slumber on in ignorance, rather than
-make some little progress in knowledge, and after all, discover (even
-should we reach the highest point of earthly wisdom) that all is doubt
-and conjecture.</p>
-
-<p>“Come Mowbray, my friend,” cried Augustus, as he drew a chair
-to the table, “come let us commence operations, for I am nearly
-famished. Peppo where are the wine coolers and goblets, make haste
-and bring them. You can go Jeannetta. Clarence what will you take?”</p>
-
-<p>I requested a piece of the before-mentioned burnt beef, and helped
-myself to some peas, which looked as if they had been grown beneath
-the burning suns of Syria, dashed over with some description of
-Italian sauce; as for potatoes, they are an eatable unknown in Italy;
-nature, however, has kindly supplied the place of many of our northern
-vegetables, by the luxurious fruits of the country; one scarcely needs
-any other food beside the luscious champagne grape, the yellow orange,
-pine-apple, zapota, and a dozen other fine fruits, the names of which
-escape my recollection.</p>
-
-<p>“Here, Peppo, come take away this elegant English dinner of yours,
-and serve dessert,” said Morton laughingly, after having tried in vain
-to masticate some of the tough meats, and dried up vegetables.
-“Don’t make another attempt in the English style, I beg of you, for
-really this one is quite killing.”</p>
-
-<p>“Le diner no good,” ejaculated Peppo, holding up both hands in
-amazement, “apres tous les soins que j’ai pris; je vous assure, Signor,
-que c’est une diner a l’Anglaise.”</p>
-
-<p>“I assure you, my good fellow, that it is perfectly uneatable; here
-take it all away, and hand the fruit and wine. I am sorry I told you
-to attempt any thing in English style. I might have known we
-should get nothing to suit us; however, make haste, for our carriage
-is at the door, to take us to the campagna.”</p>
-
-<p>Peppo, in great agitation, at the failure of his attempt, removed the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_17"></a>[17]</span>
-dishes, and as soon as we had dispatched dessert, we entered our
-Stanhope, and drove to the campagna.</p>
-
-<p>I kept my promise, and often visited Signor Carrara. I liked him
-more, the better I became acquainted with him; there are some characters
-who only show their fine traits upon a close acquaintance. We
-all of us, more or less, feel an attraction of sympathy, or repulsion of
-antipathy at first sight, an indefinite presentiment that we shall either
-like or dislike; there was something in Carrara’s manner, so different
-to the giddy light-heartedness of the generality of his countrymen,
-calculated to inspire one with confidence in his integrity: his calm
-countenance expressed benevolence, patience, and philosophical indifference.
-I might have sought in vain for those deep traces of
-satiety and discontent, which pleasure imprints upon the faces of her
-votaries. He seemed to be at peace with all mankind, and among all
-his extensive acquaintance in Rome, I never once heard him unkindly
-spoken of. I frequently passed hours in his studio, while Morton was
-engaged in a continual round of pleasure.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II.</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Carrara inhabited but two apartments in his stately mansion,
-besides his elegant studio, and a large exhibition room of magnificent
-paintings. All the other apartments were locked up, and left untenanted,
-although the old domestic, who had been a household fixture
-for more than twenty years, informed me they were all splendidly
-furnished; although uninhabited, and seldom opened, except twice a
-year, to be cleaned; I could not help wondering that any man, especially
-a bachelor artist, should keep a large, vacant house to himself,
-of no use to him, without letting it to some one, as an Englishman
-would have done; unless, indeed, he were a man of rank and fortune,
-but this Carrara, I presumed, was not, and I had seen enough of him
-to be convinced of his unassuming mind, and simple mode of living.
-Perhaps he had accumulated a comfortable fortune by his unwearied
-application, and economy, and having secured sufficient means for the
-future years of his life, thought it unnecessary to make money by his
-house. Of his private circumstances I knew nothing, and, therefore,
-dismissed the subject from my mind.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_18"></a>[18]</span></p>
-
-<p>“How many different faces, and what varieties of character you
-must see in the course of a year,” I one day remarked to him, as he
-stood at his easel, a large bunch of brushes in his hand, busily employed
-in painting a naked nymph, bathing in a limpid stream.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” he replied, “an artist has ample opportunity, if he is capable
-of doing so, of observing characters, as well as faces.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you a physiognomist?”</p>
-
-<p>“I make no pretensions to being one.”</p>
-
-<p>“Can you tell an honest man from a rogue?”</p>
-
-<p>“I think I can.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then tell me, my friend, tell me truly, what do you think of my
-face?”</p>
-
-<p>I pushed back my hair from my forehead, as I asked the kind old
-Italian this odd question; and he looked at me rather quizzically for a
-second, as if to ascertain whether I was in earnest, or seeking to make
-game of him; being assured, I suppose, by the grave expression of
-my countenance, that I was serious, he answered:</p>
-
-<p>“You have a frank, talented, amorous expression of face, such as
-many of your countrymen, whom I have seen, possessed.”</p>
-
-<p>“Amorous, is it possible you have made such a dreadful mistake?—you,
-a man of so much penetration, to say such a thing as that; why
-my dear Signor, I am as cold as the eternal snows of Russia’s mountains.
-I follow the fashionable plan, and invariably treat all womankind
-with polite rudeness; in fact, I think I hate women: the sexes
-are, of course, natural enemies to each other.”</p>
-
-<p>“You cold, about as cold as the crater of Mount Etna; how can you
-sit there, and presume to tell me such shocking stories?” Carrara
-laughed; he seldom laughed, or even smiled, but when he did, his
-face lighted up with a sunny glow. I was about to deny this accusation
-flatly, merely for the sake of a laughing argument, when, in looking
-for a stray engraving I was copying, which had fallen on the floor, I
-knocked down an unfinished picture, which stood with its face to the
-wall; I glanced at it, and was about to replace it in its original position,
-when Carrara observed, glancing at it as he spoke,</p>
-
-<p>“Talking of variety of character, that woman certainly was an oddity
-in her way: I never saw a more singular person.”</p>
-
-<p>“The original of this picture, do you mean?” I asked, as I set it
-back again.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” replied the artist; “she was the friend of Prince Monteolene.
-I painted a half length portrait for her, and began this one, but the
-prince parted from her, after having lived with her three or four<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_19"></a>[19]</span>
-years, and she left the city, leaving this picture unfinished on my
-hands.”</p>
-
-<p>“She was handsome,” I remarked, as I looked at the face more
-attentively—“a voluptuous, not a pure, or spiritual beauty.”</p>
-
-<p>“Such was her character; she possessed some fine traits of disposition,
-however, which, had they been accompanied by a well balanced
-mind, trained to virtue, she might have been an ornament to society.
-She took an interesting little girl from one of the nunnery schools, had
-her well educated, and taught the science of vocal music thoroughly,
-then placed her on the stage, through the influence of some of the
-professors of music, who felt interested in the child; where she now
-is, a brilliant star in the musical world. That action, certainly showed
-a kind, generous disposition.”</p>
-
-<p>“Such incidents of character, are extraordinary, even among the
-best of human beings, leaving the immoral out of the question,” and,
-I added, “you artists have every facility, here in Italy, in regard to
-obtaining models.”</p>
-
-<p>“We have more applications from poor girls, some reputable, some
-disreputable, than we wish or require; many have offered themselves
-to me as models, without price, and the very prettiest can be had for
-a small sum.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are any of these models virtuous?”</p>
-
-<p>“I have known many who were correct in their behaviour, and, on
-the contrary, many who were dissolute. A person, whether man or
-woman, reared to all the comforts and elegancies of a luxurious life,
-can scarcely conceive the many temptations to which these poor girls
-are exposed; living in miserable huts, feeding upon the coarsest food;
-while men of fashion and fortune, attracted by their pretty looks,
-frequently make them liberal offers of protection, which they sometimes
-refuse, but generally end by accepting. Besides, the standard
-of female virtue, does not rank as high in our country as in yours;
-therefore, their departure from the paths of virtue, is looked upon
-more in a philosophical point of view, as a foible, incident to all humanity,
-and tolerated with more leniency.”</p>
-
-<p>“I sometimes think the Italian plan the best.”</p>
-
-<p>“It may not be best, as regards the mass of the population, but
-considered individually, I cannot but prefer it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you never feel sad, Signor?”—I asked suddenly, after having
-been silent some minutes, absorbed in thought—“do you never feel
-sad sometimes, when you reflect upon the frailties and miseries of poor
-human nature?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_20"></a>[20]</span></p>
-
-<p>“You are now, my young friend,” answered Carrara, “just on the
-dawn of manhood, when, having indulged ideal dreams of what the
-world <i>ought</i> to be, you are gradually awakening to a perception of
-the vast difference between the ideal and the actual; what now appears
-to you so sentimentally sad, will gradually become a matter of course,
-and you will grow fond of the world as it is; as your freshness of
-feeling, and ideality of mind wears away, habit becomes a second
-nature; we may dislike our habitation, but we dislike a change, because
-we are accustomed to the old abode. Middle age and the decline of
-life, which lessen our sense of enjoyment, increase our love of life for
-that reason; and you will find, as you journey on, the longer you live,
-the more tenaciously will you cling to life.”</p>
-
-<p>“I presume you are right, and if I live long enough to realize your
-sage prediction, then I will think of your words.”</p>
-
-<p>I took my hat as I said this, considering that I had bored my kind
-friend long enough, by a visit of three hours, and left the studio, with
-his repeated invitation ringing in my ears, that I should come very
-soon again, and pass every morning, if it pleased me, at his house. I
-directed my steps toward modern Rome, and the Piazza del populo;
-as I passed along the principal streets, I saw the shops adorned with
-every description of masquerade dresses, and immense quantities of
-bonbons, in anticipation of the approaching carnival; many of the
-giddy throng were already attired in masquerade, passing each other;
-and all unlucky foot passengers, with the “corfette” the Italians
-make such liberal use of during the carnival, their animated gestures,
-and sprightly looks, forming a picturesque scene. While above my
-head shone the cerulean sky, dotted with golden clouds, and the horizon’s
-verge reflected the brilliant red of the setting sun’s declining fires.</p>
-
-<p>The happy dispositions and buoyant temperaments of these Italians,
-enable them to bear misfortunes, and even the squalid poverty, to
-which they are frequently subjected, with a serenity of temper, and
-happy confidence in the future, unknown to the colder inhabitants of
-northern climes. A proud Englishman would put an end to his existence,
-were he obliged to encounter half what an Italian would endure
-with philosophic indifference.</p>
-
-<p>I found the Piazza del populo crowded with equestrians, pedestrians,
-and every description of equipages, giving a brilliant, showy effect, to
-this classic and beautiful square. How many recollections of happy
-hours and days, are connected in my memory, with the name of Rome;
-of weeks and months, that sped like hours, borne only too rapidly
-away upon the wings of Time.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_21"></a>[21]</span></p>
-
-<p>The ladies talked, laughed, and flirted with the gentlemen, as they
-promenaded up and down, just as we do in England, or any other
-civilized land; the liveried footmen stood together in groups, and
-chatted, perhaps of scandal transpiring in their little world of action;
-monks glided past me, their heads bowed down, telling their rosarys
-while they stealthily eyed the women; the peasant girls in their tasteful
-costume, the red or blue woollen petticoat, ornamented with black
-horizontal bands, exchanged love tokens with their lovers; the military
-rode through the square, with much display; the nobility bowed and
-smiled to each other, as they drove swiftly by in their stately carriages;
-all nature, and almost every face wore a smile.</p>
-
-<p>Leaving the gay scene, I passed out at the gate opposite to that
-through which I had entered, and was standing gazing upon the lofty
-dome, and magnificent colonnade of Saint Peter’s, which rose towering
-above all other objects in the distance, when I felt my arm suddenly
-grasped, and a stentorian voice exclaimed, “Why, good heavens,
-Clarence, is this you? where in the name of wonder have you been all
-day? I’ve been wanting you to accompany me to a hundred and one
-places, and here you are dreaming about the Persian invasion, perhaps
-in the Piazza del populo. I’ve met some very fine people here,” he
-continued, as he linked his arm in mine, and gently turned me in the
-direction of our hotel. “Among others, there’s a Countess Dettore,
-who having heard what a fine, agreeable fellow you are, sends you an
-invitation, through me, to her grand party, to-morrow night; come
-now, do be civil, and say you’ll go; I am going; really, you have
-grown so desperately sentimental since your arrival here, there’s no
-doing anything with you; you should go into society, be gay, and
-enjoy yourself.”</p>
-
-<p>“All people don’t have the same mode of enjoyment,” I replied.
-“I enjoy myself in my way, and you in yours; but who is this Countess
-of whom you speak; how came she to hear of me, and send me an
-invitation to her ball?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I knew her when I was here before, four years ago; she’s a
-pleasant, chatty kind of person, gives nice balls, and that, you know,
-is the principal thing; I dare say you’ll be pleased with her, however,
-when you get acquainted; she’s often heard me speak of you since my
-arrival, and so, being about to give a ball, took the liberty of sending
-you an invitation, both verbal and written,” and he handed me a
-delicate little note, superscribed in a small, feminine handwriting.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve been with Carrara, I suppose, the principal part of the
-day? you seem to have become great friends in a very short space of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_22"></a>[22]</span>
-time. Carrara’s a kind-hearted, eccentric creature: I never knew him
-to take so sudden a fancy to any one, as he has to you. I went to
-Tivoli again this morning, after you left me,” added my rattling friend,
-without waiting for an answer. “I was charmed; such pure air,
-delightful scenery; met Coningsby, he’s just from home, says he’s
-coming down to see you to-morrow; he’ll return before we do, so we
-can send letters by him, if you like, to your parents.”</p>
-
-<p>We passed the magnificent arch of Constantine, and I paused to
-admire the exquisite fluting of the corinthian columns, and the statues
-of Dacian warriors, with which its front is adorned; while Morton
-strolled on ahead, picking wild flowers from the turf at his feet, and
-commenting upon the absurdity of old ruined arches, and sentimentalizing
-on ancient times.</p>
-
-<p>We found, on reaching our hotel, that my valet Henri, had been
-passing away the time during my absence, by getting up a slight row
-with another fellow of his own stamp, in which he seemed to have got
-the worst of it, for he made his appearance with a black eye, and
-numerous other small wounds, in the shape of sundry scratches and
-knocks in the face from his assailant’s fists. He had a long and grievous
-complaint to make me, of the ill usage he had received, and finished
-his speech by cursing Rome and everything Roman, wishing himself
-safe back again in the land of his nativity, the green mountains of the
-Tyrol. I interrupted him, however, by my stern commands and
-solemn adjurations, not to implicate himself in another such a fracas,
-hinting the fact, that upon a second repetition of the same thing, he
-would be obliged to enter the service of some other individual than
-myself, as I could not tolerate such disgraceful conduct in a personal
-attendant. The poor fellow looked remarkably foolish on hearing my
-stern rebuke, and promised obedience for the future, adding in extenuation
-of his behavior, “that he had not sought the row: Gustave
-had provoked him beyond himself; when others let him alone, he let
-everybody else alone.”</p>
-
-<p>I afterward discovered, to my great amusement, that the whole
-affair had originated from Gustave’s having taken a fancy to the same
-girl, of whom my valet Henri was also desperately enamored; the
-result was, Henri in a fit of jealous rage at her manifest preference for
-his rival, said some insulting things to Gustave, which the latter would
-not take, and they ended the matter by a personal encounter; not after
-the style of the renowned knight of La Mancha, but in the genuine
-old fashion of pummelling each other with their fists. Gustave possessing
-a more athletic form and stronger muscles than my unfortunate valet,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_23"></a>[23]</span>
-succeeded in gaining a complete triumph over his rival in the courts
-of love. The whole affair was vastly ridiculous, and Morton and
-myself laughed vehemently at the discomfiture of poor Henri.</p>
-
-<p>“After all,” laughed Morton, “isn’t it ridiculous to see what a
-devilish fool a man will make of himself for love of woman: it’s all
-the same thing from a king to a beggar; the feeling is the same, the
-manner of showing it alone, is different. Now I really do wonder if
-any woman could excite me to the pitch I’ve seen this poor fellow
-wound up to, to-day?”</p>
-
-<p>“I dare say,” was my reply, “you and I are both human, and
-possess passions and feelings in common with every one else.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I haven’t lost <i>my</i> heart since I’ve been here; that’s to say,
-if I really possessed any when I made my advent into this confounded
-old ruined place; as for you, I believe you’re in love with an inanimate
-picture. I prefer the real Simon pure flesh and blood myself;
-this falling in love with senseless canvass I consider quite absurd.”</p>
-
-<p>“You need not take the trouble to tell me that, Morton,” I ejaculated,
-bursting into a fit of uproarious laughter; “one need only look
-at your face, to be assured that your feelings are not by any means
-<i>too Platonic</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>He laughed most heartily, although the jest was at <i>his</i> expense; and
-chancing to turn our eyes toward the door, we saw Peppo, who stood
-there bowing with all his might, like a chinese mandarin, and he informed
-us, after many demonstrations of respect and divers flourishes,
-that dinner awaited us in the new saloon, which had just been completed
-a few days previous. The saloon, which poor Peppo considered
-such a perfect chef-d’œuvre of architecture, proved to be a
-large, barn-like room, built of rough beams, stuccoed over with a
-coarse, inferior sort of plaster, very cold and comfortless looking, destitute
-of carpeting, and furnished with a long dining table, chairs set
-round it, and an iron lamp suspended from the ceiling, on this grand
-occasion of inaugurating us into our new dining-room; the dinner was
-extraordinarily fine, although everything was covered with oil and
-cayenne pepper in abundance, and Peppo officiated with becoming
-dignity.</p>
-
-<p>This was Friday; the next day, Saturday, began the carnival, the
-great annual fête of Rome. We breakfasted earlier than usual, and
-Augustus joined the gay throng which crowded the streets in the direction
-of the Corso, where I agreed to join him, after having paid a
-morning call on Signor Carrara. Augustus declined accompanying
-me, as he said he wished to observe the populace and the different<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_24"></a>[24]</span>
-costumes before the sport began, and I, therefore, proceeded to Carrara’s
-house alone.</p>
-
-<p>At the street door, I learned from his old attendant Guiseppe, that
-the Signor had not yet risen, being somewhat indisposed from a slight
-cold and sore throat; I sent in my card, and was about leaving to
-rejoin my friend, when Guiseppe came running back, saying the
-Signor “would be happy to see me in his room, if I would honor
-him.”</p>
-
-<p>I followed the old man up the lofty stair-case, through the long
-galleries past the studio, when he turned down a short passage and
-ushered me into a small elegantly furnished room, where lay Carrara
-in a black velvet gown and cap, reclining upon a sofa.</p>
-
-<p>“So you are too sick to accompany us to the gay Corso to-day, my
-kind friend?” I asked, after having cordially shaken hands with him
-and drawn my chair close to his sofa.</p>
-
-<p>“I do not feel well enough to venture out,” he replied; “nevertheless,
-I thank you most sincerely for your politeness in calling for me; this
-is a mere transient attack of sore throat, I presume; I have had many
-such before, I shall be recovered from it in a day or two; I regret not
-being able to see the horse races and the ball to-night, as I have been
-an annual spectator for the last twenty years. You will attend the
-masquerade ball this evening? of course, I need not ask, every one
-goes to the carnival ball.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have not yet made up my mind, perhaps I may: it will be a gay
-affair I suppose?”</p>
-
-<p>“Very: one sees such variety of costume, and variety of faces, it
-forms altogether an interesting sight, especially to a stranger.”</p>
-
-<p>“I should think,” I remarked, glancing around the quiet room, “I
-should think, my dear Signor, that you would sometimes feel lonesome,
-shut up alone in this spacious house of yours, especially when sick,
-with no female relative or friend to nurse you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Guiseppe generally answers all my purposes as nurse and attendant;
-he is faithful and constant; when very ill I sometimes employ a hired
-nurse; but as for other higher attentions, what is there about my person,
-a poor, ugly old man, already tottering on the brink of the grave,
-what is there about me to attract beauty’s gentle care? No, no, my
-dear young friend, myself has sufficed thus far, and myself will suffice
-to the end; my own thoughts and recollections of the past, are society
-enough for me.”</p>
-
-<p>I had never heard Carrara speak so sadly before, for although philosophic
-in his tone of mind, he was generally cheerful, sometimes even<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_25"></a>[25]</span>
-gay. I attributed it to his slight indisposition and his solitude, and
-took my leave, promising to call on the morrow, and bring an entertaining
-English novel to read aloud to him.</p>
-
-<p>As I mechanically traversed the long distance which intervened
-between his house and the Corso, I soliloquized upon the lonely life a
-man leads without wife or children. He seems to hang, as it were, a
-loose disjointed member upon society, disconnected from the rest of
-his fellow beings, by all those household ties, which seem to form the
-connecting links of life. I thought of myself, and then my thoughts
-reverted to the beautiful portrait in Carrara’s studio, and I ardently
-wished that I might see the original of that picture. “Suppose you
-should see her this day,” reason said, “will not time have changed
-her? where would be the rosy hue of health and beauty’s bloom?” I
-suddenly remembered, Carrara had told me she was dead. “She receives
-naught now, then, but the clammy embraces of death; better that,
-however, than live to become a withered hag, after having being so
-gloriously beautiful.”</p>
-
-<p>I reached the Corso, and sought diligently for Augustus, amid the
-dense crowd there; but nothing could I see of him in that multitude,
-moving to and fro like the gigantic waves of the ocean. I tried several
-times to pass over to the other side of the street, but was pushed back at
-every movement I made; I gave up the attempt at last, in despair,
-and was about fixing my temporary abode upon a large sign post,
-commanding an extensive view of the street and the course where the
-horses were to race, when I felt myself gently plucked by the sleeve,
-and turning, saw a young peasant, who quietly requested me to follow
-him; he had spoken to me in broken English, supposing, I presume,
-that I did not understand Italian, but I boldly demanded in his native
-tongue, what he wanted of me. Some recollections flashed through
-my mind of stories I had heard, about strangers in Rome being entrapped
-at carnival time by brigands in masquerade; but a single
-glance at the face of this unsophisticated child of nature reassured me,
-and I felt that my suspicions in this instance were absurd. He uttered
-a joyful exclamation at hearing me speak Italian, and said that my
-friend, seeing me in the crowd, had sent him to find me, and requested
-me to come to him on the balcony of one of the old Palazzo’s fronting
-the Corso.</p>
-
-<p>My peasant elbowed his way through the multitude to the steps of
-the Palazzo; he then conducted me up stairs, through a splendid suite
-of rooms, and out upon a balcony, where I was received by Augustus,
-who anxiously inquired about the good old artist; and hearing that he<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_26"></a>[26]</span>
-was too sick to accompany me, we mutually turned our attention upon
-the gay scene at our feet. The Corso was already filled with coaches,
-and persons on foot of every nation under the sun; but I saw but few
-masks. A ceremony of some kind or other took place, I heard, at the
-Capitol, which we did not see; in which a deputation of Jews formally
-petition the governor of the city for permission to remain in it
-another year, which he grants them upon condition of their paying the
-expenses of the races. The military swept through the streets in their
-showy uniform; and presently came the governor and senator (Rome’s
-fallen grandeur boasts but one now) in a grand procession of gilded
-coaches, while behind them came a great number of men, showily
-dressed, on horseback, bearing in their hands beautiful banners, some
-of them elegantly embroidered and presented by the ladies of Rome;
-after these had passed, the fun and merriment began.</p>
-
-<p>A general pelting commenced from the windows of showers of
-sugar nuts, which were exchanged by those in coaches as they passed.
-The whole street presented a scene of childish gayety and confusion,
-perfectly indescribable, and, absurd as it appeared to me at first, I
-became much interested in the sport, and filling my pockets with
-“corfette,” began pelting as manfully as the silliest among them.</p>
-
-<p>The windows and balconies were hung with rich silks and velvets,
-which, waving in a gentle breeze beneath that glorious sunny sky,
-mingled with the rich dresses, and often lovely faces beaming with
-smiles, as they surveyed the animated multitude from the windows
-and balconies of their homes. The loud laughter and sprightly movements
-of the crowd, all combined to present a brilliant scene.</p>
-
-<p>The amusements of the day concluded with the horse race; a trumpet
-was sounded, and fifteen or sixteen ponies made their appearance, led
-by grooms very gayly dressed; who, after some difficulty, arranged
-the fiery little steeds behind a rope stretched across the street. At a
-given signal the rope was dropped, and away they flew down the
-Corso, as if the evil one was at their heels; at their sides were suspended
-leaden balls, filled with needles, which lashed them as they
-spurred forward, and the wild shouts of the crowd as they closed in
-behind them, sent them on with the fleetness of the wind; they ran
-furiously for about a mile, to the end of the street, where they were
-stopped by a large canvass, suspended across the way; not more than
-half reached the goal, and three or four, I noticed, who seemed to dislike
-these kinds of operations, ran off, knocking down everything and
-everybody who obstructed their progress. The races are repeated
-every evening near sunset, during the carnival.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_27"></a>[27]</span></p>
-
-<p>The day’s sport being over, gradually this odd medly of human
-beings left the Corso. I watched the different faces and forms as they
-slowly disappeared; the women looking tired and languid, like drooping
-water lilies; the robust peasant, and languid nobleman in his
-carriage; the horse jockeys, and confused assortment of all sorts of
-vehicles, in the course of a few moments had vacated the square.</p>
-
-<p>Augustus and I also left our position on the balcony, he, rather reluctantly,
-for he seemed to have been quite enchanted by a young
-beauty, stationed upon the balcony of a large house next door to the
-Palazzo, who had been making love to him with her lovely dark eyes
-during the morning; he said he should like to know who she was
-sighed, and seemed to feel the premonitory symptoms of one of those
-attacks of sentiment he had so often deprecated in me.</p>
-
-<p>A grand masquerade ball was to be given in the evening at one of
-the theatres, for this purpose the pit was covered over, and the whole
-establishment thrown open. One could wear costume or not, as they
-chose; we preferred the civilian dress, and notwithstanding our preconceived
-notions of its absurdity, and determined to be mere lookers
-on, we had not been long there, before we became involved in the
-giddy whirl of fun and nonsense, and talked and laughed as foolishly
-as any there; almost all wore costume, but there were but few masks,
-many of the costumes were tasteful and costly, others were wretched,
-and would have disgraced the wardrobe of one of our strolling circus
-companys. I saw his satanic majesty sipping ices with a Polish lady,
-while close behind them stood a beautiful Aspasia, in another part of
-the room Achilles was savagely flourishing his sword, and Venus sat
-at the feet of her Mars. Brother Jonathan knocked against me, trying
-to make a first rate bargain; and Paul Pry was there, attending to
-everybody’s business but his own. I was deserted by Morton, who
-dashed after a blue domino, whom he took to be his beauty of the
-balcony; he was disappointed, however, for although the lady’s face
-was beautiful, it was not she. I saw many long-bearded Turks, fops
-of a hundred years ago, and exquisites of the present day, mad poets,
-quack doctors; and lastly, I saw what recalled to mind many early
-associations—two handsome young persons, evidently lovers, in the
-costume of Petrarch and his Laura; the girl’s face was fair and sweet
-in its expression, she was a fine impersonation of that interesting
-character, the records of whose life have been so blended with romance,
-that we can with difficulty distinguish the real from the
-fictitious; certain it is, however, that such a being as Laura once
-existed, and that Petrarch, enamored of her real or fancied beauty,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_28"></a>[28]</span>
-addressed to her those eloquent sonnets, which are an ornament to the
-literature of his time. I remembered to have read them when a boy,
-by a favorite sister’s side, beneath the linden trees in the park of my
-father’s country seat; now that sister slept the dreamless sleep of
-death, under the shade of those very trees where in childhood she had
-played. The costume of these lovers, and the recollection of the
-sonnets, and my companion in their perusal, revived many a forgotten
-reminiscence of by-gone years.</p>
-
-<p>Aurora had already begun to display her golden banner in the East,
-when, fagged out, and nearly stupified by our potations of champagne,
-we left the ball-room; daylight had begun to force its way into the
-salon de dance, displaying to no very fine effect, the tinsel finery,
-glazed muslins and pasteboards, of which the generality of the costumes
-were composed.</p>
-
-<p>“A ball is a stupid thing anyhow,” said Morton, yawning, “particularly
-when its all over, and one has talked and danced one’s self
-nearly to death.”</p>
-
-<p>I felt too stupid myself to make any reply to this philosophical observation,
-as I followed my friend into our carriage.</p>
-
-<p>In such scenes passed off the gay carnival during eight days.
-Punch’s performance, the gay masquerading, the odd tricks performed
-by itinerant mountebanks, and divers absurdities of the populace
-themselves, formed the daily routine, usually concluded at night by a
-ball. On the last day, at night, after the races, the Corso appeared
-illuminated as if by magic, with thousands of lights carried by those
-on foot, in carriages, and displayed at all the windows; those are
-indeed unfortunate who cannot afford a light on the occasion. It is
-every one’s business to extinguish his neighbor’s light and preserve
-his own as long as he can; it is impossible to give an idea of the effect
-produced by such an odd scene, the glitter and confusion as they each
-endeavor to extinguish each other’s torches and preserve their own,
-when viewed from the commanding position we occupied on the balcony
-of the Palazzo, the effect was singular and beautiful; gradually
-the lights became fewer and fewer, until at last they disappeared, the
-noise of the multitude died away, and the carnival was over.</p>
-
-<p>The next morning, after breakfast, Augustus absolutely persisted in
-making me promise to accompany him to Tivoli, to pay a visit to
-Coningsby, who had hired a villa there; and although I cared little
-about going, yet to oblige him I consented. I sent the novel I had
-promised Carrara by my valet, with my compliments and inquiries about<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_29"></a>[29]</span>
-his health, but we had started for Tivoli before Henri returned with
-an answer.</p>
-
-<p>We remained a week with our friend, who, delighted to see us, entertained
-us with noble hospitality. The tasteful arrangement of his
-villa, the salubrious air and charming scenery of the surrounded
-country, over which was scattered many an ancient ruin, successively
-claimed our attention and admiration. Time spent agreeably flies rapidly
-away, on the contrary moments passed in pain or sorrow, are anxiously
-numbered. When our stanhope again stopped before the door of our
-hotel, it seemed but a few hours since we had left it.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III.</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>It wanted two hours of dinner, and, leaving Augustus to scold the
-servants and make whatever domestic arrangements he choose, I took
-my hat and sought the way to Carrara’s house; the windows facing the
-street were bolted and barred as usual; I knocked loudly at the street
-door, but no one came; and after waiting a few minutes I knocked
-again, still no answer; I concluded Carrara must be out of town, perhaps
-on a visit, and was about going away when I saw old Guiseppe
-coming slowly toward the house; I waited until he reached me, and
-then asked if his master was well?</p>
-
-<p>The old man looked at me with grave surprise, and mournfully exclaimed,
-“Ah, Signor! I see you have not heard the sad news. Master
-died the second day after you left for Tivoli, and was buried yesterday.”</p>
-
-<p>“Carrara dead!” I shrieked, rather than spoke; “you or I must be
-dreaming; it is impossible he could have died so very suddenly; he
-was living a week ago when I left for Tivoli.”</p>
-
-<p>“He had been sick, you know sir, all carnival time; it was only a
-simple sore-throat, to be sure, but he neglected it, he said it would get
-well of itself; but he grew worse instead of better, and gangrene had
-taken place before he would allow me to send for a physician. It was
-then too late; master became delirious, and talked constantly about you,
-and somebody whom he called “Genevra.” He got his senses a little,
-just before he died, and calling me to his bedside, told me to give you
-a packet, which he placed in my hands. I told him you had
-gone to Tivoli for a few days, and that when you returned I would<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_30"></a>[30]</span>
-do so. He said he was very sorry you were not here to see him die;
-that he never should see you again in this world. Shortly after, he became
-speechless, and the second day after your departure, in the afternoon,
-he died; a relative of his came to town just in time to witness his
-death, and attend to his funeral. He had written upon the back of
-the will, that it was not to be opened or read until your return, and
-Signor Terra told me to request you to call upon him as soon as you
-could after your return to town.”</p>
-
-<p>I scarcely heard him: I felt as if oppressed by a frightful nightmare.
-The idea that that kind old man was dead, whom I had so lately seen
-in good health and spirits; and dead so suddenly, so unexpectedly,
-was too strange and unaccountable for me to realize. Mechanically
-I followed Guiseppe into the house, and entered the studio, in which
-I had passed so many pleasant hours since my arrival in Rome; nothing
-was displaced from the position in which he had left it, when first
-taken sick; and notwithstanding the consciousness of his death, I
-momentarily expected to see his tall thin form, and benevolent face,
-appear at the open door. Guiseppe had left the room, and I fell into
-a reverie, in which were blended my sad regrets at this unexpected
-loss, when the old domestic returned, and handed me the packet his
-master bequeathed me as a legacy, together with the address of the
-lawyer who wished to see me. I put them both in my pocket: and then
-turned to the old man, who stood by my side, with his arms folded.</p>
-
-<p>“And you, my good Guiseppe, what do you intend doing, now the
-good Signor is dead, where do you think of going to?”</p>
-
-<p>Tears startled in the old man’s eyes, as he replied—“I hardly know
-myself, sir, what I shall do; I think I will return into the country with
-Signor Carrara’s cousin; I only liked Rome, because I could live with
-my dear, kind master; and now he’s gone, I would rather go than
-stay.”</p>
-
-<p>“If you conclude to remain, Guiseppe, and if my influence can be
-of service in obtaining you another situation, call on me, and I will do
-whatever I can for you.”</p>
-
-<p>“I thank you a thousand times, Signor,” answered the grateful
-Italian; and I sadly retraced my steps to our hotel. Augustus was
-almost as surprised as I had been, on hearing of the sudden death of
-his artist-friend; he could scarcely believe it, so unexpected had been
-the sad event, and expressed some curiosity to learn what I had to do
-with Carrara’s will.</p>
-
-<p>I had not spoken of the packet to Augustus: that was my own little
-secret; and when night had assumed her reign, I took a “bougie”<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_31"></a>[31]</span>
-and established myself in my chamber, with the door locked to prevent
-intrusion, and proceeded to the examination of this mysterious package.
-After taking off the paper wrapper, I saw a small silver casket, locked,
-and the little gold key belonging to it, lying within the paper; upon
-unlocking it, I saw a bundle of manuscript, and a letter addressed to
-myself in Carrara’s handwriting. Some of the papers of the diary had
-already become yellow from age. I hurriedly opened the letter,
-anxious to learn what this singular present meant; it was dated some
-days back, during carnival time; the contents were thus:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="noindent">“<span class="smcap">My dear young Friend</span>,</p>
-
-<p>“I feel a presentiment of my approaching dissolution; already the
-angel of death fans me with his wings, he beckons me to come to that
-unknown shore; he invites me to drink of the cup of oblivion, and
-forget all things in the quiet sleep of death. I am now an old man;
-I have experienced all that I shall ever experience of pleasure; the
-world is no longer either pleasing or new to me. Death, therefore, so
-far from appearing an enemy, seems like a dear friend, who comes to
-release me from future decrepitude and imbecility.</p>
-
-<p>“You will recollect you one day asked me, while gazing upon
-the portrait of the beautiful Countess Calabrella, what had been her
-character, and her destiny in life? you seemed to admire, and love
-to look upon, that picture; when living, no man ever looked upon
-her without loving her; the manuscript enclosed within the casket
-is a diary of her own life, which she, confiding in my discretion,
-promised, and sent to me, previous to her final departure from Rome.</p>
-
-<p>“The perusal of these sad recollections of her childhood, I feel confident,
-will interest you; they will, at least, exemplify the virtuous
-struggles of a noble soul, and that determined will, and perseverance
-in the paths of rectitude and morality, which sooner or later rises triumphantly
-over the transient contingencies of fortune.</p>
-
-<p>“Farewell my friend, farewell; a mist seems gathering around my
-eyes. Oh, it is nothing, I—”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>This unfinished letter was scarcely legible from blots and blurs; my
-poor friend had evidently indited it but a little while before his death,
-when his mind, as well as his body, enfeebled by illness, was becoming
-confused. He could not have bequeathed me a “memento” more acceptable
-to myself than this autobiography.</p>
-
-<p>I opened the papers, which were written in a bold free hand;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_32"></a>[32]</span>
-snuffed the candle, and began to read; as I did so, a small alabaster
-time-piece upon my mantle struck nine.</p>
-
-<p class="center">THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY.</p>
-
-<p>“While sitting to you for my portrait, you have often paid me
-compliments upon my beauty. I will not say that the language of compliment
-is unknown to me; yet, could you have seen me fourteen years
-ago, a ragged, houseless, wandering orphan child, you would never
-be able to recognize in my present self the same creature. My earliest
-recollections do not extend beyond the age of six years; but I still
-retain an indefinite remembrance of a tall, slender woman, who used
-to walk the floor with me, and hush me to sleep in her arms; it seemed
-to be in the country, for I remember hearing the mournful sighing of
-the winds, as they whistled through the trees, and of being frightened
-at the sound; these may be, however, merely the fancies or dreams
-of childhood.</p>
-
-<p>“My first distinct remembrance, is of being a ragged, dirty child,—the
-protegé, or rather the slave of an old hag, the inhabitant of a
-wretched hovel; when not subjected to her abuse and savage tyranny,
-I was generally the companion of any little vagabonds I chanced to
-meet playing in the streets. What right that old woman had to my
-person, or how she ever obtained possession of me, I never knew;
-chance or fate, whichever it is that rules the actions of mankind, removed
-me so soon from her pernicious influence, and depraved example,
-that I never learned how our destinies came to be united. She sometimes
-sent me out alone at night, to the most public squares in the city
-of Vienna, and commanded me not to return without a certain number
-of <i>sous</i>, under penalty of being whipped with rods, till the blood ran
-down my back; frequently she beat me from sheer malice, merely to
-exercise her ill humor. In winter, my bed was a heap of dirty straw, in
-the loft of this miserable hut, where I lay and shivered with cold,
-while my Hecate-like protector, crouched in the chimney corner of
-the only room the house contained, dozed, and muttered over the
-embers of her fire. During summer I played about the streets, or
-grown bold from habit, boldly asked pennys from the passers-by,
-while the old woman performed her daily routine of thieving or begging
-in different parts of the town.</p>
-
-<p>“Thus passed two years, in this depraved and wretched way; I
-was then eight years old, and reason began to shed some glimmering
-rays of light upon my benighted mind. I saw that hundreds of other<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_33"></a>[33]</span>
-children did not live as I did: some were beautifully dressed, their hair
-combed smoothly, their faces and hands clean, while mine were as
-dirty as the rags I wore. All this was a perfect mystery to me; I could
-in no way explain it to myself, that other children, no prettier than
-myself, should revel in luxury, while I was left a neglected beggar
-child; alas! knowledge of the ways of the world has since then taught
-me the reason why. I always experienced a sorrowful regret, when I
-saw other children gayly dressed, smiling and happy. I did not envy
-<i>them</i>, but I wished to be so situated myself. The old woman, whom I
-called Granny, sometimes imposed upon the credulity of the vulgar, by
-telling fortunes; her wild eyes, of a greenish color, and straggling
-gray hair, accompanied by strange mysterious gestures, would not
-have disgraced the queen of the witches herself; and I presume she
-would have taught me the same nefarious trade, had not an unexpected
-event changed the whole course of my life.</p>
-
-<p>“It was on a cold, dark evening in December; the air was keen and
-raw, and flakes of snow came driving along on the wind, when, after
-having treated me with unusual severity during the day, the old woman
-dismissed me to one of the principal squares, and forbade me to return
-until I had obtained ten <i>sous</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“I took a little paper lantern, lighted by a bit of tallow candle, to
-guide my steps through the dark and lonely streets, and went to the
-square. I had been there sometime, and had collected but five <i>sous</i>,
-from the unwilling charity of the passers-by; some of them, when I
-timidly asked them for a <i>sou</i>, looked at me harshly, and passed on,
-making me no reply; others gave it me in a contemptuous manner;
-and one woman, as she swept past me, her long robe trailing the
-pavement, remarked how absurd it was for the police to allow pauper
-children to annoy people by their importunity. I felt so degraded and
-unhappy, that unconsciously the bitter tears ran down my cheeks, and
-leaning my head upon my arm, which rested on one of the iron seats
-of the piazza, I wept bitterly; I longed to go home, but I dreaded the
-severe punishment which I knew awaited me, if I did not return with
-ten <i>sous</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“I heard heavy steps coming up the gravel walk, and rose upon
-my feet; it was a tall, stout man, enveloped in a large cloak; I could
-not see his face; my little lantern was extinguished, and the moon had
-hidden herself beneath the snowy clouds. I extended one of my cold
-little hands, and falteringly asked him for a <i>sou</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I haven’t a single <i>sou</i> about me, my little one,’ he replied, in a
-rough, kind voice, ‘nothing but a bank note.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_34"></a>[34]</span></p>
-
-<p>“He was about passing on, when trembling and animated by a sort
-of desperation, I seized his cloak with both hands, and was beginning
-to entreat him once more, when tears choked my utterance, and I
-sobbed piteously; the man seemed touched by my grief, he stopped,
-and raising me off the ground, exclaimed jocosely,</p>
-
-<p>“‘What, all this weeping about one <i>sou</i>, come with me across the
-piazza, and I’ll get a bill changed and give you a hundred, if that will
-dry your tears, poor little one;’ and then, inquiring, ‘In what part of
-the town do you live, and who is it that sends you out such cold,
-stormy nights as this, to beg; have you a father or mother?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘No sir.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Who takes care of you?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘An old woman.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Is she kind to you?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘No; she sends me out to beg, and beats and abuses me, if I don’t
-bring her as many <i>sous</i> as she bids me bring.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Why don’t you run away?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I can’t: there’s nobody to take care of me if I did.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Come with me, and let me see how you look.’ He took my
-hand, cast his ample cloak around my shivering shoulders, and I
-walked by his side to a small fancy shop, the other side of the square.
-He began singing an air as he walked along; it sounded perfectly
-celestial to my ears.</p>
-
-<p>“A pretty girl stood behind the counter, serving customers; she
-looked like an angel to me then; and I thought that poor little shop
-must certainly contain every beautiful thing on the face of the earth.
-After getting a bank note changed, my new friend pushed back my
-matted hair from my face, and attentively surveyed me from head to
-foot. I now saw <i>his</i> face; he was a tall, well made man, and his
-countenance bore a good-humored expression; the result of his investigations
-seemed satisfactory; for, turning to the shop girl, he said to her:</p>
-
-<p>“‘Mademoiselle Marie, can you oblige me by having this child’s
-face and hands washed clean?’ and pointing to a child’s dress of blue
-merino, hanging on the wall; ‘fit her, if you please, with a robe of
-that description, with suitable clothing, and I will pay whatever you
-may charge.’ The young girl looked astonished at this; but her
-amazement in no way equalled mine. To be presented with, what
-appeared to me, a princely gift, from an utter stranger, seemed too
-beautiful to be true. I imagined he must be my guardian angel, who
-had assumed humanity to watch over me; I was too young to perceive
-that the man had any <i>motive</i> in doing this benevolent action.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_35"></a>[35]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I followed the girl, whom he called Mademoiselle Marie, to a
-small, neat chamber up stairs; where by dint of perseverance, and
-some strength, she succeeded in restoring my face, neck and hands,
-to their original color; she then took a comb and smoothed my tangled
-locks, put clean shoes and stockings on my feet, clean under-clothing,
-and lastly, the pretty dress. I walked across the room to a large
-mirror, and struck with astonishment, contemplated my metamorphosis.
-I beheld a tall, slender child, with an oval face, whose large blue eyes
-and auburn hair, gave a pensive expression to the countenance; my
-complexion would have been a delicate white, had it not been turned
-by constant exposure to the sun. Was it possible that this interesting
-child was myself? I concluded it must be an agreeable dream.</p>
-
-<p>“Mademoiselle led me down stairs again, to my new protector.
-‘She looks much better now, sir; don’t you think so, now she’s
-dressed nice and clean?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Wonderful,’ cried my new friend, ‘I should scarcely know her.
-Now, my child, I’ll tell you why I give you this pretty dress; I want
-you to leave the old woman who has you now, and come with me and
-learn to be an actress; would you not like to be a great actress, rather
-than beg in the streets?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I don’t like to ask money of people; I don’t like that way of
-living at all; but I don’t know what you mean by an actress; what do
-they do?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Poor child,’ ejaculated Mademoiselle, ‘how dreadfully ignorant.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Oh, it is the most charming life in the world; perfectly delightful;
-you may yet become a great actress, and a happy woman.’</p>
-
-<p>“I could neither appreciate, not understand what greatness was;
-but I felt a vague comprehension of the word happy, for I had never
-been anything but unhappy. After paying for my new clothes, my
-protector asked me to show him the house where I lived. I dreaded
-to return to the old woman, lest she should deprive me of my new
-clothes, and replace them with rags; I, therefore, earnestly begged him
-not to take me back to her; told him she would beat and abuse me,
-and take away my clothes; he laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Do you suppose,’ he answered, ‘that I care for an old hob-goblin
-witch. I am merely going to see how much she will sell you for, and
-relinquish all future right to your person; were I to take you without
-doing so, she might trouble me hereafter.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Oh, I don’t want to be sold for a slave,’ I cried; struck with a
-sudden fear; that perhaps he intended to make some kind of merchandise
-of me.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_36"></a>[36]</span></p>
-
-<p>“‘A slave, my child; I have no intention of making a slave of you,
-or any one else I know of, at present. You don’t understand, my
-little one; therefore show me the way, and be silent.’</p>
-
-<p>“I led him to the old woman’s house; she did not recognise me at
-first, as I entered, followed by the man, and placed her withered hand
-over her eyes, to shade the sudden light, and distinguish who I was;
-for my companion carried a large lantern in his hand, which he raised
-high above my head, as he came in behind me.</p>
-
-<p>“‘It’s you, is it, you little devil; where have you been so long?
-where did you get those new clothes; you stole them, didn’t you? I
-know you did; oh, I’ll beat you, I’ll beat you.’</p>
-
-<p>“She started, when she perceived my protector, who quietly closed
-the door, and came toward her.</p>
-
-<p>“‘What do you want here, fellow?’ she sharply demanded; ‘what
-are you doing alone at night with my girl? I sent her out to beg, and
-you bring her back to me with fine clothes on; she shan’t keep them;
-I’ll strip her of every piece; she shall be a beggar, a hag like I am.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Look here, my good woman,’ said the man, in a low quiet tone;
-‘look me straight in the face, and let us talk quietly.’ She obeyed;
-and taking her pipe from her mouth, fixed her gaggle green eyes on
-his. His cool determined manner seemed to exercise a novel influence
-upon her unsettled mind.</p>
-
-<p>“‘This poor girl can be of little use to you; I should think, on the
-contrary, she would be in your way?”</p>
-
-<p>“‘Oh, yes, she’s a deal of trouble to me; so bad, I can’t—’ She
-left the sentence unfinished, and began smoking her pipe again, as she
-bent over the fire.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I’ve taken a fancy to the child,’ he continued, ‘and came back
-with her to-night, to offer you whatever sum you should ask, if you
-would give her to me; I wish to bring her up, and educate her to the
-stage.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘It’s satan’s own home; no, I’ll never consent that she shall be
-made an actress. I mean to bring her up as I was brought up, to be
-a wandering gipsy girl.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘She is not your child, that is quite certain?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘No, she is not mine.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘How did you obtain her? did you steal her?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I shall not tell you.’</p>
-
-<p>“He took a purse of gold from his pocket, and shook it between his
-hands; the old woman eyed it eagerly; ‘come my good woman, you
-had better consent to let me have the child; you may one day have<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_37"></a>[37]</span>
-the satisfaction of seeing her a distinguished woman, and of knowing
-that it is the same being you once took care of.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Great satisfaction will it be to me, when I shall be rotting in a
-pauper’s grave; and great gratitude will she owe me for the kicks
-and cuffs I’ve given her.’ The old woman laughed, a sneering,
-devilish laugh. ‘No,’ she continued in a low muttering tone, as if to
-herself; ‘my sand is nearly run, almost gone; I see it in the embers; I
-feel it in my bones. What difference does it make when you’re dead,
-whether you’re buried in the ground, or burnt up? I’d as soon have a
-hole in the ground, as a fine tomb.’</p>
-
-<p>“During this dialogue I had remained silent, in a distant corner of
-the room. The fitful gleams from the decaying fire, and the muffled
-light of the lantern, partially illumined this witch-like apartment, and
-cast fantastic shadows along the wall; in one corner was thrown a
-straw bed, upon which the old woman slept; a table, two or three
-ricketty chairs and a few pieces of broken crockery, constituted its sole
-furniture; a ladder, placed against the wall, led to my sleeping place,
-to which I nightly ascended through a hole in the ceiling. At length,
-arousing herself from her reverie, she said,</p>
-
-<p>“‘You may have the girl for ten louis; if you’ll give me that, you
-may have her.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Will you sign a paper I shall draw up; promising never to seek
-to see her, or speak to her after she leaves you, as I wish to change her
-turn of mind, and teach her better things.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Oh, yes; the girl hates me, and what should we want to see each
-other for. As for me, I hate the whole world; yes, I hate it, I have had
-my revenge; I have robbed, I have stole, and begged; and steal and
-beg I always will, until I’m put in the ground. The world owes me a
-living for the troubles I’ve had. No, I shall never want to see her
-again, if she leaves me.’</p>
-
-<p>“In the meantime, my new friend took a piece of paper from his
-pocket, and wrote something upon it in pencil mark. I did not even
-know my alphabet then; it is therefore impossible for me to say what
-were the contents of that paper. I presume it was merely a legal
-technicality, transferring all her rights over to himself. When he had
-finished, he handed it to her to sign.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I can’t write,’ said she, ‘but I’ll make my mark.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Well, make a cross, that will do.’ She obeyed, and scrawled
-two lines across each other; he took the paper from her hand, and put
-it in his pocket-book; then counted ten louis from his purse, and
-placed them in her withered claws. She carefully counted them over<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_38"></a>[38]</span>
-after him, and being satisfied that the number was correct, deposited
-the money in a piece of rag, torn off one of her garments, tied a string
-around it, and laid it in her bosom.</p>
-
-<p>“The man rose, and gathered his cloak around him.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Come my child, my business with her is done; let us depart.’</p>
-
-<p>“Strange anomaly in human nature; I, who one hour previous had
-desired nothing so earnestly as to leave this wretched hag, now, on
-being offered an opportunity of leaving, even for a new bright home,
-felt an undefined sentiment of regret at doing so; perhaps it was the
-result of old associations and habits, which we all of us, more or less,
-find difficult to shake off.</p>
-
-<p>“I timidly advanced toward her, to say farewell, for I had ever
-stood in awe of her violence, and savage nature; but she sullenly
-turned her back upon both him and me, and began chanting, with her
-eyes fixed on vacancy.</p>
-
-<p>“‘You need not take the trouble of saying good bye, child,’ remarked
-my self-appointed guardian, as he pushed open the latchless
-door—‘she wouldn’t care a farthing if you were to die to-night. Come,
-little one, are you ready?’ I took one hand; he grasped the lantern
-with the other; she did not turn her face toward me as I went out.
-When my feet left the threshold of that hut, I bade adieu to beggary
-forever, and entered upon a new career in life.</p>
-
-<p>“I felt shy, and almost afraid, as I walked quickly along to keep
-pace with him; for now that all ties were forever severed between old
-Granny (as I was wont to call her) and myself, I looked upon him as
-my saviour and protector; he traversed many streets, turning now to
-the right, now to the left, in parts of the city where I had never been
-before; I wished he had taken me back to the little shop and
-Mademoiselle Marie, but we went nowhere in the direction of the
-piazza. At length, he stopped before some building, and knocked at
-the door; I could not judge of the size of the house, or its appearance,
-the night was too dark; the door was opened by a male servant,
-holding a heavy silver candlestick, with a wax candle in it, in his
-hand; my protector said something to him, in a language I did not
-understand, and the man shut the door after him, and removed his
-cloak from his shoulders. I now saw, by the light of a large globe
-lamp suspended from the ceiling, that we stood in a spacious hall, or
-vestibule, off which opened on either side beautifully carved, mahogany
-doors; from the farther end ascended a lofty stair-case. My new friend
-opened one of these doors, and I followed him into an elegant apartment,
-where a bright coal fire burned cheerfully in the grate; the walls<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_39"></a>[39]</span>
-were hung with costly paintings and mirrors; numerous instruments
-of music lay scattered round. Such a place I had never seen, scarcely
-even dreamed of; surely this must be fairy land.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Now child,’ said my friend, as he rolled a costly arm-chair before
-the fire, and seated himself in it, ‘you must be hungry; have you had
-anything to eat to-day?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Only a crust of bread this morning, sir.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Well, you shall have some supper, and then go to bed, and to-morrow
-we will talk of your future prospects.’</p>
-
-<p>“I had no idea of what ‘future prospects’ meant; but the idea of
-getting something to eat delighted me; he rang a bell, and when the
-same domestic answered the summons, who had opened the door for
-us, he again spoke to him in the same unknown tongue. It was not
-German, or rather a degenerate dialect I had always been accustomed
-to hear; it was a softer, a more liquid language; he told me, in German,
-to go with the man, whom he called Jean, and he would give
-me my supper, and if I wanted anything to address him in German,
-and he would understand me.</p>
-
-<p>“I followed Jean across the hall to an immense room, opposite the
-drawing-room, extending the whole length of the house, beautifully
-carpeted with Brussels; while up and down the apartment, on either
-side, were placed stationary seats of scarlet velvet, fixed to the wall;
-a magnificent chandelier hung from the ceiling; eight large windows
-on each side, set with mirror plate, reflected and multiplied every
-object in this handsome and commodious saloon.</p>
-
-<p>“In a distant corner stood a small table, set with supper for two
-persons, all sorts of cakes, preserves, dried fruit, and bread; on a side
-table sat two silver urns, one containing coffee, the other tea; a warm,
-delightful heat seemed to pervade the room; but I saw no fire, and
-could not imagine whence it came; the atmosphere of peace and repose,
-which seemed to reign within this house, so different to the
-scenes of strife and destitution, to which I had alone been accustomed,
-shed a soothing influence upon my mind. In the course of the last
-three hours, I had thought more than I ever had during my whole
-dark, blank existence.</p>
-
-<p>“Jean waited on me, while I ate ravenously. A comfortable meal
-was something I had never enjoyed before; it is not, therefore, astonishing
-that I was attentive to its merits; my usual repast had generally
-been a few crusts of dry bread, sometimes the old woman gave me a
-bit of tough meat, frequently tainted; this constituted my ordinary fare;
-yet, I was then healthy and cheerful, notwithstanding my disconsolate<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_40"></a>[40]</span>
-condition. I did not know for what purpose this man had taken me
-from the street, this dark, tempestuous night, and placed me in so
-splendid a home; had I been older, and wiser, I should naturally have
-suspected that he had <i>some</i> motive or object in this strange act of
-benevolence; as it was, I enjoyed, with a keen sense of pleasure, the
-fine supper, and many glittering objects I saw around me, without
-thinking, knowing, or caring, what became of me hereafter. When I
-had finished supper, Jean reconducted me to my protector, who still
-sat by the fire reading a newspaper; he asked me if I had had supper
-enough; and upon my answering in the affirmative, and gratefully
-thanking him for his kindness, he took me up stairs to a little room in
-the second story, where he gave me in charge to a neat-looking woman,
-dressed in black, with a white, frilled cap upon her head; after telling
-her to attend me, and put me to bed, he returned to the drawing-room.
-It was now past ten o’clock; and, fatigued by the exciting events of
-the evening, I began to feel stupid and sleepy; the waiting maid undressed
-me, and after seeing me comfortably wrapped up in bed, left
-the room, and I fell speedily in a profound slumber.</p>
-
-<p>“The waiting maid, whose name I learned to be Marguerite, came
-early to dress me; and I found my friend already at his breakfast, in
-a small breakfast room back of the drawing-room; he drew a chair to
-the table, told me to help myself, and went on eating and singing at
-the same time; I needed no second invitation, and complied. When
-he had completed his breakfast, he leaned back in his chair, and producing
-a large handkerchief, vigorously rubbed his face; then turning
-to me, who sat quietly beside him, drinking my coffee, he asked:</p>
-
-<p>“‘Did you sleep well last night, child?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Yes sir, very comfortably indeed.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘It is awkward speaking to you, without calling you by name; by
-what name did that old woman call you?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I don’t know that I ever had a name. Granny used to call me
-Nancy.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Nancy, that sounds harsh, I don’t like it;’ he seemed to think a
-minute, and then said,</p>
-
-<p>“‘Genevra is a pretty name: I will call you that, since you are unprovided
-with one; hereafter, remember to answer to the name of
-Genevra.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Yes sir, I will.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Now come here, and sit upon my knee; I want to tell you what
-I intend doing for you.’ I obeyed, and he placed me on his knee.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Now, Genevra, I call you by your right name; you remember<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_41"></a>[41]</span>
-hearing me say last night to that old woman, that I intended educating
-you for the stage, if I took you from her; you are too young yet to
-know what that means, but you will learn in time. I have already
-adopted two little girls, situated much as you were, and mean to educate
-them also as actresses. I hope time will show that you possess a
-tractable disposition, and sweet temper, without which no accomplishments
-can be of advantage to you. You are to be placed at
-the same school with these girls, who will, doubtless, be friends and
-companions to you in your studies; in the course of five or six years,
-if you live, you will be prepared, by dint of hard study and application,
-to make your <i>debut</i>.’</p>
-
-<p>“One half of these remarks I had not understood; I only comprehended,
-that I was required to perform something very difficult to be
-done; I presumed a sort of punishment, which was to prepare me for
-some future eclat; but after having experienced so much of destitution,
-slight privations seemed light as air, and I joyfully welcomed the idea
-of, as I thought, going to work.</p>
-
-<p>“He told me to run up stairs, and ask Marguerite to find me some
-sort of hood, or bonnet, to wear out in the street. After an active
-search, she at length discovered a gingham hood, which I hastily tied
-on, and ran back to my protector; he took my hand, and we passed
-out into the street; it was a fine clear day, I remember; the sun shone
-bright, although the air was somewhat cold; how different I felt in
-spirit, as I gayly trotted along by his side; I did not feel the same
-acute sense of degradation I had always felt with that depraved old
-hag; the happy buoyant sense of being, which is the principal
-of happiness in youth, was gradually springing up again in my heart,
-which had been, as it were, stunted and depressed, by a malevolent
-genius.</p>
-
-<p>“At a short distance from his own house, he stopped before a gloomy
-looking dwelling, chequered alternately on the front, with red and
-black brick; he knocked at a large gate, which seemed to form the
-only mode of entrance to this convent-like abode; it was slowly unbarred
-and opened by a stout german woman, dressed in the usual
-style of the peasantry; my friend passed her without remark, and we
-ascended a heavy stone stair-case, which wound upward from the
-court-yard; at the first landing place he led me into a large parlor,
-furnished plainly, but tastefully; the floor was uncarpeted, but waxed
-and rubbed till it shone, and reflected every object like a mirror; a
-piano stood in one corner, and all the chairs were covered with cushions,
-elegantly embroidered in German worsted; two sofas were also ornamented<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_42"></a>[42]</span>
-with the same beautiful work; there was no fire in the grate,
-however, and the room had a cold, comfortless air about it; one
-mirror, inserted between the windows, and opposite the door, as we
-entered, afforded me a full length view of myself, and I started with
-astonishment at seeing the pretty form reflected there; very different
-did it look from the ragged, dirty child, I was accustomed to see reflected
-in the shop windows as I passed.</p>
-
-<p>“We had been seated scarcely a moment, when the door opened,
-and a small thin woman, with a sharp, bright expression of face, wearing
-a calico dress, and wrapped in a red shawl, came tripping in; they
-spoke together for some time, in the same unintelligible language I had
-heard the night before; at length, turning to me, the lady said in German,
-‘So my dear, you are to be a pupil of mine, I hear; I trust I
-shall find you obedient and diligent.’ They resumed their conversation,
-while I sat quietly by the side of my new-found guardian; holding
-his hand in mine, for I felt sad, at thus being obliged so soon to part
-from him. I heard the sound of mirthful laughter, and noisy whispering,
-which seemed to be in the vicinity of the parlor, and looking
-down the stone-paved gallery, I saw at its farthest extremity a door
-open, and within the room many young girls seated at desks, studying.
-The house, in its architecture, resembled more one of those old gothic
-cathedrals, I have since seen in my travels, than anything else I can
-compare it to; it was lofty, antique, and gloomy, one almost felt like
-the ghosts themselves, as one walked through its stone galleries, and
-heard one’s steps resound with a hollow echo.</p>
-
-<p>“When my guardian and the lady had finished their conference,
-which lasted more than half an hour, he took his hat, preparatory to
-departure. At the idea of losing this kind man, and being left in a
-strange house, to form acquaintances with people whom I neither
-knew, nor cared for, I burst into tears; the lady endeavored to console
-me, patting me on the head, telling me I should be her little
-favorite, and she was sure I would be contented and happy. Monsieur
-Belmont (I heard her call him so) shook me repeatedly by the hand,
-saying he should see me regularly twice a week; that I must obey
-Madame Deville in all things, and study hard, that I might become an
-accomplished girl.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I have no doubt she will be both happy and satisfied, when she
-becomes a little accustomed to the pupils and myself,’ observed
-Madame to Monsieur Belmont, as she stood beside me, pressing my
-hand in hers.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I hope so,’ was his reply, ‘it will be at least three months, I presume,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_43"></a>[43]</span>
-before I can begin to give her instruction in music, she is so
-totally uninformed.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Oh yes,’ cried she, with the sharp, quick intonation of a French
-woman: ‘it will require at least that length of time to instruct her in
-the rudiments; I shall try and do my best, Monsieur, I assure you,
-with your protegé; before you go, would you not like to have Inez
-and Blanche called from the school-room, that they may be introduced
-to their future companion?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Yes,’ answered Monsieur, ‘if it is convenient, I should like to see
-them.’</p>
-
-<p>“Madame rang a small bell, which stood on a table beside her; a
-moment after, a tall mulatto made his appearance. I had never seen
-any of the negro race before, and was much astonished at, what I considered,
-the odd color of his skin; he received her message, delivered
-to him in French, and directed his steps toward the room at the end
-of the gallery, from which he returned in a few minutes, leading by
-the hand two young girls, both older than I; the one a brunette, the
-other a blonde; their manner was lady-like, gentle, and winning.
-Inez’s hair was raven black, her eyes large, voluptuous, and star-like
-in their expression; Blanche, on the contrary, was timid as a fawn,
-in her look and ways: there was a dreamy languor in her sad blue
-eyes, which seemed to tell of love’s present or future reveries—a love,
-however, of a more spiritual kind than Inez would ever be capable
-of feeling; a profusion of pale flaxen hair shaded her sweet face, and
-hung nearly to her waist in long curls; they were both dressed alike,
-in frocks of cheap calico; they bowed respectfully to their teacher on
-entering her parlor, and upon Monsieur Belmont’s presenting me to
-them as one who was to become a companion in their studies, they politely
-kissed me on each cheek, and bade me welcome to their school.
-I could not realize, while contemplating the refinement of these two
-girls, that they had been taken, a few short years before, from the same
-position in life, from which this philanthropic man had rescued me
-but one day previous; truly, it is education, and the society in which
-we mingle, which impress in youth that bias of mind for right or
-wrong, which only leaves us when life does.</p>
-
-<p>“‘You three will occupy the same room,’ said Madame. ‘I hope
-you will be good friends. Inez and Blanche soon cultivated a friendship
-for each other after they came.’</p>
-
-<p>“The tears still flowed from my eyes; my heart in after days, became
-too hard and dry to allow me to weep often; but then the fount
-of feeling was a fresh, pure spring, uncontaminated by the mud and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_44"></a>[44]</span>
-refuse of inferior streams. I often look back, through the heavy mist
-time has left lowering upon those early days, and regret the loss of
-those fallacious hopes; those splendid castles built in air, which
-always crumbled into dust whenever I attempted to approach them.</p>
-
-<p>“Monsieur Belmont, after speaking to Inez and Blanche a moment, in
-French, shook hands with me, bade me not cry, and departed. Madame
-Deville reassuming the school-mistress deportment, and her gravity,
-which had been laid aside to entertain a visitor, led me to the schoolroom,
-and the two girls returned to their desks, their silence, and their
-studies. It was a very large room, lighted by two enormous windows,
-one at each end; the walls hung, not with superb paintings like Monsieur
-Belmont’s elegant house, but with charts and maps; rows of
-desks were ranged each side of the apartment, and more than a hundred
-girls, of all sizes, shapes, and ages, were seated at them, busily
-engaged in coning over their lessons for recitation. Upon my entrance,
-being a new scholar, all eyes were bent on me, and a subdued
-whispering ran through all the ranks of girls. Madame put me at a
-desk between Inez and Blanche, and then taking her seat upon an
-elevated dias at the head of the room. She struck her desk with a
-ruler, and called one of the classes; the girls, who were called loudly,
-all rose, shut their books, and placed themselves before her in a row.
-This class was composed of large girls, neatly dressed, some of them
-were passably pretty; no two in the room, however, could be compared
-to Inez and Blanche. They all stared at me as they passed; it was a
-lesson in ancient history they were to recite. Madame taking one of
-the books in her hand, asked the questions in a loud, clear tone; and
-the pupils replied, some well, some wrong, according as they had
-learned their lessons; the recitation ended, Madame marked those
-who had missed upon a large day-book, which always lay open upon
-her desk before her. Several smaller classes were heard, and Inez
-and Blanche left my side for a while, to recite their lessons; then I
-heard the sound of a deep-toned bell, rung for several minutes: it was
-now recess for an hour; all the girls clamorously rushed from the
-school-room, seized their sun-bonnets, and poured themselves into the
-court-yard. It was a gloomy spot for a play-ground; there were no
-trees, no flowers, which we are ever wont to associate in mind with children’s
-gambols. Nothing but the square flag-stones, flanked on all four
-sides, by the brick walls of the house, met my view. Inez and
-Blanche put up their books, and turning to me, Blanche said, ‘Come,
-Genevra, come with us to the yard, and play hide and seek.’ Inez
-also pressed me to go and play with them, for I felt shy and strange,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_45"></a>[45]</span>
-and would have preferred remaining where I was. Blanche evidently
-was a favorite with Madame, for as she went out of the school-room,
-to rest herself a few minutes in her parlor, before the pupils returned
-to their studies, she kissed me, saying I must laugh and play, and
-enjoy myself with the other children; and then said to Blanche,
-‘Well, my dear, how is that fine soprano voice of yours, have you
-practiced well this morning?’ Blanche smilingly replied she had;
-there was a sweetness about that smile of hers, and an expression of
-guileless innocence in her lovely eyes, I could never forget.</p>
-
-<p>“How little did we three inexperienced girls imagine what the
-future had in store for us. Could a magician, at that period of time,
-have shown us in a magic mirror, our several destinies in life, would
-we have believed, that the fatal sisters had allotted to us so chequered
-and sad a career? I am certain <i>I</i> would not. How grateful should
-we be to Divine Providence, that all insight into futurity is forbidden
-us; how unable would we be to contend with the many trials and
-difficulties, which constantly assail us in the rough pathway of life;
-could we foresee the sacrifices which are so frequently demanded of us
-as we journey on.</p>
-
-<p>“Inez, Blanche, and myself, descended hand-in-hand to the court-yard;
-the girls were all joyously at play. I always was a grave
-child; I cared but little for the sports and amusements children so
-dearly covet, but on this occasion I forgot my usual sadness and joined
-them in an animated race, which lasted several minutes, when the bell
-again was rung; and the girls arranging their disordered dresses, and
-composing their faces, returned to the school-room in pairs, as they
-had left it.</p>
-
-<p>“Order was restored, and the rest of the afternoon spent in recitation
-and writing; I saw several teachers, whom I had not seen during the
-morning, having been absent in different parts of the house, giving
-lessons in music and dancing. They were all thin, and had a starved
-and hungry look, excepting Miss Jones, a fat, good-humored English
-teacher. I became quite fond of her during my long residence at the
-school. I learned from Blanche, that Monsieur Belmont, was a
-Frenchman, from Paris, manager of the Royal Italian Opera, and considered
-the most splendid singer in Vienna; he also gave lessons in
-vocal music to some of the pupils at the school, among whom were
-Inez and Blanche; the girl dwelt with touching sadness upon the
-humble condition, from which this kind man had taken both Inez and
-herself, what advantages of education had been afforded them, and
-how grateful they felt towards him.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_46"></a>[46]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV.</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>“Blanche had just finished her little story, related with an air of childish
-simplicity, which gave infinite interest, when the loud sound of a
-gun reverberated through the house. I had never heard one then, and
-imagined it was thunder. Twilight’s dusky hue had stolen into the room,
-before we were aware of its approach. Madame Deville commissioned
-my future instructor, Madame Schiller, to attend to me, and, following
-her, we went to the refectory; it was a long, low ceiled, narrow room;
-two long tables extended almost as far as my eye could reach, covered
-with snow-white table linen, and scanty portions of bread and butter;
-a glass of water stood by each plate; weak tea was handed to the
-teachers, who stood together in a group, apart from the girls, and
-chatted of their own affairs. I could not help mentally comparing this
-meagre fare, with the delicacies I had eaten the night before at Monsieur
-Belmont’s. It may seem surprising, that a beggar girl should
-regret a style of living, of which she had only caught a passing glance;
-but luxury is infinitely more attractive than want; we sooner become
-accustomed to it, and lament its loss when deprived of it. Very few
-would conscientiously prefer, had they their choice, a life of rigorous
-self-sacrifice, to one of wealth and splendor. It is generally a matter
-of compulsion and self-love induces us to advocate that which we
-cannot change.</p>
-
-<p>“An unbroken silence was preserved during the meal; nearly two
-hundred girls were gathered around the tables; they ate their slices
-of bread and butter quietly, and scarce a sound was heard in the room,
-save the whispered conversation of the teachers. At its conclusion,
-Madame Deville said grace, and we all proceeded up stairs, through
-a long gallery, paved with stone, as were all the vestibules in the house,
-to the study room; this was a large apartment, near the dormitories,
-fitted up in much the same style as the saloon at Monsieur Belmont’s;
-the monthly exhibitions of the pupils, Inez told me, were held here.
-Every evening, for two hours, the girls studied their lessons for the
-following day; the two hours seemed an eternity to me, while the
-scholars industriously applied themselves to their books. Madame sat
-at the head of the room in a sort of pulpit, and with her finger pressed
-to her lips, might have passed for the goddess of Wisdom herself.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_47"></a>[47]</span>
-The expression of her features, when in repose, was somewhat stern,
-still there was a kindness blended with it, which showed she possessed
-a benevolent heart. I still think of her with love and respect, although
-the remembrance of those days is faint and dim. Another bell rang;
-the movements of the whole household seemed to be regulated by
-bells; bed-time had arrived; a certain number of girls were allotted
-to each dormitory, over whom presided one of the teachers. I was to
-become one of Madame Schiller’s little flock. A shrine, tastefully
-decorated, was placed at the head of each sleeping room, and the
-ceremony of the office was read every night before the girls retired to
-rest. Madame Schiller, with her hands clasped, knelt upon the floor,
-and we all gathered around her; the low and solemn voice with which
-she read the ‘office,’ made a deep impression on my mind. Inez and
-Blanche, with their heads bowed down, devoutly told their beads.
-The ceremony occupied perhaps half an hour, then the girls hastily
-undressed themselves, and hurried to bed; the beds were small, but
-the bedding neat and clean; they were arranged like the desks in the
-school-room, in two rows each side of the room; mine was next to
-that of Blanche. I heard Madame ask, ‘Are you all in bed, children?’
-Some one answered ‘yes;’ she extinguished the lamp, and silence and
-darkness reigned. I fell asleep and had a singular dream. I thought
-I saw myself grown to be a woman, a tall handsome woman. I stood
-upon the deck of a ship, driving furiously before the gale, upon a
-stormy sea; the dark clouds lowered above my head, the waves ran
-mountains high: a crowd of helpless frightened beings lay around me.
-I alone seemed the only one on board this doomed vessel who fearlessly
-met my fate. We were rushing fast on the rocks off the coast. I
-stood with my arms folded on the forecastle; onward dashed the ship,
-the masts shivered to splinters, and sails flying like ribbonds in the
-wind. As we passed a high black rock, which rose menacingly above
-our heads, I looked upward, and upon its summit, saw a man, who
-stood with arms folded like myself, calmly contemplating the unhappy
-bark. He looked like an angel stationed there, that after the pangs
-of death were past, he might convey to heaven our souls; instinctively
-I extended toward him my hands, and cried, ‘Save me, oh save me!’
-He also opened his arms to receive me, and answered, ‘Come.’ At
-this moment, the vessel struck the breakers; one wild unearthly yell
-I heard, and was engulphed amid the waves; I struggled violently, but
-in vain, to reach the shore; the water filled my mouth and my ears. I
-was suffocated, and lost my senses. I awoke, covered with a profuse
-perspiration, trembling with fear; it was not yet day, all was quiet in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_48"></a>[48]</span>
-the dormitory, every one asleep. I lay still for a few minutes, and
-gradually realized the conviction, that it was all a dream. I went to sleep
-again; this time I dreamed nothing, and was awoke by Blanche’s hand
-being laid on mine. Madame was calling the girls; she said it was
-time to rise. I rose, dressed myself, and washed my face and hands
-at Blanche’s ‘toilette,’ there being none yet provided for me. When
-all were dressed, prayers were said. Day had just began to dawn, it
-was not more than five o’clock, and very cold in the dormitory, sleeping
-without fire; I felt chilled and stupified by the raw atmosphere; we
-descended the stairs again, and traversed the long vestibules through
-which we had ascended the night before; the girls looked almost like
-shades from the tomb, as they flitted along, and their pattering steps
-reverberated as they passed.</p>
-
-<p>“They went to the music room, where every morning, from five till
-seven o’clock, the pupils in music practised in little cabinets, within
-each of which was placed a piano; a glass window inserted in the door
-of each room, enabled the teacher to observe whether they were attentive
-to their duty. Not being a music scholar, I left Inez and Blanche
-to pursue their practising, and went with Madame Schiller to the school-room;
-it was dreary and cold. I sat down at my desk, and wished I
-knew how to read, that I might entertain myself with a book. Several
-girls were in the room, busily occupied with their lessons; having
-nothing to do, I leaned my head on my desk and fell into a sort of doze;
-the time whiled slowly away: at last I was startled by the loud sound
-of the gong; I started up, sought out my two new friends among the
-crowd of girls in the gallery, and having found them, went into the
-refectory to breakfast; the table presented no novelty; the same slices
-of bread and butter, arranged as I had seen at supper; a cup of weak
-coffee placed at each plate, instead of the glass of water, constituted
-the only variation. I tasted mine, it was execrable; yet ‘to the
-hungry man every bitter thing is sweet,’ and being hungry myself, I
-ate my bread and butter, and drank my coffee, without paying much
-attention to the taste of either; breakfast over, we returned to the
-school-room, and I took my first lesson in my native tongue, by beginning
-the alphabet. Madame Schiller was my teacher; Madame Deville
-was also very attentive; she frequently said many kind, encouraging
-things to me. I have described the routine of one day, so it
-was every day, monotonous and regular as the ticking of a clock; at
-first I thought it inconceivably dull; but gradually becoming accustomed
-to the school, and being occupied and interested in my own
-mental culture, Time, which at first dragged wearily along, flew more<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_49"></a>[49]</span>
-rapidly away, and I became happy in my new home. I made several
-acquaintances among the pupils, and these childish friendships added
-to my love of the school.</p>
-
-<p>“Two days after my advent at Madame Deville’s, a trunk, containing
-several complete suits of clothing, was sent me, labelled ‘Genevra
-Sfonza,’ from Monsieur Belmont; Blanche read the superscription, for
-I could not; while I, delighted, contemplated the contents of this unexpected
-gift; how kind, I thought, to send me such pretty clothes;
-the dresses were of worsted, made high and plain, suitable to the cold
-season of the year, and my school occupations; how I longed to see
-my good benefactor, that I might thank him for all his care and attention
-to me.</p>
-
-<p>“The following day I saw him; he came to give Inez and Blanche
-their singing lesson; I was called to the music room; I found Monsieur
-Belmont there, talking to the two girls; they were the only tenants of
-the room; at seeing me, he extended his arms and smiled; I ran in to
-them, with the joyful glee of an infant re-united to its parent, for indeed,
-he seemed to me more like a protector and friend, whom I had
-known for years, than the self-constituted patron of a beggar-girl.
-He asked me if I was an attentive, obedient pupil; if Inez, Blanche,
-and myself were good friends, and if I were happy at the school. To
-all these questions I most sincerely answered ‘yes,’ for the few days I
-had passed there, had been the only happy ones of my whole life.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Don’t you wish you were far enough advanced in music, to be
-able to sing with your two friends?’ asked Monsieur, as Blanche took
-her seat at the piano, and arranged her music before her.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Indeed, I should like to sing very much; how long will it be
-before I can begin to learn?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘In the course of two or three months, if you are studious;’ and
-he turned his attention to Blanche as she commenced her song. It
-was a sweet melancholy air from one of the Operas; the words impassioned,
-and reproachful. The clear, harmonious voice of Blanche,
-rose gradually from a low, quiet tone, to a wild, bird-like burst of
-passion. She executed the most difficult passages, with apparently,
-the greatest ease; higher and higher, rose her tones; then slowly depressing
-them, they died imperceptibly away. The song had ceased,
-and I had fallen into a reverie, seated close to the piano, by Monsieur
-Belmont’s side; one might wonder what I could have found to muse
-about, at that juvenile period of life; but I always was a dreamy child,
-and still am a dreamy woman, with this difference alone; my dreams
-now, are sorrowful regrets over the past; then, they were the fanciful<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_50"></a>[50]</span>
-speculations of youth; my visions, then, transported me to some sort
-of fairy, etherial existence, my spirit seemed to leave my body and
-rove through infinite space; lovers, or passion, had no share in those
-dreams of mine. I have since then endeavored, but in vain, to recall
-those visions of fairyland; time, and the bustle of an active life, have
-obliterated them from my mind.</p>
-
-<p>“Monsieur praised her improvement, and bade her be diligent at her
-practising; then Inez came to sing her piece: her voice was a fine, rich
-contralto, deep and melodious in tone. She sang a bold naval song,
-with great spirit and effect. The next monthly exhibition was approaching,
-and all the music pupils were preparing their pieces for the
-occasion. Inez and Blanche were considered the two best musicians
-at the institution. Monsieur Belmont advanced them more rapidly, it
-was said, than he did the other pupils; probably he wished to perfect
-them more thoroughly for their future debut on the stage.</p>
-
-<p>“Each took a lesson on a new piece, then our teacher departed.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Don’t you ever get tired of singing and practising, Blanche?’ I
-asked, as she stood leaning thoughtfully against the piano, her eyes
-downcast, while Inez gazed from the window upon the dreary street
-below.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Sometimes, yes; yet we know it is our duty to obey Monsieur,
-and if he tells us to practise extra hours, we must do so.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘How long do you practise each day?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Four, often five hours.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Oh, that must be very dull!’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I am sure I think it is,’ exclaimed Inez, who was the most petulant
-of the two; ‘I often wish I were a woman, and an actress; I should
-at least be my own mistress, and obtaining money for myself; here I
-have been for the last three, and you for the last two years; the same
-old monotonous round of school duties to perform every day; no
-change, no home to go to in vacation, always here. I don’t believe I
-shall ever live to get away; when you have been here as long as we
-have, you will be tired of it too, Genevra!’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I don’t know; I hardly think I shall grow very tired; I like the
-school; I love you and Blanche, and I am glad and grateful to have
-some one to take care of me, and a home to stay in.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘In a few years,’ said Blanche, ‘we shall leave the school, and
-go out into the great world, to make our own way alone; then, perhaps,
-we may look back and wish we were at school again.’</p>
-
-<p>“At this moment one of the teachers made her appearance at the
-door, and called us to our studies. Time passed quietly and regularly<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_51"></a>[51]</span>
-on for two weeks; I learned my alphabet, and began to spell in
-words of two syllables; the girls became used to my appearance, and
-no longer stared and whispered when they saw me, as girls always do
-upon the advent of a new scholar at a school. Inez was fourteen,
-Blanche twelve, and I eight years old. In the course of a year or two,
-Monsieur Belmont intended withdrawing Inez from Madame Deville’s,
-to teach her the art of acting, preparatory to her entree into the gay
-world. That world, of which she, nor any of us, as yet knew anything,
-and from which, in after years, I so often turned away, disgusted
-with its heartlessness and insincerity, and wished myself buried amid
-the inaccessible solitudes of Mount Lebanon.</p>
-
-<p>“It wanted but a few days of the monthly ‘soiree;’ the servants
-were cleaning and arranging the saloon, where it was to be given.
-Inez, Blanche, and myself, had been running furious races together
-during the recess; I felt fatigued, from the violent exercise, and sat
-down where a strong current of air, from a door, blew full upon me for
-some minutes; when we returned to our desks in the school-room, my
-cheeks burnt like fire, and my head felt heavy; I could not take my
-usual interest in my lesson; for anxious to improve, I diligently applied
-myself; the letters seemed to turn red, blue, and yellow, and swam
-before my eyes; late in the afternoon, noticing my languor, as I sat
-leaning my head on Blanche’s shoulder, Madame Deville asked me, if
-I felt unwell; I answered, ‘no, I did not, but my head ached.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘You don’t look well, my dear; I am afraid you are going to be
-sick; you must go to the infirmary to-night, and be attended to. Wilhelmina,’
-addressing a tall, stout, flaxen-haired German girl, ‘take
-Genevra to the infirmary, and tell Miss Jones to attend to her, and put
-her name on the sick list, at least till to-morrow, when I will see how
-she is. Go my dear.’</p>
-
-<p>“The infirmary was a large, gloomy room, at the other end of the
-house, where the pupils were sent, to be nursed, when the least indisposed,
-if it was only a headache, or ordinary cold, and Madame happened
-to notice a heavy eye, or listless demeanor, among any of her
-flock, they were immediately dismissed to the sick room.</p>
-
-<p>“I did not want to go; it was only a slight cold I had taken from
-over exercise, but Madame’s word was law, and must be obeyed, and
-I, therefore, reluctantly followed my conductress to the infirmary.
-Wilhelmina repeated her message to Miss Jones, and then returned.
-Twilight was stealing over that vast city, not the unclouded twilight
-of a summer’s eve, but winter’s dusky clouds, mingled with the clear
-blue of the atmosphere.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_52"></a>[52]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Miss Jones, although English, spoke German well; she asked me
-if I felt sick, and what ailed me? I replied, ‘only a slight headache
-and vertigo; that I would have remained at my desk, but Madame,
-imagining I was ill, had told me to come to the infirmary.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Madame is right, of course, my child; for all you know, these
-may be the premonitory symptoms of a fever,’ and Miss Jones, with a
-learned air, felt my pulse. I could scarcely help smiling at the comical
-expression of assumed wisdom in the good-natured little woman’s
-face. ‘Your head is hot,’ placing her hand upon my head, ‘and your
-eyes look heavy; sit down quietly here; the doctor is coming soon, to
-prescribe for Miss Clarendon, and then I’ll ask him what I shall do for
-you?’</p>
-
-<p>“The little woman bustled about the room awhile, and then went
-out to order some gruel made for one of the sick girls. I sat still,
-where she had left me, in an arm-chair, near the window, and looked
-around the room. Some half dozen girls were its occupants, all sick,
-and with the exception of one, all in bed; my eyes dwelt more particularly
-upon her than any other, being the most beautiful and conspicuous
-one among the invalids, it was the young girl the teacher
-had called Miss Clarendon. I afterwards learned from one of the
-pupils, that she was the daughter of a widowed English nobleman,
-who had placed her at the institution to complete her education, while
-he pursued his travels alone in the East. She sat in a large fauteuil,
-nearly opposite me, on the other side of the room; her whole person,
-except her etherial looking face, enveloped in an enormous cashmere
-shawl. Her maid, a mulatto woman, stood by her, bathing her pale
-face with eau de Cologne; her large blue eyes, heavy and listless from
-ill health, and probably low spirits, were gazing on vacancy; a slight,
-bright tinge of pink illumined each cheek, and gave a brilliant expression
-of evanescent bloom to the countenance of this dying beauty.</p>
-
-<p>“For dying she evidently was, of that most insidious and deceptive
-of all diseases, consumption; far away from the home and associations
-of her childhood,—alone, in a land of strangers. I thought, while
-looking at her, that I had never seen any one half as lovely. Inez and
-Blanche were beautiful, but they were not to be compared to her;
-they did not possess that elegant bearing, that innate consciousness of
-superiority, which showed itself in the very looks of this girl. She
-looked so calm, so lady-like; at intervals she pressed one of her small,
-delicate hands to her mouth, as if to stifle the hacking cough, which
-seemed to convulse her frame. Her attendant offered her a lozenge;
-she took it mechanically, put it in her mouth, and still gazed on. I<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_53"></a>[53]</span>
-walked across the room and took a seat near her; she looked at me
-languidly, but made no remark.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Are you sick, Miss?’ I asked, curiously, for I wanted to hear
-her speak. ‘Are you one of Madame Deville’s pupils? I have not
-seen you before.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘You are a new pupil, I suppose, and I have been sick for many
-weeks,’ she replied, in intelligible German, but with a marked English
-accent; her voice was sweet, and intonation very clear, ‘Are you on
-the sick list?’ she asked.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Yes, Madame says so; she sent me here because I had a bad
-headache and vertigo, but I don’t like the room, it’s so still and
-gloomy.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I wish I had nothing but a headache, I should not complain
-of the gloomy room.’ Tears started in those soft blue eyes, and ran
-down her cheeks. ‘Oh my father,’ she murmured in broken tones,
-‘if you only knew how desolate and lonely I am, I am sure you would
-come to me.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Don’t cry,’ I exclaimed, moved at her grief, and wishing to console
-her, ‘I am sure you’ll get well yet.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Go away, child, you worry me; you cannot bring me what I long
-for, my dear father.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Where is your father, is he very far from here? why don’t he
-come to see you, when you want to see him?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘He don’t know that I am ill, that I am dying; if he did, oh how
-quickly would he fly to me.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Why don’t you write to him, and ask him to take you away from
-the school?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I have written several times, but I know my letters are never
-sent, if they had been, he would have been here long ago; I know I
-shall die soon; it is now two years since father placed me here, and I
-have been sick for more than a year. He went to Greece and Sicily.
-Oh, how I wish I were with him. It must be a dreadful thing to die,’
-she continued, after a moment’s pause; ‘did you ever think about
-dying, child?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘No, I never thought much about it; I always thought about being
-happy, and wished to be so.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘At home in dear England, I was happy, with all dear friends
-around us; but to be ill in a strange country, among people I care
-nothing about, and who care nothing for me, oh how dreadful it is.’
-She hid her face in her hands, and sighed, and sobbed. I wished I
-had been better acquainted with her, I would have thrown my arms<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_54"></a>[54]</span>
-around her neck, and kissed her, but I did not like to take such a liberty
-with an utter stranger. Miss Jones stole suddenly upon us, followed
-by the physician, and I glided back to my former position. He
-talked for sometime to Miss Clarendon in a low voice, and she replied
-in the same subdued tone; I could not catch any of their conversation.
-Then he passed to the bedsides of some of the other invalids, and
-paused for some time at that of a little girl, who was raving deliriously
-with typhus fever; her little hands lay outside the coverlid, and she
-sometimes clasped them frantically above her head, and demanded her
-golden crown. Poor little innocent, I hope she obtained it in a better,
-brighter sphere; for, a few days after, I saw the same slight form arrayed
-in its grave clothes, and she was borne to her last and silent
-resting place.</p>
-
-<p>“The physician prescribed for me abstinence for twenty-four hours,
-and a dose of Epsom salts, both of which recipes I considered entirely
-unnecessary, as fasting was a virtue which we, from necessity,
-were constantly obliged to practise, and as for the salts, I really did
-not need it. It was now quite dark, and two lamps, shedding a dim
-light, were placed by the nurse on tables at either end of the room. I
-saw the young English girl undress, and her servant assisted her into
-bed; she coughed continually, and the traces of tears were still on her
-cheeks; how sorry I felt for her, if I had been a carrier-pigeon, how
-willingly would I have flown to Sicily, or anywhere on earth, to have
-told that beloved parent of her sad condition, and restored him to her.</p>
-
-<p>“I was permitted to remain up an hour longer, as it was only seven
-o’clock; my head still felt heavy, and objects seemed to swim before
-my eyes; in the background of the room, the nurse, in her austere dress
-of black, stood by the side of one of the patients, pouring some drops
-of liquid into a spoon, while the faithful mulatto, seated in a chair at
-the bedhead, watched the uneasy slumber of her beautiful mistress;
-Miss Jones walked quietly backward and forward. As I grew older,
-and became more capable of observation and reflection, I often wondered
-how those poor teachers managed to support life, dragging on
-from days to months, from months to years, their monotonous, stupid
-existence: no prospect of brighter days dawning on the future, nothing
-but a continual repetition of school duties, repeated to an infinitude of
-times; habit, however, becomes second nature, and constant occupation
-frequently prevents us from dwelling with too much sensitiveness
-on personal misfortunes.</p>
-
-<p>“After taking the medicine, a gentle, soothing influence came over
-me, and I dropped asleep in my chair. I awoke during the night, I<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_55"></a>[55]</span>
-was still in the same position. Miss Jones had left the room, and the
-nurse slumbered with her head leaning on a table; I felt benumbed
-from my erect attitude, but sleep again overpowered me, and daylight
-found me locked in the arms of Morpheus. I don’t remember what
-happened afterward; for nine days I lay deliriously tossing on a sick
-bed, with an attack of fever; at the end of that time I began slowly
-to recover. Inez and Blanche, my beloved little friends, spent every
-moment they could snatch from their studies by my side, telling me
-stories to amuse me, and exercising their ingenuity in a thousand artless
-ways, to beguile away the tedious hours of convalescence. Madame
-Deville and Monsieur Belmont, during my illness, had often visited
-my bedside; they said he had been apprehensive lest my disease should
-prove mortal. Madame, in her bustling, active way, came every day
-to the infirmary, encouraged the sick ones, ordered what she thought
-proper for them, and then bustled away again; there was no difference
-in her manner toward either rich or poor girls: all were treated alike.
-I loved her for that trait of character; she only showed perhaps, a
-slight partiality in favor of those who made the most rapid progress in
-their studies. This induced the pupils to emulate each other in improvement,
-that they might deserve the approbation of their directress.
-When I was sufficiently recovered to observe what was passing around
-me, I looked for Miss Clarendon, but she was no longer in the room;
-Inez told me she was a parlor boarder, and had gone to Madame
-Deville’s private parlor, where she took private lessons, and amused
-herself as she chose; she spoke of her sweet disposition, and various
-accomplishments, and said that she was generally beloved by all who
-knew her in the school.</p>
-
-<p>“It was a week after the fever had left me, before I was able to
-return to the school-room; when I did so, Madame Schiller, and several
-of my new acquaintances greeted me as if I had been an old friend;
-after that I applied myself with energy and perseverance, and my improvement
-was rapid. At the expiration of three months, Monsieur
-Belmont began instructing me in vocal music; time, and intense assiduity
-at practising, slowly developed my voice; he was a kind, but
-a severe and exacting master; he obliged us to perform our allotted
-tasks, with punctuality and exactness; if we did them well, he praised
-us quietly, but even slight commendation from his lips was very
-gratifying.</p>
-
-<p>“The musical soiree had occurred during my illness. Inez and
-Blanche, I was told, had sung charmingly. Poor little girls! the momentary
-praise bestowed at a school exhibition, but poorly repaid them<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_56"></a>[56]</span>
-for the many hours of labor spent in acquiring those bird-like tones.
-Several months elapsed before I was sufficiently advanced in music, to
-be able to sing at one of Madame’s ‘evenings.’</p>
-
-<p>“One morning I was directing my steps toward the music room, to
-practise my lesson, when I saw Miss Clarendon come running down
-the gallery, and with a wild, passionate expression of joy and surprise,
-threw herself into the out-spread arms of a grave, elegant looking man,
-who stood quietly awaiting her approach.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Oh my dear father!’ she wildly exclaimed, as she impressed kiss
-after kiss on his lips and forehead, ‘you have come at last to see your
-poor sick child: I had expected to die without ever seeing you again.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘You had expected to die! my darling child, what do you mean?
-I have only this morning arrived from Greece: I have come to take you
-home to England. Why do you speak in this sad way? Have you
-not been happy here?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I have been ill for several months,’ she sadly replied; ‘the doctor
-says I have consumption; I have been so unhappy, too, away from you.
-How happy I feel to be with you again, dear father!’</p>
-
-<p>“The gentleman fondly stroked his daughters silky hair, and gazed
-with paternal fondness upon that grief-worn, delicate countenance.
-She now seemed happy and at rest, by the side of that parent, for
-whose presence she had longed so earnestly; the surprise and pleasure
-of this re-union, had lit up her face with an expression of feverish joy
-almost unearthly. I remained a moment at the door of my cabinet
-and looked at them.</p>
-
-<p>“‘You are really going to take me away from here, are you not,
-dear father? we shall return to dear old England.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Yes, my beloved child, you shall go with me; could I have foreseen
-your ill health and unhappiness, I never would have left you; I
-have been thinking of you, my love, during my whole journey, in Athens,
-at Mount Etna, everywhere you were constantly in my thoughts.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I wish I could have ascended Mount Etna with you: how I should
-like to see it.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘It would have been too tiresome a journey for you, my darling;
-now go and pack up your clothing, while I speak to Madame Deville
-before our departure.’</p>
-
-<p>“He went into Madame’s parlor, and his daughter walked toward
-the staircase with a quick light step; she was going to leave the school;
-in all probability I should never see her again: I was determined to
-say farewell, and, therefore, ran after her.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Are you going away, are you going to leave us, Miss Clarendon?’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_57"></a>[57]</span></p>
-
-<p>“She stopped and looked around; her face brightened with a sweet
-smile, when she saw it was I who spoke to her. ‘Yes, Genevra, I am about
-leaving you; my dear father has come to take me home to England.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Are you very glad to leave the school?’</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I am glad, because I am going to see many beloved friends,
-and because I have suffered much since I have been here from ill
-health; but I regret losing some of my school companions, and among
-them is yourself; when I am gone, you must sometimes think of me,
-Genevra, and keep this in remembrance of me.’</p>
-
-<p>“She gently placed a small gold ring upon my finger, kissed me,
-and then ran up stairs; I watched her till she disappeared, and then
-returned to my piano, with the saddening reflection that we should
-never meet again.</p>
-
-<p>“An hour afterward I saw, from the window of the music-room, a
-dark blue barouche, drawn by four dapple gray horses, standing before
-the entrance to the seminary. Lord Clarendon was buttoning up his
-great-coat, and speaking to a servant, while a liveried footman assisted
-the young lady into the carriage, presently the gentleman followed also.
-As the equipage whirled away, she glanced up at the house, and observing
-me at the window, bowed, and waved her small white hand;
-they were quickly out of sight. The recollection of that sweet young
-lady remained fresh in my memory for years; I often wondered
-whether she ever lived to reach England, or whether death’s iron grasp
-had seized her in a strange land, and I often wished to see her, but my
-wish was never gratified.</p>
-
-<p>“Two years glided away: Inez had become a beautiful blossom;
-Blanche was yet but a half-blown bud; I was a tall, slender child.
-During this length of time I had made quiet, but steady progress in
-English, French, and Italian, together with my native language; I had
-gained the love of my preceptors, and I was happy, because I was occupied.
-We had become a happy trio of firm friends, and notwithstanding
-women seldom agree, we continued, from first to last, devotedly
-attached to each other. It was, perhaps, my first grief of the heart,
-when Inez was withdrawn by Monsieur Belmont from the school.
-True, I had suffered many privations in early childhood, but they affected
-more my physical than mental system; moreover the uncultivated
-mind of a child is incapable of reflection; but now, from the
-beneficent influence of education, I could think—in after years, I
-learned to reason too. Blanche and myself dwelt with sentiments of
-regret upon our approaching separation from Inez; we seemed to love
-her more, now she was about to part from us. I presume it was the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_58"></a>[58]</span>
-perversity of human nature, which enhances the value of those objects
-we are about to lose.</p>
-
-<p>“It was the morning of her departure. Inez stood with her shawl
-and bonnet on, in our preceptress’ parlor; Madame was also there,
-conversing, and gesticulating with French vivacity to Monsieur. Inez
-had bidden farewell to all her acquaintances, and tears dropped heavily
-from her large black eyes. It was a lovely summer day; I heard the
-chirping of the birds; the sun shone brilliantly; all nature seemed to
-wear a gala dress; we kissed her in silence, and stood by her, each
-pressing one of her hands in ours.</p>
-
-<p>“‘So, children, you are about to be separated,’ cried our mutual
-master; ‘you all look very sad about it, but Inez will be very happy,
-I know, when she becomes a gay woman of the world; with her
-splendid voice, she will make a sensation, and a fortune too. As for
-you, you will soon forget your grief. Blanche’s turn will come next,
-and then you will be left alone, Genevra.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Yes, sir, I know it,’ I mechanically replied, for I was thinking
-of Inez.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Genevra has improved much in looks of late. Do you not think
-so, Madame?’ asked the gentleman.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Yes,’ answered she, glancing at me momentarily. ‘I always
-thought her a pretty child; she is obedient and polite, and very studious;
-but all the pupils look better in warm weather, than during the
-cold inclement season of the year; they will miss their schoolmate at
-first, I suppose, but then they will soon grow reconciled to her absence,
-for children soon forget.’</p>
-
-<p>“Time demonstrated to me the truth of Madame’s observation, that
-children, and sometimes men and women, ‘soon forget.’ Oh, beloved
-companions of my childhood! how often have my thoughts reverted to
-the innocent hours of pleasure, passed at that school. Where are now
-the brilliant anticipations of the future? where are the devoted lovers,
-the unfailing friends we fondly pictured to ourselves? Alas! like the
-shades of Ossian’s heroes, they have faded into air, thin air.</p>
-
-<p>“Our adieus to Inez were weepingly paid, and we saw her depart
-with our teacher; he promised to send us an account of her debut,
-and kept his word. A few months subsequently a literary Gazette
-was sent to Madame, who, after reading it, showed it to us; a paragraph,
-marked with ink, indicated an eulogium upon the personal appearance,
-and exquisite voice, of the beautiful young cantatrice, Mademoiselle
-Inez Fontana. She had made her debut at Berlin: this was
-a Berlin newspaper. How delighted she must feel at her triumph. For<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_59"></a>[59]</span>
-the first time, it occurred to me that it must be a fine thing to have the
-world’s applause. Blanche and myself were pleased at her success;
-almost as well pleased as we would have been at our own. One is
-generally gratified at hearing of a friend’s celebrity; it flatters our self-love,
-since it is <i>our</i> friend who has obtained renown.</p>
-
-<p>“The days and weeks, and months, still sped onward. At first,
-the loss of Inez seemed almost irreparable; in all our amusements we
-had always formed a little party among ourselves, now our ‘set’ was
-broken, and we missed her joyous ways; different to my beloved, confiding
-Blanche; she was apparently more impassioned, but in reality
-less so; there was an under-current of strong, deep feeling, in the disposition
-and character of my fair-haired favorite, her more volatile
-companion never possessed.</p>
-
-<p>“At length Blanche also was removed by M. Belmont, and I was
-left alone; rumors of her success, and of the popularity Inez had acquired,
-often reached me in my retirement from the busy scenes, in
-which they now occupied so conspicuous a position, and I felt happy
-in knowing that they were admired; and morning and evening, when
-I knelt in prayer, with my heart filled with devotion towards that one
-all-wise, all-creative Influence, I never failed to breathe a prayer for
-their future happiness and prosperity.</p>
-
-<p>“My own turn came next, four years after; the time had dragged
-along drearily since the departure of my two friends, and I longed to
-go; eight years had now elapsed since my advent at the institution.
-I had perfected myself in three languages, all of which I could speak
-fluently, and translate well. Madame Deville, and dear Madame
-Schiller, were both tenderly attached to me, and I bore toward each
-the most respectful regard.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I trust, my dear Genevra,’ said Madame Deville to me one day,
-as I sat in her room, making for her some wax flowers; ‘now that you
-are about to be removed from my protection, I most fervently trust that
-you will ever bear in mind the principles of integrity and truth, with
-which I have ever endeavored to inspire you; and never, I beg of you,
-allow yourself to be deceived by the skilful tongue of flattery. A beautiful
-actress is invariably exposed to many temptations, which other women,
-occupying a more private position in life, are seldom subjected to;
-you possess accomplishments, and personal attractions, which will procure
-you the admiration of men, and the envy of women; but if you
-pursue a virtuous course in life, and place your trust in God, I doubt
-not you will be rewarded.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I hope I shall ever remain true to the principles of honor and virtue,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_60"></a>[60]</span>
-which have been taught me by you, Madame, since I have been your
-pupil,’ I responded. I admired and respected my good preceptress;
-but her knowledge of life had been circumscribed, during twenty-five
-years, to the narrow limits of her school. She drew her conclusions
-of what the world ought to be from her own thoughts, and she supposed
-that honesty and virtue are ever rewarded, because she had
-read in some half-dozen moral novels I had seen her peruse, that such
-was the case. Had she mingled in the gay vortex of society, she
-would have seen that unblushing assurance, combined with knavery,
-passes with the multitude for genuine talent; that unassuming merit is
-never appreciated, and generally descends to the tomb unsought for,
-and unknown. All these things I learned from experience; a harsh,
-yet at the same time a just master; the only one, perhaps, who can
-practically convince us of the truth of an hypothesis.</p>
-
-<p>“‘My child,’ suddenly exclaimed Madame, ‘you are composing a
-parti-colored lily: I want a white one.’</p>
-
-<p>“In fact, absorbed in thought and dreams of the future, I had arranged
-a lily of red, blue and white leaves; I smiled at the odd effect
-and began another.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Monsieur Belmont informed me, the other day, that he intended
-taking you to Naples, to make your first appearance there at the San
-Carlo,’ observed Madame, as she turned a page of the book she was
-reading.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Ah! indeed,’ for this was unexpected news. ‘I thought I was
-going to rejoin Inez and Blanche; I should like to be with them.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I thought so too, but it seems not; neither are they with each
-other at present. Inez still performs at Berlin, where, it seems, she is a
-great favorite; and Blanche is at Munich; the journals speak of her as
-warbling like a nightingale. It scarcely seems four years since she
-left us; you were all dutiful, obedient pupils, and have done honor to
-the school by your great musical talents.’</p>
-
-<p>“Madame closed her book, and left the room; I laid the bouquet
-of wax flowers which I had just completed, upon a table, and rose to
-go also; as I did so, my eyes unconsciously rested upon the enormous
-mirror, in which eight years ago, I had seen my tiny person reflected,
-the first day I came to school. I again saw myself reflected on its
-smooth surface; instead of a small, delicate child, I beheld a well
-developed girl, whose long hair fell in ringlets to her waist; the expression
-of her features was thoughtful, almost sad. While gazing upon
-this inanimate image of myself, I fell into a reverie; every little incident
-that had ever happened, during my long residence at the house,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_61"></a>[61]</span>
-seemed to be vividly revived by memory. I looked around upon the
-parlor and its furniture; I wished to impress the appearance of that
-room upon my mind, that I might be able to recall it, perhaps for my
-amusement; at some future day. I was going into the world, to enter
-into a new sphere of life, among new faces, and new scenes. Inez
-and Blanche had before this been initiated into its mysteries; perhaps
-too, they had changed and become women of the world, but I trusted not.</p>
-
-<p>“The loud ringing of the bell, which was always rung at twilight,
-to assemble the pupils for study, aroused me, and I joined my companions.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V.</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>“The following day I departed, Madame Deville kissed me several
-times, and warmly embraced me. She seemed to feel more regret at
-parting from me, than I had seen her manifest upon the similar occasions
-of bidding adieu to Inez and Blanche; for myself, I felt sorry to
-leave, and yet glad to go. To spend one’s existence in an automaton-like
-performance of fixed rules, laid down for us by others, is surely
-not a life of action; and action is the object and purpose of our being,
-that each should bear his share of the joys, cares, and responsibilities
-of existence, is evidently the intent of our being sent upon earth.</p>
-
-<p>“Monsieur Belmont placed me in the hackney coach, which was to
-take us to the post-house, whence we took the diligence, to one of the
-principal towns on the road to Naples; my luggage was strapped on
-behind; my teacher placed himself by my side and closed the carriage
-door; the driver cracked his whip and we started. As I heard
-the rumbling of the coach wheels on the rough stones of the pavement,
-a feeling of loneliness, of isolation, stole over me. I, a simple schoolgirl,
-had left the abode of years, and was about to be cast forth upon
-that great chaos, the world; still I hoped that the invisible hand of some
-angel-guardian, would guide me safely through the dark clouds of obscurity,
-even unto the bright sun of the most perfect day. Since that
-day I have travelled over half the inhabited world, but I never experienced
-a sadder feeling, than on the day I bade farewell to the boarding-school
-at Vienna.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_62"></a>[62]</span></p>
-
-<p>“It was a sweet morning in the month of May. Inez had left us in
-the summer time, Blanche, when autumn’s yellow leaf strewed the
-ground; but a fresh spring day heralded my departure. The brisk
-trot at which we travelled soon carried us beyond the suburbs of the
-city, and the magnificent metropolis of the Austrian empire, its monuments,
-splendid churches, beautiful gardens, and glorious works of
-art, were left behind. My eyes dwelt upon them admiringly, as they
-gradually receded from my view; I was proud of the country, and
-place of my nativity; and in that great city I had lived for so many
-years, and yet was as ignorant of its gayeties, its vices and its crimes,
-as any poor countryman from the neighboring mountains.</p>
-
-<p>“Our road lay along a fertile plain, bordered on the right by a lofty
-chain of mountains, on the left a small stream ran gurgling by; the
-gentle murmur of its waters sounded like the regular sonorous breathing
-of a sleeping child. Monsieur pulled out of his pocket a newspaper,
-and went to reading politics. It was evident that beautiful
-scenery had no charms for him. He left me undisturbed to my meditations,
-and I followed them; I looked down on the long green grass
-at my feet, interspersed with wild flowers, and I looked up at the blue
-heavens above my head, traversed here and there by fleecy white
-clouds, and I felt thankful to the beneficent Creator of all things, that
-he had placed me in so beautiful a world. I glanced across the plain
-at the lofty dark blue mountains, and then turned to the opposite side,
-where groves of tall poplars and graceful lindens waved their dark
-green foliage in the sunshine.</p>
-
-<p>“Gradually, as we journeyed on, the scene changed; the plain was
-distanced, and we ascended a hill and rode through a thick forest. I
-listened to the mournful cooing of the doves, the chirping of the birds,
-and the hollow sound of the breeze, as it whistled through the trees;
-the snake glided through the brushwood and vanished at our approach,
-and the deer ran startled away, little partridges ran about on the ground,
-calling each other in the unintelligible language of the brute creation.
-I enjoyed everything I saw with that untarnished freshness of feeling,
-the attribute of early youth. Man becomes accustomed to anything,
-and everything, and a continued repetition of the same thing, even if
-it be beautiful, becomes tiresome. To love or appreciate a person or
-thing long, we must throw around it, or them, an air of mystery, of
-reserve, for undisputed possession sooner or later brings satiety. Poor
-frail human nature! why is it, destined child of dust, that thou canst
-only love ardently while the object of thy passion is unattained? A
-lover will run all risks, do anything to obtain his mistress; yet when<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_63"></a>[63]</span>
-once his own, grow weary of her in a month; the fervor of his passion
-will cool down to positive indifference, sometimes degenerate into
-neglect or personal abuse.</p>
-
-<p>“Monsieur still sat coning over the news; he had journeyed that
-road a hundred times before, and consequently did not care for trees,
-nor flowers, nor green grass. Towards evening the driver drew up
-before the door of a small, dirty-looking post-house, situated in a deep
-ravine, surrounded by steep precipices; a waterfall ran bounding
-down the rocks, with a wild, musical sound. The situation was picturesque
-and grand; two women, upon their knees, on the edge of
-the stream, washing their clothes, chatted to each other, and their faces
-wore the expression of smiling content. Upon the steps of the house
-sat a beautiful girl, sewing some ribbonds together; on which she was
-placing glass beads of different colors. She smiled to herself as she
-did so, probably anticipating the effect this piece of rustic finery would
-have upon the heart of some village lover. A princess, while contemplating
-a tiara of diamonds, could not have felt happier than did this
-cottage girl with her head-dress of ribbonds. There is something
-charming in nature, and in rural life; it is so natural, so pure, so unalloyed
-by the manœuvering, the hypocrisy, the turmoil of social existence;
-it is the primitive state of being our first parents led, and to its
-peaceful shades has many a hackneyed man and woman of the world
-returned, as a tired child to its mother’s arms, to seek for peace and
-repose.</p>
-
-<p>“After waiting sometime the diligence made its appearance; we
-got into it, ourselves the only passengers, and the carriage returned
-from whence it came; the postillion winded his horn as we flew
-rapidly away. We followed the course of the Danube; it was a dark
-night, the sky only illumined by the stars; I could not obtain a distinct
-view of this majestic river, still as we rolled along upon its beautiful
-banks, I thought of the lessons I had so often repeated about the invasion
-of the Goths and Vandals, and how they had crossed the great
-river on their way to Rome.</p>
-
-<p>“Our journey occupied the space of four days; we travelled without
-stopping, and long before we reached Naples, my strength was nearly
-exhausted from fatigue. When the boundaries of Italy were passed,
-and we had entered upon the fertile plains of Tuscany, my eyes dwelt
-delighted on all they saw. The peasantry in their fanciful costume,
-the blooming vineyards, and pretty cottages, all, by turns, enraptured
-me. Monsieur Belmont sometimes talked to me about Naples and my
-future career; sometimes read the everlasting newspapers, in which he<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_64"></a>[64]</span>
-seemed to take so lively an interest, and sometimes dozed away the
-time.</p>
-
-<p>“We passed several beautiful villas, and fine plantations; in the
-latter, numerous male and female peasants were at work in the fields.
-Their care-worn faces, begrimed with sweat and dirt, bearing testimony
-to the labor they performed; from my heart I most sincerely pitied
-them. To stand for hours under the burning heat of the sun digging,
-ploughing, and gathering the grape when harvest-time arrived, could
-be no enviable task; the women were frightful, the sun had turned
-their naturally dark skins to a copper hue; their short petticoats exposed
-their sinewy legs and bare feet, large and ugly, from never
-having been compressed in shoes. They scarcely looked like human
-beings, and my gaze wandered quickly away in search of more romantic
-objects to dwell upon.</p>
-
-<p>“We stopped an hour at Pisa to dine; and as everything is hurry
-and confusion at an Italian Inn, upon the advent of a stranger, Monsieur,
-learning that our dinner would not be ready for a quarter of an
-hour, took me down the street to look at the celebrated Leaning
-Tower of Pisa. We paused before its graceful front, and I looked up at
-the eight tiers of white marble arches, each different from the other in
-architecture, and each beautiful. We ascended to its summit by a
-circular stairway, which wound round and round within the building,
-till my head became confused; from the top I obtained a fine view of
-this ancient, and once powerful city. I looked down upon its broad, well-paved,
-but almost deserted streets, and recalled the warlike days of
-the republic. The tranquil Arno still ran swiftly past, as it did then;
-the plain on which the town stands was just as smiling and lovely, as
-in the days of yore, but the spirit of enterprise and commerce, which
-had once animated and enriched this classic town, had forever passed
-away.</p>
-
-<p>“Dinner was ready when we returned. The excitement of the
-journey, and visit to the Leaning Tower, had almost deprived me of
-appetite, but my teacher made amends for my bad taste, by eating
-with the greatest voracity; he seemed to wonder at my indifference to
-the viands set before us.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Why don’t you eat, child,’ he suddenly demanded, while masticating
-some oranges, ‘are you not hungry? I should think you would
-be after such a long ride; you had better eat something, for you will
-need nourishment before we stop again.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I don’t want anything to eat at present, sir,’ I answered, ‘and I
-have some biscuits in my pocket; if I feel hungry, I can eat them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_65"></a>[65]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Once more we were off; we now had company, in the shape of
-two Italians, young students from one of the universities of Pisa, returning
-home to Naples; they were handsome, talkative young men.
-The usual civilities having been mutually exchanged, Monsieur and
-they soon became involved in a long political discussion, interesting,
-I have no doubt, to them, but tiresome enough to me, since we take
-but little interest in that which we do not understand. Their conversation
-was sustained, apparently with much animation on both sides,
-for some hours. Monsieur Belmont talked well, he had seen a great
-deal of society, in all its different phases, and was a perfect man of
-the world; he did not look upon it with the same feeling of satiety,
-with which a <i>roué</i> views this fair earth; he had not the refinement,
-the elegance of mind necessary to form that character; his was merely
-the worldliness of a business-like mind. The young men with whom
-he conversed, were evidently inexperienced and unsophisticated;
-their views of life, and society in general, were certainly more theoretical
-than practical.</p>
-
-<p>“It was the fourth day of our journey, we were rapidly approaching
-the enchanting Parthenope, the far-famed Eldorado of Italy. Already
-I could see the distant summit of Vesuvius, vomiting forth clouds of
-smoke. The majestic castle of San Elmo, upon the hill, and that of
-Castle Nuovo, by the harbor, looked like two faithful sentinels, watching
-over their beloved city. Innumerable vessels, from all quarters
-of the globe, and of all sizes and shapes, rode quietly upon the azure
-bosom of the beautiful harbor. The domes and spires of its gothic
-churches rose high in air, glittering in the sunshine. The character
-of the scenery had changed as we neared the town; the dense, gloomy
-forests of Austria, and the wild mountainous scenery of northern Italy,
-had given place to the rocky, volcanic soil, and level plains of the
-environs of Naples, adorned with grapevines and fruit trees, while far
-away in the distance I saw the dark-blue tops of the Appenines.
-Well may the Neapolitan exclaim, with patriotic ardor, ‘See Naples
-and die;’ he thinks it a piece of heaven fallen upon earth, the garden
-spot of the world, and, with justice, may he cherish this opinion.</p>
-
-<p>“The coach horses dashed down the hill leading into the city, as
-if the prince of darkness was at their heels, dragging the diligence
-after them at furious speed. Our travelling companions left us as we
-entered the gates; and after dashing through the fashionable thoroughfare,
-the street called Toledo, the postillion drove in various directions,
-up one street, and down another; now through broad, handsome
-streets, now through dirty crooked lanes, until at length, he stopped<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_66"></a>[66]</span>
-before the door of a cottage, built in gothic style, of gray stone; it
-faced upon a quiet, pretty piazza, adorned with trees and flowers.
-Honeysuckle, myrtle and cypress vine, hung gracefully around the
-latticed windows of this sylvan abode. I wondered where my guardian
-was taking me to.</p>
-
-<p>“At the noise of the coach wheels, the street door opened, and a
-woman who had once been handsome, but whose interesting countenance
-now bore the traces of age, attired in gray silk, stood upon the
-threshold. She bowed and smiled to Monsieur as the diligence drew
-up; he undid the coach door, jumped out, assisted me to do the same,
-and then presented her to me as Madame Bonni.</p>
-
-<p>“‘This is my little protegee, Madame, whom I wrote you I should
-bring on to Naples this year to make her debut; we have had a long,
-and dusty travel from Vienna.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I am delighted to see you, my friend, and you also, my child;
-but pray enter my parlor, and I will order refreshments for you; you
-must feel very much fatigued after so long a journey.’</p>
-
-<p>“The good lady took my hand and led me into her parlor. Monsieur,
-after giving some directions to the servants about the luggage,
-followed also. It was really a fairy little room, hung with fine paintings
-on the walls, damask curtains at the windows, several marble
-statues placed on pedestals, while a melodious musical box, and a
-beautiful canary bird in a cage, seemed to vie with each other in harmony.
-I took a seat near a window, the lady sat opposite me, and
-Monsieur threw himself on a sofa, and complained of the hot weather
-and trouble of travelling.</p>
-
-<p>“‘So this is the young lady who sings so splendidly; but I understood
-that you had three protegees to bring out: where are the other
-two?’ inquired the lady, after having attentively surveyed me for a
-moment.</p>
-
-<p>“‘This one is the youngest of the three; they were all educated at
-the same school together—Madame Deville’s, at Vienna—but Inez and
-Blanche completed their education first, being the oldest, and have
-been performing four or five years. Inez is making a fortune for herself
-at Berlin, and Blanche I left at Munich.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I should like to hear the young lady sing, if she will oblige me
-with a song; I have a fine piano here.’ She crossed the room, uncovered
-an enormous German instrument, and ran her fingers over
-the keys.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Certainly my pupil will be happy to do so,’ said my teacher,
-answering for me. ‘She has no need to be afraid of singing: her voice<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_67"></a>[67]</span>
-is magnificent; she will make the greatest singer of the day. Come,
-Genevra, sing something from Norma for my friend.’</p>
-
-<p>“I placed myself at the piano; I was confident of my own abilities,
-and therefore felt no hesitancy in complying with the request. I
-chose an air from Norma, and sang it. I recollected many years before
-how astonished I had been at the power and compass of Blanche’s
-voice, but now my own tones far excelled hers. I was almost surprised
-at myself, as I rose from the piano.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Magnificent!’ cried the lady, ‘I never heard such a voice, not
-even among our best songstresses; so much sweetness and power combined;
-she will make a great sensation in our city, when she makes
-her appearance.’</p>
-
-<p>“Monsieur smiled; he looked pleased, but said nothing; I presume
-he was afraid of spoiling me by too much praise. At this moment, a
-domestic entered, bearing a tray of refreshments, and conversation for
-the moment was postponed.</p>
-
-<p>“Madame took me into her pretty garden, and showed me her birds
-and flowers. She gathered me a bouquet of choice flowers, which I
-afterwards placed in water. When I went to my room at night, she
-told me she was the widow of an Italian army officer, and now lived
-upon an annuity paid her by government; she never had any children,
-and felicitated herself upon my visit, as that of a companion and friend.
-She was not intellectual, nor pretty now, but kind-hearted and sincere,
-and sincerity and goodness are certainly attractive. I did not in return
-confide to her the details of my childhood, for I could not have done
-so without humbling myself in my own, and in her esteem, and my
-pride would not allow me to do that, but I spoke on general subjects;
-of the city, its beautiful scenery, and splendid buildings, and of the
-beauty of the peasantry I had seen as I journeyed toward it. On these
-subjects the enthusiastic Italian was at home, for the Neapolitans are
-desperately enamoured of their own lovely land. We passed an hour
-in pleasant conversation, then returned to the parlor, where tea was
-served; my teacher favored us with a song; he sang magnificently;
-and I also sang a duet with him, which elicited Madame’s raptures.
-At ten o’clock, we retired to rest, I felt almost worn out with fatigue;
-the lady conducted me up stairs, to a neat little chamber opposite her own.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I hope this room will suit you,’ said the kind-hearted woman, as
-she followed me into it; ‘if you want anything, pray ring the bell and
-my servant will attend you; I know you must long to go to rest, after
-so long a journey, so I will not tire you by conversation. Good night,
-my child.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_68"></a>[68]</span></p>
-
-<p>“‘Good night,’ I replied. The door closed, and I was left alone;
-I set my little lamp in the fire-place, and after I had undressed and
-repeated the rosary, I stepped into the pretty bed, draperied with white,
-and drew its curtains close around me. I could scarcely realize that
-I was not in Madame Schiller’s dormitory; and, at dawn, I started suddenly
-from my slumber, imagining I heard her voice calling the girls to rise.
-Finding myself wide awake, I thought I would get up, and did so; all
-was quiet in the house, no one stirring; faint hues of morning sun were
-rising slowly in the East. I heard the sound of deep, sonorous breathing,
-as I passed a door at the head of the stairs, which I justly concluded
-were the nocturnal tones of my guardian. I went into the
-parlor, and finding on a table an interesting novel, took it in my hand,
-and sought the garden; under a wide-spreading Acacia tree, I sat
-down upon a rustic bench; I saw an old female domestic making a
-fire in the kitchen, and beginning to prepare breakfast; I looked at her
-as she moved about, and wondered if I should ever live to become as old
-and ugly as she; if my cheeks, now so round and firm, should become
-shriveled and hanging like pieces of dried skin; my form, attenuated
-and hideous; my hair turn gray and fall out, and my eyes watery and
-blinking, like those of a sick lap-dog; yet it was natural to suppose,
-that in the course of nature all those things would come to pass. We
-see those who have once been handsome and intellectual, grow ugly,
-old, and stupid; their beauty fades away like a fleeting dream; their
-intellect declines with the vigor of body which supported it. If mind
-is soul, and if the soul is immortal, should we not reasonably suppose,
-that this etherial principal would preserve itself bright and
-untarnished from the gathering gloom of years; that time, instead
-of dimming, would only add new glories to its spiritual splendor;
-but these thoughts were then too metaphysical for my youthful comprehension.</p>
-
-<p>“While thus I mused, the sun had risen high, and his bright rays
-fell across the gravel walk where I sat; I heard footsteps in the vestibule,
-and looking up, saw Madame Bonni attired in a white muslin
-wrapper; she perceived me, and came into the garden.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Why, my child, you are indeed an early riser,’ was her morning
-salutation; ‘I expected you would sleep late after your journey; but
-you look refreshed, and I am happy to see it.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘At school, we always rose at dawn of day; from habit, I awake
-early, and prefer spending the sweet morning hours in reading, rather
-than waste them in slumber.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘You are right in doing so; when I was young I was fond of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_69"></a>[69]</span>
-reading too, but since I have advanced in life, its busy cares have
-banished literature and romance from my mind.’</p>
-
-<p>“The old woman whom I had observed, now came to her mistress,
-and announced that breakfast was ready; I followed Madame to the
-dining-room; we sat down to a comfortable breakfast, served with exquisite
-neatness. Monsieur joined us in a few minutes: he was yawning,
-and expressed himself as feeling very dull; and, in fact, his appearance
-fully corroborated the assertion.</p>
-
-<p>“After breakfast, I accompanied him to the San Carlo Opera house,
-where he took me, he said, that I might see the actors rehearse, and
-observe stage trick and manner. Since then I have seen tricks enough
-played off upon the stage of life, independent of the drama. We need
-not go to the theatre to see actors and actresses. We ascended through
-the basement story, the passage obstructed by old rubbish, stage furniture,
-to the green-room—a miserable looking apartment, draperied with
-green baize; several actors and actresses stood in groups, conversing,
-in their ordinary dress; I looked out behind the scenes; I saw on all
-sides the rough boards of the theatre, and the large open spaces
-through which the actors went upon the stage, and the scenes were
-shifted backward and forward; everything looked unfinished and bare,
-it looked like the skeleton frame of a house, and in no way realized
-my romantic visions of a theatre. Several of the actors held Opera
-books in their hands, which they appeared to be studying; Monsieur
-went around the room, bowing, and shaking hands with all, receiving,
-and paying compliments in return.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Ah, my dear fellow,’ exclaimed a tall, dark-complexioned man,
-seizing him by the arm, ‘when did you arrive? Glad to see you among
-us again. I did not expect to see you for a year to come; thought
-you intended going to Paris to perform. I was at Munich a few weeks
-ago, where I heard of the brilliant success of a protegee of yours, a
-Mademoiselle Blanche Ricorsi; I went several nights to see her play;
-a beautiful girl, she sings divinely.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘And here is another pupil of mine,’ said Monsieur, drawing me
-toward him, ‘whom I intend shall astonish the fashionable world of
-Naples.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Ah, Mademoiselle, charmed to see you; hope you will do credit
-to so distinguished a preceptor; you must sing something for me this
-morning; I should like to hear your style of voice; we are now going
-in to rehearsal. Come, ladies and gentlemen, are you ready? Allow
-me to escort you, Mademoiselle.’</p>
-
-<p>“With French politeness and volubility, he offered me his arm; at<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_70"></a>[70]</span>
-that time, unacquainted with the ways and usages of society, I felt
-momentarily surprised; but mechanically I accepted it, and the others
-following behind, we stepped out upon the stage; it was an enormous
-platform, and I felt, and looked, almost like a little child, as I walked
-across its smooth boards. I wondered how I should feel when I should
-be the most conspicuous object on that floor, when I should see before
-me those successive walls of human faces, so terrifying to a novice,—the
-eyes of all bent upon me.</p>
-
-<p>“The actors walked toward the front of the stage; part of the orchestra
-was in the musicians’ box, and accompanied their voices with
-instrumental music; they were rehearsing for Norma; some of the
-voices were sweet and thrilling, others grated harshly on my ear. The
-woman who was to perform the part of Norma, was neither young nor
-pretty: she did not look the beautiful stately priestess. The man who
-was cast for the character of Polelio, was as ugly a person as one need
-wish to see. I stood leaning against one of the side scenes and listened
-to them as they ran through the Opera. When ended, the French
-manager requested me to sing a song, which he chose. I felt somewhat
-diffident at exhibiting my voice before so many strangers. I
-wished to refuse, but a look from Monsieur Belmont, which spoke a
-command, changed my purpose, and I complied. I began almost falteringly
-at first, but gathering courage as I went on, I forgot those who
-were listening to me, and became absorbed in the sentiment of the
-song. I think I can say without egotism, that I sang well; when I
-had ceased the manager approached with a surprised air:</p>
-
-<p>“‘Good heavens! Mademoiselle, you are a perfect nightingale,
-your high notes are exquisite; I shall be proud to constitute you prima
-donna of my troupe, when you are ready to appear; you must have
-applied yourself with unceasing assiduity to have formed your voice.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I have been learning for six or eight years past, under the tuition
-of Monsieur Belmont.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Your execution has indeed astonished me, in one so young; and
-I was equally amazed when I heard Blanche, another pupil of my
-friend’s, sing at Munich.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘How is Blanche now? is she well? is she happy?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘You know her, then?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Oh yes, we were educated at the same school.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I cannot answer you in regard to her happiness; but she looks
-beautiful, and sings like a bird.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Did you ever see my other friend, who was also a pupil of Monsieur’s,
-Inez Fontana?’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_71"></a>[71]</span></p>
-
-<p>“‘A year ago, I saw her at Dresden; she left the following day to
-fulfil an engagement at Berlin; she is a charming woman, handsome,
-dark; has a deep, sweet, sonorous voice, but not the power or execution
-of yourself or Blanche. There was a rumor afloat in town of her being
-about to marry and leave the stage; it may be only report, however;
-I cannot vouch for its truth.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘It would seem very strange to me, to see my old school mate
-married.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Why, is it not natural to suppose, that a handsome young woman,
-with a good reputation, should marry, and make some worthy man
-happy?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘It is natural that women in private life should do so, but actresses
-seldom do.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘But when they have the opportunity, should they not embrace it?’</p>
-
-<p>“I was about to reply, when my teacher, having finished his confabulations
-with his acquaintances, approached me.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Well, my friend,’ cried he, ‘what do you think of my little pupil,
-I see you have been conversing with her?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I am afraid Mademoiselle would think I flattered her, if I spoke
-my real sentiments,’ answered the gallant Frenchman, with his hand
-upon his heart.</p>
-
-<p>“Monsieur laughed; for compliments seemed to him, as they always
-seemed to me, mere nonsense; things which are said without being
-felt, and therefore valueless. The actors had now all left the stage;
-after inviting his old friend to call upon him, Monsieur and myself returned
-home.</p>
-
-<p>“I pass over the space of four months, during which time, I was
-occupied in learning the part of Norma; my preceptor gave me lessons
-every day in acting, in a large unoccupied room, Madame Bonni appropriated
-to my use for that purpose; determined to succeed, I studied
-with ardor and assiduity, until at length, I perfected myself in my part,
-to his and my own complete satisfaction.</p>
-
-<p>“It was the night of my appearance: large placards announcing that
-fact, with my name printed upon them in immense capitals, had been
-posted in front of the theatre for several days previous; Monsieur said
-they anticipated a crowded house. I had been in a state of feverish excitement
-all day, which increased rather than diminished as evening
-drew near; the costume of Norma I had prepared sometime before,
-and sent it to my dressing-room at the theatre to await my coming.
-Madame Bonni, desirous of hearing me sing, had engaged seats in one
-of the stage boxes for herself and a gentleman friend.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_72"></a>[72]</span></p>
-
-<p>“‘You do not feel apprehensive of a failure, do you, Genevra?’
-asked my teacher, as he, Madame, and myself, sat conversing together
-in the parlor, in the afternoon.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Not in the least, sir; I feel perfectly confident of success.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I am glad to hear you say so; I hope you will make a sensation;
-if you feel self-possessed, you will act so, and consequently succeed.
-I expect Blanche here in a few weeks to fulfil an engagement, and then
-you can sing together.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Is Blanche coming to Naples? how glad I shall be to see her
-again, and Inez, does she never come here to play?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Inez has often sang here since she left your school; you know it
-is six years ago; but she generally prefers playing, alternately at Dresden
-or Berlin, where she is extremely popular.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Is it true, what the manager told me, that she thought of marrying,
-and leaving the stage?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I am not conversant with any of her matrimonial plans; you can ask
-Blanche when she arrives; I presume they are each other’s confidants.’.</p>
-
-<p>“Monsieur resumed his conversation with Madame about old times,
-and I went to my favorite seat in the garden, to while away the time
-till six o’clock. The air was soft and balmy; the delightful sea
-breeze, which blows off the coast every morning and evening, was now
-refreshing the air; under that clear, tropical sky, everything looks
-beautiful; the flowers seem to be of brighter hue; the turf more verdant;
-the people happier, than under those cold northern climes,
-where the bleak winters, and cloudy skies, seem to chill and contract
-men’s souls. The kind-hearted Neapolitan lives only in the present;
-he enjoys the pleasures of to-day without thinking of the future; he is
-willing to share what little he has, with any fellow creature less plentifully
-endowed than himself; and is it not better to live and feel thus,
-than to spend one’s lifetime in amassing treasures, which, when we die,
-we are obliged to leave for others to enjoy; since nothing is truer than
-that, man brings nothing into the world with him, neither can he carry
-anything away. Death is a market place where all men meet; the
-king, noble, and peasant, are all equal, when they meet in the bosom
-of mother earth. As I soliloquized, twilight gathered upon the face
-of things animate and inanimate; it is charming to watch the shades
-of evening gray descend upon a land like that; to see the mellow hues
-of dusk come slowly on, and the bright sun disappear, till finally they
-fade away into indefinite night. I should have liked to have staid and
-watched the sky, but Monsieur called me; it was time to go, he said;
-in fact, I had actually forgotten all about my theatrical engagement.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_73"></a>[73]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I went to my room and put on my bonnet and shawl, we got into
-a hack and drove off; Madame would not come for an hour, as the
-curtain did not rise till half-past seven.</p>
-
-<p>“Entering, as I had done before, through the basement, my teacher
-went to the green-room, where many of the actors were already assembled,
-and I to my dressing-room, passing on the way numerous princes,
-grand dukes, and nobles; who, like too many of their titled brethren,
-could boast no other wealth than the insignia of their order. They all
-stared at me as I hurried past them; curious, I suppose, to observe the
-new singer.</p>
-
-<p>“I quickly arrayed myself in the long white robes, and mysterious
-girdle of the priestess; scarcely had I completed my toilet, when there
-came a knock at the door: I opened it, and saw the manager.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Are you ready, Mademoiselle? It is time to go on; you know
-the part perfectly, do you not?’ he continued, as we approached the
-side scene, where I was to enter.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Perfectly, Monsieur. Entertain no apprehensions on my account.’</p>
-
-<p>“The gentleman smiled, bowed, released my arm, and I entered
-alone. I saw an immense crowd of human faces and forms before me;
-the house presented a brilliant array of fashion and beauty; the light
-of the chandeliers was dazzling; far from feeling intimidated, I felt
-perfectly at home. I had been fearful lest I should forget my notes,
-but they remained firmly impressed on my mind; a tumult of applause
-shook the house as I came forward to the foot-lights; when it had subsided
-I began to sing, almost forgetful that there was any audience
-there, and thinking only of my part. I acted naturally, and, therefore,
-pleasingly—for nature is ever pleasing. At the conclusion of the first
-act, a round of applause again greeted me; and when I went behind
-the scenes, Monsieur and the manager warmly congratulated me on
-my self-possession, in the song Dele Conte, a duet between Norma and
-Adelgisa; I was encored, and sang it twice; my cheeks were flushed
-like crimson, and I felt elated at my manifest triumph. At the conclusion
-of the Opera, a shower of bouquets and wreaths were thrown
-at my feet; one splendid wreath of exotic flowers, which struck my
-hand as it fell on the floor, was thrown from one of the stage boxes;
-happening to uplift my eyes, as I was singing the last song of the Opera,
-my gaze met that of a magnificent looking man, who stood quietly
-contemplating me. There was something in the magnetic attraction of
-those large languid black eyes, which sent a new thrill of life, a feeling
-I had never experienced, rushing through my veins; what could that
-inexplicable sensation mean? it was probably that man who had thrown<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_74"></a>[74]</span>
-the wreath at my feet. One of the actors gallantly picked it up, and
-placed it upon my head. Once more I heard myself applauded; delightful
-sound of approval, and the curtain fell.</p>
-
-<p>“I felt exhausted from my violent exertion of voice, and sat down in
-the green-room, while the manager fanned me, and the other actors
-complimented me. Monsieur Belmont seemed well pleased with me
-and himself, and was in his best humor.</p>
-
-<p>“‘You have made a decided hit, Mademoiselle,’ said my faithless
-husband of the play; ‘although you are not yet perfect in stage trick
-and manner, yet you have done wonders for the first time.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I am obliged to you for the compliment, Monsieur,’ I replied.</p>
-
-<p>“One of the servants of the theatre came into the room, bearing
-an armful of bouquets (the beautiful wreath still remained upon my
-head). When deposited in my lap, the jewels amid the flowers
-sparkled in the lamp light. ‘What do you intend doing with all
-these flowers, petite enfant?’ asked my guardian.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Oh, I shall carry them home to Madame Bonni, as trophies of
-my triumph: are they not beautiful, Monsieur?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Yes, very beautiful; some of those jewels among them I should
-think were valuable; but it is time to depart. Let the servant carry
-your flowers to the carriage.’</p>
-
-<p>“The manager politely attended me to the door of the carriage,
-and placed me in it.</p>
-
-<p>“Madame Bonni had reached home before us, and we passed an
-hour in discussing the events of the night. Good little woman! the
-world still seemed fresh and new to her, although she had long since
-passed the zenith of life. Even so trivial a thing as a visit to a theatre
-could afford her pleasure. Happy are those, I say, who can be pleased
-by trifles. What is our whole existence but a composition of trifles?</p>
-
-<p>“I went to bed, but not to sleep for many hours. When I entered
-my room, and stopped before the mirror, the diamonds among the
-flowers of my wreath glistened like stars. I took it from my head,
-and after removing the jewels, and a beautiful ring hanging to it, I
-placed it in water with my bouquets. Sleep seemed to fly my eyelids.
-However, for long after I had gone to bed, the plaudits of the audience,
-and the languid eyes of the gentleman in the stage box, seemed alternately
-to ring in my ears, or swim before my eyes. At last, the angel
-Sleep kindly weighed down my eyelids with her rosy fingers, and
-I forgot the opera, the gentleman, and the bouquets.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_75"></a>[75]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI.</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>“I awoke in the morning, persuaded that it was all a fairy dream,
-when, glancing at my toilet table, I was convinced of the reality of
-my adventure, by seeing the flowers still lying where I had left them.
-I examined the jewels, and found them as radiant by daylight as they
-had been the night before, wondering at this unknown and munificent
-gift. I laid them carefully away in my dressing-case, and descended
-to the breakfast table, where I found my guardian and Madame Bonni
-busily engaged in discussing the merits of my performance; both were
-praising me—she with a woman’s impulse and enthusiasm, Monsieur
-in a man’s quiet, reasoning way.</p>
-
-<p>“‘How do you feel after last night’s effort?’ inquired the gentleman.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Very well, sir, but rather fatigued,’ I answered.</p>
-
-<p>“‘How sweet you looked in the last act, my dear; those white
-lace robes were so becoming to you; and when the flowers were
-thrown on the stage, and the actor placed that superb wreath upon
-your head, I thought the effect exquisite,’ observed Madame, with
-feminine admiration of dress.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I am glad you were pleased with me.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘You sing again to-night, do you not, in the same opera?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Yes, for five nights in Norma.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I should like to see the morning journals, to know what they
-say of you.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘So should I,’ said Monsieur, as he rose from the table; ‘and as
-it is unnecessary for you to attend rehearsal this morning, I will go out
-and look in the newspapers, to see what is said about you, and when
-I return, bring them to you.’</p>
-
-<p>“He departed, and I spent the morning in practising some of my
-songs. At noon he returned, and I had the satisfaction of reading a
-long panegyric on my personal appearance, manner, and singing.
-They called me the Austrian nightingale, a name which I was afterwards
-known by for many years. That night, I played again, to a
-house crowded to overflowing. The applause was as great as the
-evening previous, and flowers were again thrown me, but when, as on
-leaving the stage, I timidly glanced upward to the stage box, my
-eyes encountered, instead of the beautiful orbs which had enchanted<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_76"></a>[76]</span>
-me the night before, an impertinent opera-glass directed at my face.
-I felt disappointed, I scarce knew why; for what reason had I to suppose
-that the same stranger should not be there again?</p>
-
-<p>“A month after my first appearance, I received an invitation, through
-Monsieur Belmont, to sing at the private soiree of a lady of rank, the
-Countess Bramonti; and although the idea of being merely a singer
-for the entertainment of others, was not gratifying to my sensitive
-pride, still, to oblige my kind benefactor, who had been to me a perfect
-saviour, I consented to go. I had suddenly become the rage of
-Naples. ‘I awoke one morning,’ as a great poet has since said, ‘and
-found myself famous;’ numerous gentlemen had called on me, attracted,
-I suppose, by rumors of my youth, my isolated position, and
-my good looks, for I can say without vanity that, at sixteen, I possessed
-personal attractions. I only repeat what others said, and one
-cannot remain long ignorant of that which is universally known: we
-seldom appreciate the value of beauty, and the great influence it exercises
-upon the minds of men, until it is on the decline, and then we
-cling to and treasure its wrecks with jealous care.</p>
-
-<p>“I dressed myself for the party in a white satin robe, and placed an
-artificial wreath of silver oats in my hair. I had arranged it in smooth
-bandeau, the heat of the weather rendering ringlets uncomfortable.
-When attired, I glanced at myself in the mirror, and feeling satisfied
-with my appearance, was, consequently, in a good humor; for it is
-said, that, when pleased with one’s self, one is always pleased with
-others.</p>
-
-<p>“Seeking for my gloves on the toilet table, my eyes rested momentarily
-on the withered wreath, which I still preserved. The leaves
-hung lifeless; the bright hues of the flowers had faded. Alas!
-poor ephemeral flowers, is not your brief but beautiful existence
-a type of woman’s life also? When young and lovely they are loved
-and cherished; led forth like queens to be admired and adored, every
-wish anticipated, every caprice gratified; but when Time’s rude hand
-has robbed these charms of their pristine glory, lovers gradually disappear
-like twinkling stars at dawn of day, and woman is left alone
-in the evening of her days, to think and dream over the past.</p>
-
-<p>“The Countess Bramonti resided in a noble mansion at the court
-end of the city. To the marble steps of this aristocratic abode our
-carriage whirled on the night of which I speak. The moon shone
-brightly; and as I stepped from it, I saw, by its light, long lines of
-carriages, extending from the house each way down the street. The
-liveried servants in the grand hall escorted me to the dressing room,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_77"></a>[77]</span>
-where I left my hood and shawl. Several beautiful women, some of
-them of the nobility of Naples, were dispersed about the apartment,
-conversing in subdued tones, and arranging their dress before the long
-mirrors. Monsieur came for me at the door, and, leaning on his arm,
-I entered the grand hall of reception. At the head of this magnificent
-room, upon an elevated dias, covered with crimson velvet, stood
-the Countess herself, a large, finely-formed woman, perhaps forty
-years of age, becomingly dressed in full, flowing robes of scarlet velvet,
-and ostrich plumes waved majestically in her dark, luxuriant
-hair. She received me with that urbanity and politeness which is
-ever the result of good breeding, and the attribute of an elegant mind.</p>
-
-<p>“As I passed through the gay and apparently happy crowd of
-smiling, lovely faces, many turned to look after me; but I felt the attention
-my presence excited, was paid rather to my sudden notoriety
-as a cantatrice, than to myself. Actresses, however virtuous, proud
-and talented they may be, will always, from their false position, experience
-a feeling of humiliation when introduced in private circles of
-society. They see and feel how much more beautiful and attractive
-woman is when sheltered from the rude gaze of the world, illumining
-only one mansion with her beauty, and diffusing love and kindness
-only to her own family and friends. Such a life is evidently, both
-from her mental and physical formation, more suitable for her than the
-empty plaudits of a gaping mob, or that applause of the world which
-exhilarates momentarily, and leaves an aching void when gone. But
-we are all mere creatures of circumstance, and the noblest souls are
-most frequently subjected to the stings and arrows of outrageous
-fortune.</p>
-
-<p>“These thoughts glanced across my mind, as the gay waltzers
-whirled past me, and the fine band stationed in the gallery poured
-forth its bewitching strains of music. The Countess had descended
-from her position, and mingled in the crowd, attended by several
-gentlemen. As she swept past me, gracefully supporting the train of
-her dress upon her arm, a tall, handsome young man, of elegant bearing,
-who walked at her right hand, bent his expressive blue eyes upon
-me for an instant, and then appeared to inquire of her who I was.
-The lady had passed me, but she looked back over her shoulder, as
-if to ascertain of whom he spoke, and then whispered something in
-reply. He again turned, and looked at me, not impertinently, but
-observingly. Numerous persons now intervened between me and my
-lady hostess, and I lost sight of her and the gentleman. After several
-quadrilles and waltzes had been danced, the music paused for a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_78"></a>[78]</span>
-while, and the Countess resumed her seat upon the throne. My guardian
-told me she wished to hear me sing. I wondered how I should
-sing with no instrument to accompany me; but that difficulty was
-soon solved; he led me through the crowd, and ascended the dias,
-where I saw a grand piano, which had been provided for the occasion.
-Monsieur Belmont seated himself at it, and I stood by his side.
-We sang a duet from Lucia de Lammermoor. I could not help observing
-that, during the whole song, the eyes of the gentleman who had
-been previously observing me, and who still stood by the Countess,
-were fixed upon me steadfastly—his earnest gaze almost annoyed me.
-At its conclusion, the Countess, apparently at his request, presented
-him to me as Monsieur de Serval.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I have, then, the pleasure of seeing our new star in the world of
-song; this is to me an unexpected pleasure,’ said the gentleman, as
-he inclined his graceful form toward me. I bowed, and my eyes fell
-before his; no reply was needed.</p>
-
-<p>“‘We have to-night a gay assemblage,’ he continued, ‘and yourself
-one of the fairest among us. During the last week, almost nothing
-has been talked of but your personal appearance and your exquisite
-voice; and I trust, Mademoiselle, you will confide in my sincerity,
-when I say that the reality has not disappointed my ideal expectations.’</p>
-
-<p>“I felt that this was an extravagant compliment, yet it was so delicately,
-charmingly paid, I wished to accept it as truth. From early
-youth, I have ever observed physiognomy, wishing to draw conclusions
-from the countenance as to the mind, and now I attentively regarded
-Monsieur de Serval. He was tall and delicately formed; his
-complexion was fair, like my own; his eyes were large, deep blue in
-color, with an expression of pensive thoughtfulness in their silent
-depths. This air of pensiveness, almost melancholy, pervaded his
-whole appearance. When speaking, his face would suddenly be lit
-up with a smile; then this look of joyousness would as quickly die
-away; it was grave, severe, and gay; it wore all expressions, it seemed
-to me, all at once. He was evidently a singular man, different to any
-one I had yet seen in life; there was a nameless something about him
-different to any man in that brilliant assembly of rank and fashion;
-yet he was not by any means the handsomest man there. When in
-repose, all expression seemed to vanish from his face, to return as
-quickly when he spoke again. How many indescribable nothings go
-to form a perfect whole. During ten minutes’ conversation on indifferent
-topics, I had made up my mind that Monsieur de Serval was a charming
-person.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_79"></a>[79]</span></p>
-
-<p>“‘I perceive the company are wending their way to the banquet
-hall, will you allow me to escort you?’ said he, after a moment’s pause.</p>
-
-<p>“I assented, took his arm, and we joined the gay crowd which
-was pouring through the parted leaves of the folding doors, into the
-gallery; this gallery was elegantly adorned with statues and paintings;
-at the opposite end another folding door stood open, and we entered a
-superb hall. The choice and tastefully arranged supper, ornamented
-with flowers and festoons of gold and silver tinsel, together with the
-dazzling light of the chandeliers, the gay dresses and jewels of the
-guests, their sprightly tones of conversation, and merry laughter, all
-formed a bright and exhilarating scene.</p>
-
-<p>“The Countess stood at the head of one of the long tables, chatting,
-laughing to her beaux, and displaying her white teeth; while the diamond
-necklace which adorned her neck, reflected a thousand prismatic
-rays. The undulating motion of waving plumes, rich head dresses,
-and beautiful necks and arms, alternately entranced my eager gaze.</p>
-
-<p>“‘The Countess is looking well to-night; she is considered a fine
-looking woman, do you not think so?’ asked the gentleman, as he
-handed me a dish of ice cream.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Yes, she is a handsome lady.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘And no less benevolent and talented, than good looking.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Of the two, I would prefer being talented and benevolent without
-beauty, to possessing beauty without them,’ I observed, almost unconsciously.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Ah, indeed, that is singular; young girls generally value their
-personal attractions, far above the attributes of mind.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I must be very different to other women, then.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘One need only look at your face, and hear you speak, to perceive
-that, Mademoiselle Genevra.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Different in my oddity alone, I presume.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘No, not in your eccentricity, but in your superiority to any girl
-of your age I have ever seen; but of course you know this, and I am
-merely repeating a trite compliment, which you will not thank me for,
-as you must have heard it a hundred times before.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Indeed, you mistake me, sir, the language of compliment is entirely
-new to me; and in fact, I am a perfect novice in the world’s
-ways; this is my first appearance in the gay world, as my preceptor
-not long since removed me from the boarding-school, where I was
-educated, at Vienna.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘You say you are inexperienced in the world’s ways; well, remain
-so if you can, young lady, for they are not a desirable acquisition.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_80"></a>[80]</span></p>
-
-<p>“A cloud seemed to gather over his face, as he said this; I was
-confirmed in my indefinite presentiment, that he was a singular man.
-We seemed to be conspicuous objects to the gay assembly, for the
-eyes of hundreds were directed at us; they were probably commenting
-and wondering, how the elegant man of fashion should be so
-pointedly attentive to an opera singer. I had learned a great deal
-within one week of active life; my fairy dreams were rapidly fading
-away; the world, I saw, was not what I had imagined it. I saw no
-where those benevolent hearts, and generous actions, which I had
-fondly dreamed of; and here, at this very ball, how many bitter envies,
-rivalries, and antipathies, were agitating the hearts of those very people,
-masked on the surface by smiles.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Who is that Monsieur de Serval is with?’ I heard a voice, immediately
-behind me, inquire of another.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Ah, do you not know the new opera singer? the Countess invited
-her here to-night to sing; do you like her voice?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Yes, well enough; but do you think her beautiful?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘No, I do not, but every one to their fancy; the men have been
-raving about her angelic looks for the last week.’</p>
-
-<p>“I looked at Monsieur de Serval; a significant smile sat upon his
-firm and finely chiseled lips, and I saw by the expression of his
-features, that he had also heard this little by-play. The banquet hall
-gradually thinned of its occupants; the guests returned to the ball
-room; we also went thither. Shortly after my teacher came for me to
-depart.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Permit me to see your pupil to the carriage,’ said Monsieur de
-Serval, still retaining my hand upon his arm.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I am extremely obliged for the civility, Monsieur,’ answered my
-teacher. He led the way down the grand staircase, through the marble
-hall, into the street; it was late, past two o’clock; the moon had
-disappeared, and dark masses of heavy clouds overhung the deep blue
-vault of heaven. Our carriage was ordered, and while it was driving
-up to the pavement, Monsieur de Serval said to me in a low tone, my
-teacher being a little in advance.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I hope you will not deem me impertinent, Mademoiselle, if I ask
-permission to visit you at the house where you now stay with your
-preceptor.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I should be happy to see you, Monsieur.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Well then,’ said he, as he handed me into the carriage, ‘I will do
-myself the honor of calling to-morrow; good evening, Mademoiselle;
-good evening, Monsieur Belmont.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_81"></a>[81]</span></p>
-
-<p>“The musical tones of his voice rang in my ears, as the carriage
-drove away.</p>
-
-<p>“‘It was a splendid affair, was it not, my child? and the Countess
-is a fine noble lady?’ said Monsieur, as we rattled over the stones.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I admire her much,’ I replied.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I perceive you are becoming a star here, a perfect magnet of attraction;
-every one speaks of you in praise,’ was the next observation
-of this worthy man, who was somewhat slow in making discoveries
-of any kind, unless some one else had previously enlightened him.</p>
-
-<p>“I made no reply to what he said; for by a train of ideas in thinking
-of Monsieur de Serval, and what he had said to me, my thoughts
-reverted to Blanche, and I wondered, and wished for her arrival in
-Naples; it was a long time since I had seen her; she must have altered
-much; I wondered if she still loved, and thought of me. My
-teacher had not specified any particular day for her arrival, but merely
-said, he expected her in a few days, or weeks. I longed for the society
-of some gentle one of my own sex. I began to perceive the
-brilliance, but isolated loveliness of my position; cut off from all social
-intercourse with other women; an object of admiration in the eyes of
-men; of indifference, envy, or contempt to women; I, therefore,
-longed to see my school-girl friend. Inez’s mind had never so well
-assimilated to my own; there was too much of earth about her; her
-feelings were too sensual, to suit my dreamy, abstract speculations of
-an ideal love. Visions, I then had, in those fresh young days of platonic
-sentiment, before my soul was rendered practical by earthly
-passion; still Inez had grown a fine, handsome woman; and, from
-what I had heard, notwithstanding the many temptations to which an
-actress is ever exposed, had sustained an unblemished reputation.
-How often have I seen individuals of both sexes, who possessed cultivated
-minds, personal attractions, and elegant manners; the world
-considered them irresistible; and I acknowledged, and appreciated
-their perfections, yet their fascinations never reached my heart. It is
-a sympathetic tone of mind which mutually attracts us; for does not
-every one think the object they love beautiful? ‘Beauty is only in the
-gazer’s eye;’ and the vanity of human nature induces us to believe
-that the object of our preference must be charming.</p>
-
-<p>“In the afternoon of the following day, as I sat alone in the parlor,
-Madame Bonni being employed in domestic affairs, and Monsieur gone
-out on theatrical business; Arla, a pretty female attendant of the
-house, ushered into the room Monsieur de Serval. I was sitting by
-the window, dressed in a sky blue tissue; my arms and neck bare.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_82"></a>[82]</span>
-When he entered, I was amusing myself by singing to the canary bird;
-and the winged warbler hopped about his gayly gilded prison, and
-almost looked amazed, probably imagining he heard a free brother of
-the forest. I scarcely heard the light step of the gentleman, and he
-had already taken a seat near me, ere I looked around. I had unconsciously
-fallen into a reverie, and I presume my face wore an expression
-of sadness, for the first observation he made in his sweet low
-voice, was,</p>
-
-<p>“‘Your face wears a sadder expression by daylight, Mademoiselle,
-than it did last night, at the brilliant ball.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘That is its natural expression, Monsieur; the other was a momentary
-exhilaration.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Ah, it is strange that one so young should ever feel sad; sadness
-generally comes with experience and satiety.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘But it seems to me that there is such a thing as living years in
-advance of time, and so I feel sometimes; an indefinite presentiment
-of unhappiness seems sometimes to hang over me, and so I have felt
-this afternoon.’</p>
-
-<p>“You should struggle against such feelings; they only render one
-morbid to no purpose; they make us dissatisfied with the present, and
-skeptical of the future; it only requires a slight effort of the will to
-overcome these presentiments; if you indulge in them, Mademoiselle,
-they will wither your freshness of heart, and impart to your gentle face
-an expression of gloom.’</p>
-
-<p>“A pause succeeded for a moment; Monsieur de Serval bit his lip,
-and looked down at the floor; he appeared to be absent in mind and
-thinking. I could not help admiring his elegant appearance, and
-classical face; he was the first handsome, accomplished man, I had
-ever seen, secluded for so many years within the walls of my school.
-The men I had seen there at the monthly exhibitions, were generally commonplace
-and unattractive, although many of them were of the nobility
-of Vienna. Elegance and grace are indeed rare attributes, and almost
-as rarely to be met with among the nobility, as among the commonalty.</p>
-
-<p>“How fascinating is beauty, and the winning ways some persons
-possess; how frequently it conceals a depraved heart and bad disposition.
-Oh, had I known at that moment of time, what I now know,
-how many days of sorrowful unhappiness might I have been spared
-the misery of enduring; but youth is presumptuous, self-confident, and
-conceited. Knowledge of the heart is only acquired by experience,
-and that generally comes too late to be of use to one; but let me not
-anticipate: everything has its time.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_83"></a>[83]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Glancing around the room, Monsieur de Serval observed the
-canary bird, who resting upon his perch, seemed to regard us attentively.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Is that little feathered songster yours, Mademoiselle?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘No, Monsieur, it is Madame Bonni’s little favorite.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Madame Bonni,’ he repeated, abstractedly.</p>
-
-<p>“‘The lady to whom this house belongs, with whom my teacher
-and I board.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Ah, yes, I think I recollect having seen her once; she is a pleasant
-woman, and companionable for you sometimes, I presume.’</p>
-
-<p>“Since my arrival she has been extremely kind and attentive.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘And how do you feel upon being thus suddenly brought forward,
-a bright star in the etherial world of song?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘The same as I did when a simple school girl; the change, although
-an agreeable variation to school monotony, has made but little
-alteration in me.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘You are too philosophical to allow anything to disturb your
-equanimity of mind, I suppose.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I do not know that I am a philosopher; I think the elevated tone
-of mind, necessary to form such a character, is beyond my powers of
-thought; but I endeavor to take the world as I find it, and quietly
-glide through my lot in life.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘A wise conclusion, Mademoiselle; the very remark shows you
-possess a fine mind, and, if you follow your precepts, you will doubtless
-be as happy as any human being ever is,’ he sighed, and a cloud
-seemed to gather over his face. It struck me that he possessed himself
-a considerable share of that morbidness of feeling, which he had
-a moment before criticised and reproved in me; he seemed melancholy;
-perhaps, I thought, he has been slighted in love; women invariably
-attribute any sadness of look or manner, to some affair of the
-heart. I have grown wiser since then, and now, with more truth and
-justice, trace back this depression and gloom to an abuse of the affections,
-and consequently satiety.</p>
-
-<p>“An alabaster vase of rare exotic flowers, stood upon a small chinese
-table, by my side; mechanically I had plucked one of the beautiful
-camilla japonicas, and was twirling it between my thumb and
-fore finger; the large blue eyes of Monsieur de Serval seemed to be
-attentively contemplating this pretty vegetable beauty.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I wish I were that flower, Mademoiselle,’ said he.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Why, Monsieur?’ I asked, rather astonished by the abrupt
-remark.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_84"></a>[84]</span></p>
-
-<p>“‘That I might experience the delight of being played with by
-those fairy fingers.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I know of no enchantment by which I can metamorphose you
-into a flower; but since I cannot turn witch, at least allow me to offer
-you the one which elicited your compliment.’</p>
-
-<p>“Playfully, I handed him the japonica; he took it with a smile,
-and placed it in the button hole of the dark blue coat he wore.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I shall preserve this as a precious souvenir, Mademoiselle Genevra.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘A very trivial keepsake.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Ah!’ he replied, ‘it is our recollection of the donor, not the absolute
-value of a gift, which endears it to our memory.’</p>
-
-<p>“What a just remark: how often have I treasured valueless things
-with loving care, from gratitude and love to the one who had bestowed
-them. Shortly after, Monsieur de Serval took his leave. ‘Adieu,
-Monsieur,’ said I, as he was about leaving the room, ‘a bientot.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Those words, ‘a bientot,” recall “la belle France,” and old
-associations. Farewell, Mademoiselle.’ His tall and graceful form disappeared
-from my view; unconsciously, I fell into a chair, and mused
-upon the singularity of my new acquaintance, and his many fascinations,
-when Madame Bonni joined me. She appeared surprised when
-I told her of the visit of Monsieur de Serval.</p>
-
-<p>“‘My dear child, he is a fascinating, attractive gentleman; but do
-you know his reputation?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘No, he is an utter stranger to me; I was introduced to him at
-the Countess’ party. I know nothing of him.’</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I must tell you, to warn you against these gay men of the world,
-who are in fact not unfrequently like birds of prey; he has for many
-years been considered a profligate man of fashion; he has run through
-with a large fortune of his own, and draws largely upon an aunt of his,
-for means to support his expensive way of living. He is said to have
-squandered his money in gambling; among women of improper character;
-in horse racing, and divers other fashionable vices. Knowing
-your virtuous character, I take the liberty of cautioning you, Mademoiselle.
-You will not be offended at me, I trust, for thus speaking?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘On the contrary, I feel grateful for your kind admonitions; but it
-seems strange to me that so interesting and graceful a gentleman can
-be so depraved.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘You may depend upon my veracity, I assure you; I know this to
-be a fact; he is a man of seductive manners, and has always had the
-reputation of being eminently successful among women; and I should<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_85"></a>[85]</span>
-suppose from his gentle ways that he would be a favorite. I would
-not have mentioned this, but your beauty, your isolated position in
-life; having no protector but your innate sense of virtue, and Monsieur
-Belmont, who looks upon these things in a philosophical point of
-view, and would care little what you did; your great musical abilities,
-and the celebrity you are rapidly acquiring, all these conspire to render
-you a conspicuous object of pursuit to these gay men of fashion. Had
-I a daughter, as young, and as beautiful as yourself, I should wish that
-some matron, experienced in the world’s ways, might advise her of
-the snares of life; and, since you have been here, I feel toward you
-almost the same affection a mother feels for a child; you possess the
-sentiments and character of a lady; you should have been born the
-daughter of some noble house, in which position you might have passed
-your life in luxurious elegance, without being subjected to this laborious
-and disagreeable profession.’</p>
-
-<p>“I felt the truth of the good woman’s remarks, and thought upon
-them long after she had left me; still I could not consent to believe <i>all</i>
-that she had said concerning Monsieur de Serval; perhaps he had been
-wild, most young men are, and he was yet under thirty, perhaps extravagant;
-but that he was a systematic, practised <i>roué</i>, I really could
-not think of believing. The expression of his features was so sweet,
-so sincere; his manner was so amiable; Madame might have been
-misinformed, or personal prejudice had blinded her. Thus ever do
-we cheat ourselves where our affections, or predilections are interested,
-we use every possible sophism to convince ourselves, that those whom
-we fancy, are everything our fond imaginations picture them as being;
-determinately closing our eyes and ears against facts which speak to
-the contrary.</p>
-
-<p>“I had not been to church since my arrival in Naples, so entirely
-had my new profession engrossed my attention; my conscience almost
-reproached me for this neglect of what I had been taught to consider
-so important a duty. In Naples, I perceived that religion was regarded
-by the higher classes as a matter of custom and form; few, save among
-the humble peasantry, went to church from sincere faith, or love of
-prayer; the poor, humble worms of earth, believe with blind confidence,
-whatever their priests tell them; they are generally contented
-and happy, amid the humble pursuits, the lowly joys, of their restricted
-sphere in life; and sometimes, when contemplating these unsophisticated
-children of nature, I have wondered whether they are not after
-all, wiser than those great philosophers, who propel their minds into
-the regions of science, and yet ultimately discover that we can learn<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_86"></a>[86]</span>
-nothing positive of that futurity, which no mortal has the ability to
-comprehend; no one can doubt but that they are happier, if not wiser
-than those learned skeptics, however humble the former, or great the
-latter may be; and surely that belief, be it Protestant or Catholic,
-which teaches us to bear patiently the misfortunes and ills of life; to
-confide and trust in that beneficent Spirit, the creator, from the beginning
-of time to eternity, of all things; that abstract and immaterial
-principle which we, without understanding, can only venerate and
-adore. Surely that wrapt devotion, that blind reliance, is better than
-skepticism, in which we have nothing to console us in regard to
-futurity, and yet are satisfied with our own conclusions.</p>
-
-<p>“Pardon me, my kind friend, these many digressions and reflections;
-yet I cannot forbear making them, when I recall those old days.</p>
-
-<p>“Madame Bonni had repeatedly invited me to attend mass with her:
-until now I had declined; but on the Sunday following the conclusion
-of my two weeks’ engagement, which had ended with much eclat for
-me and profit to my teacher, I promised to go with her to early mass,
-at the French church of Sacre Cœur.</p>
-
-<p>“We rose with the dawn, and together bent our steps to the house
-of prayer, which was situated perhaps half a mile from home. She
-attired in her usual dress of gray silk, wearing a mantilla, thrown over
-her head, without a bonnet. I in spotless white, a scarf of blue
-crape around my shoulders, and a white chip pamela bonnet, then in
-vogue. Even at that early hour, the streets were alive with pedestrians,
-summoned by the bells to their devotions. Splendid equipages
-and humble calesso’s jostled each other as they rattled along. Ladies,
-attended by their footmen, carrying their prayer books, passed the poor
-sempstress; the lady’s maid; the Neapolitan peasant, with her madonna-like
-coiffure, and classic face; the pretty attendants of shops,
-hurrying to their devotions before they began the business of the day;
-the gay, happy-looking peasant beaux, dressed in their holiday clothes,
-sauntered along; and, in contrast to them, the dignified, grave Italian
-noble, glided past with quick and quiet pace.</p>
-
-<p>“The enormous leaves of the bronze-gilt doors of the church were
-opened wide, and a crowd of devotees were entering the edifice, as
-we also went in. We walked up the great middle aisle, where, kneeling
-upon its polished marble surface, were numerous worshippers,
-devoutly telling their beads, and murmuring their prayers in whispered
-tones. Madame Bonni walked to the foot of the sanctuary, and
-kneeling before it, repeated her rosary. The bright sunlight began to
-cast a thousand different rays through the stained glass of the gothic<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_87"></a>[87]</span>
-windows. Leaning against one of the corinthian pillars of the centre
-aisle, I looked around; all was still as the chamber of death; the sun
-had not yet fully illumined the beautiful church; the distant corners,
-and niches, wherein statues were placed, remained in dim twilight;
-even the sanctuary would not have been clearly distinguishable, had it
-not been lighted by an alabaster lamp, suspended over the altar. The
-priests had not yet made their appearance, nor had the choir began
-to sing.</p>
-
-<p>“Near me, inlaid upon the wall, was an oblong marble tablet; and
-engraved upon it, I read the epitaph of one of the deceased cardinals
-of the church. I do not know why, but the sight of that tablet, the
-associations of time and place, the early hour of day, the solitude and
-silence of the church, brought home more vividly to my mind than I
-had ever felt before—the thought of death. I had seen grave stones
-and epitaphs a hundred times before, but had always glanced at
-them carelessly, without fully realizing that they were actually the
-abodes of the dead; of beings who, when living, had been animated
-with the same hopes, fears, and passions as myself; but who now
-slumbered on unheeded and unheeding. Yet why should we mourn
-for the dead, even for those we most love and cherish? to die in this
-life, is only to begin a new existence in some other state of being; and
-since we cannot penetrate beyond that dark abyss, the boundary of
-life, we must look forward with hope, and confidently trust in our
-Creator.</p>
-
-<p>“I had stood facing the sanctuary, and absently gazing upon it,
-when the door of the vestry opened, and the train of priests and boys
-entered; at the same moment the music began. In looking at the
-splendid robes which the priest wore, as the representative of Christ,
-I could not help recalling to mind the manner of <i>His</i> life, who, when
-he was upon earth, had not where to lay his head. His holiness, his
-self-denial, his purely spiritual life, so poorly exemplified by the
-modern Italian priesthood; the most miserable among whom fares
-sumptuously every day, compared to the life his Master led.</p>
-
-<p>“The mournful chant of the officiating priest re-echoed from
-vaulted-ceiling to paved aisles, filling the empty space with the sad
-sound; and alternately the thrilling tones of the voices in the choir,
-sang the hymns of the service. Madame Bonni, in an attitude of
-wrapt devotion, her head bowed down, still knelt at the sanctuary,
-and I at the base of the pillar. A magnificent painting of the crucifixion,
-hung over the altar; and upon the inanimate image of the
-Divine sufferer, I fixed my eyes. During the service, the incense had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_88"></a>[88]</span>
-been offered before the altar; the priest and boys had disappeared,
-bearing with them the consecrated host; and the last sweet cadences
-of the voices in the gallery were hushed, ere I aroused myself from my
-reverie. There was something beautifully solemn about that mass,
-celebrated at dawn; the classic interior of the church, built in the
-grecian style; its silence, the dim twilight which reigned, the sweet
-voices, concealed from view by the crimson silk curtains of the
-gallery, the elegant robes of the officiating priests and their attendants,
-and the grateful odor of frankincense and myrrh, with which the altar
-was perfumed, together formed a scene of impressive solemnity.</p>
-
-<p>“One by one, the people stole away; we also departed. It was
-now bright day: two hours had elapsed during mass. Madame Bonni
-proposed, before returning home, to pay a visit to the convent of
-Sacre Cœur, to which the church belonged. I willingly assented, and
-accompanied her.</p>
-
-<p>“It was an antique mass of brick, of almost shapeless form; so
-many different additions had at various times been made to the
-original edifice. The little iron-grated window, set in the middle of
-the strong, iron-barred gate, was opened by a small, thin-faced nun.
-She looked at us with a quick sharp glance; after Madame had spoken
-to her a moment, she turned away within the portal, leaving the window
-open, through which I was enabled to see the interior. It was a small
-anti-chamber, furnished with nothing, save the floor, the four walls,
-and three heavy oaken chairs, chained to the wall. After several
-questions had been asked by another nun, and responded to by the
-first, two or three bells rung, and other mysterious preliminaries gone
-through with, our nun devoutly crossed herself, and admitted us.
-Madame asked for the Lady Superior; we were conducted through
-several long narrow passages, to the convent parlor, where the nun
-left us, and went to summon her Superior. The room was small and
-dark, very plainly furnished with a waxed floor of dark wood, pictures
-of the saints on the walls, and an enormous crucifix in one corner.
-The chairs were chained to the walls, as in the anti-chamber; everything
-wore an air of monastic serenity. I heard the rustling of silk,
-and looking round, saw a tall, slender woman, thin, almost to attenuation.
-She wore the sombre dress of the order; the expression of her
-features was at once benevolent and austere; her eyes were blue,
-quiet, and grave; her face was of an oval form, and full; there was at
-once, shrewdness, benevolence, and sternness, all expressed and impressed
-upon that face.</p>
-
-<p>“She greeted Madame Bonni with cordiality; me, with politeness;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_89"></a>[89]</span>
-in her right hand she carried a rosary of ivory beads, which, from
-time to time, she passed mechanically through her small white hands.
-Having seated herself upon a chair, she quietly regarded us.</p>
-
-<p>“‘We have called thus early, Mother Cecilia,’ began Madame, in
-extenuation of our unseasonable visit, ‘that we might obtain of you a
-permit to go through the convent on Wednesday next, my young
-friend being desirous of seeing it.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Ah!’ said she, fixing her eyes upon me, ‘is she a stranger in
-Naples?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘She has been here but a short time.’</p>
-
-<p>“The holy mother would probably have been horrified, had she
-known I was an actress. Ah, blind bigotry of party faith, of sectarianism;
-ye, who look at the occupation, the condition in life, without
-regarding the honesty, the character, the heart; the mind’s the
-standard of the man or woman, and not the accidental contingencies
-of fortuitous or disadvantageous circumstances.</p>
-
-<p>“I will with pleasure give you a permit, and you need not apologise
-for the earliness of the hour, as we have long since begun the duties
-of the day; the sisters attend mass at three o’clock, in the chapel of
-the convent,’ she continued, still looking at me. ‘This young girl so
-forcibly reminds me of one of my beloved ones, who is now, I hope,
-in a state of beatitude, among the blessed around the throne of God.
-So great a resemblance do you bear to her, I almost thought when I
-entered, that it was herself revisiting earth; may I ask your name,
-Mademoiselle?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Genevra Sfonza.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Genevra,’ she absently repeated, ‘what a singular coincidence; it
-was under that name she took the veil and left the world; yes,
-she was a holy child; one of the few pure spirits which seem to emanate
-immediately from the bosom of our Heavenly Father: may she
-rest in peace, and her soul be made happy in the true faith.’</p>
-
-<p>“She crossed herself; her lips moved: perhaps she murmured a
-prayer for her favorite.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Who was the young lady of whom you spoke, mother Cecilia?’
-inquired Madame Bonni.</p>
-
-<p>“‘She was Signorina Lavona Carraggi, daughter of Prince Carraggi,
-one of the oldest and noblest families in Naples: from early infancy
-she was ever pious, very attentive to her devotional exercises, and
-absented herself, as much as her high station would permit, from the
-vanities of the world: at sixteen, her father, yielding to her solicitations,
-consented she should take the white veil, which she did, but<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_90"></a>[90]</span>
-died of consumption within the first year of her noviciate; but although
-she is gone from us for ever, her memory still lives in the hearts of the
-sisterhood, by whom she was tenderly beloved, and with justice, too,
-for surely she was an admirable being.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I heard that it was some disappointment in an affair of the heart,
-which induced the Lady Lavona to leave the world,’ observed Madame
-Bonni.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Ah, no!’ replied the Abbess, with a pious shudder at the
-frightful imputation upon the character of her deceased favorite; ‘that
-is mere report; she left the world for the solitude of the cloister, because
-she knew that its vanities and frivolities are incompatible with
-the practice of true religion, and she wished to become worthy of being
-the bride of Christ.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘What a mistaken notion of religion,’ thought I, as I listened;
-‘surely, the simple fact that the beneficent Creator has placed us here,
-sufficiently demonstrates that the world of society is our proper sphere
-of action, and not the seclusion and austerities of a convent.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘How long has the young lady been dead?’ asked Madame.</p>
-
-<p>“‘It is now a year ago: she died on the Eve of the Annunciation,
-at midnight; while she was expiring in her cell, the nuns were celebrating
-midnight mass in the chapel; suddenly her apparition appeared
-unto them, standing in their midst, and then as suddenly vanished
-away; by this miracle they knew that her spirit had departed, and it
-would seem as if, lingering on the verge of eternity, it came back to
-take a last farewell of that sisterhood by whom she was so much beloved.
-Upon going to her cell, I found her quite dead, sustained in
-the arms of the nun who nursed her. She is buried in the garden of
-the convent, and on reception days numerous visitors come to see her
-grave.’</p>
-
-<p>“My faith was not of sufficient india-rubber-like expansion to embrace
-the miraculous apparition; but I could easily understand and
-appreciate the fact, that the young lady had been beautiful and lovely,
-and that her death was regretted by those who knew and loved her.</p>
-
-<p>“After a few remarks, mutually exchanged, upon indifferent topics,
-the Superior wrote a permit for Wednesday, and we rose to go. At
-parting, she pressed my hand in hers, and again exclaimed,</p>
-
-<p>“‘Ah! what resemblance; I should think it was herself: farewell,
-my daughter, and if, in after years, the world and its frivolities satiate
-and disgust you,—if your soul becomes weary with the cares of life,—come
-then to the peaceful shade of the cloister; here you will find
-quiet and repose.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_91"></a>[91]</span></p>
-
-<p>“‘I am too young, yet, to have become tired of a world which I
-am only beginning to see.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘So thought I, at your age; not so do I regard it now; and I
-look back with regret upon those years spent in idle pleasures, which I
-should have dedicated to the service of God. Few young people
-possess sufficient self-denial to practice the austerities of religion. Lady
-Lavona was a brilliant exception: she left a high station, the pomp and
-glitter of nobility, to bear her cross and follow her Saviour.’</p>
-
-<p>“There was something solemn and impressive in the look and manner
-of the Abbess, as she spoke these grave words of advice; her face,
-marble-like when in repose, lit up when she spoke, like those beautiful
-Chinese vases, which only show the flowers painted upon the exterior
-when filled with water within.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Good morning, mother Cecilia.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Farewell, daughter: the peace of God be with you.’ The attendant
-nun conducted us back the way we came, the heavy portal
-opened and shut behind us, and we directed our steps homeward.</p>
-
-<p>“The appearance and conversation of the Superior made a deep
-impression on my mind. All the way home I thought of what she had
-said about the lady whom I resembled; her description of her loveliness
-and purity of life had interested me, still I had no desire to emulate
-her example of sanctity, and become a nun; I have always
-thought the life of a religieuse a useless one; to be pure, virtuous,
-and truly religious, it is not necessary to seclude oneself from society
-within a convent’s walls, perform penance and say prayers a hundred
-times a day; the duties of a sincere, upright and active life, are the
-best offerings we can make our Almighty Father, and, I feel confident,
-the most acceptable him.</p>
-
-<p>“Monsieur Belmont had breakfasted and gone out, when we reached
-home; we took ours; then Madame left me to attend to her domestic
-affairs, and I went to my room to practice my part in a new opera. I
-had been engaged thus two or three hours, when, looking out of my
-window, I saw a calesso drive up and stop before the door; my teacher
-got out, accompanied by a female, dressed in white, and enveloped in
-an enormous black lace veil. I caught a glimpse of her tiny feet as
-she lightly tripped out. Something familiar struck my memory as I
-glanced at that veiled form, an indefinite association of something or
-some one, I could not tell which, or what. They quickly entered the
-house, and I continued my musical studies, imagining it was some
-visitor of Madame’s, when Arla requested me to come to the parlor,
-a lady wished to see me. Many gentlemen had visited me since my<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_92"></a>[92]</span>
-arrival in Naples, but possessing not a single female acquaintance in
-the city, I puzzled myself in conjecture.</p>
-
-<p>“Wondering who it could be, I descended the stairs; the sound of
-merry voices and laughter greeted my ears from the parlour: on entering
-it, I saw a group of three, standing in the middle of the room,
-their backs toward me. The lady I had seen from the window, was
-playfully arranging upon Monsieur’s broad shoulders her large lace
-veil; my guardian was gayly conversing, while Madame stood by
-talking and laughing with Italian enthusiasm. They formed a happy-looking,
-graceful trio. I paused a moment to look at them. The
-lady, happening to turn her head, saw me, uttered an exclamation of
-surprise, dropped the veil, and we rushed into each other’s arms;—it
-was Blanche!</p>
-
-<p>“‘Ah!’ cried Monsieur, still trembling with laughter, from some
-unknown cause, ‘now I know Genevra will be happy; she has been
-wishing and longing for your arrival. Are you not mutually glad to
-see each other?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Ah, yes,’ answered Blanche, as she raised her head from my
-shoulder, and uplifted her beautiful dewy eyes to mine. ‘Genevra
-knows as well, better than I can tell her, how very happy I am at
-seeing her once more, after so many years of separation.’</p>
-
-<p>“I said nothing myself, for it has ever been my nature to say the
-least when I feel most. And now, after the first congratulations were
-over, I looked at Blanche, to see what effect Time had wrought on her.
-She had grown much taller, and her form was rounder in its voluptuous
-beautiful outlines; her face still preserved its old expression of infantile
-innocence and sweetness, yet there was something altered about
-it: and, on attentively criticizing that fair face, I perceived a slight
-expression of scorn in the almost imperceptible curl of the delicate
-upper lip, and a melancholy languor, bordering on gloom, in the
-blue depths of those large eyes. Had some disappointment crossed
-her, or was she already weary of the world’s applause? She was a
-very handsome woman,—no wonder she should be admired.</p>
-
-<p>“Her laugh was the same as ever; her merry, child-like laugh;
-how often had that joyous sound amused me amid the monotony of
-school discipline!</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, my beloved friend! my beautiful Blanche! years have rolled
-their dark mists on my soul since that re-union. I have lived to weep
-over thy solitary grave: thy only mourner the hoarse resounding waves
-of the sea. That graceful form has long ago been food for worms:
-those lovely eyes glazed in death, and those long ringlets rotted to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_93"></a>[93]</span>
-decay;—yet, whenever I recall thy gentleness, thy winning ways, and
-lofty soul, tears will start from their briny bed, to consecrate with
-grief thy sweet memory. Yes, if there be ‘a land of pure delight’
-beyond this terrestrial sphere, I feel assured thy blest shade has entered
-beatitude.</p>
-
-<p>“We went up stairs together to my room, and there she gave me a
-description of the principal events in her life since leaving Vienna.
-She was too sincerely unaffected and devoid of egotism to entertain
-me with her own conquests or matrimonial offers; but she spoke with
-tenderness of Inez; her well maintained popularity; her good temper;
-her still cherished fondness for myself; and, lastly, her approaching
-marriage with a wealthy merchant of Berlin, and consequent withdrawal
-from the stage.</p>
-
-<p>“‘It is really true, then,’ I remarked, ‘that she is to be married.
-I heard so, but did not know how true the report might be. And
-you, Blanche, have you any idea of following her example?’</p>
-
-<p>“A rose-tint, like the delicate hue of one of ocean’s shells, lingered
-for an instant on the snowy cheek of Blanche. It quickly disappeared,
-and she gravely, I thought, almost sorrowfully, replied:</p>
-
-<p>“‘My dear Genevra, I seldom bestow a thought on matrimony. To
-say that I <i>never</i> think of marrying, would be an absurdity. All women
-<i>must</i> think sometimes of that which is most certainly their manifest
-destiny; but my thoughts dwell but seldom on that subject. Single
-life presents no terrors to me: and you know actresses scarcely ever
-have an opportunity of marrying any save a professional character.
-Inez is an extraordinary instance of virtue and beauty being rewarded;
-and most fortunate is she in having obtained so generous and fine
-a gentleman for her future husband.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Monsieur Belmont told me your beauty and your voice has set
-all Naples wild,’ she continued. ‘Is it so, dear? But I need not ask;
-the journals informed me of that fact. And does the applause that
-greets you in public fully satisfy your heart? Do you never come
-home to the solitude of your own room, from these grand triumphs,
-and there, safe from the observation of others, sit and dream, and long
-for something, you scarce can divine what yourself; and <i>then</i>, do you
-not feel how brilliant, yet how isolated, are the lives we actresses lead?
-Have you never felt so?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Often,’ I replied, staring at her in amazement, at the sympathy
-of mind there evidently existed between us. ‘Yes, I have often felt
-so, although I am as yet on the outset of my new career. But I
-imagined I alone had this misanthropy;—I little thought you shared<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_94"></a>[94]</span>
-it; but let us banish all these gloomy reflections, which can do no
-good, and only tend to sadden us, and speak of something more
-cheerful; and now I want to ask about Munich, as I never was there.
-What sort of town is it?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘A very beautiful, delightful place, to those who fancy it. It contains
-many very splendid buildings, fine gardens, and much good
-society. I was so constantly engaged in my profession, however, I
-scarcely noticed what it was; and in truth, since I left you I have been
-in so many places, that they seem all alike to me, and one town is as
-agreeable as another.’</p>
-
-<p>“Here our conversation for the moment was suspended, and
-Blanche, at our hostess’ request, went to take some refreshments after
-her journey, but I plainly perceived, both from the words and looks of
-my friend, that there was something wrong at heart; either the gay
-world had wearied her, or else some disappointed or clandestine love
-was gnawing at her heart. Which it was, I could not decide; so I
-trusted to events to develope this mystery.</p>
-
-<p>“Blanche became completely domesticated with us, and we were
-to each other as sisters; yet she did not confide to me the cause of this
-concealed sadness. In the meantime, Monsieur de Serval became a
-regular visiter of mine. I presented him to Blanche,—he seemed
-pleased with her, yet I perceived that, although he treated her with
-respectful admiration, his eyes never rested on her with the same
-expression of love and tenderness as they always did when wandering
-after me. They say ‘that love begets love.’ To a certain extent I
-think the saying true; and perhaps the eager admiration of Monsieur
-de Serval quickened my perception of his merits, and gave him additional
-interest in my eyes. Be that as it may, my feelings had not as
-yet shaped themselves into a downright sentiment of love. They
-were as yet in embryo, quiescent friendship, when a strange and unexpected
-event turned the current of my destiny.</p>
-
-<p>“I was sitting alone in the little parlor before mentioned. Blanche
-had a headache, and was in her own room. Monsieur was away
-somewhere,—he generally spent his evenings out; and Madame Bonni
-had left the apartment. I sat alone: it was now midsummer; the
-weather was extremely hot; but I recollect on the evening of which
-I speak, a brisk north breeze had sprung up at twilight, and blown
-steadily off the shore for several hours, rendering the air quite chill and
-cool. The wind sighed drearily around the little cottage, and seemed
-to dwell momentarily in the tall poplar trees of the garden.</p>
-
-<p>“One wax candle, from its silver candelabra, shed a subdued light<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_95"></a>[95]</span>
-around, in its immediate vicinity, leaving the rest of the room in
-shadow, and the full moon, from a window opposite me, darted long
-streaks of silver rays along the floor; my book had fallen from my
-hand, being unable to read by the feeble light, and with my hands
-folded together in my lap, I was lost in contemplation, when a knock
-came at the door, and without waiting for permission, it was opened,
-and Monsieur de Serval entered. He did not look as well as usual,
-nor was his toilette as carefully made. He scarcely returned my salutation,
-and drawing a chair near me, seated himself in it, and leaning
-back, with his small right hand, pushed back from his forehead the
-glossy waves of his flaxen hair.</p>
-
-<p>“I spoke of several things: the opera, political debates, fashionable
-literature; he answered abstractedly in monosyllables, and then
-relapsed into silence. Suddenly starting from his chair, he began
-pacing the room with rapid strides; his face looked flushed and
-strange. I had always felt toward him an indefinite fear, arising
-probably from the magnetic influence of his stern temper, and now the
-same sensation came creeping over me as I sat, and wonderingly gazed
-upon the singular behaviour of my visiter. Suddenly pausing in his
-walk, he came toward me, and again seated himself at my side. He
-grasped both my hands in his, and bent the stern gaze of his lustrous
-eyes on mine. I now began to apprehend what was coming, and to
-tremble.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Genevra,’ said he, in the low, deep tone of impassioned feeling,
-—and as he said this, he took both my hands in his left hand, and with
-the other he played with the curls of my hair—‘Genevra, I am about
-leaving town, perhaps for some months; perhaps from contingency or
-fatality I may never return to Parthenope. I have come to say farewell.
-I could, I think, almost feel happy at going, could I for a
-moment suppose that a heart so pure as yours, would cherish towards
-a forlorn, unhappy being like myself a single sentiment of kindness or
-regret. Say, Mademoiselle, may I hope I shall not be forgotten?’</p>
-
-<p>“He grasped my hands fiercely as he said this, and looked closely
-in my face. I felt frightened, and scarcely knew what to say. At
-last I stammered out,—</p>
-
-<p>“‘You have my best wishes, Monsieur, for your future happiness.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Best wishes! Is that all? Yes, I see I was a fool to suppose—’
-He stopped abruptly, and bending down his stately head to a level
-with my eyes, riveted his gaze on mine. I could feel his warm breath
-hotly fan my cheek, and the beams of moonlight showed his broad
-full chest as it rose and fell with contending passions. Nearer and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_96"></a>[96]</span>
-nearer did he draw me to him, till his head sank upon my shoulder,
-his beautiful mouth sought mine, and with his arms tightly clasped
-around my waist, I felt myself irresistibly drawn into an embrace,
-which, by a strange paralyzation of all power of will, I had no strength
-to avoid. He drew me forcibly off my chair upon his lap, and there
-imprinted on my lips a hundred kisses before I could summon strength
-and determination to break away. I forced myself from his iron grasp
-and ran to the other side of the room. He followed me, his beautiful
-face distorted by passion, and falling on his knees, again seized my
-hands in his, and exclaimed,—‘Pardon me—oh! pardon me, beautiful
-Genevra! but I love you with a wild, intense passion. Forgive me
-if I have offended your pride or modesty. Take pity on me, Genevra,
-and encourage me to hope that my love may meet with a return.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Monsieur de Serval!’ I cried, at length recovering breath to
-speak, ‘your conduct is incomprehensible, inexplicable:—what <i>can</i>
-you mean by it? Is it gentlemanly—is it honorable, thus wantonly to
-insult the modesty and wound the pride of a defenceless girl?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘By Jupiter, you misconstrue me!” he vehemently exclaimed;
-and starting to his feet, he again traversed the room with rapid strides.
-‘Has my bearing toward you ever been anything save respectful?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Does not this look marvellously like insulting familiarity?’ I
-indignantly demanded.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I forgot myself for a moment. And are you so remorseless as to
-refuse forgiveness for an unintentional fault? Yes, here in this very
-room, bear me witness, all ye gods and goddesses, all ye saints and
-angels:—I do swear I love you, and you alone. With a crazy passion
-have I adored since our first meeting at the countess’;—till now
-I have stifled it, concealed it as much as possible from your observation;
-but now, on the eve of departure from Naples, I tell you how I
-love you, and honorably offer you my heart and hand in marriage. If
-you will accept me, I will return; otherwise, I presume, I never shall.’</p>
-
-<p>“I had sunk into a chair, overpowered by this strange scene.
-Again, as if impelled by some invisible influence, he came and put
-his arms around my waist, and kissed me as before. This time, after
-what he had just said, I did not resist him.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I have sometimes thought,’ he whispered, ‘from the expression
-of your eyes, that you loved me. Say, dearest, is it so? Put your
-beautiful arms around my neck, and say, ‘Dear Rinaldo, I love thee!’</p>
-
-<p>“Unconscious, almost stupefied, I mechanically complied, and whispered
-after him, ‘Dear Rinaldo, I love thee!’ Then he remained
-motionless for some minutes, seeming to have lost all recollection in a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_97"></a>[97]</span>
-delirium of sense, his arms tightly locked around my waist, his head
-resting in my lap. His wild, impassioned manner had in some degree
-magnetized, and inspired my naturally cold temperament with something
-like a return of the volcano-like passion which animated him.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Monsieur de Serval,’ I said, finding he made no effort to rise,
-‘recollect yourself, I beg of you. Come, seat yourself here on the sofa,
-and let us talk quietly. Why should you rage and storm thus? What
-is it disquiets you? You say you love me; but surely love is a gentle
-feeling. Where is the necessity of these tempestuous emotions?
-These bursts of passion alarm me. Be composed, and tell me why
-you are miserable and unhappy, as you just said you were. Explain
-your grief; and at least let me endeavor to console you.’</p>
-
-<p>“My quiet manner served to soothe him. He rose from his knees,
-and sat reclining on the sofa, still holding my hands in his, while I
-wiped the perspiration from his agitated countenance. I was not exactly
-in love with him then, but my disposition always prompted me
-to compassionate the sorrowful. He appeared to be unhappy, and I
-would have given much to have known, shared, and alleviated his
-sorrow.</p>
-
-<p>“‘You never heard, I suppose,’ he began, ‘anything of my private
-history?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘No,’ I hesitatingly replied, ‘I never did.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘You are not used to equivocating; I see that, Genevra. I am
-certain that you <i>have</i> heard from envious tongues, every thing that is
-bad concerning me,—that I am a <i>roué</i>; a gambler; a worthless,
-reckless man of fashion. My faults I do not pretend to conceal. Not
-to acknowledge an error, is only worthy of a knave or a fool. I trust
-I am not either. Sit nearer me;—let me hold your hand and see my
-eyes riding on the balls of yours. Now I will begin. I will go back
-in imagination—thank God I am not obliged to do it in reality—to
-childhood.’</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_98"></a>[98]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII.</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>“My father was descended from an ancient and noble family; one
-of the most aristocratic in France. Our family chateau was in Normandy;
-there we spent the principal part of the year, with the exception
-of visits to Paris at distant intervals of time.</p>
-
-<p>“Our chateau was beautifully and romantically situated on a gentle
-plain. From its fine grounds I have often watched the sun decline
-behind the distant mountains, which bordered on the east our valley-home;
-on the west a gentle river glided by: along its flowery banks,
-oft, when a child, have I, my two brothers, and little sister, played.
-I shall never see its quiet waters more,—nor would I: they would
-revive too many painful associations. Yet sometimes in fancy I transport
-myself back to its loved shores; and again I see Francois,
-Pierre, myself, and Lelia, all animated by the same childish love of
-fun, playing hide and seek, or running races.</p>
-
-<p>“Francois was the eldest, myself next, then Pierre, then our sweet
-sister Lelia. My beloved mother, to whose memory I have ever retained,
-through all my dissipations and frivolities, so great a veneration,
-was in declining health. She was a tall, beautiful blonde; her
-gentle face was the index to her soul,—all purity, sweetness and
-sincerity; were I to live a thousand years, never could I forget
-my mother’s amiability, her true nobility of soul. I was her favorite
-child, her ‘dear Rinaldo.’ At my birth, in a fit of romantic admiration
-of the fabulous Rinaldo, of Italian story, she named me after him,
-and with woman’s romance, fondly pictured to herself the great deeds
-I should one day perform. In emulation of this poetical demi-god,
-what would not children become were they to realize their parents’
-wishes and expectations.</p>
-
-<p>“My father and mother lived together in the greatest love and
-unanimity of feeling, until the advent of a governess, when Lelia was
-eight years old, to superintend her education. This woman, as sly
-and insinuating, as she was bold and unprincipled, soon sowed the
-seeds of contention between my parents, and alienated from the forsaken
-wife the lawful affections of her husband. She was not handsome,
-but she succeeded by art, in acquiring over my father’s mind an
-almost unlimited control. He forsook my mother’s society, and surrendered
-himself to the fatal influence of Mademoiselle Desportes. My<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_99"></a>[99]</span>
-mother was left to linger on and die alone, in her own solitary apartments
-of the chateau.</p>
-
-<p>“Little Lelia became fonder of her governess than of her mother,
-and preferred at all times being with Mademoiselle, than with the
-desolate and despairing Madame de Serval. Francois and Pierre,
-seduced by presents and unlimited indulgence, grew to love her. I
-alone, of the whole family, remained firm in my allegiance to my best
-parent. I alone spent hour after hour, day after day, by her lone bedside,
-endeavoring to soothe the saddened spirit, and calm its approach
-to eternity. My unfailing devotion to her, gained me the bitter enmity
-of our governess; but I defied and despised her malice. My father
-from that time henceforward, till his death, regarded me with an eye of
-distrust; but for that too I did not care: I felt convinced that he had
-forfeited all claim to the title of husband or father; that he had debased
-himself by a vulgar, dishonorable connection; disgraceful alike to
-himself and the ancient name he bore. I owed my first duty to the
-deserted, not to the deserter; I saw that this disgrace to her sex,
-aimed at my father’s hand; that she wished to establish herself firmly
-in a high position; who the man was mattered little to her, so long as
-he possessed rank and wealth; and, unfortunately, for my opinion of
-women, I have seen but too many others like unto her. My mother
-was a stumbling block to her ambition; I saw all the manœuvring
-that was constantly going on through this woman’s influence; yet what
-could I do, a young boy, without money or influence in society? If a
-man chooses to turn against his own wife, the mother of his children;
-abuse, neglect her, and take instead, a bad, intriguing woman, as confidant
-and companion, what can the world say or do? nothing, it is
-their own affair: every one says, let them settle it between them: the
-public have nothing to do with family quarrels.</p>
-
-<p>“Thus defenceless and unprotected, her parents dead, her relations
-far away, my mother became a victim to this vile creature. Her
-health declined with amazing rapidity during the first year of this
-woman’s arrival; her hectic cough increased daily; her pale and hollow
-cheeks, glassy eyes, and shrunken form, like a scroll of shriveled
-parchment, showed the ravages of disease and gloom, preying upon
-both mind and body. A little incident first gave me a horrid suspicion
-of the secret cause of this decay.</p>
-
-<p>“A physician from the village, and a mysterious looking monk
-from a neighboring convent, regularly visited my mother twice a week;
-the one to attend to her spiritual welfare, the other to administer to
-her wreck of mortal frame. Father Ignatius I never liked; no love<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_100"></a>[100]</span>
-was lost between us; my sentiments were freely returned; his step,
-gliding and noiseless; his large eyes, always downcast with mock
-humility, and hands clasped upon his breast, always inspired me with
-a presentiment of the vicinage of some evil genius. Mystery, I have
-observed, is generally the cloak of ignorant or knavish minds; in this
-case it was the latter. I felt relieved when I saw his draperied form
-leave the chateau, as if some evil influence had been withdrawn.
-Notwithstanding my dislike, he seemed to be a favorite of my mother’s,
-and to please her I forbore saying any thing to his disparagement. His
-conversation seemed to amuse and momentarily enliven her; his voice
-was soft and low, and manner insinuating and jesuitical. I said
-nothing against him to her or any one else, though secretly distrustful,
-for I would not have added to her gloom, around whose soul were
-gathering fast the shadows of the tomb.</p>
-
-<p>“I was retiring to my mother’s room one evening at dusk, when
-as I neared the anti-chamber, I heard voices within conversing, and
-my own name mentioned; pausing at the door, and concealed by its
-deep shadow, I listened; the speakers were Doctor Theodori, and
-Father Ignatius; they appeared to have met accidentally.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Well, Doctor,’ was the jocose salutation of Ignatius, ‘how fares
-thy patient?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘And may I not ask the same question of thee, oh, physician of
-the soul?’ was the laughing reply of the fat, shrewd-looking Theodori.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Between us two,’ said the monk, glancing round the anti-chamber,
-as if to observe they were free from notice; the dusk of twilight
-far advanced, reigned, and they could not see me; ‘between us, I
-say, she is failing fast: the last few months have wrought a great
-change.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I plainly perceive it,’ was the cool reply of his worthy colleague;
-‘she will not cumber the earth long, nor be in the way of Monsieur
-and Mademoiselle Desportes.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘You should be careful not to give the powders too often,—their
-effect will excite suspicion,’ was the next remark of the holy father.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Trust me, I know what I am doing; this is not the first case of
-the kind I have managed; there will be no outward sign except the
-usual appearance of disease; what has been promised you as reward,
-may I ask?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘His influence at Rome with the college of cardinals, to obtain me
-the position of the nuncio to the court of Vienna, and yours, <i>worthy</i>
-Theodori?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘When all is over, I shall accompany the naval expedition to Algiers;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_101"></a>[101]</span>
-in truth I scarcely feel safe in this affair; I sometimes catch
-myself feeling my head, to ascertain if that important member still
-performs its functions.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘No matter, ejaculated the man of prayer, penance and fasting,
-so long as we are rewarded for our services, and get safe out of the
-country, which I am very desirous of leaving. But does not his infatuation
-appear strange to you?—to me it is a riddle.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘A problem, in my opinion, which I could never solve; but these
-sly women do sometimes, you know, obtain great influence; he is
-weak and infatuated; but men have been fooled before his time, and
-will be so for ages yet unborn.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘How long do you think she will live?’ asked the monk; and
-he drew his cowl over his dark visage, and took a step forward toward
-the door, where I stood concealed.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Not longer than three months, if I am anything of a physician.’
-They both laughed, as two fiends may be supposed to laugh over a
-captured soul, and withdrew through a side door, leading to my
-father’s part of the mansion.</p>
-
-<p>“The last echo of their footsteps died upon my ear, ere I tremblingly
-emerged from my concealment; pale as a ghost from the tomb, and
-quivering like an aspen, I comprehended perfectly well that some dark
-plot was hatching to expedite my mother’s mortal doom. I tried to
-think of some means to counter-work this devilish intention; but at
-that time almost a child, my mind was not fertile in expedients, and
-even had I equaled Mephistopheles at planning, what is the use of
-invention without the power to execute. I determined to watch and
-endeavor to detect any attempt this triumvirate of wickedness should
-make upon her life. I childishly supposed I should <i>see</i> something to
-expose; I did not know their secret wiles, though I watched constantly,
-and was always with my mother; yet I saw no powders given, nothing
-visible indicated <i>their</i> secret malice, and <i>her</i> onward progress to the
-grave.</p>
-
-<p>“Mademoiselle Desportes, with cunning hypocrisy, came often with
-professions of regard, to see Madame de Serval. Could I have had
-my way, I would have kicked her out the room; but perhaps she
-chose the better part, in treating with contempt so unworthy a creature;
-for that pure soul, which was all harmony and love, could surely feel
-no rivalry with one so immeasurably beneath her.</p>
-
-<p>“My father seldom came to our apartment. I should have thought
-shame would have deterred him from brazenly insulting the deserted
-wife with his presence. I forgot that the man who could act thus,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_102"></a>[102]</span>
-would of necessity be incapable of shame. Thus lingered for three
-months longer my gentle, lovely mother, and then she died, devoutly
-hoping to be reunited to her loved ones in a future state of being. She
-died at midnight; we, her children, and the nurse, her only attendants;
-it was in the autumn time, and the wind blew in fitful gusts around
-the isolated chateau; the mournful sound, as the blast rose and fell,
-and whistled through the forest trees, and through the cracks and
-crevices of the wainscotting, seemed in harmony with the sad departing
-soul.</p>
-
-<p>“She sat upright in bed, supported by pillows: her hands convulsively
-clasped on her sunken chest, her sad blue eyes fixed on vacancy,
-as if seeking to penetrate the impenetrable mysteries of eternity; her
-long hair, escaped from its confinement, strayed wildly around her
-shoulders: thus she sat, motionless and silent, for several hours,
-though not speechless; she retained her voice and senses to the last.</p>
-
-<p>“Little Lelia sat on the bed by my mother’s side, and with tearful
-eyes gazed wonderingly on her parent; my brothers and I stood by
-the bedside; I, speechless, tearless, from intense grief: they, sobbing
-in loud lamentation; and the old nurse sat in the chimney corner, an
-uninterested, yet sympathizing spectator of the death bed. My father
-had made an excuse of going on a hunting party, some days previous,
-to avoid witnessing his wife’s last sufferings; and his wicked favorite
-had shut herself in her own rooms: we, therefore, were the sole
-attendants. And the priest and his delightful friend had gone, I know
-not where—probably departed for their respective places of destination—apprehensive
-of discovery.</p>
-
-<p>“The old brass clock in the anti-chamber struck the midnight hour,
-and its hoarse, reverberating tone, had scarcely ceased, ere Madame
-de Serval aroused herself from her stupor; decaying life appeared to
-resuscitate, momentarily, in that attenuated form, like the spasmodic
-flicker of a lamp, whose flame is about to be extinguished. She
-extended her arms, as if beckoning to the shades—uplifted her eyes,
-as if praying for grace—then, suddenly breaking the portentous
-silence which had hung over us so long, she said, ‘Dear children,
-beloved little ones, come close to me.’ We gathered close around
-her. ‘Your poor mother is going the way of all the earth—she is
-going to leave you—and her memory will be as though she never had
-been. I entreat you to be kind to each other; to love and cherish
-each other’s friendship, practice virtue and good works, that ye may
-become worthy of heavenly rewards, and meet your mother above.’</p>
-
-<p>“Her face was animated with almost supernatural energy for an<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_103"></a>[103]</span>
-instant; she pointed upwards with her finger for an instant, then her
-clay-cold fingers shrank from my clasp: she fell backward on her
-pillow; her eyes were glazed in the mists of death; and they,
-hardened in their expression, became fixed and cold; her arms
-stiffened, and fell rigid to her side: her whole form collapsed and
-changed. Death had claimed its own; all was over: the wrongs
-she had endured, her joys, her sorrows, were like a tale that is told;
-they were lost in the womb of time—past and forgotten.</p>
-
-<p>“Petrified with fear to the spot—horror struck—we gazed upon
-the inanimate clay; then, after the first spasm of terror was past, we
-rushed to the nurse, and gathered round her, seeking consolation for
-that loss, which no power—mortal, or immortal—could restore to us.</p>
-
-<p>“We wept ourselves to sleep that night, in our respective chambers.
-I, more than all the rest, felt wretched. God alone knows
-how miserable I was. And when I recalled my mother’s gentleness,
-her forbearance, her enduring love for a worthless man, <i>and its reward</i>,
-oh! that added the last bitter drop in the cup of wo!</p>
-
-<p>“My father returned next day; he seemed neither surprised nor
-grieved when told of her death: how should he be, when he had
-planned, and premeditated it: ‘her health had been so feeble within
-the last two years,’ he said, ‘the event was not an unexpected one.’
-Mademoiselle came not near us, and, absorbed in grief, I had forgotten
-her very existence.</p>
-
-<p>“When the corpse was laid out, we all went to take a last fond
-look of that loved form, and bid it a temporary, perhaps eternal, adieu.</p>
-
-<p>“She lay in state upon a costly bier, dressed as for a bridal. The
-white satin robe she was attired in, was not whiter than her marble face
-and hands: the wreath upon her hair scarcely outvied them in purity
-of color; and her face bore that expression of almost unearthly beauty,
-which rests upon the faces of the dead the first few hours after death.
-So calm, so pure and beautiful did she look, I almost thought her
-sleeping, and imagined I saw the grave-clothes rise and fall, with the
-respiration of life, upon that dead bosom. Oh, my mother! wert
-thou conscious of the tears I shed, thou wouldst have pitied me!”</p>
-
-<p>Monsieur de Serval paused; his voice was inarticulate from
-emotion. Dropping my hand, he covered his face with both his, and
-trembled with grief. A man is generally ashamed to show such
-feelings before a woman; but the recollections of his youth had completely
-unmanned him. I thought it indelicate to proffer words of
-condolence, and, therefore, waited till he became quieted, and went on.</p>
-
-<p>“The grief of my two brothers and sister partook more of wonder<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_104"></a>[104]</span>
-and fear than sorrow; but my soul was literally devoured with despair,
-and at that moment I most sincerely wished myself dead
-and buried with her. I had lost my best friend: the only one who
-could console my boyish vexations and advise my actions.</p>
-
-<p>“A splendid marble tomb was erected over the broken heart it
-enshrined, in the cemetery of the church belonging to the chateau,
-and an epitaph inscribed, testifying to the virtues of the departed, and
-the inconsolability of the bereaved widower. How I despised the
-man, even though my own father, who could thus add hypocrisy to
-villany!</p>
-
-<p>“Within three months after her death, he outraged even the usual
-conventional forms of mourning, and espoused the governess. From
-that time henceforth, completely throwing off the mask of affection she
-had previously worn, my brothers and sister, as well as myself, felt
-her iron rule. We were aliens and strangers in our own home: all
-obeyed the imperious will of the new Madame de Serval;—we were
-neglected and left alone.</p>
-
-<p>“Through her influence on the mind of her husband, he decided
-on sending me away to college. Me she most particularly disliked,
-and on all occasions treated me with studied contempt. There was a
-tacit understanding between us that we mutually understood each
-other. <i>She</i> knew me to possess penetration: <i>I felt</i> that she was a
-vile intriguante. She saw it would be far better for her control over
-my brothers and sister, that I should be away. My elder brother,
-Francois, was never very bright. Pierre (younger than myself) was
-no more so than need be: he was extremely amiable and easily influenced;
-and Lelia, any one could manage. Of the whole four I
-was most capable of resistance; consequently it was most desirable to
-get me out of the way.</p>
-
-<p>“A celebrated college, in a distant district, was selected as my
-destination, and the day appointed for my departure. I asked if
-Francois could not be sent to the same college for the completion of
-his education, that we might be companions to each other in our
-studies. My request was sternly refused by my father, and I was
-bade attend to my own business, and not trouble myself about Francois’s
-movements. Thus silenced, I made a merit of necessity, and
-obeyed, because I could not help myself, resolving mentally, however,
-that, when grown to man’s estate, I would shake off the underhand
-tyranny of this woman, and enlist in the army as a foot soldier, sooner
-than submit to her petty malice. She planned this merely to annoy
-me, knowing the society of my brother would be pleasing to me.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_105"></a>[105]</span>
-What my father intended doing with either him or Pierre, neither they
-nor I knew: Lelia would remain under the guardianship of her former
-governess.</p>
-
-<p>“Thus were we separated. I bade them farewell and departed,
-glad to be removed from the evil atmosphere of a depraved
-woman.</p>
-
-<p>“I soon became a favorite with my preceptors at the institution.
-Francois corresponded with me regularly the first year. Little Lelia,
-he said, was in delicate health; her stepmother treated her with harshness
-and severity; Pierre drooped in listless languor. He was in
-daily expectation of being ordered off to join his regiment,—father
-having bought him a commission in the 49th hussars. Of his own
-feelings, or the state of affairs between Monsieur de Serval and his wife,
-he never spoke; perhaps, I thought, he had forgotten our mother’s
-wrongs, grown politic, conciliated the kindness of his stepmother, and
-consequently was more tolerated; but I hoped not. I trusted the remembrance
-of the injuries of that angel-woman were too deeply impressed
-on his mind, to allow him to be so easily seduced into love or
-kindness to her betrayer. The tone of his letters was reckless and
-gloomy: these feelings I regretted seeing in one so young, and wished
-he were within the sphere of my influence, that I might win him to
-better things.</p>
-
-<p>“Subsequently I heard from him after his arrival in the Barbary
-States, whither he had been ordered. He described the climate as
-being insupportably hot, and a soldier’s life a hard one; yet, having
-entered the service, was determined to remain and fight his way to
-distinction.</p>
-
-<p>“The large patrimony my mother brought my father, had, upon
-her ill-starred marriage, been exclusively settled on herself (subject to
-her control alone), and, at her death, she bequeathed it to her children,
-divided equally amongst us. Upon the completion of my education, I
-paid a short visit home, to claim my share of the patrimony, and see
-my brother and sister. Lelia, grown tall and graceful, welcomed me
-with joy; my father, with cold civility; the ex-governess, with
-haughty coldness. When I inquired for Pierre, they directed me to the
-church-yard where my mother reposed, and where her youngest son
-now slumbered by her side, in the blessed sleep of forgetfulness. I
-did not weep over his grave with the same wild lamentation with
-which I had bewailed her loss: on the contrary, as I stood over the
-little mound which held the human earth, I almost felt a secret satisfaction
-that the boy had been taken away from the evils to come;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_106"></a>[106]</span>
-that his pure young mind had not remained here to become contaminated
-by mingling with inferior, less elevated souls.</p>
-
-<p>“Lelia told me how he died of a fever, and how he had wished
-to see me; but was ungratified in the wish in his dying hour. Father
-had commanded that no word should be sent me of his illness or
-death; thus I had remained in ignorance of either. When she told
-me this, a suspicion flashed across me, that, perhaps, he had been
-dealt with like his poor mother; but reflection convinced me that his
-stepmother could have had no object in putting him out of the world.
-He was an amiable, inoffensive boy; he interfered with her in no
-way; and as she was a woman of strong mind and good reasoning
-faculties, it was not probable she would have committed a deed, the
-execution of which could in no way have benefited her. At any rate
-he was dead; and as I looked on Lelia, her youth, her beauty, and
-the atmosphere of innocence and grace which seemed to hover round
-and adorn her, I wondered what destiny had in store for her, and I
-prayed that the angel-shade of our mutual parent—or some other invisible
-inhabitant of a better land—might preside over her future
-years, and shield them from all evil.</p>
-
-<p>“But the halls of my ancestors were no longer a home for me, and
-I felt it strongly during the few days I spent there. The absurd
-spectacle of the blind infatuation of a man, already on the decline of
-life, who fed and cherished his vanity into the ridiculous belief that he
-was still loveable and beloved by a young and artful woman, was—had
-I been an uninterested spectator of the farce—more laughable
-than anything else; but, as it was, indignation, instead of merriment,
-stirred my feelings, and I wished to be out of sight of so disgraceful
-an exhibition of superannuated folly; and my father, while doting upon
-his minion, and squandering his fortune upon her in every description
-of extravagance, actually believed himself to be as attractive and
-fascinating as any young man of twenty-five. When I recurred to this
-portion of my father’s life in after years, I always thought of what a
-young Parisian girl once said to me: ‘Are not those two words, man and
-vanity, synonymous?’ That young and handsome men should be vain
-of conquest is not astonishing; but that old men, hackneyed and worn,
-from misuse of the senses, possessing all the vices of the young, without
-their personal attractions or their virtues,—that <i>such</i> men should be
-candidates for the affections of young women, or dare to suppose they
-can obtain or possess them, is scarcely more reprehensible than ridiculous.
-The world has always seemed to me a perfect farce—a play: a
-stage on which all act, and those who play the best are thought the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_107"></a>[107]</span>
-best in the eyes of the undiscriminating world. What part my
-father and his favorite would have taken in the drama, I am unable to
-say; but my own opinion is, that a fool’s cap for him, and the symbol
-of knavery for her, would have suited to a charm.</p>
-
-<p>“Lelia was liberally provided with many attendants, teachers for
-various languages, and every thing the child could wish in the way
-of dress or equipage. Being satisfied that her welfare and comfort
-was attended to, I arranged with father to draw upon his banker in
-Paris for my means; and, bidding Lelia farewell—who sobbed and
-wept grievously at my departure—I glanced good-bye to the turreted
-towers, the lofty archways and imposing battlements of the homes
-of my forefathers, and took my way to the capital of France, intending
-to pursue the study of the law.</p>
-
-<p>“But, alas! for the self-promised virtue of youth and inexperience!
-I had not been in the gay city many weeks before the giddy vortex
-of Parisian society had enthralled me, and overcame many of my
-stoical resolves: so little do we know what we shall do until tasked
-by practice. I at first wondered at the wild and unrestrained dissipations
-of the youth of the metropolis; but, insensibly, by degrees
-this wonderment ceased, as I became accustomed to, and shared in
-these frivolities.</p>
-
-<p>“An old lawyer—in former years a devoted friend of my father—now,
-in turn, performed the offices of friend to me; <i>i. e.</i> gave me
-good advice on the temptations and snares of life; the dangers of love
-affairs, particularly illicit ones; the beauty of propriety of demeanor;
-the respectability of religion—at least its external appearance, no matter
-about the <i>sincerity</i> of the heart; and, lastly, the propriety of placing
-myself under his guidance, and steadfastly following his counsels.
-Fortunately, I did not take advantage of the kindness extended me;
-for, had I followed his counsels—or, rather, what one might suppose
-<i>would</i> have been his counsels, twenty years before—I should have
-been engulphed in ruin long ago. I followed the dictates of a young,
-and, at that time, pure heart; and pursued my own way, naturally
-enough concluding, that every man has a right to his own way of
-thinking, and his own rule of action, provided he interfered with no
-one else.</p>
-
-<p>“I studied law with my <i>moral</i> friend for some time; and might at
-this moment, perhaps, have been an advocate, had not unforeseen
-events changed the current of my life otherwise.</p>
-
-<p>“While in Paris I became acquainted with a lady of noble rank
-and ancient family; and, since I am giving you a faithful chronicle<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_108"></a>[108]</span>
-of my days, Genevra, I will not conceal from you, that once, and
-once only, have I loved, in by gone years, a lady, as beautiful, though
-not as virtuous, or talented, as yourself—loved, I say, as fondly, as
-blindly, as I now love you.</p>
-
-<p>“Her name was Madame Anacharsis Valliere; and she was the
-youthful wife of an old banker; she was then one of the most fashionable
-and admired of any in Paris. I first met her at a ball, and afterwards
-visited her at her house constantly. I cannot describe the artlessness
-and playful witchery of her ways, nor that light and play of
-feature which allured and captivated me—even though I saw the risk I
-ran, both for myself and her: the remembrance of her haunted me for
-years after the love had died away, and both passion, and the reciprocity
-it had met with from her confiding fondness, had faded from my
-mind.</p>
-
-<p>“That was my first ‘grande passion!’ The woman who pleased me
-then, would not please me now: so do our tastes and habits change
-as we go onward: but then, young and warm, yet shy, I required
-to be led on to love: now, I would rather seek it myself: consequently,
-I prefer one who rather shrinks from than advances to me.</p>
-
-<p>“Her husband, absorbed in business, and money speculations
-could not find time to devote much attention to his fair wife; and,
-trusting to her honor, her sense of duty, and shrinking modesty, to
-preserve her in the right way, he allowed her to do as she pleased,
-and go with whom she pleased; it often pleased her then to go with
-me. He had great confidence in me; I am sorry to say it was misplaced;
-but undesignedly, at least, I can with conscience say that, I
-did not intend to love the wife, or injure the husband. When I first
-became acquainted with them, little by little she grew to love me; if
-I did not come at the appointed hour, Madame Anacharsis, forgetting her
-embroidery, music, flowers, visitors, everything, would sit at the window
-facing the street, whence she regularly expected me, and muse
-and watch for me; then the sudden start, the smile of welcome when
-I came, the tears which suffused her eyes when I departed, by all
-these tokens, and a hundred others, I knew as well as words could
-speak it, that she loved me; what man is virtuous enough to slight
-the manifest love of a beautiful woman? I saw my triumph and I felt
-happy, for my feelings echoed hers.</p>
-
-<p>“I then became her constant visitor, her devoted admirer; I was
-with her continually, at her morning concerts, her evening soirees: I
-was ever at her side. The old husband, infatuated in his idolatry of
-his young wife, saw nothing, suspected nothing; thus we went on till<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_109"></a>[109]</span>
-passion crowned the whole; nothing was left for me to wish for. Was
-I happy then? In the possession of all that I had thought so admirable,
-so angelic, I have often asked myself that question, and never have
-been able to answer it satisfactorily. I lost myself then in the mysteries
-of love, and forgot everything but her.</p>
-
-<p>“We had been wrapt up, bound up in each other for the space of
-three months, and the old man still blundered on in confidence,
-though I was ever at his wife’s side like her shadow. He frequently
-consulted me on business matters, and both in public and private, expressed
-the highest opinion of me. I could not but regret the moment
-when he would be undeceived, and perceive the <i>real</i> state of things;
-yet the whole affair had been involuntarily on both sides. Society,
-which always decides so arbitrarily in these matters, would at once
-have pronounced that either I was a rake, or she a bold, frail woman.
-Neither was the case, a woman possessed of more true modesty and
-integrity than Madame Anacharsis I have never seen; her fault was
-over self-confidence, and reliance on me; and I, not dreaming of love,
-cherished to maturity the germ of a passion with which I had already
-inspired her.</p>
-
-<p>“We had been planning a fête champêtre, and one evening I bent
-my steps to her house, with a portfolio of beautiful costumes; one,
-handsomer than the others, I had chosen, and wished to induce her to
-adopt it for the occasion.</p>
-
-<p>“The attendants were absent from the anti-chamber, and I entered
-the salon de reception unannounced; Madame was there, alone. She
-sat upon a low ottoman, her profile toward me; she wore a blue satin
-dress, made so low in the neck that half her fair bosom was exposed;
-but it was the fashion then, and when fashion countenances an impropriety,
-it no longer seems one. She seemed absorbed in thought,
-for she had slid half off the stool, her small hands clasped, and brown
-eyes upward fixed in thought, or absentness.</p>
-
-<p>“She started, and rose up on hearing my step, and I now saw that
-her cheeks were wet with tears; surprised at these unwonted tokens
-of sadness in one usually so gay, I asked the cause.</p>
-
-<p>“She wiped the tears from her eyes, and seating herself by my side,
-placed her little hands in mine, (where they had often been before,)
-and looking me straight in the face, suddenly addressed me thus,</p>
-
-<p>“‘Rinaldo, my husband has discovered our love: he knows all.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Good heavens, how could he, how should he?’ I cried.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Indeed he has: this very afternoon he told me that he has
-watched you and me for sometime past, without our knowing it. He<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_110"></a>[110]</span>
-spoke so gently, so kindly to me of my fault, that his very leniency
-made me feel a hundred times more miserable than all the reproaches
-in the world could have done; he said he knew I was young enough
-to be his child,—that so great a disparity of years must preclude much
-happiness; but when he reminded me of the unlimited indulgence
-with which I had been treated, the tenderness with which all my
-wants, and even my most fantastic whims had been anticipated; <i>then</i>,
-indeed, I felt how unjustly I had served him. He told me too, how
-much confidence he had ever reposed in me, allowing me to go with
-whom I liked, and where I liked, without question; and turning my
-eyes inward, I saw how far I had fallen from my own high standard
-of female virtue.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I said nothing in extenuation of my fault, and in silence acquiesced
-to guilt; but when my husband took me to his arms again, and
-told me he would forgive me, even though he became the laughing
-stock of Paris, on condition I would solemnly swear never to commit
-the same offence again; and also to send you away, and never more
-to see your face; then I saw how magnanimous he was in his love,
-how infatuated in his devotion to me, unworthy me.</p>
-
-<p>“‘And now we must part, dear Rinaldo, I mean to say, Monsieur
-de Serval, we must never meet again, or if we do meet in public, as
-strangers. It will be a very hard task for me to tear your image from
-my heart, but I <i>must</i>; I ought to love my husband: has he not been
-so kind to me? Oh, yes, I must forget you, and of course you will
-forget me: very soon some other will usurp my place. Oh, I wish I
-were dead and buried.’</p>
-
-<p>“She fell down upon her knees and wept: it seemed to be so
-difficult for her to surrender me; and it was equally severe for me, for
-I was tenderly attached to her. The husband’s discovery had been
-startling news: I had not dreamt that Valliere had suspected us; it
-only remained for us now to say farewell,—a sad word to be spoken at
-any time, but most particularly in an affair of the heart: it was some
-minutes before I could calm her sufficiently to speak, and then she
-only spoke of her fault, her unhappiness, and her jealous dread of my
-loving some other better than herself.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Oh, you will not entirely forget me, will you, Rinaldo? Although
-hereafter we shall never see each other, you will sometimes think of
-me; think how unhappy I am; how unwise I have been; but do not
-despise my weakness; do not think of me with contempt, perhaps,
-at some future day, when you may love a woman of sterner virtue than
-myself.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_111"></a>[111]</span></p>
-
-<p>“‘Dear lady, I can never think of you with any other sentiment
-than admiration. What is there to contemn in one so beautiful and
-amiable? We have erred unwittingly; if any is to blame, it is myself,
-not you. May God, who sees all things, forgive me if I have caused
-you a moment’s pain.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘It is very hard to say farewell forever,’ she kept repeating, as
-she hung upon my hand; ‘but it must be said,’—and after mutual
-sighs, regrets, tears, and kisses, I sorrowfully tore myself away. She
-fell fainting on a sofa as I left the saloon, and I brushed tears from my
-own cheeks as I rushed down the marble terrace steps of her elegant
-abode.</p>
-
-<p>“My feelings were wild, incoherent, and bitter,—yes, bitter as
-wormwood, for none but honorable loves yield satisfaction and repose
-to the soul. I regretted ever having come to Paris, or ever having
-crossed the bright pathway of so young and innocent a creature; but her
-husband would still countenance and love her. She was not abandoned
-or cast away to neglect or shame; that was a great consolation
-to me; and trusting that her gay and child-like disposition would
-interest itself in the world, and that new associations would obliterate
-me from her memory, I became calmed, and returned to my ordinary
-pursuits.</p>
-
-<p>“Not long after, I received news of my brother’s death, at Tunis.
-He had been shot in a duel. The cause of the encounter was not
-explained. My two brothers were both dead, and I became heir to
-my father’s estate.</p>
-
-<p>“Francois and myself had never been sufficiently alike in disposition
-to become tenderly attached. Nevertheless, I regretted his death,
-as one is in duty to the laws of nature bound to do. Rumor said the
-charming Madame Anacharsis Valliere had withdrawn from all gay
-society, and lived entirely in the country. Her health was said to be
-declining. This was some months after our separation; and possessing
-the clue to her new love of solitude, I was vain enough to attribute
-her ennui to sad reminiscences of me.</p>
-
-<p>“I had now been in Paris two years, when I suddenly resolved,
-one day, to go home, and if my father treated me with such incivility
-as to render a long residence disagreeable, I could, in that case, return
-to Paris. I had lost much of the wildness I had brought to the city,
-and had sobered down. My old friend, the lawyer, had proved himself
-to be a real friend to me, notwithstanding some lingering traces
-of youthful vanity. Small foibles are, however, forgiveable when
-counterbalanced by other good qualities; and I was grateful to him<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_112"></a>[112]</span>
-for his kindness. He advised me to stay and pursue the practice of
-the law. But yielding to some strange presentiment, which bade me
-go, I promised him soon to return, and set off.</p>
-
-<p>“I arrived at the castle after twilight had deepened into sombre
-night. A dense forest of lindens surrounded the old homestead of
-my childhood, on one side of the building, for more than a mile; and
-riding through the thicket of trees had, perhaps, pre-disposed me to
-sadness, for I certainly felt so, when I arrived. No porter was, as
-usual, at the lodge, and the gardens bore evidence of neglect. I rode
-on; passed the drawbridge, and dismounting, left the horse to find his
-way alone to the stables. I went into the inner court of the castle,
-through the massive gateway, and after traversing that, into the servants’
-hall. None of the domestics were there. I was amazed at this;
-for among the numerous attendants my father was want to keep around
-him, surely some of them would be at their posts. Everything looked
-so familiar, that even the old wainscotting seemed to welcome me back.</p>
-
-<p>“I went up stairs into the enormous banquetting hall, where in the
-olden time, had often been heard sounds of uproarious conviviality, the
-coarse jest, and loud song, and shone beauty’s gentle presence; but it
-was now silent and deserted; cobwebs wandered unmolested on its
-walls; and the rich crimson drapery of the window curtains was thick
-with dust,—the result of years of neglect. No one was here either;
-and I began to conclude that I had in truth come to the abode of death,
-when suddenly recollecting the day of the month, I remembered that
-it was the annual holiday, on which servants had permission to visit
-the village for the day. This explained <i>their</i> absence; but where was
-Lelia, my father, and step-mother? Had they deserted the house; or
-were they all dead? I began to feel infected with superstitious gloom.
-I went up the grand staircase, and sought the different bed chambers
-of the family. They were tenantless. In Lelia’s, several articles of
-wearing apparel lay scattered about, and a miniature of our mother—an
-exquisite painting set in gold, and adorned with pearls and emeralds—was
-lying on her toilet table, entangled with other trinkets, as
-if thrown down in haste; but the presiding nymph of the boudoir was
-not there.</p>
-
-<p>“As I stood in the centre of the room staring around me, and
-wondering what had become of them all;—as I stood thus, a wild
-shriek of fear, revenge, agony, despair,—it sounded like a compendium
-of all these emotions—burst startlingly upon my ears. Amazed, I
-listened intently. I heard no more: all was still, save the flapping of
-the venetian blinds, as they swung to and fro in the wind, and the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_113"></a>[113]</span>
-mournful cooing of the doves. A curse seemed to have come and
-laid its blight and ban upon this unhappy domicile. The living appeared
-to have deserted it;—perhaps celestials, mayhap demons, had
-substituted themselves in their place. I determined to ascertain what
-that strange sound meant, and directed my steps to the quarter whence
-I thought it proceeded.</p>
-
-<p>“I had forgotten to look in my step-mother’s drawing room. It was
-on the same floor with Lelia’s room. The scream seemed to have come
-from there. Thither I went. As I neared the door, I heard a low
-hissing laugh. The house must be haunted. Surely devils were here.
-Three steps brought me full before the open door, and, oh, great God!
-I saw a sight that froze my heart with horror!”</p>
-
-<p>Monsieur de Serval here started to his feet, as if he still beheld
-what he described. He stared wildly before him a moment; then recovering
-himself sat down, and continued:</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, there, in the middle of the room, stood the accursed priest,
-Father Ignatius; his arms folded, and sinister features expanded into
-a demoniacal smile. Yes, he who hastened my mother’s death, was
-there; and he now contemplated with the eyes of cold contempt, the
-death agonies of two other unhappy beings.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who were they?” I suddenly demanded, breaking in upon the
-thread of the narrative.</p>
-
-<p>“My miserable father and his wife. She lay stretched upon the
-floor, the red life-blood gushing in torrents from a deep wound in her
-neck; and she shook her clenched fists in impotent revenge at her
-husband and murderer. Her face, hands, and hair were smeared with
-blood, and with the energy of death and despair, she muttered curses
-on his head.</p>
-
-<p>“And he, unhappy being, I could not help feeling some pity for
-him;—he was my father. In him life seemed quite extinct. He had
-fallen on a sofa, and lay to all appearance dead: his gray hair fallen
-back from his death-pale countenance, and his arms hanging listlessly
-down from his side; marks of blood were also on his person.</p>
-
-<p>“Horror-struck I gazed. This was my welcome home. Then
-animated by a strange desire to add a third to this goblin group, and
-kill that vile priest, I strode up to him, and seized him by the
-arms.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Vile, degraded wretch,’ I cried, ‘and is it you who has done this?
-Have you added downright murder to the indirect means you used to
-accomplish my mother’s death? Say, say!’ I gasped, ‘is it <i>your</i>
-deed?’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_114"></a>[114]</span></p>
-
-<p>“The monk turned black with rage; but he controlled himself,
-and said quietly:—</p>
-
-<p>“‘My son, I am as innocent of their deaths as yourself. Only
-a few minutes ago I arrived here, having just returned from Vienna.
-Finding no one about the castle, I came in here seeking for your
-father and madame. Approaching, I heard loud words, and on entering,
-saw your father stab your step-mother, then turn the weapon
-against himself, when they both fell as you see them now. The cause
-of his conduct I am unacquainted with.’</p>
-
-<p>“I did not credit him, and was about to inflict summary vengeance
-upon him, or compel him to tell me the truth, when the dying woman,
-raising herself half way on her elbow, after several attempts at speech,
-feebly articulated:</p>
-
-<p>“‘Not he, but he,’ pointing to my father; ‘<i>he</i> did it.’</p>
-
-<p>“A frightful convulsion of pain distorted her face. She pressed
-her hand to her neck, whence the blood issued, and falling back on
-the floor, after a slight spasm, expired. All this happened in a much
-shorter space of time than it requires to tell it you. It seemed as if the
-invisible hand of fate had conducted me there to behold this horrible
-spectacle. What insanity could have urged my father to such a deed?</p>
-
-<p>“This abandoned woman was dead—stone dead. Her career of
-deceit and extravagance was ended, and my martyred mother’s manes
-appeased. After looking attentively at the corpse, to see if life was
-entirely extinct, I turned my attention to my father; but he was already
-dead. Her features retained in death their expression of lowering
-darkness, and his the same look of concentrated iron will they had
-worn in life.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Oh, most gracious God!’ I ejaculated, sinking on my knees in
-earnest prayer;—‘Oh, vouchsafe to have mercy on their souls; grant
-them thy grace.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Amen,’ said the monk; and he had glided from the apartment
-before I could arrest his departure. I wished to detain him, at least
-till I had procured a physician and coroner, and had an inquest on the
-bodies; but he was gone. Had the devil sent him there also to witness
-the death of his accomplice? or accident, or what? There was none
-to answer my questions, but the solitary castle itself;—but could walls
-have spoken, I presume they would have told me many a strange tale,
-of strange scenes that had happened since I had left them.</p>
-
-<p>“Assistance must be had, and as none of the servants had yet returned,
-I mounted my horse and rode to the village, whence I soon
-returned with a physician and magistrate.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_115"></a>[115]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Their unaccountable deaths puzzled the man of law much; but
-when I had explained all the circumstances to the sensible, quiet physician,
-he appeared perfectly satisfied that they had come to their
-deaths as I surmised,—she from his hand, and he from self-infliction.</p>
-
-<p>“‘And you have no clue, no idea of the cause of this terrible
-event?’ he said, after I had told him all.</p>
-
-<p>“‘None whatever. I found them as you see them now,’</p>
-
-<p>“‘It is most unaccountable,’ said the magistrate. ‘I cannot
-imagine of anything so despicable, as a man to commit suicide. This
-is not only suicide, but murder, too; perfectly atrocious. I never
-could have thought your father capable of such a deed.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘We know not what we shall do till we are tried. Let us pray
-God to preserve us from temptation,’ said the wise physician; and
-we left the room, locking the door, until some one should come to lay
-out the bodies.</p>
-
-<p>“The physician and magistrate stayed an hour with me in the banquetting
-hall, discussing the strange affair. At least <i>they</i> discussed it,
-with professional indifference. For myself, I was stupified, satiated
-with horror, and said almost nothing. Then some of the domestics
-returned, and the gray-haired butler, the male nurse and companion
-of my childhood, listened with stupid surprise to my account of his
-master’s death.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Why, sir,’ stammered he, as if in doubt of his own identity, ‘I
-left them both well, and together in madame’s parlor. How could
-master so suddenly have taken it into his head to kill her, and then
-kill himself?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Have there ever been any violent quarrels between your master
-and mistress, that you have been aware of?’ I inquired.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Oh! yes, sir, a great many: for the last two years they have
-scarcely done any thing but fight. I’ve often heard him tell her he
-would send her off, and call you back, and make you master here.
-Miss Lelia fretted much about you; she wished to see you; and
-madame always abused her. Master seemed to take a great dislike to
-his wife in the last two years; whenever he spoke of you, she always
-got into a perfect fever; she really seemed wild; and she would dare
-him to do something which he said he would do, if she did not do as
-he told her. Oh! we’ve had a deal of trouble since you went away.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I see the whole affair plainly now,’ said the magistrate; ‘they
-had become involved in one of these quarrels; words ran high; he
-probably struck her; and then, becoming infuriated as his anger rose,
-murdered her; and, either from dread of discovery, or disgust of life,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_116"></a>[116]</span>
-killed himself: thus it must have been; and a most deplorable affair
-it is, too.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Where is my sister Lelia?’ I asked of Juan.</p>
-
-<p>“‘She went some days ago to spend a week with some lady friend
-of hers.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘How far is she from here?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Some six miles, sir.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Take one of the fastest horses and go after her: say only her
-brother has arrived, and wishes to see her—nothing more.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Yes, sir:’ the servant departed.</p>
-
-<p>“Some lay sisters were sent for, and came from the neighboring
-convent to lay out the bodies. Scarcely was their mournful task completed,
-when Juan returned with Lelia. The beautiful girl burst into
-tears as she rushed to embrace me; and her grief redoubled when I
-told her of that day’s sad events.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘My brother, dear, you little know the many lonely days I’ve
-passed since you left us, and how often I have wished for you;
-that bad woman always treated me with contempt, and father never
-cared for me; I have passed my days alone, always alone, dreaming
-and regretting: father changed much, however, in his opinion
-of you, and would have had you back again, but madame always
-opposed it; but I little thought, when I left here a week ago, that I
-should find them both dead on returning.</p>
-
-<p>“I consoled poor Lelia as much as possible, and promised her
-many future years of happiness; and so far as that happiness depended
-on myself, I kept my promise. When shown the dead body of her
-father, she burst into torrents of tears, and fell fainting over the corpse.
-We removed her to her own room, and the bodies were consigned to
-mother earth without her again seeing them. With pious care my
-sister had tended on her mother’s grave: and flowers of all hues, all
-species, grew there in wild luxuriance: and a spirit of holiness seemed
-breathed around it, as if the pure soul that had animated that mortal
-clay, still hallowed, still guarded the casket the immortal gem had
-once inhabited, and preserved it from evil influence.</p>
-
-<p>“They were then all gathered together in death: my legitimate
-father and mother, the bold usurper of her just rights, and my gentle
-brother. The governess I buried without a tombstone; she was not
-worthy of any; the common earth I could not refuse her, but even
-that I thought too good for her: but I will no longer speak of her, nor
-trouble you with my personal animosities, but will hasten to the conclusion
-of my tale.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_117"></a>[117]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I took possession, as sole and natural heir, of the remnant of fortune
-and estate left me; but finding the castle so deeply mortgaged,
-that it was more trouble to keep than it was worth, I sold it; I was
-partly induced to do so from Lelia’s nervous dread of remaining in
-the house where so terrible a murder had been committed, and partly
-from my incapacity to sustain so expensive an establishment with such
-small means. I felt much regret at parting with the halls of my ancestors,
-but the desolate castle would have made a gloomy home for so
-young a creature as Lelia; she was now at an age when society and
-gay life would please and captivate; and I determined to take her to
-Paris with me. The prospect of leaving the solitude and isolation, to
-which her whole lifetime had been alone devoted, charmed her.</p>
-
-<p>“The home of my childhood passed into stranger-hands. Previous
-to our departure I caused diligent search to be made in the vicinity
-for the wicked father Ignatius; but he had disappeared as strangely as
-he came, and left no trace of his coming or exit. I was convinced,
-however, from numerous circumstances, traced to their cause, that he
-was not concerned in or any way accessory to my father’s and stepmother’s
-death. Judging from what the domestics told me, and from
-what I gathered from the neighboring gentry whom my father visited,
-I surmised that remorse had at last seized upon that man of iron nerve:
-becoming tired of the governess, or else conceiving a hatred to her,
-from recollection of the evil deed she had induced him to commit,
-violent quarrels, crimination and recrimination, was the natural result
-of alienation of affection; when under the influence of anger we lose
-our self-consciousness, and know not what we do: in a fit of rage
-he killed her; and, dreading the consequences, and disgrace, added
-the last act to this tragedy of sin, and committed suicide. That death
-scene I shall never forget; no, not if I were to live a thousand years:
-it haunts me yet with frightful vividness.</p>
-
-<p>“I took Lelia with me to Paris, where she afterwards married, well
-and happily, the man of her choice, and lives there still.</p>
-
-<p>“I resumed the practice of the law, and became distinguished in
-that profession. From association with the gayeties of the metropolis, I
-confess I contracted habits I regret having acquired: my disposition
-was ardent and excitable, and it carried me too far. I played high,
-and was seldom fortunate,—almost invariably losing. From mixing
-with society of a certain class, I acquired the reputation of a <i>roué</i> in
-many instances; that, also, was undeserved; although at that time
-young and vain, I was more easily caught in love snares than at present.
-Thus, for some three years longer, I led a gay, wild, yet unhappy<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_118"></a>[118]</span>
-life. Then I began to weary of this futile way of spending
-time. My health had become impaired by excess, and satiety had
-taken the place of levity. I wished to find some woman in whose
-integrity I could confide, and marry her, and become a better man;
-but among all the gay, the rich, the talented, the beautiful women
-with whom I was acquainted, none suited me, none equalled my expectations.
-Sometimes I saw a woman whose <i>personelle</i> pleased me;
-but, on acquaintance, I always discovered something wanting in the
-mind,—something I could wish added or taken away. I could no
-where find my Psyche. I gave up my profession, although it yielded
-me a fine income, and came here to Naples.</p>
-
-<p>“Here I have been living since, unhappy and listless amid pleasures,
-longing for something I have never yet found, and have thought,
-till I saw you, I never should find; but at the countess’ ball, where
-first I saw your gentle face, I felt irresistibly attracted toward you:
-nor has acquaintance disappointed the illusion of fancy; but, on the
-contrary, strengthened it, and I now love, where first I admired: your
-upright principles, your beauty, your unblemished reputation and pure
-heart, have won my love and esteem. Nature evidently designed
-you for private life, cultivated and elegant society. Let me then be
-that faithful friend, lover, and husband,—three principles in one person—who
-shall guard and guide your steps through the quick-sands of
-life. Consent to redeem me from past errors: teach me to shape my
-course more worthily in future. Woman’s influence, when she exerts
-it in the right way, is great; do you then become my Mentor, and I
-will be as docile and obedient as Telemachus.”</p>
-
-<p>Monsieur ceased. Meanwhile the bougie was extinguished, and
-the rays of moonlight, as they tremblingly broke through the clouds,
-alone illumed the room. I did not like to be sitting there so late at
-night, and with a gentleman alone.</p>
-
-<p>“It is late: I know I am intruding upon you,” said he, and he rose
-upon his feet; “yet, before I go, say that I may hope—say, dearest
-Genevra, that you accept me.” He pressed my hands in his. I heard
-him; but did not take the sense of what he said. I was in a dream:
-one of those delightful waking dreams of fairy land, in which I have
-so often indulged.</p>
-
-<p>“No answer still, Genevra. Are you angry?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no! Monsieur, not with you.”</p>
-
-<p>“With others?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know.”</p>
-
-<p>“A woman’s answer, which means you do: give me the legitimate<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_119"></a>[119]</span>
-right to be your champion? Ah! let me be your husband and defender?”</p>
-
-<p>“I am afraid that, if I marry you, you will some day regret your
-condescension and your love, which induces you to descend below your
-rank to marry an actress.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, never!” cried he, in an indignant tone, “do you take me for
-a child—a fool, who knows not his own mind; for none but fools
-act without pre-consideration.”</p>
-
-<p>“You have my consent then, Monsieur: may I prove worthy of
-you and your expectations.”</p>
-
-<p>Joyously he kissed me. “Now, at last, I hope to realize my dreams
-of domestic happiness and love. Good night then, my pet; to-morrow
-I shall see you again, before I leave on my journey to the north
-of Italy, where business demands my presence.”</p>
-
-<p>“How long will you be gone?”</p>
-
-<p>“One or two weeks only: I shall hasten to rejoin you. Good
-night.”</p>
-
-<p>Reluctantly he departed. I withdrew to my own room, and, when
-in bed, endeavored to analyze his memoir. I tried to be impartial, and
-judge by reason alone, if he were worthy of my affection; but love
-confused reason, or rather the mischievous god construed everything
-in his own favor, and demanded blind faith, which, like charity,
-covers a multitude of sins. Inexperienced, too, in the ways of men,
-I knew not of that seductive eloquence which dazzles the mind through
-the heart; besides, I was so young and confiding—it was so charming
-a thing to be loved—that I did not care to inquire too closely into
-cause and effect, and crediting all, and happy in the belief, I fell
-asleep.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The next day my lover came and spent two hours with me. He
-brought me a beautiful diamond ring, the token of our engagement—the
-gems set in the form of a star,—and a miniature of himself, which
-he placed around my neck.</p>
-
-<p>“This will serve to recall me to your memory sometimes, while I
-am gone,” he remarked, playfully.</p>
-
-<p>“If a woman loves a man, she needs nothing to recall him to mind,
-and if she does not, where is the use of a portrait?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! you little logician;—little philosopher, you confute me at
-all points.”</p>
-
-<p>“Am I not right, though?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; you are always right, at least in my opinion.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_120"></a>[120]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I shall sing in the Opera of Somnambula to-morrow night; will
-you be there to hear me? but I forget, you will leave this evening,
-and of course cannot come.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I go this afternoon. The time will seem tiresome and
-tedious until re-united to you. If it were possible, I would excuse
-myself from this journey: it must absolutely be performed, and I must
-tear myself away from you and happiness for the present.”</p>
-
-<p>“And I shall feel lonely, too, until your return: it is so new, so
-strange and delightful to be loved, I hardly can realize its truth.”</p>
-
-<p>“I trust many bright years to come, we shall experience its happiness,
-and time will convince you of its reality.”</p>
-
-<p>After he was gone, I hastened to Blanche, to confide my secret to
-her—for a woman must have a confidant of some sort. I found her
-sitting musingly at an open window, her fair face pillowed on her
-hand. She listened with kindness and interest to my relation of Monsieur
-de Serval’s sudden and unexpected offer, and appeared gratified
-at the seeming good fortune which awaited me, when I asked her if she
-thought him an honorable man and serious in his intentions. She replied:</p>
-
-<p>“It is difficult to tell, my dear Genevra, who is <i>really</i> honorable and
-who is not, for many possess the outward semblance to perfection, without
-the quality; but that he wishes and intends to marry you, I question
-not. What object could he have in formally proposing and making
-these presents, if he did not intend it? The first time I saw him in
-your society, I discovered that he loved you. It is a fortunate event
-which enables you, thus early in your professional career, to marry,
-and leave this disagreeable business.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you wish to marry and leave it also, dear Blanche?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know what I wish, my dear: I wish I was dead sometimes,”
-sighed my friend.</p>
-
-<p>“Come, cheer up, dearest,” said I, kissing her; “don’t give way to
-melancholy. You who are so young, so admired and beautiful,—what
-have you to grieve about? Let me persuade you to be gay: you know
-we are to sing together to-morrow; is your costume ready?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes! I always have everything prepared in advance.”</p>
-
-<p>“What can I do to amuse you? Oh, Blanche!” I exclaimed, a
-thought suddenly striking me, “there is an old fortune-telling witch
-living out on the Posillippo road, let us take a walk out there this
-evening and hear our destiny; it will be at least amusing, if not instructive.
-Will you go with me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, certainly, if it will oblige you; but I have no faith in fortune-tellers.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_121"></a>[121]</span></p>
-
-<p>She quickly dressed, and we set out. After ascending the steep
-hill of the Castle of San Elmo, we took the shady road—bordered on
-each side by linden trees—which led to the pretty village of Posillippo.
-I had been told that old Acte inhabited, sybil-like, a cavern in the
-rock of a steep hill, about half way to the village. We examined all
-the rocks as we went along; but no traces of fairies’ haunts, or witches’
-caverns did we see. After walking on some distance, we reached the
-brow of a rising hill, and as I gazed staringly up its steep sides, endeavoring
-to discover the celebrated abode of the prophetess, I saw a
-deep cavity in the rock—the opening half overgrown with ivy and wild
-flowers; a small foot-path wound up to it amid the grass. It had a
-wild, mysterious appearance, and conjecturing that must be the place,
-we ascended to it.</p>
-
-<p>“Dear Genevra!” cried Blanche, tremblingly, as I stooped at the
-small aperture on entering, “pray be careful. Are you sure this is
-old woman’s abode? you may be mistaken;—this may be a wild
-beast’s den.”</p>
-
-<p>“This is the place, I know, from description. Don’t be afraid: give
-me your hand; I will assist you in.” Grasping my hand from fear,
-Blanche was dragged by me through the opening. When fairly through,
-we rose upright upon our feet, and looked at our localities.</p>
-
-<p>We stood in a large chamber, excavated from the solid rock;—no
-light of day penetrated this haunted dungeon home; but in the far
-corner, opposite me, an immense chimney and fire-place illumined
-with a blaze of fire light the singular apartment; and, sitting before
-the fire, her back toward us, was a strange form crouching on the floor
-of the cavern: its gray hair was matted, and hung straggling down
-its back,—and it wore a long black garment, something like the gown
-of a priest; every instant one of its thin, skeleton-like hands, or rather
-claws, was projected from its lap, depositing something (I could not
-tell what) in a large vessel hanging over the flame,—so gathered up
-and misshapen was the form, I could not distinguish whether it was
-man, woman, or beast;—the appearance of the place, and this <i>outré</i>
-figure, forcibly reminded me of my childhood, and the old woman I
-called Granny. Blanche had turned pale as a ghost from fear, and
-I regretted having come.</p>
-
-<p>The figure did not at first perceive us; and we had stood some
-minutes unobserved spectators of its singular operations, when, pausing,
-it turned its head, and I beheld a human face,—but so wild, so
-wizard-like, it scarcely resembled a woman’s countenance. She rose
-to her feet, and confronted us. She was tall in stature, and the long,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_122"></a>[122]</span>
-straight robe added to her height. She regarded us with a piercing
-glance, and then beckoned our approach.</p>
-
-<p>“Be seated,” said she, pointing to two stools near her; “you have
-come to consult me. I knew I should have visiters this evening; the
-signs said it.”</p>
-
-<p>“We had some difficulty in finding you,” I observed; “your home
-is so secluded.”</p>
-
-<p>“So much the better,—it keeps fools from troubling me,” was the
-sharp reply. As she spoke, she stepped toward a dark corner of the
-cave, and after stooping, and apparently feeling about a moment, came
-back with a bottle, filled with water, in her hand. She resumed
-her position on the floor before the fire, and then abruptly demanded,—</p>
-
-<p>“Which will learn their fate first?”</p>
-
-<p>“Blanche, do you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no, dear; let her tell you first, and then I will try,” answered
-Blanche, falteringly.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then, good mother, tell mine.”</p>
-
-<p>She turned the bottle of water slowly head downwards; then
-raising it, apparently contemplating something she saw in the liquid,
-shook her head, and said,—</p>
-
-<p>“A short lived happiness; then clouds, darkness, and sadness
-await you; yet out of this sadness shall come a lasting, quiet joy;
-durable, because it shall be based on proper feelings; and love shall
-crown all, in future years.”</p>
-
-<p>“But, mother, your words are mysterious, incomprehensible to me.
-Pray tell me in plain language what awaits me. I cannot understand
-your symbols.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have said all I can say; recollect my words,—their meaning
-will be clear as sunlight, when they shall be verified in times to come.
-Now you,” to Blanche. Again the bottle was reversed, and she
-pored over its hidden meaning.</p>
-
-<p>“A short but bright career; an ill-fated love; a sudden and violent
-death, and a solitary grave;—this your fate,” and she glared at Blanche
-with those wild eyes.</p>
-
-<p>I noticed the sudden start of surprise, and glowing blush which
-overspread the face of my friend at these words. Had she in secret
-conceived an “ill-fated love?” or was it the unexpectedness of the
-prophecy caused that start?</p>
-
-<p>“Is my destiny then so sad;—is there nothing brighter in store for
-me;—are none of my fair visions to be realized?” said she, pensively.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_123"></a>[123]</span></p>
-
-<p>I placed but little reliance on what she said, considering it the
-mummery and trick of her trade; but Blanche, although she had expressed
-incredulity on the subject of fortune-telling, for the moment
-seemed saddened by the prophecy. Wishing to divert her mind from
-the subject, I began talking to the old woman.</p>
-
-<p>“Have you lived here long, mother?”</p>
-
-<p>“Eighteen summers have been and gone since I first came here.”</p>
-
-<p>“You have seen, then, many changes in the city during that time.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, many have been born, and many have died since eighteen
-years ago.”</p>
-
-<p>“And do you like to live in this old damp cavern? could you not
-find a better home?”</p>
-
-<p>“No; I desire no better home than a cave among the rocks
-nature made, and it is not for me or any other mortal to disdain her
-works. I have been as happy here as I should have been in a fine
-house.”</p>
-
-<p>“Have you many visiters?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not as many as I used to have. I am growing old and dull, and
-those who have their fortunes told generally go for amusement and
-ridicule; and now that age and disease have made me severe and grave,
-they seek others who can entertain them better.”</p>
-
-<p>I was about to propose other questions, but observing that Blanche
-had gone to the entrance, and was beckoning me, I placed a gold
-piece in the woman’s hand, and joined her. Acte followed me to the
-door of the rock.</p>
-
-<p>“I shall see you again, I feel I shall. At some future day you will
-find me a true prophet, although now you disbelieve my words.
-Farewell to both of you.”</p>
-
-<p>We descended the hill whence we came; Blanche thoughtful and
-depressed, and I somewhat influenced by Acte’s mysterious predictions.
-The shadows of evening gathered round us as we entered the
-fashionable street, Toledo, now thronged with the beauty and fashion
-of Naples, enjoying their daily rides, drives, and promenades, along
-the beautiful shores of the bay.</p>
-
-<p>As we walked along the street toward our own home, ourselves observing
-and observed, an elegant English phæton, driven by a footman,
-in blue and orange, and occupied by a young man, lovely as an angel,
-indolently lolling against its cushions, came gliding by. As it passed
-us, the gentleman stared long at Blanche, and then bowed; her face
-flushed to crimson, as she returned the salutation. I noticed also he
-leaned out of the carriage, and looked after her.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_124"></a>[124]</span></p>
-
-<p>“What a splendid looking man,” I involuntarily exclaimed; “who
-is he?”</p>
-
-<p>“The Lord of Glenfells; a Scottish nobleman. I saw him at
-Munich,” answered she, hesitatingly.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you well acquainted with him?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, he has visited me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, is he not handsome!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, very; I always thought him fine looking.”</p>
-
-<p>Blanche evidently did not wish to speak further about him; and
-with that strange intuition with which woman divines woman, I surmised
-that it was from something of a secret partiality.</p>
-
-<p>Madame Bonni was waiting tea when we reached home.</p>
-
-<p>“My two nightingales, where have you been to? I have been
-waiting an hour for you; and the French manager has called to see
-you. He stayed sometime, but finding you did not come, went away,
-saying he should call in the morning. He has something particular to
-say to you.”</p>
-
-<p>“We have been taking a long walk toward Posillippo and Virgil’s
-tomb, which detained us longer than we had intended,” said I, not
-wishing to tell her our real adventure.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! have you? Did you go within it?—is it not an interesting
-sight?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, we did not extend our walk so far as to reach it; but some
-day, soon, I intend visiting it for that purpose.”</p>
-
-<p>My thoughts reverted to Monsieur de Serval, and wondering and
-wishing he were back again with me, I spent the evening in my room,
-leaving Blanche to entertain our kind hostess.</p>
-
-<p>When alone, I always thought of my lover, as lovers generally do,
-I believe. I admired and loved him, but this love was so sudden, so
-incomprehensible;—men seldom court women on the instant of acquaintance,
-propose and marry them, especially actresses. Then I
-recalled what Madame Bonni and rumor had said of his character;
-his extravagance and bad conduct: but then had he not frankly, and
-with sincere contrition, admitted his faults, and promised amendment
-in future? What could be sadder, more touching than that history
-itself? related so charmingly, in his graceful way. His childhood had
-been soured by a bold, bad woman, and subsequently thrown upon the
-sea of life, like a bark without a pilot or rudder to steer it. Temptations,
-in their most attractive forms, had beset him, and he had done
-only as other men would have done, not even as bad as that. Much
-allowance should be made for his youth and beauty, and lonely position<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_125"></a>[125]</span>
-in life. But my excuses for my lover were endless. I cannot
-follow them all. When love amounts to infatuation, it is useless to
-reason; and it was foolish for me to attempt it. I wished he were
-with me;—I counted the hours and days as they passed.</p>
-
-<p>The other gentlemen who visited me, no longer pleased me. I did
-not want to see them;—their society only bored me. I usually
-deserted the parlor, leaving Blanche to do the honors, while I nursed
-my reveries alone; and she, so gentle and amiable, was willing to do
-anything to oblige another, and always anticipated and gratified my
-wishes,—even my strangest whims.</p>
-
-<p>The next morning after our visit to Acte, we were summoned to the
-parlor to see the manager. We found that worthy individual intently
-engaged in self-admiration of his own person, reflected in one of the
-long mirrors. He started on perceiving that <i>we</i> had discovered <i>him</i>
-in this interesting employment, which might seem to indicate, perhaps,
-some slight vanity, (a foolish quality, however, never possessed by the
-sterner and wiser sex!) Advancing toward us on tip-toe, he smilingly
-paid the salutations of the day, and then said:</p>
-
-<p>“Mesdemoiselles, the object of my visit is to inform you, that a
-new opera has been written by a distinguished musician of this city,
-and I wish to secure your services for its representation. I wish to
-produce it within a fortnight; new scenery and costumes have been
-added to the Opera house, and everything which can add to the
-splendor of effect, I intend shall be done; may I hope to have the co-operation
-of the two nightingales?” he bowed and chasseed before us.</p>
-
-<p>“What is the name of the new opera, Monsieur?” I inquired.</p>
-
-<p>“It is called Ajesha, or the Maid of Kars, a magnificent production
-of genius; the plot is romantic and beautiful, the music divine;
-some of the songs are exquisite. Stay, I will sing you one of the
-men’s, that you may form something of an opinion about it.”</p>
-
-<p>He seated himself at the piano and sang a spirited, sweet thing,
-beginning with, ‘My home is on the storm-bound deep.’ We listened
-intently, and admired it.</p>
-
-<p>“That is one of the gems of the opera, and there are many others
-equally beautiful; some of the women’s songs are exquisite, and you,
-fair ladies, I know will do them justice. I wish to bring it out within
-two weeks. In the course of that time the royal family return to the
-city, and will grace the theatre with their presence; may I consider
-your services engaged, Mesdemoiselles?”</p>
-
-<p>“Blanche is free to decide for herself, Monsieur,” I replied; “but
-for me, my guardian must decide.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_126"></a>[126]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Ah, yes, but Belmont of course will be perfectly willing. I shall
-see him this morning and ask him, but you Mademoiselle Ricorsi,
-you are independent and can choose for yourself,—will you be the
-Ajesha?”</p>
-
-<p>“I have never yet played in Naples; you know my terms, monsieur;
-are you willing to pay me what I have been in the habit of receiving
-at Munich?”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course, Mademoiselle, your price is my price.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then I shall be happy to sing, monsieur.”</p>
-
-<p>“All is agreed then, and I shall be happy to see you at rehearsal
-to morrow, ladies, when we will run through the opera, and cast your
-parts,” and the polite Frenchman bowed himself out of our presence.</p>
-
-<p>I omit the rehearsals, the confusion of preparation, and getting
-ready the costumes for the occasion, and pass to the night when this beautiful
-opera was produced for the first time on the Neapolitan boards.</p>
-
-<p>It was a tragedy; the plot is a singular one: Ajesha, the Maid
-of Kars, is a Circassian, as her name denotes; she is sold into slavery
-from her native land, and carried to the town of Kars, where she becomes
-the property of a Turkish Emir; he loves her intensely, and of
-course is most intensely jealous. She, a beautiful, spiritual creature,
-does not love this illiterate Turk, distinguished for nothing, but his
-immense wealth and brutality.</p>
-
-<p>A noble and handsome Englishman is taken prisoner by this
-Turkish commander, the English and Turks then being at war; he is
-imprisoned in a house opposite the harem of Ajesha; news of his youth
-and beauty is brought to the lady; he becomes ill from the severity
-of his treatment, and Ajesha, in the disguise of a page, visits, and
-nurses him. The consequence is, they conceive a mutual and desperate
-love for each other.</p>
-
-<p>At first their meetings are undetected by the jealous Mussulman,
-but Ajesha dreading future discovery, appoints the cemetery, the city
-of the silent, as their rendezvous. A treacherous slave betrays her
-confidence to the Emir; he surprises them one evening, and stabs her
-in the arms of her lover; then attempting to punish the Englishman,
-he himself is killed by the enraged lover, and dies by the side of his
-fair slave.</p>
-
-<p>This is the outline, as well as I remember it, of one of the most
-exquisite things I ever saw performed. The character of Nina I was
-cast for, voluntarily resigning the principal character in favor of my
-friend; and oh, how beautiful, beyond the power of description, did
-she look the night she played it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_127"></a>[127]</span></p>
-
-<p>She first makes her appearance in the Circassian costume, when
-she is sold from the home of infancy, and carried to a strange land;
-and the dress Blanche wore, was of white silk, ornamented with gold
-lama lace; a turban of tissue, spangled with gold stars, surmounted
-her flaxen curls waving on her shoulders; the graceful trousers gathered
-into a gold bandelette at the ancle, exposed fully to view her tiny
-feet, encased in their little Circassian slippers. The affectionate, sad
-farewell to her parents and young acquaintances, and the song she
-sings, ‘My native land, farewell,’ shook the house with applause.
-Every one had heard of, but none had yet seen the Munich nightingale;
-curiosity had been on the alert for some time, to witness our
-combined appearance, and glancing out from the side scenes I observed
-the royal box occupied, and the queen leaning forward with an air
-of rapt attention.</p>
-
-<p>I personated the friend and companion of Ajesha. Nina accompanies
-her into captivity, but is finally redeemed by her friends, and
-returns home. The music of the farewell scene between Ajesha and
-Nina, was very sweet; when they bid each other adieu, and sing,
-‘We have been friends together in sunlight and in tears;’ and we
-mutually felt indeed we had been friends together. The queen enthusiastically
-applauded, clapping her hands like a girl; and bouquets
-were promiscuously showered upon us from all parts of the house: two
-wreaths were cast at our feet by the king and queen. The coincidence
-struck me, it was on a similar occasion, the night of my debut
-in that theatre, that the wreath had been thrown me; not by royalty,
-but by one whose gemmed, singular face had strangely haunted me
-since, and as we both uplifted our eyes to the royal box, who should
-I see gazing on me behind their majesties, but the same face, the same
-large liquid eyes that had magnetised mine two months before. My
-astonishment was so great, I could scarcely recollect myself enough
-to step backward as the heavy drop curtain fell.</p>
-
-<p>Who could that man be accompanying the royal family? and
-apparently on familiar terms with them. I could not doubt it was the
-very same one, the donor of the diamonded wreath, those beautiful
-flowers I had preserved for so many days with so much care, who
-seemed to regard me with an air of so much interest.</p>
-
-<p>I had no time for reflection, Monsieur Belmont hurried us to our
-dressing-rooms, to dress for the palace scene, when Ajesha and Nina
-are first presented to the Emir.</p>
-
-<p>I could not help mentally contrasting the absurd difference between
-the acting on the stage, and the motley confusion behind the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_128"></a>[128]</span>
-scenes; the heaps of stage furniture, costume, old scenery, the scene
-shifters running hither and thither, black mutes, soldiers, noblemen,
-the women of the harem, in the most charming stage of negligee,
-nearly approaching to that of genuine nature, and above all other tones,
-I heard those of the worthy manager, who was directing the men how
-to arrange the grand salon de reception, into which we were to be
-carried in close litters.</p>
-
-<p>“Here,” shouted he, “make haste; what are you all about? where’s
-the dias for the salon? place it here, spread out the carpet; now, is
-that done? arrange yourselves in a row behind the throne, to the
-guards; light the lamps; get the instruments of music.”</p>
-
-<p>I entered the little room, where I dressed amid his reiterated injunctions
-and commands to the assembled court.</p>
-
-<p>What an empty show, thought I, as I hastily attired myself in the
-rose colored satin petticoat, and black velvet boddice, and placed a
-waving plume of white feathers in my hair.</p>
-
-<p>The Count Godolpho, an old <i>roué</i> and <i>habitué</i> of the “scenes” for
-years back, stopped me with a fine compliment, as I was getting into
-the veiled litter by the side of Blanche.</p>
-
-<p>“What! Mademoiselle Sfonza, is it you? fair as a star-lit nymph
-of air!” This was a poetical fancy of his own: I never met with the
-like expression in print. “Our pet child of song, stay a moment, let
-me look at you.”</p>
-
-<p>“I cannot now, Marquis, indeed, see they wait our entry.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where then can I see you, wilful fay? one never gets a sight of
-you except at the play: then only for an instant, and you are gone;
-where do you live?”</p>
-
-<p>“On earth now, in heaven I hope some day,” I smartly answered,—making
-a faint attempt at wit, to rid myself of this worn out old coxcomb,
-as I had no wish or intention to receive his visits; and the
-black mutes raising the litter, we were borne past him on the stage.</p>
-
-<p>Although conscious it was a mere show, still in the last act, the
-death scene of Ajesha and her lover, the touching pathos of Blanche’s
-acting, her dreamy, etherial tones, melted me to tears; and I almost
-cheated myself into the delusion that it was reality. Her death song,
-‘Beloved, I die,’ seemed indeed like the last breathings of a dying
-spirit, and oh, merciful heaven, was it not prophetic of her future fate?</p>
-
-<p>When the curtain fell on the last act, we were loudly called for,
-and our teacher, proudly elated at this great triumph, led us before
-the curtain, where we made our curtesies, kissed hands to the audience
-and passed off.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_129"></a>[129]</span></p>
-
-<p>The morning papers were filled with praises of our performance,
-and the plot, music, and libretto of the new opera. I laughed myself
-to sleep that night when I thought of the discomfiture of the count,
-and his absurd manner; then again, unconsciously and mysteriously,
-my thoughts reverted to the gentleman I had seen in the royal box—you
-will think, perhaps, I did not love my affianced lover, since my
-attention and thoughts could be so easily distracted to another, but in
-truth I did; I loved him with my whole soul; every wish, every
-thought was his; this interest in a stranger, a casual spectator of my
-performance, was not love, nor curiosity; it was a prophetic, a magnetic
-attraction, a feeling that seemed to tell that in future—but no
-matter, I will no longer digress; let me strictly adhere to the tenor of
-my tale.</p>
-
-<p>Blanche had long before fully compensated monsieur for his care of
-her childhood, and presented him beside with a handsome sum of
-money. Her industry had accumulated quite a small fortune, within
-the four years she had been performing for herself; the receipts of our
-joint acting each night were enormous, and Monsieur Belmont had no
-reason to regret his patronage of the Viennese beggar girl.</p>
-
-<p>He often said, himself, that we three poor girls had gained him
-more money and celebrity than any pupils he ever had. As I said
-in the beginning of my memoir, there is always a <i>motive</i> in these apparently
-beneficent actions. His motive was to feed, clothe, and educate
-us brilliantly for the stage; for this purpose it was much better
-to select girls from the lowest walks of life, friendless, uncared-for
-ones, unprotected and unprovided for, over whom he could have absolute
-control. True, he had saved us from starvation, but then he had
-realized a fortune from our exertions, and I was anxious to absolve
-myself from my debt of gratitude and obligation, and become mistress
-of my own actions, which every sensible rational being desires and
-ought to be.</p>
-
-<p>My teacher knew nothing of my secret engagement. I had not told
-him, and wondered, when told, what he would say and think of it.
-Of course he would be astonished at its suddenness, and, in a worldly
-point of view, at the condescension of Monsieur de Serval. I did not
-even know that he would give his consent, as he had a right to command
-my services. I trusted, however, to his uniform kindness to
-me, to arrange that matter. I felt sure he would not force me to do
-any thing I did not wish to do; that he would allow me to discontinue
-my theatrical career if I felt so inclined.</p>
-
-<p>We were visited daily by many of the fashionable men of Naples;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_130"></a>[130]</span>
-we were escorted to and from the theatre by numerous beaux, and the
-gay cavaliers vied with each other in their attentions; yet the compliments,
-the civilities paid to actresses, are of a different tone to those
-rendered to ladies of private life. There is a tone to all expression, a
-gradation to every human feeling; there is an imperceptible something
-in expression which we can feel but cannot describe; and it was this
-something that I felt, but could not describe, when I regarded the
-opposite of attentions to a lady of rank, and compliments to an actress.</p>
-
-<p>I endeavored to console myself for all regrets in philosophy, but
-sometimes <i>feeling</i> triumphed over even that, stoical as I thought
-myself. Sometimes attributing every thing to fate, sometimes believing
-in chance, I surrendered myself to the current of life’s troublous
-stream, and blindly glided on.</p>
-
-<p>Among other visiters to the house, there came the beautiful Lord
-of Glenfells. I say beautiful, because handsome, manly, fine-looking,
-are not terms to express his ideal, his exquisite, shadowy, captivating
-loveliness. He often visited Blanche. I never obtruded on their interviews;
-and, save the ordinary civilities of etiquette, never had any
-acquaintance with him; yet, though I saw him frequently, the impression
-of his personal attractions ever seemed new to me. I know not
-if he were intelligent or otherwise. I once or twice spoke of him to
-her, but the embarrassment and rosy blush told of interested feeling,
-and perceiving she did not wish to converse about him, I ever afterwards
-waived the subject.</p>
-
-<p>Busy gossiping tongues, however, with which the world is filled,
-who make it their business to attend to every body’s but their own,
-reported him as a man of immense wealth, travelling for amusement,
-or pleasure, which with the rich, and great, and fashionable, means
-the same thing. This was all I gathered concerning him; yet from
-what I saw of him, I considered him a man of dangerous attractions;
-artful, without appearing to be so, possessing a mournful tenderness,
-an abandon of manner, peculiarly attractive to a woman like Blanche.
-Though younger, I was superior in perception of the realities of life.
-I was not so dreamy, perhaps not so pure as she, my embodied concentration
-of the great, the beautiful, the good. God bless her! Let
-me not dilate upon that purity, that goodness. I feel my praise is inadequate
-to her merits; my commendations cannot add to the halo of
-immortality that surrounds her in the Elysian shades.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_131"></a>[131]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The three weeks’ absence of Monsieur de Serval, was occupied in
-fulfilling our engagement in Ajesha, which was performed twenty
-nights, and obtained great popularity for itself and glorious fame for
-us. Upon the return of my lover, my comet-like career was to terminate
-into marriage and retirement into private life. Blanche still
-adhered to her resolution of remaining unmarried, though many good
-offers had been made her; and of the opinions of Inez in that particular,
-we had been duly informed by a letter from herself, describing
-her happiness, and pleasant home, and husband’s love.</p>
-
-<p>The prophecy of old Acte lingered in my mind and constantly haunted
-me, and Blanche also seemed painfully impressed by her words. I observed
-for some days before M. de Serval’s return, that she would sit
-for hours—often all day—in absent thought, noticing no one, answering
-no one, if spoken to. Wondering at this neglect of my kindness
-in her, who had always from childhood manifested so much
-attachment to me, I felt a reproach to this coolness rise to my lips;
-but when I glanced at that calm, sweet face, and saw the pre-occupation
-of sad thought, all anger vanished, and quietly coinciding with
-her wish, I left her to her meditations.</p>
-
-<p>The night before the day on which my lover returned, I sought my
-pillow early; but sleep fled my eager embrace. Restlessly I tossed: I
-could not rest. Madame Bonni had a library of select works fitted up in a
-little room on the ground floor; I remembered this, and wanting to
-amuse me till repose should come, I arose, slipped on an opera-cloak of
-blue satin, which happened to be lying near the bed, and thrusting my feet
-in slippers, descended the stairs: all the household were retired. I got
-my book from the library, and was about returning, when passing the
-door which led into the garden, at that late hour I was surprised to see it
-open. The resplendent moonlight streamed brightly through, disclosing
-my favorite seat beneath the blooming Acacia and those beds of
-roses so odorous, and that pretty garden looked so inviting, that I
-stepped out in the moonlight and looked around. All nature was
-hushed to repose,—that delightful calm which, unlike death, tells of
-prostrated strength presently to be revived. As I stood upon the
-porch, gazing vacantly around, voices struck my ear. Who could
-be there at that late hour? I thought of robbers, and trembled with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_132"></a>[132]</span>
-fear. A moment’s listening re-assured me: it was a woman’s sweet
-tones I heard, and then those of a man in reply.</p>
-
-<p>Far down the gravel-walk, at the extreme end of the garden—by
-the margin of a little fountain which had once played there, but whose
-source was now neglected and obstructed by weeds and stones—I
-thought I perceived two forms. Determined to ascertain who and
-what they were, I stole noiselessly down the walk, to the shade of my
-favorite tree, which now cast its deep shadow far down the way, and
-concealing myself behind the broad trunk, peeped from around it, and
-beheld, to my astonishment, Lord Glenfells and Blanche!</p>
-
-<p>I saw her leaning on his full chest, her arms encircling his neck, her
-little mouth united to his, her soft eyes fixed on his, and he was gazing
-into hers with the same fondness—only more animal passion added to it.
-Tears fell like pearly dew from her eyes, and I saw him pause, as he
-spoke, and wipe them away with his small hand. I listened to hear their
-voices speak again, unable to explain to myself this singular scene.</p>
-
-<p>“Is not love the same? Can an empty ceremony—said over two
-lovers—render more binding the greatest, best, and noblest sentiment
-of our nature. Say, Blanche!—my beautiful one, my ocean pearl!—could
-the words of the matrimonial service make me more constant,—make
-me love you more than I now do? You, my heart’s worship,
-my idol! shall I not give you my whole soul; and what more can I
-do? If an unhallowed, a conventional form into which I was persuaded—forced;
-if that wretched link of earth binds me, in earthly form,
-to another,—what matters it? Consider, love, it is the same, so
-long as we are constant to our attachment: that constitutes the perfidy.
-Oh! listen not to the world’s prudence—to the cold calculations
-of a prudish moral. Let feeling usurp its place, and that I know
-will triumph—will plead my cause. Come with me this night—now;
-beneath the light of yonder bright silver. We will seek some other
-land, or a distant part of this country, where your fault—if that can be
-called fault which consumates my bliss—will be unknown, unheard of;
-and we will live in blest harmony and love. Come, dearest;
-come?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, no!” and her voice was choked by tears. “My love is all
-wrong: it is unhallowed. You are a married man. If I fly with you,
-disgrace follows me: you have a wife in England: you must forget
-me, and I, you. Even were you free, would you marry me? Consider
-your rank, and <i>I</i> an actress.”</p>
-
-<p>“Blanche, you mean not what you say, when you tell me to forget
-you. Do you really wish me to return to England to my dull wife—ten<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_133"></a>[133]</span>
-years my senior—and the stupidity of home—a home like that?
-Do you really wish it? If so,—farewell.”</p>
-
-<p>He made a movement to turn away; but she clung still closer to
-his bosom, and buried her head there.</p>
-
-<p>“Cruel! oh, cruel! I do not want you to go.”</p>
-
-<p>“Consent, then, to go with me. Come now, this moment? I will
-get a carriage, and morning light shall find us far away. Decide,
-Blanche, between my loss and my happiness. No answer? Blanche,
-are you dreaming, love?”</p>
-
-<p>“No; I was thinking of Genevra, my faithful friend. What will
-she think of my conduct! How mysterious it will seem to her: how
-ungrateful! but I love her,—oh, so dearly! She is the only woman who
-ever loved me, and I return her feelings with usury, too. Let me at
-least run up to her room, and, as she sleeps, kiss her farewell. I feel,
-for the last time, and here,—while the moon shines so bright above—while
-I consent to forfeit, for your sake, my good name, inviolate till
-this moment,—here let me gaze upon those starry spheres, and call
-down upon her young head their resplendent blessings. Oh, Heavenly
-Spirit! preserve her as she now is—beautiful and pure as the lily of
-the valley. Preserve her from that error of the heart which I now
-commit, which leads me to sin—knowing that sin. Grant that, in
-some future state, our souls may meet—may hold communion with
-each other, and be conscious of affinity. Holy influences of heaven!
-spirit of night and air! grant my prayer.”</p>
-
-<p>I saw her sink upon her knees, clasp her hands on her white neck,
-and fix her eyes on the starry firmament. Thus she remained a moment,
-in a breathless ecstacy of thought, when Lord Glenfells gently
-raised her, and once more folded her to his bosom.</p>
-
-<p>“Why this tumult of passion, dearest? What agitates you
-so?”</p>
-
-<p>“Get a carriage: bring it round to the garden-gate: I shall soon be
-ready for you. Meanwhile, let me go and kiss her good by?”</p>
-
-<p>I saw her break away from his fond arms; and, quick as thought,
-I retreated to my chamber, unobserved as I had come. I would not
-for worlds that she should have known that I had overheard her. I
-got into bed again, and closed my eyes. She passed my door, and
-ascended to her own room. Her hasty steps sounded overhead for
-some time,—hurriedly packing up, I suppose,—then she again descended,
-and paused at my door.</p>
-
-<p>The lock turned, and her sylph-like form glided to my bed side.
-She stooped over me—imagining I slept—and smoothed my hair<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_134"></a>[134]</span>
-beneath my cap with her tiny hand; then she kissed my forehead, and
-murmured,—</p>
-
-<p>“Genevra! dear Genevra! dear friend! when you awake in the
-morning you will seek me, but find me not: perhaps you may miss
-me for a little while,—may sometimes think of me with love and kindness:
-I hope so. I go to a new life—the life of love! I go to accomplish
-my destiny.”</p>
-
-<p>Once again she kissed me, then glided from the room. I heard her
-tell Lord Glenfells to bring the carriage to the garden-gate. My room
-looked on the street. I rose again from bed, and directed my steps to
-a little back room, near my own, which overlooked this gate. I
-wanted to see her go, though she knew not I was a witness of that departure.
-Her behaviour was an enigma I could not solve, and the
-reasons for which ever remained a mystery. If she was determined
-to become the associate of this man, why not go to him in broad daylight:
-what prevented her? She was her own mistress: no one did,
-or had the right to control her. She had long ago emancipated herself
-from her teacher’s guardianship; what, then, was the reason of
-this secret flight? I knew not then: I know not now.</p>
-
-<p>I had stood watching at the window of the room for some time,
-when I saw Lord Glenfells and Blanche emerge from the shadow of the
-porch, and pass through the gate; he put her in the landau, saw the
-baggage placed behind; seated himself by her, and, like lightning,
-they vanished from my sight.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The amazement of our hostess can better be imagined than
-described, when, on going to her room next day, she found it unoccupied—the
-stage and personal wardrobe of its fair proprietress gone
-also: and whither had she taken her flight? how strange the gifted
-child of song should yield to a momentary infatuation; and, listening
-to impulse, forgetting reason, abandon herself to such a life: what
-demon possessed her?</p>
-
-<p>I had expected a violent storm on the part of M. Belmont; but, to
-my astonishment, he received my recital of the night’s adventure with
-perfect indifference: and remarked, with imperturbable phlegm, that
-“it was her own affair; she ought to know best what she was about.”
-I had expected some surprise, sorrow, or at least an emotion of some
-sort; but I forgot that my teacher had been hardened in the ways of
-the world; and births, deaths, marriages, seductions, and every other
-evil thing, was a matter of course to him. He always maintained that
-every sensible person should be the best judge of their own conduct:<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_135"></a>[135]</span>
-like a true Frenchman, he did as he pleased, and allowed every
-one else to do the same, unmolested, undisturbed by criticism or
-advice.</p>
-
-<p>After breakfast, Madame Bonni and I sat together speculating and
-mystifying about Blanche’s strange behaviour: the problem, however,
-could not be solved by us. It was past elucidation, and the more we
-talked, the farther we got from the point—the motive of action. While
-we were discussing, I was called away; my lover had returned.</p>
-
-<p>I found him standing on his feet, hat in hand, facing the door,
-where I entered—his face calm and happy in expression—and it
-warmed and brightened when I came towards him; catching my
-hands in his, he pressed them fervently, and, kissing me, asked,</p>
-
-<p>“Have you missed me, darling?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! very much, dear Rinaldo.”</p>
-
-<p>“And I have been dreaming of you during my whole journey;
-I scarcely had sense enough left from reverie to attend to my business,
-and I have hurried back, leaving it half incomplete, to be arranged
-by lawyers.”</p>
-
-<p>“But where is it you have been to, dearest?”</p>
-
-<p>“Genoa and the frontier of Austria: an estate left me I was in
-danger of losing, through the perfidy of relations; but, thank heaven!
-their malice is defeated, and I am safe: now, love, come sit here by
-me on this sofa, and tell me all you have been doing. I left the night
-Somnambula was to be performed: tell me about it; did it succeed?”</p>
-
-<p>I described the opera, and singing: its success, and subsequently
-the disappearance of Blanche with Lord Glenfells, the night before.</p>
-
-<p>“Gone with Lord Glenfells! what an unwise action: but who
-is he?”</p>
-
-<p>“A gay young Englishman, travelling on the continent for amusement;
-dear Blanche, who would have dreamed, after all the temptations
-she has evaded, who would have thought she would have acted
-thus?”</p>
-
-<p>“No one in truth; it is very strange: your friend appeared so gentle,
-so indifferent to men’s society, and fond of solitude; of all women, I
-should have thought her the very last one to commit so rash an action.”</p>
-
-<p>“Blanche is one of those strange, impulsive beings, who, if you
-can only thoroughly warm and interest, will go all lengths to love and
-please you. Lord Glenfells has acquired a great influence over her,
-and she has consented to forego respectability, society, everything for
-him. Oh, how I wish she had not done so; how I regret her loss.”</p>
-
-<p>“She may repent this imprudence some day, and return to propriety;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_136"></a>[136]</span>
-and you, do not grieve about her; summon your stoical philosophy,
-and practice your favorite aphorism. Never regret that
-which is past.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I know I ought to practice my precepts: philosophy triumphs
-over past and future ills, but present troubles overmaster philosophy.”</p>
-
-<p>“True, love: a wise remark.”</p>
-
-<p>“We were engaged to sing five nights yet, to complete our engagement;
-now she is flown, I shall have to finish alone,” I observed,
-absently; for, notwithstanding my joy at seeing my lover again, my
-thoughts reverted to the absent Blanche.</p>
-
-<p>Monsieur de Serval drew me gently toward him, as he sat upon
-the sofa.</p>
-
-<p>“Come hither dearest, come sit close by me, your presumptive and
-future lawful protector; do not look so sad; cheer up, and let us talk
-of happiness and love, and delightful scenes, and conversations, all in
-store for us in times to come.”</p>
-
-<p>But I could not feel my usual cheerfulness, even for <i>his</i> sake, and
-after a slight conversation he went away, and I retired to my own room
-and my solitude; and then I wept for Blanche’s loss, and Blanche’s
-shame.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing is sooner dried than a tear; and, as de Serval had said,
-my regrets could not restore her, could not undo her behaviour; and
-the deprivation of her sweet society, made me fonder still (if that could
-be) of that of Monsieur de Serval; my whole heart now exclusively
-centered in him. I performed my last engagement on the Neapolitan
-boards, and bade adieu to the distinguished patronage of royalty, and
-the humble, yet heartfelt admiration of the people. The journals
-doled forth newspaper sentiment and lamentations at the dramatic loss;
-and private circles wondered at my good fortune. For myself I did
-not think whether it was good fortune or not. I only knew, I only
-thought I loved him, and was willing to go any where, do anything,
-make any sacrifice for him. I will not describe the few weeks of
-courtship that intervened before my marriage; such scenes can only
-be felt, be experienced, they cannot be told; they are sad, yet sweet
-episodes in my memory, and though painful to recur to, yet mentally
-I treasure them, for that was my <i>first</i> love.</p>
-
-<p>Signor, I married him; my wedding was simple, and celebrated
-with but little display; his noble friend, the Countess Bramonti honored
-it with her distinguished presence; and my guardian, teacher, and
-benefactor, Monsieur Belmont, gave me away. I was united to him
-in the pretty church of Sacre Cœur, where, some weeks before I had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_137"></a>[137]</span>
-attended mass with Madame Bonni; it was filled with spectators,
-every one wishing to see the new singer married; and my kind hostess
-kissed me at the conclusion of the ceremony, and wished me happiness,
-with tears in her eyes, and smiles on her lips.</p>
-
-<p>“May many blissful days and years be thine, fair girl,” said the
-countess in her deep tones, as she swept her majestic form toward me,
-and clasped me in her arms; “may you love each other, and in that
-love be happy.”</p>
-
-<p>Monsieur Belmont conducted me to the carriage, which was to bear
-me away to my future home, in a valley, amid the cloud-capt Appenines.
-Immediately on arrival there, I promised to write to him, and
-regularly maintain a correspondence. My husband, (how strange the
-word sounded to my ears,) joined me, and I was whirled away from
-the scene of my short-lived, yet brilliant triumphs.</p>
-
-<p>Our journey to his mountain home occupied two days; and during
-the time my husband exhibited a frenzy of emotion, which terrified
-more than it pleased me. But the ways and loves of men were then
-Isiac mysteries to me, and you know their translation of the word love,
-is rendered differently to ours.</p>
-
-<p>On the evening of the second day of our travel, he told me we
-were approaching the “Chateau of the Ravine,” for that was the traditionary
-name of the castle. The scenery was sublime, and lost in
-contemplation and thought, reposing my head on his shoulder, I
-silently admired it.</p>
-
-<p>Stupendous rocks, rising perpendicularly in the air, to an immense
-height, faced the smooth road on either side for some distance; as these
-declined away, a broad vista of the dark blue mountains far in distance,
-and a beautiful level plain, such as I had seen when first I came
-to Naples, met my gaze. Like a panorama these swiftly disappeared,
-and we entered on a broken chain of the Appenines themselves; the
-carriage slowly wound round and round the upward ascent of the
-rocky pass, barely wide enough to allow the vehicle room to roll
-along; then we descended as rapidly as we had come up, and thus
-continued on for some miles, when the ridge of mountains suddenly
-terminated, and I looked down from the great height on which we
-stood, and beheld at my feet the ravine, and in the midst of it, presenting
-an imposing appearance of grandeur and decay, the chateau.
-It had been built, my husband said, in the ancient times of feudal
-splendor, but its successive possessors, either for want of means or inclination,
-had suffered it to moulder away, as time, year after year,
-diminished its magnificence. He said he intended refitting it, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_138"></a>[138]</span>
-renovating the antique style, and I was pleased to hear the promise
-that so fine a structure should be rescued from decay.</p>
-
-<p>A few minutes brought us to the gates, which were thrown wide
-open to receive us, and the carriage rumbled into the great court-yard.
-M. de Serval alighted, lifted me out, and leaning on his arm, I ascended
-a marble staircase, and entered a pretty salon, tastefully furnished,
-where I sat down, quite wearied by fatigue. He left the room for a
-moment, to order lights and supper to be prepared, for twilight was
-stealing over us, and leaning back on the couch, I languidly closed
-my eyes, and was almost dropt asleep, when a heavy footstep startled
-me; looking up, I saw standing before me, and fixedly looking at me,
-an old woman; there was nothing strange in the simple fact of her
-being old, for old women are plentiful as stars; but this one was peculiarly
-singular in appearance; she wore a scarlet woollen petticoat,
-black stockings, and a little cap of green; her long, thick, and coarse
-black hair, fell below her waist in tangled braids; her eyes were
-piercing in expression, and they seemed to sparkle and glance fire as
-she fixedly stared at me. She appeared to be beating time to her own
-thoughts, for she repeatedly struck her breast with her right hand.
-Perceiving that I saw her, she curtesied, and in a lofty tone said,</p>
-
-<p>“Welcome to your home, fair mistress; welcome to the ‘Chateau
-of the Ravine.’</p>
-
-<p>“Do you belong to the household of Monsieur de Serval?” I asked,
-strangely impressed by her manner and appearance.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, madame: I came here a long time ago, in the service of the
-first lady.”</p>
-
-<p>“The first lady! who was she?”</p>
-
-<p>“You know, madame, of course, the Lady Isodore, Monsieur’s—”</p>
-
-<p>Abruptly she paused; and, turning, I saw my husband’s stern gaze
-fastened on her: she cowered beneath that look; and well she might,
-for even I could not have met it unabashed.</p>
-
-<p>“Pasiphae, you can go; your young mistress is tired; she needs
-repose after her long travel.”</p>
-
-<p>Silently she retreated.</p>
-
-<p>“Who is that old woman, dearest? her strange ways surprised me.”</p>
-
-<p>“An old domestic I have retained in my service, though almost
-useless; come Genevra, your chamber is prepared, and supper
-arranged in the banqueting hall.”</p>
-
-<p>Thither we went: the apartment was magnificent, and one of the
-tables set with dainties that might have delighted an epicure; the
-lamps, shrined in vases of alabaster, shed a sweet, soft light; the hush<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_139"></a>[139]</span>
-of stillness and repose reigned within and without; and, more than
-all, my husband’s accents of tenderness, and the tumult of love that
-had usurped the place of gentler emotions in my breast, have impressed
-that scene in indelible traits on my memory.</p>
-
-<p>After supper we returned to the salon, and entertained ourselves,
-till the clock struck the hour for retiring, with a conversation in which
-<i>words</i> had all to do, not thoughts: <i>they</i> were differently employed.</p>
-
-<p>Then, at ten o’clock, we retired to our bedchamber; the same old
-woman stood at the door of the room as I entered: an ominous smile
-sat on her lips; she opened her mouth, as if to speak; but, perceiving
-my husband close behind me, she went away without expressing the
-thoughts which seemed to tremble on the point of utterance.</p>
-
-<p>Then, when the door closed behind us, suffocated with joy, we fell
-into each other’s arms—let me draw a veil over that night, and pass
-to other scenes.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>I wish I could make you realize the ecstatic rhapsody in those first
-days of wedded love: such emotions as I experienced one can only
-experience once in a lifetime: for the novelty wears away; they also
-disappear. I wish I could make you feel as I felt, as we roved
-together, like children, hand in hand, through those flowery glades,
-and through the blooming gardens of this old castle—sometimes reading,
-sometimes talking, always loving, and picturing a continued
-increase of happiness, and everlasting bliss.</p>
-
-<p>Alas! poor frail human nature! Poor frail, inconstant mortals! What
-a strange mockery does it not seem to our own hearts to look back
-after years have changed these delusions of fancy, and stripped them
-of their false lustre; what a mockery does it not seem to think over
-what we once thought—and see the folly of dreaming of affections
-unaltered, and hearts that never could grow cold?</p>
-
-<p>Old Pasiphae was my attendant. I preferred her to another, a
-younger girl, who had come to the castle to engage in my service.
-She was a very odd woman, and strongly infected with the popular
-superstitions of that section of the country. She was avoided by the
-other domestics as a half lunatic: for low, ignorant, or vulgar minds,
-always attribute eccentricity of mind or manner to mental perturbation;
-and, surely, the wise have every inducement to become insane,
-if they pay attention or depend for happiness on the stupid fools of
-which the greater portion of mankind are composed.</p>
-
-<p>The chateau was built with two wings each side of the main building:
-the right wing was always closed, bolted and barred. I had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_140"></a>[140]</span>
-been married two months, when curiosity induced me, one day, to
-ask Monsieur de Serval the reason why that part of the mansion was
-unopened, unoccupied, and neglected. He answered carelessly, that
-the castle was so large, he had not thought it necessary to refit that
-side of it;—it was more decayed than the rest. This reply satisfied
-me for the moment, but woman’s curiosity was on the alert, and I
-wished, I scarce know why, to see the interior of that gloomy side of
-the chateau.</p>
-
-<p>Six months had glided swiftly on since my marriage. Oh, days of
-hope! oh, hours of happiness! with what mournful pleasure do I
-retrace your flight! and with what lingering sadness detail the strange
-contrast which time developed all too quickly to my wondering
-eyes!</p>
-
-<p>I had heard several times from my worthy teacher. No tidings
-had reached him of Blanche. He had heard nothing; knew not if
-she were dead or alive. This distressed me, even amid my own joy.
-Madame Bonni was well, and often sent her love; and the theatrical
-world, they said, still mourned my irreparable loss;—the journals still
-dwelt upon my merits.</p>
-
-<p>It was at this moment of time that Rinaldo left me for three days,
-for a hunting party, to come off some fifty miles from the castle. He
-bade me farewell with great tenderness, and departed. This was a
-favorable opportunity, I thought, for the execution of my long-cherished
-project of gaining admission to the closed and, I imagined,
-haunted rooms. The key my husband always kept locked up in a
-small casket, and I knew where the key of that was to be found.</p>
-
-<p>Having unlocked the casket and obtained the key, I took a lamp
-from my dressing table, and directed my steps to that quarter of the
-house. The quivering flame was often nearly extinguished by gusts
-of wind, and the shaking of the great oriel windows reminded me of
-the tread of ghosts. My feet often faltered from fear; but I continued
-on, and reached the great door in the centre of the long gallery, which
-gave admission to the interdicted apartments.</p>
-
-<p>When I inserted the key in the lock, and unlocked the door which
-gave entrance to these deserted rooms, my heart quite failed me, and
-I regretted my curiosity. What was there to see about old unfurnished,
-desolate apartments? How foolish of me to pry into nothing! Yet
-an impulse I could not overcome bade me go onward; and accordingly
-I pushed open the door, which opened harshly. I went in; the first
-room was a large anti-chamber, like that on the other side of the
-house, naked and lonely. Crossing this, I opened another door, which<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_141"></a>[141]</span>
-led, as I supposed, into a similar apartment, when, to my utter amazement,
-I beheld what struck me dumb with astonishment.</p>
-
-<p>The salon in which I stood was well furnished. A Grecian couch
-occupied one corner; books, and toys, and instruments of music were
-scattered round, and reclining on this couch lay a woman of handsome
-form, but wild, haggard features, and insane expression; and on a
-low stool at her feet sat Pasiphae, my attendant.</p>
-
-<p>Hearing the door open, she glanced around, and seeing me, shrieked,
-and covered her face with her hands:</p>
-
-<p>“Gracious heavens! madame, how came you here? what brought
-you to these fated rooms?”</p>
-
-<p>“What does this mean? speak, I command you! Who is this
-woman?—what are you doing here?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, madame, why did you come here? Alas! alas! how unhappy;
-how unfortunate,” was the only reply she made, as she rocked
-herself to and fro.</p>
-
-<p>“Tell me! tell me quickly,” I cried, seized with a horrible suspicion
-of the truth. At this the strange woman raised herself to a sitting
-posture, and regarding me with a countenance of melancholy wildness,
-said, clasping her hands together as she spoke:</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, ask him, won’t you, to take me out of this;—I will be good,
-indeed I will: I never will come near him, if he don’t want to see me,
-if he will only take me away. Oh, do ask him: pray do?”</p>
-
-<p>I went toward her mechanically, so stunned and stupid was I with
-astonishment. I sat down beside, and more closely observed the poor
-lunatic. I could plainly see fine traits in that blurred face; traces of
-mind, now scarred and erased, like a blotted crimpled page. Love,
-jealousy, humanity, and disgust, all told me that in this unhappy one
-I saw my husband’s victim. What could he mean by shutting her up
-there? Old Pasiphae still sat with her head bowed between her
-hands, and she momently exclaimed,—“What will master say? oh,
-how he will curse me!”</p>
-
-<p>“No, no, Pasiphae; you shall not be blamed. Monsieur de Serval
-shall never know of my visit here. Get up, and tell me what this
-strange scene means.”</p>
-
-<p>The maniac stared at me with her great black eyes, and then continued
-on in her sad tones. “No, no ball to-night; I cannot dance:
-he is coming for you to-morrow,—I cannot dance when I expect him;
-take away the dress; send away the carriage; I am going to sleep to
-dream of him,” and languidly closing her eyes, she sunk back on
-the couch, and lay perfectly still. Thinking the poor creature had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_142"></a>[142]</span>
-fainted, I uttered an expression of fear, when Pasiphae, motioning me
-to silence, bent over her watchfully. Presently the sound of her
-regular breathing assured the old domestic that she slept. Smoothing
-back from her forehead the tangled masses of her hair, and covering
-the thin form with a large shawl, Pasiphae composed her delicate
-hands upon her breast, and then rising, took my hand in hers, and said
-mournfully:</p>
-
-<p>“Come, dear lady, this can be no pleasant sight for you;—if you
-will return to your own room, I will tell you all. I have been on the
-point of doing so several times, but fear of master’s anger prevented
-me; and I am old and broken down, and were he to discharge me,
-might suffer and die from want. Come, lady, ere she awakes. Poor
-thing; she will soon be dead and far away. She has been very
-troublesome of late,—I could scarcely manage her; but now she sleeps
-quietly—the first time in many days.”</p>
-
-<p>I silently contemplated the fitful repose of the madwoman for a
-moment before going, and in that instant I saw the whole fabric of
-delusive happiness I had erected on unstable air, shattered to the
-earth. I gazed on the neglected, cast-off victim of my lord’s caprice,
-in whose emaciated form and desert mind I saw the records of long
-mental and bodily suffering.</p>
-
-<p>Pasiphae interrupted my reverie by twitching my robe; and, after
-she had arranged the light on the antique mantel-piece, and adjusted
-her window drapery, taking my lamp in her hand, we left the salon,
-locking the door upon her insane ward.</p>
-
-<p>The outer door of the anti-chamber she also locked; and, satisfied
-that if awaking she could not follow us, I returned to my chamber,
-and overwhelmed with sickness of the soul, threw myself despairingly
-into a chair, and burying my face in my hands wept bitterly. I felt
-disappointed—heartbroken;—disappointed that the man in whom I
-had centred all my hopes, should so utterly have ruined them;—heartbroken
-at the melancholy sight I had seen. Sobbing like a child I
-sat and wept, forgetful of my own identity, or Pasiphae’s presence.
-At length my grief in a slight degree abated, and wiping my eyes, I
-looked up and perceived the poor old woman sorrowfully looking
-at me.</p>
-
-<p>“I know, dear Lady Genevra, how sad you feel at this proof of
-your husband’s infidelity; and sorry am I that you should have come
-to those rooms and seen my poor charge,” said Pasiphae; and sympathy
-almost rendered her voice sweet, and almost metamorphosed that
-weatherbeaten face into one of youth and beauty.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_143"></a>[143]</span></p>
-
-<p>“How long has she been insane?” I asked, my voice almost choked
-with sobs.</p>
-
-<p>“This autumn coming will be two years.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who was she? how came she here?”</p>
-
-<p>“She was always called the Lady Isodore, that is the only name by
-which I ever knew her. Four years ago master brought her here one
-night in a fine carriage, and commanded us to treat her the same as
-if she were our lawful lady: we always did so, and she ruled the
-household: master seemed very fond of her; and, although he never
-took her travelling with him, and no one visited her, yet her great
-love for him appeared to supply the place of all other society. Two
-years after she came, he seemed to grow tired of her, and they often
-had furious quarrels; one night, in a difficulty of this sort, forgetting
-himself, he struck her violently with the butt end of a pistol he held
-in his hand; she fell upon the floor, and when revived, from that hour
-was mad. In vain did my unhappy master use every endeavor to
-restore her: reason had fled—never to return. Since then she has
-been sometimes wild and gay, sometimes sad—as this evening you
-saw her. Master, at first, was nearly mad himself with remorse and
-despair; but, after a while, he recovered from his grief; and, having
-fixed those rooms up for her, consigned her to my care, and no longer
-troubled himself about her. From habit I have acquired great influence
-over her; and even in her wildest moods she will obey me.
-I think, dear lady, that crime will always meet its just reward, even
-here on earth; and when I look at master sometimes, I think within
-myself, ‘the hour of retribution for thy sin will surely come some
-day.’”</p>
-
-<p>“When he came down to the castle some months ago, and told me
-to have it cleaned and fitted up for the reception of its future lady, I
-could scarcely credit my ears; and wondered who would marry, and
-risk her happiness, with a man like him: and when he brought you
-here, and I saw how beautiful and innocent you were, I trembled for
-the future. I never intended to tell you this; and master trusted to
-my fidelity to him, that you should never discover the secret of the
-uninhabited wing of the castle. You are not more grieved than I
-that chance or curiosity should have directed you there; your trust in
-monsieur I know is broken; but, dear lady, I feel it my duty to tell
-you, that you lean upon a broken stick if you depend on him for
-faith.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hush! Pasiphae; oh! be still; don’t say any thing against him:
-how miserable I feel! I cannot believe that my Rinaldo can be so<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_144"></a>[144]</span>
-depraved; that he, whom I trusted to reform, to render a better, wiser
-man, could act with such brutality towards a woman.”</p>
-
-<p>My soul sickened with horror at such an inhuman action; and I
-soliloquized, “This was the man whose glowing description of the
-wrongs and troubles of his childhood had so interested and beguiled
-me; this was the man who had begged me to exert my influence to
-reform and purify his heart; who had promised, were I his Mentor,
-to be as gentle as Telemachus; who had entreated me to be his
-guardian angel, to warn him from the evils he had committed, yet
-deprecated: this was the man.”</p>
-
-<p>Truly, reason might have reproached me with over self-confidence,
-and blind trust in the boy-god Cupid, who had so cheated me. And I
-had dreamed of future years of tranquil happiness and companionship,
-after the first flush of love had faded, and that profiting by past errors,
-virtue hereafter should be his patroness; and this was the man on
-whom I purposed working these miracles. He, who could wantonly
-inflict personal violence on a woman, and then keep a senseless idiot
-housed like a dog in an uninhabited part of the house. The veil
-which shrouded my eyes, was being lifted off, like the mysterious
-veils of Isis, which conceal the grotesque absurdity of the image
-adored.</p>
-
-<p>Perceiving Pasiphae still standing before me, her eyes filled with
-sympathetic tears, I said, “Pasiphae, my good woman, you can go; I
-would rather be alone; I feel very sad; you had better return to the
-room; she may awake and miss you.”</p>
-
-<p>“You look very unhappy, dear lady, had I not better stay a little
-while with you?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, no, I prefer being alone; go.”</p>
-
-<p>She departed; and then thought usurped her sway; I wished my
-husband were there then, at that moment, to have told him what I
-thought of his conduct; but when I reconsidered it, I saw it would
-do no good; for to reproach a man with his vices, only alienates his
-affections, and gains his dislike; it does not convince his understanding,
-for that will not be convinced; nor better his heart, for he always
-thinks that could not be bettered; and indeed, I think they are quite
-right, not often being troubled with any. A roar of words is generally
-the only result, and contempt and hatred the inevitable consequence.
-I was determined, however, to speak of it to Monsieur de
-Serval on his return. Then, distressed in mind, caring not if I died
-that night, I sought my pillow, and wept till lost in the oblivion of
-slumber.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_145"></a>[145]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX.</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Two days afterwards, my husband returned from his hunting party,
-bringing some game with him. It was now late in the fall, and the
-forest trees were tinted with many and various dyes, but the charms
-of nature had no charms for me then, it was all dark and desolate,
-like my soul. This strange, unlooked for event in my new married
-life, carried back my thoughts to the miserable days of infancy, and
-the lonely hours I spent as a wandering beggar girl in the streets of
-Vienna; the ideas the speculative mind of childhood then indulged
-in, again returned to me, and I began to take an inverted view of
-everything, and to look on nature and human beings with an abstracted
-gaze.</p>
-
-<p>The evening of my husband’s return, I was standing on the balcony
-of the castle, when he rode up to the gates, followed by his grooms;
-he rode well, and his appearance was distinguished on horseback;
-seeing me, he lifted his hat, and smiled, then disappeared under the
-gateway.</p>
-
-<p>Knowing he would expect me to meet him, I slowly dragged myself
-to the banqueting hall, for so entirely were my feelings toward
-him changed, that now I would have avoided, where formerly I should
-joyfully have sprung to his arms.</p>
-
-<p>He stood surrounded by his dogs and servants, giving directions to
-the grooms: saddles and housings, and game were lying about.</p>
-
-<p>“My love, excuse me a moment; I will see you in your drawing-room
-presently,” said Monsieur de Serval, as I came toward him.
-Seeing him occupied with his retainers and servants, and glad to be
-alone, I went to my salon, and sat down to my piano; I began a sweet
-air from one of the operas I had formerly performed; it was Norma’s
-reproach to Polileo, and, as I sang it, I felt how applicable it was to
-my own case. A heavy hand was laid firmly on my shoulder, and
-turning, I saw Pasiphae.</p>
-
-<p>“My lady, Monsieur de Serval has come back; I saw him just now
-in the hall.’</p>
-
-<p>“I know it, Pasiphae, I have just seen him; how is she, is she
-quiet?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, my lady, rather wild and noisy this evening; oh, you had
-better not let him know what you have discovered.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_146"></a>[146]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I shall tell him the truth; I am not afraid to speak the truth,
-Pasiphae; it should at all times be spoken; no blame shall fall on you;
-be quieted, you are safe.”</p>
-
-<p>The sudden entrance of my husband interrupted us, as I was about
-asking some question about the unhappy Isodore. At the sight of him,
-notwithstanding the injury I was satisfied he had done that poor woman,
-the thousand fascinating remembrances of the last six months crowded
-fast upon me; and, in looking on his fair face, whatever wickedness
-that face concealed, I felt I loved him still. It was a delusion, when
-I imagined I could so quickly learn to hate him. In fact, the transitions
-of human feelings are like the seasons of the year, so gradually do
-we pass from one line of feeling to the other extreme, that we are ourselves
-unconscious when the end is attained. Thus it was with me; I
-did finally consummate the climax of indifference and contempt towards
-my husband, but not then: I had not reached it then.</p>
-
-<p>Pasiphae made a low obeisance to her stern master, and left us
-alone.</p>
-
-<p>As usual, Rinaldo kissed me; I submitted to the caress without returning
-it: noticing my coldness, a cloud gathered on his brow.</p>
-
-<p>“You receive me very indifferently, Genevra, on my return from a
-perilous bear hunt.”</p>
-
-<p>“I feel indifferent at this moment, Rinaldo.’</p>
-
-<p>“Pray, may I inquire, signora, the cause of this change?” said he,
-and drew his stately figure to its full height, and regarded me
-searchingly.</p>
-
-<p>“I can easily explain it, monsieur: I have been in the right wing
-of the castle, and have seen the lunatic you keep shut up there, Lady
-Isodore.”</p>
-
-<p>He started back, as if shot; then rage shone in his eyes, and he
-angrily exclaimed,</p>
-
-<p>“You have been to those deserted apartments: how dared you go
-there, what took you there?”</p>
-
-<p>“My feet, of course, were the mechanical operators on the occasion,
-monsieur,” answered I, derisively; “but curiosity was the only motive
-I had at first, till gaining access, I beheld the victim of your
-cruelty.”</p>
-
-<p>“You, Genevra, <i>you</i>, to pry into my secret affairs: you, whom I
-have taken from a disgraceful profession, and elevated in rank to any
-lady in the land, to talk to me of cruelty;” and foaming with rage he
-tore up and down the room like a madman.</p>
-
-<p>“Would, monsieur, for my peace of mind, my happiness, that you<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_147"></a>[147]</span>
-could undo what you consider so great an honor, and restore me to
-that ‘disgraceful profession,’ which I have every reason to regret
-having left for the arms of a libertine; and a home that has been
-desecrated by wanton violence. Yes, when the night before last I went
-to those rooms, and gazed with feelings of intense pity upon that forlorn
-being, I plainly beheld the life you have hitherto led, and to
-which you will of course return, after the novelty of my love has worn
-away. Oh, little did I think, when I pledged you my whole heart and
-soul at the altar, little did I dream that my affection would be thus
-requited by living witnesses of shame and horror like this.”</p>
-
-<p>I felt excited to a terrible degree: the recollection of her injuries,
-and my own shame, had excited me to a point I should, ordinarily,
-have believed myself incapable of: with his arms folded and head
-depressed, my husband contemplated me.</p>
-
-<p>“If you have finished, signora, I should like to take the liberty
-of speaking,” said he, ironically.</p>
-
-<p>“No, I have not done; I never could find words sufficiently strong
-to express my disgust and horror of such actions. Other women, perhaps,
-creatures of sensual, vulgar souls, might feel jealous of the husband’s
-love, forgetting the villany extended to the betrayed one; but
-I do not. I blame you, not her—whoever she may have been, whatever
-she may have done.”</p>
-
-<p>“Will you hear me, lady?” again demanded he, in the same cool
-tone as before.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, monsieur; speak on. I have expressed my thoughts: now
-speak yours.”</p>
-
-<p>Haughtily I flung myself on a couch, and, looking him in the face,
-awaited his remarks.</p>
-
-<p>“The unfortunate woman you have seen,” said Monsieur de
-Serval—endeavoring to compose his features and his voice to calmness—“that
-unfortunate is a Spanish woman, from Madrid—her name
-is Lady Isodore Dosamados—she was of a noble, but impoverished
-family: when I first became her lover, I never enticed her from habits
-of morality; she voluntarily became my companion. When I passed
-through Spain, on my return to Italy, she attached herself to me, and
-I brought her here: it was her own jealous temper, exasperating my
-irritable one, which brought her to her present condition. If she
-chose to excite me to a quarrel, and work upon my feelings until,
-losing all consciousness, I inflicted a blow that crazed her, it was her
-own fault; I did not intend to harm her; but immoral women, when
-enraged, are more like wild beasts than human beings: thus it was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_148"></a>[148]</span>
-with her. I have provided for her during her insanity, and will continue
-to do so as long as her wretched life continues.”</p>
-
-<p>“I do not believe all you wish to impress me with as truth, in
-regard to your moderation and kindness to her,” I replied, as he
-paused, evidently expecting me to say something. “I don’t believe
-all you say; for Pasiphae”—I stopped abruptly, remembering my promise
-not to implicate her.</p>
-
-<p>“What of her?” cried he, sternly.</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know what you would say: that she has told you many
-delightful tales of my cruelty, as you call it; well, let the old woman
-have her say: women and children should never be contradicted; her
-crazy ward will not live long; I only retain her now because she can
-manage her better than any other. When Isodore dies she shall go
-quickly: and as for you, signora, learn that I take neither reproof nor
-advice from my wife however much I love her: and beware how you
-provoke my anger thus a second time.”</p>
-
-<p>He stamped out of the room, and his heavy tread re-echoed along
-the corridor. Amazed at his temper, I sat still, thinking over what
-he had said, and wondering if he had spoken the truth: which, in
-that case, would have been some extenuation of his fault, when Pasiphae
-came rushing into the room, her face expressing the greatest
-terror, and frantically wringing her hands, she threw herself on her
-knees before me, and stared, without speaking.</p>
-
-<p>“What is the matter, Pasiphae? what has happened? what ails
-you?” I cried.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, terrible! my lady. When I went back to the rooms, an hour
-ago—when I left you here with master—I found Lady Isodore had
-got out of her room. Frightened nearly to death, I went to hunt her.
-It seems she had wandered along the corridor, which is dark and
-gloomy in the evening, and not seeing the great staircase, tripped over
-it, and fell from top to bottom, fracturing her skull, and bruising her
-body dreadfully. I found her lying senseless at the bottom of the
-steps, and got the men to carry her up to bed. Oh! come with me,
-dear lady; come quickly? she may be dead even now.”</p>
-
-<p>I needed no urging to fly through the dim galleries, to the deserted
-apartments: Pasiphae following as fast as her legs would carry her.
-There, stretched on her couch, apparently lifeless, her wild face cut
-and gashed with wounds, blood streaming from her head, lay poor
-Isodore. The physician was already in attendance, bathing the blood
-from her face and head, and two or three of the household domestics,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_149"></a>[149]</span>
-in astonishment, beheld what they had never dreamed of before,—that
-the deserted wing of the castle was tenanted by a lunatic. Her
-existence there, during the period of her insanity, had always been a
-mystery,—known but to one or two, who carefully guarded the secret,—and
-they now stood gaping in stupid wonder.</p>
-
-<p>I assisted the physician in bandaging that poor head, and applied
-aromatic vinegar to her hands and nose. The esculapius eyed her
-with that peculiar expression physicians bestow on those whose case
-they consider hopeless. For an hour, perhaps, she lay insensible. I
-stood rubbing her hands, while tears fell fast from my face on that
-poor distorted one.</p>
-
-<p>Presently a slight shiver ran through her frame, her eyes opened
-spasmodically, then closed again: she opened and shut her hands like
-one in intense pain, then she groaned sorrowfully. Old Pasiphae
-buried her weeping countenance in the pillows of the bed.</p>
-
-<p>“Doctor,” said I, “tell me the real truth; will she recover from
-these terrible wounds?”</p>
-
-<p>“My dear signora, to be candid with you, I must say, judging
-from the severity of the fracture on the skull, she never will. She may
-linger a day or two; but I scarcely think she will survive that length
-of time; the poor woman has killed herself.”</p>
-
-<p>This announcement, delivered with the habitual coolness of gentlemen
-of that profession, was a thunder-bolt to me.</p>
-
-<p>“Going to die, do you say? Oh, heavens! how dreadful.”</p>
-
-<p>After leaving a potion to be taken at a certain hour, the physician
-went away, promising to call at day-break, and we were left with the
-sufferer alone. Monsieur de Serval had been informed of the sad event.
-Pasiphae said he made no remark, but strode past her to his room, and
-locked himself in. Probably if he felt any sentiment at all, it was
-one of joy at the prospect of release from his illicit tie. Oh! how selfish
-are men where their pride or vanity is touched, or their vices exposed.</p>
-
-<p>All night I watched beside her. She remained in a state of stupor,
-manifesting no life, save by a feeble groan now and then, and sometimes
-opening those great eyes, and then relapsing into lethargy.</p>
-
-<p>The physician was punctual to his promise, and the gray dawn had
-scarce been born ere he came. He administered something which
-momentarily revived her, and in the course of the day she spoke. Oh!
-strange problem,—spoke sanely! with that singular precision we frequently
-see in the insane restored to mind. Her memory reverted and
-dated from the fatal moment when the blow was given which shattered
-that fair temple of reason.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_150"></a>[150]</span></p>
-
-<p>I had not seen Rinaldo since the hour of ten, the night before, and
-as he was acquainted with the sad disaster, I wondered at his indifference
-to what the physician too prophetically foresaw—her death-bed.
-Alas! thought I, as I leaned over her and watched the slow dawning
-of mental consciousness, and the confused look and air of intense agony
-her face showed,—alas! it seems to be my fate to be connected with
-the worthless and unhappy. My husband, whom I thought so perfect—so
-repentant of former follies and determined to amend in future—has
-sadly disappointed me. The world I imagined so beautiful an
-Elysium, I find the abode of fair deceit, and corrupt and rotten at the
-core. Oh, life! where are thy pleasures unmingled with the alloy of
-pain? or is it thus in everything? No sooner do we possess it, than
-we discover it to be like those lovely apples of the shores of the Red
-Sea, very fair to look upon; but, when tasted, bitter as wormwood—rotten
-as dust.</p>
-
-<p>Pasiphae disturbed the sad tenor of my thoughts, by directing my
-attention to the door, at which stood Monsieur de Serval. Thinking
-his presence the indication of a better mood,—of a feeling of compassion
-toward his unhappy mistress,—I sprang toward him, and,
-forgetting our quarrel, caught his hand in mine. He looked
-melancholy; and I thought I could trace remorse on those delicate
-features.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Rinaldo!” I cried, “you see what has happened. Last night,
-while the nurse was absent from the room, she left the apartment, and
-not seeing the great staircase, stepped off it and fractured her skull.
-The physician says she cannot survive. How terrible it is—is it not—to
-see one die who has led such a life? Come close to her; she is regaining
-her senses—her right mind.”</p>
-
-<p>My husband started. He evidently expected to see her crazed still,
-and did not want to meet face to face, with reason restored, the woman
-he had brutalized; but as she lay there and looked at him, intellect
-shone in those dark oriental eyes,—not the quick, sharp, wandering
-stare of insanity. She recognised him, and feebly beckoned with her
-hands. I gently drew him to the bed-side. She made a motion as if
-to be raised, and I lifted her in my arms and laid her head on my
-breast. The blood had oozed out from the bandages, and her hair
-was clotted with it: her face was deadly pale, and the mists of death
-had already settled there; her eyes were growing languid and dim,
-and hands and feet very cold. My husband looked at her with that expression
-of self-consciousness of having inflicted wrong which alone can
-impress the human features, ere the heart is altogether hardened and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_151"></a>[151]</span>
-depraved. As I have said, her memory flew back four years before,
-and she thought the quarrel and the deed had just occurred.</p>
-
-<p>“Nevermind, dear Rinaldo, I forgive you. Don’t grieve, though I die
-from it. I know I am high tempered; I provoked you to do it; I
-did not mean to make you angry: don’t grieve. Here, Pasiphae,
-bandage my head; put me to bed: when I recover I will try and be
-a better woman—more deserving of your love.”</p>
-
-<p>In agony I glanced at the physician; she had no idea of her real
-state; she knew not that death, in a few hours, would take her for
-his own. The good man eyed her with an air of interest, for this was
-a strange case.</p>
-
-<p>He approached her, perceiving my wish; and, taking one of her
-hands in his, said quietly,</p>
-
-<p>“My good lady, listen to me. You are not aware of your condition
-at present; you are only this moment regaining your mind; you
-have been insane for several years, till last night, escaping from the room,
-you fell down stairs, and that sudden concussion has been the means
-of restoring your mind. It is my duty to tell you that a very few
-hours will close your life; you cannot live longer than to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p>“Been insane,” repeated she, with a scornful, indignant air, “you
-are dreaming, man; it was only a moment ago Rinaldo and I were
-quarrelling, and, enraged, he struck me with a pistol. I am very
-sorry; but, oh! how strangely my head feels: oh! how painful!
-what ails me? why am I lying here surrounded by people? how dim
-everything looks. I cannot distinguish anything: why is this? Get
-lights: I must arise and dress. I must find Rinaldo: where is he?”</p>
-
-<p>She pushed me violently away from her, and with the last effort of
-strength, sprung from her bed to her feet. Seeing my husband, she
-threw herself on his neck, and wildly sobbing, kissed him. It was
-an awful sight, to behold that woman, already in the embraces of
-death, hugging and clinging to what had once constituted her joy
-of existence. I felt no jealousy, for I ever possessed this peculiar
-trait; the moment an object of affection disappoints me, that moment
-affection and infatuation disappear. I felt a sentiment of bitter shame
-and regret that I had given myself to such a man;—that is what I
-experienced as I witnessed this strange scene.</p>
-
-<p>He looked annoyed,—not grieved; and once or twice tried to lay
-her down on the bed, but her personal strength, to which was added
-additional power by the strong excitement under which she labored,
-frustrated his endeavor. Her disordered hair hung down her back;
-the bruised and bandaged head, covered with blood, presented a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_152"></a>[152]</span>
-ghastly sight. Her thin hands, which clasped his neck, scratched and
-wounded; and the long night robe she wore dabbled with blood.</p>
-
-<p>“No, no, no,” she cried; “I have you; I have you: now you
-shall not go till you promise to love me, and forgive me my anger.”</p>
-
-<p>“Take her away, Pasiphae: rid me of the mad woman,” shouted
-my husband. “Why do you stand there, stupidly inactive, when
-you see me thus annoyed? Take her off my neck: put her in
-bed.”</p>
-
-<p>At the sound of his loud vindictive voice she relapsed her hold,
-staggered back, and mournfully gazing on his enraged face, shivered,
-turned, if possible, more pale,—then fell flat on the floor!</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, miserable man!” I exclaimed, as the nurse raised the death-stricken,
-inanimate form, and laid it on the bed, while the doctor
-darted looks of contempt at him. “Oh, apology for humanity! and
-have you no pity for the unhappy sufferer from your vices?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why did you summon me here, madam, to witness this mummery?
-We all must die some day, it matters not how. Do I wish to behold
-the death-bed of a lunatic? Can <i>I</i> assist her final departure? Why
-have you called me?—to anger me, I suppose.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, monsieur, if you think it too great a condescension to see
-her die, go; leave the room,—I will attend the poor dying creature.”</p>
-
-<p>Without replying, save by a look of scorn and anger, he departed.
-I could easily understand that he felt doubly angered when he reflected
-(as he must have done) that my discovery of his illicit connexion
-necessarily would weaken, if not wholly obliterate, my love for him.
-It was this that inspired his rage, and made him hate the unfortunate
-object of it. His love for me was still unabated;—not so mine. A
-bar of ice seemed placed between us. In this respect women and men
-differ greatly, for though a man may indulge himself in many loves,
-yet he generally returns to the lawful one. On the contrary, when a
-woman’s affections are once thoroughly alienated, they seldom return
-to the first object of attachment.</p>
-
-<p>I cannot think of that woman’s death-bed without bitter regret, nor
-write this portion of my memoir without dropping tears upon the
-page. Recovering from the stupor into which she had fallen when he
-repulsed her,—her eyes roved anxiously round in search of him. Not
-seeing him, she closed them again, and remained motionless. An
-hour passed by: finding she did not stir, I felt her hands and feet,—they
-were growing colder and colder, and her eyes more dim. She
-was an hour nearer death.</p>
-
-<p>“She will be dead before twilight, lady,” said the physician,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_153"></a>[153]</span>
-having felt her pulse. “Poor thing! her death is very painful; she
-has suffered much.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I have suffered much,” was her audible reply, to our astonishment,
-and she uplifted her eyes and joined her hands as if praying.
-I remembered Monsieur de Serval’s description of his mother’s death-bed,
-and wondered how he could treat thus the last moments of his
-neglected mistress. So easy is it to express fine sentiments which one
-does not feel, and never practise! Fine words cost nothing, and may
-be equally well said by a bad as a noble soul; but fine actions <i>must</i>
-result from a good heart.</p>
-
-<p>Gradually twilight drew near, and she was sinking momently.
-Raised on my breast, I held one hand in mine;—she seemed laboring
-to say something. I stooped to the level of her ear, and tried to catch
-the sound. Her voice was low, faint, and broken.</p>
-
-<p>“Dear lady,” at last I thought I heard her say; “I thank you for
-your kindness, whoever you may be, and—,” she paused, as if to
-reflect, “tell him I forgive him the injury he has done me.”</p>
-
-<p>Backward she fell from my supporting arms on her pillow: slower
-and slower came her breath; more fixed grew her eyes; her hands
-grasped convulsively at the bed clothes. I heard a rattling sound
-from her throat; then the eyelids remained half closed, the mouth
-half open; the hands released their hold, and the physician, bending
-over her, said,—“Madame, she is dead!”</p>
-
-<p>I burst into tears, and fled from the chamber of death to my own
-room, and there wept long and bitterly, both for her and for myself.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Pasiphae told me, some days after, that the corpse had been buried
-in a cemetery two miles from the castle,—that M. de Serval had
-gone to the room and looked at the dead, and she saw, or fancied
-she saw, him shed tears. The old woman, now her insane charge
-was dead,—so strong is habit,—really seemed to regret the loss, and
-continually talked of her. For myself, I felt wretched, and wept
-at early dawn, at bright noon, and again when dark night came on.
-I thought of my husband: I regretted his behaviour; and notwithstanding
-all, I wished—oh, I don’t know what I wished; but one thing
-I know is certain, that death, had he come then, would not have found
-me unwilling to go.</p>
-
-<p>For two weeks after Isodore’s death, I remained alone in my apartments.
-The communication between them and monsieur’s having
-been, by my order, closed, lest he might intrude upon me. I neglected
-my dress, and my long ringlets hung in wild disorder around my face.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_154"></a>[154]</span>
-I wore a black dress, as if in mourning, for my soul was mourning;
-and thus attired, and thus lonely, I sat opposite a mirror, in which I
-beheld myself,—not the joyous bride of six months ago, but pale,
-dejected, and melancholy; and thus I sat and mused to no purpose,
-when my waist was clasped by a well known hand, and a mouth,
-whose kisses I can never forget, imprinted one on my cheek, as Rinaldo’s
-voice murmured in my ear:</p>
-
-<p>“Genevra, I am miserable, living thus without you. Let the past
-be forgotten and forgiven: let us love each other as we did before
-this sad affair. You cannot so quickly have learned to hate me, have
-you?”</p>
-
-<p>I hesitated a moment, I confess: then love triumphed over every
-other feeling, and throwing myself into his arms, we fervently kissed
-each other, and he promised to lead a better life. Of that, however,
-from what I now comprehended of my husband’s character and habits,
-I had little hope; for any habit, when once confirmed, be it <i>rouéism</i>,
-gambling, or drinking, obtains such fascinating influence over the
-mind, that it is rarely, if ever, relinquished. Still I endeavored to
-cherish a fondness, which I felt his outlandish behavior would soon
-oblige me to abandon.</p>
-
-<p>The novelty of possession had now worn off, and he began to wish
-for other society than mine; accordingly he resumed his acquaintance
-with the neighboring nobility, and frequently the banqueting hall resounded
-with their boisterous conviviality to a late hour of night.
-Then my husband would be carried in the arms of his grooms in a
-state of drunkenness to bed, while his guests were borne off in a
-similar condition to theirs. At first, when I gently reproached him
-with his excesses, he seemed grieved, listened to me quietly, and
-answered sorrowfully, that he knew he did wrong; but soon this gentleness
-changed to roughness, and if I spoke reprovingly, he sternly
-bade me be silent, and not presume to admonish him, of what he was
-the best judge of. Thus in alternations of coldness, reproaches, quarrels,
-and reconciliations, a year of married life passed away.</p>
-
-<p>As I became more estranged from him, I missed the gayeties and
-pleasures of Naples, which his affections had for a few months compensated
-me for the loss of. I often thought of Blanche, of my teacher,
-and the kind Madame Bonni. Monsieur Belmont had heard nothing
-of Blanche, though within the year, inquiry had often been made by
-him concerning her. My kind hostess had not forgotten me, and her
-love was often sent; my teacher’s letters I carefully treasured, and
-read each one with double care; they seemed like tidings of life: for<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_155"></a>[155]</span>
-the quiet chateau, the rustic neighborhood, could scarcely be designated
-by that name; and my regular existence, systematic as a clock,
-partook largely of lifeless monotony. Rinaldo, it is true, made
-amends to bacchus for my dullness, for night after night found him at
-the gaming table, playing high, or carousing with his noisy companions.
-When, sometimes, I saw him excited with wine, I could with
-difficulty realize that it was the same refined man, whose sweet voice,
-and gentle ways had won my virgin heart, on the beautiful shores of
-Parthenope. Guilo, my husband’s valet, said that although his master
-had always lived high and been very gay, yet, during the first
-months of our marriage, he had behaved much better than formerly, and
-the worthy domestic appeared astonished to see him return to his old
-habits; but he did not reflect, that the object for which this good behavior
-was cultivated was attained, and there was no longer any need
-of playing a part.</p>
-
-<p>I sometimes took long walks through that fair valley, and among the
-lofty hills which majestically surrounded it. I amused and entertained
-myself with the observation of nature, in its many different, yet all
-beautiful modifications; I saw the birds, as they floated on the wing;
-I saw the waving of the foliage of the forest trees, and the clouds as
-they moved through the dewy atmosphere, for an eternal mist ever
-hung over those mountains and that valley. The shepherds tended
-their flocks there, and thither in harvest and vintage time came the
-pretty village girls, and the hardy mountaineers, to gather the fruitful
-grape. Sometimes sitting beneath some lofty tree, I reflected on the
-sottishness of the heart, which, the more it possesses, the more it wants;
-I wondered if there was any such thing as happiness, in what it consisted,
-and where to be found; and then I wondered if it was
-exemplified by the epicurean belief, that happiness must consist in
-banishing from the mind all painful thoughts, and wholly surrendering
-oneself, spiritually and bodily, to pleasure: or if the doctrine of the
-stoics was true, that happiness or misery, pleasure or pain, was a
-principle of the mind, and could not be affected by external objects;
-that if the mind was properly tutored, it would be incapable of any other
-feeling than that of rational, quiet contentment; it would be insensible
-to the cares and sorrows of life, regarding all things with the proud
-eyes of ethereal, idealized philosophy. I inclined towards the stoics,
-and resolved, if possible, so to school my mind, that no earthly disappointment
-should surprise or vex me; but, unfortunately, it is much
-easier to make resolves, than to keep them.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes I extended my rambles to Isodore’s grave,—a simple<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_156"></a>[156]</span>
-mound of earth, unmarked by tablet or tomb-stone. She had now
-been dead several months, and the grass and wild flowers grew
-luxuriantly above the mound. I often sat down on it, and fixing my
-eyes on the starry worlds over head, at twilight time, sought to penetrate
-the secrets of futurity, and read my destiny in their eternal light.
-I thought of the thousands and thousands of years that had passed
-into eternity since first they were hung there. “Why! oh, why?” I
-cried aloud from the fulness of my heart; “why is it that the beautiful,
-the great, the good, all moulder back to dust, and are forgotten, while
-these shine on, bright as when first placed there, coeval with the Great
-Spirit, from time to eternity?—while we die, and, oh, worse than all!
-know not what is to come hereafter!” Such gloomy thoughts occupied
-my mind, as I slowly returned home after twilight had deepened into
-sombre night, my clothes damp with dew.</p>
-
-<p>“Pasiphae,” said I, as I flung myself into my fauteuil, tired and
-sorrowful; “get me some dry clothes, and arrange the fire. Where is
-Monsieur de Serval? is he at home?”</p>
-
-<p>“Master was inquiring for you, my lady, this evening, and I sought
-for you, but could not find you, when Guilo told me he saw you go
-out the castle gate, and take the forest road. I told master, and he
-went away to his shooting gallery.”</p>
-
-<p>As she spoke he entered the room, in his hunting dress, looking
-very pale after his night’s carouse. We kissed each other; but the
-salute had little of the fervor of former days.</p>
-
-<p>“I was looking for you this evening, Genevra, but you were not in
-your apartments.”</p>
-
-<p>“No; I went to take a walk in the woods.”</p>
-
-<p>He began whistling as he walked up and down, evidently wishing
-Pasiphae gone. Anticipating his wish, after I had changed shoes and
-stockings, I dismissed her.</p>
-
-<p>“I wished to see you,” said he, after she had gone, “to tell you
-that I am going away again, a hundred miles back into the country,
-on a hunting party, to be absent a week. When I return I shall bring
-a friend with me, the Count Calabrella, to spend some days.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said I, mechanically.</p>
-
-<p>Continuing his walk, he looked at me as I sat.</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t look well of late, Genevra; your face has lost its
-freshness; your eyes their brightness.”</p>
-
-<p>“I feel altered externally and internally.”</p>
-
-<p>“I think I am something changed myself within the last year. Let
-me see,” said he, reflectively; “yes, this is the anniversary of our<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_157"></a>[157]</span>
-marriage:—the year has been an eventful one to me.” He seemed
-to expect some remark, and I determined to touch him to the quick.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” I replied, as if unconsciously; “it is five months since Isodore
-died: how sad her death-bed was!”</p>
-
-<p>His face flushed, and he exclaimed fiercely:</p>
-
-<p>“Why do you speak of that woman? why do you remind me of
-her? She is dead; well, let her rest in peace, and cease to torment
-me with recollections of her.”</p>
-
-<p>But I wished him to hear of her. I thought it only an act of justice
-to her injured memory, and I continued quietly:</p>
-
-<p>“You feel, then, no remorse for your past conduct toward her,
-monsieur? no regret, yet she loved you much; and if she erred, it
-may have been through unhappy circumstances, or through an overweening
-attachment to you.”</p>
-
-<p>“She sinned through nothing of the sort,” cried he sharply,—“her
-affair with me was not the only one she ever had. She had been a
-notorious woman long before I ever saw her. As for the deep regrets
-you talk of, I feel none. I consider I acted honorably in taking care
-of a lunatic, and suffering myself to be frequently annoyed by the
-antics of a crazy woman. She is better off where she is.”</p>
-
-<p>I saw my husband was impenetrable to any feeling on the subject,
-and feeling misanthropic myself, I cared not to enter into a wordy war.
-Relapsing into silence and thought, I sat motionless. One thing I
-plainly perceived, that he was piqued that I pitied the dead Isodore,
-and manifested neither anger, contempt, nor hatred for her memory;
-he would rather have seen me furiously jealous, retaining the recollection
-of her error, and hating her name. But I had lost all hatred
-for anything and everything, and was sinking into a listless apathy.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, farewell till we meet again,” said Monsieur de Serval,
-abruptly, after a moment’s pause.</p>
-
-<p>“Farewell, monsieur.”</p>
-
-<p>We shook hands, and he departed. I watched from my window,
-and saw his close travelling carriage rolled into the court-yard. Guilo
-placed numerous packages, boxes of cigars, and comfites on the front
-seat; then my husband entered it, his hat slouched over his eyes, and
-enveloped in his great coat. Guilo mounted behind; the postillion
-huzza’d, and they rattled away down the valley road.</p>
-
-<p>I did not miss him; his society was no longer necessary to my very
-existence. We could live apart for days, weeks, months, without the
-same regrets and longings we should have experienced during the first
-months of married life. During his absence I busied myself in household<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_158"></a>[158]</span>
-affairs, rode on horseback, played and sang, and endeavored to
-kill time as fast as possible. I was very young, and my tastes and
-habits still bordered closely on girlhood—I might almost say childhood.
-Pasiphae, with her weird-like countenance, as she sat over
-the fire in the banqueting hall on those chilly autumnal nights, and
-told me strange ghost stories, often laughed at the childish alarm I
-showed at her tales. She was my confidante, and, in fact, only friend,
-in that wild region. To her I confided all my thoughts, my griefs,
-and fears, and hopes. She sympathized with, but could not advise me.</p>
-
-<p>The week of his absence passed quietly away: nothing of moment
-occurred worth relating, and I was sitting in my salon reading a
-romance, when Pasiphae entered, saying Guilo had arrived in advance
-of his master, and announced that Monsieur de Serval would be with
-me within half an hour. Upon the delivery of his message I consulted
-my mirror. Pasiphae declared herself satisfied with my appearance.
-I remember with vivid distinctness the dress I wore: it was a dark,
-deep crimson velvet, made high in the neck, and long sleeves concealed
-my arms: the rich, heavy folds of the robe swept the floor; a Grecian
-head-dress of lama lace formed my coiffure, and my hair fell in long
-ringlets to my waist.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, my lady; I never saw you look so beautiful,” said the faithful
-creature, in an ecstacy of delight; for the slightest thing will throw
-an Italian into a fit of enthusiasm. “That head-dress is so charming,
-and the robe so handsome! Ah, if fine dress only made people happy,
-it would be worth wishing for.”</p>
-
-<p>“Pasiphae, I think I heard monsieur’s carriage driving into the
-court-yard. See if it is him.”</p>
-
-<p>As I spoke, I heard voices and heavy steps in the hall, and before
-she could reach the door, it was opened hastily, and my husband
-entered, followed by a figure so wrapped up in coats and shawls, that
-I could scarcely discern what it was. Pasiphae hastened to relieve
-this muffled form of its encumbrances, after disburdening my husband:
-and when the stranger, stepping toward me, bowed,—the first
-glance at his face told me that I beheld the stranger of the opera. The
-same beautiful eyes were bent upon me, and the low deep tones of his
-voice struck my ear as he said:</p>
-
-<p>“Madame, I am happy to make the acquaintance of the wife of my
-friend.”</p>
-
-<p>I felt the blood rush to my brow, my neck, my very hands, as I
-tremblingly replied:</p>
-
-<p>“Count, you are most welcome to our home.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_159"></a>[159]</span></p>
-
-<p>Rinaldo did not notice my embarrassment; he was occupied in
-giving orders about the luggage, the game, and a hundred other
-things; and when he had completed these commands, turning to me,
-who had been saying some confused nothings to the visitor, he said:</p>
-
-<p>“Come, count, and you, madame, let us proceed to the supper
-room, and after we have rendered our duties there, we will return
-hither for conversation.”</p>
-
-<p>All my husband’s movements were abrupt and singular, otherwise
-I should have been astonished at this sudden interruption. Count
-Calabrella offered me his arm, and leaning on that strong arm, and
-looking on that handsome, energetic face, which afterwards became,
-oh! how dear to me, I followed my stern lord, who strode before, to
-the banqueting hall. Rinaldo sat at the head of the table, myself
-and his guest at each side. By the brilliant light of the lamps around
-us, I could more fully observe the stranger. The count was opposite
-in appearance to my husband; he was taller, of an athletic form,
-strong, and manly. His eyes, large, languid, yet sparkling, sometimes
-flashed fire, sometimes were the impersonation of repose. His hands,
-and feet were rather large, not so delicate as Monsieur de Serval’s.
-His whole appearance was rather massive, not feminine or soft, as was
-the look, the whole person of my husband.</p>
-
-<p>Rinaldo’s face was flushed from wine, and he talked loudly and
-gayly, not to me, but to his friend. He talked most of his ill success
-on the bear hunt, cursing the ill attendance of the servants and grooms.
-He drank glass after glass of wine, and his evanescent spirits grew
-higher and higher under the influence. I regarded him with feelings
-of painful regret, but he seemed not to observe my earnest looks, save
-by a return glance of scorn.</p>
-
-<p>The count appeared embarrassed. I saw he felt for me and for his
-friend, and looked relieved when the repast was over, and we returned
-to the salon. He must have seen the coldness existing between my
-husband and myself, for he also seemed infected by it, and after several
-efforts at a general conversation, asked me to favor him with a
-song. I did so with alacrity, to relieve the tedium which seemed to
-pervade the drawing room: yet though I sang, I did so mechanically.
-One idea dwelt in my mind—who was this Count Calabrella, this
-man, whose beautiful eyes had so long before haunted me, like a foreshadowing
-dream of futurity? How strange that he should so unexpectedly
-cross my path now, when a married woman; now, when his
-acquaintance could be nothing to me. Still, the same presentiment
-haunted me, that my destiny in future would have something to do<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_160"></a>[160]</span>
-with him; and as I glanced around at him, as he sat near my husband,
-listening to the song, leaning on the arm of the sofa, his
-strongly marked features distinctly shown by the glancing firelight,
-what a contrast did that manly form, so energetic, breathing,
-living,—speaking of nobility of soul,—what a contrast did it not present
-to my fair, yet dissipated, reckless husband! He had thrown
-himself in an attitude of ease upon a sofa, and with his eyes closed,
-seemed half asleep. That was scarcely polite to his guest, but Rinaldo
-cared not what any one thought; he cared more for his own
-comfort, than for fixed rules of etiquette.</p>
-
-<p>The count drew his chair towards me, and remarked, “Your castle,
-madame, is delightfully situated here, in this beautiful ravine; I have
-often heard Monsieur de Serval speak of his mountain home, but
-never, till now, had an opportunity of seeing it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, the castle is a charming summer residence, though rather
-dreary in winter.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have never,” continued he, “been so far north before; my
-attendance on his majesty has hitherto prevented me from travelling
-to any great extent; and Naples and its environs, you know, do not
-afford any great variety to one who has been accustomed to it a
-lifetime.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are, then, from Naples, beautiful Naples!” Numerous recollections
-were recalled by that name; and I looked down, and almost
-unconsciously sighed. When I raised my eyes, I met those of the
-stranger, bent curiously on my face: he seemed endeavoring to read
-my thoughts; and I blushed as I met that look, though I scarce knew
-why myself.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said he, in reply to my remark, “beautiful Naples was my
-birth-place; and there I have lived the principal part of my life.”</p>
-
-<p>Here Rinaldo, raising himself from his recumbent posture, joined us,
-and began turning over the music leaves on the piano.</p>
-
-<p>“My wife sings one of these songs magnificently, count,” said he,
-as he sought among the other music for it. “Oh! here it is: oblige
-us madame, by singing it.”</p>
-
-<p>It was the song for Ajesha: ‘We have lived and loved together in
-sunlight and in tears;’ and I felt the tears gush into my own eyes, as
-I executed it. It brought back, bright as yesterday, the night of
-its first representation—Blanche’s spirited acting—the presence and
-applause of the royal family. The tones lingered on my lips, as if
-they obeyed the impulse of my heart, and by remaining, could recall
-bygone hours more forcibly to mind.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_161"></a>[161]</span></p>
-
-<p>“That is a charming melody,” said the count; “and it is needless to
-admire that voice, whose far-spread fame has roused all Italy.”</p>
-
-<p>I felt weary, and, as it was growing late, on a look from my husband,
-we retired; he, accompanying his friend to a bedchamber, and
-I returning to my cheerful apartment; where, by the blazing fire, I sat
-down to dream and reflect, on what, alas! on what too many mortals
-while away existence in—dreams, unsubstantial, unreal dreams.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X.</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>I had for some weeks remarked the visits of several mysterious
-looking strangers, who came often, and were closeted long with
-Monsieur de Serval in his studio. These men were dressed in the
-costume of the peasantry, but they all wore brown cloaks, with cowls
-drawn over their faces, which they jealously preserved from sight,
-perhaps from pity to those unfortunate hearts on whom they should
-bestow their glances. There was something very strange about them;
-and as none of the domestics knew from whence they came, or
-whither they went, I determined to ask my husband their business at
-the castle.</p>
-
-<p>The morning after his arrival I rose early. I heard my husband
-move about his room till a late hour, when silence proclaimed he had
-gone to rest. We no longer sank to rest, cradled in each other’s arms—and
-sometimes when my lonely, impassioned heart, fairly ached for
-companionship, I compared our present estrangement with the joyful
-hours we had formerly spent together; and then the midnight hour
-saw convulsions of passion, I should have been ashamed any one
-should witness, save that faithful, silent monitor, time; but it was no
-fault of mine: the gay <i>roué</i>, whose fickle fancy was momently
-caught by my beauty and virtue, had wearied by possession; the
-same face, the same enduring love, no longer attracted him; he had
-not known his own heart when he promised fidelity: he was incapable
-of it. I sometimes felt disposed to forgive him the wild life he had
-led during the past year, could I have seen any indications of a
-reformation; I could have returned to my old love, and have been
-happy once more, would he have acted differently, but he would not:
-to reproaches, alienations, and recriminations, had succeeded a polite<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_162"></a>[162]</span>
-coldness, which, between husband and wife, means far more than the
-alternations of hot and cold feeling.</p>
-
-<p>I often wept myself to sleep, hugging my pillow to me for company;
-my mind dwelt in the past, or speculated on the future: it was void and
-empty, for it is only when we are with one we love that we live in the
-present, and who loved me now, who save old Pasiphae?</p>
-
-<p>I sought the salon, where, to my surprise, I saw the count seated.
-On entering, he rose, placed a chair for me, and made some general
-observation on the beautiful day. I replied, seated myself, and fixed
-my eyes on the fire, for there was a magnetic attraction in those orbs
-that influenced me strangely when I met them;—the gentleman suddenly
-remarked,</p>
-
-<p>“Madame, you are much improved since I first saw you, the night
-of your first appearance at Naples.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! you saw me then at that time?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, and I shall never forget your look, your manner, your acting
-and whole appearance: the tones of your voice, indeed the whole
-scene is engraven on my mind.”</p>
-
-<p>The <i>tone</i> in which he said this, made the expression, and sent the
-blood to my cheek. How true it is, that looks and tones give the
-sense to conversation, far more than the words themselves; I knew not
-what reply to make to this extravagant compliment, and bowed in
-silence.</p>
-
-<p>“I never thought my friend would ever marry,” he continued, I
-thought to relieve my obvious embarrassment,—“he used to be so volatile
-and gay; but I am glad he has, and that the correction of youthful
-errors has fallen to the guidance of one so gentle.” And as he looked
-at me, the same light shone in his eyes. “We have been almost like
-brothers for many years; at one time he was aide-de-camp to his
-majesty, and during that period we were constantly together; being
-older than he, I naturally advised and guided him; but now I see how
-much better he is tutored by that power that rules the world, the influence
-of love.”</p>
-
-<p>The arch smile that played upon his lips, called the blushes to my
-cheeks, while my mournful heart, alas, too truthfully denied the
-assertion.</p>
-
-<p>At this moment a servant announced the breakfast, and the count
-rising offered me his arm, and we went in together; Rinaldo was not
-there: I sent to request the honor of his presence, while the count entertained
-me delightfully, with a description of his journey to the
-shores of the Dead Sea, and travels in Arabia. His descriptive powers<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_163"></a>[163]</span>
-were fine, and I listened eagerly; we were thus engaged when Rinaldo
-entered; the lassitude and dissipated air my husband had acquired
-of late, from negligent habits, had never so forcibly struck me before,
-as then, when he came towards me; his eyes were sunken, his form
-thin, and the expression of his features cadaverous; he looked worn
-out: he smiled on his friend, said ‘good morning’ to me, then sat
-down on the other side of the table.</p>
-
-<p>“The morning is fine, count,” he remarked, as the attendant handed
-him a cup of coffee; “it is a charming day for rambling, and I will
-show you over the grounds.”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall go with pleasure,” answered he, and then continued his
-description of Mecca, and the grave of the Prophet.</p>
-
-<p>“Of what are you speaking?” asked my husband.</p>
-
-<p>“My travels in Arabia,” said the count, “I have been there within
-the last three years. Since we parted at Naples, I travelled through
-the East.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah!” said Rinaldo, “I did not know that; how desolate those
-countries of the Levant are now: what a contrast they present when we
-recall the olden time.”</p>
-
-<p>“Desolate enough, and the means of travelling miserable, and stopping
-places filthy.</p>
-
-<p>“All life, all commerce, all enterprise seems progressing onward
-to the North of Europe, leaving the East, and even us, far behind;
-we are on the decline, never probably to be revived again.</p>
-
-<p>“Thus it is with every thing on earth, every thing has its beginning,
-its zenith, and its fall. But do not let us involve madame in a
-didactic controversy, we will continue our philosophies when alone,
-my friend,” said he, bowing to me, as I accepted his escort to my
-salon, when my husband and himself departed for their walk.</p>
-
-<p>As I crossed the corridor to my bed chamber for my tapestry, to
-amuse myself during the morning, I again met some of those shrouded
-forms which seemed to haunt, like ghosts, the castle. One of them,
-pushing partially back the cowl he wore, disclosed to my view a
-remarkably sunburnt, repulsive physiognomy, whose harsh dark features
-appeared to me the index to a harsh dark soul.</p>
-
-<p>“God save thee, lady, but I wish to see the master, Monsieur de
-Serval,—is he at home?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, my good fellow,” said I, in a gentle tone, wishing to ascertain
-what these men wanted; “what is your business with him, tell
-me, and I will communicate it to him when he returns?”</p>
-
-<p>“We have orders, lady, from our chief,”—at that one of the others<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_164"></a>[164]</span>
-frowned on him, and he confusedly went on, “that is—I mean to say—it
-is a private matter of business with the master, I cannot tell any
-other than him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said I, “you can go to the lower hall and wait for him,
-he will return soon;” and calling Guilo, I bade him conduct them
-thither, and added, in a whisper, an admonition to watch and not
-permit them to depart till my husband returned. They seemed unwilling
-to remain, and the chief said he would come again at a more
-convenient season, but I gently detained them, bidding them wait
-monsieur’s return; reluctantly they followed Guilo, who regarded them
-with suspicious glances.</p>
-
-<p>An hour afterwards I was walking on the terrace, when I saw Rinaldo
-approaching, with Count Calabrella; he was speaking with great
-earnestness, and peering with penetrating eyes into those of his friend;
-they were evidently engaged in some deeply interesting discussion, in
-which the count, from his cloudy brow and downcast eyes, did not
-seem to acquiesce.</p>
-
-<p>As they ascended the stone steps, at the summit of which I stood,
-both became silent, and the count, lifting his hat to me, made some
-remark about the beauty of the grounds. I hastened to tell my husband
-about the strangers.</p>
-
-<p>“Monsieur de Serval,” addressing him by his surname, as was most
-polite, “three strangers of very mysterious appearance, whom I have
-often seen here before, now await you in the lower hall. As you were
-out, I asked their business, but they declined telling, and preferred
-waiting your return.”</p>
-
-<p>“In the lower hall did you say?” said he abruptly, and with a disturbed
-look. “Why did you not send them to the studio? It must be
-him,” he added as if to himself; “what can have happened? how
-strange!” and, without saying another word to me, he walked rapidly
-away, and entered the castle. I looked after him with surprise, for by
-his startled looks and distorted manner, I plainly saw that this was
-some affair of importance, and could not refrain from wondering what
-it was. I had a vague presentiment that his conversation with the
-count in some way related to these men. I could have wished to have
-asked the count what had been the subject of their conversation, but
-he was almost a perfect stranger. I could not do so with propriety,
-and so, silently, he and I retired to the salon. There was something
-so inexpressibly delicate and gentle in his manners, in his looks, in
-every thing he said or did, that it threw a charm around him, and this
-magic influence soon extended to those of his acquaintance. He had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_165"></a>[165]</span>
-sojourned with us but two days, and yet had ingratiated himself into
-the good graces of the domestics, and by his fine conversational powers
-had whiled away some of the many lonely hours I daily passed.
-My husband too possessed, at first sight, the most attractive and winning
-ways, but these soon gave place to capricious variations of feeling,
-which soon ended in complete indifference, like all <i>roués</i> the difficulty
-constituted the charm; that overcome, the graces, the charms
-soon vanished.</p>
-
-<p>I often regretted—as I sat alone, gazing on the fickle fire-light—often
-regretted having left the stage and having exchanged the certainty
-of a brilliant fame, unbounded admiration, and a fortunate
-perspective, for the uncertainty of love.</p>
-
-<p>My husband had been closeted with his visitors two or three hours
-when I saw them depart, and he came from the room, pale and anxious;
-with hasty strides he reached the court-yard, and having ordered
-one of the fleetest horses to be saddled, mounted, quick as lightning
-and rode off.</p>
-
-<p>I pulled the bell, and Guilo answered the appeal.</p>
-
-<p>“Guilo, where in the name of heaven has Monsieur de Serval gone
-to? I this moment saw him depart on horse-back.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know not, madame. He seemed very angry at something: he
-swore and muttered to himself as he mounted. I supposed you knew
-where he was going, my lady.”</p>
-
-<p>“No; I know not. I have no idea.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wish I could tell you, my lady; but master has acted so singularly
-lately, I am not surprised at anything he does. I never saw him
-seem so queer.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did the strange men take the same road your master did?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, my lady; they went away before him and took the opposite
-direction.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very well, Guilo, you can go.”</p>
-
-<p>“Will you be pleased to have dinner served now?”</p>
-
-<p>“What is the hour?”</p>
-
-<p>“Five o’clock, Madame.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, serve it, and announce it to the count.”</p>
-
-<p>Guilo did so. When I went to dinner, my guest had preceded me:
-he looked very thoughtful. When I said that we must excuse Monsieur
-de Serval, he having been called away by a matter of business, his
-face clouded; but it passed quickly away, and he was as entertaining
-as usual.</p>
-
-<p>That night, after I had retired to rest, the clattering of horses’ hoofs<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_166"></a>[166]</span>
-sounded on the valley road; they neared the house; now they were
-beneath my window; then stopped: then I heard the stamping of
-heavy boots, and loud voices in the hall; then I distinguished Rinaldo’s
-piquant voice—for he had a bright voice, soft and cheering; and
-next I heard him enter his own room. Satisfied that he had returned
-safe, I composed myself to sleep, wondering what this mystery could
-mean,—longing to ask, yet restrained by pride.</p>
-
-<p>Next day Rinaldo appeared to have recovered himself entirely from
-his temporary agitation, and I ventured to inquire, indirectly, the cause
-of his sudden journey. He carelessly replied, that it was a small
-matter of business which demanded his presence, and avoided the
-subject. I was not satisfied, however; I knew better; but I also
-waived the subject, as I could elicit nothing by questions.</p>
-
-<p>A fortnight of dubious calm succeeded. Three gentlemen of the
-neighborhood, my husband’s friends, came to visit him. The same old
-scenes of riot and late hours were enacted over again; but I observed
-that the count avoided, as far as was consistent with politeness, all participation
-in these midnight revels, and often retired early to his chamber
-to avoid them. This added to his attractions in my eyes; and meeting
-me one evening, as I was gliding past the banquet-hall,—whence I
-heard the drunken revels, the noisy songs and clamorous uproar of my
-husband and his friends,—he came to my side, and, quietly placing
-my arm in his, silently conducted me to my salon, closed the door, to
-shut out those noisy sounds, drew my fauteuil to the fire, then placed
-another for himself, and looking at me very sadly, said in mournful tones:</p>
-
-<p>“This behaviour of your husband is very distressing to you, I
-know.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, it saddens me much to see him wasting his life in such dissipations.”</p>
-
-<p>“Has he always led this sort of life since he married you?”</p>
-
-<p>“The first months of our wedded life we spent happily. He acted
-differently then.”</p>
-
-<p>“Rinaldo always was very wild, very unprincipled in his views
-of women, yet the first day or two of my arrival here, I confidently
-thought you had reformed him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Alas! that is not so. I wish it were.”</p>
-
-<p>“Marriage is a mere lottery at best,” said the count, thoughtfully.
-“I have always viewed it in that light, and my observation
-of its unhappy results, has deterred me from choosing a wife. Some
-frequently draw prizes; most get blanks. You, dear lady, have unfortunately—”
-He paused, and did not complete the sentence, probably<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_167"></a>[167]</span>
-fearing to wound my feelings; for so strange it is, though you may despise
-your husband, yet to hear him depreciated, will wound.</p>
-
-<p>“In a month from now, I shall probably be at Epirus. I only feel
-happy in continual motion: travelling, war, politics—something to
-excite. Onward, seems to be my watchword; onward, as we on our
-little planet continually whirl round, and other worlds follow us, unceasing,
-eternal, in the sublime organization of nature.”</p>
-
-<p>I had never seen my guest so animated before; his eyes sparkled,
-his alabaster face lit up with the warm glow of feeling and enthusiasm.
-The announcement of his intended departure, somewhat surprised me,
-as we had expected to retain him for several weeks.</p>
-
-<p>“We shall regret your departure, count,” said I, trying to force a
-smile, but it was a sad one. “Monsieur de Serval intimated that we
-were to have the pleasure of your society for some time to come.”
-As I spoke, my eyes met his, and their expression of intense interest
-riveted mine: those beautiful, sad eyes,—those eyes of love, of ingenuousness,
-of truth and fidelity. He sighed, and withdrew them, and
-I resumed my contemplation of the carpet of the salon.</p>
-
-<p>A long, loud laugh, from the apartment where my husband was
-revelling, startled me. I thought I heard footsteps coming, and not
-wishing to see him in his present condition, I rose to return to my room.</p>
-
-<p>“Good night, dear lady,” said the count. “Remember me in
-your prayers, for I need them.” Glance met glance, but I tore mine
-away, and I felt, as I sought my repose, that my fluttering heart, and
-crimsoned cheek, told sad tales against me.</p>
-
-<p>Rinaldo was ill next day from excitement, and his friends in much
-the same condition. Monsieur D’Artagnan, and Monsieur Porthos,
-were men of middle age, corpulent and lazy; high livers, high drinkers,
-fond of all sorts of rural sports, and all sorts of amusements.
-They generally favored, or rather bored, me with their compliments
-and society every day after dinner, when Rinaldo usually lounged
-about a little while, ere he and they disappeared together, to arrange
-their plans for the evening. The count spent hours and hours with
-me, reading, singing, conversing, receiving and imparting information.
-These consolations, these sympathies, between a married woman and
-a handsome male friend, are dangerous. The loneliness of heart,
-the isolation a woman who has been slighted in her affections feels,
-strongly induces her to love the society, and the self-deluding friendship
-of an interesting man. This friendship soon becomes love, and
-then—where are they?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_168"></a>[168]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Some evenings after this, twilight found me in the beautiful garden
-of the castle, seated beneath a widespreading palm tree, that threw
-far before me its blooming branches. From beneath this natural
-bower, lulled to repose by the beautiful scene before me; by the sweet,
-balmy air that played around me, and the glorious sky above me, I
-contemplated the landscape.</p>
-
-<p>The sun went down behind a veil of heavy purple clouds, whose
-ragged edges were tinted with his parting rays; his smile dwelt lingeringly
-along the mountain’s brow, as if he <i>must</i>, yet wished <i>not</i>, to say
-farewell. The warm, oriental light illumined the summits of the trees,
-and showed forth more distinctly the tall gothic turrets of the castle.
-Part of the building remained in shadow, and the rising ground of
-terrace behind me concealed my view of the court-yard and its marble
-fountain.</p>
-
-<p>The grounds, disposed in flower beds of divers shapes and patterns,
-were thickly planted with exotic flowers, which, as if tired of their
-admiration of the god of day, now drooped their heads in mournfulness
-at his departure;—the golden butterfly flew gayly from flower
-to flower; his purple and gold wings glittering in the glowing light;—the
-grasshopper hopped on the tall thick grass; and the birds sang
-in the trees, carrolling their love-notes so thrillingly, I almost envied
-them their joy. Their songs were the only voices of the hour, and in
-listening to them I felt soothed, consoled: sweeter, calmer thoughts
-came over me,—etherealized feelings,—and leaning my head against
-the rough bark of the trees, I fell into a gentle slumber.</p>
-
-<p>Cracking of brushwood, breaking of boughs, aroused me from my
-dreamy trance. I started, looked around;—I heard the sound of
-coming feet, and presently my husband emerged from the copse. The
-sun had disappeared, and the mellow dusk was gathering her dusky
-veil around me. Arousing myself from dreams, I spoke to him as he
-seated himself by me. He looked absorbed with melancholy preoccupation,
-as was his wonted air of late:—his dress was disordered.</p>
-
-<p>“What an exquisite evening!” he observed; “how gloriously that
-sun declines along the hills.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, it is indeed beautiful. I have been watching his departure
-for the last hour.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have been on a long hunt through the forest: some of the people
-said they thought they had discovered a bear’s trail; but I sought in
-vain;—I found no traces of one.”</p>
-
-<p>“How can you like those bear hunts; they are so dangerous?”</p>
-
-<p>“They are exciting:—I like excitements.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_169"></a>[169]</span></p>
-
-<p>“We mutually became silent, watching the clouds drifting across
-the sky, and the different hues of eve, as they blended into one. The
-air began to distil dew heavily. I rose, apprehensive that my health
-would be injured by exposure to it. As I rose upon my feet, a strange
-sensation came over me. Earth, air, mountains, clouds,—all objects
-seemed to swim before my eyes. I felt as if falling, I knew not
-where, and stretching out my hands for support, instinctively, I was
-received into my husband’s arms, and lost all consciousness.</p>
-
-<p>“When I recovered life, I found myself in my salon, my husband
-and Pasiphae anxiously bending over me: my bodice was unloosed,
-my hair undone. I gasped for breath, and partly raising myself, leaned
-on some one’s shoulder;—it was Rinaldo’s. Everything in the room
-seemed indistinct, confused.</p>
-
-<p>“Dear lady, what ails thee? what has happened?” I heard poor
-Pasiphae say, as she bathed my face and rubbed my hands.</p>
-
-<p>“Your mistress fainted as we sat in the garden together,” was my
-husband’s reply, rendered inarticulate by tears. He kissed me repeatedly,
-smoothed my hair, and manifested by his emotion the grief he
-felt, not only at my illness, but his own incomprehensible, cruel, conduct.</p>
-
-<p>When strong aromatics had thoroughly brought back to earth my
-truant senses, Pasiphae watched that night my fitful slumber, broken
-only by strange starts and convulsive movements that half affrighted
-her: my husband tenderly attended me. For days (they said) my life
-hung on a thread: and when exhausted nature resuscitated to life and
-health once more, I had a beautiful, a lovely boy!</p>
-
-<p>My health for weeks after his birth continued delicate. I seldom
-left my room: that cherished infant, whose life had so nearly been purchased
-by my own, my constant companion. And Rinaldo was kinder
-in those days; if our old feelings were not renewed, at least our child
-formed a connecting tie,—we seemed drawn more nearly to each other.
-Pasiphae manifested, at seeing the child, the joy of a child itself at seeing
-a new toy: she would carry the little thing in her arms, admire its
-undefined features, and playfully caress its tiny hands.</p>
-
-<p>Count Calabrella, at my husband’s urgent entreaty, prolonged his
-visit, and often came to pay his compliments; the charms of his conversation
-and manners won daily upon my esteem; I never could look
-upon that animated face, nor listen to that melodious voice, which distilled
-such noble thoughts, such chivalrous sentiments, without wishing
-that Rinaldo was more like him,—that he did not desecrate to unworthy
-uses the abilities with which nature had endowed him. Time<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_170"></a>[170]</span>
-fleeted, and I again resumed my walks in the castle garden, and on
-the terrace, in which Pasiphae sometimes followed me, bearing the
-child.</p>
-
-<p>We named him Raphael, a fancy of his father’s it was to bestow on
-the little one the name of the great painter. As day by day developed
-his senses and he became conscious of the difference of persons, and
-would extend his baby hands toward me, and weep if I left him, I
-realized in this love a mother’s pride, a mother’s joy; often when caressing
-him I imagined I saw him grown to manhood, noble in his
-principles, handsome in appearance, and that he would reward me by
-his tenderness and duty for all the mental anguish I should have to
-endure before that time came. When he pressed his little hands on my
-face, or tried to bite my finger as infants do, I always kissed that
-sweet little mouth, and sometimes tears followed the kiss and fell upon
-that face.</p>
-
-<p>On one occasion when I was passing through the corridor, on my
-way to take my daily promenade, the door of my husband’s studio
-was suddenly thrown open, and the mysterious stranger who had accosted
-me before in that corridor rushed violently passed me, and disappeared
-down the marble staircase. The sight of that shrouded form
-inspired me with a vague foreboding of horror. I had never been able
-to gather from my husband the object of their frequent visits, and I
-often attributed his dejection and gloom to his communications with
-them.</p>
-
-<p>“Who can that man be, Pasiphae? and what can he and his companions
-want with monsieur?”</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed, my lady, I know not; they come very often I know, and
-I dislike them much.”</p>
-
-<p>“God grant they bring no ill fortune here; but I feel as if contaminated
-by their vicinage,” I devoutly exclaimed, as we stepped
-from the oriel window out upon the terrace. We did not walk much
-that day, the wind blew hard; the infant gasped for breath and hid his
-face on his nurse’s shoulder: we went in.</p>
-
-<p>The next day I was occupied in my apartment with my tapestry,
-when Guilo abruptly entered, without knocking, and with a countenance
-pale and troubled, requested me to come immediately to his
-master: he wanted me. Laying aside my embroidery, I left Pasiphae
-with Raphael, and went. What was my amazement, when entering
-the banqueting hall, I found it filled with strange men, wearing the
-uniform of state officers, and seated in their midst, Monsieur de Serval
-and Count Calabrella; my husband affrighted and shrinking, the count<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_171"></a>[171]</span>
-self-collected and calm as usual. I moved hastily toward my husband,
-and seated myself at his side; the officers making way for me as I
-passed them.</p>
-
-<p>“What does this mean, Rinaldo? what do these men want?” I
-cried, seized with a strange presentiment that their presence in some
-way related to, or was concerned with the visits of the mysterious
-strangers.</p>
-
-<p>“Be composed, poor child,” replied Rinaldo. “I will tell you; I
-must leave here, I must go away.”</p>
-
-<p>“Leave your castle, go away! Wherefore? for God’s sake, explain?”
-I demanded, perfectly bewildered.</p>
-
-<p>“It is a dreadful thing to tell, but it must be told; I am arrested by
-these men for high treason; they have come to take me before my
-sovereign; I am utterly ruined; my castle is no longer mine; I am a
-bankrupt.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh God!” I exclaimed, as if struck by a sudden blow. I fell
-down upon my knees, burying my face in my hands.</p>
-
-<p>“It is but too true. I have suffered myself to be engaged in a piratical
-expedition against the government; it has been discovered,
-destroyed, and I am commanded to answer the charges laid against
-me; I am to leave here to day in company with these men.”</p>
-
-<p>“Engaged in a piratical expedition against the government; to be
-arrested; perhaps imprisoned for life; and where are they to take you?
-cannot I also go?”</p>
-
-<p>“<i>You</i> go with me to ignominious disgrace, to a prison’s walls; oh
-no, that cannot be: and yet you cannot stay here. This house will pass
-into other hands; I know not what to do with you, where to send
-you. I must return to Naples, but I do not wish you there, amid the
-general contempt, the disagreeable publicity that will attend me; no,
-you will be far better off away; I want you to go to Baie; you can
-remain there until the issue of affairs is known; then, if favorable, you
-can come to me.”</p>
-
-<p>“I will obey you; I will go there if you wish it; but tell me one
-thing, Rinaldo, I entreat you; are not those singular men who used to
-visit you, the cause of this?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said he, hesitatingly, “they are.”</p>
-
-<p>“I knew it. I felt they came for no good purpose.”</p>
-
-<p>“Gentlemen,” said my husband, addressing the king’s officers,
-“will you allow me a private conversation with my wife before I go?”</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly, monsieur,” replied the principal of the officers; and
-with their officials they filed slowly from the apartment. The count,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_172"></a>[172]</span>
-who had not spoken during our dialogue, following them with a
-dejected air. When the great door of the banqueting hall shut heavily
-behind them, Rinaldo, as if overcome by this sudden, unlooked
-for misfortune, threw his arms around me, and, weeping, kissed me.</p>
-
-<p>“Genevra, my poor Genevra, we are about to separate, and it may
-be you will never see your unhappy husband again! I have not been
-to you the kind husband I should have been; my conduct has often
-been harsh and cruel: my love for you has been an enigma to myself.
-I have not acted rightly towards you; and now, a strange fatality—as
-unlooked for as strange—is about to tear me from you and that dear
-child.”</p>
-
-<p>Sighing, he kissed me again.</p>
-
-<p>“Let the past be forgotten and forgiven,” I answered, as I folded
-my arms around his neck: “let it go; it is done; it is nothing;
-I have forgotten it: only let me accompany you now. Why should
-sorrow separate a wife from a husband? I can share imprisonment
-with you, and take Raphael with me: I fear not its isolation, nor its
-gloom.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, no; do as I wish. What could be more brutal than to
-enclose in prison walls a young woman and her child—shut out from
-God’s air and human society! Go to Baie; you will not be far from
-me; you shall hear from me often. Perhaps this unfortunate affair
-will be happily ended: then, reunited, we will seek some new home—since
-this will no longer acknowledge me as master; some sweet,
-quiet place, where our days shall be spent more happily than the best
-part of our married life has been.”</p>
-
-<p>“But that prospect is far distant; perhaps it may never come;
-you may be convicted of high treason; oh, heaven! you may be
-decapitated.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, if that is my fate, I shall meet it bravely: I am not afraid
-to die, let death come in what shape it will.” And he laughed recklessly.
-“No, Genevra, I fear no such catastrophe; I shall be able
-to clear myself: tremble not for me.”</p>
-
-<p>“How unfortunate this has been; how disastrous for you to have
-embarked in this ill-omened business. Why did you do it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Talk not of that which is past, Genevra,” said he, with something
-of his former sternness; “but come with me; the officials wait:
-let us bid each other farewell at the bedside of my child.”</p>
-
-<p>He took my hand in his: the officials stationed without the door
-respectfully made way for us; we ascended to our bedchamber,
-where, slumbering in his oaken cradle, lay Raphael—his rosy hands<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_173"></a>[173]</span>
-crossed upon his bosom, which rose and fell with his gentle breathing;
-his long night robe hung without the cradle, and the calm little
-face, so innocent, so passionless, expressed the unconscious happiness
-of infancy. A large lamp, the shade depressed, to shield the glare of
-light from his eyes, sat on a table near; and his nurse sat by the cradle
-side and watched him—her strongly marked features of dusky hue,
-and fantastic dress, thrown strongly into relief by the effect of the
-lamp.</p>
-
-<p>I sent her away, not wishing a witness of this scene; and my husband,
-kneeling by the cradle, gently took up the child in his arms,
-but did not awaken him; he still slept on. He looked at the babe
-long and wistfully: his very soul seemed gushing into his eyes as he
-contemplated the features of his son. He seemed looking forward
-into future years; he seemed inspired; he took one of the little hands
-in his, and kissed it: the child, with a slight start, withdrew it, and
-recrossed his arms on his bosom.</p>
-
-<p>“Sweet little lamb, as yet innocent of guile, pure as thy Maker: of
-such, if there is a heaven, should it be composed; sleep on, and mayst
-thou ever remain as innocent as now.”</p>
-
-<p>His thoughts appeared too deep for words; he replaced the babe,
-laid its satin coverlid over it, and rose on his feet, once more he wistfully
-regarded it, then turned to me.</p>
-
-<p>“Let us kiss each other; adieu here, Genevra. You had better not
-come down stairs again; those officials are rude sometimes, and I, being
-under arrest, cannot protect you against whatever they choose to extend
-to you. Farewell! you shall hear from me soon; be comforted,
-you know your religion teaches you that out of much tribulation shall
-arise joy; be comforted, all is not lost.”</p>
-
-<p>But I would not be put off with that abrupt farewell. I went down
-with him into the lower hall, where, standing around on the marble
-floor, in various attitudes, were the king’s functionaries. Count Calabrella
-had offered large sums of money to the chief, making himself
-responsible for Monsieur de Serval’s appearance for his trial in any
-state they should name, but the men were inexorable. Their commands
-from government were to bring him in person to Naples. No influence,
-no money could shield him. The count was traversing the hall with
-hasty strides, and gloomy expression of countenance, his steps resounding
-as he walked; seeing me approach on Rinaldo’s arm, on which I
-leant heavily, he came towards us, endeavoring to conceal his uneasiness
-by a forced smile.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_174"></a>[174]</span></p>
-
-<p>“This is a most singular affair. How came Alcantara to be detected?”
-he inquired, speaking in a low tone.</p>
-
-<p>“The stupid fool had the impudence to boast of what we were doing
-in the coffee houses, some persons informed the government, which
-led to my exposure.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have been trying to persuade them to return alone, naming some
-day for your appearance, promising to come with you myself, but they
-will not consent,—what is to be done, my friend?” he anxiously inquired,
-looking sorrowfully at Rinaldo.</p>
-
-<p>“What is to be done? why I am to go, of course, my dear Alfieri.
-Don’t be annoyed, don’t be alarmed at this: you know I told you
-weeks ago I was prepared for the worst: all that troubles me is the
-welfare of my wife and child. This old castle, though partly ruinous, is
-still a home, but even this I am obliged to part with. I sold it some
-days ago to a friend, to raise money for this expedition; and that is
-also gone. She and the infant must leave here; I wish you to attend
-her to Baie, where she will be not far from Naples, and can hear from
-me often. Promise me to see her safely there to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p>“I will do all that mortal man can do for Madame de Serval, you
-may be sure; whatever she wishes I will perform,” said the count, with
-fervor.</p>
-
-<p>“Thank the fates, then, I do not leave them friendless,—utterly uncared
-for,” ejaculated Rinaldo.</p>
-
-<p>The chief of the officers now came out of the banqueting hall, and
-whispered to my husband.</p>
-
-<p>“Very well,” said he in reply, “in an hour I shall be ready, if you
-wish it, to start.”</p>
-
-<p>“In an hour! are you going in an hour?” I cried. “Oh cannot
-they stay till to-morrow? do make them stay till then.”</p>
-
-<p>“To-morrow, child, to-morrow I shall be far away from you.”</p>
-
-<p>We three continued to walk up and down: I tearful, desponding;
-the count abstracted, silent; Rinaldo with a sort of affected reckless
-gayety, assumed, doubtless, to conceal his real feelings. The men
-were sent away into the servants’ hall, and what little luggage my
-husband was allowed to take with him, brought down. I imagined I
-had a world of things to say in that hour, yet, when I went to speak,
-they escaped my recollection. I could think of nothing but the suddenness
-of this separation, and my own sad situation. The hour
-elapsed, it fled,—the man came to summon Rinaldo, the carriage was
-ready, the luggage was placed behind, the officers got into their carriages,
-the chief came to escort my husband to his!</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_175"></a>[175]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I regret extremely that it should be my misfortune to convey such
-disagreeable tidings, and to be the cause of bringing sorrow to such a
-lady,” said the man, politely raising his cap to me.</p>
-
-<p>“It is not your fault; we excuse you; you merely act officially.
-If the carriage is ready, I am. Proceed, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>I walked with him to the court yard, notwithstanding he cautioned
-me not to do so, saying I would catch cold. Four carriages contained
-the inferior men, and their principal occupied the same carriage
-with my husband. He did not kiss me farewell there before
-others, but relinquishing my hand with stoical energy, he entered it
-with his companion, and closed the door. He shook hands convulsively
-with the count, who went round to the carriage window to bid
-him adieu. I did not move; I was riveted to the spot where I stood.
-The carriage started, it whirled through the avenue, it passed the
-lodge, it was gone, the others following it. When my eyes could no
-longer discern any traces of it; when I was fully convinced that it
-was reality, no dream, but reality, stern reality; I turned within the
-hall, went up stairs, fell upon my knees by the child’s bedside, laid
-my cheek by his, and wept bitterly.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI.</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Reason almost failed me, when I awoke the next day. I wandered
-into the banqueting hall, calling for Rinaldo. The count followed
-me, entreated me to recollect myself, to bear misfortunes with
-calmness, with fortitude; asked what he could do for me. I answered
-not: I began to doubt my own identity. I only remembered
-distinctly that I was to leave that day, to go to Baie: every thing else
-seemed blank, intangible.</p>
-
-<p>I summoned Guilo to my salon, and told him that the castle was
-sold by my husband to another, who would come in a few days to
-claim it. I offered to pay his expenses to any city he chose to go,
-or he might stay in the vicinity of the castle, and endeavor to obtain
-employment of the new owner. He thanked me for my kindness to
-him, and said he preferred remaining. The other domestics were
-sent away; my household was broken up. Pasiphae determined to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_176"></a>[176]</span>
-accompany my precarious fortunes as the nurse of Raphael, and so
-all things being definitely arranged, Count Calabrella, myself, Pasiphae,
-and my beloved babe, started that afternoon for Baie. I, almost
-unconscious, allowed myself to be placed in the barouche, and without
-looking back at those proud turrets and massive walls, within
-whose confines I had passed two years of alternate joy and grief, I
-was borne away. We rode all day. The count, anxious to beguile
-me from sad thoughts, conversed charmingly, but though ever agreeable
-and fascinating, yet my mind was too pre-occupied to listen, and
-the object so kindly intended failed of its purpose; nor did my melancholy
-abstraction cease, when, on the second day of our travel, we
-entered Baie.</p>
-
-<p>Oh, Baie! classic, beautiful, time-honored Baie! when again shall
-I revisit thy tranquil, lovely shores? when again shall I gaze upon thy
-pellucid waters, or roam over thy gentle, verdant hills, once the home
-of happy thousands,—thrilling with life, hope, perhaps happiness,—now
-silent, deserted; the seat of ruins, the abode of solitary peasants,
-who lead their flocks over the spot where once rose stately Roman
-villas, temples, theatres, and all the haunts of what <i>was</i> human vanity
-and life;—all which have faded into fragments, into dust, leaving those
-few remains to tell that the tide of human life had once passed there.</p>
-
-<p>“Why am I not also gone?” thought I despondingly, as the barouche
-rolled over the smooth road, among the ruins. “Why do I still live
-on, unfortunate, unhappy? my husband arrested for high treason;
-myself and child alone and desolate; our home lost to us forever!
-What has the future for me but disappointment, continued isolation
-and my child, my Raphael! what is to become of him?”</p>
-
-<p>The stopping of the carriage aroused me from my gloomy reflections.
-It paused at a small cottage kept as a place of accommodation for
-strangers. Tired, faint, and weary, I found myself in the parlor of
-this rustic abode, scarce knowing where I was. The apartments were
-comfortable and scrupulously clean, but in contrast to the elegant home
-I had just left, they appeared contemptible to me. An image of the
-virgin stood in one corner, under it a crucifix: some pictures decorated
-the plastered walls, and flowers were trained to creep outside the
-latticed windows;—a gaily colored parrot, in a gilded cage, mockingly
-imitated our words, repeating them after us in playful tones: the
-hostess, a peasant vinter’s wife, came courtesying in to receive us,
-wearing a Neapolitan dress, which reminded me forcibly of Naples.
-The domestics of the castle, wearing another style, embarrassed and
-awkward at the sight of one, so far superior in worldly station. Ah!<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_177"></a>[177]</span>
-how far happier, if they did but know it, are those lowly ones of
-earth! how quiet; how untinctured by ambition are their lives! Very
-little envy is theirs; very little of those fierce hatreds we see in society!
-Calm, peaceful, obscure, they walk to their graves, seldom known;
-seldom wishing to be known, yet often tasting much real, substantial
-happiness.</p>
-
-<p>The count explained that I wished apartments for myself, nurse, and
-child, and the woman left the room to prepare them.</p>
-
-<p>“And you, my friend,” I said to him, “you also are going to stay
-here?”</p>
-
-<p>“Until to-morrow I shall have that honor,” said he, “but after that
-I shall not have the pleasure of being near you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh!” I cried, “will you also desert me? shall I be utterly alone?”</p>
-
-<p>“Alone! oh, no! not all alone with the companionship of your own
-sweet thoughts and your lovely child. Do not grieve; to meet to
-separate is the inevitable law of nature. Why should we cavil at that
-we cannot change? Existence is, as I have often told you, a play, a
-farce;—do not let us be its most miserable actors. Your husband will
-doubtless be liberated soon. You will be restored to him;—life will
-put forth new buds and blossoms from its giant tree. In his renewed
-affection you will find new joys; and I shall pursue my solitary travels,
-rejoicing at your happiness.”</p>
-
-<p>“But if you were not there, the measure of our joy would be incomplete.
-If what you predict comes to pass, will not you partake of
-our joy?”</p>
-
-<p>“I! what shall I be to you but a strange dream, associated with
-unhappy circumstances, disagreeable to your memory? I shall have
-been but the witnesser of one of those vicissitudes of fortune, which
-always fall to the lot of the talented and beautiful. No! I had better
-be forgotten. To be forgotten! how mortifying is the reflection.
-Yet, has it not always been the law of destiny?”</p>
-
-<p>“Do not philosophize now; let us be matter of fact. I thought,
-when my husband was so cruelly taken away, that you, who have
-always been so kind, would be spared me—at least for some time—till
-I should recover a little from this violent shock; but I am disappointed
-in this, as in all other things.”</p>
-
-<p>“Lady,” said he, bending a piercing glance upon me from his expressive
-eyes, “the request you make would be as dangerous to myself
-(if granted), as it would be useless to you. The charms of your person,
-your judgment and talent, I appreciate to their fullest extent, and
-nothing could give me more delight than to revel in the sunshine of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_178"></a>[178]</span>
-such presence; but that enjoyment would be as injurious to you as
-perfidious in me to my friend.”</p>
-
-<p>The sad tones of his voice and significant manner of expression,
-did not allow me to misunderstand him. In my careless innocence I
-never recollected the cruel interpretation malice would put upon such
-companionship.</p>
-
-<p>“My departure,” he continued, “will be all the more advantageous
-to you, since to-morrow I will proceed immediately to Naples, and perhaps,
-through intercession with his Majesty, be the means of liberating
-your husband. I shall, of course, see him immediately, wherever
-he is, and write you a description of affairs.”</p>
-
-<p>He became silent, and mechanically stroked my infant’s rosy, downy
-cheeks. The vinter’s wife came tripping into the room, saying she
-would attend me to the apartments. Pasiphae, sad and quiet, preceded
-me, carrying Raphael; the count remained absorbed in thought. The
-rustic stairs were climbed, and with many low courtesies I was ushered
-into a large chamber, in which I noticed nothing but an immense fauteuil,
-into which I sank mechanically, completely overpowered. After
-making numerous demonstrations of respect and duty, the hostess
-withdrew.</p>
-
-<p>In the meantime, Raphael, who had slept nearly all the way from
-the Chateau of the Ravine, awoke from the slumber in which he had
-been wrapt all day, and looked inquiringly for me. I took him in my
-arms and kissed him. The little one laid his tiny hands on my face
-and raised his large eyes wistfully to mine. He was too young to
-miss his father, or know that father’s fate,—that unhappy, wayward
-man who now inhabited, perhaps, a prison’s gloom: and as I childishly
-toyed with the ribbons of his dress and watched the light
-and play of his features, I wished—oh! what does not a mother
-wish?</p>
-
-<p>I did not go down stairs again that afternoon and evening; but I
-distinctly heard the footsteps of the count as he continued to pace the
-floor of the lower room till a late hour. My own heart was the prey
-of contending emotions—of conflicting thoughts. Raphael fell asleep
-on my breast—his tiny hand clasped in mine—with an expression of
-conscious happiness on his smiling countenance. I fixed my gaze upon
-a crucifix which hung in a corner, and invoked to my support that
-invisible influence whom we worship in an earthly form. I conjured
-up before me visions of persecuted martyrs, dying saints, nuns devoted
-alone to the service of God; but, in spite of myself, other thoughts
-came stealing over me, and the recollections of the happy days of love<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_179"></a>[179]</span>
-and sunshine I had passed during the first part of my married life,
-were mingled with regrets at my husband’s misfortunes.</p>
-
-<p>A glorious morning sun beaming through the lattice, awoke me at
-an early hour; a beautiful landscape met my eyes on going to the
-window; it commanded a view of the sea coast, which was not far
-distant; and I beheld with delight the blue rolling waves of the ocean,
-crested with foam, and swelling proudly as they rolled onward, and
-came and beat against the rocks on the shore, with a hoarse echoing
-sound; the high cliffs at the water’s edge, matted into quiet unassuming
-hills as they disappeared in the distance. The light fishing skiffs
-of the fishermen, chained to the shore, danced on the bosom of the
-blue waters, and the joyous song of the men as they drew in their nets,
-was wafted to my ears by the clear morning breeze. The shepherds
-and their flocks browsing on the hill tops, diminished by distance to the
-size of mice, were dimly visible. On that classic, quiet shore, silence
-and repose kept vigils gentle and imposing as such presence should be.</p>
-
-<p>When I descended I found the count below in the parlor; he said
-his sleep had been disturbed by dismal dreams, and his sad face bore
-testimony to his words. After breakfast, at which little was said, he
-proposed a walk on the beach; mechanically I consented, put on my
-bonnet and shawl, and we went forth together.</p>
-
-<p>We pursued a path through a small forest of palm, linden, and fir
-trees; their thick shade formed an impenetrable bower, relieved at
-their base by wild flowers of every description; the meandering course
-of numerous rivulets ran through the wood.</p>
-
-<p>We continued on, the count occasionally making some remark
-about the beauty of the scenery, to which I responded by monosyllables;
-my mind was too intensely absorbed to talk. The forest was
-passed: the sun broke brightly from a cloud, and the beach and the
-murmuring waves lay before us; a small schooner, contending against
-the tide, was drifting slowly along.</p>
-
-<p>“That bark, struggling for anchorage, is like your life, dear lady;
-now it rises, now falls amid the waters; the sails gathered in, the pilot
-endeavoring to gain a position of safety; presently she will rest
-quietly, securely anchored on the bosom of the bay; so will it be, I
-predicate, of thee.”</p>
-
-<p>“God grant it may,” I murmured.</p>
-
-<p>As he said, after many tacks and manœuvres, the little bark succeeded
-in gaining safe anchorage, where riding tranquilly it rested.
-The birds of the ocean surrounded it, flapping their wings, and making
-the air resound with their mournful cries.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_180"></a>[180]</span></p>
-
-<p>A road wound along the shore, bordered by a footpath: on this we
-wandered at random, stooping sometimes to pick the flowers strewing
-the way. The count philosophized on nature in his sweet voice, and
-nature smiled upon us wearing her fairest dress; at last, after we had
-gone some distance, he looked at his watch.</p>
-
-<p>“The hour has come, dear lady, I must go: the carriage will be at
-the house to bear me away, and your forebodings will be relieved
-when I shall arrive at Naples and write you.”</p>
-
-<p>Seeing that he was really bent on going, we retraced our steps to the
-house; the barouche which brought us was already there; he did not
-enter the dwelling, but pressing my hand with earnest fervor, stepped
-into it and drove away.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A week of quiet daily routine, and intense mental anxiety, succeeded
-the count’s departure; the days sped slowly in monotonous regularity;
-the nights were lonely, and would have been terrible had it not been
-for my child and faithful servant.</p>
-
-<p>The evening of the sixth day after he went to Naples, I was sitting
-at the window of my room abstractedly gazing on vacancy, when I
-saw a man rapidly approaching on horseback, urging his spurs into
-the animal’s sides, and moving his arms in such a ridiculous manner,
-that, had my mind been at ease, I should have laughed at his absurd
-gestures; but in my grief they were unnoticed; suddenly reining in
-his horse at the door, he handed a letter to the peasant, who was
-taking his siesta before the door, and rode away as rapidly as he had
-come; the man brought it to me, and I eagerly, yet tremblingly,
-opened it and devoured the contents; it was from my husband, superscribed
-in the count’s handwriting, and as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">“<i>Barberinni Prison, June 11th.</i></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">“<span class="smcap">Dearest Genevra</span>:—</p>
-
-<p>“Count Calabrella will find means to send you this. Were it not
-for him you would hear nothing of my condition, as I am under such
-close surveillance that nothing concerning me escapes suspicion. The
-principal agent in this sad affair exposed all by his blunders, and
-this has brought me, perhaps, to a felon’s death. It is not known
-when my trial will take place,—I hope soon, as I have secured powerful
-mediation in my behalf. These prisons are dark and cold—frightful
-from their solitude. I sit in one corner of my cell and write this
-by the light of a lantern, while the count waits to take it away. I
-wish I could see my boy again; but the strange inexorable fate which<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_181"></a>[181]</span>
-has pursued me from my earliest years will probably continue its malice
-to the close of my life. Farewell,—farewell,—take care of yourself,—remain
-at Baie till the result of this is known. You shall hear from
-me soon again.</p>
-
-<p class="center">“Yours till death,</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Serval</span>.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>This strange epistle, written on a piece of paper evidently torn from
-some book, and almost illegible from blots and blurs, was too general
-and incoherent to satisfy me. Perhaps, for fear of being surprised by
-the jailor or some of the officials, he was unable to write more; yet he
-told me of nothing that had transpired. Perhaps it would have harrowed
-my heart too much had he told me all,—he wished to spare me the
-sorrow.</p>
-
-<p>Then came a note, within the other, from Count Calabrella.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="noindent">“<span class="smcap">Most Respected Lady</span>:—</p>
-
-<p>“Immediately upon my arrival I asked permission to be admitted
-to see your husband, but was refused the favor, and only obtained it
-yesterday through the intercession of a cardinal of the church, a friend
-of mine. I then hastened to see Monsieur de Serval. I found him
-sad, but not as desponding as I had expected. Of course you can
-imagine what was said of you,—and I should be rude to repeat to you
-what you will have already anticipated. We then conversed upon
-this ill-fated affair. I told him that Alcantara was arrested, of which
-fact he was ignorant,—the minor confederates had fled. We conferred
-as to what was best to be done; and I decided on soliciting the
-intercession of the foreign ministers, and some of the cardinals, together
-with as many others as I could secure.</p>
-
-<p>“When I left him I hastened to the house of the French minister.
-I was admitted to an audience. He received me most politely,—listened
-attentively to my explanation of the facts of the case, (which it
-is needless to trouble you with,)—I entreated him to interest himself
-for his countryman. He did not definitely say he would, but deferred
-the question for reconsideration. I think, however, I shall be
-able to persuade him into doing something. I have secured the
-interests of several cardinals, and intend to do much more before
-the trial comes on. Believe me, every thing that is within the range
-of human possibility shall be done. I do not despair: and I entreat
-you, also, to be consoled,—to hope.</p>
-
-<p class="center">“Yours in faith,</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Calabrella</span>.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_182"></a>[182]</span></p>
-
-<p>This letter partially revived my drooping spirits, for it breathed
-hope and elasticity of mind. My husband’s was gloomy, but that was
-attributable to his unhappy situation. I had expected an explanation,—I
-received only general assurances of brighter times, which to me
-seemed far distant,—dubious,—if not impossible.</p>
-
-<p>I resigned myself to the course of circumstances, and patiently
-abided my time. Beautiful sunny days, and moonlight nights, fell
-upon Baie at that time,—the warm, bright glow of the sun, and the
-calm sweet light of the moon was soothing as its rays. I often walked,
-beneath its light, up and down the road on which the house faced.</p>
-
-<p>One evening I started before sunset and walked in the direction of
-some curious ruins, situated on a cliff on the shores; the road diverged
-in a fork leading down to the beach. I preferred this walk and followed
-it; when I had walked some distance I reached the beach, the
-waters now quietly swelling and falling beneath the brilliant rays of
-the sun; the road was thickly strewn with shells, some of which I
-picked up and examined; then, my mind naturally running back to
-philosophy, I compared human life, human joys, human expectations,
-to those shells at my feet, and those ruins on the cliff before me. As
-the light played upon the broken archway, the desolate court-yard, the
-ruined chambers, the falling turrets, I felt my old feelings of gloom
-and morbid thought come wandering back.</p>
-
-<p>I ascended the hill by a beaten pathway, and wandered in and
-around the little temple; myself and my thoughts were the only inhabitants
-of the place. I gathered a bouquet of flowers and was preparing
-to return, the moon having now arisen: when, glancing up at
-the sky, I saw that which had been a few moments before so serene,
-dark and lowering; the horizon obscured by immense black clouds,
-which were rapidly spreading over the sky; heavy gusts were borne
-bellowing along, and the glaring foam of the waves was visible faraway.</p>
-
-<p>It was impossible to take the beach road under such circumstances,
-the tide having arisen, I was in danger of drowning; it was impossible
-to go through the woods the other side of the ruins, I was in danger
-of being lost in their density. I knew not what to do: meanwhile
-the sky continued to darken; the moon was completely overcast; the
-wind continued to howl around me; the only thing to do was to remain
-in the temple, and claim the precarious benefit of its shelter. I
-could scarcely see to re-enter the ruins, and seated myself on a broken
-column in their midst; everything was buried in stones and darkness;
-the gloom was so intense I felt it.</p>
-
-<p>The storm increased rapidly; the waves lashed to fury, broke against<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_183"></a>[183]</span>
-the rocks with a roaring noise; the waves in the distance shone with
-phosphoric light; the clouds swept hither and thither over the face
-of the sky; now in tremendous masses, now scattered, white, dim
-and ghostlike; such a scene as this, was calculated to inspire any one
-with horror, and the blood ran cold in my veins, as I sat and listened.</p>
-
-<p>Thus it raged for I know not how long: I could not reckon time in
-such a place. I thought it must be two hours. Then another sound was
-mingled with the gale: a strange crashing, a wild unearthly yell rang
-out on the storm; then all was absorbed in the rushing gale. Presently
-another interval of calm succeeded to the hellish sounds, when the
-waves and winds apparently paused to take breath, and gather their
-strength for another onset. The uproar of echoes, reverberating around
-me, was frightful; I almost thought demons from a lower world were
-playing their fantastic tricks within the old ruins. The weather during
-the day had been delightful, but the storm had rendered the air severe;
-and, as I sat shivering on the column, my hair standing on end, and
-teeth chattering with fear, the moon momentarily broke through the
-clouds, and disclosed the lurid landscape, strange and unearthly looking
-by the mysterious light. I could not express on paper the agony
-I suffered, till by the faint streaks of morning light in the east, I perceived
-day would soon dawn. The roar of the gale gradually subsided,
-the clouds became less strongly dark, the ocean’s waves less
-tumultuous; and an hour afterward, when I could fully perceive objects,
-I saw the light of day; and it shone upon a strange scene!
-When assured that the danger was over, I summoned strength to rise;
-my trembling limbs almost refused to support me. I wished to return
-to the house, anxious about my child. Walking down the hill towards
-the beach, my attention was attracted by pieces of spars, rigging, and
-a small boat stranded by the waves; this explained to me the horrid
-sound I had heard during the storm. A ship had been wrecked off
-the coast, which in that part abounded in breakers; numerous other
-objects now caught my astonished eyes: a little farther on a number
-of bales and some personal property lay scattered about; an object
-clothed in white, was stretched across my way; going towards it I knelt
-down and sought to distinguish what it was; it was a corpse, a female
-form; the drapery concealed the face. I raised the robe from the countenance,
-and beheld! yes,—no,—yes—it <i>was</i> Blanche!</p>
-
-<p>Blanche! Great heaven! what could it mean? Yes, it was her!
-There she was dead: the same calm, sweet features; the same graceful
-form, dressed in white; the fair arms crossed on the breast. From
-the position in which I found her, she seemed not to have made the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_184"></a>[184]</span>
-slightest effort to save herself: the angels of heaven seemed to have
-fanned her with their wings,—so innocently calm, so pure looked she.
-But how came she on board this unhappy bark? Where was she
-going to? I had supposed that when she fled from Naples, it was to
-some foreign land, not to remain in Italy. And where was her lover?
-I resolved to leave the body, and go to some fishermen’s huts on the
-cliff behind the ruin, and seek assistance, to have the body conveyed
-to town. As I prepared to do so, several other bodies presented themselves
-to my gaze, and in the corpse of a man, lying with his face
-exposed, I recognized Lord Glenfell. He was dressed in royal blue
-cloth, such as he had always worn (preserving his English customs) at
-Naples. One hand was buried in his bosom, the other hung stiff and
-cold by his side; and even in death he retained his perfect beauty.
-This unexpected, incomprehensible event, coming so suddenly upon
-me, after my own sorrows, and the fright from the storm, overpowered
-me, and sitting down on a fragment of stone, I wept over the bodies.
-Along the beach for a quarter of a mile the wreck was strewed in
-confusion: masts, cargo, rigging, luggage, all lay in different positions.
-The principal part of the passengers and crew probably had perished.
-One or two bodies came floating along as I franticly rushed up the hill
-again, in the direction of the fisher’s huts. They were not there when
-I reached them:—gone, an old woman told me, to plunder the wreck.
-She and a young girl were the only occupants of the tent, and I
-earnestly entreated them to return with me to the shore, and carry the
-body of Blanche to their house, to remain there till I could obtain
-assistance from Baie. They consented to accompany me, and we returned
-together, they talking incessantly about the storm and the wreck,
-wondering what the name of the vessel was, and whence it came.
-The bodies were undisturbed when I reached them. The woman,
-apparently used to such scenes, carelessly took up the inanimate form
-of my beloved friend, and strode away to the house again, while the
-girl remained to watch that of Lord Glenfell’s.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the sun had fully risen, and threw his golden rays on the
-scene. The waves had subsided somewhat: they were growing
-calmer. The sky was bright and glowing: the hues of morning lit
-up the shores.</p>
-
-<p>The wreckers were busy at their plunder, wretchedly dressed; some
-of them in tatters, running here and there: even the dead bodies they
-spared not. The girl sat down on the sand near the gurgling waves,
-and I, standing on my feet, regarded the fair young Englishman. His
-eyes, which in life had been a soft brilliant blue, were wide open, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_185"></a>[185]</span>
-their unnatural glare startled me. The deadly pallor of his features,
-and the languid air his form and face bore, too surely showed that life
-was not there. Presently the old woman returned, and with the aid
-of her husband, an athletic peasant, they raised the corpse, and I and
-the girl following, went back whence we came.</p>
-
-<p>They laid the two beautiful, yet guilty lovers, side by side on a
-rustic bed, poor and lowly as the lot of them to whom it belonged.
-Then the woman began to wash away the sand which thickly obscured
-their faces, and gathered on their clothes, all the while uttering sad
-cries that two so beautiful should die. Wiping the tears from my
-eyes, I turned to the peasant, and asked him if he could proceed immediately
-to my house at Baie, and procure biers to take the bodies
-thither, and tell my maid and some of the peasants there to come also?
-He replied with alacrity that he would, and departed.</p>
-
-<p>When the sand and red clay of the shore was entirely cleared from
-their persons, I regarded the corpses more attentively. Two years
-had not changed my Blanche; she was as beautiful as in those times
-past, when we sang together at Naples. I remembered the night of
-her departure, and her nocturnal farewell—so sad, so strange. Where
-had she gone then, and whither was she going now in this ship?
-Perhaps again to Parthenope, when the scissors of the fatal sisters, cut
-short the thread of her days. Oh! unhappy fate,—sad destiny.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Glenfells then continued faithful to his vows of faith and love.
-Oh! marvellous instance of attachment in a man, that his love should
-last two years. Perhaps, if there were more women like her, their
-love would last longer. Together they had died, and now it was my
-sad task to see them buried amid the wild, romantic scenery of
-Baie.</p>
-
-<p>I was alone with the bodies for more than an hour, ere the peasant
-came back with my poor, astonished Pasiphae, accompanied by several
-men, bearing hand biers. News of the shipwreck had reached the
-town, and great fear had been entertained lest some evil had befallen
-me, as hour after hour passed away, and I came not, and the terrible
-storm arose. Great was their amazement when they beheld me watching
-two corpses, and when they saw the agony imprinted on my face.
-The sympathizing Pasiphae threw herself at my feet, and weepingly
-buried her face in the folds of my robe.</p>
-
-<p>“This is a most inexplicable affair, my poor Pasiphae,” said I.
-“I will tell you some other time. I could not return to you last evening.
-I spent the night in the ruins of the temple to avoid the storm.
-I wish to get home quickly.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_186"></a>[186]</span></p>
-
-<p>“The sweet child wept much last night, my lady, but I hushed him
-to sleep at last,” said my faithful servant.</p>
-
-<p>I turned to the men, who had placed upon the bier Lord Glenfells
-and his beautiful Blanche, and after paying the women for their attention,
-the mournful cortege set out.</p>
-
-<p>We took the road along the beach to the fork, whence it diverged
-to the house; then following that, we soon arrived at home. The
-women came rushing to the door to see so strange a sight, and scarce
-believed their eyes when they beheld what I brought. They were
-carried up stairs into an empty room, next to mine, placed on a bed,
-covered with a white coverlid; and I left the room, locking the door
-and taking the key with me. I returned to my child.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>I buried them at Baie. They have a lonely grave on that rock-bound
-coast, at the top of the cliff on which the ruined temple of fortune
-stands. The ocean’s waves wash the base of the rocks, and the
-flowers and trees are gathered thickly around it. No splendid monument
-marks the last repose of one of England’s brightest, handsomest
-sons;—no inscription tells of the fair, ill-fated songstress. Her death,
-like her life, was isolated. But her memory at least is still fondly
-cherished by one who knew and loved her well.</p>
-
-<p>When last I visited their graves, I found them overgrown with
-flowers,—odorous and beautiful as had been the character of Blanche.
-There the rose, the acacia, japonica, myrtle, and cypress, form unfading
-bowers, unfailing mourners, over their graves. When the sea
-is calm, the quiet murmur of its waves seems to utter unknown regrets.
-In storms their swelling tumult sounds like a requiem. Vain
-would it be for me to describe the many sad hours I passed there,
-silently offering as an ovation the grief of a sincere heart. During
-my stay at Baie, not a day elapsed but found me a visiter there.
-There the sadness of the scene taught me to moderate my own regrets,—taught
-me to uplift my heart to God,—taught me to be humble,
-thankful, and resigned.</p>
-
-<p>A month passed without my hearing anything farther from my husband
-or Count Calabrella. I was terribly anxious: I dreaded lest
-something of a frightful character had happened, and that they feared
-to tell me it. I sometimes walked half the night up and down my
-room, conjuring my brains to imagine the reasons of this mysterious
-silence; but I could bring my mind to no clear explanation. I could
-resolve on nothing; everything was dark to me. At length the
-dreaded, yet wished for explanation came. Another courier came<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_187"></a>[187]</span>
-with another letter, which I have still preserved. I submit it to
-you:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“I have made my escape. I have left Naples and Italy for ever.
-Had I awaited my trial, I know I should have been utterly lost. I
-jeoparded my life in getting out of prison; but am safe now. I release
-you from all faith, all allegiance to me; forget me: heaven
-never intended us for each other. Return to the gay world: may you
-be happy. Kiss my child for me. I had a presentiment, when I stood
-over his cradle, that I should never see him more: his baby-features
-are imprinted on my soul; they will only be obliterated when I shall
-cease to breathe. Remember me in those prayers you so fervently offer to
-your God, and may that God watch over you.</p>
-
-<p>“I go to seek a new fortune in some foreign land; as yet I know
-not where: everything in the future is dark and uncertain. Farewell!
-Farewell!</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Serval</span>.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>When I had read this strange epistle, and fully comprehended it, I
-remained petrified with amazement: the tone of it was so reckless,
-wild—almost incoherent—I scarcely believed it to be my husband’s. He
-gave me up; he told me to forget him; to return to the world I had
-quitted for him. He seemed to write without feeling any regret, any
-sadness at this eternal separation. His child alone elicited a sentiment
-of humanity; and this was all the reward I received for the forbearance
-I had manifested toward him,—the devotion I had practiced for
-more than two years to that unhappy man. I was thrown off—cast away!</p>
-
-<p>After reflection, I resolved to go to Naples to learn something definite.
-Our travelling arrangements were soon made, and the following
-afternoon we left Baie.</p>
-
-<p>The classic ruins, the ocean, the beautiful shore, and the graves of
-Blanche and Lord Glenfells, were soon lost to my longing eyes, in the
-windings of the road. The town, the mountains, sea, rivulets, ruins
-and all, were enveloped in the blue mists of heaven.</p>
-
-<p>The next day I again beheld the fair city of Naples rising on the
-hill, with her lofty towers, gardens, churches, castles and splendid
-private dwellings, rearing their superb height one above the other;
-and again I drove through the beautiful street Toledo. I hastened to
-the house of Madame Bonni; but two years had created changes in
-Naples. The good woman was gone, and another dwelt in her house.
-I secured apartments, however, in one of the most retired hotels, and
-then sent for the Court Guide, to ascertain the residence of Count Calabrella,
-whom I regarded as my only friend in this great trouble; it<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_188"></a>[188]</span>
-was brought, and after ascertaining his address, I sent mine to
-him.</p>
-
-<p>He came immediately. When he entered my parlour I rushed toward
-him, and showing him the letter I held in my hand, exclaimed:</p>
-
-<p>“Is this true? Oh! tell me, dear count, is it true?”</p>
-
-<p>“Be calm, dear lady, I entreat you; be composed; this is an
-unexpected meeting. I had intended coming to you at Baie to-morrow
-to tell you the strange news.”</p>
-
-<p>“But tell me, I entreat you, is it true? has my husband really escaped
-from prison? has he left me in this way?”</p>
-
-<p>“He has escaped, and gone I know not where. Three days ago I
-visited him to tell him some favorable news regarding himself; he
-seemed cheerful; spoke much of you, and confidently of the result of
-the trial. Yesterday it was noised abroad that he had fled from
-Naples; doubting whether it was not mere rumor, I inquired, and
-found it true: it astonished me much. Knowing your husband’s
-determined character, I had been actively engaged in obtaining all the
-influence I could in his favor. I doubt not, myself, had he awaited
-his trial, it would have terminated favorably.”</p>
-
-<p>“Gone! gone!” I cried—thinking only of the desertion—“for ever
-gone! and what is to become of me and the child?”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t give way to grief, madame; be comforted; you will find
-numerous friends: those who have known and loved you before your
-marriage.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, count! I feel as if this were the acme of my misfortunes!”</p>
-
-<p>“I know life has had many changes for you; but sorrow will not
-last for ever; and destiny sometimes presents a pleasant face.”</p>
-
-<p>Thus for an hour he endeavored to divert my mind from dwelling
-with too much intensity on this inexplicable affair; but in vain did I
-try to talk or think of something else; and he, perceiving the abstraction
-of my thoughts, probably thought that quiet and repose would be
-the best consolers at that moment: and, after repeated adjurations to
-be calm, to hope, he went away. I appreciated the delicacy of his
-behavior in not reverting to any thing that could pain me: he had
-impressed me agreeably at first, and acquaintance had not dissipated
-that impression. I was determined, however, to learn more concerning
-my husband; and that day calling a calesso, bade him drive to
-the Barberinni prison. It was situated in an obscure quarter of the
-city, down near the harbor, surrounded by dark and dirty looking
-buildings on all sides, and itself presenting an appearance of dark,
-impenetrable gloom. I alighted and entered the keeper’s room, where<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_189"></a>[189]</span>
-he sat, amid old papers of all descriptions, reading from a great book,
-which looked to me like a ledger. Great bunches of keys adorned the
-smoked walls, dirty and old as their proprietor; and an old writing-desk
-stood in one corner, with a high stool before it.</p>
-
-<p>He rose civilly as I entered, and asked in what he could please me.
-I told him that I had come to ask the particulars of my husband’s
-escape; and then informed him that I was the wife of Monsieur
-de Serval. He seemed surprised at that; and, on my requesting to
-be shown my husband’s cell, immediately acquiesced, locking the
-door of his stronghold previous to accompanying me.</p>
-
-<p>We threaded several long stone galleries, off which, on either side,
-opened the doors of the cells. Then we descended a long flight of
-stairs; then came another gallery; then he paused, and unlocked an
-iron door, and ushered me into the dreary cell, lighted by one window,
-in which Rinaldo had written me the letter I received at Baie.
-One of the iron bars of the window was gone; the keeper pointed to
-it, and said: “Through that aperture your husband made his escape
-two nights ago. I know not how he obtained possession of the file
-with which he sawed apart the bar; but he did so, and swam probably
-to the opposite shore: at any rate, nothing has been learned
-of him, though government has sent spies every where to look for
-him.” I looked down at the stone pavement at my feet—and up at
-the dim light above my head—and soliloquized, that a month in a
-dungeon like that must be equivalent to ten years in the world.</p>
-
-<p>“Did no one come to see my husband during his imprisonment?”
-I asked, wishing to learn if any one besides Count Calabrella had
-visited him.</p>
-
-<p>“A tall, dark gentleman came often, and once another man came,
-but he wore a cloak, and I could not see his face; as he presented a
-permit, I admitted him.”</p>
-
-<p>“That must have been the man who was accessary to his departure,”
-thought I: and having nothing farther to say to the keeper, I left the
-cell and returned to the carriage, and was driven home to the hotel.</p>
-
-<p>All the inquiries I made were baffled; all my suppositions were
-useless; nothing further concerning my husband’s dubious fate was
-learned. I found myself once more thrown out on the world, obliged
-to resort to my musical talents for a support. The old manager of the
-San Carlo, hearing I wished to return to the stage, called on me,
-and I entered into an engagement with him to perform in one of my
-old operas. I cannot describe the heartaches I experienced at being
-obliged to resume the laborious and distasteful profession I had so<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_190"></a>[190]</span>
-gladly resigned: but something must be done;—I could not remain
-idle;—I knew of no other means by which I could maintain myself
-as well as by singing, and therefore decided on that.</p>
-
-<p>The night of my reappearance, a crowded house awaited me: and
-the Austrian nightingale, in her misfortunes, was more admired than
-had been the gay Genevra; yet could those brilliant crowds have
-looked into my heart, and have seen the bitter sadness imprinted there,
-even my rivals would have pitied me; but the world only beheld the
-celebrated beauty, the great singer, and my rivals could see nothing;
-their envy blinded them. My only joy was to return from those
-crowded houses; to run away from the plaudits of the multitude, the
-dubious admiration of the men, the patronizing envy of the women,
-and bury myself in the solitude of my own room; devote myself to my
-smiling, happy boy. It was generally understood that I denied myself to
-all visitors, consequently I was not annoyed by any of those disagreeable
-attentions so often extended to actresses. I even wished to
-deny myself to the count, dreading the consequences of such companionship;
-but gratitude forbade such incivility, and he came.</p>
-
-<p>One evening Raphael had fallen asleep on a sofa, after creeping
-about on the floor till sleep overcame him. His pretty mouth, like a
-blooming rose-bud, was half open, showing two new teeth, and his
-long white robe swept along the sofa as he lay;—as I sat near him,
-listening to his gentle breathing, I heard a light step on the carpet, and
-turning, saw the count. He sat down on the sofa, at the feet of
-Raphael, and looking at him, said:</p>
-
-<p>“How sweetly he slumbers; how innocent is the sleep of a child.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, their unsuspicious innocence is a charming attribute which
-they soon lose.”</p>
-
-<p>I never could raise my eyes when the count was present without
-encountering his fixed gaze, and I met it now as I looked up from my
-child. He turned his away as I did so, and turned his hat from one
-hand to the other with a confused air.</p>
-
-<p>“Can nothing be thought of? can nothing be done, to find out
-something more about Monsieur de Serval?” I suddenly inquired,
-reminded more strongly by the presence of the count of my unhappy
-lord.</p>
-
-<p>“Everything that the ingenuity of the government could devise, or
-I, or others, suggest to find him out, has been done, but in vain. He
-has baffled pursuit. Perhaps some day in future will find you reunited
-to him on some fair isle, of which you and your child will form
-the Venus and Cupid, your husband the Mars: then, in those days of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_191"></a>[191]</span>
-sunshine, all recollections of unhappy hours will be forgotten: that
-will be another sphere of existence.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is very kind of you to re-assure me, but I am convinced that
-will never be.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is possible, and whatever is possible is probable; as for me,” he
-continued, “I wonder what fate has in store for me; a life of loneliness
-I suppose, as it always has been, travelling, wandering alone.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, say not so,” I cried, and anxious to soothe, I laid my hand
-on his; “not if you were near me, should you be lonely; friend to
-me and my husband, I would always cheer you.”</p>
-
-<p>“You,” he exclaimed, catching my hand; “oh, heaven itself would
-seem to dawn upon me, could I always be near you as I am now.”
-Then, as if amazed at the fervor with which he had spoken, he dropped
-my hand, and confusedly looked down. An agitated silence followed:
-this singular avowal had been so abrupt, it startled me into a tumult
-of thoughts I had not dreamed of for a long time past: my cheeks
-blushed carnation hues as I looked away; my confusion, however, did
-not last long, for the count, as if struggling against some feeling he
-wished to hide, rose abruptly, and ejaculated, as if with an effort,</p>
-
-<p>“I have alarmed you; I have acted foolishly; but God knows it was
-involuntary; I did not intend to wound your feelings; forgive me,
-dear Lady Genevra, forgive me; good night.” He extended his small,
-thin hand for mine; with my head averted, I placed mine within his.
-He shook it gently, and when I looked up he was gone. Oh, how fervently
-I wished I had a right ever to retain that hand, ever to lean on
-that arm, and gaze into those star-lit eyes; to feel that some one
-human being on earth cared for me, was true to me, would not desert
-me or disdain my love. Oh, how I wished for that faithful heart. And
-then to think I had found it, but under such circumstances that it was
-guilt itself to think of it! Had I not better determine never to see
-him again, to deny myself the siren-like attraction which was drawing
-me I know not where? Ought I not to think of my husband, to mourn
-his loss, regret his destiny? Yet he had himself bade me forget him,
-abandon all allegiance to him, be happy without him. What was
-to become of me? whither should I turn for consolation? Monsieur
-Belmont had gone to Paris, to direct the opera there; Madame Bonni
-had left the city; sweet Blanche was dead, and Inez far away. Oppressed
-with these thoughts, I sank into a reverie, when my child
-stirred, and turning, I took him in my arms.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_192"></a>[192]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII.</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In my loneliness I reminded me of the words of the superior of the
-convent of Sacre Cœur, and resolved to visit her. The same nun
-admitted me, and I again found myself in the little convent parlor.</p>
-
-<p>Presently I heard the rustling silk dress, and the superior stood
-before me. Her features bore the same calm expression of severity;
-her manner the same impressive solemnity. She immediately recognised
-me, and pressing my hand, almost cordially said,</p>
-
-<p>“Well, daughter, I see you again; you have remembered me; and
-how fares the world with thee? has not its hollow-heartednesss already
-tired you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I feel tired of it sometimes, mother, and remembering the invitation
-to visit you, which you gave me two years age, I have come.”</p>
-
-<p>“You have done rightly, daughter: I am glad to see you. I think
-you told me you were a catholic; I hope you still remain faithful to
-our blessed faith?”</p>
-
-<p>“It has often been a consolation to me in much trouble.”</p>
-
-<p>I was about to enter into more general conversation, when other
-visitors came, and I took leave, the Superior cordially bidding me
-adieu, and inviting me to come to mass in the chapelle of the Sisters.</p>
-
-<p>Thinking upon the solitude of a convent life—the austerity of such
-an existence—I sought my room, where I found the count playing
-with Raphael’s baby-rattle to amuse him. He came toward me, as if
-doubtful of his reception after the incident of our last meeting; but
-forgetting the slight peak I then felt—thinking only of the happiness
-of seeing him—I smiled and extended my hand.</p>
-
-<p>“You see I have been endeavoring to amuse little Raphael during
-your absence.”</p>
-
-<p>“For which I am very much obliged;” and not knowing what to
-say—for his presence, of late, always embarrassed me—I sat down on
-the sofa, and as the infant began to cry, told Pasiphae to take it away,
-which she did, and we were left alone, I turned, momentarily, to
-look from the window on the busy street: an audible sigh fell on my
-ear, when I turned round, the count was at my feet.</p>
-
-<p>“Genevra! Let me call you by that name,” said he. “Why should
-I seek to conceal a passion which I know you must have already discovered?
-why should I hesitate to declare that, of all the women I<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_193"></a>[193]</span>
-have ever seen in all the lands I have ever been, I single you out as
-the fairest, the noblest of all; that when I first saw you in the opera, I
-was struck with your beauty, and afterwards in that lonely castle,
-where you led so isolated a life, a personal acquaintance did not dispel
-that illusion. Now, when I see you struggling against the adverse
-tide of life—forsaken by your husband,—surrounded by envy, with no
-happiness save the society of your child,—why will you not let me
-consecrate to your pleasure a soul which would be only too happy to
-dedicate itself to you? Why will you evade my sympathy? Why not
-let me be the sharer of those sorrows which you try to conceal?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, count!” I cried, bursting into tears, as he held my hands;
-“you must not talk thus to me; remember I am a married woman;
-respect my situation. Whatever may be my sentiments toward you,
-I must smother them, and you, for my sake, must do the same.”</p>
-
-<p>“I? No, never can I do that! your sweet image is too deeply impressed
-upon my heart: there shall it remain a sacred solace to me.
-Oh! why did we not meet before your marriage, when you first made
-your appearance here? why do we only understand each other when
-it is too late?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; ask the question of fate: in vain have I demanded it. Why
-do I continually long for a shade which eludes my grasp? Why does
-solitude ever haunt my footsteps?”</p>
-
-<p>“But I offer you society, happiness; everything on earth that I can
-command shall be yours. Has not your husband deserted you? what
-faith do you owe to him? If you returned my love; if you would
-honor me by your confidence, imagine, my Genevra, what days of
-happiness might be in store for us.”</p>
-
-<p>“Count!” I exclaimed, clasping both hands before my eyes, “forbear:
-I pray you forbear. I do like you, I acknowledge it; but this
-must be our last meeting. This must be the first, last, only expression
-of my feelings; and I feel I am doing wrong even in saying this. Consider,
-what happiness could I feel in doing anything that could reflect
-upon my character, hitherto so unblemished? What joy could I experience
-in a future clouded with shame? How differently should I
-regard you from that calm-abiding sentiment of security with which a
-wife regards her husband? What a tempest of emotions would succeed
-the happy quiet I have always enjoyed! And can you wish me
-to change even the uncertain life I now lead for such a scene? Depend
-upon it, dear count, we are better as we are. The feelings we
-now entertain for each other are pure; do not let us dim them by
-guilt.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_194"></a>[194]</span></p>
-
-<p>“You love me then?” he whispered, still holding my hands; “you
-acknowledge it; say it again;—if we are to be hereafter separated,
-let me at least be sure of that,—say so, Genevra.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, oh, why do you still tempt me? if you know I like you, you
-know it without my telling you: words are easily spoken: they might
-deceive you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not words from your mouth, my Genevra. I distrust the world
-generally, but I know in whom to confide; and who could distrust
-you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! if you only knew how miserable I feel, you would pity me,”
-I passionately exclaimed, comprehending the necessity of our separation,
-yet feeling wretched at that thought. “Let us talk of something
-else; let us try and remain friends only.”</p>
-
-<p>“Friends!” said he, vehemently, starting from his knees, dropping
-my hands, and rapidly walking the room. “My feelings could never
-answer to so cold a title, nor could yours if they are what I wish them
-to be. No, dear lady, we can never again be merely <i>friends</i>,” and
-he emphasized the word scornfully. He walked on for some minutes,
-then suddenly pausing before me, looked long at my face.</p>
-
-<p>“How beautiful, how truthful you are! how misplaced is your present
-position!” then, as if animated by a frenzy of feeling, he again
-caught my hands, and drawing me to the open window, said:—“Genevra,
-look there; look at that beautiful scene! see how the sun
-gilds the lofty domes; the tall trees, the gardens, the flowers! see how
-he warms whatever he looks upon, and his light might also warm two
-loving hearts, if my prayer was heard. Fly, Genevra, fly with me,” and
-he moved, drawing my hand toward the door; but I, though penetrated
-by a profound emotion, remained immovable, and suppressing
-all external indications of it, quietly drew him back to the casement,
-and pointing to the clear blue sky, now near twilight, said to him:</p>
-
-<p>“You spoke to me allegorically: I will answer you the same. As
-you said to me at Baie, when we together stood upon the shore, watching
-the little schooner struggling for anchorage, which it at last secured,
-and you predicted that thus would it be with me; so do I say to you
-now,—behold that heavy white cloud, obscuring the light of the sky;
-see it gradually moves away, and the light shines clear again: so
-will destiny alter for us; wait and hope;—everything is comprised in
-these words.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, Genevra, I have no hope now: this is not an occasion on
-which hope is permitted me. If this is our last meeting (and your
-refusal has signified it), give me one of those fair curls, that when I<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_195"></a>[195]</span>
-look upon it, I may recall the lovely head on which it grew: yes, give
-me one of them, and let me paint your beautiful eyes, your lips, your
-cheeks, your whole face, your whole figure, on my heart; but memory
-has been the artist: who could paint as well as she?”</p>
-
-<p>A pair of tapestry scissors lay upon the table; he took them up, and
-tremblingly severed one of my curls. It was soft and silky, and at
-least half a yard long. He smoothed the glossy tress, then laid it in
-his bosom, and turned from me as if to go. I saw nothing, felt nothing,
-but that he was going away.</p>
-
-<p>“Stay! stay! you are not going from me thus indifferently; not
-thus forever?”</p>
-
-<p>“Have you not said so? have you not bade me go? am I not
-obeying you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, you are obeying me. I meant what I said: but stay yet
-awhile; I have something to say. I——,” overpowered by my own
-sadness, my head sank upon his shoulder, and with my hands pressed
-to my eyes, the tears forced their way through them. Suddenly he
-encircled me with his arms, and bowing that proud yet noble head
-on mine, smoothed the ringlets from my brow.</p>
-
-<p>“My beautiful Genevra—you will let me call you mine, will you
-not?” I bowed acquiescence;—I could not speak. “Since you
-refuse my love, decline my visits, I shall write you: you will not refuse
-me that pleasure, will you?”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” I stammered.</p>
-
-<p>“To-morrow then, a letter shall explain. Farewell, now,—farewell,
-beautiful one.”</p>
-
-<p>He went toward the door. I stood motionless. As he turned half
-round before opening the door, I involuntarily stepped toward him.
-He extended his arms,—I rushed into them, and clung convulsively
-to him, as a drowning man catches at a straw.</p>
-
-<p>“My God! how hard it is,” he ejaculated, as he tore himself away,
-and the echo of his footsteps died away on my ear. I still grasped
-at air, as if seeking him, and it was some moments before I could
-convince myself that he was really gone. Then I went to the windows,
-pushed back the curtains, admitted air and light, and sought
-to cool my burning forehead,—to recall my scattered thoughts,—but
-neither air nor light brought me relief. Objects were dim; nothing
-appeared as it had in the morning. The sound of voices and carts in
-the streets below sounded strange and unnatural. One only thought
-haunted me, dwelt in my mind, lingered in my ears,—he was gone—I
-had sent him away. I knew I had acted honorably, uprightly; that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_196"></a>[196]</span>
-I had shown myself to be virtuous and high principled; but I was
-miserable,—utterly wretched. I recalled his winning ways, his lofty
-mind, his handsome person: I imagined my destiny united to his,—imagined
-myself his wife:—I could be his on no other terms. Then
-I revelled in ideal happiness,—then no invidious fate stood between
-us, but I stood lawfully by his side;—then I was happy.</p>
-
-<p>Thus pre-occupied, agitated and desponding, I sat till dusk had
-thrown a veil over the fair city. I did not notice, but dreamed on,
-and was only aroused from my meditations by the entrance of Pasiphae
-with lights.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The next morning, more dead than alive, I went to rehearsal.
-The performance was tedious—the theatre cold. I hurried through,
-glad to escape from the tiresome scene, and returned home, where
-Pasiphae handed me a letter. In haste and confusion I opened it. It
-was from the count:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“You have told me I cannot be to you what I wish to be. You
-have bade me be your friend, and as I cannot be that with safety
-either to you or myself, we must see each other no more; at least not
-now, as you say; but to me the prospect of a future lawful re-union
-is very dim and remote. But you have not denied me the honor and
-pleasure of writing you, and that shall be a slight link of friendship
-between us when I am far away,—for I intend leaving, a few days
-hence, for Epirus, having to-day resigned my commission as chamberlain
-to his majesty,—and I shall treasure the precious replies you send
-me as mementos breathing your own pure spirit.</p>
-
-<p>“I shall resume my lonely wanderings in the Levant, where two
-years ago, I spent many happy hours in silent contemplation. To
-those scenes I shall transport your fairy form, and in your imaginary
-society, the ruined grandeur of Athens,—the stately remains of Agrigentum,—the
-classic shores of Troy,—will acquire new beauties for
-me from association. Would that you were with me,—that your
-dreamy, philosophic mind, might conjure up visions of past magnificence,
-and revel in the recollections of what it was, contrasted
-with what it is.</p>
-
-<p>“But why do I wander into dreams again? Suffice it to say, that
-I must go while yet I have the will to do so, and in bidding <i>you</i> farewell,
-I feel as if bidding adieu to life. But most generally in life so
-it is. No sooner have you found a sympathetic mind,—one in whose
-society existence would wing itself away only too delightfully,—than<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_197"></a>[197]</span>
-some fatal accident tears her away, as if Providence envied human
-felicity, so rarely is it found on earth. I know, however, that that
-angelic virtue which has so nobly sustained you thus far, will continue
-to do so to the end; and that it will, of itself, be a great reward.
-And that heaven may shower upon your pathway roses, the brightest,
-the most beautiful, is the fervent prayer of your own</p>
-
-<p class="right">“<span class="smcap">Alfieri Calabrella</span>.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Below his signature, was written in small characters,—“I shall write
-you next from Epirus, and expect an answer there.”</p>
-
-<p>I read it again and again,—I kissed the words and examined the
-handwriting,—then I folded it, and carefully laid it away in an album.
-Within a week, then, he would be away on his journey to Epirus.
-Far away from me: I should only hear from him through the indifferent
-communication of letters; and how unhappy I should feel when
-I actually saw him depart. But I felt in my own heart that I had
-acted rightly, and the consciousness of moral rectitude upheld me.</p>
-
-<p>That night I played the part of Norma to a crowded house. Again
-the lips and eyes of royalty applauded me. Never did I look better:
-the excitement of my mind had sent the hot blood to my cheeks, and
-my long auburn hair, falling to my waist in spiral ringlets, relieved
-my face. An unwonted inspiration came over me that night, and my
-voice was unusually clear; the house was in an uproar of delight, but
-neither elated by my triumph, nor caring for the admiration I elicited,
-I was about leaving the stage, when the silk curtains of the lower stage
-box were drawn aside, and the beautiful, but pale and sad face of
-the count presented itself to my view. So sudden was the encounter
-of our eyes, so strange this unexpressed adieu, that I scarcely had
-recollection enough to leave the stage.</p>
-
-<p>Determined to avoid the crowd which always awaited me in the
-green-room, I requested the manager to hand me to my calesso, which
-he did, and I drove to my hotel.</p>
-
-<p>It was one o’clock. Pasiphae sat in the bedroom near an open
-window,—Raphael lay on his bed in a sweet slumber. I thought I
-saw something glitter on my dressing table: going towards it, I perceived
-a small Tripoli chain, with a tiny gold heart attached to it, and
-a slip of paper pinned to it, with these words written upon it:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Let the child wear this in remembrance of me.</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Calabrella.</span>”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>I asked Pasiphae who had brought it. She said an African servant
-had left it an half hour before. It was a delicate parting gift to my
-child, and a souvenir for me: but no, I was mistaken—so slight a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_198"></a>[198]</span>
-present was not intended indirectly for me. Three days after a small
-package was handed me. I opened it, and beheld an exquisite miniature
-of the count, set in brilliants. The beautiful black eyes seemed
-to smile on me with their languid fervor; the clear white complexion,
-the long nose, slightly aquiline, and waving black hair, were all detailed
-naturally; the blending and commingling of expression, which
-gave an air of haughtiness and benevolence to his countenance, was
-all there.</p>
-
-<p>That was his parting gift: that day he left Naples.</p>
-
-<p>If I had been unhappy in the struggle between love and duty, how
-much more so was I not when left utterly alone in that great city;
-when I looked forward and saw nothing, when I looked back on
-strange scenes, and at the present which was so unsatisfactory.</p>
-
-<p>I renewed my engagement, and continued to sing; from my unprotected
-position, I was necessarily exposed to covert attacks of the most
-dishonorable character; and one such I received from a Baron Reichstadt,
-in the shape of an impertinent note, which I answered as it
-deserved, and dismissed him. One or two other innuendos I met
-with, and although I bore them all with an outward calm of stoicism;
-yet within I felt the bitter humiliation of a proud woman, that such
-indignities should be put upon me.</p>
-
-<p>The stagnant calm of a monotonous routine, requires little detail;
-to rise early, attend to my child, then go to rehearsal as often as a new
-opera was to be performed; practise my favorite songs, then walk on
-the Toledo, and dine at six, completed my daily existence. I received
-a glowing letter from the count, dated Epirus, in which he thrillingly
-described the country, dwelt upon its associations, its desolate, ruined
-condition now; then delicately bringing the subject back to reality,
-spoke of himself, of me. I will not insert it here, nor the many others
-he sent me equally beautiful; my story is drawing to a close, my
-kind friend, and I am convinced its length must have already tired
-you.</p>
-
-<p>He continued his travels in the Levant and through the East, while I
-went to Florence, to fulfil an engagement there. The charming society
-of that fair town; the fine scenery of the city itself, and the air of repose
-so different to the busy activity of Naples, combined to cheer and calm
-me. There I remained a month, and when I left, it was with feelings
-of regret. I carried away with me (they said) the hearts and imaginations
-of all; but if I did so, it was unconsciously, for never had I
-exerted myself less.</p>
-
-<p>Genoa next claimed my attention, and it was three months ere I<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_199"></a>[199]</span>
-saw Naples again. The laurels I won seemed to me to adorn the head
-of a corpse, so listlessly did I regard my fame.</p>
-
-<p>Visions of my husband and the count haunted my dreams, and I
-always saw them under strange circumstances, in strange places, when
-I would seem to be trying to reach either one or the other, but could
-not get near them, some obstacle always interposed,—then in my despair,
-I would feel as I felt at parting with the count. From these
-tumultuous dreams I awoke in terror, thankful they were mere dreams;
-and my perceptions being rendered more acute by these nocturnal
-visitations, I would renew my anxious searches for my husband, and
-send new agents to endeavor to discover him; but in vain, I heard
-nothing more of him.</p>
-
-<p>Six months elapsed in the same quiet way, when one day, as I was
-walking up and down my parlor, leading Raphael by the hand, a servant
-announced that an old man wished to see me.</p>
-
-<p>“Show him in,” said I, and he presently returned, ushering in a
-tall man, attired in sailor’s clothes. He came towards me, holding his
-tarpaulin-hat in his hand, and apparently confused at my presence.</p>
-
-<p>“Is this the lady?” asked he, bashfully.</p>
-
-<p>“I am Madame de Serval, do you wish to see me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, lady, I have a letter for you from Pondicherry.”</p>
-
-<p>“From Pondicherry,—who can it be from?—I know no one there.
-Give it me.”</p>
-
-<p>I extended my hand, and the sailor placed in it a letter, coarsely
-folded and sealed. I hastily tore it open, and read the following:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“A gentleman giving his name as Monsieur de Serval, committed
-suicide in my house six days ago, by blowing his brains out with a
-pocket pistol. Having by accident seen a Neapolitan paper, containing
-a description of a Madame de Serval, a great singer, I address this
-letter to the lady in question, thinking, from the names, that there may
-be some relationship between the dead gentleman and the lady. If
-there is, I beg she will answer this, and tell me what is to be done
-with his effects, which consist of several large chests, heavily locked
-with padlocks, and four trunks, together with a toilette case of rare
-value, the interior being set with gold, and the utensils of the same
-metal, adorned with precious stones.</p>
-
-<p>“The gentleman was buried in the English burying ground, and a
-small sum of money in his purse paid for the interment.</p>
-
-<p class="right">“<span class="smcap">Jerome Tobia.</span></p>
-
-<p>“<i>Pondicherry, January 10th.</i>”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_200"></a>[200]</span></p>
-
-<p>When I had read this fatal letter, I endeavored to look around for
-the man who had brought it, but I could not see him: the room darkened,
-and, with a wild shriek, I fell into Pasiphae’s arms, and lost
-all recollection.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>I must carry you onward another year. When I had sufficiently
-recovered from the shock of this unexpected news, I sent to Pondicherry,
-and had the remains of my unfortunate husband brought to
-Naples. I thought I should have gone mad when I saw the body:
-and with bitter sadness did I consign it to mother earth. A marble
-tombstone was placed over him in the cemetery of the convent of
-Sacre Cœur. Of his adventures, or the cause of his going to Pondicherry,
-I never knew. All I learned was, that he came there,
-boarded at the house of the man who had written me, and was gentlemanly
-and reserved. They knew nothing of him. He told no one
-any thing concerning himself. He had been there some weeks at the
-period of his self-destruction; and it was merely from accident that
-the landlord had supposed, that perhaps there might be a relationship
-between two persons of the same name. Thus, through the merest
-chance, after six months of anxiety and sadness, did I once more, and
-for the last time, look upon my Rinaldo’s face.</p>
-
-<p>There is a feeling between husband and wife—that is to say,
-between husbands and wives of any sensibility, who have ever loved—there
-is, I say, a feeling of affection, which will sooner or later return,
-however alienated the parties may have become. As I stood over
-that lifeless form, and thought of his erratic career, and wayward,
-uncertain character; of his love for me, and subsequent desertion;
-his entering into a conspiracy against the government; then carried
-as prisoner of state to Naples; his escape and after-wanderings—all
-rushed through my mind. Why had he acted thus? Why had he
-not been honest, upright? Why? Of whom could I ask that question?
-The earth falling on the coffin was my only reply.</p>
-
-<p>Let me pass over those times.</p>
-
-<p>It was in the dawn of spring, I occupied a small Gothic cottage
-about a mile from Naples. Two domestics and my child—now a lisping,
-rosy boy—together with Pasiphae, were its sole tenants. The
-grounds of this sylvan abode were beautifully laid out, and the fairest
-flowers planted there. There, too, a marble fountain threw high in
-air its airy spray—cooling the air and adorning the garden by its
-beauty.</p>
-
-<p>Several rustic arbors, formed of the pliable bamboo, and shaped in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_201"></a>[201]</span>
-Gothic turrets, were placed at intervals along the gravel walks, which,
-meeting in one broad attic before the porch ended there; the birds
-sang their sweetest songs in the day time; and, at night, the spiritual
-warbling of the nightingale was the inspirer of the hour.</p>
-
-<p>Here, one sunny afternoon, I sat under the shade of a tree, watching
-Raphael, and Zoe, his pet dog, running races. The frolicksome
-glee of the child, the graceful antics of the dog, as he sometimes ran
-after his baby master,—sometimes solicited pursuit in return,—amused
-and diverted me. As the child grew older I could trace his father’s
-lineaments in his young features: and the thoughts which were recalled
-by that resemblance only rendered me sadder than I was. I
-was reading Petrarch’s sonnets, a volume of which had been presented
-me by my husband during the first months of my marriage: their gloomy
-descriptions of love and beauty entranced my soul; and, absorbed, I
-read on, forgetful even of the playful cries of Raphael, when I saw
-Pasiphae coming towards me, her face lighted with more than usual
-animation: and with a gleeful voice she told me a man desired to see
-me in the salon.</p>
-
-<p>“Ask him to send me word what he wants, Pasiphae. I do not
-wish to see any one this morning. Why did you not deny me yourself?
-you know I do not want to talk,” was my reply; for I was indisposed
-to see visitors, or answer business engagements.</p>
-
-<p>“Do come, my lady; do come,” said Pasiphae, urgently, and
-joyfully; “indeed you won’t regret it; the person has something
-particular to say.”</p>
-
-<p>Thus urged, and wondering what it could be, I rose, leaving my
-book on the seat, and taking Raphael by the hand, followed by the
-dog, went into the house. The rooms were all on the ground floor;
-a broad hall ran through the house, and opening off it were four rooms;
-two were fitted up as salons, the other two constituted my bed-room
-and dining-room. They were furnished alike with red velvet drapery,
-Turkey carpets, and mirrors. Pasiphae regularly each day placed
-fresh flowers in the Chinese vases on the marble consoles, and their
-delightful perfume scented the rooms with oriental fragrance.</p>
-
-<p>I entered the room holding Raphael by the hand, and coming from
-the clear light of the garden into the crimson light of the salon, I
-could scarcely discern objects.</p>
-
-<p>A tall figure stood with its back towards me, facing the window.
-As I stepped forward on the carpet, it turned, and I beheld Count
-Calabrella. Animated with a supernatural joy, I sprang toward
-him.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_202"></a>[202]</span></p>
-
-<p>“It is you!” I cried; “oh, is it you? You have come! you have
-come!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, beloved one,” answered he, as he clasped me in his arms.
-“At last we are united: now the unstable dreams which have buoyed
-me up through this long separation, and my lonely wanderings are
-realized; now we meet, not to feel again the same sorrow we mutually
-experienced at our last parting.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, let me die now!” I answered, as I laid my head on his
-breast, “for now I am happy, and life cannot have many repetitions
-of such emotions for me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Instead of dying, let us picture long years of happiness, and be
-determined they should be verified,” replied my Alfieri, laughingly.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Naples once again saw me as a bride; not as at the first, blooming
-with health and joy, my mind in an ecstatic rhapsody of romance, but
-a woman chastened by experience, that best of monitors. Subdued, but
-not downcast, was my mien the morning of my bridal: the sobered
-happiness of my husband’s face was mirrored in mine, and surely I
-could not have had a more beautiful mirror.</p>
-
-<p>And in that marriage I was supremely happy; my life glided like
-a fairy dream away. The elegance of mind and manner which captivated
-at first, did not prove, on mature acquaintance, a fictitious dress, worn
-merely for ornament. Judgment, tempered by feeling, guided him,
-and in obeying such a guide, how could he fail to act rightly? The
-calm good sense, the nobility of soul, and sweet disposition of Alfieri,
-day by day, more completely gained my love and esteem.</p>
-
-<p>Before leaving Naples, on a journey we took, soon after our marriage,
-to the north of Italy, I chanced to meet in the suburbs of the town—while
-walking with my husband—old Acte, the sybil of the rock. She
-stopped my way, and looking at me with her piercing eyes, said,
-“Well, fair lady, we meet again: I knew we should; and the other,
-where is she? You need not tell me: I know already;—she is dead.
-She lies on the shore, where the winds howl and the waters beat.
-Say, lady, say, have not my words proved true?” demanded she, in
-her shrill tones.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, good woman, you were right,” was my hasty reply, as I and
-my husband hurried away, anxious to avoid any farther conversation
-with the weird-woman.</p>
-
-<p>Soon after we took our departure on a tour through the north of
-Europe. Those magnificent cities, beautiful scenery, and the different
-nations we visited, acquired new interest in my eyes, when viewed in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_203"></a>[203]</span>
-such society. Then, after we had satiated our eyes and ears with the
-wonders of other lands, we came finally to the Eternal City, where I
-have had the pleasure of forming your acquaintance; and I number it
-as one of the most agreeable episodes of my life: so, also, does my
-husband.</p>
-
-<p>My tale is done. You have asked it of me, and knowing your
-integrity, I feel no hesitancy in complying with the request. The hours
-I have passed in your studio have been among the pleasantest I have
-spent in Rome.</p>
-
-<p>Should the count and myself never have the pleasure of seeing
-you again, at least the copy of my portrait and this diary will
-seem to be an invisible link to the chain of thoughts between us
-three.</p>
-
-<p>Adieu, dear Signor Carrara: we shall leave to-morrow, and have
-completed this in haste to leave with you.</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Genevra Calabrella</span>.</p>
-
-<p><i>Rome</i>, <i>April</i> 6th, ——</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The latter part of this diary was very old, yellow, and much torn,
-from apparently repeated readings: I had some difficulty in decyphering
-it. Its perusal had deeply interested me, so I folded it up, and
-rose upon my feet. I saw my little time-piece indicated the hour of one,
-and a moment after there came a violent knocking at the door, and
-then Morton’s stentorian voice was fully audible.</p>
-
-<p>“Clarence, I say Clarence, are you within? if you are, for God’s
-sake answer; there’s some infernal thing in my room which has kept
-me from sleeping for the last hour. I don’t know what it is, and I
-can’t find out, for my light’s gone out; come here and bring a candle
-for pity’s sake.”</p>
-
-<p>I seized my expiring candle and rushed into his apartment, where
-stood in the middle of the floor my friend, apparently in a state of
-great bewilderment; the chairs were thrown about in confusion, and
-clothes were lying here and there; the curtains of the bed half pulled
-down.</p>
-
-<p>“What is it, Morton? what’s the matter?” I cried, bringing the
-luminary to bear upon the chaos.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter? why that’s just what I want to know myself;
-for the last hour I have heard nothing but chairs upset, the hangings
-scratched at, and my own hair and face most delightfully scratched.
-When I stretched out my hands, seeking to discover the cause of the
-mischief, I grasped empty air; I could see nothing, all was darkness:<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_204"></a>[204]</span>
-and thus have I been bored; now take your candle and try and find
-out what it is.”</p>
-
-<p>I began a tour of the apartment, but saw nothing, except luggage
-piled on luggage, dressing cases, brushes, combs, &amp;c., &amp;c.; when
-going around the bed, I heard a sardonic laugh, and looking up, saw
-perched on the tester, a monkey; the property of a fellow boarder,
-who, by some means, had contrived to secrete himself in my friend’s
-room, and consequently annoy him by his tricks. Taking the mischievous
-animal by his fore legs I put him out the room, much to
-Morton’s relief, who exclaimed,</p>
-
-<p>“Is that the thing? well, it has been troubling me enough, the
-plague; I thought satan himself was here. Thank you, Clarence, my
-dear fellow; what time is it?”</p>
-
-<p>I told him, then went to bed.</p>
-
-<p>The next day I waited on Signor Ferra, the attorney; he lived in a
-dark, dirty street, in an old tumble-down house. Upon opening Carrara’s
-will, I found, to my utter amazement, that with the exception
-of the house in which he lived, and the gallery of paintings, he had
-made me heir to his considerable property in Rome and the environs,
-together with the beautiful portrait of Genevra. My kindness to the
-solitary old artist, had not been ill repaid; so impossible it is for us in
-this strange existence, to foresee the result of even the slightest action;
-and, which only more fully demonstrated to me the propriety of
-always being polite.</p>
-
-<p>A few days after, Morton and myself left Rome for Athens.</p>
-
-<p class="titlepage">THE END.</p>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK GENEVRA; OR, THE HISTORY OF A PORTRAIT, ***</div>
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