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      The Pilgrims of the Rhine, by Edward Bulwer Lytton
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Project Gutenberg's The Pilgrims Of The Rhine, by Edward Bulwer-Lytton

This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere 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


Title: The Pilgrims Of The Rhine

Author: Edward Bulwer-Lytton

Release Date: March 17, 2009 [EBook #8206]
Last Updated: August 28, 2016

Language: English

Character set encoding: UTF-8

*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE PILGRIMS OF THE RHINE ***




Produced by David Widger and Dagny





</pre>

    <p>
      <br /><br />
    </p>
    <h1>
      THE PILGRIMS OF THE RHINE
    </h1>
    <h2>
      TO WHICH IS PREFIXED <br /><br />THE IDEAL WORLD
    </h2>
    <p>
      <br /><br />
    </p>
    <h2>
      By Edward Bulwer Lytton (Lord Lytton)
    </h2>
    <p>
      <br /> <br />
    </p>
    <hr />
    <p>
      <br /> <br />
    </p>
    <blockquote>
      <p class="toc">
        <big><b>CONTENTS</b></big>
      </p>
      <p>
        <br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0002"> ADVERTISEMENT TO THE FIRST EDITION. </a><br /><br />
        <a href="#link2H_PREF"> PREFACE. </a><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0004">
        <b>THE IDEAL WORLD</b> </a><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0005"> <b>THE
        PILGRIMS OF THE RHINE</b> </a><br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0001">
        CHAPTER I. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;IN WHICH THE READER IS INTRODUCED TO QUEEN
        NYMPHALIN <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
        LOVERS <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;FEELINGS
        <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE MAID
        OF MALINES <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;ROTTERDAM.&mdash;THE
        CHARACTER OF THE DUTCH <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI.
        </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;GORCUM.&mdash;THE TOUR OF THE VIRTUES: A PHILOSOPHER&rsquo;S
        TALE <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;COLOGNE.&mdash;THE
        TRACES OF THE ROMAN YOKE <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER
        VIII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE SOUL IN PURGATORY; OR LOVE STRONGER THAN DEATH
        <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
        SCENERY OF THE RHINE ANALOGOUS TO THE GERMAN LITERARY <br /><br /> <a
        href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE LEGEND OF ROLAND.&mdash;THE
        ADVENTURES OF NYMPHALIN <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI.
        </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;WHEREIN THE READER IS MADE SPECTATOR WITH THE ENGLISH
        <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
        WOOING OF MASTER FOX <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII.
        </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE TOMB OF A FATHER OF MANY CHILDREN <br /><br /> <a
        href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER XIV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE FAIRY&rsquo;S CAVE, AND
        THE FAIRY&rsquo;S WISH <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER XV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
        BANKS OF THE RHINE.&mdash;FROM THE DRACHENFELS TO BROHL <br /><br /> <a
        href="#link2HCH0016"> CHAPTER XVI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;GERTRUDE.&mdash;THE
        EXCURSION TO HAMMERSTEIN <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0017"> CHAPTER
        XVII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;LETTER FROM TREVYLYAN <br /><br /> <a
        href="#link2HCH0018"> CHAPTER XVIII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;COBLENTZ.&mdash;EXCURSION
        TO THE MOUNTAINS OF TAUNUS <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0019"> CHAPTER
        XIX. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE FALLEN STAR; OR THE HISTORY OF A FALSE RELIGION
        <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0020"> CHAPTER XX. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;GLENHAUSEN.&mdash;THE
        POWER OF LOVE IN SANCTIFIED PLACES <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0021">
        CHAPTER XXI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;VIEW OF EHRENBREITSTEIN.&mdash;A NEW ALARM
        <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0022"> CHAPTER XXII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
        DOUBLE LIFE.&mdash;TREVYLYAN&rsquo;S FATE <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0023">
        CHAPTER XXIII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE LIFE OF DREAMS <br /><br /> <a
        href="#link2HCH0024"> CHAPTER XXIV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE BROTHERS <br /><br />
        <a href="#link2HCH0025"> CHAPTER XXV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE IMMORTALITY OF
        THE SOUL.&mdash;A COMMON INCIDENT <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0026">
        CHAPTER XXVI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;IN WHICH THE READER WILL LEARN HOW THE
        FAIRIES <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0027"> CHAPTER XXVII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THURMBERG.&mdash;A
        STORM UPON THE RHINE <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0028"> CHAPTER XXVIII.
        </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE VOYAGE TO BINGEN.&mdash;THE SIMPLE INCIDENTS <br /><br />
        <a href="#link2HCH0029"> CHAPTER XXIX. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;ELLFELD.&mdash;MAYENCE.&mdash;HEIDELBERG.&mdash;A
        CONVERSATION BETWEEN <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0030"> CHAPTER XXX.
        </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;NO PART OF THE EARTH REALLY SOLITARY.&mdash;THE SONG
        <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0031"> CHAPTER XXXI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;GERTRUDE
        AND TREVYLYAN, WHEN THE FORMER IS AWAKENED <br /><br /> <a
        href="#link2HCH0032"> CHAPTER XXXII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;A SPOT TO BE BURIED
        IN <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0033"> CHAPTER THE LAST. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
        CONCLUSION OF THIS TALE <br /><br />
      </p>
    </blockquote>
    <p>
      <br /> <br />
    </p>
    <hr />
    <p>
      <br /> <br /> TO HENRY LYTTON BULWER.
    </p>
    <p>
      ALLOW me, my dear Brother, to dedicate this Work to you. The greater part
      of it (namely, the tales which vary and relieve the voyages of Gertrude
      and Trevylyan) was written in the pleasant excursion we made together some
      years ago. Among the associations&mdash;some sad and some pleasing&mdash;connected
      with the general design, none are so agreeable to me as those that remind
      me of the friendship subsisting between us, and which, unlike that of near
      relations in general, has grown stronger and more intimate as our
      footsteps have receded farther from the fields where we played together in
      our childhood. I dedicate this Work to you with the more pleasure, not
      only when I remember that it has always been a favourite with yourself,
      but when I think that it is one of my writings most liked in foreign
      countries; and I may possibly, therefore, have found a record destined to
      endure the affectionate esteem which this Dedication is intended to
      convey.
    </p>
    <p>
      Yours, etc.
    </p>
    <p>
      E. L. B. LONDON, April 23, 1840.
    </p>
    <p>
      <br /> <br />
    </p>
    <hr />
    <p>
      <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002">
      <!--  H2 anchor --> </a>
    </p>
    <div style="height: 4em;">
      <br /><br /><br /><br />
    </div>
    <h2>
      ADVERTISEMENT TO THE FIRST EDITION.
    </h2>
    <p>
      COULD I prescribe to the critic and to the public, I would wish that this
      work might be tried by the rules rather of poetry than prose, for
      according to those rules have been both its conception and its execution;
      and I feel that something of sympathy with the author&rsquo;s design is
      requisite to win indulgence for the superstitions he has incorporated with
      his tale, for the floridity of his style, and the redundance of his
      descriptions. Perhaps, indeed, it would be impossible, in attempting to
      paint the scenery and embody some of the Legends of the Rhine, not to give
      (it may be, too loosely) the reins to the imagination, or to escape the
      influence of that wild German spirit which I have sought to transfer to a
      colder tongue.
    </p>
    <p>
      I have made the experiment of selecting for the main interest of my work
      the simplest materials, and weaving upon them the ornaments given chiefly
      to subjects of a more fanciful nature. I know not how far I have
      succeeded, but various reasons have conspired to make this the work, above
      all others that I have written, which has given me the most delight
      (though not unmixed with melancholy) in producing, and in which my mind
      for the time has been the most completely absorbed. But the ardour of
      composition is often disproportioned to the merit of the work; and the
      public sometimes, nor unjustly, avenges itself for that forgetfulness of
      its existence which makes the chief charm of an author&rsquo;s solitude,&mdash;and
      the happiest, if not the wisest, inspiration of his dreams.
    </p>
    <p>
      <br /> <br />
    </p>
    <hr />
    <p>
      <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_PREF" id="link2H_PREF">
      <!--  H2 anchor --> </a>
    </p>
    <div style="height: 4em;">
      <br /><br /><br /><br />
    </div>
    <h2>
      PREFACE.
    </h2>
    <p>
      WITH the younger class of my readers this work has had the good fortune to
      find especial favour; perhaps because it is in itself a collection of the
      thoughts and sentiments that constitute the Romance of youth. It has
      little to do with the positive truths of our actual life, and does not
      pretend to deal with the larger passions and more stirring interests of
      our kind. It is but an episode out of the graver epic of human destinies.
      It requires no explanation of its purpose, and no analysis of its story;
      the one is evident, the other simple,&mdash;the first seeks but to
      illustrate visible nature through the poetry of the affections; the other
      is but the narrative of the most real of mortal sorrows, which the Author
      attempts to take out of the region of pain by various accessories from the
      Ideal. The connecting tale itself is but the string that binds into a
      garland the wild-flowers cast upon a grave.
    </p>
    <p>
      The descriptions of the Rhine have been considered by Germans sufficiently
      faithful to render this tribute to their land and their legends one of the
      popular guide-books along the course it illustrates,&mdash;especially to
      such tourists as wish not only to take in with the eye the inventory of
      the river, but to seize the peculiar spirit which invests the wave and the
      bank with a beauty that can only be made visible by reflection. He little
      comprehends the true charm of the Rhine who gazes on the vines on the
      hill-tops without a thought of the imaginary world with which their
      recesses have been peopled by the graceful credulity of old; who surveys
      the steep ruins that overshadow the water, untouched by one lesson from
      the pensive morality of Time. Everywhere around us is the evidence of
      perished opinions and departed races; everywhere around us, also, the
      rejoicing fertility of unconquerable Nature, and the calm progress of Man
      himself through the infinite cycles of decay. He who would judge
      adequately of a landscape must regard it not only with the painter&rsquo;s eye,
      but with the poet&rsquo;s. The feelings which the sight of any scene in Nature
      conveys to the mind&mdash;more especially of any scene on which history or
      fiction has left its trace&mdash;must depend upon our sympathy with those
      associations which make up what may be called the spiritual character of
      the spot. If indifferent to those associations, we should see only
      hedgerows and ploughed land in the battle-field of Bannockburn; and the
      traveller would but look on a dreary waste, whether he stood amidst the
      piles of the Druid on Salisbury plain, or trod his bewildered way over the
      broad expanse on which the Chaldaean first learned to number the stars.
    </p>
    <p>
      To the former editions of this tale was prefixed a poem on &ldquo;The Ideal,&rdquo;
       which had all the worst faults of the author&rsquo;s earliest compositions in
      verse. The present poem (with the exception of a very few lines) has been
      entirely rewritten, and has at least the comparative merit of being less
      vague in the thought, and less unpolished in the diction, than that which
      it replaces.
    </p>
    <p>
      <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004">
      <!--  H2 anchor --> </a>
    </p>
    <div style="height: 4em;">
      <br /><br /><br /><br />
    </div>
    <h2>
      THE IDEAL WORLD
    </h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
  I.

  THE IDEAL WORLD,&mdash;ITS REALM IS EVERYWHERE AROUND US; ITS INHABITANTS ARE
  THE IMMORTAL PERSONIFICATIONS OF ALL BEAUTIFUL THOUGHTS; TO THAT WORLD WE
  ATTAIN BY THE REPOSE OF THE SENSES.

  AROUND &ldquo;this visible diurnal sphere&rdquo;
     There floats a World that girds us like the space;
  On wandering clouds and gliding beams career
    Its ever-moving murmurous Populace.
  There, all the lovelier thoughts conceived below
    Ascending live, and in celestial shapes.
  To that bright World, O Mortal, wouldst thou go?
    Bind but thy senses, and thy soul escapes:
  To care, to sin, to passion close thine eyes;
  Sleep in the flesh, and see the Dreamland rise!
  Hark to the gush of golden waterfalls,
  Or knightly tromps at Archimagian Walls!
  In the green hush of Dorian Valleys mark
    The River Maid her amber tresses knitting;
  When glow-worms twinkle under coverts dark,
    And silver clouds o&rsquo;er summer stars are flitting,
  With jocund elves invade &ldquo;the Moone&rsquo;s sphere,
  Or hang a pearl in every cowslip&rsquo;s ear;&rdquo; *
  Or, list! what time the roseate urns of dawn
    Scatter fresh dews, and the first skylark weaves
  Joy into song, the blithe Arcadian Faun
    Piping to wood-nymphs under Bromian leaves,
  While slowly gleaming through the purple glade
  Come Evian&rsquo;s panther car, and the pale Naxian Maid.

    * &ldquo;Midsummer Night&rsquo;s Dream.&rdquo;
 
  Such, O Ideal World, thy habitants!
    All the fair children of creative creeds,
  All the lost tribes of Fantasy are thine,&mdash;
  From antique Saturn in Dodonian haunts,
    Or Pan&rsquo;s first music waked from shepherd reeds,
  To the last sprite when Heaven&rsquo;s pale lamps decline,
  Heard wailing soft along the solemn Rhine.
</pre>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
  II.

  OUR DREAMS BELONG TO THE IDEAL.&mdash;THE DIVINER LOVE FOR WHICH YOUTH SIGHS
  NOT ATTAINABLE IN LIFE, BUT THE PURSUIT OF THAT LOVE BEYOND THE WORLD OF
  THE SENSES PURIFIES THE SOUL AND AWAKES THE GENIUS.&mdash;PETRARCH.&mdash;DANTE.

  Thine are the Dreams that pass the Ivory Gates,
    With prophet shadows haunting poet eyes!
  Thine the belov&rsquo;d illusions youth creates
    From the dim haze of its own happy skies.
  In vain we pine; we yearn on earth to win
    The being of the heart, our boyhood&rsquo;s dream.
  The Psyche and the Eros ne&rsquo;er have been,
    Save in Olympus, wedded!  As a stream
  Glasses a star, so life the ideal love;
  Restless the stream below, serene the orb above!
  Ever the soul the senses shall deceive;
  Here custom chill, there kinder fate bereave:
  For mortal lips unmeet eternal vows!
  And Eden&rsquo;s flowers for Adam&rsquo;s mournful brows!
  We seek to make the moment&rsquo;s angel guest
    The household dweller at a human hearth;
  We chase the bird of Paradise, whose nest
    Was never found amid the bowers of earth.*

    * According to a belief in the East, which is associated with one
      of the loveliest and most familiar of Oriental superstitions,
      the bird of Paradise is never seen to rest upon the earth, and
      its nest is never to be found.

  Yet loftier joys the vain pursuit may bring,
    Than sate the senses with the boons of time;
  The bird of Heaven hath still an upward wing,
    The steps it lures are still the steps that climb;
  And in the ascent although the soil be bare,
  More clear the daylight and more pure the air.
  Let Petrarch&rsquo;s heart the human mistress lose,
  He mourns the Laura but to win the Muse.
  Could all the charms which Georgian maids combine
  Delight the soul of the dark Florentine,
  Like one chaste dream of childlike Beatrice
  Awaiting Hell&rsquo;s dark pilgrim in the skies,
  Snatched from below to be the guide above,
  And clothe Religion in the form of Love?*

    * It is supposed by many of the commentators on Dante, that in
      the form of his lost Beatrice, who guides him in his Vision
      of Heaven, he allegorizes Religious Faith.
</pre>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
  III.

  GENIUS, LIFTING ITS LIFE TO THE IDEAL, BECOMES ITSELF A PURE IDEA: IT
  MUST COMPREHEND ALL EXISTENCE, ALL HUMAN SINS AND SUFFERINGS; BUT IN
  COMPREHENDING, IT TRANSMUTES THEM.&mdash;THE POET IN HIS TWO-FOLD BEING,&mdash;THE
  ACTUAL AND THE IDEAL.&mdash;THE INFLUENCE OF GENIUS OVER THE STERNEST
  REALITIES OF EARTH; OVER OUR PASSIONS; WARS AND SUPERSTITIONS.&mdash;ITS
  IDENTITY IS WITH HUMAN PROGRESS.&mdash;ITS AGENCY, EVEN WHERE UNACKNOWLEDGED,
  IS UNIVERSAL.

  Oh, thou true Iris! sporting on thy bow
    Of tears and smiles! Jove&rsquo;s herald, Poetry,
  Thou reflex image of all joy and woe,
    <i>Both</i> fused in light by thy dear fantasy!
  Lo! from the clay how Genius lifts its life,
    And grows one pure Idea, one calm soul!
  True, its own clearness must reflect our strife;
    True, its completeness must comprise our whole;
  But as the sun transmutes the sullen hues
    Of marsh-grown vapours into vermeil dyes,
  And melts them later into twilight dews,
    Shedding on flowers the baptism of the skies;
  So glows the Ideal in the air we breathe,
    So from the fumes of sorrow and of sin,
  Doth its warm light in rosy colours wreathe
    Its playful cloudland, storing balms within.

  Survey the Poet in his mortal mould,
    Man, amongst men, descended from his throne!
  The moth that chased the star now frets the fold,
    Our cares, our faults, our follies are his own.
  Passions as idle, and desires as vain,
  Vex the wild heart, and dupe the erring brain.
  From Freedom&rsquo;s field the recreant Horace flies
  To kiss the hand by which his country dies;
  From Mary&rsquo;s grave the mighty Peasant turns,
  And hoarse with orgies rings the laugh of Burns.
  While Rousseau&rsquo;s lips a lackey&rsquo;s vices own,&mdash;
  Lips that could draw the thunder on a throne!
  But when from Life the Actual GENIUS springs,
    When, self-transformed by its own magic rod,
  It snaps the fetters and expands the wings,
    And drops the fleshly garb that veiled the god,
  How the mists vanish as the form ascends!
  How in its aureole every sunbeam blends!
  By the Arch-Brightener of Creation seen,
    How dim the crowns on perishable brows!
  The snows of Atlas melt beneath the sheen,
    Through Thebaid caves the rushing splendour flows.
  Cimmerian glooms with Asian beams are bright,
  And Earth reposes in a belt of light.
  Now stern as Vengeance shines the awful form,
  Armed with the bolt and glowing through the storm;
  Sets the great deeps of human passion free,
  And whelms the bulwarks that would breast the sea.
  Roused by its voice the ghastly Wars arise,
  Mars reddens earth, the Valkyrs pale the skies;
  Dim Superstition from her hell escapes,
  With all her shadowy brood of monster shapes;
  Here life itself the scowl of Typhon* takes;
  There Conscience shudders at Alecto&rsquo;s snakes;
  From Gothic graves at midnight yawning wide,
  In gory cerements gibbering spectres glide;
  And where o&rsquo;er blasted heaths the lightnings flame,
  Black secret hags &ldquo;do deeds without a name!&rdquo;
   Yet through its direst agencies of awe,
  Light marks its presence and pervades its law,
  And, like Orion when the storms are loud,
  It links creation while it gilds a cloud.
  By ruthless Thor, free Thought, frank Honour stand,
  Fame&rsquo;s grand desire, and zeal for Fatherland.
  The grim Religion of Barbarian Fear
  With some Hereafter still connects the Here,
  Lifts the gross sense to some spiritual source,
  And thrones some Jove above the Titan Force,
  Till, love completing what in awe began,
  From the rude savage dawns the thoughtful man.

    * The gloomy Typhon of Egypt assumes many of the mystic attributes
      of the Principle of Life which, in the Grecian Apotheosis of the
      Indian Bacchus, is represented in so genial a character of
      exuberant joy and everlasting youth.

  Then, oh, behold the Glorious comforter!
    Still bright&rsquo;ning worlds but gladd&rsquo;ning now the hearth,
  Or like the lustre of our nearest star,
    Fused in the common atmosphere of earth.
  It sports like hope upon the captive&rsquo;s chain;
  Descends in dreams upon the couch of pain;
  To wonder&rsquo;s realm allures the earnest child;
  To the chaste love refines the instinct wild;
  And as in waters the reflected beam,
  Still where we turn, glides with us up the stream,
  And while in truth the whole expanse is bright,
  Yields to each eye its own fond path of light,&mdash;
  So over life the rays of Genius fall,
  Give each his track because illuming all.
</pre>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
  IV.

  FORGIVENESS TO THE ERRORS OF OUR BENEFACTORS.

  Hence is that secret pardon we bestow
    In the true instinct of the grateful heart,
  Upon the Sons of Song.  The good they do
    In the clear world of their Uranian art
  Endures forever; while the evil done
    In the poor drama of their mortal scene,
  Is but a passing cloud before the sun;
    Space hath no record where the mist hath been.
  Boots it to us if Shakspeare erred like man?
    Why idly question that most mystic life?
  Eno&rsquo; the giver in his gifts to scan;
    To bless the sheaves with which thy fields are rife,
  Nor, blundering, guess through what obstructive clay
  The glorious corn-seed struggled up to day.
</pre>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
  V.

  THE IDEAL IS NOT CONFINED TO POETS.&mdash;ALGERNON SIDNEY RECOGNIZES HIS IDEAL
  IN LIBERTY, AND BELIEVES IN ITS TRIUMPH WHERE THE MERE PRACTICAL MAN
  COULD BEHOLD BUT ITS RUINS; YET LIBERTY IN THIS WORLD MUST EVER BE AN
  IDEAL, AND THE LAND THAT IT PROMISES CAN BE FOUND BUT IN DEATH.

  But not to you alone, O Sons Of Song,
  The wings that float the loftier airs along.
  Whoever lifts us from the dust we are,
    Beyond the sensual to spiritual goals;
  Who from the MOMENT and the SELF afar
    By deathless deeds allures reluctant souls,
  Gives the warm life to what the Limner draws,&mdash;
  Plato but thought what godlike Cato was.*
  Recall the Wars of England&rsquo;s giant-born,
    Is Elyot&rsquo;s voice, is Hampden&rsquo;s death in vain?
  Have all the meteors of the vernal morn
    But wasted light upon a frozen main?
  Where is that child of Carnage, Freedom, flown?
  The Sybarite lolls upon the martyr&rsquo;s throne.
  Lewd, ribald jests succeed to solemn zeal;
  And things of silk to Cromwell&rsquo;s men of steel.
  Cold are the hosts the tromps of Ireton thrilled,
  And hushed the senates Vane&rsquo;s large presence filled.
  In what strong heart doth the old manhood dwell?
  Where art thou, Freedom?  Look! in Sidney&rsquo;s cell!
  There still as stately stands the living Truth,
  Smiling on age as it had smiled on youth.
  Her forts dismantled, and her shrines o&rsquo;erthrown,
  The headsman&rsquo;s block her last dread altar-stone,
  No sanction left to Reason&rsquo;s vulgar hope,
  Far from the wrecks expands her prophet&rsquo;s scope.
  Millennial morns the tombs of Kedron gild,
  The hands of saints the glorious walls rebuild,&mdash;
  Till each foundation garnished with its gem,
  High o&rsquo;er Gehenna flames Jerusalem!
  O thou blood-stained Ideal of the free,
  Whose breath is heard in clarions,&mdash;Liberty!
  Sublimer for thy grand illusions past,
  Thou spring&rsquo;st to Heaven,&mdash;Religion at the last.
  Alike below, or commonwealths or thrones,
  Where&rsquo;er men gather some crushed victim groans;
  Only in death thy real form we see,
  All life is bondage,&mdash;souls alone are free.
  Thus through the waste the wandering Hebrews went,
  Fire on the march, but cloud upon the tent.
  At last on Pisgah see the prophet stand,
  Before his vision spreads the PROMISED LAND;
  But where revealed the Canaan to his eye?&mdash;
  Upon the mountain he ascends to die.

    * What Plato thought, and godlike Cato was.&mdash;POPE.
</pre>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
  VI.

  YET ALL HAVE TWO ESCAPES INTO THE IDEAL WORLD; NAMELY, MEMORY AND
  HOPE.&mdash;EXAMPLE OF HOPE IN YOUTH, HOWEVER EXCLUDED FROM ACTION AND
  DESIRE.&mdash;NAPOLEON&rsquo;S SON.

  Yet whatsoever be our bondage here,
  All have two portals to the phantom sphere.
  What hath not glided through those gates that ope
  Beyond the Hour, to MEMORY or to HOPE!
  Give Youth the Garden,&mdash;still it soars above,
  Seeks some far glory, some diviner love.
  Place Age amidst the Golgotha,&mdash;its eyes
  Still quit the graves, to rest upon the skies;
  And while the dust, unheeded, moulders there,
  Track some lost angel through cerulean air.

  Lo! where the Austrian binds, with formal chain,
  The crownless son of earth&rsquo;s last Charlemagne,&mdash;
  Him, at whose birth laughed all the violet vales
    (While yet unfallen stood thy sovereign star,
  O Lucifer of nations).  Hark, the gales
    Swell with the shout from all the hosts, whose war
  Rended the Alps, and crimsoned Memphian Nile,&mdash;
    &ldquo;Way for the coming of the Conqueror&rsquo;s Son:
  Woe to the Merchant-Carthage of the Isle!
    Woe to the Scythian ice-world of the Don!
  O Thunder Lord, thy Lemnian bolts prepare,
  The Eagle&rsquo;s eyry hath its eagle heir!&rdquo;
   Hark, at that shout from north to south, gray Power
    Quails on its weak, hereditary thrones;
  And widowed mothers prophesy the hour
    Of future carnage to their cradled sons.
  What! shall our race to blood be thus consigned,
    And Ate claim an heirloom in mankind?
  Are these red lots unshaken in the urn?
  Years pass; approach, pale Questioner, and learn
  Chained to his rock, with brows that vainly frown,
  The fallen Titan sinks in darkness down!
  And sadly gazing through his gilded grate,
  Behold the child whose birth was as a fate!
  Far from the land in which his life began;
  Walled from the healthful air of hardy man;
  Reared by cold hearts, and watched by jealous eyes,
  His guardians jailers, and his comrades spies.
  Each trite convention courtly fears inspire
  To stint experience and to dwarf desire;
  Narrows the action to a puppet stage,
  And trains the eaglet to the starling&rsquo;s cage.
  On the dejected brow and smileless cheek,
  What weary thought the languid lines bespeak;
  Till drop by drop, from jaded day to day,
  The sickly life-streams ooze themselves away.
  Yet oft in HOPE a boundless realm was thine,
    That vaguest Infinite,&mdash;the Dream of Fame;
  Son of the sword that first made kings divine,
    Heir to man&rsquo;s grandest royalty,&mdash;a Name!
  Then didst thou burst upon the startled world,
  And keep the glorious promise of thy birth;
  Then were the wings that bear the bolt unfurled,
    A monarch&rsquo;s voice cried, &ldquo;Place upon the earth!&rdquo;
   A new Philippi gained a second Rome,
  And the Son&rsquo;s sword avenged the greater Caesar&rsquo;s doom.
</pre>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
  VII.

  EXAMPLE OF MEMORY AS LEADING TO THE IDEAL,&mdash;AMIDST LIFE HOWEVER HUMBLE,
  AND IN A MIND HOWEVER IGNORANT.&mdash;THE VILLAGE WIDOW.

  But turn the eye to life&rsquo;s sequestered vale
    And lowly roofs remote in hamlets green.
  Oft in my boyhood where the moss-grown pale
    Fenced quiet graves, a female form was seen;
  Each eve she sought the melancholy ground,
  And lingering paused, and wistful looked around.
  If yet some footstep rustled through the grass,
  Timorous she shrunk, and watched the shadow pass;
  Then, when the spot lay lone amidst the gloom,
  Crept to one grave too humble for a tomb,
  There silent bowed her face above the dead,
  For, if in prayer, the prayer was inly said;
  Still as the moonbeam, paused her quiet shade,
  Still as the moonbeam, through the yews to fade.
  Whose dust thus hallowed by so fond a care?
  What the grave saith not, let the heart declare.
    On yonder green two orphan children played;
  By yonder rill two plighted lovers strayed;
  In yonder shrine two lives were blent in one,
  And joy-bells chimed beneath a summer sun.
  Poor was their lot, their bread in labour found;
  No parent blessed them, and no kindred owned;
  They smiled to hear the wise their choice condemn;
  They loved&mdash;they loved&mdash;and love was wealth to them!
  Hark&mdash;one short week&mdash;again the holy bell!
  Still shone the sun; but dirge like boomed the knell,&mdash;
  The icy hand had severed breast from breast;
  Left life to toil, and summoned Death to rest.
  Full fifty years since then have passed away,
  Her cheek is furrowed, and her hair is gray.
  Yet, when she speaks of <i>him</i> (the times are rare),
  Hear in her voice how youth still trembles there.
  The very name of that young life that died
  Still heaves the bosom, and recalls the bride.
  Lone o&rsquo;er the widow&rsquo;s hearth those years have fled,
  The daily toil still wins the daily bread;
  No books deck sorrow with fantastic dyes;
  Her fond romance her woman heart supplies;
  And, haply in the few still moments given,
  (Day&rsquo;s taskwork done), to memory, death, and heaven,
  To that unuttered poem may belong
  Thoughts of such pathos as had beggared song.
</pre>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
  VIII.

  HENCE IN HOPE, MEMORY, AND PRAYER, ALL OF US ARE POETS.

  Yes, while thou hopest, music fills the air,
    While thou rememberest, life reclothes the clod;
  While thou canst feel the electric chain of prayer,
    Breathe but a thought, and be a soul with God!
  Let not these forms of matter bound thine eye.
    He who the vanishing point of Human things
  Lifts from the landscape, lost amidst the sky,
    Has found the Ideal which the poet sings,
  Has pierced the pall around the senses thrown,
  And is himself a poet, though unknown.
</pre>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
  IX.

  APPLICATION OF THE POEM TO THE TALE TO WHICH IT IS PREFIXED.&mdash;THE
  RHINE,&mdash;ITS IDEAL CHARACTER IN ITS HISTORICAL AND LEGENDARY ASSOCIATIONS.

  Eno&rsquo;!&mdash;my song is closing, and to thee,
    Land of the North, I dedicate its lay;
  As I have done the simple tale to be
    The drama of this prelude!
                                    Faraway
  Rolls the swift Rhine beneath the starry ray;
  But to my ear its haunted waters sigh;
  Its moonlight mountains glimmer on my eye;
  On wave, on marge, as on a wizard&rsquo;s glass,
  Imperial ghosts in dim procession pass;
  Lords of the wild, the first great Father-men,
  Their fane the hill-top, and their home the glen;
  Frowning they fade; a bridge of steel appears
  With frank-eyed Caesar smiling through the spears;
  The march moves onwards, and the mirror brings
  The Gothic crowns of Carlovingian kings
  Vanished alike!  The Hermit rears his Cross,
  And barbs neigh shrill, and plumes in tumult toss,
  While (knighthood&rsquo;s sole sweet conquest from the Moor)
  Sings to Arabian lutes the Tourbadour.
    Not yet, not yet; still glide some lingering shades,
  Still breathe some murmurs as the starlight fades,
  Still from her rock I hear the Siren call,
  And see the tender ghost in Roland&rsquo;s mouldering hall!
</pre>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
  X.

  APPLICATION OF THE POEM CONTINUED.&mdash;THE IDEAL LENDS ITS AID TO THE MOST
  FAMILIAR AND THE MOST ACTUAL SORROW OF LIFE.&mdash;FICTION COMPARED TO
  SLEEP,&mdash;IT STRENGTHENS WHILE IT SOOTHES.

  Trite were the tale I tell of love and doom,
  (Whose life hath loved not, whose not mourned a tomb?)
  But fiction draws a poetry from grief,
  As art its healing from the withered leaf.
  Play thou, sweet Fancy, round the sombre truth,
    Crown the sad Genius ere it lower the torch!
  When death the altar and the victim youth,
    Flutes fill the air, and garlands deck the porch.
  As down the river drifts the Pilgrim sail,
  Clothe the rude hill-tops, lull the Northern gale;
  With childlike lore the fatal course beguile,
  And brighten death with Love&rsquo;s untiring smile.
  Along the banks let fairy forms be seen
  &ldquo;By fountain clear, or spangled starlike sheen.&rdquo; *
  Let sound and shape to which the sense is dull
  Haunt the soul opening on the Beautiful.
  And when at length, the symbol voyage done,
  Surviving Grief shrinks lonely from the sun,
  By tender types show Grief what memories bloom
  From lost delight, what fairies guard the tomb.
  Scorn not the dream, O world-worn; pause a while,
  New strength shall nerve thee as the dreams beguile,
  Stung by the rest, less far shall seem the goal!
  As sleep to life, so fiction to the soul.

    * &ldquo;Midsummer Night&rsquo;s Dream.&rdquo;
 </pre>
    <p>
      <a name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005">
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    </p>
    <div style="height: 4em;">
      <br /><br /><br /><br />
    </div>
    <h2>
      THE PILGRIMS OF THE RHINE
    </h2>
    <p>
      <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001">
      <!--  H2 anchor --> </a>
    </p>
    <div style="height: 4em;">
      <br /><br /><br /><br />
    </div>
    <h2>
      CHAPTER I. IN WHICH THE READER IS INTRODUCED TO QUEEN NYMPHALIN.
    </h2>
    <p>
      IN one of those green woods which belong so peculiarly to our island (for
      the Continent has its forests, but England its woods) there lived, a short
      time ago, a charming little fairy called Nymphalin. I believe she is
      descended from a younger branch of the house of Mab; but perhaps that may
      only be a genealogical fable, for your fairies are very susceptible to the
      pride of ancestry, and it is impossible to deny that they fall somewhat
      reluctantly into the liberal opinions so much in vogue at the present day.
    </p>
    <p>
      However that may be, it is quite certain that all the courtiers in
      Nymphalin&rsquo;s domain (for she was a queen fairy) made a point of asserting
      her right to this illustrious descent; and accordingly she quartered the
      Mab arms with her own,&mdash;three acorns vert, with a grasshopper
      rampant. It was as merry a little court as could possibly be conceived,
      and on a fine midsummer night it would have been worth while attending the
      queen&rsquo;s balls; that is to say, if you could have got a ticket, a favour
      not obtained without great interest.
    </p>
    <p>
      But, unhappily, until both men and fairies adopt Mr. Owen&rsquo;s proposition,
      and live in parallelograms, they will always be the victims of <i>ennui</i>.
      And Nymphalin, who had been disappointed in love, and was still unmarried,
      had for the last five or six months been exceedingly tired even of giving
      balls. She yawned very frequently, and consequently yawning became a
      fashion.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;But why don&rsquo;t we have some new dances, my Pipalee?&rdquo; said Nymphalin to her
      favourite maid of honour; &ldquo;these waltzes are very old-fashioned.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Very old-fashioned,&rdquo; said Pipalee.
    </p>
    <p>
      The queen gaped, and Pipalee did the same.
    </p>
    <p>
      It was a gala night; the court was held in a lone and beautiful hollow,
      with the wild brake closing round it on every side, so that no human step
      could easily gain the spot. Wherever the shadows fell upon the brake a
      glow-worm made a point of exhibiting itself, and the bright August moon
      sailed slowly above, pleased to look down upon so charming a scene of
      merriment; for they wrong the moon who assert that she has an objection to
      mirth,&mdash;with the mirth of fairies she has all possible sympathy. Here
      and there in the thicket the scarce honeysuckles&mdash;in August
      honeysuckles are somewhat out of season&mdash;hung their rich festoons,
      and at that moment they were crowded with the elderly fairies, who had
      given up dancing and taken to scandal. Besides the honeysuckle you might
      see the hawkweed and the white convolvulus, varying the soft verdure of
      the thicket; and mushrooms in abundance had sprung up in the circle,
      glittering in the silver moonlight, and acceptable beyond measure to the
      dancers: every one knows how agreeable a thing tents are in a <i>fete
      champetre</i>! I was mistaken in saying that the brake closed the circle
      entirely round; for there was one gap, scarcely apparent to mortals,
      through which a fairy at least might catch a view of a brook that was
      close at hand, rippling in the stars, and checkered at intervals by the
      rich weeds floating on the surface, interspersed with the delicate
      arrowhead and the silver water-lily. Then the trees themselves, in their
      prodigal variety of hues,&mdash;the blue, the purple, the yellowing tint,
      the tender and silvery verdure, and the deep mass of shade frowning into
      black; the willow, the elm, the ash, the fir, and the lime, &ldquo;and, best of
      all, Old England&rsquo;s haunted oak;&rdquo; these hues were broken again into a
      thousand minor and subtler shades as the twinkling stars pierced the
      foliage, or the moon slept with a richer light upon some favoured glade.
    </p>
    <p>
      It was a gala night; the elderly fairies, as I said before, were chatting
      among the honeysuckles; the young were flirting, and dancing, and making
      love; the middle-aged talked politics under the mushrooms; and the queen
      herself and half-a-dozen of her favourites were yawning their pleasure
      from a little mound covered with the thickest moss.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;It has been very dull, madam, ever since Prince Fayzenheim left us,&rdquo; said
      the fairy Nip.
    </p>
    <p>
      The queen sighed.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;How handsome the prince is!&rdquo; said Pipalee.
    </p>
    <p>
      The queen blushed.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;He wore the prettiest dress in the world; and what a mustache!&rdquo; cried
      Pipalee, fanning herself with her left wing.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;He was a coxcomb,&rdquo; said the lord treasurer, sourly. The lord treasurer
      was the honestest and most disagreeable fairy at court; he was an
      admirable husband, brother, son, cousin, uncle, and godfather,&mdash;it
      was these virtues that had made him a lord treasurer. Unfortunately they
      had not made him a sensible fairy. He was like Charles the Second in one
      respect, for he never did a wise thing; but he was not like him in
      another, for he very often said a foolish one.
    </p>
    <p>
      The queen frowned.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;A young prince is not the worse for that,&rdquo; retorted Pipalee. &ldquo;Heigho!
      does your Majesty think his Highness likely to return?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t tease me,&rdquo; said Nymphalin, pettishly.
    </p>
    <p>
      The lord treasurer, by way of giving the conversation an agreeable turn,
      reminded her Majesty that there was a prodigious accumulation of business
      to see to, especially that difficult affair about the emmet-wasp loan. Her
      Majesty rose; and leaning on Pipalee&rsquo;s arm, walked down to the supper
      tent.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Pray,&rdquo; said the fairy Trip to the fairy Nip, &ldquo;what is all this talk about
      Prince Fayzenheim? Excuse my ignorance; I am only just out, you know.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Why,&rdquo; answered Nip, a young courtier, not a marrying fairy, but very
      seductive, &ldquo;the story runs thus: Last summer a foreigner visited us,
      calling himself Prince Fayzenheim: one of your German fairies, I fancy; no
      great things, but an excellent waltzer. He wore long spurs, made out of
      the stings of the horse-flies in the Black Forest; his cap sat on one
      side, and his mustachios curled like the lip of the dragon-flower. He was
      on his travels, and amused himself by making love to the queen. You can&rsquo;t
      fancy, dear Trip, how fond she was of hearing him tell stories about the
      strange creatures of Germany,&mdash;about wild huntsmen, water-sprites,
      and a pack of such stuff,&rdquo; added Nip, contemptuously, for Nip was a
      freethinker.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;In short?&rdquo; said Trip.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;In short, she loved,&rdquo; cried Nip, with a theatrical air.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;And the prince?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Packed up his clothes, and sent on his travelling-carriage, in order that
      he might go at his ease on the top of a stage-pigeon; in short&mdash;as
      you say&mdash;in short, he deserted the queen, and ever since she has set
      the fashion of yawning.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;It was very naughty in him,&rdquo; said the gentle Trip.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Ah, my dear creature,&rdquo; cried Nip, &ldquo;if it had been you to whom he had paid
      his addresses!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Trip simpered, and the old fairies from their seats in the honeysuckles
      observed she was &ldquo;sadly conducted;&rdquo; but the Trips had never been too
      respectable.
    </p>
    <p>
      Meanwhile the queen, leaning on Pipalee, said, after a short pause, &ldquo;Do
      you know I have formed a plan!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;How delightful!&rdquo; cried Pipalee. &ldquo;Another gala!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Pooh, surely even you must be tired with such levities: the spirit of the
      age is no longer frivolous; and I dare say as the march of gravity
      proceeds, we shall get rid of galas altogether.&rdquo; The queen said this with
      an air of inconceivable wisdom, for the &ldquo;Society for the Diffusion of
      General Stupefaction&rdquo; had been recently established among the fairies, and
      its tracts had driven all the light reading out of the market. &ldquo;The Penny
      Proser&rdquo; had contributed greatly to the increase of knowledge and yawning,
      so visibly progressive among the courtiers.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;No,&rdquo; continued Nymphalin; &ldquo;I have thought of something better than galas.
      Let us travel!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Pipalee clasped her hands in ecstasy.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Where shall we travel?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Let us go up the Rhine,&rdquo; said the queen, turning away her head. &ldquo;We shall
      be amazingly welcomed; there are fairies without number all the way by its
      banks, and various distant connections of ours whose nature and properties
      will afford interest and instruction to a philosophical mind.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Number Nip, for instance,&rdquo; cried the gay Pipalee.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;The Red Man!&rdquo; said the graver Nymphalin.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Oh, my queen, what an excellent scheme!&rdquo; and Pipalee was so lively during
      the rest of the night that the old fairies in the honeysuckle insinuated
      that the lady of honour had drunk a buttercup too much of the Maydew.
    </p>
    <p>
      <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002">
      <!--  H2 anchor --> </a>
    </p>
    <div style="height: 4em;">
      <br /><br /><br /><br />
    </div>
    <h2>
      CHAPTER II. THE LOVERS.
    </h2>
    <p>
      I WISH only for such readers as give themselves heart and soul up to me,&mdash;if
      they begin to cavil I have done with them; their fancy should put itself
      entirely under my management; and, after all, ought they not to be too
      glad to get out of this hackneyed and melancholy world, to be run away
      with by an author who promises them something new?
    </p>
    <p>
      From the heights of Bruges, a Mortal and his betrothed gazed upon the
      scene below. They saw the sun set slowly amongst purple masses of cloud,
      and the lover turned to his mistress and sighed deeply; for her cheek was
      delicate in its blended roses, beyond the beauty that belongs to the hues
      of health; and when he saw the sun sinking from the world, the thought
      came upon him that <i>she</i> was his sun, and the glory that she shed
      over his life might soon pass away into the bosom of the &ldquo;ever-during
      Dark.&rdquo; But against the clouds rose one of the many spires that
      characterize the town of Bruges; and on that spire, tapering into heaven,
      rested the eyes of Gertrude Vane. The different objects that caught the
      gaze of each was emblematic both of the different channel of their
      thoughts and the different elements of their nature: he thought of the
      sorrow, she of the consolation; his heart prophesied of the passing away
      from earth, hers of the ascension into heaven. The lower part of the
      landscape was wrapped in shade; but just where the bank curved round in a
      mimic bay, the waters caught the sun&rsquo;s parting smile, and rippled against
      the herbage that clothed the shore, with a scarcely noticeable wave. There
      are two of the numerous mills which are so picturesque a feature of that
      country, standing at a distance from each other on the rising banks, their
      sails perfectly still in the cool silence of the evening, and adding to
      the rustic tranquillity which breathed around. For to me there is
      something in the still sails of one of those inventions of man&rsquo;s industry
      peculiarly eloquent of repose: the rest seems typical of the repose of our
      own passions, short and uncertain, contrary to their natural ordination;
      and doubly impressive from the feeling which admonishes us how precarious
      is the stillness, how utterly dependent on every wind rising at any moment
      and from any quarter of the heavens! They saw before them no living forms,
      save of one or two peasants yet lingering by the water-side.
    </p>
    <p>
      Trevylyan drew closer to his Gertrude; for his love was inexpressibly
      tender, and his vigilant anxiety for her made his stern frame feel the
      first coolness of the evening even before she felt it herself.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Dearest, let me draw your mantle closer round you.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Gertrude smiled her thanks.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;I feel better than I have done for weeks,&rdquo; said she; &ldquo;and when once we
      get into the Rhine, you will see me grow so strong as to shock all your
      interest for me.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Ah, would to Heaven my interest for you may be put to such an ordeal!&rdquo;
       said Trevylyan; and they turned slowly to the inn, where Gertrude&rsquo;s father
      already awaited them.
    </p>
    <p>
      Trevylyan was of a wild, a resolute, and an active nature. Thrown on the
      world at the age of sixteen, he had passed his youth in alternate
      pleasure, travel, and solitary study. At the age in which manhood is least
      susceptible to caprice, and most perhaps to passion, he fell in love with
      the loveliest person that ever dawned upon a poet&rsquo;s vision. I say this
      without exaggeration, for Gertrude Vane&rsquo;s was indeed the beauty, but the
      perishable beauty, of a dream. It happened most singularly to Trevylyan
      (but he was a singular man), that being naturally one whose affections it
      was very difficult to excite, he should have fallen in love at first sight
      with a person whose disease, already declared, would have deterred any
      other heart from risking its treasures on a bark so utterly unfitted for
      the voyage of life. Consumption, but consumption in its most beautiful
      shape, had set its seal upon Gertrude Vane, when Trevylyan first saw her,
      and at once loved. He knew the danger of the disease; he did not, except
      at intervals, deceive himself; he wrestled against the new passion: but,
      stern as his nature was, he could not conquer it. He loved, he confessed
      his love, and Gertrude returned it.
    </p>
    <p>
      In a love like this, there is something ineffably beautiful,&mdash;it is
      essentially the poetry of passion. Desire grows hallowed by fear, and,
      scarce permitted to indulge its vent in the common channel of the senses,
      breaks forth into those vague yearnings, those lofty aspirations, which
      pine for the Bright, the Far, the Unattained. It is &ldquo;the desire of the
      moth for the star;&rdquo; it is the love of the soul!
    </p>
    <p>
      Gertrude was advised by the faculty to try a southern climate; but
      Gertrude was the daughter of a German mother, and her young fancy had been
      nursed in all the wild legends and the alluring visions that belong to the
      children of the Rhine. Her imagination, more romantic than classic,
      yearned for the vine-clad hills and haunted forests which are so fertile
      in their spells to those who have once drunk, even sparingly, of the
      Literature of the North. Her desire strongly expressed, her declared
      conviction that if any change of scene could yet arrest the progress of
      her malady it would be the shores of the river she had so longed to visit,
      prevailed with her physicians and her father, and they consented to that
      pilgrimage along the Rhine on which Gertrude, her father, and her lover
      were now bound.
    </p>
    <p>
      It was by the green curve of the banks which the lovers saw from the
      heights of Bruges that our fairy travellers met. They were reclining on
      the water-side, playing at dominos with eye-bright and the black specks of
      the trefoil; namely, Pipalee, Nip, Trip, and the lord treasurer (for that
      was all the party selected by the queen for her travelling <i>cortege</i>),
      and waiting for her Majesty, who, being a curious little elf, had gone
      round the town to reconnoitre.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Bless me!&rdquo; said the lord treasurer; &ldquo;what a mad freak is this! Crossing
      that immense pond of water! And was there ever such bad grass as this? One
      may see that the fairies thrive ill here.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;You are always discontented, my lord,&rdquo; said Pipalee; &ldquo;but then you are
      somewhat too old to travel,&mdash;at least, unless you go in your nutshell
      and four.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      The lord treasurer did not like this remark, so he muttered a peevish
      pshaw, and took a pinch of honeysuckle dust to console himself for being
      forced to put up with so much frivolity.
    </p>
    <p>
      At this moment, ere the moon was yet at her middest height, Nymphalin
      joined her subjects.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;I have just returned,&rdquo; said she, with a melancholy expression on her
      countenance, &ldquo;from a scene that has almost renewed in me that sympathy
      with human beings which of late years our race has well-nigh relinquished.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;I hurried through the town without noticing much food for adventure. I
      paused for a moment on a fat citizen&rsquo;s pillow, and bade him dream of love.
      He woke in a fright, and ran down to see that his cheeses were safe. I
      swept with a light wing over a politician&rsquo;s eyes, and straightway he
      dreamed of theatres and music. I caught an undertaker in his first nap,
      and I have left him whirled into a waltz. For what would be sleep if it
      did not contrast life? Then I came to a solitary chamber, in which a girl,
      in her tenderest youth, knelt by the bedside in prayer, and I saw that the
      death-spirit had passed over her, and the blight was on the leaves of the
      rose. The room was still and hushed, the angel of Purity kept watch there.
      Her heart was full of love, and yet of holy thoughts, and I bade her dream
      of the long life denied to her,&mdash;of a happy home, of the kisses of
      her young lover, of eternal faith, and unwaning tenderness. Let her at
      least enjoy in dreams what Fate has refused to Truth! And, passing from
      the room, I found her lover stretched in his cloak beside the door; for he
      reads with a feverish and desperate prophecy the doom that waits her; and
      so loves he the very air she breathes, the very ground she treads, that
      when she has left his sight he creeps, silently and unknown to her, to the
      nearest spot hallowed by her presence, anxious that while yet she is on
      earth not an hour, not a moment, should be wasted upon other thoughts than
      those that belong to her; and feeling a security, a fearful joy, in
      lessening the distance that <i>now</i> only momentarily divides them. And
      that love seemed to me not as the love of the common world, and I stayed
      my wings and looked upon it as a thing that centuries might pass and bring
      no parallel to, in its beauty and its melancholy truth. But I kept away
      the sleep from the lover&rsquo;s eyes, for well I knew that sleep was a tyrant,
      that shortened the brief time of waking tenderness for the living, yet
      spared him; and one sad, anxious thought of her was sweeter, in spite of
      its sorrow, than the brightest of fairy dreams. So I left him awake, and
      watching there through the long night, and felt that the children of earth
      have still something that unites them to the spirits of a finer race, so
      long as they retain amongst them the presence of real love!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      And oh! is there not a truth also in our fictions of the Unseen World? Are
      there not yet bright lingerers by the forest and the stream? Do the moon
      and the soft stars look out on no delicate and winged forms bathing in
      their light? Are the fairies and the invisible hosts but the children of
      our dreams, and not their inspiration? Is that all a delusion which speaks
      from the golden page? And is the world only given to harsh and anxious
      travellers that walk to and fro in pursuit of no gentle shadows? Are the
      chimeras of the passions the sole spirits of the universe? No! while my
      remembrance treasures in its deepest cell the image of one no more,&mdash;one
      who was &ldquo;not of the earth, earthy;&rdquo; one in whom love was the essence of
      thoughts divine; one whose shape and mould, whose heart and genius, would,
      had Poesy never before dreamed it, have called forth the first notion of
      spirits resembling mortals, but not of them,&mdash;no, Gertrude! while I
      remember you, the faith, the trust in brighter shapes and fairer natures
      than the world knows of, comes clinging to my heart; and still will I
      think that Fairies might have watched over your sleep and Spirits have
      ministered to your dreams.
    </p>
    <p>
      <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003">
      <!--  H2 anchor --> </a>
    </p>
    <div style="height: 4em;">
      <br /><br /><br /><br />
    </div>
    <h2>
      CHAPTER III. FEELINGS.
    </h2>
    <p>
      GERTRUDE and her companions proceeded by slow and, to her, delightful
      stages to Rotterdam. Trevylyan sat by her side, and her hand was ever in
      his; and when her delicate frame became sensible of fatigue, her head
      drooped on his shoulder as its natural resting-place. Her father was a man
      who had lived long enough to have encountered many reverses of fortune,
      and they had left him, as I am apt to believe long adversity usually does
      leave its prey, somewhat chilled and somewhat hardened to affection;
      passive and quiet of hope, resigned to the worst as to the common order of
      events, and expecting little from the best, as an unlooked-for incident in
      the regularity of human afflictions. He was insensible of his daughter&rsquo;s
      danger, for he was not one whom the fear of love endows with prophetic
      vision; and he lived tranquilly in the present, without asking what new
      misfortune awaited him in the future. Yet he loved his child, his only
      child, with whatever of affection was left him by the many shocks his
      heart had received; and in her approaching connection with one rich and
      noble as Trevylyan, he felt even something bordering upon pleasure. Lapped
      in the apathetic indifference of his nature, he leaned back in the
      carriage, enjoying the bright weather that attended their journey, and
      sensible&mdash;for he was one of fine and cultivated taste&mdash;of
      whatever beauties of nature or remains of art varied their course. A
      companion of this sort was the most agreeable that two persons never
      needing a third could desire; he left them undisturbed to the intoxication
      of their mutual presence; he marked not the interchange of glances; he
      listened not to the whisper, the low delicious whisper, with which the
      heart speaks its sympathy to heart. He broke not that charmed silence
      which falls over us when the thoughts are full, and words leave nothing to
      explain; that repose of feeling; that certainty that we are understood
      without the effort of words, which makes the real luxury of intercourse
      and the true enchantment of travel. What a memory hours like these
      bequeath, after we have settled down into the calm occupation of common
      life! How beautiful, through the vista of years, seems that brief
      moonlight track upon the waters of our youth!
    </p>
    <p>
      And Trevylyan&rsquo;s nature, which, as I have said before, was naturally hard
      and stern, which was hot, irritable, ambitious, and prematurely tinctured
      with the policy and lessons of the world, seemed utterly changed by the
      peculiarities of his love. Every hour, every moment was full of incident
      to him; every look of Gertrude&rsquo;s was entered in the tablets of his heart;
      so that his love knew no languor, it required no change: he was absorbed
      in it,&mdash;<i>it was himself</i>! And he was soft, and watchful as the
      step of a mother by the couch of her sick child; the lion within him was
      tamed by indomitable love; the sadness, the presentiment, that was mixed
      with all his passion for Gertrude, filled him too with that poetry of
      feeling which is the result of thoughts weighing upon us, and not to be
      expressed by ordinary language. In this part of their journey, as I find
      by the date, were the following lines written; they are to be judged as
      the lines of one in whom emotion and truth were the only inspiration:&mdash;
    </p>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
     I. As leaves left darkling in the flush of day,
       When glints the glad sun checkering o&rsquo;er the tree,
     I see the green earth brightening in the ray,
       Which only casts a shadow upon me!
</pre>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
     II. What are the beams, the flowers, the glory, all
       Life&rsquo;s glow and gloss, the music and the bloom,
     When every sun but speeds the Eternal Pall,
       And Time is Death that dallies with the Tomb?
</pre>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
     III. And yet&mdash;oh yet, so young, so pure!&mdash;the while
       Fresh laugh the rose-hues round youth&rsquo;s morning sky,
     That voice, those eyes, the deep love of that smile,
       Are they not soul&mdash;<i>all</i> soul&mdash;and <i>can</i> they die?
</pre>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
     IV. Are there the words &ldquo;NO MORE&rdquo; for thoughts like ours?
       Must the bark sink upon so soft a wave?
     Hath the short summer of thy life no flowers
       But those which bloom above thine early grave?
</pre>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
     V. O God! and what is life, that I should live?
       (Hath not the world enow of common clay?)
     And she&mdash;the Rose&mdash;whose life a soul could give
       To the void desert, sigh its sweets away?
</pre>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
     VI. And I that love thee thus, to whom the air,
       Blest by thy breath, makes heaven where&rsquo;er it be,
     Watch thy cheek wane, and smile away despair,
       Lest it should dim one hour yet left to Thee.
</pre>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
     VII. Still let me conquer self; oh, still conceal
       By the smooth brow the snake that coils below;
     Break, break my heart! it comforts yet to feel
       That <i>she</i> dreams on, unwakened by my woe!
</pre>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
     VIII. Hushed, where the Star&rsquo;s soft angel loves to keep
       Watch o&rsquo;er their tide, the morning waters roll;
     So glides my spirit,&mdash;darkness in the deep,
       But o&rsquo;er the wave the presence of thy soul!
</pre>
    <p>
      Gertrude had not as yet the presentiments that filled the soul of
      Trevylyan. She thought too little of herself to know her danger, and those
      hours to her were hours of unmingled sweetness. Sometimes, indeed, the
      exhaustion of her disease tinged her spirits with a vague sadness, an
      abstraction came over her, and a languor she vainly struggled against.
      These fits of dejection and gloom touched Trevylyan to the quick; his eye
      never ceased to watch them, nor his heart to soothe. Often when he marked
      them, he sought to attract her attention from what he fancied, though
      erringly, a sympathy with his own forebodings, and to lead her young and
      romantic imagination through the temporary beguilements of fiction; for
      Gertrude was yet in the first bloom of youth, and all the dews of
      beautiful childhood sparkled freshly from the virgin blossoms of her mind.
      And Trevylyan, who had passed some of his early years among the students
      of Leipsic, and was deeply versed in the various world of legendary lore,
      ransacked his memory for such tales as seemed to him most likely to win
      her interest; and often with false smiles entered into the playful tale,
      or oftener, with more faithful interest, into the graver legend of trials
      that warned yet beguiled them from their own. Of such tales I have
      selected but a few; I know not that they are the least unworthy of
      repetition,&mdash;they are those which many recollections induce me to
      repeat the most willingly. Gertrude loved these stories, for she had not
      yet lost, by the coldness of the world, one leaf from that soft and wild
      romance which belonged to her beautiful mind; and, more than all, she
      loved the sound of a voice which every day became more and more musical to
      her ear. &ldquo;Shall I tell you,&rdquo; said Trevylyan, one morning, as he observed
      her gloomier mood stealing over the face of Gertrude,&mdash;&ldquo;shall I tell
      you, ere yet we pass into the dull land of Holland, a story of Malines,
      whose spires we shall shortly see?&rdquo; Gertrude&rsquo;s face brightened at once,
      and as she leaned back in the carriage as it whirled rapidly along, and
      fixed her deep blue eyes on Trevylyan, he began the following tale.
    </p>
    <p>
      <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004">
      <!--  H2 anchor --> </a>
    </p>
    <div style="height: 4em;">
      <br /><br /><br /><br />
    </div>
    <h2>
      CHAPTER IV. THE MAID OF MALINES.
    </h2>
    <p>
      IT was noonday in the town of Malines, or Mechlin, as the English usually
      term it; the Sabbath bell had summoned the inhabitants to divine worship;
      and the crowd that had loitered round the Church of St. Rembauld had
      gradually emptied itself within the spacious aisles of the sacred edifice.
    </p>
    <p>
      A young man was standing in the street, with his eyes bent on the ground,
      and apparently listening for some sound; for without raising his looks
      from the rude pavement, he turned to every corner of it with an intent and
      anxious expression of countenance. He held in one hand a staff, in the
      other a long slender cord, the end of which trailed on the ground; every
      now and then he called, with a plaintive voice, &ldquo;Fido, Fido, come back!
      Why hast thou deserted me?&rdquo; Fido returned not; the dog, wearied of
      confinement, had slipped from the string, and was at play with his kind in
      a distant quarter of the town, leaving the blind man to seek his way as he
      might to his solitary inn.
    </p>
    <p>
      By and by a light step passed through the street, and the young stranger&rsquo;s
      face brightened.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Pardon me,&rdquo; said he, turning to the spot where his quick ear had caught
      the sound, &ldquo;and direct me, if you are not much pressed for a few moments&rsquo; 
      time, to the hotel &lsquo;Mortier d&rsquo;Or.&rsquo;&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      It was a young woman, whose dress betokened that she belonged to the
      middling class of life, whom he thus addressed. &ldquo;It is some distance
      hence, sir,&rdquo; said she; &ldquo;but if you continue your way straight on for about
      a hundred yards, and then take the second turn to your right hand&mdash;&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Alas!&rdquo; interrupted the stranger, with a melancholy smile, &ldquo;your direction
      will avail me little; my dog has deserted me, and I am blind!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      There was something in these words, and in the stranger&rsquo;s voice, which
      went irresistibly to the heart of the young woman. &ldquo;Pray forgive me,&rdquo; she
      said, almost with tears in her eyes, &ldquo;I did not perceive your&mdash;&rdquo;
       misfortune, she was about to say, but she checked herself with an
      instinctive delicacy. &ldquo;Lean upon me, I will conduct you to the door; nay,
      sir,&rdquo; observing that he hesitated, &ldquo;I have time enough to spare, I assure
      you.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      The stranger placed his hand on the young woman&rsquo;s arm; and though Lucille
      was naturally so bashful that even her mother would laughingly reproach
      her for the excess of a maiden virtue, she felt not the least pang of
      shame, as she found herself thus suddenly walking through the streets of
      Malines along with a young stranger, whose dress and air betokened him of
      rank superior to her own.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Your voice is very gentle,&rdquo; said he, after a pause; &ldquo;and that,&rdquo; he added,
      with a slight sigh, &ldquo;is the only criterion by which I know the young and
      the beautiful!&rdquo; Lucille now blushed, and with a slight mixture of pain in
      the blush, for she knew well that to beauty she had no pretension. &ldquo;Are
      you a native of this town?&rdquo; continued he.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Yes, sir; my father holds a small office in the customs, and my mother
      and I eke out his salary by making lace. We are called poor, but we do not
      feel it, sir.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;You are fortunate! there is no wealth like the heart&rsquo;s wealth,&mdash;content,&rdquo;
       answered the blind man, mournfully.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;And, monsieur,&rdquo; said Lucille, feeling angry with herself that she had
      awakened a natural envy in the stranger&rsquo;s mind, and anxious to change the
      subject&mdash;&ldquo;and, monsieur, has he been long at Malines?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;But yesterday. I am passing through the Low Countries on a tour; perhaps
      you smile at the tour of a blind man, but it is wearisome even to the
      blind to rest always in the same place. I thought during church-time, when
      the streets were empty, that I might, by the help of my dog, enjoy safely
      at least the air, if not the sight of the town; but there are some
      persons, methinks, who cannot have even a dog for a friend!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      The blind man spoke bitterly,&mdash;the desertion of his dog had touched
      him to the core. Lucille wiped her eyes. &ldquo;And does Monsieur travel then
      alone?&rdquo; said she; and looking at his face more attentively than she had
      yet ventured to do, she saw that he was scarcely above two-and-twenty.
      &ldquo;His father, and his <i>mother</i>,&rdquo; she added, with an emphasis on the
      last word, &ldquo;are they not with him?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;I am an orphan!&rdquo; answered the stranger; &ldquo;and I have neither brother nor
      sister.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      The desolate condition of the blind man quite melted Lucille; never had
      she been so strongly affected. She felt a strange flutter at the heart, a
      secret and earnest sympathy, that attracted her at once towards him. She
      wished that Heaven had suffered her to be his sister!
    </p>
    <p>
      The contrast between the youth and the form of the stranger, and the
      affliction which took hope from the one and activity from the other,
      increased the compassion he excited. His features were remarkably regular,
      and had a certain nobleness in their outline; and his frame was gracefully
      and firmly knit, though he moved cautiously and with no cheerful step.
    </p>
    <p>
      They had now passed into a narrow street leading towards the hotel, when
      they heard behind them the clatter of hoofs; and Lucille, looking hastily
      back, saw that a troop of the Belgian horse was passing through the town.
    </p>
    <p>
      She drew her charge close by the wall, and trembling with fear for him,
      she stationed herself by his side. The troop passed at a full trot through
      the street; and at the sound of their clanging arms, and the ringing hoofs
      of their heavy chargers, Lucille might have seen, had she looked at the
      blind man&rsquo;s face, that its sad features kindled with enthusiasm, and his
      head was raised proudly from its wonted and melancholy bend. &ldquo;Thank
      Heaven!&rdquo; she said, as the troop had nearly passed them, &ldquo;the danger is
      over!&rdquo; Not so. One of the last two soldiers who rode abreast was
      unfortunately mounted on a young and unmanageable horse. The rider&rsquo;s oaths
      and digging spur only increased the fire and impatience of the charger; it
      plunged from side to side of the narrow street.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Look to yourselves!&rdquo; cried the horseman, as he was borne on to the place
      where Lucille and the stranger stood against the wall. &ldquo;Are ye mad? Why do
      you not run?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;For Heaven&rsquo;s sake, for mercy&rsquo;s sake, he is blind!&rdquo; cried Lucille,
      clinging to the stranger&rsquo;s side.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Save yourself, my kind guide!&rdquo; said the stranger. But Lucille dreamed not
      of such desertion. The trooper wrested the horse&rsquo;s head from the spot
      where they stood; with a snort, as it felt the spur, the enraged animal
      lashed out with its hind-legs; and Lucille, unable to save <i>both</i>,
      threw herself before the blind man, and received the shock directed
      against him; her slight and delicate arm fell broken by her side, the
      horseman was borne onward. &ldquo;Thank God, <i>you</i> are saved!&rdquo; was poor
      Lucille&rsquo;s exclamation; and she fell, overcome with pain and terror, into
      the arms which the stranger mechanically opened to receive her.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;My guide! my friend!&rdquo; cried he, &ldquo;you are hurt, you&mdash;&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;No, sir,&rdquo; interrupted Lucille, faintly, &ldquo;I am better, I am well. <i>This</i>
      arm, if you please,&mdash;we are not far from your hotel now.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      But the stranger&rsquo;s ear, tutored to every inflection of voice, told him at
      once of the pain she suffered. He drew from her by degrees the confession
      of the injury she had sustained; but the generous girl did not tell him it
      had been incurred solely in his protection. He now insisted on reversing
      their duties, and accompanying <i>her</i> to her home; and Lucille, almost
      fainting with pain, and hardly able to move, was forced to consent. But a
      few steps down the next turning stood the humble mansion of her father.
      They reached it; and Lucille scarcely crossed the threshold, before she
      sank down, and for some minutes was insensible to pain. It was left to the
      stranger to explain, and to beseech them immediately to send for a
      surgeon, &ldquo;the most skilful, the most practised in the town,&rdquo; said he.
      &ldquo;See, I am rich, and this is the least I can do to atone to your generous
      daughter, for not forsaking even a stranger in peril.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      He held out his purse as he spoke, but the father refused the offer; and
      it saved the blind man some shame, that he could not see the blush of
      honest resentment with which so poor a species of renumeration was put
      aside.
    </p>
    <p>
      The young man stayed till the surgeon arrived, till the arm was set; nor
      did he depart until he had obtained a promise from the mother that he
      should learn the next morning how the sufferer had passed the night.
    </p>
    <p>
      The next morning, indeed, he had intended to quit a town that offers but
      little temptation to the traveller; but he tarried day after day, until
      Lucille herself accompanied her mother, to assure him of her recovery.
    </p>
    <p>
      You know, at least I do, dearest Gertrude, that there is such a thing as
      love at the first meeting,&mdash;a secret, an unaccountable affinity
      between persons (strangers before) which draws them irresistibly together,&mdash;as
      if there were truth in Plato&rsquo;s beautiful fantasy, that our souls were a
      portion of the stars, and that spirits, thus attracted to each other, have
      drawn their original light from the same orb, and yearn for a renewal of
      their former union. Yet without recurring to such fanciful solutions of a
      daily mystery, it was but natural that one in the forlorn and desolate
      condition of Eugene St. Amand should have felt a certain tenderness for a
      person who had so generously suffered for his sake.
    </p>
    <p>
      The darkness to which he was condemned did not shut from his mind&rsquo;s eye
      the haunting images of Ideal beauty; rather, on the contrary, in his
      perpetual and unoccupied solitude, he fed the reveries of an imagination
      naturally warm, and a heart eager for sympathy and commune.
    </p>
    <p>
      He had said rightly that his only test of beauty was in the melody of
      voice; and never had a softer or more thrilling tone than that of the
      young maiden touched upon his ear. Her exclamation, so beautifully denying
      self, so devoted in its charity, &ldquo;Thank God, <i>you</i> are saved!&rdquo;
       uttered too in the moment of her own suffering, rang constantly upon his
      soul, and he yielded, without precisely defining their nature, to vague
      and delicious sentiments, that his youth had never awakened to till then.
      And Lucille&mdash;the very accident that had happened to her on his behalf
      only deepened the interest she had already conceived for one who, in the
      first flush of youth, was thus cut off from the glad objects of life, and
      left to a night of years desolate and alone. There is, to your beautiful
      and kindly sex, a natural inclination to <i>protect</i>. This makes them
      the angels of sickness, the comforters of age, the fosterers of childhood;
      and this feeling, in Lucille peculiarly developed, had already
      inexpressibly linked her compassionate nature to the lot of the
      unfortunate traveller. With ardent affections, and with thoughts beyond
      her station and her years, she was not without that modest vanity which
      made her painfully susceptible to her own deficiencies in beauty.
      Instinctively conscious of how deeply she herself could love, she believed
      it impossible that she could ever be so loved in return. The stranger, so
      superior in her eyes to all she had yet seen, was the first who had ever
      addressed her in that voice which by tones, not words, speaks that
      admiration most dear to a woman&rsquo;s heart. To <i>him</i> she was beautiful,
      and her lovely mind spoke out, undimmed by the imperfections of her face.
      Not, indeed, that Lucille was wholly without personal attraction; her
      light step and graceful form were elastic with the freshness of youth, and
      her mouth and smile had so gentle and tender an expression, that there
      were moments when it would not have been the blind only who would have
      mistaken her to be beautiful. Her early childhood had indeed given the
      promise of attractions, which the smallpox, that then fearful malady, had
      inexorably marred. It had not only seared the smooth skin and brilliant
      hues, but utterly changed even the character of the features. It so
      happened that Lucille&rsquo;s family were celebrated for beauty, and vain of
      that celebrity; and so bitterly had her parents deplored the effects of
      the cruel malady, that poor Lucille had been early taught to consider them
      far more grievous than they really were, and to exaggerate the advantages
      of that beauty, the loss of which was considered by her parents so heavy a
      misfortune. Lucille, too, had a cousin named Julie, who was the wonder of
      all Malines for her personal perfections; and as the cousins were much
      together, the contrast was too striking not to occasion frequent
      mortification to Lucille. But every misfortune has something of a
      counterpoise; and the consciousness of personal inferiority had meekened,
      without souring, her temper, had given gentleness to a spirit that
      otherwise might have been too high, and humility to a mind that was
      naturally strong, impassioned, and energetic.
    </p>
    <p>
      And yet Lucille had long conquered the one disadvantage she most dreaded
      in the want of beauty. Lucille was never known but to be loved. Wherever
      came her presence, her bright and soft mind diffused a certain
      inexpressible charm; and where she was not, a something was absent from
      the scene which not even Julie&rsquo;s beauty could replace.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;I propose,&rdquo; said St. Amand to Madame le Tisseur, Lucille&rsquo;s mother, as he
      sat in her little salon,&mdash;for he had already contracted that
      acquaintance with the family which permitted him to be led to their house,
      to return the visits Madame le Tisseur had made him, and his dog, once
      more returned a penitent to his master, always conducted his steps to the
      humble abode, and stopped instinctively at the door,&mdash;&ldquo;I propose,&rdquo;
       said St. Amand, after a pause, and with some embarrassment, &ldquo;to stay a
      little while longer at Malines; the air agrees with me, and I like the
      quiet of the place; but you are aware, madam, that at a hotel among
      strangers, I feel my situation somewhat cheerless. I have been thinking&rdquo;&mdash;St.
      Amand paused again&mdash;&ldquo;I have been thinking that if I could persuade
      some agreeable family to receive me as a lodger, I would fix myself here
      for some weeks. I am easily pleased.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Doubtless there are many in Malines who would be too happy to receive
      such a lodger.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Will you receive me?&rdquo; asked St. Amand, abruptly. &ldquo;It was of <i>your</i>
      family I thought.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Of us? Monsieur is too flattering. But we have scarcely a room good
      enough for you.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;What difference between one room and another can there be to me? That is
      the best apartment to my choice in which the human voice sounds most
      kindly.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      The arrangement was made, and St. Amand came now to reside beneath the
      same roof as Lucille. And was she not happy that <i>he</i> wanted so
      constant an attendance; was she not happy that she was ever of use? St.
      Amand was passionately fond of music; he played himself with a skill that
      was only surpassed by the exquisite melody of his voice, and was not
      Lucille happy when she sat mute and listening to such sounds as in Malines
      were never heard before? Was she not happy in gazing on a face to whose
      melancholy aspect her voice instantly summoned the smile? Was she not
      happy when the music ceased, and St. Amand called &ldquo;Lucille&rdquo;? Did not her
      own name uttered by that voice seem to her even sweeter than the music?
      Was she not happy when they walked out in the still evenings of summer,
      and her arm thrilled beneath the light touch of one to whom she was so
      necessary? Was she not proud in her happiness, and was there not something
      like worship in the gratitude she felt to him for raising her humble
      spirit to the luxury of feeling herself beloved?
    </p>
    <p>
      St. Amand&rsquo;s parents were French. They had resided in the neighbourhood of
      Amiens, where they had inherited a competent property, to which he had
      succeeded about two years previous to the date of my story.
    </p>
    <p>
      He had been blind from the age of three years. &ldquo;I know not,&rdquo; said he, as
      he related these particulars to Lucille one evening when they were alone,&mdash;&ldquo;I
      know not what the earth may be like, or the heaven, or the rivers whose
      voice at least I can hear, for I have no recollection beyond that of a
      confused but delicious blending of a thousand glorious colours, a bright
      and quick sense of joy, A VISIBLE MUSIC. But it is only since my childhood
      closed that I have mourned, as I now unceasingly mourn, for the light of
      day. My boyhood passed in a quiet cheerfulness; the least trifle then
      could please and occupy the vacancies of my mind; but it was as I took
      delight in being read to, as I listened to the vivid descriptions of
      Poetry, as I glowed at the recital of great deeds, as I was made
      acquainted by books with the energy, the action, the heat, the fervour,
      the pomp, the enthusiasm of life, that I gradually opened to the sense of
      all I was forever denied. I felt that I existed, not lived; and that, in
      the midst of the Universal Liberty, I was sentenced to a prison, from
      whose blank walls there was no escape. Still, however, while my parents
      lived, I had something of consolation; at least I was not alone. They
      died, and a sudden and dread solitude, a vast and empty dreariness,
      settled upon my dungeon. One old servant only, who had attended me from my
      childhood, who had known me in my short privilege of light, by whose
      recollections my mind could grope back its way through the dark and narrow
      passages of memory to faint glimpses of the sun, was all that remained to
      me of human sympathies. It did not suffice, however, to content me with a
      home where my father and my mother&rsquo;s kind voice were <i>not</i>. A
      restless impatience, an anxiety to move, possessed me, and I set out from
      my home, journeying whither I cared not, so that at least I could change
      an air that weighed upon me like a palpable burden. I took only this old
      attendant as my companion; he too died three months since at Bruxelles,
      worn out with years. Alas! I had forgotten that he was old, for I saw not
      his progress to decay; and now, save my faithless dog, I was utterly
      alone, till I came hither and found <i>thee</i>.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Lucille stooped down to caress the dog; she blessed the desertion that had
      led him to a friend who never could desert.
    </p>
    <p>
      But however much, and however gratefully, St. Amand loved Lucille, her
      power availed not to chase the melancholy from his brow, and to reconcile
      him to his forlorn condition.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Ah, would that I could see thee! would that I could look upon a face that
      my heart vainly endeavours to delineate!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;If thou couldst,&rdquo; sighed Lucille, &ldquo;thou wouldst cease to love me.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Impossible!&rdquo; cried St. Amand, passionately. &ldquo;However the world may find
      thee, <i>thou</i> wouldst become my standard of beauty; and I should judge
      not of thee by others, but of others by thee.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      He loved to hear Lucille read to him, and mostly he loved the descriptions
      of war, of travel, of wild adventure, and yet they occasioned him the most
      pain. Often she paused from the page as she heard him sigh, and felt that
      she would even have renounced the bliss of being loved by him, if she
      could have restored to him that blessing, the desire for which haunted him
      as a spectre.
    </p>
    <p>
      Lucille&rsquo;s family were Catholic, and, like most in their station, they
      possessed the superstitions, as well as the devotion of the faith.
      Sometimes they amused themselves of an evening by the various legends and
      imaginary miracles of their calendar; and once, as they were thus
      conversing with two or three of their neighbours, &ldquo;The Tomb of the Three
      Kings of Cologne&rdquo; became the main topic of their wondering recitals.
      However strong was the sense of Lucille, she was, as you will readily
      conceive, naturally influenced by the belief of those with whom she had
      been brought up from her cradle, and she listened to tale after tale of
      the miracles wrought at the consecrated tomb, as earnestly and
      undoubtingly as the rest.
    </p>
    <p>
      And the Kings of the East were no ordinary saints; to the relics of the
      Three Magi, who followed the Star of Bethlehem, and were the first
      potentates of the earth who adored its Saviour, well might the pious
      Catholic suppose that a peculiar power and a healing sanctity would
      belong. Each of the circle (St. Amand, who had been more than usually
      silent, and even gloomy during the day, had retired to his own apartment,
      for there were some moments when, in the sadness of his thoughts, he
      sought that solitude which he so impatiently fled from at others)&mdash;each
      of the circle had some story to relate equally veracious and indisputable,
      of an infirmity cured, or a prayer accorded, or a sin atoned for at the
      foot of the holy tomb. One story peculiarly affected Lucille; the
      narrator, a venerable old man with gray locks, solemnly declared himself a
      witness of its truth.
    </p>
    <p>
      A woman at Anvers had given birth to a son, the offspring of an illicit
      connection, who came into the world deaf and dumb. The unfortunate mother
      believed the calamity a punishment for her own sin. &ldquo;Ah, would,&rdquo; said she,
      &ldquo;that the affliction had fallen only upon me! Wretch that I am, my
      innocent child is punished for my offence!&rdquo; This, idea haunted her night
      and day; she pined and could not be comforted. As the child grew up, and
      wound himself more and more round her heart, his caresses added new pangs
      to her remorse; and at length (continued the narrator) hearing perpetually
      of the holy fame of the Tomb of Cologne, she resolved upon a pilgrimage
      barefoot to the shrine. &ldquo;God is merciful,&rdquo; said she; &ldquo;and He who called
      Magdalene his sister may take the mother&rsquo;s curse from the child.&rdquo; She then
      went to Cologne; she poured her tears, her penitence, and her prayers at
      the sacred tomb. When she returned to her native town, what was her dismay
      as she approached her cottage to behold it a heap of ruins! Its blackened
      rafters and yawning casements betokened the ravages of fire. The poor
      woman sank upon the ground utterly overpowered. Had her son perished? At
      that moment she heard the cry of a child&rsquo;s voice, and, lo! her child
      rushed to her arms, and called her &ldquo;mother!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      He had been saved from the fire, which had broken out seven days before;
      but in the terror he had suffered, the string that tied his tongue had
      been loosened; he had uttered articulate sounds of distress; the curse was
      removed, and one word at least the kind neighbours had already taught him
      to welcome his mother&rsquo;s return. What cared she now that her substance was
      gone, that her roof was ashes? She bowed in grateful submission to so mild
      a stroke; her prayer had been heard, and the sin of the mother was visited
      no longer on the child.
    </p>
    <p>
      I have said, dear Gertrude, that this story made a deep impression upon
      Lucille. A misfortune so nearly akin to that of St. Amand removed by the
      prayer of another filled her with devoted thoughts and a beautiful hope.
      &ldquo;Is not the tomb still standing?&rdquo; thought she. &ldquo;Is not God still in
      heaven?&mdash;He who heard the guilty, may He not hear the guiltless? Is
      He not the God of love? Are not the affections the offerings that please
      Him best? And what though the child&rsquo;s mediator was his mother, can even a
      mother love her child more tenderly than I love Eugene? But if, Lucille,
      thy prayer be granted, if he recover his sight, <i>thy</i> charm is gone,
      he will love thee no longer. No matter! be it so,&mdash;I shall at least
      have made him happy!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Such were the thoughts that filled the mind of Lucille; she cherished them
      till they settled into resolution, and she secretly vowed to perform her
      pilgrimage of love. She told neither St. Amand nor her parents of her
      intention; she knew the obstacles such an announcement would create.
      Fortunately she had an aunt settled at Bruxelles, to whom she had been
      accustomed once in every year to pay a month&rsquo;s visit, and at that time she
      generally took with her the work of a twelvemonths&rsquo; industry, which found
      a readier sale at Bruxelles than at Malines. Lucille and St. Amand were
      already betrothed; their wedding was shortly to take place; and the custom
      of the country leading parents, however poor, to nourish the honourable
      ambition of giving some dowry with their daughters, Lucille found it easy
      to hide the object of her departure, under the pretence of taking the lace
      to Bruxelles, which had been the year&rsquo;s labour of her mother and herself,&mdash;it
      would sell for sufficient, at least, to defray the preparations for the
      wedding.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Thou art ever right, child,&rdquo; said Madame le Tisseur; &ldquo;the richer St.
      Amand is, why, the less oughtest thou to go a beggar to his house.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      In fact, the honest ambition of the good people was excited; their pride
      had been hurt by the envy of the town and the current congratulations on
      so advantageous a marriage; and they employed themselves in counting up
      the fortune they should be able to give to their only child, and
      flattering their pardonable vanity with the notion that there would be no
      such great disproportion in the connection after all. They were right, but
      not in their own view of the estimate; the wealth that Lucille brought was
      what fate could not lessen, reverse could not reach; the ungracious
      seasons could not blight its sweet harvest; imprudence could not
      dissipate, fraud could not steal, one grain from its abundant coffers!
      Like the purse in the Fairy Tale, its use was hourly, its treasure
      inexhaustible.
    </p>
    <p>
      St. Amand alone was not to be won to her departure; he chafed at the
      notion of a dowry; he was not appeased even by Lucille&rsquo;s representation
      that it was only to gratify and not to impoverish her parents. &ldquo;And <i>thou</i>,
      too, canst leave me!&rdquo; he said, in that plaintive voice which had made his
      first charm to Lucille&rsquo;s heart. &ldquo;It is a double blindness!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;But for a few days; a fortnight at most, dearest Eugene.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;A fortnight! you do not reckon time as the blind do,&rdquo; said St. Amand,
      bitterly.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;But listen, listen, dear Eugene,&rdquo; said Lucille, weeping.
    </p>
    <p>
      The sound of her sobs restored him to a sense of his ingratitude. Alas, he
      knew not how much he had to be grateful for! He held out his arms to her.
      &ldquo;Forgive me,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;Those who can see Nature know not how terrible it
      is to be alone.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;But my mother will not leave you.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;She is not you!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;And Julie,&rdquo; said Lucille, hesitatingly.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;What is Julie to me?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Ah, you are the only one, save my parents, who could think of me in her
      presence.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;And why, Lucille?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Why! She is more beautiful than a dream.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Say not so. Would I could see, that I might prove to the world how much
      more beautiful thou art! There is no music in her voice.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      The evening before Lucille departed she sat up late with St. Amand and her
      mother. They conversed on the future; they made plans; in the wide
      sterility of the world they laid out the garden of household love, and
      filled it with flowers, forgetful of the wind that scatters and the frost
      that kills. And when, leaning on Lucille&rsquo;s arm, St. Amand sought his
      chamber, and they parted at his door, which closed upon her, she fell down
      on her knees at the threshold, and poured out the fulness of her heart in
      a prayer for his safety and the fulfilment of her timid hope.
    </p>
    <p>
      At daybreak she was consigned to the conveyance that performed the short
      journey from Malines to Bruxelles. When she entered the town, instead of
      seeking her aunt, she rested at an <i>auberge</i> in the suburbs, and
      confiding her little basket of lace to the care of its hostess, she set
      out alone, and on foot, upon the errand of her heart&rsquo;s lovely
      superstition. And erring though it was, her faith redeemed its weakness,
      her affection made it even sacred; and well may we believe that the Eye
      which reads all secrets scarce looked reprovingly on that fanaticism whose
      only infirmity was love.
    </p>
    <p>
      So fearful was she lest, by rendering the task too easy, she might impair
      the effect, that she scarcely allowed herself rest or food. Sometimes, in
      the heat of noon, she wandered a little from the roadside, and under the
      spreading lime-tree surrendered her mind to its sweet and bitter thoughts;
      but ever the restlessness of her enterprise urged her on, and faint,
      weary, and with bleeding feet, she started up and continued her way. At
      length she reached the ancient city, where a holier age has scarce worn
      from the habits and aspects of men the Roman trace. She prostrated herself
      at the tomb of the Magi; she proffered her ardent but humble prayer to Him
      before whose Son those fleshless heads (yet to faith at least preserved)
      had, eighteen centuries ago, bowed in adoration. Twice every day, for a
      whole week, she sought the same spot, and poured forth the same prayer.
      The last day an old priest, who, hovering in the church, had observed her
      constantly at devotion, with that fatherly interest which the better
      ministers of the Catholic sect (that sect which has covered the earth with
      the mansions of charity) feel for the unhappy, approached her as she was
      retiring with moist and downcast eyes, and saluting her, assumed the
      privilege of his order to inquire if there was aught in which his advice
      or aid could serve. There was something in the venerable air of the old
      man which encouraged Lucille; she opened her heart to him; she told him
      all. The good priest was much moved by her simplicity and earnestness. He
      questioned her minutely as to the peculiar species of blindness with which
      St. Amand was afflicted; and after musing a little while, he said,
      &ldquo;Daughter, God is great and merciful; we must trust in His power, but we
      must not forget that He mostly works by mortal agents. As you pass through
      Louvain in your way home, fail not to see there a certain physician, named
      Le Kain. He is celebrated through Flanders for the cures he has wrought
      among the blind, and his advice is sought by all classes from far and
      near. He lives hard by the Hotel de Ville, but any one will inform you of
      his residence. Stay, my child, you shall take him a note from me; he is a
      benevolent and kindly man, and you shall tell him exactly the same story
      (and with the same voice) you have told to me.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      So saying the priest made Lucille accompany him to his home, and forcing
      her to refresh herself less sparingly than she had yet done since she had
      left Malines, he gave her his blessing, and a letter to Le Kain, which he
      rightly judged would insure her a patient hearing from the physician. Well
      known among all men of science was the name of the priest, and a word of
      recommendation from him went further, where virtue and wisdom were
      honoured, than the longest letter from the haughtiest sieur in Flanders.
    </p>
    <p>
      With a patient and hopeful spirit, the young pilgrim turned her back on
      the Roman Cologne; and now about to rejoin St. Amand, she felt neither the
      heat of the sun nor the weariness of the road. It was one day at noon that
      she again passed through Louvain, and she soon found herself by the noble
      edifice of the Hotel de Ville. Proud rose its spires against the sky, and
      the sun shone bright on its rich tracery and Gothic casements; the broad
      open street was crowded with persons of all classes, and it was with some
      modest alarm that Lucille lowered her veil and mingled with the throng. It
      was easy, as the priest had said, to find the house of Le Kain; she bade
      the servant take the priest&rsquo;s letter to his master, and she was not long
      kept waiting before she was admitted to the physician&rsquo;s presence. He was a
      spare, tall man, with a bald front, and a calm and friendly countenance.
      He was not less touched than the priest had been by the manner in which
      she narrated her story, described the affliction of her betrothed, and the
      hope that had inspired the pilgrimage she had just made.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said he, encouragingly, &ldquo;we must see our patient. You can bring
      him hither to me.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Ah, sir, I had hoped&mdash;&rdquo; Lucille stopped suddenly.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;What, my young friend?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;That I might have had the triumph of bringing you to Malines. I know,
      sir, what you are about to say, and I know, sir, your time must be very
      valuable; but I am not so poor as I seem, and Eugene, that is, M. St.
      Amand, is very rich, and&mdash;and I have at Bruxelles what I am sure is a
      large sum; it was to have provided for the wedding, but it is most
      heartily at your service, sir.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Le Kain smiled; he was one of those men who love to read the human heart
      when its leaves are fair and undefiled; and, in the benevolence of
      science, he would have gone a longer journey than from Louvain to Malines
      to give sight to the blind, even had St. Amand been a beggar.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Well, well,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;but you forget that M. St. Amand is not the only
      one in the world who wants me. I must look at my notebook, and see if I
      can be spared for a day or two.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      So saying, he glanced at his memoranda. Everything smiled on Lucille; he
      had no engagements that his partner could not fulfil, for some days; he
      consented to accompany Lucille to Malines.
    </p>
    <p>
      Meanwhile, cheerless and dull had passed the time to St. Amand. He was
      perpetually asking Madame le Tisseur what hour it was,&mdash;it was almost
      his only question. There seemed to him no sun in the heavens, no freshness
      in the air, and he even forbore his favourite music; the instrument had
      lost its sweetness since Lucille was not by to listen.
    </p>
    <p>
      It was natural that the gossips of Malines should feel some envy at the
      marriage Lucille was about to make with one whose competence report had
      exaggerated into prodigal wealth, whose birth had been elevated from the
      respectable to the noble, and whose handsome person was clothed, by the
      interest excited by his misfortune, with the beauty of Antinous. Even that
      misfortune, which ought to have levelled all distinctions, was not
      sufficient to check the general envy; perhaps to some of the damsels of
      Malines blindness in a husband would not have seemed an unwelcome
      infirmity! But there was one in whom this envy rankled with a peculiar
      sting: it was the beautiful, the all-conquering Julie! That the humble,
      the neglected Lucille should be preferred to her; that Lucille, whose
      existence was well-nigh forgot beside Julie&rsquo;s, should become thus suddenly
      of importance; that there should be one person in the world, and that
      person young, rich, handsome, to whom she was less than nothing, when
      weighed in the balance with Lucille, mortified to the quick a vanity that
      had never till then received a wound. &ldquo;It is well,&rdquo; she would say with a
      bitter jest, &ldquo;that Lucille&rsquo;s lover is blind. To be the one it is necessary
      to be the other!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      During Lucille&rsquo;s absence she had been constantly in Madame le Tisseur&rsquo;s
      house; indeed, Lucille had prayed her to be so. She had sought, with an
      industry that astonished herself, to supply Lucille&rsquo;s place; and among the
      strange contradictions of human nature, she had learned during her efforts
      to please, to love the object of those efforts,&mdash;as much at least as
      she was capable of loving.
    </p>
    <p>
      She conceived a positive hatred to Lucille; she persisted in imagining
      that nothing but the accident of first acquaintance had deprived her of a
      conquest with which she persuaded herself her happiness had become
      connected. Had St. Amand never loved Lucille and proposed to Julie, his
      misfortune would have made her reject him, despite his wealth and his
      youth; but to be Lucille&rsquo;s lover, and a conquest to be won from Lucille,
      raised him instantly to an importance not his own. Safe, however, in his
      affliction, the arts and beauty of Julie fell harmless on the fidelity of
      St. Amand. Nay, he liked her less than ever, for it seemed an impertinence
      in any one to counterfeit the anxiety and watchfulness of Lucille.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;It is time, surely it is time, Madame le Tisseur, that Lucille should
      return? She might have sold all the lace in Malines by this time,&rdquo; said
      St. Amand, one day, peevishly.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Patience, my dear friend, patience; perhaps she may return to-morrow.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;To-morrow! let me see, it is only six o&rsquo;clock,&mdash;only six, you are
      sure?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Just five, dear Eugene. Shall I read to you? This is a new book from
      Paris; it has made a great noise,&rdquo; said Julie.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;You are very kind, but I will not trouble you.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;It is anything but trouble.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;In a word, then, I would rather not.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Oh, that he could see!&rdquo; thought Julie; &ldquo;would I not punish him for this!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;I hear carriage wheels; who can be passing this way? Surely it is the <i>voiturier</i>
      from Bruxelles,&rdquo; said St. Amand, starting up; &ldquo;it is his day,&mdash;his
      hour, too. No, no, it is a lighter vehicle,&rdquo; and he sank down listlessly
      on his seat.
    </p>
    <p>
      Nearer and nearer rolled the wheels; they turned the corner; they stopped
      at the lowly door; and, overcome, overjoyed, Lucille was clasped to the
      bosom of St. Amand.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Stay,&rdquo; said she, blushing, as she recovered her self-possession, and
      turned to Le Kain; &ldquo;pray pardon me, sir. Dear Eugene, I have brought with
      me one who, by God&rsquo;s blessing, may yet restore you to sight.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;We must not be sanguine, my child,&rdquo; said Le Kain; &ldquo;anything is better
      than disappointment.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      To close this part of my story, dear Gertrude, Le Kain examined St. Amand,
      and the result of the examination was a confident belief in the
      probability of a cure. St. Amand gladly consented to the experiment of an
      operation; it succeeded, the blind man saw! Oh, what were Lucille&rsquo;s
      feelings, what her emotion, what her joy, when she found the object of her
      pilgrimage, of her prayers, fulfilled! That joy was so intense that in the
      eternal alternations of human life she might have foretold from its excess
      how bitter the sorrows fated to ensue.
    </p>
    <p>
      As soon as by degrees the patient&rsquo;s new sense became reconciled to the
      light, his first, his only demand was for Lucille. &ldquo;No, let me not see her
      alone; let me see her in the midst of you all, that I may convince you
      that the heart never is mistaken in its instincts.&rdquo; With a fearful, a
      sinking presentiment, Lucille yielded to the request, to which the
      impetuous St. Amand would hear indeed no denial. The father, the mother,
      Julie, Lucille, Julie&rsquo;s younger sisters, assembled in the little parlour;
      the door opened, and St. Amand stood hesitating on the threshold. One look
      around sufficed to him; his face brightened, he uttered a cry of joy.
      &ldquo;Lucille! Lucille!&rdquo; he exclaimed, &ldquo;it is you, I know it, <i>you</i> only!&rdquo;
       He sprang forward <i>and fell at the feet of Julie</i>!
    </p>
    <p>
      Flushed, elated, triumphant, Julie bent upon him her sparkling eyes; <i>she</i>
      did not undeceive him.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;You are wrong, you mistake,&rdquo; said Madame le Tisseur, in confusion; &ldquo;that
      is her cousin Julie,&mdash;this is your Lucille.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      St. Amand rose, turned, saw Lucille, and at that moment she wished herself
      in her grave. Surprise, mortification, disappointment, almost dismay, were
      depicted in his gaze. He had been haunting his prison-house with dreams,
      and now, set free, he felt how unlike they were to the truth. Too new to
      observation to read the woe, the despair, the lapse and shrinking of the
      whole frame, that his look occasioned Lucille, he yet felt, when the first
      shock of his surprise was over, that it was not thus he should thank her
      who had restored him to sight. He hastened to redeem his error&mdash;ah!
      how could it be redeemed?
    </p>
    <p>
      From that hour all Lucille&rsquo;s happiness was at an end; her fairy palace was
      shattered in the dust; the magician&rsquo;s wand was broken up; the Ariel was
      given to the winds; and the bright enchantment no longer distinguished the
      land she lived in from the rest of the barren world. It is true that St.
      Amand&rsquo;s words were kind; it is true that he remembered with the deepest
      gratitude all she had done in his behalf; it is true that he forced
      himself again and again to say, &ldquo;She is my betrothed, my benefactress!&rdquo;
       and he cursed himself to think that the feelings he had entertained for
      her were fled. Where was the passion of his words; where the ardour of his
      tone; where that play and light of countenance which her step, her voice,
      could formerly call forth? When they were alone he was embarrassed and
      constrained, and almost cold; his hand no longer sought hers, his soul no
      longer missed her if she was absent a moment from his side. When in their
      household circle he seemed visibly more at ease; but did his eyes fasten
      upon her who had opened them to the day; did they not wander at every
      interval with a too eloquent admiration to the blushing and radiant face
      of the exulting Julie? This was not, you will believe, suddenly
      perceptible in one day or one week, but every day it was perceptible more
      and more. Yet still&mdash;bewitched, ensnared, as St. Amand was he never
      perhaps would have been guilty of an infidelity that he strove with the
      keenest remorse to wrestle against, had it not been for the fatal
      contrast, at the first moment of his gushing enthusiasm, which Julie had
      presented to Lucille; but for that he would have formed no previous idea
      of real and living beauty to aid the disappointment of his imaginings and
      his dreams. He would have seen Lucille young and graceful, and with eyes
      beaming affection, contrasted only by the wrinkled countenance and bended
      frame of her parents, and she would have completed her conquest over him
      before he had discovered that she was less beautiful than others; nay,
      more,&mdash;that infidelity never could have lasted above the first few
      days, if the vain and heartless object of it had not exerted every art,
      all the power and witchery of her beauty, to cement and continue it. The
      unfortunate Lucille&mdash;so susceptible to the slightest change in those
      she loved, so diffident of herself, so proud too in that diffidence&mdash;no
      longer necessary, no longer missed, no longer loved, could not bear to
      endure the galling comparison between the past and the present. She fled
      uncomplainingly to her chamber to indulge her tears, and thus, unhappily,
      absent as her father generally was during the day, and busied as her
      mother was either at work or in household matters, she left Julie a
      thousand opportunities to complete the power she had begun to wield over&mdash;no,
      not the heart!&mdash;the <i>senses</i> of St. Amand! Yet, still not
      suspecting, in the open generosity of her mind, the whole extent of her
      affliction, poor Lucille buoyed herself at times with the hope that when
      once married, when, once in that intimacy of friendship, the unspeakable
      love she felt for him could disclose itself with less restraint than at
      present,&mdash;she would perhaps regain a heart which had been so
      devotedly hers, that she could not think that without a fault it was
      irrevocably gone: on that hope she anchored all the little happiness that
      remained to her. And still St. Amand pressed their marriage, but in what
      different tones! In fact, he wished to preclude from himself the
      possibility of a deeper ingratitude than that which he had incurred
      already. He vainly thought that the broken reed of love might be bound up
      and strengthened by the ties of duty; and at least he was anxious that his
      hand, his fortune, his esteem, his gratitude, should give to Lucille the
      only recompense it was now in his power to bestow. Meanwhile, left alone
      so often with Julie, and Julie bent on achieving the last triumph over his
      heart, St. Amand was gradually preparing a far different reward, a far
      different return, for her to whom he owed so incalculable a debt.
    </p>
    <p>
      There was a garden, behind the house, in which there was a small arbour,
      where often in the summer evenings Eugene and Lucille had sat together,&mdash;hours
      never to return! One day she heard from her own chamber, where she sat
      mourning, the sound of St. Amand&rsquo;s flute swelling gently from that beloved
      and consecrated bower. She wept as she heard it, and the memories that the
      music bore softening and endearing his image, she began to reproach
      herself that she had yielded so often to the impulse of her wounded
      feelings; that chilled by <i>his</i> coldness, she had left him so often
      to himself, and had not sufficiently dared to tell him of that affection
      which, in her modest self-depreciation, constituted her only pretension to
      his love. &ldquo;Perhaps he is alone now,&rdquo; she thought; &ldquo;the air too is one
      which he knows that I love;&rdquo; and with her heart in her step, she stole
      from the house and sought the arbour. She had scarce turned from her
      chamber when the flute ceased; as she neared the arbour she heard voices,&mdash;Julie&rsquo;s
      voice in grief, St. Amand&rsquo;s in consolation. A dread foreboding seized her;
      her feet clung rooted to the earth.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Yes, marry her, forget me,&rdquo; said Julie; &ldquo;in a few days you will be
      another&rsquo;s, and I&mdash;I&mdash;forgive me, Eugene, forgive me that I have
      disturbed your happiness. I am punished sufficiently; my heart will break,
      but it will break in loving you.&rdquo; Sobs choked Julie&rsquo;s voice.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Oh, speak not thus,&rdquo; said St. Amand. &ldquo;I, <i>I</i> only am to blame,&mdash;I,
      false to both, to both ungrateful. Oh, from the hour that these eyes
      opened upon you I drank in a new life; the sun itself to me was less
      wonderful than your beauty. But&mdash;but&mdash;let me forget that hour.
      What do I not owe to Lucille? I shall be wretched,&mdash;I shall deserve
      to be so; for shall I not think, Julie, that I have embittered your life
      with our ill-fated love? But all that I can give&mdash;my hand, my home,
      my plighted faith&mdash;must be hers. Nay, Julie, nay&mdash;why that look?
      Could I act otherwise? Can I dream otherwise? Whatever the sacrifice, <i>must</i>
      I not render it? Ah, what do I owe to Lucille, were it only for the
      thought that but for her I might never have seen thee!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Lucille stayed to hear no more; with the same soft step as that which had
      borne her within hearing of these fatal words, she turned back once more
      to her desolate chamber.
    </p>
    <p>
      That evening, as St. Amand was sitting alone in his apartment, he heard a
      gentle knock at the door. &ldquo;Come in,&rdquo; he said, and Lucille entered. He
      started in some confusion, and would have taken her hand, but she gently
      repulsed him. She took a seat opposite to him, and looking down, thus
      addressed him:&mdash;
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;My dear Eugene, that is, Monsieur St. Amand, I have something on my mind
      that I think it better to speak at once; and if I do not exactly express
      what I would wish to say, you must not be offended with Lucille: it is not
      an easy matter to put into words what one feels deeply.&rdquo; Colouring, and
      suspecting something of the truth, St. Amand would have broken in upon her
      here; but she with a gentle impatience motioned him to be silent, and
      continued:&mdash;
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;You know that when you once loved me, I used to tell you that you would
      cease to do so could you see how undeserving I was of your attachment. I
      did not deceive myself, Eugene; I always felt assured that such would be
      the case, that your love for me necessarily rested on your affliction. But
      for all that I never at least had a dream or a desire but for your
      happiness; and God knows, that if again, by walking barefooted, not to
      Cologne, but to Rome&mdash;to the end of the world&mdash;I could save you
      from a much less misfortune than that of blindness, I would cheerfully do
      it; yes, even though I might foretell all the while that, on my return,
      you would speak to me coldly, think of me lightly, and that the penalty to
      me would&mdash;would be&mdash;what it has been!&rdquo; Here Lucille wiped a few
      natural tears from her eyes. St. Amand, struck to the heart, covered his
      face with his hands, without the courage to interrupt her. Lucille
      continued:&mdash;
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;That which I foresaw has come to pass; I am no longer to you what I once
      was, when you could clothe this poor form and this homely face with a
      beauty they did not possess. You would wed me still, it is true; but I am
      proud, Eugene, and cannot stoop to gratitude where I once had love. I am
      not so unjust as to blame you; the change was natural, was inevitable. I
      should have steeled myself more against it; but I am now resigned. We must
      part; you love Julie&mdash;that too is natural&mdash;and <i>she</i> loves
      you; ah! what also more in the probable course of events? Julie loves you,
      not yet, perhaps, so much as I did; but then she has not known you as I
      have, and she whose whole life has been triumph cannot feel the gratitude
      that I felt at fancying myself loved; but this will come&mdash;God grant
      it! Farewell, then, forever, dear Eugene; I leave you when you no longer
      want me; you are now independent of Lucille; wherever you go, a thousand
      hereafter can supply my place. Farewell!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      She rose, as she said this, to leave the room; but St. Amand seizing her
      hand, which she in vain endeavoured to withdraw from his clasp, poured
      forth incoherently, passionately, his reproaches on himself, his eloquent
      persuasion against her resolution.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;I confess,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;that I have been allured for a moment; I confess
      that Julie&rsquo;s beauty made me less sensible to your stronger, your holier,
      oh! far, far holier title to my love! But forgive me, dearest Lucille;
      already I return to you, to all I once felt for you; make me not curse the
      blessing of sight that I owe to you. You must not leave me; never can we
      two part. Try me, only try me, and if ever hereafter my heart wander from
      you, <i>then</i>, Lucille, leave me to my remorse!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Even at that moment Lucille did not yield; she felt that his prayer was
      but the enthusiasm of the hour; she felt that there was a virtue in her
      pride,&mdash;that to leave him was a duty to herself. In vain he pleaded;
      in vain were his embraces, his prayers; in vain he reminded her of their
      plighted troth, of her aged parents, whose happiness had become wrapped in
      her union with him: &ldquo;How,&mdash;even were it as you wrongly believe,&mdash;how,
      in honour to them, can I desert you, can I wed another?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Trust that, trust all, to me,&rdquo; answered Lucille; &ldquo;your honour shall be my
      care, none shall blame <i>you</i>; only do not let your marriage with
      Julie be celebrated here before their eyes: that is all I ask, all they
      can expect. God bless you! do not fancy I shall be unhappy, for whatever
      happiness the world gives you, shall I not have contributed to bestow it?
      and with that thought I am above compassion.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      She glided from his arms, and left him to a solitude more bitter even than
      that of blindness. That very night Lucille sought her mother; to her she
      confided all. I pass over the reasons she urged, the arguments she
      overcame; she conquered rather than convinced, and leaving to Madame le
      Tisseur the painful task of breaking to her father her unalterable
      resolution, she quitted Malines the next morning, and with a heart too
      honest to be utterly without comfort, paid that visit to her aunt which
      had been so long deferred.
    </p>
    <p>
      The pride of Lucille&rsquo;s parents prevented them from reproaching St. Amand.
      He could not bear, however, their cold and altered looks; he left their
      house; and though for several days he would not even see Julie, yet her
      beauty and her art gradually resumed their empire over him. They were
      married at Courtroi, and to the joy of the vain Julie departed to the gay
      metropolis of France. But, before their departure, before his marriage,
      St. Amand endeavoured to appease his conscience by obtaining for M. le
      Tisseur a much more lucrative and honourable office than that he now held.
      Rightly judging that Malines could no longer be a pleasant residence for
      them, and much less for Lucille, the duties of the post were to be
      fulfilled in another town; and knowing that M. le Tisseur&rsquo;s delicacy would
      revolt at receiving such a favour from his hands, he kept the nature of
      his negotiation a close secret, and suffered the honest citizen to believe
      that his own merits alone had entitled him to so unexpected a promotion.
    </p>
    <p>
      Time went on. This quiet and simple history of humble affections took its
      date in a stormy epoch of the world,&mdash;the dawning Revolution of
      France. The family of Lucille had been little more than a year settled in
      their new residence when Dumouriez led his army into the Netherlands. But
      how meanwhile had that year passed for Lucille? I have said that her
      spirit was naturally high; that though so tender, she was not weak. Her
      very pilgrimage to Cologne alone, and at the timid age of seventeen,
      proved that there was a strength in her nature no less than a devotion in
      her love. The sacrifice she had made brought its own reward. She believed
      St. Amand was happy, and she would not give way to the selfishness of
      grief; she had still duties to perform; she could still comfort her
      parents and cheer their age; she could still be all the world to them: she
      felt this, and was consoled. Only once during the year had she heard of
      Julie; she had been seen by a mutual friend at Paris, gay, brilliant,
      courted, and admired; of St. Amand she heard nothing.
    </p>
    <p>
      My tale, dear Gertrude, does not lead me through the harsh scenes of war.
      I do not tell you of the slaughter and the siege, and the blood that
      inundated those fair lands,&mdash;the great battlefield of Europe. The
      people of the Netherlands in general were with the cause of Dumouriez, but
      the town in which Le Tisseur dwelt offered some faint resistance to his
      arms. Le Tisseur himself, despite his age, girded on his sword; the town
      was carried, and the fierce and licentious troops of the conqueror poured,
      flushed with their easy victory, through its streets. Le Tisseur&rsquo;s house
      was filled with drunken and rude troopers; Lucille herself trembled in the
      fierce gripe of one of those dissolute soldiers, more bandit than soldier,
      whom the subtle Dumouriez had united to his army, and by whose blood he so
      often saved that of his nobler band. Her shrieks, her cries, were vain,
      when suddenly the troopers gave way. &ldquo;The Captain! brave Captain!&rdquo; was
      shouted forth; the insolent soldier, felled by a powerful arm, sank
      senseless at the feet of Lucille, and a glorious form, towering above its
      fellows,&mdash;even through its glittering garb, even in that dreadful
      hour, remembered at a glance by Lucille,&mdash;stood at her side; her
      protector, her guardian! Thus once more she beheld St. Amand!
    </p>
    <p>
      The house was cleared in an instant, the door barred. Shouts, groans, wild
      snatches of exulting song, the clang of arms, the tramp of horses, the
      hurrying footsteps, the deep music sounded loud, and blended terribly
      without. Lucille heard them not,&mdash;she was on that breast which never
      should have deserted her.
    </p>
    <p>
      Effectually to protect his friends, St. Amand took up his quarters at
      their house; and for two days he was once more under the same roof as
      Lucille. He never recurred voluntarily to Julie; he answered Lucille&rsquo;s
      timid inquiry after her health briefly, and with coldness, but he spoke
      with all the enthusiasm of a long-pent and ardent spirit of the new
      profession he had embraced. Glory seemed now to be his only mistress; and
      the vivid delusion of the first bright dreams of the Revolution filled his
      mind, broke from his tongue, and lighted up those dark eyes which Lucille
      had redeemed to day.
    </p>
    <p>
      She saw him depart at the head of his troops; she saw his proud crest
      glancing in the sun; she saw his steed winding through the narrow street;
      she saw that his last glance reverted to her, where she stood at the door;
      and, as he waved his adieu, she fancied that there was on his face that
      look of deep and grateful tenderness which reminded her of the one bright
      epoch of her life.
    </p>
    <p>
      She was right; St. Amand had long since in bitterness repented of a
      transient infatuation, had long since distinguished the true Florimel from
      the false, and felt that, in Julie, Lucille&rsquo;s wrongs were avenged. But in
      the hurry and heat of war he plunged that regret&mdash;the keenest of all&mdash;which
      embodies the bitter words, &ldquo;TOO LATE!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Years passed away, and in the resumed tranquillity of Lucille&rsquo;s life the
      brilliant apparition of St. Amand appeared as something dreamed of, not
      seen. The star of Napoleon had risen above the horizon; the romance of his
      early career had commenced; and the campaign of Egypt had been the herald
      of those brilliant and meteoric successes which flashed forth from the
      gloom of the Revolution of France.
    </p>
    <p>
      You are aware, dear Gertrude, how many in the French as well as the
      English troops returned home from Egypt blinded with the ophthalmia of
      that arid soil. Some of the young men in Lucille&rsquo;s town, who had joined
      Napoleon&rsquo;s army, came back darkened by that fearful affliction, and
      Lucille&rsquo;s alms and Lucille&rsquo;s aid and Lucille&rsquo;s sweet voice were ever at
      hand for those poor sufferers, whose common misfortune touched so
      thrilling a chord of her heart.
    </p>
    <p>
      Her father was now dead, and she had only her mother to cheer amidst the
      ills of age. As one evening they sat at work together, Madame le Tisseur
      said, after a pause,&mdash;
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;I wish, dear Lucille, thou couldst be persuaded to marry Justin; he loves
      thee well, and now that thou art yet young, and hast many years before
      thee, thou shouldst remember that when I die thou wilt be alone.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Ah, cease, dearest mother, I never can marry now; and as for love&mdash;once
      taught in the bitter school in which I have learned the knowledge of
      myself&mdash;I cannot be deceived again.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;My Lucille, you do not know yourself. Never was woman loved if Justin
      does not love you; and never did lover feel with more real warmth how
      worthily he loved.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      And this was true; and not of Justin alone, for Lucille&rsquo;s modest virtues,
      her kindly temper, and a certain undulating and feminine grace, which
      accompanied all her movements, had secured her as many conquests as if she
      had been beautiful. She had rejected all offers of marriage with a
      shudder; without even the throb of a flattered vanity. One memory, sadder,
      was also dearer to her than all things; and something sacred in its
      recollections made her deem it even a crime to think of effacing the past
      by a new affection.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;I believe,&rdquo; continued Madame le Tisseur, angrily, &ldquo;that thou still
      thinkest fondly of him from whom only in the world thou couldst have
      experienced ingratitude.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Nay, Mother,&rdquo; said Lucille, with a blush and a slight sigh, &ldquo;Eugene is
      married to another.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      While thus conversing, they heard a gentle and timid knock at the door;
      the latch was lifted. &ldquo;This,&rdquo; said the rough voice of a <i>commissionaire</i>
      of the town, &ldquo;this, monsieur, is the house of Madame le Tisseur, and <i>voila
      mademoiselle</i>!&rdquo; A tall figure, with a shade over his eyes, and wrapped
      in a long military cloak, stood in the room. A thrill shot across
      Lucille&rsquo;s heart. He stretched out his arms. &ldquo;Lucille,&rdquo; said that
      melancholy voice, which had made the music of her first youth, &ldquo;where art
      thou, Lucille? Alas! she does not recognize St. Amand.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Thus was it indeed. By a singular fatality, the burning suns and the sharp
      dust of the plains of Egypt had smitten the young soldier, in the flush of
      his career, with a second&mdash;and this time with an irremediable&mdash;blindness!
      He had returned to France to find his hearth lonely. Julie was no more,&mdash;a
      sudden fever had cut her off in the midst of youth; and he had sought his
      way to Lucille&rsquo;s house, to see if one hope yet remained to him in the
      world!
    </p>
    <p>
      And when, days afterwards, humbly and sadly he re-urged a former suit, did
      Lucille shut her heart to its prayer? Did her pride remember its wound;
      did she revert to his desertion; did she reply to the whisper of her
      yearning love, &ldquo;<i>Thou hast been before forsaken</i>&rdquo;? That voice and
      those darkened eyes pleaded to her with a pathos not to be resisted. &ldquo;I am
      once more necessary to him,&rdquo; was all her thought; &ldquo;if I reject him who
      will tend him?&rdquo; In that thought was the motive of her conduct; in that
      thought gushed back upon her soul all the springs of checked but
      unconquered, unconquerable love! In that thought, she stood beside him at
      the altar, and pledged, with a yet holier devotion than she might have
      felt of yore, the vow of her imperishable truth.
    </p>
    <p>
      And Lucille found, in the future, a reward, which the common world could
      never comprehend. With his blindness returned all the feelings she had
      first awakened in St. Amand&rsquo;s solitary heart; again he yearned for her
      step, again he missed even a moment&rsquo;s absence from his side, again her
      voice chased the shadow from his brow, and in her presence was a sense of
      shelter and of sunshine. He no longer sighed for the blessing he had lost;
      he reconciled himself to fate, and entered into that serenity of mood
      which mostly characterizes the blind.
    </p>
    <p>
      Perhaps after we have seen the actual world, and experienced its hollow
      pleasures, we can resign ourselves the better to its exclusion; and as the
      cloister, which repels the ardour of our hope, is sweet to our
      remembrance, so the darkness loses its terror when experience has wearied
      us with the glare and travail of the day. It was something, too, as they
      advanced in life, to feel the chains that bound him to Lucille
      strengthening daily, and to cherish in his overflowing heart the sweetness
      of increasing gratitude; it was something that he could not see years
      wrinkle that open brow, or dim the tenderness of that touching smile; it
      was something that to him she was beyond the reach of time, and preserved
      to the verge of a grave (which received them both within a few days of
      each other) in all the bloom of her unwithering affection, in all the
      freshness of a heart that never could grow old!
    </p>
    <p>
      Gertrude, who had broken in upon Trevylyan&rsquo;s story by a thousand anxious
      interruptions, and a thousand pretty apologies for interrupting, was
      charmed with a tale in which true love was made happy at last, although
      she did not forgive St. Amand his ingratitude, and although she declared,
      with a critical shake of the head, that &ldquo;it was very unnatural that the
      mere beauty of Julie, or the mere want of it in Lucille, should have
      produced such an effect upon him, if he had ever <i>really</i> loved
      Lucille in his blindness.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      As they passed through Malines, the town assumed an interest in Gertrude&rsquo;s
      eyes to which it scarcely of itself was entitled. She looked wistfully at
      the broad market-place, at a corner of which was one of those out-of-door
      groups of quiet and noiseless revellers, which Dutch art has raised from
      the Familiar to the Picturesque; and then glancing to the tower of St.
      Rembauld, she fancied, amidst the silence of noon, that she yet heard the
      plaintive cry of the blind orphan, &ldquo;Fido, Fido, why hast thou deserted
      me?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005">
      <!--  H2 anchor --> </a>
    </p>
    <div style="height: 4em;">
      <br /><br /><br /><br />
    </div>
    <h2>
      CHAPTER V. ROTTERDAM.&mdash;THE CHARACTER OF THE DUTCH.&mdash;THEIR
      RESEMBLANCE TO
    </h2>
    <p>
      THE GERMANS.&mdash;A DISPUTE BETWEEN VANE AND TREVYLYAN, AFTER THE MANNER
      OF THE ANCIENT NOVELISTS, AS TO WHICH IS PREFERABLE, THE LIFE OF ACTION OR
      THE LIFE OF REPOSE.&mdash;TREVYLYAN&rsquo;S CONTRAST BETWEEN LITERARY AMBITION
      AND THE AMBITION OF PUBLIC LIFE.
    </p>
    <p>
      OUR travellers arrived at Rotterdam on a bright and sunny day. There is a
      cheerfulness about the operations of Commerce,&mdash;a life, a bustle, an
      action which always exhilarate the spirits at the first glance. Afterwards
      they fatigue us; we get too soon behind the scenes, and find the base and
      troublous passions which move the puppets and conduct the drama.
    </p>
    <p>
      But Gertrude, in whom ill health had not destroyed the vividness of
      impression that belongs to the inexperienced, was delighted at the
      cheeriness of all around her. As she leaned lightly on Trevylyan&rsquo;s arm, he
      listened with a forgetful joy to her questions and exclamations at the
      stir and liveliness of a city from which was to commence their pilgrimage
      along the Rhine. And indeed the scene was rife with the spirit of that
      people at once so active and so patient, so daring on the sea, so cautious
      on the land. Industry was visible everywhere; the vessels in the harbour,
      the crowded boat putting off to land, the throng on the quay,&mdash;all
      looked bustling and spoke of commerce. The city itself, on which the skies
      shone fairly through light and fleecy clouds, wore a cheerful aspect. The
      church of St. Lawrence rising above the clean, neat houses, and on one
      side trees thickly grouped, gayly contrasted at once the waters and the
      city.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;I like this place,&rdquo; said Gertrude&rsquo;s father, quietly; &ldquo;it has an air of
      comfort.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;And an absence of grandeur,&rdquo; said Trevylyan.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;A commercial people are one great middle-class in their habits and train
      of mind,&rdquo; replied Vane; &ldquo;and grandeur belongs to the extremes,&mdash;an
      impoverished population and a wealthy despot.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      They went to see the statue of Erasmus, and the house in which he was
      born. Vane had a certain admiration for Erasmus which his companions did
      not share; he liked the quiet irony of the sage, and his knowledge of the
      world; and, besides, Vane was at that time of life when philosophers
      become objects of interest. At first they are teachers; secondly, friends;
      and it is only a few who arrive at the third stage, and find them
      deceivers. The Dutch are a singular people. Their literature is neglected,
      but it has some of the German vein in its strata,&mdash;the patience, the
      learning, the homely delineation, and even some traces of the mixture of
      the humorous and the terrible which form that genius for the grotesque so
      especially German&mdash;you find this in their legends and ghost-stories.
      But in Holland activity destroys, in Germany indolence nourishes, romance.
    </p>
    <p>
      They stayed a day or two at Rotterdam, and then proceeded up the Rhine to
      Gorcum. The banks were flat and tame, and nothing could be less impressive
      of its native majesty than this part of the course of the great river.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;I never felt before,&rdquo; whispered Gertrude, tenderly, &ldquo;how much there was
      of consolation in your presence; for here I am at last on the Rhine,&mdash;the
      blue Rhine, and how disappointed I should be if you were not by my side!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;But, my Gertrude, you must wait till we have passed Cologne, before the
      <i>glories</i> of the Rhine burst upon you.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;It reverses life, my child,&rdquo; said the moralizing Vane; &ldquo;and the stream
      flows through dulness at first, reserving its poetry for our
      perseverance.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;I will not allow your doctrine,&rdquo; said Trevylyan, as the ambitious ardour
      of his native disposition stirred within him. &ldquo;Life has always action; it
      is our own fault if it ever be dull: youth has its enterprise, manhood its
      schemes; and even if infirmity creep upon age, the mind, the mind still
      triumphs over the mortal clay, and in the quiet hermitage, among books,
      and from thoughts, keeps the great wheel within everlastingly in motion.
      No, the better class of spirits have always an antidote to the insipidity
      of a common career, they have ever energy at will&mdash;&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;And never happiness!&rdquo; answered Vane, after a pause, as he gazed on the
      proud countenance of Trevylyan, with that kind of calm, half-pitying
      interest which belonged to a character deeply imbued with the philosophy
      of a sad experience acting upon an unimpassioned heart. &ldquo;And in truth,
      Trevylyan, it would please me if I could but teach you the folly of
      preferring the exercise of that energy of which you speak to the golden
      luxuries of REST. What ambition can ever bring an adequate reward? Not,
      surely, the ambition of letters, the desire of intellectual renown!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;True,&rdquo; said Trevylyan, quietly; &ldquo;that dream I have long renounced; there
      is nothing palpable in literary fame,&mdash;it scarcely perhaps soothes
      the vain, it assuredly chafes the proud. In my earlier years I attempted
      some works which gained what the world, perhaps rightly, deemed a
      sufficient need of reputation; yet it was not sufficient to recompense
      myself for the fresh hours I had consumed, for the sacrifices of pleasure
      I had made. The subtle aims that had inspired me were not perceived; the
      thoughts that had seemed new and beautiful to me fell flat and lustreless
      on the soul of others. If I was approved, it was often for what I
      condemned myself; and I found that the trite commonplace and the false wit
      charmed, while the truth fatigued, and the enthusiasm revolted. For men of
      that genius to which I make no pretension, who have dwelt apart in the
      obscurity of their own thoughts, gazing upon stars that shine not for the
      dull sleepers of the world, it must be a keen sting to find the product of
      their labour confounded with a class, and to be mingled up in men&rsquo;s
      judgment with the faults or merits of a tribe. Every great genius must
      deem himself original and alone in his conceptions. It is not enough for
      him that these conceptions should be approved as good, unless they are
      admitted as inventive, if they mix him with the herd he has shunned, not
      separate him in fame as he has been separated in soul. Some Frenchman, the
      oracle of his circle, said of the poet of the &lsquo;Phedre,&rsquo; &lsquo;Racine and the
      other imitators of Corneille;&rsquo; and Racine, in his wrath, nearly forswore
      tragedy forever. It is in vain to tell the author that the public is the
      judge of his works. The author believes himself above the public, or he
      would never have written; and,&rdquo; continued Trevylyan, with enthusiasm, &ldquo;he
      <i>is</i> above them; their fiat may crush his glory, but never his
      self-esteem. He stands alone and haughty amidst the wrecks of the temple
      he imagined he had raised &lsquo;To THE FUTURE,&rsquo; and retaliates neglect with
      scorn. But is this, the life of scorn, a pleasurable state of existence?
      Is it one to be cherished? Does even the moment of fame counterbalance the
      years of mortification? And what is there in literary fame itself present
      and palpable to its heir? His work is a pebble thrown into the deep; the
      stir lasts for a moment, and the wave closes up, to be susceptible no more
      to the same impression. The circle may widen to other lands and other
      ages, but around <i>him</i> it is weak and faint. The trifles of the day,
      the low politics, the base intrigues, occupy the tongue, and fill the
      thought of his contemporaries. He is less known than a mountebank, or a
      new dancer; his glory comes not home to him; it brings no present, no
      perpetual reward, like the applauses that wait the actor, or the
      actor-like murmur of the senate; and this, which vexes, also lowers him;
      his noble nature begins to nourish the base vices of jealousy, and the
      unwillingness to admire. Goldsmith is forgotten in the presence of a
      puppet; he feels it, and is mean; he expresses it, and is ludicrous. It is
      well to say that great minds will not stoop to jealousy; in the greatest
      minds, it is most frequent.* Few authors are ever so aware of the
      admiration they excite as to afford to be generous; and this melancholy
      truth revolts us with our own ambition. Shall we be demigods in our
      closets at the price of sinking below mortality in the world? No! it was
      from this deep sentiment of the unrealness of literary fame, of
      dissatisfaction at the fruits it produced, of fear for the meanness it
      engendered, that I resigned betimes all love for its career; and if, by
      the restless desire that haunts men who think much to write ever, I should
      be urged hereafter to literature, I will sternly teach myself to persevere
      in the indifference to its fame.&rdquo;
     </p>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
  * See the long list of names furnished by Disraeli, in that most
    exquisite work, &ldquo;The Literary Character,&rdquo; vol. ii. p. 75.  Plato,
    Xenophon, Chaucer, Corneille, Voltaire, Dryden, the Caracci,
    Domenico Venetiano, murdered by his envious friend, and the gentle
    Castillo fainting away at the genius of Murillo.
</pre>
    <p>
      &ldquo;You say as I would say,&rdquo; answered Vane, with his tranquil smile; &ldquo;and
      your experience corroborates my theory. Ambition, then, is not the root of
      happiness. Why more in action than in letters?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Because,&rdquo; said Trevylyan, &ldquo;in action we commonly gain in our life all the
      honour we deserve: the public judge of men better and more rapidly than of
      books. And he who takes to himself in action a high and pure ambition,
      associates it with so many objects, that, unlike literature, the failure
      of one is balanced by the success of the other. He, the creator of deeds,
      not resembling the creator of books, stands not alone; he is eminently
      social; he has many comrades, and without their aid he could not
      accomplish his designs. This divides and mitigates the impatient jealousy
      against others. He works for a cause, and knows early that he cannot
      monopolize its whole glory; he shares what he is aware it is impossible to
      engross. Besides, action leaves him no time for brooding over
      disappointment. The author has consumed his youth in a work,&mdash;it
      fails in glory. Can he write another work? Bid him call back another
      youth! But in action, the labour of the mind is from day to day. A week
      replaces what a week has lost, and all the aspirant&rsquo;s fame is of the
      present. It is lipped by the Babel of the living world; he is ever on the
      stage, and the spectators are ever ready to applaud. Thus perpetually in
      the service of others self ceases to be his world; he has no leisure to
      brood over real or imaginary wrongs; the excitement whirls on the machine
      till it is worn out&mdash;&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;And kicked aside,&rdquo; said Vane, &ldquo;with the broken lumber of men&rsquo;s other
      tools, in the chamber of their son&rsquo;s forgetfulness. Your man of action
      lasts but for an hour; the man of letters lasts for ages.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;We live not for ages,&rdquo; answered Trevylyan; &ldquo;our life is on earth, and not
      in the grave.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;But even grant,&rdquo; continued Vane&mdash;&ldquo;and I for one will concede the
      point&mdash;that posthumous fame is not worth the living agonies that
      obtain it, how are you better off in your poor and vulgar career of
      action? Would you assist the rulers?&mdash;servility! The people?&mdash;folly!
      If you take the great philosophical view which the worshippers of the past
      rarely take, but which, unknown to them, is their sole excuse,&mdash;namely,
      that the changes which <i>may</i> benefit the future unsettle the present;
      and that it is not the wisdom of practical legislation to risk the peace
      of our contemporaries in the hope of obtaining happiness for their
      posterity,&mdash;to what suspicions, to what charges are you exposed! You
      are deemed the foe of all liberal opinion, and you read your curses in the
      eyes of a nation. But take the side of the people. What caprice, what
      ingratitude! You have professed so much in theory, that you can never
      accomplish sufficient in practice. Moderation becomes a crime; to be
      prudent is to be perfidious. New demagogues, without temperance, because
      without principle, outstrip you in the moment of your greatest services.
      The public is the grave of a great man&rsquo;s deeds; it is never sated; its maw
      is eternally open; it perpetually craves for more. Where, in the history
      of the world, do you find the gratitude of a people? You find fervour, it
      is true, but not gratitude,&mdash;the fervour that exaggerates a benefit
      at one moment, but not the gratitude that remembers it the next year. Once
      disappoint them, and all your actions, all your sacrifices, are swept from
      their remembrance forever; they break the windows of the very house they
      have given you, and melt down their medals into bullets. Who serves man,
      ruler or peasant, serves the ungrateful; and all the ambitious are but
      types of a Wolsey or a De Witt.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;And what,&rdquo; said Trevylyan, &ldquo;consoles a man in the ills that flesh is heir
      to, in that state of obscure repose, that serene inactivity to which you
      would confine him? Is it not his conscience? Is it not his self-acquittal,
      or his self-approval?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Doubtless,&rdquo; replied Vane.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Be it so,&rdquo; answered the high-souled Trevylyan; &ldquo;the same consolation
      awaits us in action as in repose. We sedulously pursue what we deem to be
      true glory. We are maligned; but our soul acquits us. Could it do more in
      the scandal and the prejudice that assail us in private life? You are
      silent; but note how much deeper should be the comfort, how much loftier
      the self-esteem; for if calumny attack us in a wilful obscurity, what have
      we done to refute the calumny? How have we served our species? Have we
      &lsquo;scorned delight and loved laborious days&rsquo;? Have we made the utmost of the
      &lsquo;talent&rsquo; confided to our care? Have we done those good deeds to our race
      upon which we can retire,&mdash;an &lsquo;Estate of Beneficence,&rsquo;&mdash;from the
      malice of the world, and feel that our deeds are our defenders? This is
      the consolation of virtuous actions; is it so of&mdash;even a virtuous&mdash;indolence?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;You speak as a preacher,&rdquo; said Vane,&mdash;&ldquo;I merely as a calculator; you
      of virtue in affliction, I of a life in ease.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Well, then, if the consciousness of perpetual endeavour to advance our
      race be not alone happier than the life of ease, let us see what this
      vaunted ease really is. Tell me, is it not another name for <i>ennui</i>?
      This state of quiescence, this objectless, dreamless torpor, this
      transition <i>du lit a la table, de la table au lit</i>,&mdash;what more
      dreary and monotonous existence can you devise? Is it pleasure in this
      inglorious existence to think that you are serving pleasure? Is it freedom
      to be the slave to self? For I hold,&rdquo; continued Trevylyan, &ldquo;that this
      jargon of &lsquo;consulting happiness,&rsquo; this cant of living for ourselves, is
      but a mean as well as a false philosophy. Why this eternal reference to
      self? Is self alone to be consulted? Is even our happiness, did it truly
      consist in repose, really the great end of life? I doubt if we cannot
      ascend higher. I doubt if we cannot say with a great moralist, &lsquo;If virtue
      be not estimable in itself, we can see nothing estimable in following it
      for the sake of a bargain.&rsquo; But, in fact, repose is the poorest of all
      delusions; the very act of recurring to self brings about us all those
      ills of self from which, in the turmoil of the world, we can escape. We
      become hypochondriacs. Our very health grows an object of painful
      possession. We are so desirous to be well (for what is retirement without
      health?) that we are ever fancying ourselves ill; and, like the man in the
      &lsquo;Spectator,&rsquo; we weigh ourselves daily, and live but by grains and
      scruples. Retirement is happy only for the poet, for to him it is <i>not</i>
      retirement. He secedes from one world but to gain another, and he finds
      not <i>ennui</i> in seclusion: why? Not because seclusion hath <i>repose</i>,
      but because it hath <i>occupation</i>. In one word, then, I say of action
      and of indolence, grant the same ills to both, and to action there is the
      readier escape or the nobler consolation.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Vane shrugged his shoulders. &ldquo;Ah, my dear friend,&rdquo; said he, tapping his
      snuff-box with benevolent superiority, &ldquo;you are much younger than I am!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      But these conversations, which Trevylyan and Vane often held together,
      dull as I fear this specimen must seem to the reader, had an inexpressible
      charm for Gertrude. She loved the lofty and generous vein of philosophy
      which Trevylyan embraced, and which, while it suited his ardent nature,
      contrasted a demeanour commonly hard and cold to all but herself. And
      young and tender as she was, his ambition infused its spirit into her fine
      imagination, and that passion for enterprise which belongs inseparably to
      romance. She loved to muse over his future lot, and in fancy to share its
      toils and to exult in its triumphs. And if sometimes she asked herself
      whether a career of action might not estrange him from her, she had but to
      turn her gaze upon his watchful eye,&mdash;and lo, he was by her side or
      at her feet!
    </p>
    <p>
      <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006">
      <!--  H2 anchor --> </a>
    </p>
    <div style="height: 4em;">
      <br /><br /><br /><br />
    </div>
    <h2>
      CHAPTER VI. GORCUM.&mdash;THE TOUR OF THE VIRTUES: A PHILOSOPHER&rsquo;S TALE.
    </h2>
    <p>
      IT was a bright and cheery morning as they glided by Gorcum. The boats
      pulling to the shore full of fishermen and peasants in their national
      costume; the breeze freshly rippling the waters; the lightness of the blue
      sky; the loud and laughing voices from the boats,&mdash;all contributed to
      raise the spirit, and fill it with that indescribable gladness which is
      the physical sense of life.
    </p>
    <p>
      The tower of the church, with its long windows and its round dial, rose
      against the clear sky; and on a bench under a green bush facing the water
      sat a jolly Hollander, refreshing the breezes with the fumes of his
      national weed.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;How little it requires to make a journey pleasant, when the companions
      are our friends!&rdquo; said Gertrude, as they sailed along. &ldquo;Nothing can be
      duller than these banks, nothing more delightful than this voyage.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Yet what tries the affections of people for each other so severely as a
      journey together?&rdquo; said Vane. &ldquo;That perpetual companionship from which
      there is no escaping; that confinement, in all our moments of ill-humour
      and listlessness, with persons who want us to look amused&mdash;ah, it is
      a severe ordeal for friendship to pass through! A post-chaise must have
      jolted many an intimacy to death.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;You speak feelingly, dear father,&rdquo; said Gertrude, laughing; &ldquo;and, I
      suspect, with a slight desire to be sarcastic upon us. Yet, seriously, I
      should think that travel must be like life, and that good persons must be
      always agreeable companions to each other.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Good persons, my Gertrude!&rdquo; answered Vane, with a smile. &ldquo;Alas! I fear
      the good weary each other quite as much as the bad. What say you,
      Trevylyan,&mdash;would Virtue be a pleasant companion from Paris to
      Petersburg? Ah, I see you intend to be on Gertrude&rsquo;s side of the question.
      Well now, if I tell you a story, since stories are so much the fashion
      with you, in which you shall find that the Virtues themselves actually
      made the experiment of a tour, will you promise to attend to the moral?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Oh, dear father, anything for a story,&rdquo; cried Gertrude; &ldquo;especially from
      you, who have not told us one all the way. Come, listen, Albert; nay,
      listen to your new rival.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      And, pleased to see the vivacity of the invalid, Vane began as follows:&mdash;
    </p>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
                      THE TOUR OF THE VIRTUES:

                       A PHILOSOPHER&rsquo;S TALE.
</pre>
    <p>
      ONCE upon a time, several of the Virtues, weary of living forever with the
      Bishop of Norwich, resolved to make a little excursion; accordingly,
      though they knew everything on earth was very ill prepared to receive
      them, they thought they might safely venture on a tour from Westminster
      Bridge to Richmond. The day was fine, the wind in their favour, and as to
      entertainment,&mdash;why, there seemed, according to Gertrude, to be no
      possibility of any disagreement among the Virtues.
    </p>
    <p>
      They took a boat at Westminster stairs; and just as they were about to
      push off, a poor woman, all in rags, with a child in her arms, implored
      their compassion. Charity put her hand into her reticule and took out a
      shilling. Justice, turning round to look after the luggage, saw the folly
      which Charity was about to commit. &ldquo;Heavens!&rdquo; cried Justice, seizing poor
      Charity by the arm, &ldquo;what are you doing? Have you never read Political
      Economy? Don&rsquo;t you know that indiscriminate almsgiving is only the
      encouragement to Idleness, the mother of Vice? You a Virtue, indeed! I&rsquo;m
      ashamed of you. Get along with you, good woman;&mdash;yet stay, there is a
      ticket for soup at the Mendicity Society; they&rsquo;ll see if you&rsquo;re a proper
      object of compassion.&rdquo; But Charity is quicker than Justice, and slipping
      her hand behind her, the poor woman got the shilling and the ticket for
      soup too. Economy and Generosity saw the double gift. &ldquo;What waste!&rdquo; cried
      Economy, frowning; &ldquo;what! a ticket and a shilling? <i>either</i> would
      have sufficed.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Either!&rdquo; said Generosity, &ldquo;fie! Charity should have given the poor
      creature half-a-crown, and Justice a dozen tickets!&rdquo; So the next ten
      minutes were consumed in a quarrel between the four Virtues, which would
      have lasted all the way to Richmond, if Courage had not advised them to
      get on shore and fight it out. Upon this, the Virtues suddenly perceived
      they had a little forgotten themselves, and Generosity offering the first
      apology, they made it up, and went on very agreeably for the next mile or
      two.
    </p>
    <p>
      The day now grew a little overcast, and a shower seemed at hand. Prudence,
      who had on a new bonnet, suggested the propriety of putting to shore for
      half an hour; Courage was for braving the rain; but, as most of the
      Virtues are ladies, Prudence carried it. Just as they were about to land,
      another boat cut in before them very uncivilly, and gave theirs such a
      shake that Charity was all but overboard. The company on board the uncivil
      boat, who evidently thought the Virtues extremely low persons, for they
      had nothing very fashionable about their exterior, burst out laughing at
      Charity&rsquo;s discomposure, especially as a large basket full of buns, which
      Charity carried with her for any hungry-looking children she might
      encounter at Richmond, fell pounce into the water. Courage was all on
      fire; he twisted his mustache, and would have made an onset on the enemy,
      if, to his great indignation, Meekness had not forestalled him, by
      stepping mildly into the hostile boat and offering both cheeks to the foe.
      This was too much even for the incivility of the boatmen; they made their
      excuses to the Virtues, and Courage, who is no bully, thought himself
      bound discontentedly to accept them. But oh! if you had seen how Courage
      used Meekness afterwards, you could not have believed it possible that one
      Virtue could be so enraged with another. This quarrel between the two
      threw a damp on the party; and they proceeded on their voyage, when the
      shower was over, with anything but cordiality. I spare you the little
      squabbles that took place in the general conversation,&mdash;how Economy
      found fault with all the villas by the way, and Temperance expressed
      becoming indignation at the luxuries of the City barge. They arrived at
      Richmond, and Temperance was appointed to order the dinner; meanwhile
      Hospitality, walking in the garden, fell in with a large party of
      Irishmen, and asked them to join the repast.
    </p>
    <p>
      Imagine the long faces of Economy and Prudence, when they saw the addition
      to the company! Hospitality was all spirits; he rubbed his hands and
      called for champagne with the tone of a younger brother. Temperance soon
      grew scandalized, and Modesty herself coloured at some of the jokes; but
      Hospitality, who was now half seas over, called the one a milksop, and
      swore at the other as a prude. Away went the hours; it was time to return,
      and they made down to the water-side, thoroughly out of temper with one
      another, Economy and Generosity quarrelling all the way about the bill and
      the waiters. To make up the sum of their mortification, they passed a boat
      where all the company were in the best possible spirits, laughing and
      whooping like mad; and discovered these jolly companions to be two or
      three agreeable Vices, who had put themselves under the management of Good
      Temper.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;So you see, Gertrude, that even the Virtues may fall at loggerheads with
      each other, and pass a very sad time of it, if they happen to be of
      opposite dispositions, and have forgotten to take Good Temper with them.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said Gertrude, &ldquo;but you have overloaded your boat; too many Virtues
      might contradict one another, but not a few.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Voila ce que veux dire,&rdquo; said Vane; &ldquo;but listen to the sequel of my tale,
      which now takes a new moral.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      At the end of the voyage, and after a long, sulky silence, Prudence said,
      with a thoughtful air, &ldquo;My dear friends, I have been thinking that as long
      as we keep so entirely together, never mixing with the rest of the world,
      we shall waste our lives in quarrelling amongst ourselves and run the risk
      of being still less liked and sought after than we already are. You know
      that we are none of us popular; every one is quite contented to see us
      represented in a vaudeville, or described in an essay. Charity, indeed,
      has her name often taken in vain at a bazaar or a subscription; and the
      miser as often talks of the duty he owes to <i>me</i>, when he sends the
      stranger from his door or his grandson to jail: but still we only resemble
      so many wild beasts, whom everybody likes to see but nobody cares to
      possess. Now, I propose that we should all separate and take up our abode
      with some mortal or other for a year, with the power of changing at the
      end of that time should we not feel ourselves comfortable,&mdash;that is,
      should we not find that we do all the good we intend; let us try the
      experiment, and on this day twelvemonths let us all meet under the largest
      oak in Windsor Forest, and recount what has befallen us.&rdquo; Prudence ceased,
      as she always does when she has said enough; and, delighted at the
      project, the Virtues agreed to adopt it on the spot. They were enchanted
      at the idea of setting up for themselves, and each not doubting his or her
      success,&mdash;for Economy in her heart thought Generosity no Virtue at
      all, and Meekness looked on Courage as little better than a heathen.
    </p>
    <p>
      Generosity, being the most eager and active of all the Virtues, set off
      first on his journey. Justice followed, and kept up with him, though at a
      more even pace. Charity never heard a sigh, or saw a squalid face, but she
      stayed to cheer and console the sufferer,&mdash;a kindness which somewhat
      retarded her progress.
    </p>
    <p>
      Courage espied a travelling carriage, with a man and his wife in it
      quarrelling most conjugally, and he civilly begged he might be permitted
      to occupy the vacant seat opposite the lady. Economy still lingered,
      inquiring for the cheapest inns. Poor Modesty looked round and sighed, on
      finding herself so near to London, where she was almost wholly unknown;
      but resolved to bend her course thither for two reasons: first, for the
      novelty of the thing; and, secondly, not liking to expose herself to any
      risks by a journey on the Continent. Prudence, though the first to
      project, was the last to execute; and therefore resolved to remain where
      she was for that night, and take daylight for her travels.
    </p>
    <p>
      The year rolled on, and the Virtues, punctual to the appointment, met
      under the oak-tree; they all came nearly at the same time, excepting
      Economy, who had got into a return post-chaise, the horses to which,
      having been forty miles in the course of the morning, had foundered by the
      way, and retarded her journey till night set in. The Virtues looked sad
      and sorrowful, as people are wont to do after a long and fruitless
      journey; and, somehow or other, such was the wearing effect of their
      intercourse with the world, that they appeared wonderfully diminished in
      size.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Ah, my dear Generosity,&rdquo; said Prudence, with a sigh, &ldquo;as you were the
      first to set out on your travels, pray let us hear your adventures first.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;You must know, my dear sisters,&rdquo; said Generosity, &ldquo;that I had not gone
      many miles from you before I came to a small country town, in which a
      marching regiment was quartered, and at an open window I beheld, leaning
      over a gentleman&rsquo;s chair, the most beautiful creature imagination ever
      pictured; her eyes shone out like two suns of perfect happiness, and she
      was almost cheerful enough to have passed for Good Temper herself. The
      gentleman over whose chair she leaned was her husband; they had been
      married six weeks; he was a lieutenant with one hundred pounds a year
      besides his pay. Greatly affected by their poverty, I instantly
      determined, without a second thought, to ensconce myself in the heart of
      this charming girl. During the first hour in my new residence I made many
      wise reflections such as&mdash;that Love never was so perfect as when
      accompanied by Poverty; what a vulgar error it was to call the unmarried
      state &lsquo;Single <i>Blessedness</i>;&rsquo; how wrong it was of us Virtues never to
      have tried the marriage bond; and what a falsehood it was to say that
      husbands neglected their wives, for never was there anything in nature so
      devoted as the love of a husband&mdash;six weeks married!
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;The next morning, before breakfast, as the charming Fanny was waiting for
      her husband, who had not yet finished his toilet, a poor, wretched-looking
      object appeared at the window, tearing her hair and wringing her hands;
      her husband had that morning been dragged to prison, and her seven
      children had fought for the last mouldy crust. Prompted by me, Fanny,
      without inquiring further into the matter, drew from her silken purse a
      five-pound note, and gave it to the beggar, who departed more amazed than
      grateful. Soon after, the lieutenant appeared. &lsquo;What the devil, another
      bill!&rsquo; muttered he, as he tore the yellow wafer from a large, square,
      folded, bluish piece of paper. &lsquo;Oh, ah! confound the fellow, <i>he</i>
      must be paid. I must trouble you, Fanny, for fifteen pounds to pay this
      saddler&rsquo;s bill.&rsquo; 
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;&lsquo;Fifteen pounds, love?&rsquo; stammered Fanny, blushing.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;&lsquo;Yes, dearest, the fifteen pounds I gave you yesterday.&rsquo; 
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;&lsquo;I have only ten pounds,&rsquo; said Fanny, hesitatingly; &lsquo;for such a poor,
      wretched-looking creature was here just now, that I was obliged to give
      her five pounds.&rsquo; 
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;&lsquo;Five pounds? good Heavens!&rsquo; exclaimed the astonished husband; &lsquo;I shall
      have no more money this three weeks.&rsquo; He frowned, he bit his lips, nay, he
      even wrung his hands, and walked up and down the room; worse still, he
      broke forth with&mdash;&lsquo;Surely, madam, you did not suppose, when you
      married a lieutenant in a marching regiment, that he could afford to
      indulge in the whim of giving five pounds to every mendicant who held out
      her hand to you? You did not, I say, madam, imagine&rsquo;&mdash;but the
      bridegroom was interrupted by the convulsive sobs of his wife: it was
      their first quarrel, they were but six weeks married; he looked at her for
      one moment sternly, the next he was at her feet. &lsquo;Forgive me, dearest
      Fanny,&mdash;forgive me, for I cannot forgive myself. I was too great a
      wretch to say what I did; and do believe, my own Fanny, that while I may
      be too poor to indulge you in it, I do from my heart admire so noble, so
      disinterested, a generosity.&rsquo; Not a little proud did I feel to have been
      the cause of this exemplary husband&rsquo;s admiration for his amiable wife, and
      sincerely did I rejoice at having taken up my abode with these <i>poor</i>
      people. But not to tire you, my dear sisters, with the minutiae of detail,
      I shall briefly say that things did not long remain in this delightful
      position; for before many months had elapsed, poor Fanny had to bear with
      her husband&rsquo;s increased and more frequent storms of passion, unfollowed by
      any halcyon and honeymoon suings for forgiveness: for at my instigation
      every shilling went; and when there were no more to go, her trinkets and
      even her clothes followed. The lieutenant became a complete brute, and
      even allowed his unbridled tongue to call me&mdash;me, sisters, <i>me</i>!&mdash;&lsquo;heartless
      Extravagance.&rsquo; His despicable brother-officers and their gossiping wives
      were no better; for they did nothing but animadvert upon my Fanny&rsquo;s
      ostentation and absurdity, for by such names had they the impertinence to
      call <i>me</i>. Thus grieved to the soul to find myself the cause of all
      poor Fanny&rsquo;s misfortunes, I resolved at the end of the year to leave her,
      being thoroughly convinced that, however amiable and praiseworthy I might
      be in myself, I was totally unfit to be bosom friend and adviser to the
      wife of a lieutenant in a marching regiment, with only one hundred pounds
      a year besides his pay.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      The Virtues groaned their sympathy with the unfortunate Fanny; and
      Prudence, turning to Justice, said, &ldquo;I long to hear what you have been
      doing, for I am certain you cannot have occasioned harm to any one.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Justice shook her head and said: &ldquo;Alas! I find that there are times and
      places when even I do better not to appear, as a short account of my
      adventures will prove to you. No sooner had I left you than I instantly
      repaired to India, and took up my abode with a Brahmin. I was much shocked
      by the dreadful inequalities of condition that reigned in the several
      castes, and I longed to relieve the poor Pariah from his ignominious
      destiny; accordingly I set seriously to work on reform. I insisted upon
      the iniquity of abandoning men from their birth to an irremediable state
      of contempt, from which no virtue could exalt them. The Brahmins looked
      upon my Brahmin with ineffable horror. They called <i>me</i> the most
      wicked of vices; they saw no distinction between Justice and Atheism. I
      uprooted their society&mdash;that was sufficient crime. But the worst was,
      that the Pariahs themselves regarded me with suspicion; they thought it
      unnatural in a Brahmin to care for a Pariah! And one called me &lsquo;Madness,&rsquo; 
      another, &lsquo;Ambition,&rsquo; and a third, &lsquo;The Desire to innovate.&rsquo; My poor
      Brahmin led a miserable life of it; when one day, after observing, at my
      dictation, that he thought a Pariah&rsquo;s life as much entitled to respect as
      a cow&rsquo;s, he was hurried away by the priests and secretly broiled on the
      altar as a fitting reward for his sacrilege. I fled hither in great
      tribulation, persuaded that in some countries even Justice may do harm.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;As for me,&rdquo; said Charity, not waiting to be asked, &ldquo;I grieve to say that
      I was silly enough to take up my abode with an old lady in Dublin, who
      never knew what discretion was, and always acted from impulse; my
      instigation was irresistible, and the money she gave in her drives through
      the suburbs of Dublin was so lavishly spent that it kept all the rascals
      of the city in idleness and whiskey. I found, to my great horror, that I
      was a main cause of a terrible epidemic, and that to give alms without
      discretion was to spread poverty without help. I left the city when my
      year was out, and as ill-luck would have it, just at the time when I was
      most wanted.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;And oh,&rdquo; cried Hospitality, &ldquo;I went to Ireland also. I fixed my abode
      with a squireen; I ruined him in a year, and only left him because he had
      no longer a hovel to keep me in.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;As for myself,&rdquo; said Temperance, &ldquo;I entered the breast of an English
      legislator, and he brought in a bill against ale-houses; the consequence
      was, that the labourers took to gin; and I have been forced to confess
      that Temperance may be too zealous when she dictates too vehemently to
      others.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Courage, keeping more in the background than he had ever done
      before, and looking rather ashamed of himself, &ldquo;that travelling carriage I
      got into belonged to a German general and his wife, who were returning to
      their own country. Growing very cold as we proceeded, she wrapped me up in
      a polonaise; but the cold increasing, I inadvertently crept into her
      bosom. Once there I could not get out, and from thenceforward the poor
      general had considerably the worst of it. She became so provoking that I
      wondered how he could refrain from an explosion. To do him justice, he did
      at last threaten to get out of the carriage; upon which, roused by me, she
      collared him&mdash;and conquered. When he got to his own district, things
      grew worse, for if any <i>aide-de-camp</i> offended her she insisted that
      he might be publicly reprimanded; and should the poor general refuse she
      would with her own hands confer a caning upon the delinquent. The
      additional force she had gained in me was too much odds against the poor
      general, and he died of a broken heart, six months after my <i>liaison</i>
      with his wife. She after this became so dreaded and detested, that a
      conspiracy was formed to poison her; this daunted even me, so I left her
      without delay,&mdash;<i>et me voici</i>!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Humph,&rdquo; said Meekness, with an air of triumph, &ldquo;I, at least, have been
      more successful than you. On seeing much in the papers of the cruelties
      practised by the Turks on the Greeks, I thought my presence would enable
      the poor sufferers to bear their misfortunes calmly. I went to Greece,
      then, at a moment when a well-planned and practicable scheme of
      emancipating themselves from the Turkish yoke was arousing their youth.
      Without confining myself to one individual, I flitted from breast to
      breast; I meekened the whole nation; my remonstrances against the
      insurrection succeeded, and I had the satisfaction of leaving a whole
      people ready to be killed or strangled with the most Christian resignation
      in the world.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      The Virtues, who had been a little cheered by the opening self-complacence
      of Meekness, would not, to her great astonishment, allow that she had
      succeeded a whit more happily than her sisters, and called next upon
      Modesty for her confession.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;You know,&rdquo; said that amiable young lady, &ldquo;that I went to London in search
      of a situation. I spent three months of the twelve in going from house to
      house, but I could not get a single person to receive me. The ladies
      declared that they never saw so old-fashioned a gawkey, and civilly
      recommended me to their abigails; the abigails turned me round with a
      stare, and then pushed me down to the kitchen and the fat scullion-maids,
      who assured me that, &lsquo;in the respectable families they had the honour to
      live in, they had never even heard of my name.&rsquo; One young housemaid, just
      from the country, did indeed receive me with some sort of civility; but
      she very soon lost me in the servants&rsquo; hall. I now took refuge with the
      other sex, as the least uncourteous. I was fortunate enough to find a
      young gentleman of remarkable talents, who welcomed me with open arms. He
      was full of learning, gentleness, and honesty. I had only one rival,&mdash;Ambition.
      We both contended for an absolute empire over him. Whatever Ambition
      suggested, I damped. Did Ambition urge him to begin a book, I persuaded
      him it was not worth publication. Did he get up, full of knowledge, and
      instigated by my rival, to make a speech (for he was in parliament), I
      shocked him with the sense of his assurance, I made his voice droop and
      his accents falter. At last, with an indignant sigh, my rival left him; he
      retired into the country, took orders, and renounced a career he had
      fondly hoped would be serviceable to others; but finding I did not suffice
      for his happiness, and piqued at his melancholy, I left him before the end
      of the year, and he has since taken to drinking!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      The eyes of the Virtues were all turned to Prudence. She was their last
      hope. &ldquo;I am just where I set out,&rdquo; said that discreet Virtue; &ldquo;I have done
      neither good nor harm. To avoid temptation I went and lived with a hermit
      to whom I soon found that I could be of no use beyond warning him not to
      overboil his peas and lentils, not to leave his door open when a storm
      threatened, and not to fill his pitcher too full at the neighbouring
      spring. I am thus the only one of you that never did harm; but only
      because I am the only one of you that never had an opportunity of doing
      it! In a word,&rdquo; continued Prudence, thoughtfully,&mdash;&ldquo;in a word, my
      friends, circumstances are necessary to the Virtues themselves. Had, for
      instance, Economy changed with Generosity, and gone to the poor
      lieutenant&rsquo;s wife, and had I lodged with the Irish squireen instead of
      Hospitality, what misfortunes would have been saved to both! Alas! I
      perceive we lose all our efficacy when we are misplaced; and <i>then</i>,
      though in reality Virtues, we operate as Vices. Circumstances must be
      favourable to our exertions, and harmonious with our nature; and we lose
      our very divinity unless Wisdom direct our footsteps to the home we should
      inhabit and the dispositions we should govern.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      The story was ended, and the travellers began to dispute about its moral.
      Here let us leave them.
    </p>
    <p>
      <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007">
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    </p>
    <div style="height: 4em;">
      <br /><br /><br /><br />
    </div>
    <h2>
      CHAPTER VII. COLOGNE.&mdash;THE TRACES OF THE ROMAN YOKE.&mdash;THE CHURCH
      OF ST.
    </h2>
    <p>
      MARIA.&mdash;TREVYLYAN&rsquo;S REFLECTIONS ON THE MONASTIC LIFE.&mdash;THE TOMB
      OF THE THREE KINGS.&mdash;AN EVENING EXCURSION ON THE RHINE.
    </p>
    <p>
      ROME&mdash;magnificent Rome! wherever the pilgrim wends, the traces of thy
      dominion greet his eyes. Still in the heart of the bold German race is
      graven the print of the eagle&rsquo;s claws; and amidst the haunted regions of
      the Rhine we pause to wonder at the great monuments of the Italian yoke.
    </p>
    <p>
      At Cologne our travellers rested for some days. They were in the city to
      which the camp of Marcus Agrippa had given birth; that spot had resounded
      with the armed tread of the legions of Trajan. In that city, Vitellius,
      Sylvanus, were proclaimed emperors. By that church did the latter receive
      his death.
    </p>
    <p>
      As they passed round the door they saw some peasants loitering on the
      sacred ground; and when they noted the delicate cheek of Gertrude they
      uttered their salutations with more than common respect. Where they then
      were the building swept round in a circular form; and at its base it is
      supposed by tradition to retain something of the ancient Roman masonry.
      Just before them rose the spire of a plain and unadorned church,
      singularly contrasting the pomp of the old with the simplicity of the
      innovating creed.
    </p>
    <p>
      The church of St. Maria occupies the site of the Roman Capitol, and the
      place retains the Roman name; and still something in the aspect of the
      people betrays the hereditary blood.
    </p>
    <p>
      Gertrude, whose nature was strongly impressed with <i>the venerating
      character</i>, was fond of visiting the old Gothic churches, which, with
      so eloquent a moral, unite the living with the dead.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Pause for a moment,&rdquo; said Trevylyan, before they entered the church of
      St. Maria. &ldquo;What recollections crowd upon us! On the site of the Roman
      Capitol a Christian church and a convent are erected! By whom? The mother
      of Charles Martel,&mdash;the Conqueror of the Saracen, the arch-hero of
      Christendom itself! And to these scenes and calm retreats, to the
      cloisters of the convent once belonging to this church, fled the bruised
      spirit of a royal sufferer,-the victim of Richelieu,&mdash;the unfortunate
      and ambitious Mary de Medicis. Alas! the cell and the convent are but a
      vain emblem of that desire to fly to God which belongs to Distress; the
      solitude soothes, but the monotony recalls, regret. And for my own part in
      my frequent tours through Catholic countries, I never saw the still walls
      in which monastic vanity hoped to shut out the world, but a melancholy
      came over me! What hearts at war with themselves! what unceasing regrets!
      what pinings after the past! what long and beautiful years devoted to a
      moral grave, by a momentary rashness, an impulse, a disappointment! But in
      these churches the lesson is more impressive and less sad. The weary heart
      has ceased to ache; the burning pulses are still; the troubled spirit has
      flown to the only rest which is not a deceit. Power and love, hope and
      fear, avarice, ambition,&mdash;they are quenched at last! Death is the
      only monastery, the tomb is the only cell.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Your passion is ever for active life,&rdquo; said Gertrude. &ldquo;You allow no charm
      to solitude, and contemplation to you seems torture. If any great sorrow
      ever come upon you, you will never retire to seclusion as its balm. You
      will plunge into the world, and lose your individual existence in the
      universal rush of life.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Ah, talk not of sorrow!&rdquo; said Trevylyan, wildly. &ldquo;Let us enter the
      church.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      They went afterwards to the celebrated cathedral, which is considered one
      of the noblest of the architectural triumphs of Germany; but it is yet
      more worthy of notice from the Pilgrim of Romance than the searcher after
      antiquity, for here, behind the grand altar, is the Tomb of the Three
      Kings of Cologne,&mdash;the three worshippers whom tradition humbled to
      our Saviour. Legend is rife with a thousand tales of the relics of this
      tomb. The Three Kings of Cologne are the tutelary names of that golden
      superstition which has often more votaries than the religion itself from
      which it springs and to Gertrude the simple story of Lucille sufficed to
      make her for the moment credulous of the sanctity of the spot. Behind the
      tomb three Gothic windows cast their &ldquo;dim, religious light&rdquo; over the
      tessellated pavement and along the Ionic pillars. They found some of the
      more credulous believers in the authenticity of the relics kneeling before
      the tomb, and they arrested their steps, fearful to disturb the
      superstition which is never without something of sanctity when contented
      with prayer and forgetful of persecution. The bones of the Magi are still
      supposed to consecrate the tomb, and on the higher part of the monument
      the artist has delineated their adoration to the infant Saviour.
    </p>
    <p>
      That evening came on with a still and tranquil beauty, and as the sun
      hastened to its close they launched their boat for an hour or two&rsquo;s
      excursion upon the Rhine. Gertrude was in that happy mood when the quiet
      of nature is enjoyed like a bath for the soul, and the presence of him she
      so idolized deepened that stillness into a more delicious and subduing
      calm. Little did she dream as the boat glided over the water, and the
      towers of Cologne rose in the blue air of evening, how few were those
      hours that divided her from the tomb! But, in looking back to the life of
      one we have loved, how dear is the thought that the latter days were the
      days of light, that the cloud never chilled the beauty of the setting sun,
      and that if the years of existence were brief, all that existence has most
      tender, most sacred, was crowded into that space! Nothing dark, then, or
      bitter, rests with our remembrance of the lost: <i>we</i> are the
      mourners, but pity is not for the mourned,&mdash;our grief is purely
      selfish; when we turn to its object, the hues of happiness are round it,
      and that very love which is the parent of our woe was the consolation, the
      triumph, of the departed!
    </p>
    <p>
      The majestic Rhine was calm as a lake; the splashing of the oar only broke
      the stillness, and after a long pause in their conversation, Gertrude,
      putting her hand on Trevylyan&rsquo;s arm, reminded him of a promised story: for
      he too had moods of abstraction, from which, in her turn, she loved to
      lure him; and his voice to her had become a sort of want.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Let it be,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;a tale suited to the hour; no fierce tradition,&mdash;nay,
      no grotesque fable, but of the tenderer dye of superstition. Let it be of
      love, of woman&rsquo;s love,&mdash;of the love that defies the grave: for surely
      even after death it lives; and heaven would scarcely be heaven if memory
      were banished from its blessings.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;I recollect,&rdquo; said Trevylyan, after a slight pause, &ldquo;a short German
      legend, the simplicity of which touched me much when I heard it; but,&rdquo;
       added he, with a slight smile, &ldquo;so much more faithful appears in the
      legend the love of the woman than that of the man, that <i>I</i> at least
      ought scarcely to recite it.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; said Gertrude, tenderly, &ldquo;the fault of the inconstant only
      heightens our gratitude to the faithful.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008">
      <!--  H2 anchor --> </a>
    </p>
    <div style="height: 4em;">
      <br /><br /><br /><br />
    </div>
    <h2>
      CHAPTER VIII. THE SOUL IN PURGATORY; OR LOVE STRONGER THAN DEATH.
    </h2>
    <p>
      THE angels strung their harps in heaven, and their music went up like a
      stream of odours to the pavilions of the Most High; but the harp of
      Seralim was sweeter than that of his fellows, and the Voice of the
      Invisible One (for the angels themselves know not the glories of Jehovah&mdash;only
      far in the depths of heaven they see one Unsleeping Eye watching forever
      over Creation) was heard saying,&mdash;
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Ask a gift for the love that burns in thy song, and it shall be given
      thee.&rdquo; And Seralim answered,&mdash;
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;There is in that place which men call Purgatory, and which is the escape
      from hell, but the painful porch of heaven, many souls that adore Thee,
      and yet are punished justly for their sins; grant me the boon to visit
      them at times, and solace their suffering by the hymns of the harp that is
      consecrated to Thee!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      And the Voice answered,&mdash;
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Thy prayer is heard, O gentlest of the angels! and it seems good to Him
      who chastises but from love. Go! Thou hast thy will.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Then the angel sang the praises of God; and when the song was done he rose
      from his azure throne at the right hand of Gabriel, and, spreading his
      rainbow wings, he flew to that melancholy orb which, nearest to earth,
      echoes with the shrieks of souls that by torture become pure. There the
      unhappy ones see from afar the bright courts they are hereafter to obtain,
      and the shapes of glorious beings, who, fresh from these Fountains of
      Immortality, walk amidst the gardens of Paradise, and feel that their
      happiness hath no morrow; and this thought consoles amidst their torments,
      and makes the true difference between Purgatory and Hell.
    </p>
    <p>
      Then the angel folded his wings, and entering the crystal gates, sat down
      upon a blasted rock and struck his divine lyre, and a peace fell over the
      wretched; the demon ceased to torture and the victim to wail. As sleep to
      the mourners of earth was the song of the angel to the souls of the
      purifying star: one only voice amidst the general stillness seemed not
      lulled by the angel; it was the voice of a woman, and it continued to cry
      out with a sharp cry,&mdash;
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Oh, Adenheim, Adenheim! mourn not for the lost!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      The angel struck chord after chord, till his most skilful melodies were
      exhausted; but still the solitary voice, unheeding&mdash;unconscious of&mdash;the
      sweetest harp of the angel choir, cried out,&mdash;
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Oh, Adenheim, Adenheim! mourn not for the lost!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Then Seralim&rsquo;s interest was aroused, and approaching the spot whence the
      voice came, he saw the spirit of a young and beautiful girl chained to a
      rock, and the demons lying idly by. And Seralim said to the demons, &ldquo;Doth
      the song lull ye thus to rest?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      And they answered, &ldquo;Her care for another is bitterer than all our
      torments; therefore are we idle.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Then the angel approached the spirit, and said in a voice which stilled
      her cry&mdash;for in what state do we outlive sympathy?&mdash;&ldquo;Wherefore,
      O daughter of earth, wherefore wailest thou with the same plaintive wail;
      and why doth the harp that soothes the most guilty of thy companions fail
      in its melody with thee?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;O radiant stranger,&rdquo; answered the poor spirit, &ldquo;thou speakest to one who
      on earth loved God&rsquo;s creature more than God; therefore is she thus justly
      sentenced. But I know that my poor Adenheim mourns ceaselessly for me, and
      the thought of his sorrow is more intolerable to me than all that the
      demons can inflict.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;And how knowest thou that he laments thee?&rdquo; asked the angel.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Because I know with what agony I should have mourned for <i>him</i>,&rdquo;
       replied the spirit, simply.
    </p>
    <p>
      The divine nature of the angel was touched; for love is the nature of the
      sons of heaven. &ldquo;And how,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;can I minister to thy sorrow?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      A transport seemed to agitate the spirit, and she lifted up her mistlike
      and impalpable arms, and cried,&mdash;
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Give me&mdash;oh, give me to return to earth, but for one little hour,
      that I may visit my Adenheim; and that, concealing from him my present
      sufferings, I may comfort him in his own.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Alas!&rdquo; said the angel, turning away his eyes,&mdash;for angels may not
      weep in the sight of others,&mdash;&ldquo;I could, indeed, grant thee this boon,
      but thou knowest not the penalty. For the souls in Purgatory may return to
      Earth, but heavy is the sentence that awaits their return. In a word, for
      one hour on earth thou must add a thousand years to the torture of thy
      confinement here!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Is that all?&rdquo; cried the spirit. &ldquo;Willingly then will I brave the doom.
      Ah, surely they love not in heaven, or thou wouldst know, O Celestial
      Visitant; that one hour of consolation to the one we love is worth a
      thousand ages of torture to ourselves! Let me comfort and convince my
      Adenheim; no matter what becomes of me.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Then the angel looked on high, and he saw in far distant regions, which in
      that orb none else could discern, the rays that parted from the
      all-guarding Eye; and heard the VOICE of the Eternal One bidding him act
      as his pity whispered. He looked on the spirit, and her shadowy arms
      stretched pleadingly towards him; he uttered the word that loosens the
      bars of the gate of Purgatory; and lo, the spirit had re-entered the human
      world.
    </p>
    <p>
      It was night in the halls of the lord of Adenheim, and he sat at the head
      of his glittering board. Loud and long was the laugh, and merry the jest
      that echoed round; and the laugh and the jest of the lord of Adenheim were
      louder and merrier than all. And by his right side sat a beautiful lady;
      and ever and anon he turned from others to whisper soft vows in her ear.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;And oh,&rdquo; said the bright dame of Falkenberg, &ldquo;thy words what ladye can
      believe? Didst thou not utter the same oaths, and promise the same love,
      to Ida, the fair daughter of Loden, and now but three little months have
      closed upon her grave?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;By my halidom,&rdquo; quoth the young lord of Adenheim, &ldquo;thou dost thy beauty
      marvellous injustice. Ida! Nay, thou mockest me; <i>I</i> love the
      daughter of Loden! Why, how then should I be worthy thee? A few gay words,
      a few passing smiles,&mdash;behold all the love Adenheim ever bore to Ida.
      Was it my fault if the poor fool misconstrued such common courtesy? Nay,
      dearest lady, this heart is virgin to thee.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;And what!&rdquo; said the lady of Falkenberg, as she suffered the arm of
      Adenheim to encircle her slender waist, &ldquo;didst thou not grieve for her
      loss?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Why, verily, yes, for the first week; but in thy bright eyes I found
      ready consolation.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      At this moment, the lord of Adenheim thought he heard a deep sigh behind
      him; he turned, but saw nothing, save a slight mist that gradually faded
      away, and vanished in the distance. Where was the necessity for Ida to
      reveal herself?
    </p>
    <p>
      .......
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;And thou didst not, then, do thine errand to thy lover?&rdquo; said Seralim, as
      the spirit of the wronged Ida returned to Purgatory.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Bid the demons recommence their torture,&rdquo; was poor Ida&rsquo;s answer.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;And was it for this that thou added a thousand years to thy doom?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Alas!&rdquo; answered Ida, &ldquo;after the single hour I have endured on Earth,
      there seems to be but little terrible in a thousand fresh years of
      Purgatory!&rdquo;*
    </p>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
  * This story is principally borrowed from a foreign soil.  It
    seemed to the author worthy of being transferred to an English
    one, although he fears that much of its singular beauty in the
    original has been lost by the way.
</pre>
    <p>
      &ldquo;What! is the story ended?&rdquo; asked Gertrude.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Nay, surely the thousand years were not added to poor Ida&rsquo;s doom; and
      Seralim bore her back with him to Heaven?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;The legend saith no more. The writer was contented to show us the
      perpetuity of woman&rsquo;s love&mdash;&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;And its reward,&rdquo; added Vane.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;It was not <i>I</i> who drew that last conclusion, Albert,&rdquo; whispered
      Gertrude.
    </p>
    <p>
      <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009">
      <!--  H2 anchor --> </a>
    </p>
    <div style="height: 4em;">
      <br /><br /><br /><br />
    </div>
    <h2>
      CHAPTER IX. THE SCENERY OF THE RHINE ANALOGOUS TO THE GERMAN LITERARY
    </h2>
    <p>
      GENIUS.&mdash;THE DRACHENFELS.
    </p>
    <p>
      ON leaving Cologne, the stream winds round among banks that do not yet
      fulfil the promise of the Rhine; but they increase in interest as you
      leave Surdt and Godorf. The peculiar character of the river does not,
      however, really appear, until by degrees the Seven Mountains, and &ldquo;THE
      CASTLED CRAG OF DRACHENFELS&rdquo; above them all, break upon the eye. Around
      Nieder Cassel and Rheidt the vines lie thick and clustering; and, by the
      shore, you see from place to place the islands stretching their green
      length along, and breaking the exulting tide. Village rises upon village,
      and viewed from the distance as you sail, the pastoral errors that
      enamoured us of the village life crowd thick and fast upon us. So still do
      these hamlets seem, so sheltered from the passions of the world,&mdash;as
      if the passions were not like winds, only felt where they breathe, and
      invisible save by their effects! Leaping into the broad bosom of the Rhine
      come many a stream and rivulet upon either side. Spire upon spire rises
      and sinks as you sail on. Mountain and city, the solitary island, the
      castled steep, like the dreams of ambition, suddenly appear, proudly
      swell, and dimly fade away.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;You begin now,&rdquo; said Trevylyan, &ldquo;to understand the character of the
      German literature. The Rhine is an emblem of its luxuriance, its
      fertility, its romance. The best commentary to the German genius is a
      visit to the German scenery. The mighty gloom of the Hartz, the feudal
      towers that look over vines and deep valleys on the legendary Rhine; the
      gigantic remains of antique power, profusely scattered over plain, mount,
      and forest; the thousand mixed recollections that hallow the ground; the
      stately Roman, the stalwart Goth, the chivalry of the feudal age, and the
      dim brotherhood of the ideal world, have here alike their record and their
      remembrance. And over such scenes wanders the young German student.
      Instead of the pomp and luxury of the English traveller, the thousand
      devices to cheat the way, he has but his volume in his hand, his knapsack
      at his back. From such scenes he draws and hives all that various store
      which after years ripen to invention. Hence the florid mixture of the
      German muse,&mdash;the classic, the romantic, the contemplative, the
      philosophic, and the superstitious; each the result of actual meditation
      over different scenes; each the produce of separate but confused
      recollections. As the Rhine flows, so flows the national genius, by
      mountain and valley, the wildest solitude, the sudden spires of ancient
      cities, the mouldered castle, the stately monastery, the humble cot,&mdash;grandeur
      and homeliness, history and superstition, truth and fable, succeeding one
      another so as to blend into a whole.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;But,&rdquo; added Trevylyan, a moment afterwards, &ldquo;the Ideal is passing slowly
      away from the German mind; a spirit for the more active and the more
      material literature is springing up amongst them. The revolution of mind
      gathers on, preceding stormy events; and the memories that led their
      grandsires to contemplate will urge the youth of the next generation to
      dare and to act.&rdquo; *
    </p>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
  * Is not this prediction already fulfilled?&mdash;1849.
</pre>
    <p>
      Thus conversing, they continued their voyage, with a fair wave and beneath
      a lucid sky.
    </p>
    <p>
      The vessel now glided beside the Seven Mountains and the Drachenfels.
    </p>
    <p>
      The sun, slowly setting, cast his yellow beams over the smooth waters. At
      the foot of the mountains lay a village deeply sequestered in shade; and
      above, the Ruin of the Drachenfels caught the richest beams of the sun.
      Yet thus alone, though lofty, the ray cheered not the gloom that hung over
      the giant rock: it stood on high, like some great name on which the light
      of glory may shine, but which is associated with a certain melancholy,
      from the solitude to which its very height above the level of the herd
      condemned its owner!
    </p>
    <p>
      <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010">
      <!--  H2 anchor --> </a>
    </p>
    <div style="height: 4em;">
      <br /><br /><br /><br />
    </div>
    <h2>
      CHAPTER X. THE LEGEND OF ROLAND.&mdash;THE ADVENTURES OF NYMPHALIN ON THE
    </h2>
    <p>
      ISLAND OF NONNEWERTH.&mdash;HER SONG.&mdash;THE DECAY OF THE FAIRY-FAITH
      IN ENGLAND.
    </p>
    <p>
      ON the shore opposite the Drachenfels stand the Ruins of Rolandseck,&mdash;they
      are the shattered crown of a lofty and perpendicular mountain, consecrated
      to the memory of the brave Roland; below, the trees of an island to which
      the lady of Roland retired, rise thick and verdant from the smooth tide.
    </p>
    <p>
      Nothing can exceed the eloquent and wild grandeur of the whole scene. That
      spot is the pride and beauty of the Rhine.
    </p>
    <p>
      The legend that consecrates the tower and the island is briefly told; it
      belongs to a class so common to the Romaunts of Germany. Roland goes to
      the wars. A false report of his death reaches his betrothed. She retires
      to the convent in the isle of Nonnewerth, and takes the irrevocable veil.
      Roland returns home, flushed with glory and hope, to find that the very
      fidelity of his affianced had placed an eternal barrier between them. He
      built the castle that bears his name, and which overlooks the monastery,
      and dwelt there till his death,&mdash;happy in the power at least to gaze,
      even to the last, upon those walls which held the treasure he had lost.
    </p>
    <p>
      The willows droop in mournful luxuriance along the island, and harmonize
      with the memory that, through the desert of a thousand years, love still
      keeps green and fresh. Nor hath it permitted even those additions of
      fiction which, like mosses, gather by time over the truth that they adorn,
      yet adorning conceal, to mar the simple tenderness of the legend.
    </p>
    <p>
      All was still in the island of Nonnewerth; the lights shone through the
      trees from the house that contained our travellers. On one smooth spot
      where the islet shelves into the Rhine met the wandering fairies.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Oh, Pipalee! how beautiful!&rdquo; cried Nymphalin, as she stood enraptured by
      the wave, a star-beam shining on her, with her yellow hair &ldquo;dancing its
      ringlets in the whistling wind.&rdquo; &ldquo;For the first time since our departure I
      do not miss the green fields of England.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Hist!&rdquo; said Pipalee, under her breath; &ldquo;I hear fairy steps,&mdash;they
      must be the steps of strangers.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Let us retreat into this thicket of weeds,&rdquo; said Nymphalin, somewhat
      alarmed; &ldquo;the good lord treasurer is already asleep there.&rdquo; They whisked
      into what to them was a forest, for the reeds were two feet high, and
      there sure enough they found the lord treasurer stretched beneath a
      bulrush, with his pipe beside him, for since he had been in Germany he had
      taken to smoking; and indeed wild thyme, properly dried, makes very good
      tobacco for a fairy. They also found Nip and Trip sitting very close
      together, Nip playing with her hair, which was exceedingly beautiful.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;What do you do here?&rdquo; said Pipalee, shortly; for she was rather an old
      maid, and did not like fairies to be too close to each other.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Watching my lord&rsquo;s slumber,&rdquo; said Nip.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Pshaw!&rdquo; said Pipalee.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; quoth Trip, blushing like a sea-shell; &ldquo;there is no harm in <i>that</i>,
      I&rsquo;m sure.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Hush!&rdquo; said the queen, peeping through the reeds.
    </p>
    <p>
      And now forth from the green bosom of the earth came a tiny train; slowly,
      two by two, hand in hand, they swept from a small aperture, shadowed with
      fragrant herbs, and formed themselves into a ring: then came other
      fairies, laden with dainties, and presently two beautiful white mushrooms
      sprang up, on which the viands were placed, and lo, there was a banquet!
      Oh, how merry they were! what gentle peals of laughter, loud as a virgin&rsquo;s
      sigh! what jests! what songs! Happy race! if mortals could see you as
      often as I do, in the soft nights of summer, they would never be at a loss
      for entertainment. But as our English fairies looked on, they saw that
      these foreign elves were of a different race from themselves: they were
      taller and less handsome, their hair was darker, they wore mustaches, and
      had something of a fiercer air. Poor Nymphalin was a little frightened;
      but presently soft music was heard floating along, something like the
      sound we suddenly hear of a still night when a light breeze steals through
      rushes, or wakes a ripple in some shallow brook dancing over pebbles. And
      lo, from the aperture of the earth came forth a fay, superbly dressed, and
      of a noble presence. The queen started back, Pipalee rubbed her eyes, Trip
      looked over Pipalee&rsquo;s shoulder, and Nip, pinching her arm, cried out
      amazed, &ldquo;By the last new star, that is Prince von Fayzenheim!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Poor Nymphalin gazed again, and her little heart beat under her bee&rsquo;s-wing
      bodice as if it would break. The prince had a melancholy air, and he sat
      apart from the banquet, gazing abstractedly on the Rhine.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; whispered Nymphalin to herself, &ldquo;does he think of me?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Presently the prince drew forth a little flute hollowed from a small reed,
      and began to play a mournful air. Nymphalin listened with delight; it was
      one he had learned in her dominions.
    </p>
    <p>
      When the air was over, the prince rose, and approaching the banqueters,
      despatched them on different errands; one to visit the dwarf of the
      Drachenfels, another to look after the grave of Musaeus, and a whole
      detachment to puzzle the students of Heidelberg. A few launched themselves
      upon willow leaves on the Rhine to cruise about in the starlight, and an
      other band set out a hunting after the gray-legged moth. The prince was
      left alone; and now Nymphalin, seeing the coast clear, wrapped herself up
      in a cloak made out of a withered leaf; and only letting her eyes glow out
      from the hood, she glided from the reeds, and the prince turning round,
      saw a dark fairy figure by his side. He drew back, a little startled, and
      placed his hand on his sword, when Nymphalin circling round him, sang the
      following words:&mdash;
    </p>
    <p>
      THE FAIRY&rsquo;S REPROACH.
    </p>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
     I. By the glow-worm&rsquo;s lamp in the dewy brake;
       By the gossamer&rsquo;s airy net;
     By the shifting skin of the faithless snake,
       Oh, teach me to forget:
             For none, ah none
     Can teach so well that human spell
             As thou, false one!
</pre>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
     II. By the fairy dance on the greensward smooth;
       By the winds of the gentle west;
     By the loving stars, when their soft looks soothe
       The waves on their mother&rsquo;s breast,
             Teach me thy lore!
         By which, like withered flowers,
         The leaves of buried Hours
           Blossom no more!
</pre>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
     III. By the tent in the violet&rsquo;s bell;
       By the may on the scented bough;
     By the lone green isle where my sisters dwell;
       And thine own forgotten vow,
             Teach me to live,
           Nor feed on thoughts that pine
           For love so false as thine!
           Teach me thy lore,
           And one thou lov&rsquo;st no more
             Will bless thee and forgive!
</pre>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Surely,&rdquo; said Fayzenheim, faltering, &ldquo;surely I know that voice!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      And Nymphalin&rsquo;s cloak dropped off her shoulder. &ldquo;My English fairy!&rdquo; and
      Fayzenheim knelt beside her.
    </p>
    <p>
      I wish you had seen the fay kneel, for you would have sworn it was so like
      a human lover that you would never have sneered at love afterwards. Love
      is so fairy-like a part of us, that even a fairy cannot make it
      differently from us,&mdash;that is to say, when we love truly.
    </p>
    <p>
      There was great joy in the island that night among the elves. They
      conducted Nymphalin to their palace within the earth, and feasted her
      sumptuously; and Nip told their adventures with so much spirit that he
      enchanted the merry foreigners. But Fayzenheim talked apart to Nymphalin,
      and told her how he was lord of that island, and how he had been obliged
      to return to his dominions by the law of his tribe, which allowed him to
      be absent only a certain time in every year. &ldquo;But, my queen, I always
      intended to revisit thee next spring.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Thou need&rsquo;st not have left us so abruptly,&rdquo; said Nymphalin, blushing.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;But do <i>thou</i> never leave me!&rdquo; said the ardent fairy; &ldquo;be mine, and
      let our nuptials be celebrated on these shores. Wouldst thou sigh for thy
      green island? No! for <i>there</i> the fairy altars are deserted, the
      faith is gone from the land; thou art among the last of an unhonoured and
      expiring race. Thy mortal poets are dumb, and Fancy, which was thy
      priestess, sleeps hushed in her last repose. New and hard creeds have
      succeeded to the fairy lore. Who steals through the starlit boughs on the
      nights of June to watch the roundels of thy tribe? The wheels of commerce,
      the din of trade, have silenced to mortal ear the music of thy subjects&rsquo; 
      harps! And the noisy habitations of men, harsher than their dreaming
      sires, are gathering round the dell and vale where thy co-mates linger: a
      few years, and where will be the green solitudes of England?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      The queen sighed, and the prince, perceiving that he was listened to,
      continued,&mdash;
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Who, in thy native shores, among the children of men, now claims the
      fairy&rsquo;s care? What cradle wouldst thou tend? On what maid wouldst thou
      shower thy rosy gifts? What barb wouldst thou haunt in his dreams? Poesy
      is fled the island, why shouldst thou linger behind? Time hath brought
      dull customs, that laugh at thy gentle being. Puck is buried in the
      harebell, he hath left no offspring, and none mourn for his loss; for
      night, which is the fairy season, is busy and garish as the day. What
      hearth is desolate after the curfew? What house bathed in stillness at the
      hour in which thy revels commence? Thine empire among men hath passed from
      thee, and thy race are vanishing from the crowded soil; for, despite our
      diviner nature, our existence is linked with man&rsquo;s. Their neglect is our
      disease, their forgetfulness our death. Leave then those dull, yet
      troubled scenes, that are closing round the fairy rings of thy native
      isle. These mountains, this herbage, these gliding waves, these mouldering
      ruins, these starred rivulets, be they, O beautiful fairy! thy new domain.
      Yet in these lands our worship lingers; still can we fill the thought of
      the young bard, and mingle with his yearnings after the Beautiful, the
      Unseen. Hither come the pilgrims of the world, anxious only to gather from
      these scenes the legends of Us; ages will pass away ere the Rhine shall be
      desecrated of our haunting presence. Come then, my queen, let this palace
      be thine own, and the moon that glances over the shattered towers of the
      Dragon Rock witness our nuptials and our vows!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      In such words the fairy prince courted the young queen, and while she
      sighed at their truth she yielded to their charm. Oh, still may there be
      one spot on the earth where the fairy feet may press the legendary soil!
      still be there one land where the faith of The Bright Invisible hallows
      and inspires! Still glide thou, O majestic and solemn Rhine, among shades
      and valleys, from which the wisdom of belief can call the creations of the
      younger world!
    </p>
    <p>
      <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011">
      <!--  H2 anchor --> </a>
    </p>
    <div style="height: 4em;">
      <br /><br /><br /><br />
    </div>
    <h2>
      CHAPTER XI. WHEREIN THE READER IS MADE SPECTATOR WITH THE ENGLISH
    </h2>
    <p>
      FAIRIES OF THE SCENES AND BEINGS THAT ARE BENEATH THE EARTH.
    </p>
    <p>
      DURING the heat of next day&rsquo;s noon, Fayzenheim took the English visitors
      through the cool caverns that wind amidst the mountains of the Rhine.
      There, a thousand wonders awaited the eyes of the fairy queen. I speak not
      of the Gothic arch and aisle into which the hollow earth forms itself, or
      the stream that rushes with a mighty voice through the dark chasm, or the
      silver columns that shoot aloft, worked by the gnomes from the mines of
      the mountains of Taunus; but of the strange inhabitants that from time to
      time they came upon. They found in one solitary cell, lined with dried
      moss, two misshapen elves, of a larger size than common, with a plebeian
      working-day aspect, who were chatting noisily together, and making a pair
      of boots: these were the Hausmannen or domestic elves, that dance into
      tradesmen&rsquo;s houses of a night, and play all sorts of undignified tricks.
      They were very civil to the queen, for they are good-natured creatures on
      the whole, and once had many relations in Scotland. They then, following
      the course of a noisy rivulet, came to a hole from which the sharp head of
      a fox peeped out. The queen was frightened. &ldquo;Oh, come on,&rdquo; said the fox,
      encouragingly, &ldquo;I am one of the fairy race, and many are the gambols we of
      the brute-elves play in the German world of romance.&rdquo; &ldquo;Indeed, Mr. Fox,&rdquo;
       said the prince, &ldquo;you only speak the truth; and how is Mr. Bruin?&rdquo; &ldquo;Quite
      well, my prince, but tired of his seclusion; for indeed our race can do
      little or nothing now in the world; and lie here in our old age, telling
      stories of the past, and recalling the exploits we did in our youth,&mdash;which,
      madam, you may see in all the fairy histories in the prince&rsquo;s library.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Your own love adventures, for instance, Master Fox,&rdquo; said the prince.
    </p>
    <p>
      The fox snarled angrily, and drew in his head.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;You have displeased your friend,&rdquo; said Nymphalin.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Yes; he likes no allusions to the amorous follies of his youth. Did you
      ever hear of his rivalry with the dog for the cat&rsquo;s good graces?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;No; that must be very amusing.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Well, my queen, when we rest by and by, I will relate to you the history
      of the fox&rsquo;s wooing.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      The next place they came to was a vast Runic cavern, covered with dark
      inscriptions of a forgotten tongue; and sitting on a huge stone they found
      a dwarf with long yellow hair, his head leaning on his breast, and
      absorbed in meditation. &ldquo;This is a spirit of a wise and powerful race,&rdquo;
       whispered Fayzenheim, &ldquo;that has often battled with the fairies; but he is
      of the kindly tribe.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Then the dwarf lifted his head with a mournful air; and gazed upon the
      bright shapes before him, lighted by the pine torches that the prince&rsquo;s
      attendants carried.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;And what dost thou muse upon, O descendant of the race of Laurin?&rdquo; said
      the prince.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Upon TIME!&rdquo; answered the dwarf, gloomily. &ldquo;I see a River, and its waves
      are black, flowing from the clouds, and none knoweth its source. It rolls
      deeply on, aye and evermore, through a green valley, which it slowly
      swallows up, washing away tower and town, and vanquishing all things; and
      the name of the River is TIME.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Then the dwarf&rsquo;s head sank on his bosom, and he spoke no more.
    </p>
    <p>
      The fairies proceeded. &ldquo;Above us,&rdquo; said the prince, &ldquo;rises one of the
      loftiest mountains of the Rhine; for mountains are the Dwarf&rsquo;s home. When
      the Great Spirit of all made earth, he saw that the hollows of the rocks
      and hills were tenantless, and yet that a mighty kingdom and great palaces
      were hid within them,&mdash;a dread and dark solitude, but lighted at
      times from the starry eyes of many jewels; and there was the treasure of
      the human world&mdash;gold and silver&mdash;and great heaps of gems, and a
      soil of metals. So God made a race for this vast empire, and gifted them
      with the power of thought, and the soul of exceeding wisdom, so that they
      want not the merriment and enterprise of the outer world; but musing in
      these dark caves is their delight. Their existence rolls away in the
      luxury of thought; only from time to time they appear in the world, and
      betoken woe or weal to men,&mdash;according to their nature, for they are
      divided into two tribes, the benevolent and the wrathful.&rdquo; While the
      prince spoke, they saw glaring upon them from a ledge in the upper rock a
      grisly face with a long matted beard. The prince gathered himself up, and
      frowned at the evil dwarf, for such it was; but with a wild laugh the face
      abruptly disappeared, and the echo of the laugh rang with a ghastly sound
      through the long hollows of the earth.
    </p>
    <p>
      The queen clung to Fayzenheim&rsquo;s arm. &ldquo;Fear not, my queen,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;The
      evil race have no power over our light and aerial nature; with men only
      they war; and he whom we have seen was, in the old ages of the world, one
      of the deadliest visitors to mankind.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      But now they came winding by a passage to a beautiful recess in the
      mountain empire; it was of a circular shape of amazing height; in the
      midst of it played a natural fountain of sparkling waters, and around it
      were columns of massive granite, rising in countless vistas, till lost in
      the distant shade. Jewels were scattered round, and brightly played the
      fairy torches on the gem, the fountain, and the pale silver, that gleamed
      at frequent intervals from the rocks. &ldquo;Here let us rest,&rdquo; said the gallant
      fairy, clapping his hands; &ldquo;what, ho! music and the feast.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      So the feast was spread by the fountain&rsquo;s side; and the courtiers
      scattered rose-leaves, which they had brought with them, for the prince
      and his visitor; and amidst the dark kingdom of the dwarfs broke the
      delicate sound of fairy lutes. &ldquo;We have not these evil beings in England,&rdquo;
       said the queen, as low as she could speak; &ldquo;they rouse my fear, but my
      interest also. Tell me, dear prince, of what nature was the intercourse of
      the evil dwarf with man?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;You know,&rdquo; answered the prince, &ldquo;that to every species of living thing
      there is something in common; the vast chain of sympathy runs through all
      creation. By that which they have in common with the beast of the field or
      the bird of the air, men govern the inferior tribes; they appeal to the
      common passions of fear and emulation when they tame the wild steed, to
      the common desire of greed and gain when they snare the fishes of the
      stream, or allure the wolves to the pitfall by the bleating of the lamb.
      In their turn, in the older ages of the world, it was by the passions
      which men had in common with the demon race that the fiends commanded or
      allured them. The dwarf whom you saw, being of that race which is
      characterized by the ambition of power and the desire of hoarding,
      appealed then in his intercourse with men to the same characteristics in
      their own bosoms,&mdash;to ambition or to avarice. And thus were his
      victims made! But, not now, dearest Nymphalin,&rdquo; continued the prince, with
      a more lively air,&mdash;&ldquo;not now will we speak of those gloomy beings.
      Ho, there! cease the music, and come hither all of ye, to listen to a
      faithful and homely history of the Dog, the Cat, the Griffin, and the
      Fox.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012">
      <!--  H2 anchor --> </a>
    </p>
    <div style="height: 4em;">
      <br /><br /><br /><br />
    </div>
    <h2>
      CHAPTER XII. THE WOOING OF MASTER FOX.*
    </h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
  * In the excursions of the fairies, it is the object of the author
    to bring before the reader a rapid phantasmagoria of the various
    beings that belong to the German superstitions, so that the work
    may thus describe the outer and the inner world of the land of
    the Rhine.  The tale of the Fox&rsquo;s Wooing has been composed to
    give the English reader an idea of a species of novel not
    naturalized amongst us, though frequent among the legends of our
    Irish neighbours; in which the brutes are the only characters
    drawn,&mdash;drawn too with shades of distinction as nice and subtle
    as if they were the creatures of the civilized world.
</pre>
    <p>
      You are aware, my dear Nymphalin, that in the time of which I am about to
      speak there was no particular enmity between the various species of
      brutes; the dog and the hare chatted very agreeably together, and all the
      world knows that the wolf, unacquainted with mutton, had a particular
      affection for the lamb. In these happy days, two most respectable cats, of
      very old family, had an only daughter. Never was kitten more amiable or
      more seducing; as she grew up she manifested so many charms, that in a
      little while she became noted as the greatest beauty in the neighbourhood.
      Need I to you, dearest Nymphalin, describe her perfection? Suffice it to
      say that her skin was of the most delicate tortoiseshell, that her paws
      were smoother than velvet, that her whiskers were twelve inches long at
      the least, and that her eyes had a gentleness altogether astonishing in a
      cat. But if the young beauty had suitors in plenty during the lives of
      monsieur and madame, you may suppose the number was not diminished when,
      at the age of two years and a half, she was left an orphan, and sole
      heiress to all the hereditary property. In fine, she was the richest
      marriage in the whole country. Without troubling you, dearest queen, with
      the adventures of the rest of her lovers, with their suit and their
      rejection, I come at once to the two rivals most sanguine of success,&mdash;the
      dog and the fox.
    </p>
    <p>
      Now the dog was a handsome, honest, straightforward, affectionate fellow.
      &ldquo;For my part,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t wonder at my cousin&rsquo;s refusing Bruin the
      bear, and Gauntgrim the wolf: to be sure they give themselves great airs,
      and call themselves &lsquo;<i>noble</i>,&rsquo; but what then? Bruin is always in the
      sulks, and Gauntgrim always in a passion; a cat of any sensibility would
      lead a miserable life with them. As for me, I am very good-tempered when
      I&rsquo;m not put out, and I have no fault except that of being angry if
      disturbed at my meals. I am young and good-looking, fond of play and
      amusement, and altogether as agreeable a husband as a cat could find in a
      summer&rsquo;s day. If she marries me, well and good; she may have her property
      settled on herself: if not, I shall bear her no malice; and I hope I
      sha&rsquo;n&rsquo;t be too much in love to forget that there are other cats in the
      world.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      With that the dog threw his tail over his back, and set off to his
      mistress with a gay face on the matter.
    </p>
    <p>
      Now the fox heard the dog talking thus to himself, for the fox was always
      peeping about, in holes and corners, and he burst out a laughing when the
      dog was out of sight.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Ho, ho, my fine fellow!&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;not so fast, if you please: you&rsquo;ve got
      the fox for a rival, let me tell you.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      The fox, as you very well know, is a beast that can never do anything
      without a manoeuvre; and as, from his cunning, he was generally very lucky
      in anything he undertook, he did not doubt for a moment that he should put
      the dog&rsquo;s nose out of joint. Reynard was aware that in love one should
      always, if possible, be the first in the field; and he therefore resolved
      to get the start of the dog and arrive before him at the cat&rsquo;s residence.
      But this was no easy matter; for though Reynard could run faster than the
      dog for a little way, he was no match for him in a journey of some
      distance. &ldquo;However,&rdquo; said Reynard, &ldquo;those good-natured creatures are never
      very wise; and I think I know already what will make him bait on his way.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      With that, the fox trotted pretty fast by a short cut in the woods, and
      getting before the dog, laid himself down by a hole in the earth, and
      began to howl most piteously.
    </p>
    <p>
      The dog, hearing the noise, was very much alarmed. &ldquo;See now,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;if
      the poor fox has not got himself into some scrape! Those cunning creatures
      are always in mischief; thank Heaven, it never comes into my head to be
      cunning!&rdquo; And the good-natured animal ran off as hard as he could to see
      what was the matter with the fox.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Oh, dear!&rdquo; cried Reynard; &ldquo;what shall I do? What shall I do? My poor
      little sister has fallen into this hole, and I can&rsquo;t get her out; she&rsquo;ll
      certainly be smothered.&rdquo; And the fox burst out a howling more piteously
      than before.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;But, my dear Reynard,&rdquo; quoth the dog, very simply, &ldquo;why don&rsquo;t you go in
      after your sister?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Ah, you may well ask that,&rdquo; said the fox; &ldquo;but, in trying to get in,
      don&rsquo;t you perceive that I have sprained my back and can&rsquo;t stir? Oh, dear!
      what shall I do if my poor little sister is smothered!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Pray don&rsquo;t vex yourself,&rdquo; said the dog; &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll get her out in an instant.&rdquo;
       And with that he forced himself with great difficulty into the hole.
    </p>
    <p>
      Now, no sooner did the fox see that the dog was fairly in, than he rolled
      a great stone to the mouth of the hole and fitted it so tight, that the
      dog, not being able to turn round and scratch against it with his
      forepaws, was made a close prisoner.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Ha, ha!&rdquo; cried Reynard, laughing outside; &ldquo;amuse yourself with my poor
      little sister, while I go and make your compliments to Mademoiselle the
      Cat.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      With that Reynard set off at an easy pace, never troubling his head what
      became of the poor dog. When he arrived in the neighbourhood of the
      beautiful cat&rsquo;s mansion, he resolved to pay a visit to a friend of his, an
      old magpie that lived in a tree and was well acquainted with all the news
      of the place. &ldquo;For,&rdquo; thought Reynard, &ldquo;I may as well know the blind side
      of my mistress that is to be, and get round it at once.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      The magpie received the fox with great cordiality, and inquired what
      brought him so great a distance from home.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Upon my word,&rdquo; said the fox, &ldquo;nothing so much as the pleasure of seeing
      your ladyship and hearing those agreeable anecdotes you tell with so
      charming a grace; but to let you into a secret&mdash;be sure it don&rsquo;t go
      further&mdash;&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;On the word of a magpie,&rdquo; interrupted the bird.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Pardon me for doubting you,&rdquo; continued the fox; &ldquo;I should have
      recollected that a pie was a proverb for discretion. But, as I was saying,
      you know her Majesty the lioness?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Surely,&rdquo; said the magpie, bridling.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Well; she was pleased to fall in&mdash;that is to say&mdash;to&mdash;to&mdash;take
      a caprice to your humble servant, and the lion grew so jealous that I
      thought it prudent to decamp. A jealous lion is no joke, let me assure
      your ladyship. But mum&rsquo;s the word.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      So great a piece of news delighted the magpie. She could not but repay it
      in kind, by all the news in her budget. She told the fox all the scandal
      about Bruin and Gauntgrim, and she then fell to work on the poor young
      cat. She did not spare her foibles, you may be quite sure. The fox
      listened with great attention, and he learned enough to convince him that
      however much the magpie might exaggerate, the cat was very susceptible to
      flattery, and had a great deal of imagination.
    </p>
    <p>
      When the magpie had finished she said, &ldquo;But it must be very unfortunate
      for you to be banished from so magnificent a court as that of the lion?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;As to that,&rdquo; answered the fox, &ldquo;I console myself for my exile with a
      present his Majesty made me on parting, as a reward for my anxiety for his
      honour and domestic tranquillity; namely, three hairs from the fifth leg
      of the amoronthologosphorus. Only think of that, ma&rsquo;am!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;The what?&rdquo; cried the pie, cocking down her left ear.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;The amoronthologosphorus.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;La!&rdquo; said the magpie; &ldquo;and what is that very long word, my dear Reynard?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;The amoronthologosphorus is a beast that lives on the other side of the
      river Cylinx; it has five legs, and on the fifth leg there are three
      hairs, and whoever has those three hairs can be young and beautiful
      forever.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Bless me! I wish you would let me see them,&rdquo; said the pie, holding out
      her claw.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Would that I could oblige you, ma&rsquo;am; but it&rsquo;s as much as my life&rsquo;s worth
      to show them to any but the lady I marry. In fact, they only have an
      effect on the fair sex, as you may see by myself, whose poor person they
      utterly fail to improve: they are, therefore, intended for a marriage
      present, and his Majesty the lion thus generously atoned to me for
      relinquishing the tenderness of his queen. One must confess that there was
      a great deal of delicacy in the gift. But you&rsquo;ll be sure not to mention
      it.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;A magpie gossip indeed!&rdquo; quoth the old blab.
    </p>
    <p>
      The fox then wished the magpie good night, and retired to a hole to sleep
      off the fatigues of the day, before he presented himself to the beautiful
      young cat.
    </p>
    <p>
      The next morning, Heaven knows how! it was all over the place that Reynard
      the fox had been banished from court for the favour shown him by her
      Majesty, and that the lion had bribed his departure with three hairs that
      would make any lady whom the fox married young and beautiful forever.
    </p>
    <p>
      The cat was the first to learn the news, and she became all curiosity to
      see so interesting a stranger, possessed of &ldquo;qualifications&rdquo; which, in the
      language of the day, &ldquo;would render any animal happy!&rdquo; She was not long
      without obtaining her wish. As she was taking a walk in the wood the fox
      contrived to encounter her. You may be sure that he made her his best bow;
      and he flattered the poor cat with so courtly an air that she saw nothing
      surprising in the love of the lioness.
    </p>
    <p>
      Meanwhile let us see what became of his rival, the dog.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Ah, the poor creature!&rdquo; said Nymphalin; &ldquo;it is easy to guess that he need
      not be buried alive to lose all chance of marrying the heiress.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Wait till the end,&rdquo; answered Fayzenheim.
    </p>
    <p>
      When the dog found that he was thus entrapped, he gave himself up for
      lost. In vain he kicked with his hind-legs against the stone,&mdash;he
      only succeeded in bruising his paws; and at length he was forced to lie
      down, with his tongue out of his mouth, and quite exhausted. &ldquo;However,&rdquo;
       said he, after he had taken breath, &ldquo;it won&rsquo;t do to be starved here,
      without doing my best to escape; and if I can&rsquo;t get out one way, let me
      see if there is not a hole at the other end.&rdquo; Thus saying, his courage,
      which stood him in lieu of cunning, returned, and he proceeded on in the
      same straightforward way in which he always conducted himself. At first
      the path was exceedingly narrow, and he hurt his sides very much against
      the rough stones that projected from the earth; but by degrees the way
      became broader, and he now went on with considerable ease to himself, till
      he arrived in a large cavern, where he saw an immense griffin sitting on
      his tail, and smoking a huge pipe.
    </p>
    <p>
      The dog was by no means pleased at meeting so suddenly a creature that had
      only to open his mouth to swallow him up at a morsel; however, he put a
      bold face on the danger, and walking respectfully up to the griffin, said,
      &ldquo;Sir, I should be very much obliged to you if you would inform me the way
      out of these holes into the upper world.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      The griffin took the pipe out of his mouth, and looked at the dog very
      sternly.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Ho, wretch!&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;how comest thou hither? I suppose thou wantest to
      steal my treasure; but I know how to treat such vagabonds as you, and I
      shall certainly eat you up.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;You can do that if you choose,&rdquo; said the dog; &ldquo;but it would be very
      unhandsome conduct in an animal so much bigger than myself. For my own
      part, I never attack any dog that is not of equal size,&mdash;I should be
      ashamed of myself if I did. And as to your treasure, the character I bear
      for honesty is too well known to merit such a suspicion.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Upon my word,&rdquo; said the griffin, who could not help smiling for the life
      of him, &ldquo;you have a singularly free mode of expressing yourself. And how,
      I say, came you hither?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Then the dog, who did not know what a lie was, told the griffin his whole
      history,&mdash;how he had set off to pay his court to the cat, and how
      Reynard the fox had entrapped him into the hole.
    </p>
    <p>
      When he had finished, the griffin said to him, &ldquo;I see, my friend, that you
      know how to speak the truth; I am in want of just such a servant as you
      will make me, therefore stay with me and keep watch over my treasure when
      I sleep.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Two words to that,&rdquo; said the dog. &ldquo;You have hurt my feelings very much by
      suspecting my honesty, and I would much sooner go back into the wood and
      be avenged on that scoundrel the fox, than serve a master who has so ill
      an opinion of me. I pray you, therefore, to dismiss me, and to put me in
      the right way to my cousin the cat.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;I am not a griffin of many words,&rdquo; answered the master of the cavern,
      &ldquo;and I give you your choice,&mdash;be my servant or be my breakfast; it is
      just the same to me. I give you time to decide till I have smoked out my
      pipe.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      The poor dog did not take so long to consider. &ldquo;It is true,&rdquo; thought he,
      &ldquo;that it is a great misfortune to live in a cave with a griffin of so
      unpleasant a countenance; but, probably, if I serve him well and
      faithfully, he&rsquo;ll take pity on me some day, and let me go back to earth,
      and prove to my cousin what a rogue the fox is; and as to the rest, though
      I would sell my life as dear as I could, it is impossible to fight a
      griffin with a mouth of so monstrous a size.&rdquo; In short, he decided to stay
      with the griffin.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Shake a paw on it,&rdquo; quoth the grim smoker; and the dog shook paws.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;And now,&rdquo; said the griffin, &ldquo;I will tell you what you are to do. Look
      here,&rdquo; and moving his tail, he showed the dog a great heap of gold and
      silver, in a hole in the ground, that he had covered with the folds of his
      tail; and also, what the dog thought more valuable, a great heap of bones
      of very tempting appearance. &ldquo;Now,&rdquo; said the griffin, &ldquo;during the day I
      can take very good care of these myself; but at night it is very necessary
      that I should go to sleep, so when I sleep you must watch over them
      instead of me.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Very well,&rdquo; said the dog. &ldquo;As to the gold and silver, I have no
      objection; but I would much rather that you would lock up the bones, for
      I&rsquo;m often hungry of a night, and&mdash;&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Hold your tongue,&rdquo; said the griffin.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;But, sir,&rdquo; said the dog, after a short silence, &ldquo;surely nobody ever comes
      into so retired a situation! Who are the thieves, if I may make bold to
      ask?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Know,&rdquo; answered the griffin, &ldquo;that there are a great many serpents in
      this neighbourhood. They are always trying to steal my treasure; and if
      they catch me napping, they, not contented with theft, would do their best
      to sting me to death. So that I am almost worn out for want of sleep.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; quoth the dog, who was fond of a good night&rsquo;s rest, &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t envy
      you your treasure, sir.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      At night, the griffin, who had a great deal of penetration, and saw that
      he might depend on the dog, lay down to sleep in another corner of the
      cave; and the dog, shaking himself well, so as to be quite awake, took
      watch over the treasure. His mouth watered exceedingly at the bones, and
      he could not help smelling them now and then; but he said to himself, &ldquo;A
      bargain&rsquo;s a bargain, and since I have promised to serve the griffin, I
      must serve him as an honest dog ought to serve.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      In the middle of the night he saw a great snake creeping in by the side of
      the cave; but the dog set up so loud a bark that the griffin awoke, and
      the snake crept away as fast as he could. Then the griffin was very much
      pleased, and he gave the dog one of the bones to amuse himself with; and
      every night the dog watched the treasure, and acquitted himself so well
      that not a snake, at last, dared to make its appearance,&mdash;so the
      griffin enjoyed an excellent night&rsquo;s rest.
    </p>
    <p>
      The dog now found himself much more comfortable than he expected. The
      griffin regularly gave him one of the bones for supper; and, pleased with
      his fidelity, made himself as agreeable a master as a griffin could be.
      Still, however, the dog was secretly very anxious to return to earth; for
      having nothing to do during the day but to doze on the ground, he dreamed
      perpetually of his cousin the cat&rsquo;s charms, and, in fancy, he gave the
      rascal Reynard as hearty a worry as a fox may well have the honour of
      receiving from a dog&rsquo;s paws. He awoke panting; alas! he could not realize
      his dreams.
    </p>
    <p>
      One night, as he was watching as usual over the treasure, he was greatly
      surprised to see a beautiful little black and white dog enter the cave;
      and it came fawning to our honest friend, wagging its tail with pleasure.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Ah, little one,&rdquo; said our dog, whom, to distinguish, I will call the
      watch-dog, &ldquo;you had better make the best of your way back again. See,
      there is a great griffin asleep in the other corner of the cave, and if he
      wakes, he will either eat you up or make you his servant, as he has made
      me.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;I know what you would tell me,&rdquo; says the little dog; &ldquo;and I have come
      down here to deliver you. The stone is now gone from the mouth of the
      cave, and you have nothing to do but to go back with me. Come, brother,
      come.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      The dog was very much excited by this address. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t ask me, my dear
      little friend,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;you must be aware that I should be too happy to
      escape out of this cold cave, and roll on the soft turf once more: but if
      I leave my master, the griffin, those cursed serpents, who are always on
      the watch, will come in and steal his treasure,&mdash;nay, perhaps, sting
      him to death.&rdquo; Then the little dog came up to the watch-dog, and
      remonstrated with him greatly, and licked him caressingly on both sides of
      his face; and, taking him by the ear, endeavoured to draw him from the
      treasure: but the dog would not stir a step, though his heart sorely
      pressed him. At length the little dog, finding it all in vain, said,
      &ldquo;Well, then, if I must leave, good-by; but I have become so hungry in
      coming down all this way after you, that I wish you would give me one of
      those bones; they smell very pleasantly, and one out of so many could
      never be missed.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Alas!&rdquo; said the watchdog, with tears in his eyes, &ldquo;how unlucky I am to
      have eaten up the bone my master gave me, otherwise you should have had it
      and welcome. But I can&rsquo;t give you one of these, because my master has made
      me promise to watch over them all, and I have given him my paw on it. I am
      sure a dog of your respectable appearance will say nothing further on the
      subject.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Then the little dog answered pettishly, &ldquo;Pooh, what nonsense you talk!
      surely a great griffin can&rsquo;t miss a little bone fit for me?&rdquo; and nestling
      his nose under the watch-dog, he tried forthwith to bring up one of the
      bones.
    </p>
    <p>
      On this the watch-dog grew angry, and, though with much reluctance, he
      seized the little dog by the nape of the neck and threw him off, but
      without hurting him. Suddenly the little dog changed into a monstrous
      serpent, bigger even than the griffin himself, and the watch-dog barked
      with all his might. The griffin rose in a great hurry, and the serpent
      sprang upon him ere he was well awake. I wish, dearest Nymphalin, you
      could have seen the battle between the griffin and the serpent,&mdash;how
      they coiled and twisted, and bit and darted their fiery tongues at each
      other. At length the serpent got uppermost, and was about to plunge his
      tongue into that part of the griffin which is unprotected by his scales,
      when the dog, seizing him by the tail, bit him so sharply that he could
      not help turning round to kill his new assailant, and the griffin, taking
      advantage of the opportunity, caught the serpent by the throat with both
      claws, and fairly strangled him. As soon as the griffin had recovered from
      the nervousness of the conflict, he heaped all manner of caresses on the
      dog for saving his life. The dog told him the whole story, and the griffin
      then explained that the dead snake was the king of the serpents, who had
      the power to change himself into any shape he pleased. &ldquo;If he had tempted
      you,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;to leave the treasure but for one moment, or to have given
      him any part of it, ay, but a single bone, he would have crushed you in an
      instant, and stung me to death ere I could have waked; but none, no, not
      the most venomous thing in creation, has power to hurt the honest!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;That has always been my belief,&rdquo; answered the dog; &ldquo;and now, sir, you had
      better go to sleep again and leave the rest to me.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; answered the griffin, &ldquo;I have no longer need of a servant; for now
      that the king of the serpents is dead, the rest will never molest me. It
      was only to satisfy his avarice that his subjects dared to brave the den
      of the griffin.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Upon hearing this the dog was exceedingly delighted; and raising himself
      on his hind paws, he begged the griffin most movingly to let him return to
      earth, to visit his mistress the cat, and worry his rival the fox.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;You do not serve an ungrateful master,&rdquo; answered the griffin. &ldquo;You shall
      return, and I will teach you all the craft of our race, which is much
      craftier than the race of that pettifogger the fox, so that you may be
      able to cope with your rival.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Ah, excuse me,&rdquo; said the dog, hastily, &ldquo;I am equally obliged to you; but
      I fancy honesty is a match for cunning any day, and I think myself a great
      deal safer in being a dog of honour than if I knew all the tricks in the
      world.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said the griffin, a little piqued at the dog&rsquo;s bluntness, &ldquo;do as
      you please; I wish you all possible success.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Then the griffin opened a secret door in the side of the cabin, and the
      dog saw a broad path that led at once into the wood. He thanked the
      griffin with all his heart, and ran wagging his tail into the open
      moonlight. &ldquo;Ah, ah, master fox,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;there&rsquo;s no trap for an honest
      dog that has not two doors to it, cunning as you think yourself.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      With that he curled his tail gallantly over his left leg, and set off on a
      long trot to the cat&rsquo;s house. When he was within sight of it, he stopped
      to refresh himself by a pool of water, and who should be there but our
      friend the magpie.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;And what do <i>you</i> want, friend?&rdquo; said she, rather disdainfully, for
      the dog looked somewhat out of case after his journey.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;I am going to see my cousin the cat,&rdquo; answered he.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;<i>Your cousin</i>! marry come up,&rdquo; said the magpie; &ldquo;don&rsquo;t you know she
      is going to be married to Reynard the fox? This is not a time for her to
      receive the visits of a brute like you.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      These words put the dog in such a passion that he very nearly bit the
      magpie for her uncivil mode of communicating such bad news. However, he
      curbed his temper, and, without answering her, went at once to the cat&rsquo;s
      residence.
    </p>
    <p>
      The cat was sitting at the window, and no sooner did the dog see her than
      he fairly lost his heart; never had he seen so charming a cat before. He
      advanced, wagging his tail, and with his most insinuating air, when the
      cat, getting up, clapped the window in his face, and lo! Reynard the fox
      appeared in her stead.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Come out, thou rascal!&rdquo; said the dog, showing his teeth; &ldquo;come out, I
      challenge thee to single combat; I have not forgiven thy malice, and thou
      seest that I am no longer shut up in the cave, and unable to punish thee
      for thy wickedness.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Go home, silly one!&rdquo; answered the fox, sneering; &ldquo;thou hast no business
      here, and as for fighting thee&mdash;bah!&rdquo; Then the fox left the window
      and disappeared. But the dog, thoroughly enraged, scratched lustily at the
      door, and made such a noise, that presently the cat herself came to the
      window.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;How now!&rdquo; said she, angrily; &ldquo;what means all this rudeness? Who are you,
      and what do you want at my house?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Oh, my dear cousin,&rdquo; said the dog, &ldquo;do not speak so severely. Know that I
      have come here on purpose to pay you a visit; and, whatever you do, let me
      beseech you not to listen to that villain Reynard,&mdash;you have no
      conception what a rogue he is!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;What!&rdquo; said the cat, blushing; &ldquo;do you dare to abuse your betters in this
      fashion? I see you have a design on me. Go, this instant, or&mdash;&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Enough, madam,&rdquo; said the dog, proudly; &ldquo;you need not speak twice to me,&mdash;farewell.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      And he turned away very slowly, and went under a tree, where he took up
      his lodgings for the night. But the next morning there was an amazing
      commotion in the neighbourhood; a stranger, of a very different style of
      travelling from that of the dog, had arrived at the dead of the night, and
      fixed his abode in a large cavern hollowed out of a steep rock. The noise
      he had made in flying through the air was so great that it had awakened
      every bird and beast in the parish; and Reynard, whose bad conscience
      never suffered him to sleep very soundly, putting his head out of the
      window, perceived, to his great alarm, that the stranger was nothing less
      than a monstrous griffin.
    </p>
    <p>
      Now the griffins are the richest beasts in the world; and that&rsquo;s the
      reason they keep so close under ground. Whenever it does happen that they
      pay a visit above, it is not a thing to be easily forgotten.
    </p>
    <p>
      The magpie was all agitation. What could the griffin possibly want there?
      She resolved to take a peep at the cavern, and accordingly she hopped
      timorously up the rock, and pretended to be picking up sticks for her
      nest.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Holla, ma&rsquo;am!&rdquo; cried a very rough voice, and she saw the griffin putting
      his head out of the cavern. &ldquo;Holla! you are the very lady I want to see;
      you know all the people about here, eh?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;All the best company, your lordship, I certainly do,&rdquo; answered the
      magpie, dropping a courtesy.
    </p>
    <p>
      Upon this the griffin walked out; and smoking his pipe leisurely in the
      open air, in order to set the pie at her ease, continued,&mdash;
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Are there any respectable beasts of good families settled in this
      neighbourhood?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Oh, most elegant society, I assure your lordship,&rdquo; cried the pie. &ldquo;I have
      lived here myself these ten years, and the great heiress, the cat yonder,
      attracts a vast number of strangers.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Humph! heiress, indeed! much you know about heiresses!&rdquo; said the griffin.
      &ldquo;There is only one heiress in the world, and that&rsquo;s my daughter.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Bless me! has your lordship a family? I beg you a thousand pardons; but I
      only saw your lordship&rsquo;s own equipage last night, and did not know you
      brought any one with you.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;My daughter went first, and was safely lodged before I arrived. She did
      not disturb you, I dare say, as I did; for she sails along like a swan:
      but I have got the gout in my left claw, and that&rsquo;s the reason I puff and
      groan so in taking a journey.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Shall I drop in upon Miss Griffin, and see how she is after her journey?&rdquo;
       said the pie, advancing.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;I thank you, no. I don&rsquo;t intend her to be seen while I stay here,&mdash;it
      unsettles her; and I&rsquo;m afraid of the young beasts running away with her if
      they once heard how handsome she was: she&rsquo;s the living picture of me, but
      she&rsquo;s monstrous giddy! Not that I should care much if she did go off with
      a beast of degree, were I not obliged to pay her portion, which is
      prodigious; and I don&rsquo;t like parting with money, ma&rsquo;am, when I&rsquo;ve once got
      it. Ho, ho, ho!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;You are too witty, my lord. But if you refused your consent?&rdquo; said the
      pie, anxious to know the whole family history of so grand a seigneur.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;I should have to pay the dowry all the same. It was left her by her uncle
      the dragon. But don&rsquo;t let this go any further.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Your lordship may depend on my secrecy. I wish your lordship a very good
      morning.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Away flew the pie, and she did not stop till she got to the cat&rsquo;s house.
      The cat and the fox were at breakfast, and the fox had his paw on his
      heart. &ldquo;Beautiful scene!&rdquo; cried the pie; the cat coloured, and bade the
      pie take a seat.
    </p>
    <p>
      Then off went the pie&rsquo;s tongue, glib, glib, glib, chatter, chatter,
      chatter. She related to them the whole story of the griffin and his
      daughter, and a great deal more besides, that the griffin had never told
      her.
    </p>
    <p>
      The cat listened attentively. Another young heiress in the neighbourhood
      might be a formidable rival. &ldquo;But is this griffiness handsome?&rdquo; said she.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Handsome!&rdquo; cried the pie; &ldquo;oh, if you could have seen the father!&mdash;such
      a mouth, such eyes, such a complexion; and he declares she&rsquo;s the living
      picture of himself! But what do you say, Mr. Reynard,&mdash;you, who have
      been so much in the world, have, perhaps, seen the young lady?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Why, I can&rsquo;t say I have,&rdquo; answered the fox, waking from a revery; &ldquo;but
      she must be wonderfully rich. I dare say that fool the dog will be making
      up to her.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Ah, by the way,&rdquo; said the pie, &ldquo;what a fuss he made at your door
      yesterday; why would you not admit him, my dear?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; said the cat, demurely, &ldquo;Mr. Reynard says that he is a dog of very
      bad character, quite a fortune-hunter; and hiding the most dangerous
      disposition to bite under an appearance of good nature. I hope he won&rsquo;t be
      quarrelsome with you, dear Reynard!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;With me? Oh, the poor wretch, no!&mdash;he might bluster a little; but he
      knows that if I&rsquo;m once angry I&rsquo;m a devil at biting;&mdash;one should not
      boast of oneself.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      In the evening Reynard felt a strange desire to go and see the griffin
      smoking his pipe; but what could he do? There was the dog under the
      opposite tree evidently watching for him, and Reynard had no wish to prove
      himself that devil at biting which he declared he was. At last he resolved
      to have recourse to stratagem to get rid of the dog.
    </p>
    <p>
      A young buck of a rabbit, a sort of provincial fop, had looked in upon his
      cousin the cat, to pay her his respects, and Reynard, taking him aside,
      said, &ldquo;You see that shabby-looking dog under the tree? He has behaved very
      ill to your cousin the cat, and you certainly ought to challenge him.
      Forgive my boldness, nothing but respect for your character induces me to
      take so great a liberty; you know I would chastise the rascal myself, but
      what a scandal it would make! If I were already married to your cousin, it
      would be a different thing. But you know what a story that cursed magpie
      would hatch out of it!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      The rabbit looked very foolish; he assured the fox he was no match for the
      dog; that he was very fond of his cousin, to be sure! but he saw no
      necessity to interfere with her domestic affairs; and, in short, he tried
      all he possibly could to get out of the scrape; but the fox so artfully
      played on his vanity, so earnestly assured him that the dog was the
      biggest coward in the world and would make a humble apology, and so
      eloquently represented to him the glory he would obtain for manifesting so
      much spirit, that at length the rabbit was persuaded to go out and deliver
      the challenge.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll be your second,&rdquo; said the fox; &ldquo;and the great field on the other
      side the wood, two miles hence, shall be the place of battle: there we
      shall be out of observation. You go first, I&rsquo;ll follow in half an hour;
      and I say, hark!&mdash;in case he does accept the challenge, and you feel
      the least afraid, I&rsquo;ll be in the field, and take it off your paws with the
      utmost pleasure; rely on <i>me</i>, my dear sir!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Away went the rabbit. The dog was a little astonished at the temerity of
      the poor creature; but on hearing that the fox was to be present,
      willingly consented to repair to the place of conflict. This readiness the
      rabbit did not at all relish; he went very slowly to the field, and seeing
      no fox there, his heart misgave him; and while the dog was putting his
      nose to the ground to try if he could track the coming of the fox, the
      rabbit slipped into a burrow, and left the dog to walk back again.
    </p>
    <p>
      Meanwhile the fox was already at the rock; he walked very soft-footedly,
      and looked about with extreme caution, for he had a vague notion that a
      griffin-papa would not be very civil to foxes.
    </p>
    <p>
      Now there were two holes in the rock,&mdash;one below, one above, an upper
      story and an under; and while the fox was peering about, he saw a great
      claw from the upper rock beckoning to him.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Ah, ah!&rdquo; said the fox, &ldquo;that&rsquo;s the wanton young griffiness, I&rsquo;ll swear.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      He approached, and a voice said,&mdash;
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Charming Mr. Reynard, do you not think you could deliver an unfortunate
      griffiness from a barbarous confinement in this rock?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Oh, heavens!&rdquo; cried the fox, tenderly, &ldquo;what a beautiful voice! and, ah,
      my poor heart, what a lovely claw! Is it possible that I hear the daughter
      of my lord, the great griffin?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Hush, flatterer! not so loud, if you please. My father is taking an
      evening stroll, and is very quick of hearing. He has tied me up by my poor
      wings in the cavern, for he is mightily afraid of some beast running away
      with me. You know I have all my fortune settled on myself.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Talk not of fortune,&rdquo; said the fox; &ldquo;but how can I deliver you? Shall I
      enter and gnaw the cord?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Alas!&rdquo; answered the griffiness, &ldquo;it is an immense chain I am bound with.
      However, you may come in and talk more at your ease.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      The fox peeped cautiously all round, and seeing no sign of the griffin, he
      entered the lower cave and stole upstairs to the upper story; but as he
      went on, he saw immense piles of jewels and gold, and all sorts of
      treasure, so that the old griffin might well have laughed at the poor cat
      being called an heiress. The fox was greatly pleased at such indisputable
      signs of wealth, and he entered the upper cave, resolved to be transported
      with the charms of the griffiness.
    </p>
    <p>
      There was, however, a great chasm between the landing-place and the spot
      where the young lady was chained, and he found it impossible to pass; the
      cavern was very dark, but he saw enough of the figure of the griffiness to
      perceive, in spite of her petticoat, that she was the image of her father,
      and the most hideous heiress that the earth ever saw!
    </p>
    <p>
      However, he swallowed his disgust, and poured forth such a heap of
      compliments that the griffiness appeared entirely won.
    </p>
    <p>
      He implored her to fly with him the first moment she was unchained.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;That is impossible,&rdquo; said she; &ldquo;for my father never unchains me except in
      his presence, and then I cannot stir out of his sight.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;The wretch!&rdquo; cried Reynard, &ldquo;what is to be done?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Why, there is only one thing I know of,&rdquo; answered the griffiness, &ldquo;which
      is this: I always make his soup for him, and if I could mix something in
      it that would put him fast to sleep before he had time to chain me up
      again I might slip down and carry off all the treasure below on my back.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Charming!&rdquo; exclaimed Reynard; &ldquo;what invention! what wit! I will go and
      get some poppies directly.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Alas!&rdquo; said the griffiness, &ldquo;poppies have no effect upon griffins. The
      only thing that can ever put my father fast to sleep is a nice young cat
      boiled up in his soup; it is astonishing what a charm that has upon him!
      But where to get a cat?&mdash;it must be a maiden cat too!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Reynard was a little startled at so singular an opiate. &ldquo;But,&rdquo; thought he,
      &ldquo;griffins are not like the rest of the world, and so rich an heiress is
      not to be won by ordinary means.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;I do know a cat,&mdash;a maiden cat,&rdquo; said he, after a short pause; &ldquo;but
      I feel a little repugnance at the thought of having her boiled in the
      griffin&rsquo;s soup. Would not a dog do as well?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Ah, base thing!&rdquo; said the griffiness, appearing to weep; &ldquo;you are in love
      with the cat, I see it; go and marry her, poor dwarf that she is, and
      leave me to die of grief.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      In vain the fox protested that he did not care a straw for the cat;
      nothing could now appease the griffiness but his positive assurance that
      come what would poor puss should be brought to the cave and boiled for the
      griffin&rsquo;s soup.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;But how will you get her here?&rdquo; said the griffiness.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Ah, leave that to me,&rdquo; said Reynard. &ldquo;Only put a basket out of the window
      and draw it up by a cord; the moment it arrives at the window, be sure to
      clap your claw on the cat at once, for she is terribly active.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Tush!&rdquo; answered the heiress; &ldquo;a pretty griffiness I should be if I did
      not know how to catch a cat!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;But this must be when your father is out?&rdquo; said Reynard.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Certainly; he takes a stroll every evening at sunset.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Let it be to-morrow, then,&rdquo; said Reynard, impatient for the treasure.
    </p>
    <p>
      This being arranged, Reynard thought it time to decamp. He stole down the
      stairs again, and tried to filch some of the treasure by the way; but it
      was too heavy for him to carry, and he was forced to acknowledge to
      himself that it was impossible to get the treasure without taking the
      griffiness (whose back seemed prodigiously strong) into the bargain.
    </p>
    <p>
      He returned home to the cat, and when he entered her house, and saw how
      ordinary everything looked after the jewels in the griffin&rsquo;s cave, he
      quite wondered how he had ever thought the cat had the least pretensions
      to good looks. However, he concealed his wicked design, and his mistress
      thought he had never appeared so amiable.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Only guess,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;where I have been!&mdash;to our new neighbour the
      griffin; a most charming person, thoroughly affable, and quite the air of
      the court. As for that silly magpie, the griffin saw her character at
      once; and it was all a hoax about his daughter,&mdash;he has no daughter
      at all. You know, my dear, hoaxing is a fashionable amusement among the
      great. He says he has heard of nothing but your beauty, and on my telling
      him we were going to be married, he has insisted upon giving a great ball
      and supper in honour of the event. In fact, he is a gallant old fellow,
      and dying to see you. Of course, I was obliged to accept the invitation.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;You could not do otherwise,&rdquo; said the unsuspecting young creature, who,
      as I before said, was very susceptible to flattery.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;And only think how delicate his attentions are,&rdquo; said the fox. &ldquo;As he is
      very badly lodged for a beast of his rank, and his treasure takes up the
      whole of the ground floor, he is forced to give the <i>fete</i> in the
      upper story, so he hangs out a basket for his guests, and draws them up
      with his own claw. How condescending! But the great <i>are</i> so
      amiable!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      The cat, brought up in seclusion, was all delight at the idea of seeing
      such high life, and the lovers talked of nothing else all the next day,&mdash;when
      Reynard, towards evening, putting his head out of the window, saw his old
      friend the dog lying as usual and watching him very grimly. &ldquo;Ah, that
      cursed creature! I had quite forgotten him; what is to be done now? He
      would make no bones of me if he once saw me set foot out of doors.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      With that, the fox began to cast in his head how he should get rid of his
      rival, and at length he resolved on a very notable project; he desired the
      cat to set out first, and wait for him at a turn in the road a little way
      off. &ldquo;For,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;if we go together we shall certainly be insulted by
      the dog; and he will know that in the presence of a lady, the custom of a
      beast of my fashion will not suffer me to avenge the affront. But when I
      am alone, the creature is such a coward that he will not dare say his
      soul&rsquo;s his own; leave the door open and I&rsquo;ll follow immediately.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      The cat&rsquo;s mind was so completely poisoned against her cousin that she
      implicitly believed this account of his character; and accordingly, with
      many recommendations to her lover not to sully his dignity by getting into
      any sort of quarrel with the dog, she set off first.
    </p>
    <p>
      The dog went up to her very humbly, and begged her to allow him to say a
      few words to her; but she received him so haughtily, that his spirit was
      up; and he walked back to the tree more than ever enraged against his
      rival. But what was his joy when he saw that the cat had left the door
      open! &ldquo;Now, wretch,&rdquo; thought he, &ldquo;you cannot escape me!&rdquo; So he walked
      briskly in at the back door. He was greatly surprised to find Reynard
      lying down in the straw, panting as if his heart would break, and rolling
      his eyes in the pangs of death.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Ah, friend,&rdquo; said the fox, with a faltering voice, &ldquo;you are avenged, my
      hour is come; I am just going to give up the ghost: put your paw upon
      mine, and say you forgive me.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Despite his anger, the generous dog could not set tooth on a dying foe.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;You have served me a shabby trick,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;you have left me to starve
      in a hole, and you have evidently maligned me with my cousin: certainly I
      meant to be avenged on you; but if you are really dying, that alters the
      affair.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Oh, oh!&rdquo; groaned the fox, very bitterly; &ldquo;I am past help; the poor cat is
      gone for Doctor Ape, but he&rsquo;ll never come in time. What a thing it is to
      have a bad conscience on one&rsquo;s death-bed! But wait till the cat returns,
      and I&rsquo;ll do you full justice with her before I die.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      The good-natured dog was much moved at seeing his mortal enemy in such a
      state, and endeavoured as well as he could to console him.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Oh, oh!&rdquo; said the fox; &ldquo;I am so parched in the throat, I am burning;&rdquo; and
      he hung his tongue out of his mouth, and rolled his eyes more fearfully
      than ever.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Is there no water here?&rdquo; said the dog, looking round.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Alas, no!&mdash;yet stay! yes, now I think of it, there is some in that
      little hole in the wall; but how to get at it! It is so high that I can&rsquo;t,
      in my poor weak state, climb up to it; and I dare not ask such a favour of
      one I have injured so much.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t talk of it,&rdquo; said the dog: &ldquo;but the hole&rsquo;s very small, I could not
      put my nose through it.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;No; but if you just climb up on that stone, and thrust your paw into the
      hole, you can dip it into the water, and so cool my poor parched mouth.
      Oh, what a thing it is to have a bad conscience!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      The dog sprang upon the stone, and, getting on his hind legs, thrust his
      front paw into the hole; when suddenly Reynard pulled a string that he had
      concealed under the straw, and the dog found his paw caught tight to the
      wall in a running noose.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Ah, rascal!&rdquo; said he, turning round; but the fox leaped up gayly from the
      straw, and fastening the string with his teeth to a nail in the other end
      of the wall, walked out, crying, &ldquo;Good-by, my dear friend; have a care how
      you believe hereafter in sudden conversions!&rdquo; So he left the dog on his
      hind legs to take care of the house.
    </p>
    <p>
      Reynard found the cat waiting for him where he had appointed, and they
      walked lovingly together till they came to the cave. It was now dark, and
      they saw the basket waiting below; the fox assisted the poor cat into it.
      &ldquo;There is only room for one,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;you must go first!&rdquo; Up rose the
      basket; the fox heard a piteous mew, and no more.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;So much for the griffin&rsquo;s soup!&rdquo; thought he.
    </p>
    <p>
      He waited patiently for some time, when the griffiness, waving her claw
      from the window, said cheerfully, &ldquo;All&rsquo;s right, my dear Reynard; my papa
      has finished his soup, and sleeps as sound as a rock! All the noise in the
      world would not wake him now, till he has slept off the boiled cat, which
      won&rsquo;t be these twelve hours. Come and assist me in packing up the
      treasure; I should be sorry to leave a single diamond behind.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;So should I,&rdquo; quoth the fox. &ldquo;Stay, I&rsquo;ll come round by the lower hole:
      why, the door&rsquo;s shut! pray, beautiful griffiness, open it to thy impatient
      adorer.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Alas, my father has hid the key! I never know where he places it. You
      must come up by the basket; see, I will lower it for you.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      The fox was a little loth to trust himself in the same conveyance that had
      taken his mistress to be boiled; but the most cautious grow rash when
      money&rsquo;s to be gained, and avarice can trap even a fox. So he put himself
      as comfortably as he could into the basket, and up he went in an instant.
      It rested, however, just before it reached the window, and the fox felt,
      with a slight shudder, the claw of the griffiness stroking his back.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Oh, what a beautiful coat!&rdquo; quoth she, caressingly.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;You are too kind,&rdquo; said the fox; &ldquo;but you can feel it more at your
      leisure when I am once up. Make haste, I beseech you.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Oh, what a beautiful bushy tail! Never did I feel such a tail.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;It is entirely at your service, sweet griffiness,&rdquo; said the fox; &ldquo;but
      pray let me in. Why lose an instant?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;No, never did I feel such a tail! No wonder you are so successful with
      the ladies.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Ah, beloved griffiness, my tail is yours to eternity, but you pinch it a
      little too hard.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Scarcely had he said this, when down dropped the basket, but not with the
      fox in it; he found himself caught by the tail, and dangling half way down
      the rock, by the help of the very same sort of pulley wherewith he had
      snared the dog. I leave you to guess his consternation; he yelped out as
      loud as he could,&mdash;for it hurts a fox exceedingly to be hanged by his
      tail with his head downwards,&mdash;when the door of the rock opened, and
      out stalked the griffin himself, smoking his pipe, with a vast crowd of
      all the fashionable beasts in the neighbourhood.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Oho, brother,&rdquo; said the bear, laughing fit to kill himself; &ldquo;who ever saw
      a fox hanged by the tail before?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;You&rsquo;ll have need of a physician,&rdquo; quoth Doctor Ape.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;A pretty match, indeed; a griffiness for such a creature as you!&rdquo; said
      the goat, strutting by him.
    </p>
    <p>
      The fox grinned with pain, and said nothing. But that which hurt him most
      was the compassion of a dull fool of a donkey, who assured him with great
      gravity that he saw nothing at all to laugh at in his situation!
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;At all events,&rdquo; said the fox, at last, &ldquo;cheated, gulled, betrayed as I
      am, I have played the same trick to the dog. Go and laugh at him,
      gentlemen; he deserves it as much as I can, I assure you.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Pardon me,&rdquo; said the griffin, taking the pipe out of his mouth; &ldquo;one
      never laughs at the honest.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;And see,&rdquo; said the bear, &ldquo;here he is.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      And indeed the dog had, after much effort, gnawed the string in two, and
      extricated his paw; the scent of the fox had enabled him to track his
      footsteps, and here he arrived, burning for vengeance and finding himself
      already avenged.
    </p>
    <p>
      But his first thought was for his dear cousin. &ldquo;Ah, where is she?&rdquo; he
      cried movingly; &ldquo;without doubt that villain Reynard has served her some
      scurvy trick.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;I fear so indeed, my old friend,&rdquo; answered the griffin; &ldquo;but don&rsquo;t
      grieve,&mdash;after all, she was nothing particular. You shall marry my
      daughter the griffiness, and succeed to all the treasure; ay, and all the
      bones that you once guarded so faithfully.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Talk not to me,&rdquo; said the faithful dog. &ldquo;I want none of your treasure;
      and, though I don&rsquo;t mean to be rude, your griffiness may go to the devil.
      I will run over the world, but I will find my dear cousin.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;See her then,&rdquo; said the griffin; and the beautiful cat, more beautiful
      than ever, rushed out of the cavern, and threw herself into the dog&rsquo;s
      paws.
    </p>
    <p>
      A pleasant scene this for the fox! He had skill enough in the female heart
      to know that it may excuse many little infidelities, but to be boiled
      alive for a griffin&rsquo;s soup&mdash;no, the offence was inexpiable.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;You understand me, Mr. Reynard,&rdquo; said the griffin, &ldquo;I have no daughter,
      and it was me you made love to. Knowing what sort of a creature a magpie
      is, I amused myself with hoaxing her,&mdash;the fashionable amusement at
      court, you know.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      The fox made a mighty struggle, and leaped on the ground, leaving his tail
      behind him. It did not grow again in a hurry.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;See,&rdquo; said the griffin, as the beasts all laughed at the figure Reynard
      made running into the wood, &ldquo;the dog beats the fox with the ladies, after
      all; and cunning as he is in everything else, the fox is the last creature
      that should ever think of making love!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Charming!&rdquo; cried Nymphalin, clasping her hands; &ldquo;it is just the sort of
      story I like.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;And I suppose, sir,&rdquo; said Nip, pertly, &ldquo;that the dog and the cat lived
      very happily ever afterwards? Indeed the nuptial felicity of a dog and cat
      is proverbial!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;I dare say they lived much the same as any other married couple,&rdquo;
       answered the prince.
    </p>
    <p>
      <a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013">
      <!--  H2 anchor --> </a>
    </p>
    <div style="height: 4em;">
      <br /><br /><br /><br />
    </div>
    <h2>
      CHAPTER XIII. THE TOMB OF A FATHER OF MANY CHILDREN.
    </h2>
    <p>
      THE feast being now ended, as well as the story, the fairies wound their
      way homeward by a different path, till at length a red steady light glowed
      through the long basaltic arches upon them, like the Demon Hunters&rsquo; fires
      in the Forest of Pines.
    </p>
    <p>
      The prince sobered in his pace. &ldquo;You approach,&rdquo; said he, in a grave tone,
      &ldquo;the greatest of our temples; you will witness the tomb of a mighty
      founder of our race!&rdquo; An awe crept over the queen, in spite of herself.
      Tracking the fires in silence, they came to a vast space, in the midst of
      which was a long gray block of stone, such as the traveller finds amidst
      the dread silence of Egyptian Thebes.
    </p>
    <p>
      And on this stone lay the gigantic figure of a man,&mdash;dead, but not
      death-like, for invisible spells had preserved the flesh and the long hair
      for untold ages; and beside him lay a rude instrument of music, and at his
      feet was a sword and a hunter&rsquo;s spear; and above, the rock wound, hollowed
      and roofless, to the upper air, and daylight came through, sickened and
      pale, beneath red fires that burned everlastingly around him, on such
      simple altars as belong to a savage race. But the place was not solitary,
      for many motionless but not lifeless shapes sat on large blocks of stone
      beside the tomb. There was the wizard, wrapped in his long black mantle,
      and his face covered with his hands; there was the uncouth and deformed
      dwarf, gibbering to himself; there sat the household elf; there glowered
      from a gloomy rent in the wall, with glittering eyes and shining scale,
      the enormous dragon of the North. An aged crone in rags, leaning on a
      staff, and gazing malignantly on the visitors, with bleared but fiery
      eyes, stood opposite the tomb of the gigantic dead. And now the fairies
      themselves completed the group! But all was dumb and unutterably silent,&mdash;the
      silence that floats over some antique city of the desert, when, for the
      first time for a hundred centuries, a living foot enters its desolate
      remains; the silence that belongs to the dust of eld,&mdash;deep, solemn,
      palpable, and sinking into the heart with a leaden and death-like weight.
      Even the English fairy spoke not; she held her breath, and gazing on the
      tomb, she saw, in rude vast characters,&mdash;
    </p>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
     THE TEUTON.
</pre>
    <p>
      &ldquo;<i>We</i> are all that remain of his religion!&rdquo; said the prince, as they
      turned from the dread temple.
    </p>
    <p>
      <a name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014">
      <!--  H2 anchor --> </a>
    </p>
    <div style="height: 4em;">
      <br /><br /><br /><br />
    </div>
    <h2>
      CHAPTER XIV. THE FAIRY&rsquo;S CAVE, AND THE FAIRY&rsquo;S WISH.
    </h2>
    <h3>
      IT was evening; and the fairies were dancing beneath the twilight star.
    </h3>
    <p>
      &ldquo;And why art thou sad, my violet?&rdquo; said the prince; &ldquo;for thine eyes seek
      the ground!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Now that I have found thee,&rdquo; answered the queen, &ldquo;and now that I feel
      what happy love is to a fairy, I sigh over that love which I have lately
      witnessed among mortals, but the bud of whose happiness already conceals
      the worm. For well didst thou say, my prince, that we are linked with a
      mysterious affinity to mankind, and whatever is pure and gentle amongst
      them speaks at once to our sympathy, and commands our vigils.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;And most of all,&rdquo; said the German fairy, &ldquo;are they who love under our
      watch; for love is the golden chain that binds all in the universe: love
      lights up alike the star and the glow-worm; and wherever there is love in
      men&rsquo;s lot, lies the secret affinity with men, and with things divine.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;But with the human race,&rdquo; said Nymphalin, &ldquo;there is no love that outlasts
      the hour, for either death ends, or custom alters. When the blossom comes
      to fruit, it is plucked and seen no more; and therefore, when I behold
      true love sentenced to an early grave, I comfort myself that I shall not
      at least behold the beauty dimmed, and the softness of the heart hardened
      into stone. Yet, my prince, while still the pulse can beat, and the warm
      blood flow, in that beautiful form which I have watched over of late, let
      me not desert her; still let my influence keep the sky fair, and the
      breezes pure; still let me drive the vapour from the moon, and the clouds
      from the faces of the stars; still let me fill her dreams with tender and
      brilliant images, and glass in the mirror of sleep the happiest visions of
      fairy-land; still let me pour over her eyes that magic, which suffers them
      to see no fault in one in whom she has garnered up her soul! And as death
      comes slowly on, still let me rob the spectre of its terror, and the grave
      of its sting; so that, all gently and unconscious to herself, life may
      glide into the Great Ocean where the shadows lie, and the spirit without
      guile may be severed from its mansion without pain!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      The wish of the fairy was fulfilled.
    </p>
    <p>
      <a name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015">
      <!--  H2 anchor --> </a>
    </p>
    <div style="height: 4em;">
      <br /><br /><br /><br />
    </div>
    <h2>
      CHAPTER XV. THE BANKS OF THE RHINE.&mdash;FROM THE DRACHENFELS TO BROHL.&mdash;AN
    </h2>
    <p>
      INCIDENT THAT SUFFICES IN THIS TALE FOR AN EPOCH.
    </p>
    <p>
      FROM the Drachenfels commences the true glory of the Rhine; and once more
      Gertrude&rsquo;s eyes conquered the languor that crept gradually over them as
      she gazed on the banks around.
    </p>
    <p>
      Fair blew the breeze, and freshly curled the waters; and Gertrude did not
      feel the vulture that had fixed its talons within her breast. The Rhine
      widens, like a broad lake, between the Drachenfels and Unkel; villages are
      scattered over the extended plain on the left; on the right is the Isle of
      Werth and the houses of Oberwinter; the hills are covered with vines; and
      still Gertrude turned back with a lingering gaze to the lofty crest of the
      Seven Hills.
    </p>
    <p>
      On, on&mdash;and the spires of Unkel rose above a curve in the banks, and
      on the opposite shore stretched those wondrous basaltic columns which
      extend to the middle of the river, and when the Rhine runs low, you may
      see them like an engulfed city beneath the waves. You then view the ruins
      of Okkenfels, and hear the voice of the pastoral Gasbach pouring its
      waters into the Rhine. From amidst the clefts of the rocks the vine peeps
      luxuriantly forth, and gives a richness and colouring to what Nature, left
      to herself, intended for the stern.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;But turn your eye backward to the right,&rdquo; said Trevylyan; &ldquo;those banks
      were formerly the special haunt of the bold robbers of the Rhine, and from
      amidst the entangled brakes that then covered the ragged cliffs they
      rushed upon their prey. In the gloomy canvas of those feudal days what
      vigorous and mighty images were crowded! A robber&rsquo;s life amidst these
      mountains, and beside this mountain stream, must have been the very poetry
      of the spot carried into action.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      They rested at Brohl, a small town between two mountains. On the summit of
      one you see the gray remains of Rheinech. There is something weird and
      preternatural about the aspect of this place; its soil betrays signs that
      in the former ages (from which even tradition is fast fading away) some
      volcano here exhausted its fires. The stratum of the earth is black and
      pitchy, and the springs beneath it are of a dark and graveolent water.
      Here the stream of the Brohlbach falls into the Rhine, and in a valley
      rich with oak and pine, and full of caverns, which are not without their
      traditionary inmates, stands the castle of Schweppenbourg, which our party
      failed not to visit.
    </p>
    <p>
      Gertrude felt fatigued on their return, and Trevylyan sat by her in the
      little inn, while Vane went forth, with the curiosity of science, to
      examine the strata of the soil.
    </p>
    <p>
      They conversed in the frankness of their plighted troth upon those topics
      which are only for lovers: upon the bright chapter in the history of their
      love; their first meeting; their first impressions; the little incidents
      in their present journey,&mdash;incidents noticed by themselves alone;
      that life <i>within</i> life which two persons know together,&mdash;which
      one knows not without the other, which ceases to both the instant they are
      divided.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;I know not what the love of others may be,&rdquo; said Gertrude, &ldquo;but ours
      seems different from all of which I have read. Books tell us of jealousies
      and misconstructions, and the necessity of an absence, the sweetness of a
      quarrel; but we, dearest Albert, have had no experience of these passages
      in love. <i>We</i> have never misunderstood each other; <i>we</i> have no
      reconciliation to look back to. When was there ever occasion for me to ask
      forgiveness from you? Our love is made up only of one memory,&mdash;unceasing
      kindness! A harsh word, a wronging thought, never broke in upon the
      happiness we have felt and feel.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Dearest Gertrude,&rdquo; said Trevylyan, &ldquo;that character of our love is caught
      from you; you, the soft, the gentle, have been its pervading genius; and
      the well has been smooth and pure, for you were the spirit that lived
      within its depths.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      And to such talk succeeded silence still more sweet,&mdash;the silence of
      the hushed and overflowing heart. The last voices of the birds, the sun
      slowly sinking in the west, the fragrance of descending dews, filled them
      with that deep and mysterious sympathy which exists between Love and
      Nature.
    </p>
    <p>
      It was after such a silence&mdash;a long silence, that seemed but as a
      moment&mdash;that Trevylyan spoke, but Gertrude answered not; and,
      yearning once more for her sweet voice, he turned and saw that she had
      fainted away.
    </p>
    <p>
      This was the first indication of the point to which her increasing
      debility had arrived. Trevylyan&rsquo;s heart stood still, and then beat
      violently; a thousand fears crept over him; he clasped her in his arms,
      and bore her to the open window. The setting sun fell upon her
      countenance, from which the play of the young heart and warm fancy had
      fled, and in its deep and still repose the ravages of disease were darkly
      visible. What were then his emotions! His heart was like stone; but he
      felt a rush as of a torrent to his temples: his eyes grew dizzy,&mdash;he
      was stunned by the greatness of his despair. For the last week he had
      taken hope for his companion; Gertrude had seemed so much stronger, for
      her happiness had given her a false support. And though there had been
      moments when, watching the bright hectic come and go, and her step linger,
      and the breath heave short, he had felt the hope suddenly cease, yet never
      had he known till now that fulness of anguish, that dread certainty of the
      worst, which the calm, fair face before him struck into his soul; and
      mixed with this agony as he gazed was all the passion of the most ardent
      love. For there she lay in his arms, the gentle breath rising from lips
      where the rose yet lingered, and the long, rich hair, soft and silken as
      an infant&rsquo;s, stealing from its confinement: everything that belonged to
      Gertrude&rsquo;s beauty was so inexpressibly soft and pure and youthful!
      Scarcely seventeen, she seemed much younger than she was; her figure had
      sunken from its roundness, but still how light, how lovely were its
      wrecks! the neck whiter than snow, the fair small hand! Her weight was
      scarcely felt in the arms of her lover; and he&mdash;what a contrast!&mdash;was
      in all the pride and flower of glorious manhood! His was the lofty brow,
      the wreathing hair, the haughty eye, the elastic form; and upon this
      frail, perishable thing had he fixed all his heart, all the hopes of his
      youth, the pride of his manhood, his schemes, his energies, his ambition!
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Oh, Gertrude!&rdquo; cried he, &ldquo;is it&mdash;is it thus&mdash;is there indeed no
      hope?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      And Gertrude now slowly recovering, and opening her eyes upon Trevylyan&rsquo;s
      face, the revulsion was so great, his emotions so overpowering, that,
      clasping her to his bosom, as if even death should not tear her away from
      him, he wept over her in an agony of tears; not those tears that relieve
      the heart, but the fiery rain of the internal storm, a sign of the fierce
      tumult that shook the very core of his existence, not a relief.
    </p>
    <p>
      Awakened to herself, Gertrude, in amazement and alarm, threw her arms
      around his neck, and, looking wistfully into his face, implored him to
      speak to her.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Was it my illness, love?&rdquo; said she; and the music of her voice only
      conveyed to him the thought of how soon it would be dumb to him forever.
      &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; she continued winningly, &ldquo;it was but the heat of the day; I am
      better now,&mdash;I am well; there is no cause to be alarmed for me!&rdquo; and
      with all the innocent fondness of extreme youth, she kissed the burning
      tears from his eyes.
    </p>
    <p>
      There was a playfulness, an innocence in this poor girl, so unconscious as
      yet of her destiny, which rendered her fate doubly touching, and which to
      the stern Trevylyan, hackneyed by the world, made her irresistible charm;
      and now as she put aside her hair, and looked up gratefully, yet
      pleadingly, into his face, he could scarce refrain from pouring out to her
      the confession of his anguish and despair. But the necessity of
      self-control, the necessity of concealing from <i>her</i> a knowledge
      which might only, by impressing her imagination, expedite her doom, while
      it would embitter to her mind the unconscious enjoyment of the hour,
      nerved and manned him. He checked by those violent efforts which only men
      can make, the evidence of his emotions; and endeavoured, by a rapid
      torrent of words, to divert her attention from a weakness, the causes of
      which he could not explain. Fortunately Vane soon returned, and Trevylyan,
      consigning Gertrude to his care, hastily left the room.
    </p>
    <p>
      Gertrude sank into a revery.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Ah, dear father!&rdquo; said she, suddenly, and after a pause, &ldquo;if I indeed
      were worse than I have thought myself of late, if I were to die now, what
      would Trevylyan feel? Pray God I may live for his sake!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;My child, do not talk thus; you are better, much better than you were.
      Ere the autumn ends, Trevylyan&rsquo;s happiness will be your lawful care. Do
      not think so despondently of yourself.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;I thought not of myself,&rdquo; sighed Gertrude, &ldquo;but of <i>him</i>!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
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    <h2>
      CHAPTER XVI. GERTRUDE.&mdash;THE EXCURSION TO HAMMERSTEIN.&mdash;THOUGHTS.
    </h2>
    <p>
      THE next day they visited the environs of Brohl. Gertrude was unusually
      silent; for her temper, naturally sunny and enthusiastic, was accustomed
      to light up everything she saw. Ah, once how bounding was that step! how
      undulating the young graces of that form! how playfully once danced the
      ringlets on that laughing cheek! But she clung to Trevylyan&rsquo;s proud form
      with a yet more endearing tenderness than was her wont, and hung yet more
      eagerly on his words; her hand sought his, and she often pressed it to her
      lips, and sighed as she did so. Something that she would not tell seemed
      passing within her, and sobered her playful mood. But there was this
      noticeable in Gertrude: whatever took away from her gayety increased her
      tenderness. The infirmities of her frame never touched her temper. She was
      kind, gentle, loving to the last.
    </p>
    <p>
      They had crossed to the opposite banks, to visit the Castle of
      Hammerstein. The evening was transparently serene and clear; and the
      warmth of the sun yet lingered upon the air, even though the twilight had
      passed and the moon risen, as their boat returned by a lengthened passage
      to the village. Broad and straight flows the Rhine in this part of its
      career. On one side lay the wooded village of Namedy, the hamlet of
      Fornech, backed by the blue rock of Kruezborner Ley, the mountains that
      shield the mysterious Brohl; and on the opposite shore they saw the mighty
      rock of Hammerstein, with the green and livid ruins sleeping in the
      melancholy moonlight. Two towers rose haughtily above the more dismantled
      wrecks. How changed since the alternate banners of the Spaniard and the
      Swede waved from their ramparts, in that great war in which the gorgeous
      Wallenstein won his laurels! And in its mighty calm flowed on the
      ancestral Rhine, the vessel reflected on its smooth expanse; and above,
      girded by thin and shadowy clouds, the moon cast her shadows upon rocks
      covered with verdure, and brought into a dim light the twin spires of
      Andernach, tranquil in the distance.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;How beautiful is this hour!&rdquo; said Gertrude, with a low voice, &ldquo;surely we
      do not live enough in the night; one half the beauty of the world is slept
      away. What in the day can equal the holy calm, the loveliness, and the
      stillness which the moon now casts over the earth? These,&rdquo; she continued,
      pressing Trevylyan&rsquo;s hand, &ldquo;are hours to remember; and <i>you</i>&mdash;will
      you ever forget them?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Something there is in recollections of such times and scenes that seem not
      to belong to real life, but are rather an episode in its history; they are
      like some wandering into a more ideal world; they refuse to blend with our
      ruder associations; they live in us, apart and alone, to be treasured
      ever, but not lightly to be recalled. There are none living to whom we can
      confide them,&mdash;who can sympathize with what then we felt? It is this
      that makes poetry, and that page which we create as a confidant to
      ourselves, necessary to the thoughts that weigh upon the breast. We write,
      for our writing is our friend, the inanimate paper is our confessional; we
      pour forth on it the thoughts that we could tell to no private ear, and
      are relieved, are consoled. And if genius has one prerogative dearer than
      the rest, it is that which enables it to do honour to the dead,&mdash;to
      revive the beauty, the virtue that are no more; to wreathe chaplets that
      outlive the day around the urn which were else forgotten by the world!
    </p>
    <p>
      When the poet mourns, in his immortal verse, for the dead, tell me not
      that fame is in his mind! It is filled by thoughts, by emotions that shut
      out the living. He is breathing to his genius&mdash;to that sole and
      constant friend which has grown up with him from his cradle&mdash;the
      sorrows too delicate for human sympathy! and when afterwards he consigns
      the confession to the crowd, it is indeed from the hope of honour&mdash;,
      honour not for himself, but for the being that is no more.
    </p>
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    <h2>
      CHAPTER XVII. LETTER FROM TREVYLYAN TO &mdash;&mdash;-.
    </h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
                         COBLENTZ.
</pre>
    <p>
      I AM obliged to you, my dear friend, for your letter; which, indeed, I
      have not, in the course of our rapid journey, had the leisure, perhaps the
      heart, to answer before. But we are staying in this town for some days,
      and I write now in the early morning, ere any one else in our hotel is
      awake. Do not tell me of adventure, of politics, of intrigues; my nature
      is altered. I threw down your letter, animated and brilliant as it was,
      with a sick and revolted heart. But I am now in somewhat less dejected
      spirits. Gertrude is better,&mdash;yes, really better; there is a
      physician here who gives me hope; my care is perpetually to amuse, and
      never to fatigue her,&mdash;never to permit her thoughts to rest upon
      herself. For I have imagined that illness cannot, at least in the
      unexhausted vigour of our years, fasten upon us irremediably unless we
      feed it with our own belief in its existence. You see men of the most
      delicate frames engaged in active and professional pursuits, who literally
      have no time for illness. Let them become idle, let them take care of
      themselves, let them think of their health&mdash;and they die! The rust
      rots the steel which use preserves; and, thank Heaven, although Gertrude,
      once during our voyage, seemed roused, by an inexcusable imprudence of
      emotion on my part, into some suspicion of her state, yet it passed away;
      for she thinks rarely of herself,&mdash;I am ever in her thoughts and
      seldom from her side, and you know, too, the sanguine and credulous nature
      of her disease. But, indeed, I now hope more than I have done since I knew
      her.
    </p>
    <p>
      When, after an excited and adventurous life which had comprised so many
      changes in so few years, I found myself at rest in the bosom of a retired
      and remote part of the country, and Gertrude and her father were my only
      neighbours, I was in that state of mind in which the passions, recruited
      by solitude, are accessible to the purer and more divine emotions. I was
      struck by Gertrude&rsquo;s beauty, I was charmed by her simplicity. Worn in the
      usages and fashions of the world, the inexperience, the trustfulness, the
      exceeding youth of her mind, charmed and touched me; but when I saw the
      stamp of our national disease in her bright eye and transparent cheek, I
      felt my love chilled while my interest was increased. I fancied myself
      safe, and I went daily into the danger; I imagined so pure a light could
      not burn, and I was consumed. Not till my anxiety grew into pain, my
      interest into terror, did I know the secret of my own heart; and at the
      moment that I discovered this secret, I discovered also that Gertrude
      loved me! What a destiny was mine! what happiness, yet what misery!
      Gertrude was my own&mdash;but for what period? I might touch that soft
      hand, I might listen to the tenderest confession from that silver voice;
      but all the while my heart spoke of passion, my reason whispered of death.
      You know that I am considered of a cold and almost callous nature, that I
      am not easily moved into affection; but my very pride bowed me here into
      weakness. There was so soft a demand upon my protection, so constant an
      appeal to my anxiety. You know that my father&rsquo;s quick temper burns within
      me, that I am hot, and stern, and exacting; but one hasty word, one
      thought of myself, here were inexcusable. So brief a time might be left
      for her earthly happiness,&mdash;could I embitter one moment? All that
      feeling of uncertainty which should in prudence have prevented my love,
      increased it almost to a preternatural excess. That which it is said
      mothers feel for an only child in sickness, I feel for Gertrude. <i>My</i>
      existence is not!&mdash;I exist in her!
    </p>
    <p>
      Her illness increased upon her at home; they have recommended travel. She
      chose the course we were to pursue, and, fortunately, it was so familiar
      to me, that I have been enabled to brighten the way. I am ever on the
      watch that she shall not know a weary hour; you would almost smile to see
      how I have roused myself from my habitual silence, and to find me&mdash;me,
      the scheming and worldly actor of real life&mdash;plunged back into the
      early romance of my boyhood, and charming the childish delight of Gertrude
      with the invention of fables and the traditions of the Rhine.
    </p>
    <p>
      But I believe that I have succeeded in my object; if not, what is left to
      me? <i>Gertrude is better!</i>&mdash;In that sentence what visions of hope
      dawn upon me! I wish you could have seen Gertrude before we left England;
      you might then have understood my love for her. Not that we have not, in
      the gay capitals of Europe, paid our brief vows to forms more richly
      beautiful; not that we have not been charmed by a more brilliant genius,
      by a more tutored grace. But there is that in Gertrude which I never saw
      before,&mdash;the union of the childish and the intellectual, an ethereal
      simplicity, a temper that is never dimmed, a tenderness&mdash;O God! let
      me not speak of her virtues, for they only tell me how little she is
      suited to the earth.
    </p>
    <p>
      You will direct to me at Mayence, whither our course now leads us, and
      your friendship will find indulgence for a letter that is so little a
      reply to yours.
    </p>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
     Your sincere friend,

          A. G. TREVYLYAN.
</pre>
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    <h2>
      CHAPTER XVIII. COBLENTZ.&mdash;EXCURSION TO THE MOUNTAINS OF TAUNUS; ROMAN
    </h2>
    <p>
      TOWER IN THE VALLEY OF EHRENBREITSTEIN.&mdash;TRAVEL, ITS PLEASURES
      ESTIMATED DIFFERENTLY BY THE YOUNG AND THE OLD.&mdash;THE STUDENT OF
      HEIDELBERG; HIS CRITICISMS ON GERMAN LITERATURE.
    </p>
    <p>
      GERTRUDE had, indeed, apparently rallied during their stay at Coblentz;
      and a French physician established in the town (who adopted a peculiar
      treatment for consumption, which had been attended with no ordinary
      success) gave her father and Trevylyan a sanguine assurance of her
      ultimate recovery. The time they passed within the white walls of Coblentz
      was, therefore, the happiest and most cheerful part of their pilgrimage.
      They visited the various places in its vicinity; but the excursion which
      most delighted Gertrude was one to the mountains of Taunus.
    </p>
    <p>
      They took advantage of a beautiful September day; and, crossing the river,
      commenced their tour from the Thal, or valley of Ehrenbreitstein. They
      stopped on their way to view the remains of a Roman tower in the valley;
      for the whole of that district bears frequent witness of the ancient
      conquerors of the world. The mountains of Taunus are still intersected
      with the roads which the Romans cut to the mines that supplied them with
      silver. Roman urns and inscribed stones are often found in these ancient
      places. The stones, inscribed with names utterly unknown,&mdash;a type of
      the uncertainty of fame! the urns, from which the dust is gone, a very
      satire upon life!
    </p>
    <p>
      Lone, gray, and mouldering, this tower stands aloft in the valley; and the
      quiet Vane smiled to see the uniform of a modern Prussian, with his white
      belt and lifted bayonet, by the spot which had once echoed to the clang of
      the Roman arms. The soldier was paying a momentary court to a country
      damsel, whose straw hat and rustic dress did not stifle the vanity of the
      sex; and this rude and humble gallantry, in that spot, was another moral
      in the history of human passions. Above, the ramparts of a modern rule
      frowned down upon the solitary tower, as if in the vain insolence with
      which present power looks upon past decay,&mdash;the living race upon
      ancestral greatness. And indeed, in this respect, rightly! for modern
      times have no parallel to that degradation of human dignity stamped upon
      the ancient world by the long sway of the Imperial Harlot, all slavery
      herself, yet all tyranny to earth; and, like her own Messalina, at once a
      prostitute and an empress!
    </p>
    <p>
      They continued their course by the ancient baths of Ems, and keeping by
      the banks of the romantic Lahn, arrived at Holzapfel.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said Gertrude, one day, as they proceeded to the springs of the
      Carlovingian Wiesbaden, &ldquo;surely perpetual travel with those we love must
      be the happiest state of existence! If home has its comforts, it also has
      its cares; but here we are at home with Nature, and the minor evils vanish
      almost before they are felt.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;True,&rdquo; said Trevylyan, &ldquo;we escape from &lsquo;THE LITTLE,&rsquo; which is the curse
      of life; the small cares that devour us up, the grievances of the day. We
      are feeding the divinest part of our nature,&mdash;the appetite to
      admire.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;But of all things wearisome,&rdquo; said Vane, &ldquo;a succession of changes is the
      most. There can be a monotony in variety itself. As the eye aches in
      gazing long at the new shapes of the kaleidoscope, the mind aches at the
      fatigue of a constant alternation of objects; and we delightedly return to
      &lsquo;REST,&rsquo; which is to life what green is to the earth.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      In the course of their sojourn among the various baths of Taunus, they
      fell in, by accident, with a German student of Heidelberg, who was
      pursuing the pedestrian excursions so peculiarly favoured by his tribe. He
      was tamer and gentler than the general herd of those young wanderers, and
      our party were much pleased with his enthusiasm, because it was
      unaffected. He had been in England, and spoke its language almost as a
      native.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Our literature,&rdquo; said he, one day, conversing with Vane, &ldquo;has two faults,&mdash;we
      are too subtle and too homely. We do not speak enough to the broad
      comprehension of mankind; we are forever making abstract qualities of
      flesh and blood. Our critics have turned your &lsquo;Hamlet&rsquo; into an allegory;
      they will not even allow Shakspeare to paint mankind, but insist on his
      embodying qualities. They turn poetry into metaphysics, and truth seems to
      them shallow, unless an allegory, which is false, can be seen at the
      bottom. Again, too, with our most imaginative works we mix a homeliness
      that we fancy touching, but which in reality is ludicrous. We eternally
      step from the sublime to the ridiculous; we want taste.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;But not, I hope, French taste. Do not govern a Goethe, or even a Richter,
      by a Boileau!&rdquo; said Trevylyan.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;No; but Boileau&rsquo;s taste was false. Men who have the reputation for good
      taste often acquire it solely because of the want of genius. By taste I
      mean a quick tact into the harmony of composition, the art of making the
      whole consistent with its parts, the <i>concinnitas</i>. Schiller alone of
      our authors has it. But we are fast mending; and by following shadows so
      long we have been led at last to the substance. Our past literature is to
      us what astrology was to science,&mdash;false but ennobling, and
      conducting us to the true language of the intellectual heaven.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Another time the scenes they passed, interspersed with the ruins of
      frequent monasteries, leading them to converse on the monastic life, and
      the various additions time makes to religion, the German said: &ldquo;Perhaps
      one of the works most wanted in the world is the history of Religion. We
      have several books, it is true, on the subject, but none that supply the
      want I allude to. A German ought to write it; for it is, probably, only a
      German that would have the requisite learning. A German only, too, is
      likely to treat the mighty subject with boldness, and yet with veneration;
      without the shallow flippancy of the Frenchman, without the timid
      sectarianism of the English. It would be a noble task, to trace the
      winding mazes of antique falsehood; to clear up the first glimmerings of
      divine truth; to separate Jehovah&rsquo;s word from man&rsquo;s invention; to
      vindicate the All-merciful from the dread creeds of bloodshed and of fear:
      and, watching in the great Heaven of Truth the dawning of the True Star,
      follow it&mdash;like the Magi of the East&mdash;till it rested above the
      real God. Not indeed presuming to such a task,&rdquo; continued the German, with
      a slight blush, &ldquo;I have about me a humble essay, which treats only of one
      part of that august subject; which, leaving to a loftier genius the
      history of the true religion, may be considered as the history of a false
      one,&mdash;of such a creed as Christianity supplanted in the North; or
      such as may perhaps be found among the fiercest of the savage tribes. It
      is a fiction&mdash;as you may conceive; but yet, by a constant reference
      to the early records of human learning, I have studied to weave it up from
      truths. If you would like to hear it,&mdash;it is very short&mdash;&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Above all things,&rdquo; said Vane; and the German drew a manuscript neatly
      bound from his pocket.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;After having myself criticised so insolently the faults of our national
      literature,&rdquo; said he, smiling, &ldquo;you will have a right to criticise the
      faults that belong to so humble a disciple of it; but you will see that,
      though I have commenced with the allegorical or the supernatural, I have
      endeavoured to avoid the subtlety of conceit, and the obscurity of design,
      which I blame in the wilder of our authors. As to the style, I wished to
      suit it to the subject; it ought to be, unless I err, rugged and massive,&mdash;hewn,
      as it were, out of the rock of primeval language. But you, madam&mdash;doubtless
      you do not understand German?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Her mother was an Austrian,&rdquo; said Vane; &ldquo;and she knows at least enough of
      the tongue to understand you; so pray begin.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Without further preface, the German then commenced the story, which the
      reader will find translated* in the next chapter.
    </p>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
  * Nevertheless I beg to state seriously, that the German student
    is an impostor; and that he has no right to wrest the parentage
    of the fiction from the true author.
</pre>
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      <br /><br /><br /><br />
    </div>
    <h2>
      CHAPTER XIX. THE FALLEN STAR; OR THE HISTORY OF A FALSE RELIGION.
    </h2>
    <p>
      AND the STARS sat, each on his ruby throne, and watched with sleepless
      eyes upon the world. It was the night ushering in the new year, a night on
      which every star receives from the archangel that then visits the
      universal galaxy its peculiar charge. The destinies of men and empires are
      then portioned forth for the coming year, and, unconsciously to ourselves,
      our fates become minioned to the stars. A hushed and solemn night is that
      in which the dark gates of time open to receive the ghost of the Dead
      Year, and the young and radiant Stranger rushes forth from the clouded
      chasms of Eternity. On that night, it is said that there are given to the
      spirits that we see not a privilege and a power; the dead are troubled in
      their forgotten graves, and men feast and laugh, while demon and angel are
      contending for their doom.
    </p>
    <p>
      It was night in heaven; all was unutterably silent; the music of the
      spheres had paused, and not a sound came from the angels of the stars; and
      they who sat upon those shining thrones were three thousand and ten, each
      resembling each. Eternal youth clothed their radiant limbs with celestial
      beauty, and on their faces was written the dread of calm,&mdash;that
      fearful stillness which feels not, sympathizes not with the doom over
      which it broods. War, tempest, pestilence, the rise of empires and their
      fall, they ordain, they compass, unexultant and uncompassionate. The fell
      and thrilling crimes that stalk abroad when the world sleeps,&mdash;the
      parricide with his stealthy step and horrent brow and lifted knife; the
      unwifed mother that glides out and looks behind, and behind, and shudders,
      and casts her babe upon the river, and hears the wail, and pities not&mdash;the
      splash, and does not tremble,&mdash;these the starred kings behold, to
      these they lead the unconscious step; but the guilt blanches not their
      lustre, neither doth remorse wither their unwrinkled youth. Each star wore
      a kingly diadem; round the loins of each was a graven belt, graven with
      many and mighty signs; and the foot of each was on a burning ball, and the
      right arm drooped over the knee as they bent down from their thrones. They
      moved not a limb or feature, save the finger of the right hand, which ever
      and anon moved slowly pointing, and regulated the fates of men as the hand
      of the dial speaks the career of time.
    </p>
    <p>
      One only of the three thousand and ten wore not the same aspect as his
      crowned brethren,&mdash;a star smaller than the rest, and less luminous;
      the countenance of this star was not impressed with the awful calmness of
      the others, but there were sullenness and discontent upon his mighty brow.
    </p>
    <p>
      And this star said to himself, &ldquo;Behold! I am created less glorious than my
      fellows, and the archangel apportions not to me the same lordly destinies.
      Not for me are the dooms of kings and bards, the rulers of empires, or,
      yet nobler, the swayers and harmonists of souls. Sluggish are the spirits
      and base the lot of the men I am ordained to lead through a dull life to a
      fameless grave. And wherefore? Is it mine own fault, or is it the fault
      which is not mine, that I was woven of beams less glorious than my
      brethren? Lo! when the archangel comes, I will bow not my crowned head to
      his decrees. I will speak, as the ancestral Lucifer before me: <i>he</i>
      rebelled because of his glory, <i>I</i> because of my obscurity; <i>he</i>
      from the ambition of pride, and <i>I</i> from its discontent.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      And while the star was thus communing with himself, the upward heavens
      were parted as by a long river of light, and adown that stream swiftly,
      and without sound, sped the archangel visitor of the stars. His vast limbs
      floated in the liquid lustre, and his outspread wings, each plume the
      glory of a sun, bore him noiselessly along; but thick clouds veiled his
      lustre from the eyes of mortals, and while above all was bathed in the
      serenity of his splendour, tempest and storm broke below over the children
      of the earth: &ldquo;He bowed the heavens and came down, and darkness was under
      his feet.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      And the stillness on the faces of the stars became yet more still, and the
      awfulness was humbled into awe. Right above their thrones paused the
      course of the archangel; and his wings stretched from east to west,
      overshadowing with the shadow of light the immensity of space. Then forth,
      in the shining stillness, rolled the dread music of his voice: and,
      fulfilling the heraldry of God, to each star he appointed the duty and the
      charge; and each star bowed his head yet lower as he heard the fiat, while
      his throne rocked and trembled at the Majesty of the Word. But at last,
      when each of the brighter stars had, in succession, received the mandate,
      and the viceroyalty over the nations of the earth, the purple and diadems
      of kings, the archangel addressed the lesser star as he sat apart from his
      fellows.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Behold,&rdquo; said the archangel, &ldquo;the rude tribes of the North, the fishermen
      of the river that flows beneath, and the hunters of the forests that
      darken the mountain tops with verdure! these be thy charge, and their
      destinies thy care. Nor deem thou, O Star of the sullen beams, that thy
      duties are less glorious than the duties of thy brethren; for the peasant
      is not less to thy master and mine than the monarch; nor doth the doom of
      empires rest more upon the sovereign than on the herd. The passions and
      the heart are the dominion of the stars,&mdash;a mighty realm; nor less
      mighty beneath the hide that garbs the shepherd than under the jewelled
      robes of the eastern kings.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Then the star lifted his pale front from his breast, and answered the
      archangel.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Lo!&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;ages have passed, and each year thou hast appointed me to
      the same ignoble charge. Release me, I pray thee, from the duties that I
      scorn; or, if thou wilt that the lowlier race of men be my charge, give
      unto me the charge not of many, but of one, and suffer me to breathe into
      him the desire that spurns the valleys of life, and ascends its steeps. If
      the humble are given to me, let there be amongst them one whom I may lead
      on the mission that shall abase the proud; for, behold, O Appointer of the
      Stars, as I have sat for uncounted years upon my solitary throne, brooding
      over the things beneath, my spirit hath gathered wisdom from the changes
      that shift below. Looking upon the tribes of earth, I have seen how the
      multitude are swayed, and tracked the steps that lead weakness into power;
      and fain would I be the ruler of one who, if abased, shall aspire to
      rule.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      As a sudden cloud over the face of noon was the change on the brow of the
      archangel.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Proud and melancholy star,&rdquo; said the herald, &ldquo;thy wish would war with the
      courses of the invisible DESTINY, that, throned far above, sways and
      harmonizes all,&mdash;the source from which the lesser rivers of fate are
      eternally gushing through the heart of the universe of things. Thinkest
      thou that thy wisdom, of itself, can lead the peasant to become a king?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      And the crowned star gazed undauntedly on the face of the archangel, and
      answered,&mdash;
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Yea! Grant me but one trial!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Ere the archangel could reply, the farthest centre of the Heaven was rent
      as by a thunderbolt; and the divine herald covered his face with his
      hands, and a voice low and sweet and mild, with the consciousness of
      unquestionable power, spoke forth to the repining star.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;The time has arrived when thou mayest have thy wish. Below thee, upon yon
      solitary plain, sits a mortal, gloomy as thyself, who, born under thy
      influence, may be moulded to thy will.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      The voice ceased as the voice of a dream. Silence was over the seas of
      space, and the archangel, once more borne aloft, slowly soared away into
      the farther heaven, to promulgate the divine bidding to the stars of
      far-distant worlds. But the soul of the discontented star exulted within
      itself; and it said, &ldquo;I will call forth a king from the valley of the
      herdsman that shall trample on the kings subject to my fellows, and render
      the charge of the contemned star more glorious than the minions of its
      favoured brethren; thus shall I revenge neglect! thus shall I prove my
      claim hereafter to the heritage of the great of earth!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      .......
    </p>
    <p>
      At that time, though the world had rolled on for ages, and the pilgrimage
      of man had passed through various states of existence, which our dim
      traditionary knowledge has not preserved, yet the condition of our race in
      the northern hemisphere was then what we, in our imperfect lore, have
      conceived to be among the earliest.
    </p>
    <p>
      .......
    </p>
    <p>
      By a rude and vast pile of stones, the masonry of arts forgotten, a lonely
      man sat at midnight, gazing upon the heavens. A storm had just passed from
      the earth; the clouds had rolled away, and the high stars looked down upon
      the rapid waters of the Rhine; and no sound save the roar of the waves,
      and the dripping of the rain from the mighty trees, was heard around the
      ruined pile. The white sheep lay scattered on the plain, and slumber with
      them. He sat watching over the herd, lest the foes of a neighbouring tribe
      seized them unawares, and thus he communed with himself: &ldquo;The king sits
      upon his throne, and is honoured by a warrior race, and the warrior exults
      in the trophies he has won; the step of the huntsman is bold upon the
      mountain-top, and his name is sung at night round the pine-fires by the
      lips of the bard; and the bard himself hath honour in the hall. But I, who
      belong not to the race of kings, and whose limbs can bound not to the
      rapture of war, nor scale the eyries of the eagle and the haunts of the
      swift stag; whose hand cannot string the harp, and whose voice is harsh in
      the song,&mdash;<i>I</i> have neither honour nor command, and men bow not
      the head as I pass along; yet do I feel within me the consciousness of a
      great power that should rule my species&mdash;not obey. My eye pierces the
      secret hearts of men. I see their thoughts ere their lips proclaim them;
      and I scorn, while I see, the weakness and the vices which I never shared.
      I laugh at the madness of the warrior; I mock within my soul at the
      tyranny of kings. Surely there is something in man&rsquo;s nature more fitted to
      command, more worthy of renown, than the sinews of the arm, or the
      swiftness of the feet, or the accident of birth!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      As Morven, the son of Osslah, thus mused within himself, still looking at
      the heavens, the solitary man beheld a star suddenly shooting from its
      place, and speeding through the silent air, till it suddenly paused right
      over the midnight river, and facing the inmate of the pile of stones.
    </p>
    <p>
      As he gazed upon the star, strange thoughts grew slowly over him. He
      drank, as it were, from its solemn aspect the spirit of a great design. A
      dark cloud rapidly passing over the earth snatched the star from his
      sight, but left to his awakened mind the thoughts and the dim scheme that
      had come to him as he gazed.
    </p>
    <p>
      When the sun arose, one of his brethren relieved him of his charge over
      the herd, and he went away, but not to his father&rsquo;s home. Musingly he
      plunged into the dark and leafless recesses of the winter forest; and
      shaped out of his wild thoughts, more palpably and clearly, the outline of
      his daring hope. While thus absorbed he heard a great noise in the forest,
      and, fearful lest the hostile tribe of the Alrich might pierce that way,
      he ascended one of the loftiest pine-trees, to whose perpetual verdure the
      winter had not denied the shelter he sought; and, concealed by its
      branches, he looked anxiously forth in the direction whence the noise had
      proceeded. And IT came,&mdash;it came with a tramp and a crash, and a
      crushing tread upon the crunched boughs and matted leaves that strewed the
      soil; it came, it came,&mdash;the monster that the world now holds no
      more,&mdash;the mighty Mammoth of the North! Slowly it moved its huge
      strength along, and its burning eyes glittered through the gloomy shade;
      its jaws, falling apart, showed the grinders with which it snapped asunder
      the young oaks of the forest; and the vast tusks, which, curved downward
      to the midst of its massive limbs, glistened white and ghastly, curdling
      the blood of one destined hereafter to be the dreadest ruler of the men of
      that distant age.
    </p>
    <p>
      The livid eyes of the monster fastened on the form of the herdsman, even
      amidst the thick darkness of the pine. It paused, it glared upon him; its
      jaws opened, and a low deep sound, as of gathering thunder, seemed to the
      son of Osslah as the knell of a dreadful grave. But after glaring on him
      for some moments, it again, and calmly, pursued its terrible way, crashing
      the boughs as it marched along, till the last sound of its heavy tread
      died away upon his ear.*
    </p>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
  * <i>The Critic</i> will perceive that this sketch of the beast, whose
    race has perished, is mainly intended to designate the remote
    period of the world in which the tale is cast.
</pre>
    <p>
      Ere yet, however, Morven summoned the courage to descend the tree, he saw
      the shining of arms through the bare branches of the wood, and presently a
      small band of the hostile Alrich came into sight. He was perfectly hidden
      from them; and, listening as they passed him, he heard one say to another,&mdash;
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;The night covers all things; why attack them by day?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      And he who seemed the chief of the band, answered,&mdash;
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Right. To-night, when they sleep in their city, we will upon them. Lo!
      they will be drenched in wine, and fall like sheep into our hands.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;But where, O chief,&rdquo; said a third of the band, &ldquo;shall our men hide during
      the day? for there are many hunters among the youth of the Oestrich tribe,
      and they might see us in the forest unawares, and arm their race against
      our coming.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;I have prepared for that,&rdquo; answered the chief. &ldquo;Is not the dark cavern of
      Oderlin at hand? Will it not shelter us from the eyes of the victims?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Then the men laughed, and, shouting, they went their way adown the forest.
    </p>
    <p>
      When they were gone, Morven cautiously descended, and, striking into a
      broad path, hastened to a vale that lay between the forest and the river
      in which was the city where the chief of his country dwelt. As he passed
      by the warlike men, giants in that day, who thronged the streets (if
      streets they might be called), their half garments parting from their huge
      limbs, the quiver at their backs, and the hunting spear in their hand,
      they laughed and shouted out, and, pointing to him, cried, &ldquo;Morven the
      woman! Morven the cripple! what dost thou among men?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      For the son of Osslah was small in stature and of slender strength, and
      his step had halted from his birth; but he passed through the warriors
      unheedingly. At the outskirts of the city he came upon a tall pile in
      which some old men dwelt by themselves, and counselled the king when times
      of danger, or when the failure of the season, the famine or the drought,
      perplexed the ruler, and clouded the savage fronts of his warrior tribe.
    </p>
    <p>
      They gave the counsels of experience, and when experience failed, they
      drew, in their believing ignorance, assurances and omens from the winds of
      heaven, the changes of the moon, and the flights of the wandering birds.
      Filled&mdash;by the voices of the elements, and the variety of mysteries,
      which ever shift along the face of things, unsolved by the wonder which
      pauses not, the fear which believes, and that eternal reasoning of all
      experience, which assigns causes to effect&mdash;with the notion of
      superior powers, they assisted their ignorance by the conjectures of their
      superstition. But as yet they knew no craft and practised no <i>voluntary</i>
      delusion; they trembled too much at the mysteries which had created their
      faith to seek to belie them. They counselled as they believed, and the
      bold dream of governing their warriors and their kings by the wisdom of
      deceit had never dared to cross men thus worn and gray with age.
    </p>
    <p>
      The son of Osslah entered the vast pile with a fearless step, and
      approached the place at the upper end of the hall where the old men sat in
      conclave.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;How, base-born and craven-limbed!&rdquo; cried the eldest, who had been a noted
      warrior in his day, &ldquo;darest thou enter unsummoned amidst the secret
      councils of the wise men? Knowest thou not, scatterling! that the penalty
      is death?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Slay me, if thou wilt,&rdquo; answered Morven, &ldquo;but hear! As I sat last night
      in the ruined palace of our ancient kings, tending, as my father bade me,
      the sheep that grazed around, lest the fierce tribe of Alrich should
      descend unseen from the mountains upon the herd, a storm came darkly on;
      and when the storm had ceased, and I looked above on the sky, I saw a star
      descend from its height towards me, and a voice from the star said: &lsquo;Son
      of Osslah, leave thy herd and seek the council of the wise men and say
      unto them, that they take thee as one of their number, or that sudden will
      be the destruction of them and theirs.&rsquo; But I had courage to answer the
      voice, and I said, &lsquo;Mock not the poor son of the herdsman. Behold, they
      will kill me if I utter so rash a word, for I am poor and valueless in the
      eyes of the tribe of Oestrich, and the great in deeds and the gray of hair
      alone sit in the council of the wise men.&rsquo; 
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Then the voice said: &lsquo;Do my bidding, and I will give thee a token that
      thou comest from the Powers that sway the seasons and sail upon the eagles
      of the winds. Say unto the wise men this very night if they refuse to
      receive thee of their band, evil shall fall upon them, and the morrow
      shall dawn in blood.&rsquo; 
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Then the voice ceased, and the cloud passed over the star; and I communed
      with myself, and came, O dread father, mournfully unto you; for I feared
      that ye would smite me because of my bold tongue, and that ye would
      sentence me to the death, in that I asked what may scarce be given even to
      the sons of kings.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Then the grim elders looked one at the other, and marvelled much, nor knew
      they what answer they should make to the herdsman&rsquo;s son.
    </p>
    <p>
      At length one of the wise men said, &ldquo;Surely there must be truth in the son
      of Osslah, for he would not dare to falsify the great lights of Heaven. If
      he had given unto men the words of the star, verily we might doubt the
      truth. But who would brave the vengeance of the gods of night?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Then the elders shook their heads approvingly; but one answered and said,&mdash;
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Shall we take the herdsman&rsquo;s son as our equal? No!&rdquo; The name of the man
      who thus answered was Darvan, and his words were pleasing to the elders.
    </p>
    <p>
      But Morven spoke out: &ldquo;Of a truth, O councillors of kings, I look not to
      be an equal with yourselves. Enough if I tend the gates of your palace,
      and serve you as the son of Osslah may serve;&rdquo; and he bowed his head
      humbly as he spoke.
    </p>
    <p>
      Then said the chief of the elders, for he was wiser than the others, &ldquo;But
      how wilt thou deliver us from the evil that is to come? Doubtless the star
      has informed thee of the service thou canst render to us if we take thee
      into our palace, as well as the ill that will fall on us if we refuse.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Morven answered meekly, &ldquo;Surely, if thou acceptest thy servant, the star
      will teach him that which may requite thee; but as yet he knows only what
      he has uttered.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Then the sages bade him withdraw, and they communed with themselves, and
      they differed much; but though fierce men, and bold at the war-cry of a
      human foe, they shuddered at the prophecy of a star. So they resolved to
      take the son of Osslah, and suffer him to keep the gate of the
      council-hall.
    </p>
    <p>
      He heard their decree and bowed his head, and went to the gate, and sat
      down by it in silence.
    </p>
    <p>
      And the sun went down in the west, and the first stars of the twilight
      began to glimmer, when Morven started from his seat, and a trembling
      appeared to seize his limbs. His lips foamed; an agony and a fear
      possessed him; he writhed as a man whom the spear of a foeman has pierced
      with a mortal wound, and suddenly fell upon his face on the stony earth.
    </p>
    <p>
      The elders approached him; wondering, they lifted him up. He slowly
      recovered as from a swoon; his eyes rolled wildly.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Heard ye not the voice of the star?&rdquo; he said.
    </p>
    <p>
      And the chief of the elders answered, &ldquo;Nay, we heard no sound.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Then Morven sighed heavily.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;To me only the word was given. Summon instantly, O councillors of the
      king, summon the armed men, and all the youth of the tribe, and let them
      take the sword and the spear, and follow thy servant! For lo! the star
      hath announced to him that the foe shall fall into our hands as the wild
      beasts of the forests.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      The son of Osslah spoke with the voice of command, and the elders were
      amazed. &ldquo;Why pause ye?&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;Do the gods of the night lie? On my
      head rest the peril if I deceive ye.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Then the elders communed together; and they went forth and summoned the
      men of arms, and all the young of the tribe; and each man took the sword
      and the spear, and Morven also. And the son of Osslah walked first, still
      looking up at the star, and he motioned them to be silent, and moved with
      a stealthy step.
    </p>
    <p>
      So they went through the thickest of the forest, till they came to the
      mouth of a great cave, overgrown with aged and matted trees, and it was
      called the Cave of Oberlin; and he bade the leaders place the armed men on
      either side the cave, to the right and to the left, among the bushes.
    </p>
    <p>
      So they watched silently till the night deepened, when they heard a noise
      in the cave and the sound of feet, and forth came an armed man; and the
      spear of Morven pierced him, and he fell dead at the mouth of the cave.
      Another and another, and both fell! Then loud and long was heard the
      war-cry of Alrich, and forth poured, as a stream over a narrow bed, the
      river of armed men. And the sons of Oestrich fell upon them, and the foe
      were sorely perplexed and terrified by the suddenness of the battle and
      the darkness of the night; and there was a great slaughter.
    </p>
    <p>
      And when the morning came, the children of Oestrich counted the slain, and
      found the leader of Alrich and the chief men of the tribe amongst them;
      and great was the joy thereof. So they went back in triumph to the city,
      and they carried the brave son of Osslah on their shoulders, and shouted
      forth, &ldquo;Glory to the servant of the star.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      And Morven dwelt in the council of the wise men.
    </p>
    <p>
      Now the king of the tribe had one daughter, and she was stately amongst
      the women of the tribe, and fair to look upon. And Morven gazed upon her
      with the eyes of love, but he did not dare to speak.
    </p>
    <p>
      Now the son of Osslah laughed secretly at the foolishness of men; he loved
      them not, for they had mocked him; he honoured them not, for he had
      blinded the wisest of their leaders. He shunned their feasts and
      merriment, and lived apart and solitary. The austerity of his life
      increased the mysterious homage which his commune with the stars had won
      him, and the boldest of the warriors bowed his head to the favourite of
      the gods.
    </p>
    <p>
      One day he was wandering by the side of the river, and he saw a large bird
      of prey rise from the waters, and give chase to a hawk that had not yet
      gained the full strength of its wings. From his youth the solitary Morven
      had loved to watch, in the great forests and by the banks of the mighty
      stream, the habits of the things which nature has submitted to man; and
      looking now on the birds, he said to himself, &ldquo;Thus is it ever; by cunning
      or by strength each thing wishes to master its kind.&rdquo; While thus
      moralizing, the larger bird had stricken down the hawk, and it fell
      terrified and panting at his feet. Morven took the hawk in his hands, and
      the vulture shrieked above him, wheeling nearer and nearer to its
      protected prey; but Morven scared away the vulture, and placing the hawk
      in his bosom he carried it home, and tended it carefully, and fed it from
      his hand until it had regained its strength; and the hawk knew him, and
      followed him as a dog. And Morven said, smiling to himself, &ldquo;Behold, the
      credulous fools around me put faith in the flight and motion of birds. I
      will teach this poor hawk to minister to my ends.&rdquo; So he tamed the bird,
      and tutored it according to its nature; but he concealed it carefully from
      others, and cherished it in secret.
    </p>
    <p>
      The king of the country was old, and like to die, and the eyes of the
      tribe were turned to his two sons, nor knew they which was the worthier to
      reign. And Morven, passing through the forest one evening, saw the younger
      of the two, who was a great hunter, sitting mournfully under an oak, and
      looking with musing eyes upon the ground.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Wherefore musest thou, O swift-footed Siror?&rdquo; said the son of Osslah;
      &ldquo;and wherefore art thou sad?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Thou canst not assist me,&rdquo; answered the prince, sternly; &ldquo;take thy way.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; answered Morven, &ldquo;thou knowest not what thou sayest; am I not the
      favourite of the stars?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Away, I am no graybeard whom the approach of death makes doting: talk not
      to me of the stars; I know only the things that my eye sees and my ear
      drinks in.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Hush,&rdquo; said Morven, solemnly, and covering his face; &ldquo;hush! lest the
      heavens avenge thy rashness. But, behold, the stars have given unto me to
      pierce the secret hearts of others; and I can tell thee the thoughts of
      thine.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Speak out, base-born!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Thou art the younger of two, and thy name is less known in war than the
      name of thy brother: yet wouldst thou desire to be set over his head, and
      to sit on the high seat of thy father?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      The young man turned pale. &ldquo;Thou hast truth in thy lips,&rdquo; said he, with a
      faltering voice.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Not from me, but from the stars, descends the truth.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Can the stars grant my wish?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;They can: let us meet to-morrow.&rdquo; Thus saying, Morven passed into the
      forest.
    </p>
    <p>
      The next day, at noon, they met again.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;I have consulted the gods of night, and they have given me the power that
      I prayed for, but on one condition.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Name it.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;That thou sacrifice thy sister on their altars; thou must build up a heap
      of stones, and take thy sister into the wood, and lay her on the pile, and
      plunge thy sword into her heart; so only shalt thou reign.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      The prince shuddered, and started to his feet, and shook his spear at the
      pale front of Morven.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Tremble,&rdquo; said the son of Osslah, with a loud voice. &ldquo;Hark to the gods
      who threaten thee with death, that thou hast dared to lift thine arm
      against their servant!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      As he spoke, the thunder rolled above; for one of the frequent storms of
      the early summer was about to break. The spear dropped from the prince&rsquo;s
      hand; he sat down, and cast his eyes on the ground.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Wilt thou do the bidding of the stars, and reign?&rdquo; said Morven.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;I will!&rdquo; cried Siror, with a desperate voice.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;This evening, then, when the sun sets, thou wilt lead her hither, alone;
      I may not attend thee. Now, let us pile the stones.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Silently the huntsman bent his vast strength to the fragments of rock that
      Morven pointed to him, and they built the altar, and went their way.
    </p>
    <p>
      And beautiful is the dying of the great sun, when the last song of the
      birds fades into the lap of silence; when the islands of the cloud are
      bathed in light, and the first star springs up over the grave of day!
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Whither leadest thou my steps, my brother?&rdquo; said Orna; &ldquo;and why doth thy
      lip quiver; and why dost thou turn away thy face?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Is not the forest beautiful; does it not tempt us forth, my sister?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;And wherefore are those heaps of stone piled together?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Let others answer; I piled them not.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Thou tremblest, brother: we will return.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Not so; by these stones is a bird that my shaft pierced today,&mdash;a
      bird of beautiful plumage that I slew for thee.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;We are by the pile; where hast thou laid the bird?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Here!&rdquo; cried Siror; and he seized the maiden in his arms, and, casting
      her on the rude altar, he drew forth his sword to smite her to the heart.
    </p>
    <p>
      Right over the stones rose a giant oak, the growth of immemorial ages; and
      from the oak, or from the heavens, broke forth a loud and solemn voice,
      &ldquo;Strike not, son of kings! the stars forbear their own: the maiden thou
      shalt not slay; yet shalt thou reign over the race of Oestrich; and thou
      shalt give Orna as a bride to the favourite of the stars. Arise, and go
      thy way!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      The voice ceased: the terror of Orna had overpowered for a time the
      springs of life; and Siror bore her home through the wood in his strong
      arms.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Alas!&rdquo; said Morven, when, at the next day, he again met the aspiring
      prince; &ldquo;alas! the stars have ordained me a lot which my heart desires
      not: for I, lonely of life, and crippled of shape, am insensible to the
      fires of love; and ever, as thou and thy tribe know, I have shunned the
      eyes of women, for the maidens laughed at my halting step and my sullen
      features; and so in my youth I learned betimes to banish all thoughts of
      love. But since they told me (as they declared to <i>thee</i>), that only
      through that marriage, thou, O beloved prince! canst obtain thy father&rsquo;s
      plumed crown, I yield me to their will.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;But,&rdquo; said the prince, &ldquo;not until I am king can I give thee my sister in
      marriage; for thou knowest that my sire would smite me to the dust if I
      asked him to give the flower of our race to the son of the herdsman
      Osslah.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Thou speakest the words of truth. Go home and fear not; but, when thou
      art king, the sacrifice must be made, and Orna mine. Alas! how can I dare
      to lift mine eyes to her! But so ordain the dread kings of the night!&mdash;who
      shall gainsay their word?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;The day that sees me king sees Orna thine,&rdquo; answered the prince.
    </p>
    <p>
      Morven walked forth, as was his wont, alone; and he said to himself, &ldquo;The
      king is old, yet may he live long between me and mine hope!&rdquo; and he began
      to cast in his mind how he might shorten the time. Thus absorbed, he
      wandered on so unheedingly that night advanced, and he had lost his path
      among the thick woods and knew not how to regain his home. So he lay down
      quietly beneath a tree, and rested till day dawned; then hunger came upon
      him, and he searched among the bushes for such simple roots as those with
      which, for he was ever careless of food, he was used to appease the
      cravings of nature.
    </p>
    <p>
      He found, among other more familiar herbs and roots, a red berry of a
      sweetish taste, which he had never observed before. He ate of it
      sparingly, and had not proceeded far in the wood before he found his eyes
      swim, and a deadly sickness came over him. For several hours he lay
      convulsed on the ground, expecting death; but the gaunt spareness of his
      frame, and his unvarying abstinence, prevailed over the poison, and he
      recovered slowly, and after great anguish. But he went with feeble steps
      back to the spot where the berries grew, and, plucking several, hid them
      in his bosom, and by nightfall regained the city.
    </p>
    <p>
      The next day he went forth among his father&rsquo;s herds, and seizing a lamb,
      forced some of the berries into his stomach, and the lamb, escaping, ran
      away, and fell down dead. Then Morven took some more of the berries and
      boiled them down, and mixed the juice with wine, and he gave the wine in
      secret to one of his father&rsquo;s servants, and the servant died.
    </p>
    <p>
      Then Morven sought the king, and coming into his presence, alone, he said
      unto him, &ldquo;How fares my lord?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      The king sat on a couch made of the skins of wolves, and his eye was
      glassy and dim; but vast were his aged limbs, and huge was his stature,
      and he had been taller by a head than the children of men, and none living
      could bend the bow he had bent in youth; gray, gaunt, and worn, as some
      mighty bones that are dug at times from the bosom of the earth,&mdash;a
      relic of the strength of old.
    </p>
    <p>
      And the king said faintly, and with a ghastly laugh, &ldquo;The men of my years
      fare ill. What avails my strength? Better had I been born a cripple like
      thee, so should I have had nothing to lament in growing old.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      The red flush passed over Morven&rsquo;s brow; but he bent humbly,&mdash;
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;O king, what if I could give thee back thy youth? What if I could restore
      to thee the vigour which distinguished thee above the sons of men, when
      the warriors of Alrich fell like grass before thy sword?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Then the king uplifted his dull eyes, and he said,&mdash;
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;What meanest thou, son of Osslah? Surely I hear much of thy great wisdom,
      and how thou speakest nightly with the stars. Can the gods of the night
      give unto thee the secret to make the old young?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Tempt them not by doubt,&rdquo; said Morven, reverently. &ldquo;All things are
      possible to the rulers of the dark hour; and, lo! the star that loves thy
      servant spake to him at the dead of night, and said, &lsquo;Arise, and go unto
      the king; and tell him that the stars honour the tribe of Oestrich, and
      remember how the king bent his bow against the sons of Alrich; wherefore,
      look thou under the stone that lies to the right of thy dwelling, even
      beside the pine tree, and thou shalt see a vessel of clay, and in the
      vessel thou wilt find a sweet liquid, that shall make the king thy master
      forget his age forever.&rsquo; Therefore, my lord, when the morning rose I went
      forth, and looked under the stone, and behold the vessel of clay; and I
      have brought it hither to my lord the king.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Quick, slave, quick! that I may drink and regain my youth!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Nay, listen, O king! further said the star to me,&mdash;
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;&lsquo;It is only at night, when the stars have power, that this their gift
      will avail; wherefore the king must wait till the hush of the midnight,
      when the moon is high, and then may he mingle the liquid with his wine.
      And he must reveal to none that he hath received the gift from the hand of
      the servant of the stars. For THEY do their work in secret, and when men
      sleep; therefore they love not the babble of mouths, and he who reveals
      their benefits shall surely die.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Fear not,&rdquo; said the king, grasping the vessel; &ldquo;none shall know: and,
      behold, I will rise on the morrow; and my two sons, wrangling for my crown&mdash;verily
      I shall be younger than they!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Then the king laughed loud; and he scarcely thanked the servant of the
      stars, neither did he promise him reward; for the kings in those days had
      little thought save for themselves.
    </p>
    <p>
      And Morven said to him, &ldquo;Shall I not attend my lord?&mdash;for without me,
      perchance, the drug might fail of its effect.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; said the king, &ldquo;rest here.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; replied Morven; &ldquo;thy servants will marvel and talk much, if they
      see the son of Osslah sojourning in thy palace. So would the displeasure
      of the gods of night perchance be incurred. Suffer that the lesser door of
      the palace be unbarred, so that at the night hour, when the moon is midway
      in the heavens, I may steal unseen into thy chamber, and mix the liquid
      with thy wine.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;So be it,&rdquo; said the king. &ldquo;Thou art wise, though thy limbs are crooked
      and curt; and the stars might have chosen a taller man.&rdquo; Then the king
      laughed again; and Morven laughed too, but there was danger in the mirth
      of the son of Osslah.
    </p>
    <p>
      The night had begun to wane, and the inhabitants of Oestrich were buried
      in deep sleep, when, hark! a sharp voice was heard crying out in the
      streets, &ldquo;Woe, woe! Awake, ye sons of Oestrich! woe!&rdquo; Then forth, wild,
      haggard, alarmed, spear in hand, rushed the giant sons of the rugged
      tribe, and they saw a man on a height in the middle of the city, shrieking
      &ldquo;Woe!&rdquo; and it was Morven, the son of Osslah! And he said unto them, as
      they gathered round him, &ldquo;Men and warriors, tremble as ye hear. The star
      of the west hath spoken to me, and thus said the star: &lsquo;Evil shall fall
      upon the kingly house of Oestrich,&mdash;yea, ere the morning dawn;
      wherefore, go thou mourning into the streets, and wake the inhabitants to
      woe!&rsquo; So I rose and did the bidding of the star.&rdquo; And while Morven was yet
      speaking, a servant of the king&rsquo;s house ran up to the crowd, crying
      loudly, &ldquo;The king is dead!&rdquo; So they went into the palace and found the
      king stark upon his couch, and his huge limbs all cramped and crippled by
      the pangs of death, and his hands clenched as if in menace of a foe,&mdash;the
      Foe of all living flesh! Then fear came on the gazers, and they looked on
      Morven with a deeper awe than the boldest warrior would have called forth;
      and they bore him back to the council-hall of the wise men, wailing and
      clashing their arms in woe, and shouting, ever and anon, &ldquo;Honour to Morven
      the prophet!&rdquo; And that was the first time the word PROPHET was ever used
      in those countries.
    </p>
    <p>
      At noon, on the third day from the king&rsquo;s death, Siror sought Morven, and
      he said, &ldquo;Lo, my father is no more, and the people meet this evening at
      sunset to elect his successor, and the warriors and the young men will
      surely choose my brother, for he is more known in war. Fail me not
      therefore.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Peace, boy!&rdquo; said Morven, sternly; &ldquo;nor dare to question the truth of the
      gods of night.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      For Morven now began to presume on his power among the people, and to
      speak as rulers speak, even to the sons of kings; and the voice silenced
      the fiery Siror, nor dared he to reply.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Behold,&rdquo; said Morven, taking up a chaplet of coloured plumes, &ldquo;wear this
      on thy head, and put on a brave face, for the people like a hopeful
      spirit, and go down with thy brother to the place where the new king is to
      be chosen, and leave the rest to the stars. But, above all things, forget
      not that chaplet; it has been blessed by the gods of night.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      The prince took the chaplet and returned home.
    </p>
    <p>
      It was evening, and the warriors and chiefs of the tribe were assembled in
      the place where the new king was to be elected. And the voices of the many
      favoured Prince Voltoch, the brother of Siror, for he had slain twelve
      foemen with his spear; and verily, in those days, that was a great virtue
      in a king.
    </p>
    <p>
      Suddenly there was a shout in the streets, and the people cried out, &ldquo;Way
      for Morven the prophet, the prophet!&rdquo; For the people held the son of
      Osslah in even greater respect than did the chiefs. Now, since he had
      become of note, Morven had assumed a majesty of air which the son of the
      herdsman knew not in his earlier days; and albeit his stature was short,
      and his limbs halted, yet his countenance was grave and high. He only of
      the tribe wore a garment that swept the ground, and his head was bare and
      his long black hair descended to his girdle, and rarely was change or
      human passion seen in his calm aspect. He feasted not, nor drank wine, nor
      was his presence frequent in the streets. He laughed not, neither did he
      smile, save when alone in the forest,&mdash;and then he laughed at the
      follies of his tribe.
    </p>
    <p>
      So he walked slowly through the crowd, neither turning to the left nor to
      the right, as the crowd gave way; and he supported his steps with a staff
      of the knotted pine.
    </p>
    <p>
      And when he came to the place where the chiefs were met, and the two
      princes stood in the centre, he bade the people around him proclaim
      silence; then mounting on a huge fragment of rock, he thus spake to the
      multitude:&mdash;
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Princes, Warriors, and Bards! ye, O council of the wise men! and ye, O
      hunters of the forests and snarers of the fishes of the streams! hearken
      to Morven, the son of Osslah. Ye know that I am lowly of race and weak of
      limb; but did I not give into your hands the tribe of Alrich, and did ye
      not slay them in the dead of night with a great slaughter? Surely, ye must
      know this of himself did not the herdsman&rsquo;s son; surely he was but the
      agent of the bright gods that love the children of Oestrich! Three nights
      since when slumber was on the earth, was not my voice heard in the
      streets? Did I not proclaim woe to the kingly house of Oestrich? and
      verily the dark arm had fallen on the bosom of the mighty, that is no
      more. Could I have dreamed this thing merely in a dream, or was I not as
      the voice of the bright gods that watch over the tribes of Oestrich?
      Wherefore, O men and chiefs! scorn not the son of Osslah, but listen to
      his words; for are they not the wisdom of the stars? Behold, last night, I
      sat alone in the valley, and the trees were hushed around, and not a
      breath stirred; and I looked upon the star that counsels the son of
      Osslah; and I said, &lsquo;Dread conqueror of the cloud! thou that bathest thy
      beauty in the streams and piercest the pine-boughs with thy presence;
      behold thy servant grieved because the mighty one hath passed away, and
      many foes surround the houses of my brethren; and it is well that they
      should have a king valiant and prosperous in war, the cherished of the
      stars. Wherefore, O star! as thou gavest into our hands the warriors of
      Alrich, and didst warn us of the fall of the oak of our tribe, wherefore I
      pray thee give unto the people a token that they may choose that king whom
      the gods of the night prefer!&rsquo; Then a low voice, sweeter than the music of
      the bard, stole along the silence. &lsquo;Thy love for thy race is grateful to
      the stars of night: go, then, son of Osslah, and seek the meeting of the
      chiefs and the people to choose a king, and tell them not to scorn thee
      because thou art slow to the chase, and little known in war; for the stars
      give thee wisdom as a recompense for all. Say unto the people that as the
      wise men of the council shape their lessons by the flight of birds, so by
      the flight of birds shall a token be given unto them, and they shall
      choose their kings. For, saith the star of night, the birds are the
      children of the winds, they pass to and fro along the ocean of the air,
      and visit the clouds that are the war-ships of the gods; and their music
      is but broken melodies which they glean from the harps above. Are they not
      the messengers of the storm? Ere the stream chafes against the bank, and
      the rain descends, know ye not, by the wail of birds and their low circle
      over the earth, that the tempest is at hand? Wherefore, wisely do ye deem
      that the children of the air are the fit interpreters between the sons of
      men and the lords of the world above. Say then to the people and the
      chiefs that they shall take, from among the doves that build their nests
      in the roof of the palace, a white dove, and they shall let it loose in
      the air, and verily the gods of the night shall deem the dove as a prayer
      coming from the people, and they shall send a messenger to grant the
      prayer and give to the tribes of Oestrich a king worthy of themselves.&rsquo; 
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;With that the star spoke no more.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Then the friends of Voltoch murmured among themselves, and they said,
      &ldquo;Shall this man dictate to us who shall be king?&rdquo; But the people and the
      warriors shouted, &ldquo;Listen to the star; do we not give or deny battle
      according as the bird flies,&mdash;shall we not by the same token choose
      him by whom the battle should be led?&rdquo; And the thing seemed natural to
      them, for it was after the custom of the tribe. Then they took one of the
      doves that built in the roof of the palace, and they brought it to the
      spot where Morven stood, and he, looking up to the stars and muttering to
      himself, released the bird.
    </p>
    <p>
      There was a copse of trees at a little distance from the spot, and as the
      dove ascended, a hawk suddenly rose from the copse and pursued the dove;
      and the dove was terrified, and soared circling high above the crowd, when
      lo, the hawk, poising itself one moment on its wings, swooped with a
      sudden swoop, and, abandoning its prey, alighted on the plumed head of
      Siror.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Behold,&rdquo; cried Morven in a loud voice, &ldquo;behold your king!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Hail, all hail the king!&rdquo; shouted the people. &ldquo;All hail the chosen of the
      stars!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Then Morven lifted his right hand and the hawk left the prince and
      alighted on Morven&rsquo;s shoulder. &ldquo;Bird of the gods!&rdquo; said he, reverently,
      &ldquo;hast thou not a secret message for my ear?&rdquo; Then the hawk put its beak to
      Morven&rsquo;s ear, and Morven bowed his head submissively; and the hawk rested
      with Morven from that moment and would not be scared away. And Morven
      said, &ldquo;The stars have sent me this bird, that in the day-time when I see
      them not, we may never be without a councillor in distress.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      So Siror was made king and Morven the son of Osslah was constrained by the
      king&rsquo;s will to take Orna for his wife; and the people and the chiefs
      honoured Morven the prophet above all the elders of the tribe.
    </p>
    <p>
      One day Morven said unto himself, musing, &ldquo;Am I not already equal with the
      king,&mdash;nay, is not the king my servant? Did I not place him over the
      heads of his brothers? Am I not, therefore, more fit to reign than he is;
      shall I not push him from his seat? It is a troublesome and stormy office
      to reign over the wild men of Oestrich, to feast in the crowded hall, and
      to lead the warriors to the fray. Surely if I feasted not, neither went
      out to war, they might say, &lsquo;This is no king, but the cripple Morven;&rsquo; and
      some of the race of Siror might slay me secretly. But can I not be greater
      far than kings, and continue to choose and govern them, living as now at
      mine own ease? Verily the stars shall give me a new palace, and many
      subjects.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Among the wise men was Darvan; and Morven feared him, for his eye often
      sought the movements of the son of Osslah.
    </p>
    <p>
      And Morven said, &ldquo;It were better to <i>trust</i> this man than to <i>blind</i>,
      for surely I want a helpmate and a friend.&rdquo; So he said to the wise man as
      he sat alone watching the setting sun,&mdash;
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;It seemeth to me, O Darvan! that we ought to build a great pile in honour
      of the stars, and the pile should be more glorious than all the palaces of
      the chiefs and the palace of the king; for are not the stars our masters?
      And thou and I should be the chief dwellers in this new palace, and we
      would serve the gods of night and fatten their altars with the choicest of
      the herd and the freshest of the fruits of the earth.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      And Darvan said, &ldquo;Thou speakest as becomes the servant of the stars. But
      will the people help to build the pile? For they are a warlike race and
      they love not toil.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      And Morven answered, &ldquo;Doubtless the stars will ordain the work to be done.
      Fear not.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;In truth thou art a wondrous man; thy words ever come to pass,&rdquo; answered
      Darvan; &ldquo;and I wish thou wouldest teach me, friend, the language of the
      stars.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Assuredly if thou servest me, thou shalt know,&rdquo; answered the proud
      Morven; and Darvan was secretly wroth that the son of the herdsman should
      command the service of an elder and a chief.
    </p>
    <p>
      And when Morven returned to his wife he found her weeping much. Now she
      loved the son of Osslah with an exceeding love, for he was not savage and
      fierce as the men she had known, and she was proud of his fame among the
      tribe; and he took her in his arms and kissed her, and asked her why she
      wept. Then she told him that her brother the king had visited her, and had
      spoken bitter words of Morven: &ldquo;He taketh from me the affection of my
      people,&rdquo; said Siror, &ldquo;and blindeth them with lies. And since he hath made
      me king, what if he take my kingdom from me? Verily a new tale of the
      stars might undo the old.&rdquo; And the king had ordered her to keep watch on
      Morven&rsquo;s secrecy, and to see whether truth was in him when he boasted of
      his commune with the Powers of night.
    </p>
    <p>
      But Orna loved Morven better than Siror, therefore she told her husband
      all.
    </p>
    <p>
      And Morven resented the king&rsquo;s ingratitude, and was troubled much, for a
      king is a powerful foe; but he comforted Orna, and bade her dissemble, and
      complain also of him to her brother, so that he might confide to her
      unsuspectingly whatsoever he might design against Morven.
    </p>
    <p>
      There was a cave by Morven&rsquo;s house in which he kept the sacred hawk, and
      wherein he secretly trained and nurtured other birds against future need;
      and the door of the cave was always barred. And one day he was thus
      engaged when he beheld a chink in the wall that he had never noted before,
      and the sun came playfully in; and while he looked he perceived the
      sunbeam was darkened, and presently he saw a human face peering in through
      the chink. And Morven trembled, for he knew he had been watched. He ran
      hastily from the cave; but the spy had disappeared among the trees, and
      Morven went straight to the chamber of Darvan and sat himself down. And
      Darvan did not return home till late, and he started and turned pale when
      he saw Morven. But Morven greeted him as a brother, and bade him to a
      feast, which, for the first time, he purposed giving at the full of the
      moon, in honour of the stars. And going out of Darvan&rsquo;s chamber he
      returned to his wife, and bade her rend her hair, and go at the dawn of
      day to the king her brother, and complain bitterly of Morven&rsquo;s treatment,
      and pluck the black plans from the breast of the king. &ldquo;For surely,&rdquo; said
      he, &ldquo;Darvan hath lied to thy brother, and some evil waits me that I would
      fain know.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      So the next morning Orna sought the king, and she said, &ldquo;The herdsman&rsquo;s
      son hath reviled me, and spoken harsh words to me; shall I not be
      avenged?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Then the king stamped his feet and shook his mighty sword. &ldquo;Surely thou
      shalt be avenged; for I have learned from one of the elders that which
      convinceth me that the man hath lied to the people, and the base-born
      shall surely die. Yea, the first time that he goeth alone into the forest
      my brother and I will fall upon him and smite him to the death.&rdquo; And with
      this comfort Siror dismissed Orna.
    </p>
    <p>
      And Orna flung herself at the feet of her husband. &ldquo;Fly now, O my beloved!&mdash;fly
      into the forests afar from my brethren, or surely the sword of Siror will
      end thy days.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Then the son of Osslah folded his arms, and seemed buried in black
      thoughts; nor did he heed the voice of Orna, until again and again she had
      implored him to fly.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Fly!&rdquo; he said at length. &ldquo;Nay, I was doubting what punishment the stars
      should pour down upon our foe. Let warriors fly. Morven the prophet
      conquers by arms mightier than the sword.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Nevertheless Morven was perplexed in his mind, and knew not how to save
      himself from the vengeance of the king. Now, while he was musing
      hopelessly he heard a roar of waters; and behold, the river, for it was
      now the end of autumn, had burst its bounds, and was rushing along the
      valley to the houses of the city. And now the men of the tribe, and the
      women, and the children, came running, and with shrieks, to Morven&rsquo;s
      house, crying, &ldquo;Behold, the river has burst upon us! Save us, O ruler of
      the stars!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Then the sudden thought broke upon Morven, and he resolved to risk his
      fate upon one desperate scheme.
    </p>
    <p>
      And he came out from the house calm and sad, and he said, &ldquo;Ye know not
      what ye ask; I cannot save ye from this peril: ye have brought it on
      yourselves.&rdquo; And they cried, &ldquo;How? O son of Osslah! We are ignorant of our
      crime.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      And he answered, &ldquo;Go down to the king&rsquo;s palace and wait before it, and
      surely I will follow ye, and ye shall learn wherefore ye have incurred
      this punishment from the gods.&rdquo; Then the crowd rolled murmuring back, as a
      receding sea; and when it was gone from the place, Morven went alone to
      the house of Darvan, which was next his own. And Darvan was greatly
      terrified; for he was of a great age, and had no children, neither
      friends, and he feared that he could not of himself escape the waters.
    </p>
    <p>
      And Morven said to him soothingly, &ldquo;Lo, the people love me, and I will see
      that thou art saved; for verily thou hast been friendly to me, and done me
      much service with the king.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      And as he thus spake, Morven opened the door of the house and looked
      forth, and saw that they were quite alone. Then he seized the old man by
      the throat and ceased not his gripe till he was quite dead; and leaving
      the body of the elder on the floor, Morven stole from the house and shut
      the gate. And as he was going to his cave he mused a little while, when,
      hearing the mighty roar of the waves advancing, and far off the shrieks of
      women, he lifted up his head and said proudly, &ldquo;No, in this hour terror
      alone shall be my slave; I will use no art save the power of my soul.&rdquo; So,
      leaning on his pine-staff, he strode down to the palace. And it was now
      evening, and many of the men held torches, that they might see each
      other&rsquo;s faces in the universal fear. Red flashed the quivering flames on
      the dark robes and pale front of Morven; and he seemed mightier than the
      rest, because his face alone was calm amidst the tumult. And louder and
      hoarser became the roar of the waters; and swift rushed the shades of
      night over the hastening tide.
    </p>
    <p>
      And Morven said in a stern voice, &ldquo;Where is the king; and wherefore is he
      absent from his people in the hour of dread?&rdquo; Then the gate of the palace
      opened, and, behold, Siror was sitting in the hall by the vast pine-fire,
      and his brother by his side, and his chiefs around him: for they would not
      deign to come amongst the crowd at the bidding of the herdsman&rsquo;s son.
    </p>
    <p>
      Then Morven, standing upon a rock above the heads of the people (the same
      rock whereon he had proclaimed the king), thus spake:&mdash;
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Ye desired to know, O sons of Oestrich! wherefore the river hath burst
      its bounds, and the peril hath come upon you. Learn, then, that the stars
      resent as the foulest of human crimes an insult to their servants and
      delegates below. Ye are all aware of the manner of life of Morven, whom ye
      have surnamed the Prophet! He harms not man nor beast; he lives alone;
      and, far from the wild joys of the warrior tribe, he worships in awe and
      fear the Powers of Night. So is he able to advise ye of the coming danger,&mdash;so
      is he able to save ye from the foe. Thus are your huntsmen swift and your
      warriors bold; and thus do your cattle bring forth their young, and the
      earth its fruits. What think ye, and what do ye ask to hear? Listen, men
      of Oestrich!&mdash;they have laid snares for my life; and there are
      amongst you those who have whetted the sword against the bosom that is
      only filled with love for you all. Therefore have the stern lords of
      heaven loosened the chains of the river; therefore doth this evil menace
      ye. Neither will it pass away until they who dug the pit for the servant
      of the stars are buried in the same.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Then, by the red torches, the faces of the men looked fierce and
      threatening; and ten thousand voices shouted forth, &ldquo;Name them who
      conspired against thy life, O holy prophet, and surely they shall be torn
      limb from limb.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      And Morven turned aside, and they saw that he wept bitterly; and he said,&mdash;
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Ye have asked me, and I have answered: but now scarce will ye believe the
      foe that I have provoked against me; and by the heavens themselves I
      swear, that if my death would satisfy their fury, nor bring down upon
      yourselves and your children&rsquo;s children the anger of the throned stars,
      gladly would I give my bosom to the knife. Yes,&rdquo; he cried, lifting up his
      voice, and pointing his shadowy arm towards the hall where the king sat by
      the pine-fire,&mdash;&ldquo;yes, thou whom by my voice the stars chose above thy
      brother; yes, Siror, the guilty one! take thy sword, and come hither;
      strike, if thou hast the heart to strike, the Prophet of the Gods!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      The king started to his feet, and the crowd were hushed in a shuddering
      silence.
    </p>
    <p>
      Morven resumed:&mdash;
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Know then, O men of Oestrich, that Siror and Voltoch his brother, and
      Darvan the elder of the wise men, have purposed to slay your prophet, even
      at such hour as when alone he seeks the shade of the forest to devise new
      benefits for you. Let the king deny it, if he can!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Then Voltoch, of the giant limbs, strode forth from the hall, and his
      spear quivered in his hand.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Rightly hast thou spoken, base son of my father&rsquo;s herdsman! and for thy
      sins shalt thou surely die; for thou liest when thou speakest of thy power
      with the stars, and thou laughest at the folly of them who hear thee:
      wherefore put him to death.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Then the chiefs in the hall clashed their arms, and rushed forth to slay
      the son of Osslah.
    </p>
    <p>
      But he, stretching his unarmed hands on high, exclaimed, &ldquo;Hear him, O
      dread ones of the night! Hark how he blasphemeth!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Then the crowd took up the word, and cried, &ldquo;He blasphemeth! he
      blasphemeth against the prophet!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      But the king and the chiefs, who hated Morven because of his power with
      the people, rushed into the crowd; and the crowd were irresolute, nor knew
      they how to act, for never yet had they rebelled against their chiefs, and
      they feared alike the prophet and the king.
    </p>
    <p>
      And Siror cried, &ldquo;Summon Darvan to us, for he hath watched the steps of
      Morven, and he shall lift the veil from my people&rsquo;s eyes.&rdquo; Then three of
      the swift of foot started forth to the house of Darvan.
    </p>
    <p>
      And Morven cried out with a loud voice, &ldquo;Hark! thus saith the star, who,
      now riding through yonder cloud, breaks forth upon my eyes, &lsquo;For the lie
      that the elder hath uttered against my servant, the curse of the stars
      shall fall upon him.&rsquo; Seek, and as ye find him so may ye find ever the
      foes of Morven and the gods!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      A chill and an icy fear fell over the crowd, and even the cheek of Siror
      grew pale; and Morven, erect and dark above the waving torches, stood
      motionless with folded arms. And hark!&mdash;far and fast came on the
      war-steeds of the wave; the people heard them marching to the land, and
      tossing their white manes in the roaring wind.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Lo, as ye listen,&rdquo; said Morven, calmly, &ldquo;the river sweeps on. Haste, for
      the gods will have a victim, be it your prophet or your king.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Slave!&rdquo; shouted Siror, and his spear left his hand, and far above the
      heads of the crowd sped hissing beside the dark form of Morven, and rent
      the trunk of the oak behind. Then the people, wroth at the danger of their
      beloved seer, uttered a wild yell, and gathered round him with brandished
      swords, facing their chieftains and their king. But at that instant, ere
      the war had broken forth among the tribe, the three warriors returned, and
      they bore Darvan on their shoulders, and laid him at the feet of the king,
      and they said tremblingly, &ldquo;Thus found we the elder in the centre of his
      own hall.&rdquo; And the people saw that Darvan was a corpse, and that the
      prediction of Morven was thus verified. &ldquo;So perish the enemies of Morven
      and the stars!&rdquo; cried the son of Osslah. And the people echoed the cry.
      Then the fury of Siror was at its height, and waving his sword above his
      head he plunged into the crowd, &ldquo;Thy blood, baseborn, or mine!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;So be it!&rdquo; answered Morven, quailing not. &ldquo;People, smite the blasphemer!
      Hark how the river pours down upon your children and your hearths! On, on,
      or ye perish!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      And Siror fell, pierced by five hundred spears.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Smite! smite!&rdquo; cried Morven, as the chiefs of the royal house gathered
      round the king. And the clash of swords, and the gleam of spears, and the
      cries of the dying, and the yell of the trampling people mingled with the
      roar of the elements, and the voices of the rushing wave.
    </p>
    <p>
      Three hundred of the chiefs perished that night by the swords of their own
      tribe; and the last cry of the victors was, &ldquo;Morven the prophet! <i>Morven
      the king!</i>&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      And the son of Osslah, seeing the waves now spreading over the valley, led
      Orna his wife, and the men of Oestrich, their women, and their children,
      to a high mount, where they waited the dawning sun. But Orna sat apart and
      wept bitterly, for her brothers were no more, and her race had perished
      from the earth. And Morven sought to comfort her in vain.
    </p>
    <p>
      When the morning rose, they saw that the river had overspread the greater
      part of the city, and now stayed its course among the hollows of the vale.
      Then Morven said to the people, &ldquo;The star-kings are avenged, and their
      wrath appeased. Tarry only here until the waters have melted into the
      crevices of the soil.&rdquo; And on the fourth day they returned to the city,
      and no man dared to name another, save Morven, as the king.
    </p>
    <p>
      But Morven retired into his cave and mused deeply; and then assembling the
      people, he gave them new laws; and he made them build a mighty temple in
      honour of the stars, and made them heap within it all that the tribe held
      most precious. And he took unto him fifty children from the most famous of
      the tribe; and he took also ten from among the men who had served him
      best, and he ordained that they should serve the stars in the great
      temple: and Morven was their chief. And he put away the crown they pressed
      upon him, and he chose from among the elders a new king. And he ordained
      that henceforth the servants only of the stars in the great temple should
      elect the king and the rulers, and hold council, and proclaim war; but he
      suffered the king to feast, and to hunt, and to make merry in the
      banquet-halls. And Morven built altars in the temple, and was the first
      who, in the North, sacrificed the beast and the bird, and afterwards human
      flesh, upon the altars. And he drew auguries from the entrails of the
      victim, and made schools for the science of the prophet; and Morven&rsquo;s
      piety was the wonder of the tribe, in that he refused to be a king. And
      Morven the high priest was ten thousand times mightier than the king. He
      taught the people to till the ground and to sow the herb; and by his
      wisdom, and the valour that his prophecies instilled into men, he
      conquered all the neighbouring tribes. And the sons of Oestrich spread
      themselves over a mighty empire, and with them spread the name and the
      laws of Morven. And in every province which he conquered, he ordered them
      to build a temple to the stars.
    </p>
    <p>
      But a heavy sorrow fell upon the fears of Morven. The sister of Siror
      bowed down her head, and survived not long the slaughter of her race. And
      she left Morven childless. And he mourned bitterly and as one distraught,
      for her only in the world had his heart the power to love. And he sat down
      and covered his face, saying:&mdash;
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Lo! I have toiled and travailed; and never before in the world did man
      conquer what I have conquered. Verily the empire of the iron thews and the
      giant limbs is no more! I have founded a new power, that henceforth shall
      sway the lands,&mdash;the empire of a plotting brain and a commanding
      mind. But, behold! my fate is barren, and I feel already that it will grow
      neither fruit nor tree as a shelter to mine old age. Desolate and lonely
      shall I pass unto my grave. O Orna! my beautiful! my loved! none were like
      unto thee, and to thy love do I owe my glory and my life! Would for thy
      sake, O sweet bird! that nestled in the dark cavern of my heart,&mdash;would
      for thy sake that thy brethren had been spared, for verily with my life
      would I have purchased thine. Alas! only when I lost thee did I find that
      thy love was dearer to me than the fear of others!&rdquo; And Morven mourned
      night and day, and none might comfort him.
    </p>
    <p>
      But from that time forth he gave himself solely up to the cares of his
      calling; and his nature and his affections, and whatever there was yet
      left soft in him, grew hard like stone; and he was a man without love, and
      he forbade love and marriage to the priest.
    </p>
    <p>
      Now, in his latter years, there arose <i>other</i> prophets; for the world
      had grown wiser even by Morven&rsquo;s wisdom, and some did say unto themselves,
      &ldquo;Behold Morven, the herdsman&rsquo;s son, is a king of kings: this did the stars
      for their servant; shall we not also be servants to the star?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      And they wore black garments like Morven, and went about prophesying of
      what the stars foretold them. And Morven was exceeding wroth; for he, more
      than other men, knew that the prophets lied. Wherefore he went forth
      against them with the ministers of the temple, and he took them, and
      burned them by a slow fire; for thus said Morven to the people: &ldquo;A true
      prophet hath honour, but <i>I</i> only am a true prophet; to all false
      prophets there shall be surely death.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      And the people applauded the piety of the son of Osslah.
    </p>
    <p>
      And Morven educated the wisest of the children in the mysteries of the
      temple, so that they grew up to succeed him worthily.
    </p>
    <p>
      And he died full of years and honour; and they carved his effigy on a
      mighty stone before the temple, and the effigy endured for a thousand
      ages, and whoso looked on it trembled; for the face was calm with the
      calmness of unspeakable awe!
    </p>
    <p>
      And Morven was the first mortal of the North that made Religion the
      stepping-stone to Power. Of a surety Morven was a great man!
    </p>
    <p>
      It was the last night of the old year, and the stars sat, each upon his
      ruby throne, and watched with sleepless eyes upon the world. The night was
      dark and troubled, the dread winds were abroad, and fast and frequent
      hurried the clouds beneath the thrones of the kings of night. And ever and
      anon fiery meteors flashed along the depths of heaven, and were again
      swallowed up in the grave of darkness. But far below his brethren, and
      with a lurid haze around his orb, sat the discontented star that had
      watched over the hunters of the North.
    </p>
    <p>
      And on the lowest abyss of space there was spread a thick and mighty
      gloom, from which, as from a caldron, rose columns of wreathing smoke; and
      still, when the great winds rested for an instant on their paths, voices
      of woe and laughter, mingled with shrieks, were heard booming from the
      abyss to the upper air.
    </p>
    <p>
      And now, in the middest night, a vast figure rose slowly from the abyss,
      and its wings threw blackness over the world. High upward to the throne of
      the discontented star sailed the fearful shape, and the star trembled on
      his throne when the form stood before him face to face.
    </p>
    <p>
      And the shape said, &ldquo;Hail, brother! all hail!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;I know thee not,&rdquo; answered the star; &ldquo;thou art not the archangel that
      visitest the kings of night.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      And the shape laughed loud. &ldquo;I am the fallen star of the morning! I am
      Lucifer, thy brother! Hast thou not, O sullen king, served me and mine;
      and hast thou not wrested the earth from thy Lord who sittest above, and
      given it to me, by darkening the souls of men with the religion of fear?
      Wherefore come, brother, come; thou hast a throne prepared beside my own
      in the fiery gloom. Come! The heavens are no more for thee!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Then the star rose from his throne, and descended to the side of Lucifer;
      for ever hath the spirit of discontent had sympathy with the soul of
      pride. And they sank slowly down to the gulf of gloom.
    </p>
    <p>
      It was the first night of the new year, and the stars sat each on his ruby
      throne, and watched with sleepless eyes upon the world. But sorrow dimmed
      the bright faces of the kings of night, for they mourned in silence and in
      fear for a fallen brother.
    </p>
    <p>
      And the gates of the heaven of heavens flew open with a golden sound, and
      the swift archangel fled down on his silent wings; and the archangel gave
      to each of the stars, as before, the message of his Lord, and to each star
      was his appointed charge. And when the heraldry seemed done there came a
      laugh from the abyss of gloom, and half-way from the gulf rose the lurid
      shape of Lucifer the fiend!
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Thou countest thy flock ill, O radiant shepherd! Behold! one star is
      missing from the three thousand and ten!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Back to thy gulf, false Lucifer!&mdash;the throne of thy brother hath
      been filled.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      And, lo! as the archangel spake, the stars beheld a young and all-lustrous
      stranger on the throne of the erring star; and his face was so soft to
      look upon that the dimmest of human eyes might have gazed upon its
      splendour unabashed: but the dark fiend alone was dazzled by its lustre,
      and, with a yell that shook the flaming pillars of the universe, he
      plunged backward into the gloom.
    </p>
    <p>
      Then, far and sweet from the arch unseen, came forth the voice of God,&mdash;
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Behold! on the throne of the discontented star sits the star of Hope; and
      he that breathed into mankind the religion of Fear hath a successor in him
      who shall teach earth the religion of Love!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      And evermore the star of Fear dwells with Lucifer, and the star of Love
      keeps vigil in heaven!
    </p>
    <p>
      <a name="link2HCH0020" id="link2HCH0020">
      <!--  H2 anchor --> </a>
    </p>
    <div style="height: 4em;">
      <br /><br /><br /><br />
    </div>
    <h2>
      CHAPTER XX. GLENHAUSEN.&mdash;THE POWER OF LOVE IN SANCTIFIED PLACES.&mdash;A
    </h2>
    <p>
      PORTRAIT OF FREDERICK BARBAROSSA.&mdash;THE AMBITION OF MEN FINDS NO
      ADEQUATE SYMPATHY IN WOMEN.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;YOU made me tremble for you more than once,&rdquo; said Gertrude to the
      student; &ldquo;I feared you were about to touch upon ground really sacred, but
      your end redeemed all.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;The false religion always tries to counterfeit the garb, the language,
      the aspect of the true,&rdquo; answered the German; &ldquo;for that reason, I
      purposely suffered my tale to occasion that very fear and anxiety you
      speak of, conscious that the most scrupulous would be contented when the
      whole was finished.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      This German was one of a new school, of which England as yet knows
      nothing. We shall see hereafter what it will produce.
    </p>
    <p>
      The student left them at Friedberg, and our travellers proceeded to
      Glenhausen,&mdash;a spot interesting to lovers; for here Frederick the
      First was won by the beauty of Gela, and, in the midst of an island vale,
      he built the Imperial Palace, in honour of the lady of his love. This spot
      is, indeed, well chosen of itself; the mountains of the Rhinegeburg close
      it in with the green gloom of woods and the glancing waters of the Kinz.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Still, wherever we go,&rdquo; said Trevylyan, &ldquo;we find all tradition is
      connected with love; and history, for that reason, hallows less than
      romance.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;It is singular,&rdquo; said Vane, moralizing, &ldquo;that love makes but a small part
      of our actual lives, but is yet the master-key to our sympathies. The
      hardest of us, who laugh at the passion when they see it palpably before
      them, are arrested by some dim tradition of its existence in the past. It
      is as if life had few opportunities of bringing out certain qualities
      within us, so that they always remain untold and dormant, susceptible to
      thought, but deaf to action.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;You refine and mystify too much,&rdquo; said Trevylyan, smiling; &ldquo;none of us
      have any faculty, any passion, uncalled forth, if we have <i>really</i>
      loved, though but for a day.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Gertrude smiled, and drawing her arm within his, Trevylyan left Vane to
      philosophize on passion,&mdash;a fit occupation for one who had never felt
      it.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Here let us pause,&rdquo; said Trevylyan, afterwards, as they visited the
      remains of the ancient palace, and the sun glittered on the scene, &ldquo;to
      recall the old chivalric day of the gallant Barbarossa; let us suppose him
      commencing the last great action of his life; let us picture him as
      setting out for the Holy Land. Imagine him issuing from those walls on his
      white charger,&mdash;his fiery eye somewhat dimmed by years, and his hair
      blanched; but nobler from the impress of time itself,&mdash;the clang of
      arms; the tramp of steeds; banners on high; music pealing from hill to
      hill; the red cross and the nodding plume; the sun, as now glancing on
      yonder trees; and thence reflected from the burnished arms of the
      Crusaders. But, Gela&mdash;&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said Gertrude, &ldquo;<i>she</i> must be no more; for she would have
      outlived her beauty, and have found that glory had now no rival in his
      breast. Glory consoles men for the death of the loved; but glory is
      infidelity to the living.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Nay, not so, dearest Gertrude,&rdquo; said Trevylyan, quickly; &ldquo;for my darling
      dream of Fame is the hope of laying its honours at your feet! And if ever,
      in future years, I should rise above the herd, I should only ask if <i>your</i>
      step were proud and <i>your</i> heart elated.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;I was wrong,&rdquo; said Gertrude, with tears in her eyes; &ldquo;and for your sake I
      can be ambitious.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Perhaps there, too, she was mistaken; for one of the common
      disappointments of the heart is, that women have so rarely a sympathy in
      our better and higher aspirings. Their ambition is not for great things;
      they cannot understand that desire &ldquo;which scorns delight, and loves
      laborious days.&rdquo; If they love us, they usually exact too much. They are
      jealous of the ambition to which we sacrifice so largely, and which
      divides us from them; and they leave the stern passion of great minds to
      the only solitude which affection cannot share. To aspire is to be alone!
    </p>
    <p>
      <a name="link2HCH0021" id="link2HCH0021">
      <!--  H2 anchor --> </a>
    </p>
    <div style="height: 4em;">
      <br /><br /><br /><br />
    </div>
    <h2>
      CHAPTER XXI. VIEW OF EHRENBREITSTEIN.&mdash;A NEW ALARM IN GERTRUDE&rsquo;S
    </h2>
    <p>
      HEALTH.&mdash;TRARBACH.
    </p>
    <p>
      ANOTHER time our travellers proceeded from Coblentz to Treves, following
      the course of the Moselle. They stopped on the opposite bank below the
      bridge that unites Coblentz with the Petersberg, to linger over the superb
      view of Ehrenbreitstein which you may there behold.
    </p>
    <p>
      It was one of those calm noonday scenes which impress upon us their own
      bright and voluptuous tranquillity. There stood the old herdsman leaning
      on his staff, and the quiet cattle knee-deep in the gliding waters. Never
      did stream more smooth and sheen than was at that hour the surface of the
      Moselle mirror the images of the pastoral life. Beyond, the darker shadows
      of the bridge and of the walls of Coblentz fell deep over the waves,
      checkered by the tall sails of the craft that were moored around the
      harbour. But clear against the sun rose the spires and roofs of Coblentz,
      backed by many a hill sloping away to the horizon. High, dark, and
      massive, on the opposite bank, swelled the towers and rock of
      Ehrenbreitstein,&mdash;a type of that great chivalric spirit&mdash;the
      HONOUR that the rock arrogates for its name&mdash;which demands so many
      sacrifices of blood and tears, but which ever creates in the restless
      heart of man a far deeper interest than the more peaceful scenes of life
      by which it is contrasted. There, still&mdash;from the calm waters, and
      the abodes of common toil and ordinary pleasure&mdash;turns the aspiring
      mind! Still as we gaze on that lofty and immemorial rock we recall the
      famine and the siege; and own that the more daring crimes of men have a
      strange privilege in hallowing the very spot which they devastate.
    </p>
    <p>
      Below, in green curves and mimic bays covered with herbage, the gradual
      banks mingled with the water; and just where the bridge closed, a solitary
      group of trees, standing dark in the thickest shadow, gave that melancholy
      feature to the scene which resembles the one dark thought that often
      forces itself into our sunniest hours. Their boughs stirred not; no voice
      of birds broke the stillness of their gloomy verdure: the eye turned from
      them, as from the sad moral that belongs to existence.
    </p>
    <p>
      In proceeding to Trarbach, Gertrude was seized with another of those
      fainting fits which had so terrified Trevylyan before; they stopped an
      hour or two at a little village, but Gertrude rallied with such apparent
      rapidity, and so strongly insisted on proceeding, that they reluctantly
      continued their way. This event would have thrown a gloom over their
      journey, if Gertrude had not exerted herself to dispel the impression she
      had occasioned; and so light, so cheerful, were her spirits, that for the
      time at least she succeeded.
    </p>
    <p>
      They arrived at Trarbach late at noon. This now small and humble town is
      said to have been the Thronus Bacchi of the ancients. From the spot where
      the travellers halted to take, as it were, their impression of the town,
      they saw before them the little hostelry, a poor pretender to the Thronus
      Bacchi, with the rude sign of the Holy Mother over the door. The peaked
      roof, the sunk window, the gray walls, checkered with the rude beams of
      wood so common to the meaner houses on the Continent, bore something of a
      melancholy and prepossessing aspect. Right above, with its Gothic windows
      and venerable spire, rose the church of the town; and, crowning the summit
      of a green and almost perpendicular mountain, scowled the remains of one
      of those mighty castles which make the never-failing frown on a German
      landscape.
    </p>
    <p>
      The scene was one of quiet and of gloom: the exceeding serenity of the day
      contrasted, with an almost unpleasing brightness, the poverty of the town,
      the thinness of the population, and the dreary grandeur of the ruins that
      overhung the capital of the perished race of the bold Counts of Spanheim.
    </p>
    <p>
      They passed the night at Trarbach, and continued their journey next day.
      At Treves, Gertrude was for some days seriously ill; and when they
      returned to Coblentz, her disease had evidently received a rapid and
      alarming increase.
    </p>
    <p>
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    </div>
    <h2>
      CHAPTER XXII. THE DOUBLE LIFE.&mdash;TREVYLYAN&rsquo;S FATE.&mdash;SORROW THE
      PARENT OF
    </h2>
    <p>
      FAME.&mdash;NIEDERLAHNSTEIN.&mdash;DREAMS.
    </p>
    <p>
      THERE are two lives to each of us, gliding on at the same time, scarcely
      connected with each other,&mdash;the life of our actions, the life of our
      minds; the external and the inward history; the movements of the frame,
      the deep and ever-restless workings of the heart! They who have loved know
      that there is a diary of the affections, which we might keep for years
      without having occasion even to touch upon the exterior surface of life,
      our busy occupations, the mechanical progress of our existence; yet by the
      last are we judged, the first is never known. History reveals men&rsquo;s deeds,
      men&rsquo;s outward character, but <i>not themselves</i>. There is a secret self
      that hath its own life &ldquo;rounded by a dream,&rdquo; unpenetrated, unguessed. What
      passed within Trevylyan, hour after hour, as he watched over the declining
      health of the only being in the world whom his proud heart had been ever
      destined to love? His real record of the time was marked by every cloud
      upon Gertrude&rsquo;s brow, every smile of her countenance, every&mdash;the
      faintest&mdash;alteration in her disease; yet, to the outward seeming, all
      this vast current of varying eventful emotion lay dark and unconjectured.
      He filled up with wonted regularity the colourings of existence, and
      smiled and moved as other men. For still, in the heroism with which
      devotion conquers self, he sought only to cheer and gladden the young
      heart on which he had embarked his all; and he kept the dark tempest of
      his anguish for the solitude of night.
    </p>
    <p>
      That was a peculiar doom which Fate had reserved for him; and casting him,
      in after years, on the great sea of public strife, it seemed as if she
      were resolved to tear from his heart all yearnings for the land. For him
      there was to be no green or sequestered spot in the valley of household
      peace. His bark was to know no haven, and his soul not even the desire of
      rest. For action is that Lethe in which alone we forget our former dreams,
      and the mind that, too stern not to wrestle with its emotions, seeks to
      conquer regret, must leave itself no leisure to look behind. Who knows
      what benefits to the world may have sprung from the sorrows of the
      benefactor? As the harvest that gladdens mankind in the suns of autumn was
      called forth by the rains of spring, so the griefs of youth may make the
      fame of maturity.
    </p>
    <p>
      Gertrude, charmed by the beauties of the river, desired to continue the
      voyage to Mayence. The rich Trevylyan persuaded the physician who had
      attended her to accompany them, and they once more pursued their way along
      the banks of the feudal Rhine. For what the Tiber is to the classic, the
      Rhine is to the chivalric age. The steep rock and the gray dismantled
      tower, the massive and rude picturesque of the feudal days, constitute the
      great features of the scene; and you might almost fancy, as you glide
      along, that you are sailing back adown the river of Time, and the
      monuments of the pomp and power of old, rising, one after one, upon its
      shores!
    </p>
    <p>
      Vane and Du&mdash;&mdash;-e, the physician, at the farther end of the
      vessel, conversed upon stones and strata, in that singular pedantry of
      science which strips nature to a skeleton, and prowls among the dead bones
      of the world, unconscious of its living beauty.
    </p>
    <p>
      They left Gertrude and Trevylyan to themselves; and, &ldquo;bending o&rsquo;er the
      vessel&rsquo;s laving side,&rdquo; they indulged in silence the melancholy with which
      each was imbued. For Gertrude began to waken, though doubtingly and at
      intervals, to a sense of the short span that was granted to her life; and
      over the loveliness around her there floated that sad and ineffable
      interest which springs from the presentiment of our own death. They passed
      the rich island of Oberwerth, and Hochheim, famous for its ruby grape, and
      saw, from his mountain bed, the Lahn bear his tribute of fruits and corn
      into the treasury of the Rhine. Proudly rose the tower of Niederlahnstein,
      and deeply lay its shadow along the stream. It was late noon; the cattle
      had sought the shade from the slanting sun, and, far beyond, the holy
      castle of Marksburg raised its battlements above mountains covered with
      the vine. On the water two boats had been drawn alongside each other; and
      from one, now moving to the land, the splash of oars broke the general
      stillness of the tide. Fast by an old tower the fishermen were busied in
      their craft, but the sound of their voices did not reach the ear. It was
      life, but a silent life, suited to the tranquillity of noon.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;There is something in travel,&rdquo; said Gertrude, &ldquo;which constantly, even
      amidst the most retired spots, impresses us with the exuberance of life.
      We come to those quiet nooks and find a race whose existence we never
      dreamed of. In their humble path they know the same passions and tread the
      same career as ourselves. The mountains shut them out from the great
      world, but their village is a world in itself. And they know and heed no
      more of the turbulent scenes of remote cities than our own planet of the
      inhabitants of the distant stars. What then is death, but the
      forgetfulness of some few hearts added to the general unconsciousness of
      our existence that pervades the universe? The bubble breaks in the vast
      desert of the air without a sound.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Why talk of death?&rdquo; said Trevylyan, with a writhing smile. &ldquo;These sunny
      scenes should not call forth such melancholy images.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Melancholy,&rdquo; repeated Gertrude, mechanically. &ldquo;Yes, death is indeed
      melancholy when we are loved!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      They stayed a short time at Niederlahnstein, for Vane was anxious to
      examine the minerals that the Lahn brings into the Rhine; and the sun was
      waning towards its close as they renewed their voyage. As they sailed
      slowly on, Gertrude said, &ldquo;How like a dream is this sentiment of
      existence, when, without labour or motion, every change of scene is
      brought before us; and if I am with you, dearest, I do not feel it less
      resembling a dream, for I have dreamed of you lately more than ever; and
      dreams have become a part of my life itself.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Speaking of dreams,&rdquo; said Trevylyan, as they pursued that mysterious
      subject, &ldquo;I once during my former residence in Germany fell in with a
      singular enthusiast, who had taught himself what he termed &lsquo;A System of
      Dreaming.&rsquo; When he first spoke to me upon it I asked him to explain what
      he meant, which he did somewhat in the following words.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
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    <div style="height: 4em;">
      <br /><br /><br /><br />
    </div>
    <h2>
      CHAPTER XXIII. THE LIFE OF DREAMS.
    </h2>
    <p>
      &ldquo;I WAS born,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;with many of the sentiments of the poet, but
      without the language to express them; my feelings were constantly chilled
      by the intercourse of the actual world. My family, mere Germans, dull and
      unimpassioned, had nothing in common with me; nor did I out of my family
      find those with whom I could better sympathize. I was revolted by
      friendships,&mdash;for they were susceptible to every change; I was
      disappointed in love,&mdash;for the truth never approached to my ideal.
      Nursed early in the lap of Romance, enamoured of the wild and the
      adventurous, the commonplaces of life were to me inexpressibly tame and
      joyless. And yet indolence, which belongs to the poetical character, was
      more inviting than that eager and uncontemplative action which can alone
      wring enterprise from life. Meditation was my natural element. I loved to
      spend the noon reclined by some shady stream, and in a half sleep to shape
      images from the glancing sunbeams. A dim and unreal order of philosophy,
      that belongs to our nation, was my favourite intellectual pursuit; and I
      sought amongst the Obscure and the Recondite the variety and emotion I
      could not find in the Familiar. Thus constantly watching the operations of
      the inner mind, it occurred to me at last that sleep having its own world,
      but as yet a rude and fragmentary one, it might be possible to shape from
      its chaos all those combinations of beauty, of power, of glory, and of
      love, which were denied to me in the world in which my frame walked and
      had its being. So soon as this idea came upon me, I nursed and cherished
      and mused over it, till I found that the imagination began to effect the
      miracle I desired. By brooding ardently, intensely, before I retired to
      rest, over any especial train of thought, over any ideal creations; by
      keeping the body utterly still and quiescent during the whole day; by
      shutting out all living adventure, the memory of which might perplex and
      interfere with the stream of events that I desired to pour forth into the
      wilds of sleep, I discovered at last that I could lead in dreams a life
      solely their own, and utterly distinct from the life of day. Towers and
      palaces, all my heritage and seigneury, rose before me from the depths of
      night; I quaffed from jewelled cups the Falernian of imperial vaults;
      music from harps of celestial tone filled up the crevices of air; and the
      smiles of immortal beauty flushed like sunlight over all. Thus the
      adventure and the glory that I could not for my waking life obtain, was
      obtained for me in sleep. I wandered with the gryphon and the gnome; I
      sounded the horn at enchanted portals; I conquered in the knightly lists;
      I planted my standard over battlements huge as the painter&rsquo;s birth of
      Babylon itself.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;But I was afraid to call forth one shape on whose loveliness to pour all
      the hidden passion of my soul. I trembled lest my sleep should present me
      some image which it could never restore, and, waking from which, even the
      new world I had created might be left desolate forever. I shuddered lest I
      should adore a vision which the first ray of morning could smite to the
      grave.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;In this train of mind I began to wonder whether it might not be possible
      to connect dreams together; to supply the thread that was wanting; to make
      one night continue the history of the other, so as to bring together the
      same shapes and the same scenes, and thus lead a connected and harmonious
      life, not only in the one half of existence, but in the other, the richer
      and more glorious half. No sooner did this idea present itself to me, than
      I burned to accomplish it. I had before taught myself that Faith is the
      great creator; that to believe fervently is to make belief true. So I
      would not suffer my mind to doubt the practicability of its scheme. I shut
      myself up then entirely by day, refused books, and hated the very sun, and
      compelled all my thoughts (and sleep is the mirror of thought) to glide in
      one direction,&mdash;the direction of my dreams,&mdash;so that from night
      to night the imagination might keep up the thread of action, and I might
      thus lie down full of the past dream and confident of the sequel. Not for
      one day only, or for one month, did I pursue this system, but I continued
      it zealously and sternly till at length it began to succeed. Who shall
      tell,&rdquo; cried the enthusiast,&mdash;I see him now with his deep, bright,
      sunken eyes, and his wild hair thrown backward from his brow,&mdash;&ldquo;the
      rapture I experienced, when first, faintly and half distinct, I perceived
      the harmony I had invoked dawn upon my dreams? At first there was only a
      partial and desultory connection between them; my eye recognized certain
      shapes, my ear certain tones common to each; by degrees these augmented in
      number, and were more defined in outline. At length one fair face broke
      forth from among the ruder forms, and night after night appeared mixing
      with them for a moment and then vanishing, just as the mariner watches, in
      a clouded sky, the moon shining through the drifting rack, and quickly
      gone. My curiosity was now vividly excited; the face, with its lustrous
      eyes and seraph features, roused all the emotions that no living shape had
      called forth. I became enamoured of a dream, and as the statue to the
      Cyprian was my creation to me; so from this intent and unceasing passion I
      at length worked out my reward. My dream became more palpable; I spoke
      with it; I knelt to it; my lips were pressed to its own; we exchanged the
      vows of love, and morning only separated us with the certainty that at
      night we should meet again. Thus then,&rdquo; continued my visionary, &ldquo;I
      commenced a history utterly separate from the history of the world, and it
      went on alternately with my harsh and chilling history of the day, equally
      regular and equally continuous. And what, you ask, was that history?
      Methought I was a prince in some Eastern island that had no features in
      common with the colder north of my native home. By day I looked upon the
      dull walls of a German town, and saw homely or squalid forms passing
      before me; the sky was dim and the sun cheerless. Night came on with her
      thousand stars, and brought me the dews of sleep. Then suddenly there was
      a new world; the richest fruits hung from the trees in clusters of gold
      and purple. Palaces of the quaint fashion of the sunnier climes, with
      spiral minarets and glittering cupolas, were mirrored upon vast lakes
      sheltered by the palm-tree and banana. The sun seemed a different orb, so
      mellow and gorgeous were his beams; birds and winged things of all hues
      fluttered in the shining air; the faces and garments of men were not of
      the northern regions of the world, and their voices spoke a tongue which,
      strange at first, by degrees I interpreted. Sometimes I made war upon
      neighbouring kings; sometimes I chased the spotted pard through the vast
      gloom of immemorial forests; my life was at once a life of enterprise and
      pomp. But above all there was the history of my love! I thought there were
      a thousand difficulties in the way of attaining its possession. Many were
      the rocks I had to scale, and the battles to wage, and the fortresses to
      storm, in order to win her as my bride. But at last&rdquo; (continued the
      enthusiast), &ldquo;she <i>is</i> won, she is my own! Time in that wild world,
      which I visit nightly, passes not so slowly as in this, and yet an hour
      may be the same as a year. This continuity of existence, this successive
      series of dreams, so different from the broken incoherence of other men&rsquo;s
      sleep, at times bewilders me with strange and suspicious thoughts. What if
      this glorious sleep be a real life, and this dull waking the true repose?
      Why not? What is there more faithful in the one than in the other? And
      there have I garnered and collected all of pleasure that I am capable of
      feeling. I seek no joy in this world; I form no ties, I feast not, nor
      love, nor make merry; I am only impatient till the hour when I may
      re-enter my royal realms and pour my renewed delight into the bosom of my
      bright Ideal. There then have I found all that the world denied me; there
      have I realized the yearning and the aspiration within me; there have I
      coined the untold poetry into the Felt, the Seen!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      I found, continued Trevylyan, that this tale was corroborated by inquiry
      into the visionary&rsquo;s habits. He shunned society; avoided all unnecessary
      movement or excitement. He fared with rigid abstemiousness, and only
      appeared to feel pleasure as the day departed, and the hour of return to
      his imaginary kingdom approached. He always retired to rest punctually at
      a certain hour, and would sleep so soundly that a cannon fired under his
      window would not arouse him. He never, which may seem singular, spoke or
      moved much in his sleep, but was peculiarly calm, almost to the appearance
      of lifelessness; but, discovering once that he had been watched in sleep,
      he was wont afterwards carefully to secure the chamber from intrusion. His
      victory over the natural incoherence of sleep had, when I first knew him,
      lasted for some years; possibly what imagination first produced was
      afterwards continued by habit.
    </p>
    <p>
      I saw him again a few months subsequent to this confession, and he seemed
      to me much changed. His health was broken, and his abstraction had
      deepened into gloom.
    </p>
    <p>
      I questioned him of the cause of the alteration, and he answered me with
      great reluctance,&mdash;
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;She is dead,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;my realms are desolate! A serpent stung her, and
      she died in these very arms. Vainly, when I started from my sleep in
      horror and despair, vainly did I say to myself,&mdash;This is but a dream.
      I shall see her again. A vision cannot die! Hath it flesh that decays; is
      it not a spirit,&mdash;bodiless, indissoluble? With what terrible anxiety
      I awaited the night! Again I slept, and the DREAM lay again before me,
      dead and withered. Even the ideal can vanish. I assisted in the burial; I
      laid her in the earth; I heaped the monumental mockery over her form. And
      never since hath she, or ought like her, revisited my dreams. I see her
      only when I wake; thus to wake is indeed to dream! But,&rdquo; continued the
      visionary in a solemn voice, &ldquo;I feel myself departing from this world, and
      with a fearful joy; for I think there may be a land beyond even the land
      of sleep where I shall see her again,&mdash;a land in which a vision
      itself may be restored.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      And in truth, concluded Trevylyan, the dreamer died shortly afterwards,
      suddenly, and in his sleep. And never before, perhaps, had Fate so
      literally made of a living man (with his passions and his powers, his
      ambition and his love) the plaything and puppet of a dream!
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said Vane, who had heard the latter part of Trevylyan&rsquo;s story,
      &ldquo;could the German have bequeathed to us his secret, what a refuge should
      we possess from the ills of earth! The dungeon and disease, poverty,
      affliction, shame, would cease to be the tyrants of our lot; and to Sleep
      we should confine our history and transfer our emotions.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Gertrude,&rdquo; whispered the lover, &ldquo;what his kingdom and his bride were to
      the Dreamer art thou to me!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
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    </p>
    <div style="height: 4em;">
      <br /><br /><br /><br />
    </div>
    <h2>
      CHAPTER XXIV. THE BROTHERS.
    </h2>
    <p>
      THE banks of the Rhine now shelved away into sweeping plains, and on their
      right rose the once imperial city of Boppart. In no journey of similar
      length do you meet with such striking instances of the mutability and
      shifts of power. To find, as in the Memphian Egypt, a city sunk into a
      heap of desolate ruins; the hum, the roar, the mart of nations, hushed
      into the silence of ancestral tombs, is less humbling to our human vanity
      than to mark, as along the Rhine, the kingly city dwindled into the humble
      town or the dreary village,&mdash;decay without its grandeur, change
      without the awe of its solitude! On the site on which Drusus raised his
      Roman tower, and the kings of the Franks their palaces, trade now dribbles
      in tobacco-pipes, and transforms into an excellent cotton factory the
      antique nunnery of Konigsberg! So be it; it is the progressive order of
      things,&mdash;the world itself will soon be one excellent cotton factory!
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Look,&rdquo; said Trevylyan, as they sailed on, &ldquo;at yonder mountain, with its
      two traditionary Castles of Liebenstein and Sternfels.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Massive and huge the ruins swelled above the green rock, at the foot of
      which lay, in happier security from time and change, the clustered
      cottages of the peasant, with a single spire rising above the quiet
      village.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Is there not, Albert, a celebrated legend attached to those castles?&rdquo;
       said Gertrude. &ldquo;I think I remember to have heard their names in connection
      with your profession of taleteller.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Trevylyan, &ldquo;the story relates to the last lords of those
      shattered towers, and&mdash;&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;You will sit here, nearer to me, and begin,&rdquo; interrupted Gertrude, in her
      tone of childlike command. &ldquo;Come.&rdquo;
     </p>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
                           THE BROTHERS.

                              A TALE.*

  * This tale is, in reality, founded on the beautiful tradition
    which belongs to Liebenstein and Sternfels.
</pre>
    <p>
      You must imagine then, dear Gertrude (said Trevylyan), a beautiful summer
      day, and by the same faculty that none possess so richly as yourself, for
      it is you who can kindle something of that divine spark even in me, you
      must rebuild those shattered towers in the pomp of old; raise the gallery
      and the hall; man the battlements with warders, and give the proud banners
      of ancestral chivalry to wave upon the walls. But above, sloping half down
      the rock, you must fancy the hanging gardens of Liebenstein, fragrant with
      flowers, and basking in the noonday sun.
    </p>
    <p>
      On the greenest turf, underneath an oak, there sat three persons, in the
      bloom of youth. Two of the three were brothers; the third was an orphan
      girl, whom the lord of the opposite tower of Sternfels had bequeathed to
      the protection of his brother, the chief of Liebenstein. The castle itself
      and the demesne that belonged to it passed away from the female line, and
      became the heritage of Otho, the orphan&rsquo;s cousin, and the younger of the
      two brothers now seated on the turf.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;And oh,&rdquo; said the elder, whose name was Warbeck, &ldquo;you have twined a
      chaplet for my brother; have you not, dearest Leoline, a simple flower for
      me?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      The beautiful orphan (for beautiful she was, Gertrude, as the heroine of
      the tale you bid me tell ought to be,&mdash;should she not have to the
      dreams of my fancy your lustrous hair, and your sweet smile, and your eyes
      of blue, that are never, never silent? Ah, pardon me, that in a former
      tale, I denied the heroine the beauty of your face, and remember that to
      atone for it, I endowed her with the beauty of your mind)&mdash;the
      beautiful orphan blushed to her temples, and culling from the flowers in
      her lap the freshest of the roses, began weaving them into a wreath for
      Warbeck.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;It would be better,&rdquo; said the gay Otho, &ldquo;to make my sober brother a
      chaplet of the rue and cypress; the rose is much too bright a flower for
      so serious a knight.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Leoline held up her hand reprovingly.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Let him laugh, dearest cousin,&rdquo; said Warbeck, gazing passionately on her
      changing cheek; &ldquo;and thou, Leoline, believe that the silent stream runs
      the deepest.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      At this moment, they heard the voice of the old chief, their father,
      calling aloud for Leoline; for ever when he returned from the chase he
      wanted her gentle presence; and the hall was solitary to him if the light
      sound of her step and the music of her voice were not heard in welcome.
    </p>
    <p>
      Leoline hastened to her guardian, and the brothers were left alone.
    </p>
    <p>
      Nothing could be more dissimilar than the features and the respective
      characters of Otho and Warbeck. Otho&rsquo;s countenance was flushed with the
      brown hues of health; his eyes were of the brightest hazel: his dark hair
      wreathed in short curls round his open and fearless brow; the jest ever
      echoed on his lips, and his step was bounding as the foot of the hunter of
      the Alps. Bold and light was his spirit; if at times he betrayed the
      haughty insolence of youth, he felt generously, and though not ever ready
      to confess sorrow for a fault, he was at least ready to brave peril for a
      friend.
    </p>
    <p>
      But Warbeck&rsquo;s frame, though of equal strength, was more slender in its
      proportions than that of his brother; the fair long hair that
      characterized his northern race hung on either side of a countenance calm
      and pale, and deeply impressed with thought, even to sadness. His
      features, more majestic and regular than Otho&rsquo;s, rarely varied in their
      expression. More resolute even than Otho, he was less impetuous; more
      impassioned, he was also less capricious.
    </p>
    <p>
      The brothers remained silent after Leoline had left them. Otho carelessly
      braced on his sword, that he had laid aside on the grass; but Warbeck
      gathered up the flowers that had been touched by the soft hand of Leoline,
      and placed them in his bosom.
    </p>
    <p>
      The action disturbed Otho; he bit his lip, and changed colour; at length
      he said, with a forced laugh,&mdash;
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;It must be confessed, brother, that you carry your affection for our fair
      cousin to a degree that even relationship seems scarcely to warrant.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;It is true,&rdquo; said Warbeck, calmly; &ldquo;I love her with a love surpassing
      that of blood.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;How!&rdquo; said Otho, fiercely: &ldquo;do you dare to think of Leoline as a bride?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Dare!&rdquo; repeated Warbeck, turning yet paler than his wonted hue.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Yes, I have said the word! Know, Warbeck, that I, too, love Leoline; I,
      too, claim her as my bride; and never, while I can wield a sword, never,
      while I wear the spurs of knighthood, will I render my claim to a living
      rival,&mdash;even,&rdquo; he added, sinking his voice, &ldquo;though that rival be my
      brother!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Warbeck answered not; his very soul seemed stunned; he gazed long and
      wistfully on his brother, and then, turning his face away, ascended the
      rock without uttering a single word.
    </p>
    <p>
      This silence startled Otho. Accustomed to vent every emotion of his own,
      he could not comprehend the forbearance of his brother; he knew his high
      and brave nature too well to imagine that it arose from fear. Might it not
      be contempt, or might he not, at this moment, intend to seek their father;
      and, the first to proclaim his love for the orphan, advance, also, the
      privilege of the elder born? As these suspicions flashed across him, the
      haughty Otho strode to his brother&rsquo;s side, and laying his hand on his arm,
      said,&mdash;
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Whither goest thou; and dost thou consent to surrender Leoline?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Does she love thee, Otho?&rdquo; answered Warbeck, breaking silence at last;
      and his voice spoke so deep an anguish, that it arrested the passions of
      Otho even at their height.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;It is thou who art now silent,&rdquo; continued Warbeck; &ldquo;speak. Doth she love
      thee, and has her lip confessed it?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;I have believed that she loved me,&rdquo; faltered Otho; &ldquo;but she is of maiden
      bearing, and her lip, at least, has never told it.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Enough,&rdquo; said Warbeck; &ldquo;release your hold.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Stay,&rdquo; said Otho, his suspicions returning; &ldquo;stay,&mdash;yet one word;
      dost thou seek my father? He ever honoured thee more than me: wilt thou
      own to him thy love, and insist on thy right of birth? By my soul and my
      hope of heaven, do it, and one of us two must fall!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Poor boy!&rdquo; answered Warbeck, bitterly; &ldquo;how little thou canst read the
      heart of one who loves truly! Thinkest thou I would wed her if she loved
      thee? Thinkest thou I could, even to be blessed myself, give her one
      moment&rsquo;s pain? Out on the thought! away!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Then wilt not thou seek our father?&rdquo; said Otho, abashed.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Our father!&mdash;has our father the keeping of Leoline&rsquo;s affection?&rdquo;
       answered Warbeck; and shaking off his brother&rsquo;s grasp, he sought the way
      to the castle.
    </p>
    <p>
      As he entered the hall, he heard the voice of Leoline; she was singing to
      the old chief one of the simple ballads of the time that the warrior and
      the hunter loved to hear. He paused lest he should break the spell (a
      spell stronger than a sorcerer&rsquo;s to him), and gazing upon Leoline&rsquo;s
      beautiful form, his heart sank within him. His brother and himself had
      each that day, as they sat in the gardens, given her a flower; his flower
      was the fresher and the rarer; his he saw not, but she wore his brother&rsquo;s
      in her bosom!
    </p>
    <p>
      The chief, lulled by the music and wearied with the toils of the chase,
      sank into sleep as the song ended, and Warbeck, coming forward, motioned
      to Leoline to follow him. He passed into a retired and solitary walk, and
      when they were a little distance from the castle, Warbeck turned round,
      and taking Leoline&rsquo;s hand gently, said,&mdash;
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Let us rest here for one moment, dearest cousin; I have much on my heart
      to say to thee.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;And what is there,&rdquo; answered Leoline, as they sat on a mossy bank, with
      the broad Rhine glancing below, &ldquo;what is there that my kind Warbeck would
      ask of me? Ah, would it might be some favour, something in poor Leoline&rsquo;s
      power to grant; for ever from my birth you have been to me most tender,
      most kind. You, I have often heard them say; taught my first steps to
      walk; you formed my infant lips into language, and, in after years, when
      my wild cousin was far away in the forests at the chase, you would brave
      his gay jest and remain at home, lest Leoline should be weary in the
      solitude. Ah, would I could repay you!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Warbeck turned away his cheek; his heart was very full, and it was some
      moments before he summoned courage to reply.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;My fair cousin,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;those were happy days; but they were the days
      of childhood. New cares and new thoughts have now come on us; but I am
      still thy friend, Leoline, and still thou wilt confide in me thy young
      sorrows and thy young hopes, as thou ever didst. Wilt thou not, Leoline?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Canst thou ask me?&rdquo; said Leoline; and Warbeck, gazing on her face, saw
      that though her eyes were full of tears, they yet looked steadily upon
      his; and he knew that she loved him only as a sister.
    </p>
    <p>
      He sighed, and paused again ere he resumed. &ldquo;Enough,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;now to my
      task. Once on a time, dear cousin, there lived among these mountains a
      certain chief who had two sons, and an orphan like thyself dwelt also in
      his halls. And the elder son&mdash;but no matter, let us not waste words
      on <i>him</i>!&mdash;the younger son, then, loved the orphan dearly,&mdash;more
      dearly than cousins love; and fearful of refusal, he prayed the elder one
      to urge his suit to the orphan. Leoline, my tale is done. Canst thou not
      love Otho as he loves thee?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      And now lifting his eyes to Leoline, he saw that she trembled violently,
      and her cheek was covered with blushes.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Say,&rdquo; continued he, mastering himself, &ldquo;is not that flower his&mdash;present&mdash;a
      token that he is chiefly in thy thoughts?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Ah, Warbeck! do not deem me ungrateful that I wear not yours also; but&mdash;&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Hush!&rdquo; said Warbeck, hastily; &ldquo;I am but as thy brother; is not Otho more?
      He is young, brave, and beautiful. God grant that he may deserve thee, if
      thou givest him so rich a gift as thy affections!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;I saw less of Otho in my childhood,&rdquo; said Leoline, evasively; &ldquo;therefore,
      his kindness of late years seemed stranger to me than thine.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;And thou wilt not then reject him? Thou wilt be his bride?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;And <i>thy</i> sister,&rdquo; answered Leoline.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Bless thee, mine own dear cousin! one brother&rsquo;s kiss then, and farewell!
      Otho shall thank thee for himself.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      He kissed her forehead calmly, and, turning away, plunged into the
      thicket; then, nor till then, he gave vent to such emotions as, had
      Leoline seen them, Otho&rsquo;s suit had been lost forever; for passionately,
      deeply as in her fond and innocent heart she loved Otho, the <i>happiness</i>
      of Warbeck was not less dear to her.
    </p>
    <p>
      When the young knight had recovered his self-possession he went in search
      of Otho. He found him alone in the wood, leaning with folded arms against
      a tree, and gazing moodily on the ground. Warbeck&rsquo;s noble heart was
      touched at his brother&rsquo;s dejection.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Cheer thee, Otho,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;I bring thee no bad tidings; I have seen
      Leoline, I have conversed with her&mdash;nay, start not,&mdash;she loves
      thee! she is thine!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Generous, generous Warbeck!&rdquo; exclaimed Otho; and he threw himself on his
      brother&rsquo;s neck. &ldquo;No, no,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;this must not be; thou hast the elder
      claim,&mdash;I resign her to thee. Forgive me my waywardness, brother,
      forgive me!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Think of the past no more,&rdquo; said Warbeck; &ldquo;the love of Leoline is an
      excuse for greater offences than thine. And now, be kind to her; her
      nature is soft and keen. <i>I</i> know her well; for <i>I</i> have studied
      her faintest wish. Thou art hasty and quick of ire; but remember that a
      word wounds where love is deep. For my sake, as for hers, think more of
      her happiness than thine own; now seek her,&mdash;she waits to hear from
      thy lips the tale that sounded cold upon mine.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      With that he left his brother, and, once more re-entering the castle, he
      went into the hall of his ancestors. His father still slept; he put his
      hand on his gray hair, and blessed him; then stealing up to his chamber,
      he braced on his helm and armour, and thrice kissing the hilt of his
      sword, said, with a flushed cheek,&mdash;
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Henceforth be <i>thou</i> my bride!&rdquo; Then passing from the castle, he
      sped by the most solitary paths down the rock, gained the Rhine, and
      hailing one of the numerous fishermen of the river, won the opposite
      shore; and alone, but not sad, for his high heart supported him, and
      Leoline at least was happy, he hastened to Frankfort.
    </p>
    <p>
      The town was all gayety and life, arms clanged at every corner, the sounds
      of martial music, the wave of banners, the glittering of plumed casques,
      the neighing of war-steeds, all united to stir the blood and inflame the
      sense. Saint Bertrand had lifted the sacred cross along the shores of the
      Rhine, and the streets of Frankfort witnessed with what success!
    </p>
    <p>
      On that same day Warbeck assumed the sacred badge, and was enlisted among
      the knights of the Emperor Conrad.
    </p>
    <p>
      We must suppose some time to have elapsed, and Otho and Leoline were not
      yet wedded; for, in the first fervour of his gratitude to his brother,
      Otho had proclaimed to his father and to Leoline the conquest Warbeck had
      obtained over himself; and Leoline, touched to the heart, would not
      consent that the wedding should take place immediately. &ldquo;Let him, at
      least,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;not be insulted by a premature festivity; and give him
      time, amongst the lofty beauties he will gaze upon in a far country, to
      forget, Otho, that he once loved her who is the beloved of thee.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      The old chief applauded this delicacy; and even Otho, in the first flush
      of his feelings towards his brother, did not venture to oppose it. They
      settled, then, that the marriage should take place at the end of a year.
    </p>
    <p>
      Months rolled away, and an absent and moody gloom settled upon Otho&rsquo;s
      brow. In his excursions with his gay companions among the neighbouring
      towns, he heard of nothing but the glory of the Crusaders, of the homage
      paid to the heroes of the Cross at the courts they visited, of the
      adventures of their life, and the exciting spirit that animated their war.
      In fact, neither minstrel nor priest suffered the theme to grow cold; and
      the fame of those who had gone forth to the holy strife gave at once
      emulation and discontent to the youths who remained behind.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;And my brother enjoys this ardent and glorious life,&rdquo; said the impatient
      Otho; &ldquo;while I, whose arm is as strong, and whose heart is as bold,
      languish here listening to the dull tales of a hoary sire and the silly
      songs of an orphan girl.&rdquo; His heart smote him at the last sentence, but he
      had already begun to weary of the gentle love of Leoline. Perhaps when he
      had no longer to gain a triumph over a rival the excitement palled; or
      perhaps his proud spirit secretly chafed at being conquered by his brother
      in generosity, even when outshining him in the success of love.
    </p>
    <p>
      But poor Leoline, once taught that she was to consider Otho her betrothed,
      surrendered her heart entirely to his control. His wild spirit, his dark
      beauty, his daring valour, won while they awed her; and in the fitfulness
      of his nature were those perpetual springs of hope and fear that are the
      fountains of ever-agitated love. She saw with increasing grief the change
      that was growing over Otho&rsquo;s mind; nor did she divine the cause. &ldquo;Surely I
      have not offended him?&rdquo; thought she.
    </p>
    <p>
      Among the companions of Otho was one who possessed a singular sway over
      him. He was a knight of that mysterious Order of the Temple, which
      exercised at one time so great a command over the minds of men.
    </p>
    <p>
      A severe and dangerous wound in a brawl with an English knight had
      confined the Templar at Frankfort, and prevented his joining the Crusade.
      During his slow recovery he had formed an intimacy with Otho, and, taking
      up his residence at the castle of Liebenstein, had been struck with the
      beauty of Leoline. Prevented by his oath from marriage, he allowed himself
      a double license in love, and doubted not, could he disengage the young
      knight from his betrothed, that she would add a new conquest to the many
      he had already achieved. Artfully therefore he painted to Otho the various
      attractions of the Holy Cause; and, above all, he failed not to describe,
      with glowing colours, the beauties who, in the gorgeous East,
      distinguished with a prodigal favour the warriors of the Cross. Dowries,
      unknown in the more sterile mountains of the Rhine, accompanied the hand
      of these beauteous maidens; and even a prince&rsquo;s daughter was not deemed,
      he said, too lofty a marriage for the heroes who might win kingdoms for
      themselves.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;To me,&rdquo; said the Templar, &ldquo;such hopes are eternally denied. But you, were
      you not already betrothed, what fortunes might await you!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      By such discourses the ambition of Otho was perpetually aroused; they
      served to deepen his discontent at his present obscurity, and to convert
      to distaste the only solace it afforded in the innocence and affection of
      Leoline.
    </p>
    <p>
      One night, a minstrel sought shelter from the storm in the halls of
      Liebenstein. His visit was welcomed by the chief, and he repaid the
      hospitality he had received by the exercise of his art. He sang of the
      chase, and the gaunt hound started from the hearth. He sang of love, and
      Otho, forgetting his restless dreams, approached to Leoline, and laid
      himself at her feet. Louder then and louder rose the strain. The minstrel
      sang of war; he painted the feats of the Crusaders; he plunged into the
      thickest of the battle; the steed neighed; the trump sounded; and you
      might have heard the ringing of the steel. But when he came to signalize
      the names of the boldest knights, high among the loftiest sounded the name
      of Sir Warbeck of Liebenstein. Thrice had he saved the imperial banner;
      two chargers slain beneath him, he had covered their bodies with the
      fiercest of the foe.
    </p>
    <p>
      Gentle in the tent and terrible in the fray, the minstrel should forget
      his craft ere the Rhine should forget its hero. The chief started from his
      seat. Leoline clasped the minstrel&rsquo;s hand.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Speak,&mdash;you have seen him, he lives, he is honoured?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;I myself am but just from Palestine, brave chief and noble maiden. I saw
      the gallant knight of Liebenstein at the right hand of the imperial
      Conrad. And he, ladye, was the only knight whom admiration shone upon
      without envy, its shadow. Who then,&rdquo; continued the minstrel, once more
      striking his harp, &ldquo;who then would remain inglorious in the hall? Shall
      not the banners of his sires reproach him as they wave; and shall not
      every voice from Palestine strike shame into his soul?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Right!&rdquo; cried Otho, suddenly, and flinging himself at the feet of his
      father. &ldquo;Thou hearest what my brother has done, and thine aged eyes weep
      tears of joy. Shall I only dishonour thine old age with a rusted sword?
      No! grant me, like my brother, to go forth with the heroes of the Cross!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Noble youth,&rdquo; cried the harper, &ldquo;therein speaks the soul of Sir Warbeck;
      hear him, sir, knight,&mdash;hear the noble youth.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Heaven cries aloud in his voice,&rdquo; said the Templar, solemnly.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;My son, I cannot chide thine ardour,&rdquo; said the old chief, raising him
      with trembling hands; &ldquo;but Leoline, thy betrothed?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Pale as a statue, with ears that doubted their sense as they drank in the
      cruel words of her lover, stood the orphan. She did not speak, she
      scarcely breathed; she sank into her seat, and gazed upon the ground,
      till, at the speech of the chief both maiden pride and maiden tenderness
      restored her consciousness, and she said,&mdash;
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;<i>I</i>, uncle! Shall <i>I</i> bid Otho stay when his wishes bid him
      depart?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;He will return to thee, noble ladye, covered with glory,&rdquo; said the
      harper: but Otho said no more. The touching voice of Leoline went to his
      soul; he resumed his seat in silence; and Leoline, going up to him,
      whispered gently, &ldquo;Act as though I were not;&rdquo; and left the hall to commune
      with her heart and to weep alone.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;I can wed her before I go,&rdquo; said Otho, suddenly, as he sat that night in
      the Templar&rsquo;s chamber.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Why, that is true! and leave thy bride in the first week,&mdash;a hard
      trial!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Better than incur the chance of never calling her mine. Dear, kind,
      beloved Leoline!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Assuredly, she deserves all from thee; and, indeed, it is no small
      sacrifice, at thy years and with thy mien, to renounce forever all
      interest among the noble maidens thou wilt visit. Ah, from the galleries
      of Constantinople what eyes will look down on thee, and what ears,
      learning that thou art Otho the bridegroom, will turn away, caring for
      thee no more! A bridegroom without a bride! Nay, man, much as the Cross
      wants warriors, I am enough thy friend to tell thee, if thou weddest, to
      stay peaceably at home, and forget in the chase the labours of war, from
      which thou wouldst strip the ambition of love.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;I would I knew what were best,&rdquo; said Otho, irresolutely. &ldquo;My brother&mdash;ha,
      shall he forever excel me? But Leoline, how will she grieve,&mdash;she who
      left him for me!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Was that thy fault?&rdquo; said the Templar, gayly. &ldquo;It may many times chance
      to thee again to be preferred to another. Troth, it is a sin under which
      the conscience may walk lightly enough. But sleep on it, Otho; my eyes
      grow heavy.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      The next day Otho sought Leoline, and proposed to her that their wedding
      should precede his parting; but so embarrassed was he, so divided between
      two wishes, that Leoline, offended, hurt, stung by his coldness, refused
      the proposal at once. She left him lest he should see her weep, and then&mdash;then
      she repented even of her just pride!
    </p>
    <p>
      But Otho, striving to appease his conscience with the belief that hers now
      was the <i>sole</i> fault, busied himself in preparations for his
      departure. Anxious to outshine his brother, he departed not as Warbeck,
      alone and unattended, but levying all the horse, men, and money that his
      domain of Sternfels&mdash;which he had not yet tenanted&mdash;would
      afford, he repaired to Frankfort at the head of a glittering troop.
    </p>
    <p>
      The Templar, affecting a relapse, tarried behind, and promised to join him
      at that Constantinople of which he had so loudly boasted. Meanwhile he
      devoted his whole powers of pleasing to console the unhappy orphan. The
      force of her simple love was, however, stronger than all his arts. In vain
      he insinuated doubts of Otho,&mdash;she refused to hear them; in vain he
      poured with the softest accents into her ear the witchery of flattery and
      song,&mdash;she turned heedlessly away; and only pained by the courtesies
      that had so little resemblance to Otho, she shut herself up in her
      chamber, and pined in solitude for her forsaker.
    </p>
    <p>
      The Templar now resolved to attempt darker arts to obtain power over her,
      when, fortunately, he was summoned suddenly away by a mission from the
      Grand Master of so high import, that it could not be resisted by a passion
      stronger in his breast than love,&mdash;the passion of ambition. He left
      the castle to its solitude; and Otho peopling it no more with his gay
      companions, no solitude <i>could</i> be more unfrequently disturbed.
    </p>
    <p>
      Meanwhile, though, ever and anon, the fame of Warbeck reached their ears,
      it came unaccompanied with that of Otho,&mdash;of him they had no tidings;
      and thus the love of the tender orphan was kept alive by the perpetual
      restlessness of fear. At length the old chief died, and Leoline was left
      utterly alone.
    </p>
    <p>
      One evening as she sat with her maidens in the hall, the ringing of a
      steed&rsquo;s hoofs was heard in the outer court; a horn sounded, the heavy
      gates were unbarred, and a knight of a stately mien and covered with the
      mantle of the Cross entered the hall. He stopped for one moment at the
      entrance, as if overpowered by his emotion; in the next he had clasped
      Leoline to his breast.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Dost thou not recognize thy cousin Warbeck?&rdquo; He doffed his casque, and
      she saw that majestic brow which, unlike Otho&rsquo;s, had never changed or been
      clouded in its aspect to her.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;The war is suspended for the present,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;I learned my father&rsquo;s
      death, and I have returned home to hang up my banner in the hall and spend
      my days in peace.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Time and the life of camps had worked their change upon Warbeck&rsquo;s face;
      the fair hair, deepened in its shade, was worn from the temples, and
      disclosed one scar that rather aided the beauty of a countenance that had
      always something high and martial in its character; but the calm it had
      once worn had settled down into sadness; he conversed more rarely than
      before, and though he smiled not less often, nor less kindly, the smile
      had more of thought, and the kindness had forgot its passion. He had
      apparently conquered a love that was so early crossed, but not that
      fidelity of remembrance which made Leoline dearer to him than all others,
      and forbade him to replace the images he had graven upon his soul.
    </p>
    <p>
      The orphan&rsquo;s lips trembled with the name of Otho, but a certain
      recollection stifled even her anxiety. Warbeck hastened to forestall her
      questions. Otho was well, he said, and sojourning at Constantinople; he
      had lingered there so long that the crusade had terminated without his
      aid: doubtless now he would speedily return,&mdash;a month, a week, nay, a
      day, might restore him to her side.
    </p>
    <p>
      Leoline was inexpressibly consoled, yet something remained untold. Why, so
      eager for the strife of the sacred tomb, had he thus tarried at
      Constantinople? She wondered, she wearied conjecture, but she did not dare
      to search further.
    </p>
    <p>
      The generous Warbeck concealed from her that Otho led a life of the most
      reckless and indolent dissipation,&mdash;wasting his wealth in the
      pleasures of the Greek court, and only occupying his ambition with the
      wild schemes of founding a principality in those foreign climes, which the
      enterprises of the Norman adventurers had rendered so alluring to the
      knightly bandits of the age.
    </p>
    <p>
      The cousins resumed their old friendship, and Warbeck believed that it was
      friendship alone.
    </p>
    <p>
      They walked again among the gardens in which their childhood had strayed;
      they sat again on the green turf whereon they had woven flowers; they
      looked down on the eternal mirror of the Rhine,&mdash;ah! could it have
      reflected the same unawakened freshness of their life&rsquo;s early spring!
    </p>
    <p>
      The grave and contemplative mind of Warbeck had not been so contented with
      the honours of war but that it had sought also those calmer sources of
      emotion which were yet found among the sages of the East. He had drunk at
      the fountain of the wisdom of those distant climes, and had acquired the
      habits of meditation which were indulged by those wiser tribes from which
      the Crusaders brought back to the North the knowledge that was destined to
      enlighten their posterity. Warbeck, therefore, had little in common with
      the ruder chiefs around; he did not summon them to his board; nor attend
      at their noisy wassails. Often late at night, in yon shattered tower, his
      lonely lamp shone still over the mighty stream, and his only relief to
      loneliness was in the presence and the song of his soft cousin.
    </p>
    <p>
      Months rolled on, when suddenly a vague and fearful rumour reached the
      castle of Liebenstein. Otho was returning home to the neighbouring tower
      of Sternfels; but not alone. He brought back with him a Greek bride of
      surprising beauty, and dowered with almost regal wealth. Leoline was the
      first to discredit the rumour; Leoline was soon the only one who
      disbelieved.
    </p>
    <p>
      Bright in the summer noon flashed the array of horsemen; far up the steep
      ascent wound the gorgeous cavalcade; the lonely towers of Liebenstein
      heard the echo of many a laugh and peal of merriment. Otho bore home his
      bride to the hall of Sternfels.
    </p>
    <p>
      That night there was a great banquet in Otho&rsquo;s castle; the lights shone
      from every casement, and music swelled loud and ceaselessly within.
    </p>
    <p>
      By the side of Otho, glittering with the prodigal jewels of the East, sat
      the Greek. Her dark locks, her flashing eye, the false colours of her
      complexion, dazzled the eyes of her guests. On her left hand sat the
      Templar.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;By the holy rood,&rdquo; quoth the Templar, gayly, though he crossed himself as
      he spoke, &ldquo;we shall scare the owls to-night on those grim towers of
      Liebenstein. Thy grave brother, Sir Otho, will have much to do to comfort
      his cousin when she sees what a gallant life she would have led with
      thee.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Poor damsel!&rdquo; said the Greek, with affected pity, &ldquo;doubtless she will now
      be reconciled to the rejected one. I hear he is a knight of a comely
      mien.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Peace!&rdquo; said Otho, sternly, and quaffing a large goblet of wine.
    </p>
    <p>
      The Greek bit her lip, and glanced meaningly at the Templar, who returned
      the glance.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Nought but a beauty such as thine can win my pardon,&rdquo; said Otho, turning
      to his bride, and gazing passionately in her face.
    </p>
    <p>
      The Greek smiled.
    </p>
    <p>
      Well sped the feast, the laugh deepened, the wine circled, when Otho&rsquo;s eye
      rested on a guest at the bottom of the board, whose figure was mantled
      from head to foot, and whose face was covered by a dark veil.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Beshrew me!&rdquo; said he, aloud, &ldquo;but this is scarce courteous at our revel:
      will the stranger vouchsafe to unmask?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      These words turned all eyes to the figure, and they who sat next it
      perceived that it trembled violently; at length it rose, and walking
      slowly, but with grace, to the fair Greek, it laid beside her a wreath of
      flowers.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;It is a simple gift, ladye,&rdquo; said the stranger, in a voice of such
      sweetness that the rudest guest was touched by it; &ldquo;but it is all I can
      offer, and the bride of Otho should not be without a gift at my hands. May
      ye both be happy!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      With these words, the stranger turned and passed from the hall silent as a
      shadow.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Bring back the stranger!&rdquo; cried the Greek, recovering her surprise.
      Twenty guests sprang up to obey her mandate.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;No, no!&rdquo; said Otho, waving his hand impatiently. &ldquo;Touch her not, heed her
      not, at your peril.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      The Greek bent over the flowers to conceal her anger, and from amongst
      them dropped the broken half of a ring. Otho recognized it at once; it was
      the broken half of that ring which he had broken with his betrothed. Alas!
      he required not such a sign to convince him that that figure, so full of
      ineffable grace, that touching voice, that simple action so tender in its
      sentiment, that gift, that blessing, came only from the forsaken and
      forgiving Leoline.
    </p>
    <p>
      But Warbeck, alone in his solitary tower, paced to and fro with agitated
      steps. Deep, undying wrath at his brother&rsquo;s falsehood mingled with one
      burning, one delicious hope. He confessed now that he had deceived himself
      when he thought his passion was no more; was there any longer a bar to his
      union with Leoline?
    </p>
    <p>
      In that delicacy which was breathed into him by his love, he had forborne
      to seek, or to offer her the insult of consolation. He felt that the shock
      should be borne alone, and yet he pined, he thirsted, to throw himself at
      her feet.
    </p>
    <p>
      Nursing these contending thoughts, he was aroused by a knock at his door;
      he opened it. The passage was thronged by Leoline&rsquo;s maidens, pale,
      anxious, weeping. Leoline had left the castle, with but one female
      attendant, none knew whither; they knew too soon. From the hall of
      Sternfels she had passed over in the dark and inclement night to the
      valley in which the convent of Bornhofen offered to the weary of spirit
      and the broken of heart a refuge at the shrine of God.
    </p>
    <p>
      At daybreak the next morning, Warbeck was at the convent&rsquo;s gate. He saw
      Leoline. What a change one night of suffering had made in that face, which
      was the fountain of all loveliness to him! He clasped her in his arms; he
      wept; he urged all that love could urge: he besought her to accept that
      heart which had never wronged her memory by a thought. &ldquo;Oh, Leoline! didst
      thou not say once that these arms nursed thy childhood; that this voice
      soothed thine early sorrows? Ah, trust to them again and forever. From a
      love that forsook thee turn to the love that never swerved.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Leoline; &ldquo;no. What would the chivalry of which thou art the
      boast,&mdash;what would they say of thee, wert thou to wed one affianced
      and deserted, who tarried years for another, and brought to thine arms
      only that heart which he had abandoned? No; and even if thou, as I know
      thou wouldst be, wert callous to such wrong of thy high name, shall I
      bring to thee a broken heart and bruised spirit? Shalt thou wed sorrow and
      not joy; and shall sighs that will not cease, and tears that may not be
      dried, be the only dowry of thy bride? Thou, too, for whom all blessings
      should be ordained! No, forget me; forget thy poor Leoline! She hath
      nothing but prayers for thee.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      In vain Warbeck pleaded; in vain he urged all that passion and truth could
      urge; the springs of earthly love were forever dried up in the orphan&rsquo;s
      heart, and her resolution was immovable. She tore herself from his arms,
      and the gate of the convent creaked harshly on his ear.
    </p>
    <p>
      A new and stern emotion now wholly possessed him; though naturally mild
      and gentle, he cherished anger, when once it was aroused, with the
      strength of a calm mind. Leoline&rsquo;s tears, her sufferings, her wrongs, her
      uncomplaining spirit, the change already stamped upon her face,&mdash;all
      cried aloud to him for vengeance. &ldquo;She is an orphan,&rdquo; said he, bitterly;
      &ldquo;she hath none to protect, to redress her, save me alone. My father&rsquo;s
      charge over her forlorn youth descends of right to me. What matters it
      whether her forsaker be my brother? He is <i>her</i> foe. Hath he not
      crushed her heart? Hath he not consigned her to sorrow till the grave? And
      with what insult! no warning, no excuse; with lewd wassailers keeping
      revel for his new bridals in the hearing&mdash;before the sight&mdash;of
      his betrothed! Enough! the time hath come when, to use his own words, &lsquo;One
      of us two must fall!&rsquo;&rdquo; He half drew his sword as he spoke, and thrusting
      it back violently into the sheath, strode home to his solitary castle. The
      sound of steeds and of the hunting horn met him at his portal; the bridal
      train of Sternfels, all mirth and gladness, were parting for the chase.
    </p>
    <p>
      That evening a knight in complete armour entered the banquet-hall of
      Sternfels, and defied Otho, on the part of Warbeck of Liebenstein, to
      mortal combat.
    </p>
    <p>
      Even the Templar was startled by so unnatural a challenge; but Otho,
      reddening, took up the gage, and the day and spot were fixed.
      Discontented, wroth with himself, a savage gladness seized him; he longed
      to wreak his desperate feelings even on his brother. Nor had he ever in
      his jealous heart forgiven that brother his virtues and his renown.
    </p>
    <p>
      At the appointed hour the brothers met as foes. Warbeck&rsquo;s vizor was up,
      and all the settled sternness of his soul was stamped upon his brow. But
      Otho, more willing to brave the arm than to face the front of his brother,
      kept his vizor down; the Templar stood by him with folded arms. It was a
      study in human passions to his mocking mind. Scarce had the first trump
      sounded to this dread conflict, when a new actor entered on the scene. The
      rumour of so unprecedented an event had not failed to reach the convent of
      Bornhofen; and now, two by two, came the sisters of the holy shrine, and
      the armed men made way, as with trailing garments and veiled faces they
      swept along into the very lists. At that moment one from amongst them left
      her sisters with a slow majestic pace, and paused not till she stood right
      between the brother foes.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Warbeck,&rdquo; she said in a hollow voice, that curdled up his dark spirit as
      it spoke, &ldquo;is it thus thou wouldst prove thy love, and maintain thy trust
      over the fatherless orphan whom thy sire bequeathed to thy care? Shall I
      have murder on my soul?&rdquo; At that question she paused, and those who heard
      it were struck dumb, and shuddered. &ldquo;The murder of one man by the hand of
      his own brother! Away, Warbeck! <i>I command</i>.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Shall I forget thy wrongs, Leoline?&rdquo; said Warbeck.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Wrongs! they united me to God! they are forgiven, they are no more. Earth
      has deserted me, but Heaven hath taken me to its arms. Shall I murmur at
      the change? And thou, Otho&rdquo;&mdash;here her voice faltered&mdash;&ldquo;thou,
      does thy conscience smite thee not? Wouldst thou atone for robbing me of
      hope by barring against me the future? Wretch that I should be, could I
      dream of mercy, could I dream of comfort, if thy brother fell by thy sword
      in my cause? Otho, I have pardoned thee, and blessed thee and thine. Once,
      perhaps, thou didst love me; remember how I loved thee,&mdash;cast down
      thine arms.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Otho gazed at the veiled form before him. Where had the soft Leoline
      learned to command? He turned to his brother; he felt all that he had
      inflicted upon both; and casting his sword upon the ground, he knelt at
      the feet of Leoline, and kissed her garment with a devotion that votary
      never lavished on a holier saint.
    </p>
    <p>
      The spell that lay over the warriors around was broken; there was one loud
      cry of congratulation and joy. &ldquo;And thou, Warbeck?&rdquo; said Leoline, turning
      to the spot where, still motionless and haughty, Warbeck stood.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Have I ever rebelled against thy will?&rdquo; said he, softly; and buried the
      point of his sword in the earth. &ldquo;Yet, Leoline, yet,&rdquo; added he, looking at
      his kneeling brother, &ldquo;yet art thou already better avenged than by this
      steel!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Thou art! thou art!&rdquo; cried Otho, smiting his breast; and slowly, and
      scarce noting the crowd that fell back from his path, Warbeck left the
      lists.
    </p>
    <p>
      Leoline said no more; her divine errand was fulfilled. She looked long and
      wistfully after the stately form of the knight of Liebenstein, and then,
      with a slight sigh, she turned to Otho, &ldquo;This is the last time we shall
      meet on earth. Peace be with us all!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      She then, with the same majestic and collected bearing, passed on towards
      the sisterhood; and as, in the same solemn procession, they glided back
      towards the convent, there was not a man present&mdash;no, not even the
      hardened Templar&mdash;who would not, like Otho, have bent his knee to
      Leoline.
    </p>
    <p>
      Once more Otho plunged into the wild revelry of the age; his castle was
      thronged with guests, and night after night the lighted halls shone down
      athwart the tranquil Rhine. The beauty of the Greek, the wealth of Otho,
      the fame of the Templar, attracted all the chivalry from far and near.
      Never had the banks of the Rhine known so hospitable a lord as the knight
      of Sternfels. Yet gloom seized him in the midst of gladness, and the revel
      was welcome only as the escape from remorse. The voice of scandal,
      however, soon began to mingle with that of envy at the pomp of Otho. The
      fair Greek, it was said, weary of her lord, lavished her smiles on others;
      the young and the fair were always most acceptable at the castle; and,
      above all, her guilty love for the Templar scarcely affected disguise.
      Otho alone appeared unconscious of the rumour; and though he had begun to
      neglect his bride, he relaxed not in his intimacy with the Templar.
    </p>
    <p>
      It was noon, and the Greek was sitting in her bower alone with her
      suspected lover; the rich perfumes of the East mingled with the fragrance
      of flowers, and various luxuries, unknown till then in those northern
      shores, gave a soft and effeminate character to the room.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;I tell thee,&rdquo; said the Greek, petulantly, &ldquo;that he begins to suspect;
      that I have seen him watch thee, and mutter as he watched, and play with
      the hilt of his dagger. Better let us fly ere it is too late, for his
      vengeance would be terrible were it once roused against us. Ah, why did I
      ever forsake my own sweet land for these barbarous shores! There, love is
      not considered eternal, nor inconstancy a crime worthy death.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Peace, pretty one!&rdquo; said the Templar, carelessly; &ldquo;thou knowest not the
      laws of our foolish chivalry. Thinkest thou I could fly from a knight&rsquo;s
      halls like a thief in the night? Why, verily, even the red cross would not
      cover such dishonour. If thou fearest that thy dull lord suspects, let us
      part. The emperor hath sent to me from Frankfort. Ere evening I might be
      on my way thither.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;And I left to brave the barbarian&rsquo;s revenge alone? Is this thy chivalry?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Nay, prate not so wildly,&rdquo; answered the Templar. &ldquo;Surely, when the object
      of his suspicion is gone, thy woman&rsquo;s art and thy Greek wiles can easily
      allay the jealous fiend. Do I not know thee, Glycera? Why, thou wouldst
      fool all men&mdash;save a Templar.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;And thou, cruel, wouldst thou leave me?&rdquo; said the Greek, weeping. &ldquo;How
      shall I live without thee?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      The Templar laughed slightly. &ldquo;Can such eyes ever weep without a
      comforter? But farewell; I must not be found with thee. To-morrow I depart
      for Frankfort; we shall meet again.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      As soon as the door closed on the Templar, the Greek rose, and pacing the
      room, said, &ldquo;Selfish, selfish! how could I ever trust him? Yet I dare not
      brave Otho alone. Surely it was his step that disturbed us in our
      yesterday&rsquo;s interview? Nay, I will fly. I can never want a companion.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      She clapped her hands; a young page appeared; she threw herself on her
      seat and wept bitterly.
    </p>
    <p>
      The page approached, and love was mingled with his compassion.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Why weepest thou, dearest lady?&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;Is there aught in which
      Conrad&rsquo;s services&mdash;services!&mdash;ah, thou hast read his heart&mdash;<i>his
      devotion</i> may avail?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Otho had wandered out the whole day alone; his vassals had observed that
      his brow was more gloomy than its wont, for he usually concealed whatever
      might prey within. Some of the most confidential of his servitors he had
      conferred with, and the conference had deepened the shadow of his
      countenance. He returned at twilight; the Greek did not honour the repast
      with her presence. She was unwell, and not to be disturbed. The gay
      Templar was the life of the board.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Thou carriest a sad brow to-day, Sir Otho,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;good faith, thou
      hast caught it from the air of Liebenstein.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;I have something troubles me,&rdquo; answered Otho, forcing a smile, &ldquo;which I
      would fain impart to thy friendly bosom. The night is clear and the moon
      is up, let us forth alone into the garden.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      The Templar rose, and he forgot not to gird on his sword as he followed
      the knight.
    </p>
    <p>
      Otho led the way to one of the most distant terraces that overhung the
      Rhine.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Sir Templar,&rdquo; said he, pausing, &ldquo;answer me one question on thy knightly
      honour. Was it thy step that left my lady&rsquo;s bower yester-eve at vesper?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Startled by so sudden a query, the wily Templar faltered in his reply.
    </p>
    <p>
      The red blood mounted to Otho&rsquo;s brow. &ldquo;Nay, lie not, sir knight; these
      eyes, thanks to God! have not witnessed, but these ears have heard from
      others of my dishonour.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      As Otho spoke, the Templar&rsquo;s eye resting on the water perceived a boat
      rowing fast over the Rhine; the distance forbade him to see more than the
      outline of two figures within it. &ldquo;She was right,&rdquo; thought he; &ldquo;perhaps
      that boat already bears her from the danger.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Drawing himself up to the full height of his tall stature, the Templar
      replied haughtily,&mdash;
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Sir Otho of Sternfels, if thou hast deigned to question thy vassals,
      obtain from them only an answer. It is not to contradict such minions that
      the knights of the Temple pledge their word!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Enough,&rdquo; cried Otho, losing patience, and striking the Templar with his
      clenched hand. &ldquo;Draw, traitor, draw!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Alone in his lofty tower Warbeck watched the night deepen over the
      heavens, and communed mournfully with himself. &ldquo;To what end,&rdquo; thought he,
      &ldquo;have these strong affections, these capacities of love, this yearning
      after sympathy, been given me? Unloved and unknown I walk to my grave, and
      all the nobler mysteries of my heart are forever to be untold.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Thus musing, he heard not the challenge of the warder on the wall, or the
      unbarring of the gate below, or the tread of footsteps along the winding
      stair; the door was thrown suddenly open, and Otho stood before him.
      &ldquo;Come,&rdquo; he said, in a low voice trembling with passion; &ldquo;come, I will show
      thee that which shall glad thine heart. Twofold is Leoline avenged.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Warbeck looked in amazement on a brother he had not met since they stood
      in arms each against the other&rsquo;s life, and he now saw that the arm that
      Otho extended to him dripped with blood, trickling drop by drop upon the
      floor.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Come,&rdquo; said Otho, &ldquo;follow me; it is my last prayer. Come, for Leoline&rsquo;s
      sake, come.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      At that name Warbeck hesitated no longer; he girded on his sword, and
      followed his brother down the stairs and through the castle gate. The
      porter scarcely believed his eyes when he saw the two brothers, so long
      divided, go forth at that hour alone, and seemingly in friendship.
    </p>
    <p>
      Warbeck, arrived at that epoch in the feelings when nothing stuns,
      followed with silent steps the rapid strides of his brother. The two
      castles, as you are aware, are scarce a stone&rsquo;s throw from each other. In
      a few minutes Otho paused at an open space in one of the terraces of
      Sternfels, on which the moon shone bright and steady. &ldquo;Behold!&rdquo; he said,
      in a ghastly voice, &ldquo;behold!&rdquo; and Warbeck saw on the sward the corpse of
      the Templar, bathed with the blood that even still poured fast and warm
      from his heart.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Hark!&rdquo; said Otho. &ldquo;He it was who first made me waver in my vows to
      Leoline; he persuaded me to wed yon whited falsehood. Hark! he, who had
      thus wronged my real love, dishonoured me with my faithless bride, and
      thus&mdash;thus&mdash;thus&rdquo;&mdash;as grinding his teeth, he spurned again
      and again the dead body of the Templar&mdash;&ldquo;thus Leoline and myself are
      avenged!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;And thy wife?&rdquo; said Warbeck, pityingly.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Fled,&mdash;fled with a hireling page. It is well! she was not worth the
      sword that was once belted on&mdash;by Leoline.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      The tradition, dear Gertrude, proceeds to tell us that Otho, though often
      menaced by the rude justice of the day for the death of the Templar,
      defied and escaped the menace. On the very night of his revenge a long and
      delirious illness seized him; the generous Warbeck forgave, forgot all,
      save that he had been once consecrated by Leoline&rsquo;s love. He tended him
      through his sickness, and when he recovered, Otho was an altered man. He
      forswore the comrades he had once courted, the revels he had once led. The
      halls of Sternfels were desolate as those of Liebenstein. The only
      companion Otho sought was Warbeck, and Warbeck bore with him. They had no
      topic in common, for on one subject Warbeck at least felt too deeply ever
      to trust himself to speak; yet did a strange and secret sympathy re-unite
      them. They had at least a common sorrow; often they were seen wandering
      together by the solitary banks of the river, or amidst the woods, without
      apparently interchanging word or sign. Otho died first, and still in the
      prime of youth; and Warbeck was now left companionless. In vain the
      imperial court wooed him to its pleasures; in vain the camp proffered him
      the oblivion of renown. Ah! could he tear himself from a spot where
      morning and night he could see afar, amidst the valley, the roof that
      sheltered Leoline, and on which every copse, every turf, reminded him of
      former days? His solitary life, his midnight vigils, strange scrolls about
      his chamber, obtained him by degrees the repute of cultivating the darker
      arts; and shunning, he became shunned by all. But still it was sweet to
      hear from time to time of the increasing sanctity of her in whom he had
      treasured up his last thoughts of earth. She it was who healed the sick;
      she it was who relieved the poor; and the superstition of that age brought
      pilgrims from afar to the altars that she served.
    </p>
    <p>
      Many years afterwards, a band of lawless robbers, who ever and anon broke
      from their mountain fastnesses to pillage and to desolate the valleys of
      the Rhine,&mdash;who spared neither sex nor age, neither tower nor hut,
      nor even the houses of God Himself,&mdash;laid waste the territories round
      Bornhofen, and demanded treasure from the convent. The abbess, of the bold
      lineage of Rudesheim, refused the sacrilegious demand. The convent was
      stormed; its vassals resisted; the robbers, inured to slaughter, won the
      day; already the gates were forced, when a knight, at the head of a small
      but hardy troop, rushed down from the mountain side and turned the tide of
      the fray. Wherever his sword flashed fell a foe; wherever his war-cry
      sounded was a space of dead men in the thick of the battle. The fight was
      won, the convent saved; the abbess and the sisterhood came forth to bless
      their deliverer. Laid under an aged oak, he was bleeding fast to death;
      his head was bare and his locks were gray, but scarcely yet with years.
      One only of the sisterhood recognized that majestic face; one bathed his
      parched lips; one held his dying hand; and in Leoline&rsquo;s presence passed
      away the faithful spirit of the last lord of Liebenstein!
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; said Gertrude, through her tears; &ldquo;surely you must have altered the
      facts,&mdash;surely&mdash;surely&mdash;it must have been impossible for
      Leoline, with a woman&rsquo;s heart, to have loved Otho more than Warbeck?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;My child,&rdquo; said Vane, &ldquo;so think women when they read a tale of love, and
      see <i>the whole heart</i> bared before them; but not so act they in real
      life, when they see only the surface of character, and pierce not its
      depths&mdash;until it is too late!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      <a name="link2HCH0025" id="link2HCH0025">
      <!--  H2 anchor --> </a>
    </p>
    <div style="height: 4em;">
      <br /><br /><br /><br />
    </div>
    <h2>
      CHAPTER XXV. THE IMMORTALITY OF THE SOUL.&mdash;A COMMON INCIDENT NOT
      BEFORE
    </h2>
    <p>
      DESCRIBED.&mdash;TREVYLYAN AND GERTRUDE.
    </p>
    <p>
      THE day now grew cool as it waned to its decline, and the breeze came
      sharp upon the delicate frame of the sufferer. They resolved to proceed no
      farther; and as they carried with them attendants and baggage, which
      rendered their route almost independent of the ordinary accommodation,
      they steered for the opposite shore, and landed at a village beautifully
      sequestered in a valley, and where they fortunately obtained a lodging not
      often met with in the regions of the picturesque.
    </p>
    <p>
      When Gertrude, at an early hour, retired to bed, Vane and Du&mdash;&mdash;-e
      fell into speculative conversation upon the nature of man. Vane&rsquo;s
      philosophy was of a quiet and passive scepticism; the physician dared more
      boldly, and rushed from doubt to negation. The attention of Trevylyan, as
      he sat apart and musing, was arrested in despite of himself. He listened
      to an argument in which he took no share, but which suddenly inspired him
      with an interest in that awful subject which, in the heat of youth and the
      occupations of the world, had never been so prominently called forth
      before.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;What,&rdquo; thought he, with unutterable anguish, as he listened to the
      earnest vehemence of the Frenchman and the tranquil assent of Vane, &ldquo;if
      this creed were indeed true,&mdash;if there be no other world,&mdash;Gertrude
      is lost to me eternally, through the dread gloom of death there would
      break forth no star!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      That is a peculiar incident that perhaps occurs to us all at times, but
      which I have never found expressed in books, namely, to hear a doubt of
      futurity at the very moment in which the present is most overcast; and to
      find at once this world stripped of its delusion and the next of its
      consolation. It is perhaps for others, rather than ourselves, that the
      fond heart requires a Hereafter. The tranquil rest, the shadow, and the
      silence, the mere pause of the wheel of life, have no terror for the wise,
      who know the due value of the world.
    </p>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
     &ldquo;After the billows of a stormy sea,
      Sweet is at last the haven of repose!&rdquo;
 </pre>
    <p>
      But not so when that stillness is to divide us eternally from others; when
      those we have loved with all the passion, the devotion, the watchful
      sanctity of the weak human heart, are to exist to us no more! when, after
      long years of desertion and widowhood on earth, there is to be no hope of
      reunion in that INVISIBLE beyond the stars; when the torch, not of life
      only, but of love, is to be quenched in the Dark Fountain, and the grave,
      that we would fain hope is the great restorer of broken ties, is but the
      dumb seal of hopeless, utter, inexorable separation! And it is this
      thought, this sentiment, which makes religion out of woe, and teaches
      belief to the mourning heart that in the gladness of united affections
      felt not the necessity of a heaven! To how many is the death of the
      beloved the parent of faith!
    </p>
    <p>
      Stung by his thoughts, Trevylyan rose abruptly, and stealing from the
      lowly hostelry, walked forth amidst the serene and deepening night; from
      the window of Gertrude&rsquo;s room the light streamed calm on the purple air.
    </p>
    <p>
      With uneven steps and many a pause, he paced to and fro beneath the
      window, and gave the rein to his thoughts. How intensely he felt the ALL
      that Gertrude was to him! how bitterly he foresaw the change in his lot
      and character that her death would work out! For who that met him in later
      years ever dreamed that emotions so soft, and yet so ardent, had visited
      one so stern? Who could have believed that time was when the polished and
      cold Trevylyan had kept the vigils he now held below the chamber of one so
      little like himself as Gertrude, in that remote and solitary hamlet; shut
      in by the haunted mountains of the Rhine, and beneath the moonlight of the
      romantic North?
    </p>
    <p>
      While thus engaged, the light in Gertrude&rsquo;s room was suddenly
      extinguished; it is impossible to express how much that trivial incident
      affected him! It was like an emblem of what was to come; the light had
      been the only evidence of life that broke upon that hour, and he was now
      left alone with the shades of night. Was not this like the herald of
      Gertrude&rsquo;s own death; the extinction of the only living ray that broke
      upon the darkness of the world?
    </p>
    <p>
      His anguish, his presentiment of utter desolation, increased. He groaned
      aloud; he dashed his clenched hand to his breast; large and cold drops of
      agony stole down his brow. &ldquo;Father,&rdquo; he exclaimed with a struggling voice,
      &ldquo;let this cup pass from me! Smite my ambition to the root; curse me with
      poverty, shame, and bodily disease; but leave me this one solace, this one
      companion of my fate!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      At this moment Gertrude&rsquo;s window opened gently, and he heard accents steal
      soothingly upon his ear.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Is not that your voice, Albert?&rdquo; said she, softly. &ldquo;I heard it just as I
      lay down to rest, and could not sleep while you were thus exposed to the
      damp night air. You do not answer; surely it is your voice: when did I
      mistake it for another&rsquo;s?&rdquo; Mastering with a violent effort his emotions,
      Trevylyan answered, with a sort of convulsive gayety,&mdash;
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Why come to these shores, dear Gertrude, unless you are honoured with the
      chivalry that belongs to them? What wind, what blight, can harm me while
      within the circle of your presence; and what sleep can bring me dreams so
      dear as the waking thought of you?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;It is cold,&rdquo; said Gertrude, shivering; &ldquo;come in, dear Albert, I beseech
      you, and I will thank you to-morrow.&rdquo; Gertrude&rsquo;s voice was choked by the
      hectic cough, that went like an arrow to Trevylyan&rsquo;s heart; and he felt
      that in her anxiety for him she was now exposing her own frame to the
      unwholesome night.
    </p>
    <p>
      He spoke no more, but hurried within the house; and when the gray light of
      morn broke upon his gloomy features, haggard from the want of sleep, it
      might have seemed, in that dim eye and fast-sinking cheek, as if the
      lovers were not to be divided&mdash;even by death itself.
    </p>
    <p>
      <a name="link2HCH0026" id="link2HCH0026">
      <!--  H2 anchor --> </a>
    </p>
    <div style="height: 4em;">
      <br /><br /><br /><br />
    </div>
    <h2>
      CHAPTER XXVI. IN WHICH THE READER WILL LEARN HOW THE FAIRIES WERE
    </h2>
    <p>
      RECEIVED BY THE SOVEREIGNS OF THE MINES.&mdash;THE COMPLAINT OF THE LAST
      OF THE FAUNS.&mdash;THE RED HUNTSMAN.&mdash;THE STORM.&mdash;DEATH.
    </p>
    <p>
      IN the deep valley of Ehrenthal, the metal kings&mdash;the Prince of the
      Silver Palaces, the Gnome Monarch of the dull Lead Mine, the President of
      the Copper United States&mdash;held a court to receive the fairy wanderers
      from the island of Nonnewerth.
    </p>
    <p>
      The prince was there, in a gallant hunting-suit of oak leaves, in honour
      to England; and wore a profusion of fairy orders, which had been
      instituted from time to time, in honour of the human poets that had
      celebrated the spiritual and ethereal tribes. Chief of these, sweet
      Dreamer of the &ldquo;Midsummer Night&rsquo;s Dream,&rdquo; was the badge crystallized from
      the dews that rose above the whispering reeds of Avon on the night of thy
      birth,&mdash;the great epoch of the intellectual world! Nor wert thou, O
      beloved Musaeus! nor thou, dim-dreaming Tieck! nor were ye, the wild
      imaginer of the bright-haired Undine, and the wayward spirit that invoked
      for the gloomy Manfred the Witch of the breathless Alps and the spirits of
      earth and air!&mdash;nor were ye without the honours of fairy homage! Your
      memory may fade from the heart of man, and the spells of new enchanters
      may succeed to the charm you once wove over the face of the common world;
      but still in the green knolls of the haunted valley and the deep shade of
      forests, and the starred palaces of air, ye are honoured by the beings of
      your dreams, as demigods and kings! Your graves are tended by invisible
      hands, and the places of your birth are hallowed by no perishable worship!
    </p>
    <p>
      Even as I write,* far away amidst the hills of Scotland, and by the forest
      thou hast clothed with immortal verdure, thou, the maker of &ldquo;the Harp by
      lone Glenfillan&rsquo;s spring,&rdquo; art passing from the earth which thou hast
      &ldquo;painted with delight.&rdquo; And such are the chances of mortal fame, our
      children&rsquo;s children may raise new idols on the site of thy holy altar, and
      cavil where their sires adored; but for thee the mermaid of the ocean
      shall wail in her coral caves, and the sprite that lives in the waterfalls
      shall mourn! Strange shapes shall hew thy monument in the recesses of the
      lonely rocks! ever by moonlight shall the fairies pause from their roundel
      when some wild note of their minstrelsy reminds them of thine own,&mdash;ceasing
      from their revelries, to weep for the silence of that mighty lyre, which
      breathed alike a revelation of the mysteries of spirits and of men!
    </p>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
  * It was just at the time the author was finishing this work
    that the great master of his art was drawing to the close
    of his career.
</pre>
    <p>
      The King of the Silver Mines sat in a cavern in the valley, through which
      the moonlight pierced its way and slept in shadow on the soil shining with
      metals wrought into unnumbered shapes; and below him, on a humbler throne,
      with a gray beard and downcast eye, sat the aged King of the Dwarfs that
      preside over the dull realms of lead, and inspire the verse of &mdash;&mdash;-,
      and the prose of &mdash;&mdash;-! And there too a fantastic household elf
      was the President of the Copper Republic,&mdash;a spirit that loves
      economy and the Uses, and smiles sparely on the Beautiful. But, in the
      centre of the cave, upon beds of the softest mosses, the untrodden growth
      of ages, reclined the fairy visitors, Nymphalin seated by her betrothed.
      And round the walls of the cave were dwarf attendants on the sovereigns of
      the metals, of a thousand odd shapes and fantastic garments. On the abrupt
      ledges of the rocks the bats, charmed to stillness but not sleep,
      clustered thickly, watching the scene with fixed and amazed eyes; and one
      old gray owl, the favourite of the witch of the valley, sat blinking in a
      corner, listening with all her might that she might bring home the scandal
      to her mistress.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;And tell me, Prince of the Rhine-Island Fays,&rdquo; said the King of the
      Silver Mines, &ldquo;for thou art a traveller, and a fairy that hath seen much,
      how go men&rsquo;s affairs in the upper world? As to ourself, we live here in a
      stupid splendour, and only hear the news of the day when our brother of
      lead pays a visit to the English printing-press, or the President of
      Copper goes to look at his improvements in steam-engines.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Indeed,&rdquo; replied Fayzenheim, preparing to speak like AEneas in the
      Carthaginian court,&mdash;&ldquo;indeed, your Majesty, I know not much that will
      interest you in the present aspect of mortal affairs, except that you are
      quite as much honoured at this day as when the Roman conqueror bent his
      knee to you among the mountains of Taunus; and a vast number of little
      round subjects of yours are constantly carried about by the rich, and
      pined after with hopeless adoration by the poor. But, begging your
      Majesty&rsquo;s pardon, may I ask what has become of your cousin, the King of
      the Golden Mines? I know very well that he has no dominion in these
      valleys, and do not therefore wonder at his absence from your court this
      night; but I see so little of his subjects on earth that I should fear his
      empire was well nigh at an end, if I did not recognize everywhere the most
      servile homage paid to a power now become almost invisible.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      The King of the Silver Mines fetched a deep sigh. &ldquo;Alas, prince,&rdquo; said he,
      &ldquo;too well do you divine the expiration of my cousin&rsquo;s empire. So many of
      his subjects have from time to time gone forth to the world, pressed into
      military service and never returning, that his kingdom is nearly
      depopulated. And he lives far off in the distant parts of the earth, in a
      state of melancholy seclusion; the age of gold has passed, the age of
      paper has commenced.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Paper,&rdquo; said Nymphalin, who was still somewhat of a <i>precieuse</i>,&mdash;&ldquo;paper
      is a wonderful thing. What pretty books the human people write upon it!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Ah! that&rsquo;s what I design to convey,&rdquo; said the silver king. &ldquo;It is the age
      less of paper money than paper government: the Press is the true bank.&rdquo;
       The lord treasurer of the English fairies pricked up his ears at the word
      &ldquo;bank;&rdquo; for he was the Attwood of the fairies: he had a favourite plan of
      making money out of bulrushes, and had written four large bees&rsquo;-wings full
      upon the true nature of capital.
    </p>
    <p>
      While they were thus conversing, a sudden sound as of some rustic and rude
      music broke along the air, and closing its wild burden, they heard the
      following song:&mdash;
    </p>
    <p>
      THE COMPLAINT OF THE LAST FAUN.
    </p>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
I. The moon on the Latmos mountain  Her pining vigil keeps;
And ever the silver fountain  In the Dorian valley weeps.
But gone are Endymion&rsquo;s dreams;  And the crystal lymph
  Bewails the nymph
Whose beauty sleeked the streams!
</pre>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
II. Round Arcady&rsquo;s oak its green  The Bromian ivy weaves;
But no more is the satyr seen  Laughing out from the glossy leaves.
Hushed is the Lycian lute,  Still grows the seed
  Of the Moenale reed,
But the pipe of Pan is mute!
</pre>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
III. The leaves in the noon-day quiver;  The vines on the mountains wave;
And Tiber rolls his river  As fresh by the Sylvan&rsquo;s cave.
But my brothers are dead and gone;  And far away
  From their graves I stray,
And dream of the past alone!
</pre>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
IV. And the sun of the north is chill;  And keen is the northern gale;
Alas for the Song of the Argive hill;  And the dance in the Cretan vale!
The youth of the earth is o&rsquo;er,  And its breast is rife
  With the teeming life
Of the golden Tribes no more!
</pre>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
V. My race are more blest than I,  Asleep in their distant bed;
‘T were better, be sure, to die  Than to mourn for the buried Dead:
To rove by the stranger streams,  At dusk and dawn
  A lonely faun,
The last of the Grecian&rsquo;s dreams.
</pre>
    <p>
      As the song ended a shadow crossed the moonlight, that lay white and
      lustrous before the aperture of the cavern; and Nymphalin, looking up,
      beheld a graceful yet grotesque figure standing on the sward without, and
      gazing on the group in the cave. It was a shaggy form, with a goat&rsquo;s legs
      and ears; but the rest of its body, and the height of the stature, like a
      man&rsquo;s. An arch, pleasant, yet malicious smile played about its lips; and
      in its hand it held the pastoral pipe of which poets have sung,&mdash;they
      would find it difficult to sing to it!
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;And who art thou?&rdquo; said Fayzenheim, with the air of a hero.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;I am the last lingering wanderer of the race which the Romans worshipped;
      hither I followed their victorious steps, and in these green hollows have
      I remained. Sometimes in the still noon, when the leaves of spring bud
      upon the whispering woods, I peer forth from my rocky lair, and startle
      the peasant with my strange voice and stranger shape. Then goes he home,
      and puzzles his thick brain with mopes and fancies, till at length he
      imagines me, the creature of the South! one of his northern demons, and
      his poets adapt the apparition to their barbarous lines.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Ho!&rdquo; quoth the silver king, &ldquo;surely thou art the origin of the fabled
      Satan of the cowled men living whilom in yonder ruins, with its horns and
      goatish limbs; and the harmless faun has been made the figuration of the
      most implacable of fiends. But why, O wanderer of the South, lingerest
      thou in these foreign dells? Why returnest thou not to the bi-forked
      hill-top of old Parnassus, or the wastes around the yellow course of the
      Tiber?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;My brethren are no more,&rdquo; said the poor faun; &ldquo;and the very faith that
      left us sacred and unharmed is departed. But here all the spirits not of
      mortality are still honoured; and I wander, mourning for Silenus, though
      amidst the vines that should console me for his loss.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Thou hast known great beings in thy day,&rdquo; said the leaden king, who loved
      the philosophy of a truism (and the history of whose inspirations I shall
      one day write).
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Ah, yes,&rdquo; said the faun; &ldquo;my birth was amidst the freshness of the world,
      when the flush of the universal life coloured all things with divinity;
      when not a tree but had its Dryad, not a fountain that was without its
      Nymph. I sat by the gray throne of Saturn, in his old age, ere yet he was
      discrowned (for he was no visionary ideal, but the arch monarch of the
      pastoral age), and heard from his lips the history of the world&rsquo;s birth.
      But those times are gone forever,&mdash;they have left harsh successors.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;It is the age of paper,&rdquo; muttered the lord treasurer, shaking his head.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;What ho, for a dance!&rdquo; cried Fayzenheim, too royal for moralities, and he
      whirled the beautiful Nymphalin into a waltz. Then forth issued the
      fairies, and out went the dwarfs. And the faun leaning against an aged
      elm, ere yet the midnight waned, the elves danced their charmed round to
      the antique minstrelsy of his pipe,&mdash;the minstrelsy of the Grecian
      world!
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Hast thou seen yet, my Nymphalin,&rdquo; said Fayzenheim, in the pauses of the
      dance, &ldquo;the recess of the Hartz, and the red form of its mighty hunter?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;It is a fearful sight,&rdquo; answered Nymphalin; &ldquo;but with thee I should not
      fear.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Away then!&rdquo; cried Fayzenheim; &ldquo;let us away at the first cock-crow, into
      those shaggy dells; for there is no need of night to conceal us, and the
      unwitnessed blush of morn or the dreary silence of noon is, no less than
      the moon&rsquo;s reign, the season for the sports of the superhuman tribes.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Nymphalin, charmed with the proposal, readily assented; and at the last
      hour of night, bestriding the starbeams of the many-titled Friga, away
      sped the fairy cavalcade to the gloom of the mystic Hartz.
    </p>
    <p>
      Fain would I relate the manner of their arrival in the thick recesses of
      the forest,&mdash;how they found the Red Hunter seated on a fallen pine
      beside a wide chasm in the earth, with the arching bows of the wizard oak
      wreathing above his head as a canopy, and his bow and spear lying idle at
      his feet. Fain would I tell of the reception which he deigned to the
      fairies, and how he told them of his ancient victories over man; how he
      chafed at the gathering invasions of his realm; and how joyously he
      gloated of some great convulsion* in the northern States, which, rapt into
      moody reveries in those solitary woods, the fierce demon broodingly
      foresaw. All these fain would I narrate, but they are not of the Rhine,
      and my story will not brook the delay. While thus conversing with the
      fiend, noon had crept on, and the sky had become overcast and lowering;
      the giant trees waved gustily to and fro, and the low gatherings of the
      thunder announced the approaching storm. Then the hunter rose and
      stretched his mighty limbs, and seizing his spear, he strode rapidly into
      the forest to meet the things of his own tribe that the tempest wakes from
      their rugged lair.
    </p>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
  * Which has come to pass.&mdash;1847.
</pre>
    <p>
      A sudden recollection broke upon Nymphalin. &ldquo;Alas, alas!&rdquo; she cried,
      wringing her hands; &ldquo;what have I done! In journeying hither with thee, I
      have forgotten my office. I have neglected my watch over the elements, and
      my human charge is at this hour, perhaps, exposed to all the fury of the
      storm.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Cheer thee, my Nymphalin,&rdquo; said the prince, &ldquo;we will lay the tempest;&rdquo;
       and he waved his sword and muttered the charms which curb the winds and
      roll back the marching thunder: but for once the tempest ceased not at his
      spells. And now, as the fairies sped along the troubled air, a pale and
      beautiful form met them by the way, and the fairies paused and trembled;
      for the power of that Shape could vanquish even them. It was the form of a
      Female, with golden hair, crowned with a chaplet of withered leaves; her
      bosoms, of an exceeding beauty, lay bare to the wind, and an infant was
      clasped between them, hushed into a sleep so still, that neither the roar
      of the thunder, nor the livid lightning flashing from cloud to cloud,
      could even ruffle, much less arouse, the slumberer. And the face of the
      female was unutterably calm and sweet (though with a something of severe);
      there was no line nor wrinkle in the hueless brow; care never wrote its
      defacing characters upon that everlasting beauty. It knew no sorrow or
      change; ghostlike and shadowy floated on that Shape through the abyss of
      Time, governing the world with an unquestioned and noiseless sway. And the
      children of the green solitudes of the earth, the lovely fairies of my
      tale, shuddered as they gazed and recognized&mdash;the form of DEATH,&mdash;death
      vindicated.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;And why,&rdquo; said the beautiful Shape, with a voice soft as the last sighs
      of a dying babe,&mdash;&ldquo;why trouble ye the air with spells? Mine is the
      hour and the empire, and the storm is the creature of my power. Far yonder
      to the west it sweeps over the sea, and the ship ceases to vex the waves;
      it smites the forest, and the destined tree, torn from its roots, feels
      the winter strip the gladness from its boughs no more! The roar of the
      elements is the herald of eternal stillness to their victims; and they who
      hear the progress of my power idly shudder at the coming of peace. And
      thou, O tender daughter of the fairy kings, why grievest thou at a
      mortal&rsquo;s doom? Knowest thou not that sorrow cometh with years, and that to
      live is to mourn? Blessed is the flower that, nipped in its early spring,
      feels not the blast that one by one scatters its blossoms around it, and
      leaves but the barren stem. Blessed are the young whom I clasp to my
      breast, and lull into the sleep which the storm cannot break, nor the
      morrow arouse to sorrow or to toil. The heart that is stilled in the bloom
      of its first emotions, that turns with its last throb to the eye of love,
      as yet unlearned in the possibility of change,&mdash;has exhausted already
      the wine of life, and is saved only from the lees. As the mother soothes
      to sleep the wail of her troubled child, I open my arms to the vexed
      spirit, and my bosom cradles the unquiet to repose!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      The fairies answered not, for a chill and a fear lay over them, and the
      Shape glided on; ever as it passed away through the veiling clouds they
      heard its low voice singing amidst the roar of the storm, as the dirge of
      the water-sprite over the vessel it hath lured into the whirlpool or the
      shoals.
    </p>
    <p>
      <a name="link2HCH0027" id="link2HCH0027">
      <!--  H2 anchor --> </a>
    </p>
    <div style="height: 4em;">
      <br /><br /><br /><br />
    </div>
    <h2>
      CHAPTER XXVII. THURMBERG.&mdash;A STORM UPON THE RHINE.&mdash;THE RUINS OF
    </h2>
    <p>
      RHEINFELS.&mdash;PERIL UNFELT BY LOVE.&mdash;THE ECHO OF THE LURLEI-BERG.&mdash;ST.
      GOAR.&mdash;KAUB, GUTENFELS, AND PFALZGRAFENSTEIN.&mdash;A CERTAIN
      VASTNESS OF MIND IN THE FIRST HERMITS.&mdash;THE SCENERY OF THE RHINE TO
      BACHARACH.
    </p>
    <p>
      OUR party continued their voyage the next day, which was less bright than
      any they had yet experienced. The clouds swept on dull and heavy,
      suffering the sun only to break forth at scattered intervals. They wound
      round the curving bay which the Rhine forms in that part of its course,
      and gazed upon the ruins of Thurmberg, with the rich gardens that skirt
      the banks below. The last time Trevylyan had seen those ruins soaring
      against the sky, the green foliage at the foot of the rocks, and the quiet
      village sequestered beneath, glassing its roofs and solitary tower upon
      the wave, it had been with a gay summer troop of light friends, who had
      paused on the opposite shore during the heats of noon, and, over wine and
      fruits, had mimicked the groups of Boccaccio, and intermingled the lute,
      the jest, the momentary love, and the laughing tale.
    </p>
    <p>
      What a difference now in his thoughts, in the object of the voyage, in his
      present companions! The feet of years fall noiseless; we heed, we note
      them not, till tracking the same course we passed long since, we are
      startled to find how deep the impression they leave behind. To revisit the
      scenes of our youth is to commune with the ghost of ourselves.
    </p>
    <p>
      At this time the clouds gathered rapidly along the heavens, and they were
      startled by the first peal of the thunder. Sudden and swift came on the
      storm, and Trevylyan trembled as he covered Gertrude&rsquo;s form with the rude
      boat-cloaks they had brought with them; the small vessel began to rock
      wildly to and fro upon the waters. High above them rose the vast
      dismantled ruins of Rheinfels, the lightning darting through its shattered
      casements and broken arches, and brightening the gloomy trees that here
      and there clothed the rocks, and tossed to the angry wind. Swift wheeled
      the water-birds over the river, dipping their plumage in the white foam,
      and uttering their discordant screams. A storm upon the Rhine has a
      grandeur it is in vain to paint. Its rocks, its foliage, the feudal ruins
      that everywhere rise from the lofty heights, speaking in characters of
      stern decay of many a former battle against time and tempest; the broad
      and rapid course of the legendary river,&mdash;all harmonize with the
      elementary strife; and you feel that to see the Rhine only in the sunshine
      is to be unconscious of its most majestic aspects. What baronial war had
      those ruins witnessed! From the rapine of the lordly tyrant of those
      battlements rose the first Confederation of the Rhine,&mdash;the great
      strife between the new time and the old, the town and the castle, the
      citizen and the chief. Gray and stern those ruins breasted the storm,&mdash;a
      type of the antique opinion which once manned them with armed serfs; and,
      yet in ruins and decay, appeals from the victorious freedom it may no
      longer resist!
    </p>
    <p>
      Clasped in Trevylyan&rsquo;s guardian arms, and her head pillowed on his breast,
      Gertrude felt nothing of the storm save its grandeur; and Trevylyan&rsquo;s
      voice whispered cheer and courage to her ear. She answered by a smile and
      a sigh, but not of pain. In the convulsions of nature we forget our own
      separate existence, our schemes, our projects, our fears; our dreams
      vanish back into their cells. One passion only the storm quells not, and
      the presence of Love mingles with the voice of the fiercest storms, as
      with the whispers of the southern wind. So she felt, as they were thus
      drawn close together, and as she strove to smile away the anxious terror
      from Trevylyan&rsquo;s gaze, a security, a delight; for peril is sweet even to
      the fears of woman, when it impresses upon her yet more vividly that she
      is beloved.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;A moment more and we reach the land,&rdquo; murmured Trevylyan.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;I wish it not,&rdquo; answered Gertrude, softly. But ere they got into St. Goar
      the rain descended in torrents, and even the thick coverings round
      Gertrude&rsquo;s form were not sufficient protection against it. Wet and
      dripping she reached the inn; but not then, nor for some days, was she
      sensible of the shock her decaying health had received.
    </p>
    <p>
      The storm lasted but a few hours, and the sun afterwards broke forth so
      brightly, and the stream looked so inviting, that they yielded to
      Gertrude&rsquo;s earnest wish, and, taking a larger vessel, continued their
      course; they passed along the narrow and dangerous defile of the Gewirre,
      and the fearful whirlpool of the &ldquo;Bank;&rdquo; and on the shore to the left the
      enormous rock of Lurlei rose, huge and shapeless, on their gaze. In this
      place is a singular echo, and one of the boatmen wound a horn, which
      produced an almost supernatural music,&mdash;so wild, loud, and oft
      reverberated was its sound.
    </p>
    <p>
      The river now curved along in a narrow and deep channel amongst rugged
      steeps, on which the westering sun cast long and uncouth shadows; and here
      the hermit, from whose sacred name the town of St. Goar derived its own,
      fixed his abode and preached the religion of the Cross. &ldquo;There was a
      certain vastness of mind,&rdquo; said Vane, &ldquo;in the adoption of utter solitude,
      in which the first enthusiasts of our religion indulged. The remote
      desert, the solitary rock, the rude dwelling hollowed from the cave, the
      eternal commune with their own hearts, with nature, and their dreams of
      God,&mdash;all make a picture of severe and preterhuman grandeur. Say what
      we will of the necessity and charm of social life, there is a greatness
      about man when he dispenses with mankind.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;As to that,&rdquo; said Du&mdash;&mdash;-e, shrugging his shoulders, &ldquo;there was
      probably very good wine in the neighbourhood, and the females&rsquo; eyes about
      Oberwesel are singularly blue.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      They now approached Oberwesel, another of the once imperial towns, and
      behind it beheld the remains of the castle of the illustrious family of
      Schomberg, the ancestors of the old hero of the Boyne. A little farther
      on, from the opposite shore, the castle of Gutenfels rose above the busy
      town of Kaub.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Another of those scenes,&rdquo; said Trevylyan, &ldquo;celebrated equally by love and
      glory, for the castle&rsquo;s name is derived from that of the beautiful ladye
      of an emperor&rsquo;s passion; and below, upon a ridge in the steep, the great
      Gustavus issued forth his command to begin battle with the Spaniards.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;It looks peaceful enough now,&rdquo; said Vane, pointing to the craft that lay
      along the stream, and the green trees drooping over a curve in the bank.
      Beyond, in the middle of the stream itself, stands the lonely castle of
      Pfalzgrafenstein, sadly memorable as a prison to the more distinguished of
      criminals. How many pining eyes may have turned from those casements to
      the vine-clad hills of the free shore! how many indignant hearts have
      nursed the deep curses of hate in the dungeons below, and longed for the
      wave that dashed against the gray walls to force its way within and set
      them free!
    </p>
    <p>
      Here the Rhine seems utterly bounded, shrunk into one of those delusive
      lakes into which it so frequently seems to change its course; and as you
      proceed, it is as if the waters were silently overflowing their channel
      and forcing their way into the clefts of the mountain shore. Passing the
      Werth Island on one side and the castle of Stahleck on the other, our
      voyagers arrived at Bacharach, which, associating the feudal recollections
      with the classic, takes its name from the god of the vine; and as Du&mdash;&mdash;-e
      declared with peculiar emphasis, quaffing a large goblet of the peculiar
      liquor, &ldquo;richly deserves the honour!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      <a name="link2HCH0028" id="link2HCH0028">
      <!--  H2 anchor --> </a>
    </p>
    <div style="height: 4em;">
      <br /><br /><br /><br />
    </div>
    <h2>
      CHAPTER XXVIII. THE VOYAGE TO BINGEN.&mdash;THE SIMPLE INCIDENTS IN THIS
      TALE
    </h2>
    <p>
      EXCUSED.&mdash;THE SITUATION AND CHARACTER OF GERTRUDE.&mdash;THE
      CONVERSATION OF THE LOVERS IN THE TEMPEST.&mdash;A FACT CONTRADICTED.&mdash;THOUGHTS
      OCCASIONED BY A MADHOUSE AMONGST THE MOST BEAUTIFUL LANDSCAPES OF THE
      RHINE.
    </p>
    <p>
      THE next day they again resumed their voyage, and Gertrude&rsquo;s spirits were
      more cheerful than usual. The air seemed to her lighter, and she breathed
      with a less painful effort; once more hope entered the breast of
      Trevylyan; and, as the vessel bounded on, their conversation was steeped
      in no sombre hues. When Gertrude&rsquo;s health permitted, no temper was so gay,
      yet so gently gay, as hers; and now the <i>naive</i> sportiveness of her
      remarks called a smile to the placid lip of Vane, and smoothed the anxious
      front of Trevylyan himself; as for Du&mdash;&mdash;-e, who had much of the
      boon companion beneath his professional gravity, he broke out every now
      and then into snatches of French songs and drinking glees, which he
      declared were the result of the air of Bacharach. Thus conversing, the
      ruins of Furstenberg, and the echoing vale of Rheindeibach, glided past
      their sail; then the old town of Lorch, on the opposite bank (where the
      red wine is said first to have been made), with the green island before it
      in the water. Winding round, the stream showed castle upon castle alike in
      ruins, and built alike upon scarce accessible steeps. Then came the chapel
      of St. Clements and the opposing village of Asmannshausen; the lofty
      Rossell, built at the extremest verge of the cliff; and now the tower of
      Hatto, celebrated by Southey&rsquo;s ballad, and the ancient town of Bingen.
      Here they paused a while from their voyage, with the intention of visiting
      more minutely the Rheingau, or valley of the Rhine.
    </p>
    <p>
      It must occur to every one of my readers, that, in undertaking, as now, in
      these passages in the history of Trevylyan, scarcely so much a tale as an
      episode in real life, it is very difficult to offer any interest save of
      the most simple and unexciting kind. It is true that to Trevylyan every
      day, every hour, had its incident; but what are those incidents to others?
      A cloud in the sky; a smile from the lip of Gertrude,&mdash;these were to
      him far more full of events than had been the most varied scenes of his
      former adventurous career; but the history of the heart is not easily
      translated into language; and the world will not readily pause from its
      business to watch the alternations in the cheek of a dying girl.
    </p>
    <p>
      In the immense sum of human existence what is a single unit? Every sod on
      which we tread is the grave of some former being; yet is there something
      that softens without enervating the heart in tracing in the life of
      another those emotions that all of us have known ourselves. For who is
      there that has not, in his progress through life, felt all its ordinary
      business arrested, and the varieties of fate commuted into one chronicle
      of the affections? Who has not watched over the passing away of some
      being, more to him at that epoch than all the world? And this unit, so
      trivial to the calculation of others, of what inestimable value was it not
      to him? Retracing in another such recollections, shadowed and mellowed
      down by time, we feel the wonderful sanctity of human life, we feel what
      emotions a single being can awake; what a world of hope may be buried in a
      single grave! And thus we keep alive within ourselves the soft springs of
      that morality which unites us with our kind, and sheds over the harsh
      scenes and turbulent contests of earth the colouring of a common love.
    </p>
    <p>
      There is often, too, in the time of year in which such thoughts are
      presented to us, a certain harmony with the feelings they awaken. As I
      write I hear the last sighs of the departing summer, and the sere and
      yellow leaf is visible in the green of nature. But when this book goes
      forth into the world, the year will have passed through a deeper cycle of
      decay; and the first melancholy signs of winter have breathed into the
      Universal Mind that sadness which associates itself readily with the
      memory of friends, of feelings, that are no more. The seasons, like
      ourselves, track their course by something of beauty, or of glory, that is
      left behind. As the traveller in the land of Palestine sees tomb after
      tomb rise before him, the landmarks of his way, and the only signs of the
      holiness of the soil, thus Memory wanders over the most sacred spots in
      its various world, and traces them but by the graves of the Past.
    </p>
    <p>
      It was now that Gertrude began to feel the shock her frame had received in
      the storm upon the Rhine. Cold shiverings frequently seized her; her cough
      became more hollow, and her form trembled at the slightest breeze.
    </p>
    <p>
      Vane grew seriously alarmed; he repented that he had yielded to Gertrude&rsquo;s
      wish of substituting the Rhine for the Tiber or the Arno; and would even
      now have hurried across the Alps to a warmer clime, if Du&mdash;&mdash;-e
      had not declared that she could not survive the journey, and that her sole
      chance of regaining her strength was rest. Gertrude herself, however, in
      the continued delusion of her disease, clung to the belief of recovery,
      and still supported the hopes of her father, and soothed, with secret talk
      of the future, the anguish of her betrothed. The reader may remember that
      in the most touching passage in the ancient tragedians, the most pathetic
      part of the most pathetic of human poets&mdash;the pleading speech of
      Iphigenia, when imploring for her prolonged life, she impresses you with
      so soft a picture of its innocence and its beauty, and in this Gertrude
      resembled the Greek&rsquo;s creation&mdash;that she felt, on the verge of death,
      all the flush, the glow, the loveliness of life. Her youth was filled with
      hope and many-coloured dreams; she loved, and the hues of morning slept
      upon the yet disenchanted earth. The heavens to her were not as the common
      sky; the wave had its peculiar music to her ear, and the rustling leaves a
      pleasantness that none whose heart is not bathed in the love and sense of
      beauty could discern. Therefore it was, in future years, a thought of deep
      gratitude to Trevylyan that she was so little sensible of her danger; that
      the landscape caught not the gloom of the grave; and that, in the Greek
      phrase, &ldquo;death found her sleeping amongst flowers.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      At the end of a few days, another of those sudden turns, common to her
      malady, occurred in Gertrude&rsquo;s health; her youth and her happiness rallied
      against the encroaching tyrant, and for the ensuing fortnight she seemed
      once more within the bounds of hope. During this time they made several
      excursions into the Rheingau, and finished their tour at the ancient
      Heidelberg.
    </p>
    <p>
      One morning, in these excursions, after threading the wood of Niederwald,
      they gained that small and fairy temple, which hanging lightly over the
      mountain&rsquo;s brow, commands one of the noblest landscapes of earth. There,
      seated side by side, the lovers looked over the beautiful world below; far
      to the left lay the happy islets, in the embrace of the Rhine, as it wound
      along the low and curving meadows that stretch away towards
      Nieder-Ingelheim and Mayence. Glistening in the distance, the opposite Nah
      swept by the Mause tower, and the ruins of Klopp, crowning the ancient Bingen,
      into the mother tide. There, on either side the town, were the mountains
      of St. Roch and Rupert, with some old monastic ruin saddening in the sun.
      But nearer, below the temple, contrasting all the other features of
      landscape, yawned a dark and rugged gulf, girt by cragged elms and
      mouldering towers, the very prototype of the abyss of time,&mdash;black
      and fathomless amidst ruin and desolation.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;I think sometimes,&rdquo; said Gertrude, &ldquo;as in scenes like these we sit
      together, and rapt from the actual world, see only the enchantment that
      distance lends to our view,&mdash;I think sometimes what pleasure it will
      be hereafter to recall these hours. If ever you should love me less, I
      need only whisper to you, &lsquo;The Rhine,&rsquo; and will not all the feelings you
      have now for me return?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Ah, there will never be occasion to recall my love for you,&mdash;it can
      never decay.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;What a strange thing is life!&rdquo; said Gertrude; &ldquo;how unconnected, how
      desultory seem all its links! Has this sweet pause from trouble, from the
      ordinary cares of life&mdash;has it anything in common with your past
      career, with your future? You will go into the great world; in a few years
      hence these moments of leisure and musing will be denied to you. The
      action that you love and court is a jealous sphere,&mdash;it allows no
      wandering, no repose. These moments will then seem to you but as yonder
      islands that stud the Rhine,&mdash;the stream lingers by them for a
      moment, and then hurries on in its rapid course; they vary, but they do
      not interrupt the tide.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;You are fanciful, my Gertrude; but your simile might be juster. Rather
      let these banks be as our lives, and this river the one thought that flows
      eternally by both, blessing each with undying freshness.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Gertrude smiled; and, as Trevylyan&rsquo;s arm encircled her, she sank her
      beautiful face upon his bosom, he covered it with his kisses, and she
      thought at the moment, that, even had she passed death, that embrace could
      have recalled her to life.
    </p>
    <p>
      They pursued their course to Mayence, partly by land, partly along the
      river. One day, as returning from the vine-clad mountains of Johannisberg,
      which commands the whole of the Rheingau, the most beautiful valley in the
      world, they proceeded by water to the town of Ellfeld, Gertrude said,&mdash;
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;There is a thought in your favourite poet which you have often repeated,
      and which I cannot think true,&mdash;
    </p>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
  &ldquo;&lsquo;In nature there is nothing melancholy.&rsquo; 
</pre>
    <p>
      &ldquo;To me, it seems as if a certain melancholy were inseparable from beauty;
      in the sunniest noon there is a sense of solitude and stillness which
      pervades the landscape, and even in the flush of life inspires us with a
      musing and tender sadness. Why is this?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;I cannot tell,&rdquo; said Trevylyan, mournfully; &ldquo;but I allow that it is
      true.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;It is as if,&rdquo; continued the romantic Gertrude, &ldquo;the spirit of the world
      spoke to us in the silence, and filled us with a sense of our mortality,&mdash;a
      whisper from the religion that belongs to nature, and is ever seeking to
      unite the earth with the reminiscences of Heaven. Ah, what without a
      heaven would be even love!&mdash;a perpetual terror of the separation that
      must one day come! If,&rdquo; she resumed solemnly, after a momentary pause, and
      a shadow settled on her young face, &ldquo;if it be true, Albert, that I must
      leave you soon&mdash;&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;It cannot! it cannot!&rdquo; cried Trevylyan, wildly; &ldquo;be still, be silent, I
      beseech you.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Look yonder,&rdquo; said Du&mdash;&mdash;-e, breaking seasonably in upon the
      conversation of the lovers; &ldquo;on that hill to the left, what once was an
      abbey is now an asylum for the insane. Does it not seem a quiet and serene
      abode for the unstrung and erring minds that tenant it? What a mystery is
      there in our conformation!&mdash;those strange and bewildered fancies
      which replace our solid reason, what a moral of our human weakness do they
      breathe!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      It does indeed induce a dark and singular train of thought, when, in the
      midst of these lovely scenes, we chance upon this lone retreat for those
      on whose eyes Nature, perhaps, smiles in vain. <i>Or is it in vain?</i>
      They look down upon the broad Rhine, with its tranquil isles: do their
      wild delusions endow the river with another name, and people the valleys
      with no living shapes? Does the broken mirror within reflect back the
      countenance of real things, or shadows and shapes, crossed, mingled, and
      bewildered,&mdash;the phantasma of a sick man&rsquo;s dreams? Yet, perchance,
      one memory unscathed by the general ruin of the brain can make even the
      beautiful Rhine more beautiful than it is to the common eye; can calm it
      with the hues of departed love, and bids its possessor walk over its
      vine-clad mountains with the beings that have ceased to <i>be</i>! There,
      perhaps, the self-made monarch sits upon his throne and claims the vessels
      as his fleet, the waves and the valleys as his own; there, the enthusiast,
      blasted by the light of some imaginary creed, beholds the shapes of
      angels, and watches in the clouds round the setting sun the pavilions of
      God; there the victim of forsaken or perished love, mightier than the
      sorcerers of old, evokes the dead, or recalls the faithless by the philter
      of undying fancies. Ah, blessed art thou, the winged power of Imagination
      that is within us! conquering even grief, brightening even despair. Thou
      takest us from the world when reason can no longer bind us to it, and
      givest to the maniac the inspiration and the solace of the bard! Thou, the
      parent of the purer love, lingerest like love, when even ourself forsakes
      us, and lightest up the shattered chambers of the heart with the glory
      that makes a sanctity of decay.
    </p>
    <p>
      <a name="link2HCH0029" id="link2HCH0029">
      <!--  H2 anchor --> </a>
    </p>
    <div style="height: 4em;">
      <br /><br /><br /><br />
    </div>
    <h2>
      CHAPTER XXIX. ELLFELD.&mdash;MAYENCE.&mdash;HEIDELBERG.&mdash;A
      CONVERSATION BETWEEN
    </h2>
    <p>
      VANE AND THE GERMAN STUDENT.&mdash;THE RUINS OF THE CASTLE OF HEIDELBERG
      AND ITS SOLITARY HABITANT.
    </p>
    <p>
      IT was now the full noon; light clouds were bearing up towards the
      opposite banks of the Rhine, but over the Gothic towers of Ellfeld the sky
      spread blue and clear; the river danced beside the old gray walls with a
      sunny wave, and close at hand a vessel crowded with passengers, and loud
      with eager voices, gave a merry life to the scene. On the opposite bank
      the hills sloped away into the far horizon, and one slight skiff in the
      midst of the waters broke the solitary brightness of the noonday calm.
    </p>
    <p>
      The town of Ellfeld was the gift of Otho the First to the Church; not far
      from thence is the crystal spring that gives its name to the delicious
      grape of Markbrunner.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; quoth Du&mdash;&mdash;-e, &ldquo;doubtless the good bishops of Mayence
      made the best of the vicinity!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      They stayed some little time at this town, and visited the ruins of
      Scharfenstein; thence proceeding up the river, they passed Nieder Walluf,
      called the Gate of the Rheingau, and the luxuriant garden of Schierstein;
      thence, sailing by the castle-seat of the Prince Nassau Usingen, and
      passing two long and narrow isles, they arrived at Mayence, as the sun
      shot his last rays upon the waters, gilding the proud cathedral-spire, and
      breaking the mists that began to gather behind, over the rocks of the
      Rheingau.
    </p>
    <p>
      Ever memorable Mayence,&mdash;memorable alike for freedom and for song,
      within those walls how often woke the gallant music of the Troubadour; and
      how often beside that river did the heart of the maiden tremble to the
      lay! Within those walls the stout Walpoden first broached the great scheme
      of the Hanseatic league; and, more than all, O memorable Mayence, thou
      canst claim the first invention of the mightiest engine of human
      intellect,&mdash;the great leveller of power, the Demiurgus of the moral
      world,&mdash;the Press! Here too lived the maligned hero of the greatest
      drama of modern genius, the traditionary Faust, illustrating in himself
      the fate of his successors in dispensing knowledge,&mdash;held a monster
      for his wisdom, and consigned to the penalties of hell as a recompense for
      the benefits he had conferred on earth!
    </p>
    <p>
      At Mayence, Gertrude heard so much and so constantly of Heidelberg, that
      she grew impatient to visit that enchanting town; and as Du&mdash;&mdash;-e
      considered the air of Heidelberg more pure and invigorating than that of
      Mayence, they resolved to fix within it their temporary residence. Alas!
      it was the place destined to close their brief and melancholy pilgrimage,
      and to become to the heart of Trevylyan the holiest spot which the earth
      contained,&mdash;the KAABA of the world. But Gertrude, unconscious of her
      fate, conversed gayly as their carriage rolled rapidly on, and, constantly
      alive to every new sensation, she touched with her characteristic vivacity
      on all that they had seen in their previous route. There is a great charm
      in the observations of one new to the world; if we ourselves have become
      somewhat tired of &ldquo;its hack sights and sounds,&rdquo; we hear in their freshness
      a voice from our own youth.
    </p>
    <p>
      In the haunted valley of the Neckar, the most crystal of rivers, stands
      the town of Heidelberg. The shades of evening gathered round it as their
      heavy carriage rattled along the antique streets, and not till the next
      day was Gertrude aware of all the unrivalled beauties that environ the
      place.
    </p>
    <p>
      Vane, who was an early riser, went forth alone in the morning to
      reconnoitre the town; and as he was gazing on the tower of St. Peter, he
      heard himself suddenly accosted. He turned round and saw the German
      student whom they had met among the mountains of Taunus at his elbow.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Monsieur has chosen well in coming hither,&rdquo; said the student; &ldquo;and I
      trust our town will not disappoint his expectations.&rdquo; Vane answered with
      courtesy, and the German offering to accompany him in his walk, their
      conversation fell naturally on the life of a university, and the current
      education of the German people.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;It is surprising,&rdquo; said the student, &ldquo;that men are eternally inventing
      new systems of education, and yet persevering in the old. How many years
      ago is it since Fichte predicted in the system of Pestalozzi the
      regeneration of the German people? What has it done? We admire, we praise,
      and we blunder on in the very course Pestalozzi proves to be erroneous.
      Certainly,&rdquo; continued the student, &ldquo;there must be some radical defect in a
      system of culture in which genius is an exception, and dulness the result.
      Yet here, in our German universities, everything proves that education
      without equitable institutions avails little in the general formation of
      character. Here the young men of the colleges mix on the most equal terms;
      they are daring, romantic, enamoured of freedom even to its madness. They
      leave the University: no political career continues the train of mind they
      had acquired; they plunge into obscurity; live scattered and separate, and
      the student inebriated with Schiller sinks into the passive priest or the
      lethargic baron. His college career, so far from indicating his future
      life, exactly reverses it: he is brought up in one course in order to
      proceed in another. And this I hold to be the universal error of education
      in all countries; they conceive it a certain something to be finished at a
      certain age. They do not make it a part of the continuous history of life,
      but a wandering from it.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;You have been in England?&rdquo; asked Vane.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Yes; I have travelled over nearly the whole of it on foot. I was poor at
      that time, and imagining there was a sort of masonry between all men of
      letters, I inquired at each town for the <i>savants</i>, and asked money
      of them as a matter of course.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Vane almost laughed outright at the simplicity and naive unconsciousness
      of degradation with which the student proclaimed himself a public beggar.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;And how did you generally succeed?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;In most cases I was threatened with the stocks, and twice I was consigned
      by the <i>juge de paix</i> to the village police, to be passed to some
      mystic Mecca they were pleased to entitle &lsquo;a parish.&rsquo; Ah&rdquo; (continued the
      German with much <i>bonhomie</i>), &ldquo;it was a pity to see in a great nation
      so much value attached to such a trifle as money. But what surprised me
      greatly was the tone of your poetry. Madame de Stael, who knew perhaps as
      much of England as she did of Germany, tells us that its chief character
      is the <i>chivalresque</i>; and, excepting only Scott, who, by the way, is
      <i>not</i> English, I did not find one chivalrous poet among you. Yet,&rdquo;
       continued the student, &ldquo;between ourselves, I fancy that in our present age
      of civilization, there is an unexamined mistake in the general mind as to
      the value of poetry. It delights still as ever, but it has ceased to
      teach. The prose of the heart enlightens, touches, rouses, far more than
      poetry. Your most philosophical poets would be commonplace if turned into
      prose. Verse cannot contain the refining subtle thoughts which a great
      prose writer embodies; the rhyme eternally cripples it; it properly deals
      with the common problems of human nature, which are now hackneyed, and not
      with the nice and philosophizing corollaries which may be drawn from them.
      Thus, though it would seem at first a paradox, commonplace is more the
      element of poetry than of prose.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      This sentiment charmed Vane, who had nothing of the poet about him; and he
      took the student to share their breakfast at the inn, with a complacency
      he rarely experienced at the remeeting with a new acquaintance.
    </p>
    <p>
      After breakfast, our party proceeded through the town towards the
      wonderful castle which is its chief attraction, and the noblest wreck of
      German grandeur.
    </p>
    <p>
      And now pausing, the mountain yet unscaled, the stately ruin frowned upon
      them, girt by its massive walls and hanging terraces, round which from
      place to place clung the dwarfed and various foliage. High at the rear
      rose the huge mountain, covered, save at its extreme summit, with dark
      trees, and concealing in its mysterious breast the shadowy beings of the
      legendary world. But towards the ruins, and up a steep ascent, you may see
      a few scattered sheep thinly studding the broken ground. Aloft, above the
      ramparts, rose, desolate and huge, the Palace of the Electors of the
      Palatinate. In its broken walls you may trace the tokens of the lightning
      that blasted its ancient pomp, but still leaves in the vast extent of pile
      a fitting monument of the memory of Charlemagne. Below, in the distance,
      spread the plain far and spacious, till the shadowy river, with one
      solitary sail upon its breast, united the melancholy scene of earth with
      the autumnal sky.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;See,&rdquo; said Vane, pointing to two peasants who were conversing near them
      on the matters of their little trade, utterly unconscious of the
      associations of the spot, &ldquo;see, after all that is said and done about
      human greatness, it is always the greatness of the few. Ages pass, and
      leave the poor herd, the mass of men, eternally the same,&mdash;hewers of
      wood and drawers of water. The pomp of princes has its ebb and flow, but
      the peasant sells his fruit as gayly to the stranger on the ruins as to
      the emperor in the palace.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Will it be always so?&rdquo; said the student.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Let us hope not, for the sake of permanence in glory,&rdquo; said Trevylyan.
      &ldquo;Had <i>a people</i> built yonder palace, its splendour would never have
      passed away.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Vane shrugged his shoulders, and Du&mdash;&mdash;-e took snuff.
    </p>
    <p>
      But all the impressions produced by the castle at a distance are as
      nothing when you stand within its vast area and behold the architecture of
      all ages blended into one mighty ruin! The rich hues of the masonry, the
      sweeping facades&mdash;every description of building which man ever framed
      for war or for luxury&mdash;is here; all having only the common character,&mdash;RUIN.
      The feudal rampart, the yawning fosse, the rude tower, the splendid arch,
      the strength of a fortress, the magnificence of a palace,&mdash;all
      united, strike upon the soul like the history of a fallen empire in all
      its epochs.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;There is one singular habitant of these ruins,&rdquo; said the student,&mdash;&ldquo;a
      solitary painter, who has dwelt here some twenty years, companioned only
      by his Art. No other apartment but that which he tenants is occupied by a
      human being.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;What a poetical existence!&rdquo; cried Gertrude, enchanted with a solitude so
      full of associations.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Perhaps so,&rdquo; said the cruel Vane, ever anxious to dispel an illusion,
      &ldquo;but more probably custom has deadened to him all that overpowers
      ourselves with awe; and he may tread among these ruins rather seeking to
      pick up some rude morsel of antiquity, than feeding his imagination with
      the dim traditions that invest them with so august a poetry.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Monsieur&rsquo;s conjecture has something of the truth in it,&rdquo; said the German;
      &ldquo;but then the painter is a Frenchman.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      There is a sense of fatality in the singular mournfulness and majesty
      which belong to the ruins of Heidelberg, contrasting the vastness of the
      strength with the utterness of the ruin. It has been twice struck with
      lightning, and is the wreck of the elements, not of man; during the great
      siege it sustained, the lightning is supposed to have struck the powder
      magazine by accident.
    </p>
    <p>
      What a scene for some great imaginative work! What a mocking interference
      of the wrath of nature in the puny contests of men! One stroke of &ldquo;the red
      right arm&rdquo; above us, crushing the triumph of ages, and laughing to scorn
      the power of the beleaguers and the valour of the besieged!
    </p>
    <p>
      They passed the whole day among these stupendous ruins, and felt, when
      they descended to their inn, as if they had left the caverns of some
      mighty tomb.
    </p>
    <p>
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      <br /><br /><br /><br />
    </div>
    <h2>
      CHAPTER XXX. NO PART OF THE EARTH REALLY SOLITARY.&mdash;THE SONG OF THE
    </h2>
    <p>
      FAIRIES.&mdash;THE SACRED SPOT.&mdash;THE WITCH OF THE EVIL WINDS.&mdash;THE
      SPELL AND THE DUTY OF THE FAIRIES.
    </p>
    <p>
      BUT in what spot of the world is there ever utter solitude? The vanity of
      man supposes that loneliness is <i>his</i> absence! Who shall say what
      millions of spiritual beings glide invisibly among scenes apparently the
      most deserted? Or what know we of our own mechanism, that we should deny
      the possibility of life and motion to things that we cannot ourselves
      recognize?
    </p>
    <p>
      At moonlight, in the Great Court of Heidelberg, on the borders of the
      shattered basin overgrown with weeds, the following song was heard by the
      melancholy shades that roam at night through the mouldering halls of old,
      and the gloomy hollows in the mountain of Heidelberg.
    </p>
    <p>
      SONG OF THE FAIRIES IN THE RUINS OF HEIDELBERG.
    </p>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
     From the woods and the glossy green,
       With the wild thyme strewn;
     From the rivers whose crisped sheen
       Is kissed by the trembling moon;
     While the dwarf looks out from his mountain cave,
       And the erl king from his lair,
     And the water-nymph from her moaning wave,
       We skirr the limber air.

     There&rsquo;s a smile on the vine-clad shore,
       A smile on the castled heights;
     They dream back the days of yore,
       And they smile at our roundel rites!
                    Our roundel rites!

     Lightly we tread these halls around,
       Lightly tread we;
     Yet, hark! we have scared with a single sound
       The moping owl on the breathless tree,
                    And the goblin sprites!
     Ha, ha! we have scared with a single sound
       The old gray owl on the breathless tree,
                    And the goblin sprites!
</pre>
    <p>
      &ldquo;They come not,&rdquo; said Pipalee; &ldquo;yet the banquet is prepared, and the poor
      queen will be glad of some refreshment.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;What a pity! all the rose-leaves will be over-broiled,&rdquo; said Nip.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Let us amuse ourselves with the old painter,&rdquo; quoth Trip, springing over
      the ruins.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Well said,&rdquo; cried Pipalee and Nip; and all three, leaving my lord
      treasurer amazed at their levity, whisked into the painter&rsquo;s apartment.
      Permitting them to throw the ink over their victim&rsquo;s papers, break his
      pencils, mix his colours, mislay his nightcap, and go whiz against his
      face in the shape of a great bat, till the astonished Frenchman began to
      think the pensive goblins of the place had taken a sprightly fit,&mdash;we
      hasten to a small green spot some little way from the town, in the valley
      of the Neckar, and by the banks of its silver stream. It was circled round
      by dark trees, save on that side bordered by the river. The wild-flowers
      sprang profusely from the turf, which yet was smooth and singularly green.
      And there was the German fairy describing a circle round the spot, and
      making his elvish spells; and Nymphalin sat droopingly in the centre,
      shading her face, which was bowed down as the head of a water-lily, and
      weeping crystal tears.
    </p>
    <p>
      There came a hollow murmur through the trees, and a rush as of a mighty
      wind, and a dark form emerged from the shadow and approached the spot.
    </p>
    <p>
      The face was wrinkled and old, and stern with a malevolent and evil
      aspect. The frame was lean and gaunt, and supported by a staff, and a
      short gray mantle covered its bended shoulders.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Things of the moonbeam!&rdquo; said the form, in a shrill and ghastly voice,
      &ldquo;what want ye here; and why charm ye this spot from the coming of me and
      mine?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Dark witch of the blight and blast,&rdquo; answered the fairy, &ldquo;THOU that
      nippest the herb in its tender youth, and eatest up the core of the soft
      bud; behold, it is but a small spot that the fairies claim from thy
      demesnes, and on which, through frost and heat, they will keep the herbage
      green and the air gentle in its sighs!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;And, wherefore, O dweller in the crevices of the earth, wherefore wouldst
      thou guard this spot from the curses of the seasons?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;We know by our instinct,&rdquo; answered the fairy, &ldquo;that this spot will become
      the grave of one whom the fairies love; hither, by an unfelt influence,
      shall we guide her yet living steps; and in gazing upon this spot shall
      the desire of quiet and the resignation to death steal upon her soul.
      Behold, throughout the universe, all things are at war with one another,&mdash;the
      lion with the lamb; the serpent with the bird; and even the gentlest bird
      itself with the moth of the air; or the worm of the humble earth! What
      then to men, and to the spirits transcending men, is so lovely and so
      sacred as a being that harmeth none; what so beautiful as Innocence; what
      so mournful as its untimely tomb? And shall not that tomb be sacred; shall
      it not be our peculiar care? May we not mourn over it as at the passing
      away of some fair miracle in Nature, too tender to endure, too rare to be
      forgotten? It is for this, O dread waker of the blast, that the fairies
      would consecrate this little spot; for this they would charm away from its
      tranquil turf the wandering ghoul and the evil children of the night.
      Here, not the ill-omened owl, nor the blind bat, nor the unclean worm
      shall come. And thou shouldst have neither will nor power to nip the
      flowers of spring, nor sear the green herbs of summer. Is it not, dark
      mother of the evil winds,&mdash;is it not <i>our</i> immemorial office to
      tend the grave of Innocence, and keep fresh the flowers round the
      resting-place of Virgin Love?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Then the witch drew her cloak round her, and muttered to herself, and
      without further answer turned away among the trees and vanished, as the
      breath of the east wind, which goeth with her as her comrade, scattered
      the melancholy leaves along her path!
    </p>
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      <br /><br /><br /><br />
    </div>
    <h2>
      CHAPTER XXXI. GERTRUDE AND TREVYLYAN, WHEN THE FORMER IS AWAKENED TO THE
    </h2>
    <p>
      APPROACH OF DEATH.
    </p>
    <p>
      THE next day, Gertrude and her companions went along the banks of the
      haunted Neckar. She had passed a sleepless and painful night, and her
      evanescent and childlike spirits had sobered down into a melancholy and
      thoughtful mood. She leaned back in an open carriage with Trevylyan, ever
      constant, by her side, while Du&mdash;&mdash;-e and Vane rode slowly in
      advance. Trevylyan tried in vain to cheer her; even his attempts (usually
      so eagerly received) to charm her duller moments by tale or legend were,
      in this instance, fruitless. She shook her head gently, pressed his hand,
      and said, &ldquo;No, dear Trevylyan, no; even your art fails to-day, but your
      kindness never!&rdquo; and pressing his hand to her lips, she burst passionately
      into tears.
    </p>
    <p>
      Alarmed and anxious, he clasped her to his breast, and strove to lift her
      face, as it drooped on its resting-place, and kiss away its tears. &ldquo;Oh,&rdquo;
       said she, at length, &ldquo;do not despise my weakness; I am overcome by my own
      thoughts: I look upon the world, and see that it is fair and good; I look
      upon you, and I see all that I can venerate and adore. Life seems to me so
      sweet, and the earth so lovely; can you wonder, then, that I should shrink
      at the thought of death? Nay, interrupt me not, dear Albert; the thought
      must be borne and braved. I have not cherished, I have not yielded to it
      through my long-increasing illness; but there have been times when it has
      forced itself upon me, and now, <i>now</i> more palpably than ever. Do not
      think me weak and childish. I never feared death till I knew you; but to
      see you no more,&mdash;never again to touch this dear hand, never to thank
      you for your love, never to be sensible of your care,&mdash;to lie down
      and sleep, <i>and never, never, once more to dream of you</i>! Ah, that is
      a bitter thought! but I will brave it,&mdash;yes, brave it as one worthy
      of your regard.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Trevylyan, choked by his emotions, covered his own face with his hands,
      and, leaning back in the carriage, vainly struggled with his sobs.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Perhaps,&rdquo; she said, yet ever and anon clinging to the hope that had
      utterly abandoned <i>him</i>, &ldquo;perhaps, I may yet deceive myself; and my
      love for you, which seems to me as if it could conquer death, may bear me
      up against this fell disease. The hope to live with you, to watch you, to
      share your high dreams, and oh! above all, to soothe you in sorrow and
      sickness, as you have soothed me&mdash;has not that hope something that
      may support even this sinking frame? And who shall love thee as I love;
      who see thee as I have seen; who pray for thee in gratitude and tears as I
      have prayed? Oh, Albert, so little am I jealous of you, so little do I
      think of myself in comparison, that I could close my eyes happily on the
      world if I knew that what I could be to thee another will be!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Gertrude,&rdquo; said Trevylyan, and lifting up his colourless face, he gazed
      upon her with an earnest and calm solemnity, &ldquo;Gertrude, let us be united
      at once! If Fate must sever us, let her cut the last tie too; let us feel
      that at least upon earth we have been all in all to each other; let us
      defy death, even as it frowns upon us. Be mine to-morrow&mdash;this day&mdash;oh,
      God! be mine!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Over even that pale countenance, beneath whose hues the lamp of life so
      faintly fluttered, a deep, radiant flush passed one moment, lighting up
      the beautiful ruin with the glow of maiden youth and impassioned hope, and
      then died rapidly away.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;No, Albert,&rdquo; she said sighing; &ldquo;no! it must not be. Far easier would come
      the pang to you, while yet we are not wholly united; and for my own part I
      am selfish, and feel as if I should leave a tenderer remembrance on your
      heart thus parted,&mdash;tenderer, but not so sad. I would not wish you to
      feel yourself widowed to my memory; I would not cling like a blight to
      your fair prospects of the future. Remember me rather as a dream,&mdash;as
      something never wholly won, and therefore asking no fidelity but that of
      kind and forbearing thoughts. Do you remember one evening as we sailed
      along the Rhine&mdash;ah! happy, happy hour!&mdash;that we heard from the
      banks a strain of music,&mdash;not so skilfully played as to be worth
      listening to for itself, but, suiting as it did the hour and the scene, we
      remained silent, that we might hear it the better; and when it died
      insensibly upon the waters, a certain melancholy stole over us; we felt
      that a something that softened the landscape had gone, and we conversed
      less lightly than before? Just so, my own loved, my own adored Trevylyan,
      just so is the influence that our brief love, your poor Gertrude&rsquo;s
      existence, should bequeath to your remembrance. A sound, a presence,
      should haunt you for a little while, but no more, ere you again become
      sensible of the glories that court your way!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      But as Gertrude said this, she turned to Trevylyan, and seeing his agony,
      she could refrain no longer; she felt that to soothe was to insult; and
      throwing herself upon his breast, they mingled their tears together.
    </p>
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      <br /><br /><br /><br />
    </div>
    <h2>
      CHAPTER XXXII. A SPOT TO BE BURIED IN.
    </h2>
    <p>
      ON their return homeward, Du&mdash;&mdash;-e took the third seat in the
      carriage, and endeavoured, with his usual vivacity, to cheer the spirits
      of his companions; and such was the elasticity of Gertrude&rsquo;s nature, that
      with her, he, to a certain degree, succeeded in his kindly attempt.
      Quickly alive to the charms of scenery, she entered by degrees into the
      external beauties which every turn in the road opened to their view; and
      the silvery smoothness of the river, that made the constant attraction of
      the landscape, the serenity of the time, and the clearness of the heavens,
      tended to tranquillize a mind that, like a sunflower, so instinctively
      turned from the shadow to the light.
    </p>
    <p>
      Once Du&mdash;&mdash;-e stopped the carriage in a spot of herbage, bedded
      among the trees, and said to Gertrude, &ldquo;We are now in one of the many
      places along the Neckar which your favourite traditions serve to
      consecrate. Amidst yonder copses, in the early ages of Christianity, there
      dwelt a hermit, who, though young in years, was renowned for the sanctity
      of his life. None knew whence he came, nor for what cause he had limited
      the circle of life to the seclusion of his cell. He rarely spoke, save
      when his ghostly advice or his kindly prayer was needed; he lived upon
      herbs, and the wild fruits which the peasants brought to his cave; and
      every morning and every evening he came to this spot to fill his pitcher
      from the water of the stream. But here he was observed to linger long
      after his task was done, and to sit gazing upon the walls of a convent
      which then rose upon the opposite side of the bank, though now even its
      ruins are gone. Gradually his health gave way beneath the austerities he
      practised; and one evening he was found by some fishermen insensible on
      the turf. They bore him for medical aid to the opposite convent; and one
      of the sisterhood, the daughter of a prince, was summoned to attend the
      recluse. But when his eyes opened upon hers, a sudden recognition appeared
      to seize both. He spoke; and the sister threw herself on the couch of the
      dying man, and shrieked forth a name, the most famous in the surrounding
      country,&mdash;the name of a once noted minstrel, who, in those rude
      times, had mingled the poet with the lawless chief, and was supposed,
      years since, to have fallen in one of the desperate frays between prince
      and outlaw, which were then common; storming the very castle which held
      her, now the pious nun, then the beauty and presider over the tournament
      and galliard. In her arms the spirit of the hermit passed away. She
      survived but a few hours, and left conjecture busy with a history to which
      it never obtained further clew. Many a troubadour in later times furnished
      forth in poetry the details which truth refused to supply; and the place
      where the hermit at sunrise and sunset ever came to gaze upon the convent
      became consecrated by song.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      The place invested with this legendary interest was impressed with a
      singular aspect of melancholy quiet; wildflowers yet lingered on the turf,
      whose grassy sedges gently overhung the Neckar, that murmured amidst them
      with a plaintive music. Not a wind stirred the trees; but at a little
      distance from the place, the spire of a church rose amidst the copse; and,
      as they paused, they suddenly heard from the holy building the bell that
      summons to the burial of the dead. It came on the ear in such harmony with
      the spot, with the hour, with the breathing calm, that it thrilled to the
      heart of each with an inexpressible power. It was like the voice of
      another world, that amidst the solitude of nature summoned the lulled
      spirit from the cares of this; it invited, not repulsed, and had in its
      tone more of softness than of awe.
    </p>
    <p>
      Gertrude turned, with tears starting to her eyes, and, laying her hand on
      Trevylyan&rsquo;s, whispered, &ldquo;In such a spot, so calm, so sequestered, yet in
      the neighbourhood of the house of God, would I wish this broken frame to
      be consigned to rest.&rdquo;
     </p>
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      <br /><br /><br /><br />
    </div>
    <h2>
      CHAPTER THE LAST. THE CONCLUSION OF THIS TALE.
    </h2>
    <p>
      FROM that day Gertrude&rsquo;s spirit resumed its wonted cheerfulness, and for
      the ensuing week she never reverted to her approaching fate; she seemed
      once more to have grown unconscious of its limit. Perhaps she sought,
      anxious for Trevylyan to the last, not to throw additional gloom over
      their earthly separation; or, perhaps, once steadily regarding the
      certainty of her doom, its terrors vanished. The chords of thought,
      vibrating to the subtlest emotions, may be changed by a single incident,
      or in a single hour; a sound of sacred music, a green and quiet
      burial-place, may convert the form of death into the aspect of an angel.
      And therefore wisely, and with a beautiful lore, did the Greeks strip the
      grave of its unreal gloom; wisely did they body forth the great principle
      of Rest by solemn and lovely images, unconscious of the northern madness
      that made a Spectre of REPOSE!
    </p>
    <p>
      But while Gertrude&rsquo;s <i>spirit</i> resumed its healthful tone, her <i>frame</i>
      rapidly declined, and a few days now could do the ravage of months a
      little while before.
    </p>
    <p>
      One evening, amidst the desolate ruins of Heidelberg, Trevylyan, who had
      gone forth alone to indulge the thoughts which he strove to stifle in
      Gertrude&rsquo;s presence, suddenly encountered Vane. That calm and almost
      callous pupil of the adversities of the world was standing alone, and
      gazing upon the shattered casements and riven tower, through which the sun
      now cast its slant and parting ray.
    </p>
    <p>
      Trevylyan, who had never loved this cold and unsusceptible man, save for
      the sake of Gertrude, felt now almost a hatred creep over him, as he
      thought in such a time, and with death fastening upon the flower of his
      house, he could yet be calm, and smile, and muse, and moralize, and play
      the common part of the world. He strode slowly up to him, and standing
      full before him, said with a hollow voice and writhing smile, &ldquo;You amuse
      yourself pleasantly, sir: this is a fine scene; and to meditate over
      griefs a thousand years hushed to rest is better than watching over a sick
      girl and eating away your heart with fear!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Vane looked at him quietly, but intently, and made no reply.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Vane!&rdquo; continued Trevylyan, with the same preternatural attempt at calm,
      &ldquo;Vane, in a few days all will be over, and you and I, the things, the
      plotters, the false men of the world, will be left alone,&mdash;left by
      the sole being that graces our dull life, that makes by her love either of
      us worthy of a thought!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Vane started, and turned away his face. &ldquo;You are cruel,&rdquo; said he, with a
      faltering voice.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;What, man!&rdquo; shouted Trevylyan, seizing him abruptly by the arm, &ldquo;can <i>you</i>
      feel? Is your cold heart touched? Come then,&rdquo; added he, with a wild laugh,
      &ldquo;come, let us be friends!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Vane drew himself aside, with a certain dignity, that impressed Trevylyan
      even at that hour. &ldquo;Some years hence,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;you will be called cold
      as I am; sorrow will teach you the wisdom of indifference&mdash;it is a
      bitter school, sir,&mdash;a bitter school! But think you that I do indeed
      see unmoved my last hope shivered,&mdash;the last tie that binds me to my
      kind? No, no! I feel it as a man may feel; I cloak it as a man grown gray
      in misfortune should do! My child is more to me than your betrothed to
      you; for you are young and wealthy, and life smiles before you; but I&mdash;no
      more&mdash;sir, no more!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Forgive me,&rdquo; said Trevylyan, humbly, &ldquo;I have wronged you; but Gertrude is
      an excuse for any crime of love; and now listen to my last prayer,&mdash;give
      her to me, even on the verge of the grave. Death cannot seize her in the
      arms, in the vigils of a love like mine.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Vane shuddered. &ldquo;It were to wed the dead,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;No!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      Trevylyan drew back, and without another word, hurried away; he returned
      to the town; he sought, with methodical calmness, the owner of the piece
      of ground in which Gertrude had wished to be buried. He purchased it, and
      that very night he sought the priest of a neighbouring church, and
      directed it should be consecrated according to the due rite and
      ceremonial.
    </p>
    <p>
      The priest, an aged and pious man, was struck by the request, and the air
      of him who made it.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Shall it be done forthwith, sir?&rdquo; said he, hesitating.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Forthwith,&rdquo; answered Trevylyan, with a calm smile,&mdash;&ldquo;a bridegroom,
      you know, is naturally impatient.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      For the next three days, Gertrude was so ill as to be confined to her bed.
      All that time Trevylyan sat outside her door, without speaking, scarcely
      lifting his eyes from the ground. The attendants passed to and fro,&mdash;he
      heeded them not; perhaps as even the foreign menials turned aside and
      wiped their eyes, and prayed God to comfort him, he required compassion
      less at that time than any other. There is a stupefaction in woe, and the
      heart sleeps without a pang when exhausted by its afflictions.
    </p>
    <p>
      But on the fourth day Gertrude rose, and was carried down (how changed,
      yet how lovely ever!) to their common apartment. During those three days
      the priest had been with her often, and her spirit, full of religion from
      her childhood, had been unspeakably soothed by his comfort. She took food
      from the hand of Trevylyan; she smiled upon him as sweetly as of old. She
      conversed with him, though with a faint voice, and at broken intervals.
      But she felt no pain; life ebbed away gradually, and without a pang. &ldquo;My
      father,&rdquo; she said to Vane, whose features still bore their usual calm,
      whatever might have passed within, &ldquo;I know that you will grieve when I am
      gone more than the world might guess; for I alone know what you were years
      ago, ere friends left you and fortune frowned, and ere my poor mother
      died. But do not&mdash;do not believe that hope and comfort leave you with
      me. Till the heaven pass away from the earth there shall be comfort and
      hope for all.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      They did not lodge in the town, but had fixed their abode on its
      outskirts, and within sight of the Neckar; and from the window they saw a
      light sail gliding gayly by till it passed, and solitude once more rested
      upon the waters.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;The sail passes from our eyes,&rdquo; said Gertrude, pointing to it, &ldquo;but still
      it glides on as happily though we see it no more; and I feel&mdash;yes,
      Father, I feel&mdash;I know that it is so with <i>us</i>. We glide down
      the river of time from the eyes of men, but we cease not the less to <i>be</i>!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      And now, as the twilight descended, she expressed a wish, before she
      retired to rest, to be left alone with Trevylyan. He was not then sitting
      by her side, for he would not trust himself to do so, but with his face
      averted, at a little distance from her. She called him by his name; he
      answered not, nor turned. Weak as she was, she raised herself from the
      sofa, and crept gently along the floor till she came to him, and sank in
      his arms.
    </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Ah, unkind!&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;unkind for once! Will you turn away from me?
      Come, let us look once more on the river: see! the night darkens over it.
      Our pleasant voyage, the type of our love, is finished; our sail may be
      unfurled no more. Never again can your voice soothe the lassitude of
      sickness with the legend and the song; the course is run, the vessel is
      broken up, night closes over its fragments; but now, in this hour, love
      me, be kind to me as ever. Still let me be your own Gertrude, still let me
      close my eyes this night, as before, with the sweet consciousness that I
      am loved.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Loved! O Gertrude! speak not to me thus!&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Come, that is yourself again!&rdquo; and she clung with weak arms caressingly
      to his breast. &ldquo;And now,&rdquo; she said more solemnly, &ldquo;let us forget that we
      are mortal; let us remember only that life is a part, not the whole, of
      our career; let us feel in this soft hour, and while yet we are unsevered,
      the presence of The Eternal that is within us, so that it shall not be as
      death, but as a short absence; and when once the pang of parting is over,
      you must think only that we are shortly to meet again. What! you turn from
      me still? See, I do not weep or grieve, I have conquered the pang of our
      absence; will you be outdone by me? Do you remember, Albert, that you once
      told me how the wisest of the sages of old, in prison, and before death,
      consoled his friends with the proof of the immortality of the soul? Is it
      not a consolation; does it not suffice; or will you deem it wise from the
      lips of wisdom, but vain from the lips of love?&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      &ldquo;Hush, hush!&rdquo; said Trevylyan, wildly; &ldquo;or I shall think you an angel
      already.&rdquo;
     </p>
    <p>
      But let us close this commune, and leave unrevealed the <i>last</i> sacred
      words that ever passed between them upon earth.
    </p>
    <p>
      When Vane and the physician stole back softly into the room, Trevylyan
      motioned to them to be still. &ldquo;She sleeps,&rdquo; he whispered; &ldquo;hush!&rdquo; And in
      truth, wearied out by her own emotions, and lulled by the belief that she
      had soothed one with whom her heart dwelt now, as ever, she had fallen
      into sleep, or it may be, insensibility, on his breast. There as she lay,
      so fair, so frail, so delicate, the twilight deepened into shade, and the
      first star, like the hope of the future, broke forth upon the darkness of
      the earth.
    </p>
    <p>
      Nothing could equal the stillness without, save that which lay
      breathlessly within. For not one of the group stirred or spoke, and
      Trevylyan, bending over her, never took his eyes from her face, watching
      the parted lips, and fancying that he imbibed the breath. Alas, the breath
      was stilled! from sleep to death she had glided without a sigh,&mdash;happy,
      most happy in that death! cradled in the arms of unchanged love, and
      brightened in her last thought by the consciousness of innocence and the
      assurances of Heaven!
    </p>
    <p>
      .......
    </p>
    <p>
      Trevylyan, after a long sojourn on the Continent, returned to England. He
      plunged into active life, and became what is termed in this age of little
      names a distinguished and noted man. But what was mainly remarkable in his
      future conduct was his impatience of rest. He eagerly courted all
      occupations, even of the most varied and motley kind,&mdash;business,
      letters, ambition, pleasure. He suffered no pause in his career; and
      leisure to him was as care to others. He lived in the world, as the
      worldly do, discharging its duties, fostering its affections, and
      fulfilling its career. But there was a deep and wintry change within him,&mdash;<i>the
      sunlight of his life was gone</i>; the loveliness of romance had left the
      earth. The stem was proof as heretofore to the blast, but the green leaves
      were severed from it forever, and the bird had forsaken its boughs. Once
      he had idolized the beauty that is born of song, the glory and the ardour
      that invest such thoughts as are not of our common clay; but the well of
      enthusiasm was dried up, and the golden bowl was broken at the fountain.
      With Gertrude the poetry of existence was gone. As she herself had
      described her loss, a music had ceased to breathe along the face of
      things; and though the bark might sail on as swiftly, and the stream swell
      with as proud a wave, a something that had vibrated on the heart was
      still, and the magic of the voyage was no more.
    </p>
    <p>
      And Gertrude sleeps on the spot where she wished her last couch to be
      made; and far&mdash;oh, far dearer, is that small spot on the distant
      banks of the gliding Neckar to Trevylyan&rsquo;s heart than all the broad lands
      and fertile fields of his ancestral domain. The turf too preserves its
      emerald greenness; and it would seem to me that the field flowers spring
      up by the sides of the simple tomb even more profusely than of old. A
      curve in the bank breaks the tide of the Neckar; and therefore its stream
      pauses, as if to linger reluctantly, by that solitary grave, and to mourn
      among the rustling sedges ere it passes on. And I have thought, when I
      last looked upon that quiet place, when I saw the turf so fresh, and the
      flowers so bright of hue, that aerial hands might <i>indeed</i> tend the
      sod; that it was by no <i>imaginary</i> spells that I summoned the fairies
      to my tale; that in truth, and with vigils constant though unseen, they
      yet kept from all polluting footsteps, and from the harsher influence of
      the seasons, the grave of one who so loved their race; and who, in her
      gentle and spotless virtue claimed kindred with the beautiful Ideal of the
      world. Is there one of us who has not known some being for whom it seemed
      not too wild a fantasy to indulge such dreams?
    </p>
    <p>
      THE END. <br /><br /><br /><br />
    </p>
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