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English Pages 537 Year 1848
PAUL AKDENHEIM,
THE MONK OF WISSAH1K0N.
BY GEORGE LIPPAKD. AUTHOR OF " THE QUAKER CITY, " ROSE OF EPHRATA, " WASHINGTON AND HIS GENERALS, OR LEGENDS OF THE REVOLUTION," "LEGENDS OF MEXICO," "ELANCHE OF BRANDYWINE," "LADYE ANNABEL," " ROSE OF WISSAHIKON," " THE NAZARENE, OR LAST OF THE WASHINGTONS," " HERBERT TRACY," &C., &C.
"These Legend9 of the olden time, have for the heart, a voice as stern and beautiful, as the sad tones from the lips of the dying. It is true, they were very superstitious, these early settlers of Pennsylvania— believed somewhat fervently in astrology, magic, witchcraft,— were imbued with all the mysticism of their Fatherland— and yet with it alJ, they had an unyielding hope in Man, a childlike faith in God." Mss. Memoirs of the Revolution
T. B.
PETERSON,
No. 98
CHESNUT STREET,
ONE DOOR ABOVE THIRD.
Entered according
to the
Act of Congress, in the year 1848, by
T. B. in-
PETERSON,
the office of the Clerk of the District Court for the Eastern District
of Pennsylvania.
Stereotyped by R. P. Mogridge.
TO MY SISTER,
HARRIET NEWELL LIBPARD. With
hope that some portion of the purity and truth of your nature,
the
found embodied in these pages, in the character of Catharine Ardenheim, this
book
to you.
I
might inscribe upon
this
I
may
be
dedicate
page some name indicative of worldly
no power beneath Heaven like that which derives its impulses from a Sister's Counsels there is no wealth than can compare for a moment, with the priceless treasure of a Sister's Love. power, and worldly wealth, but there
is
—
When
your eye for the
I
—
when you discover that have written your name at the head of
time rests upon this page
first
without your permission or knowledge,
—
I beseech to regard the act as a word of blessing from a Brother to a Regard it thus, and at the same time accept it as a memorial of the years of Orphanage we have spent together. It is true, that with but a few exceptions, the name we bear, is only borne by those who sleep their last in the silence of the grave. I write your dame, here upon my book and ask you to remember the days when all was dark with me when my name was uttered with the hiss of calumniation, and my life poisoned by every slander that malice could invent, or
these lines Sister.
—
—
— ;
falsehood enunciate .vas
my
friend
;
but,
when my
by me, with the counsels of a " Brother God-speed !"
—
more than a Child in years, had on the earth of God when she stood Love, and said in face of cloud and danger
Sister, scarcely
— almost the only friend Sister's
—
I
!
GEORGE LIPPARD.
PROLOGUE. The
author was aided in the preparation of this work,
papers, letters, and other
MSS.
relating to the events
by a
and
series of
men
of our
Revolution, and especially to certain incidents, connected with the Wissahikon, near Philadelphia.
The
incidents detailed in the
remarkable and various character
;
home-life, the battles, and superstitions of olden time. the
MSS. were
latable, at least,
most
MSS. were
of a
presenting at one view, a picture of the
Some
portions of
written in a cipher, not only difficult, but utterly untrans-
without a key.
As
the pages in cipher occurred in the
interesting points of the narrative,
picture not only events
and seemed from the context
which took place
in '75, '77
to
and '78 on the Wis-
sahikon, but also events of other lands, and of distant centuries, the author was exceedingly anxious to discover the key to this secret writing. The
3
—
PROLOGUE.
4
reader will appreciate the difficulty untranslatable Cipher
At
first sight, this
or,
:
when he
beholds a specimen of the
perhaps, Cryptograph would be a better word.
of course, looked like nothing but a scrawl, without
object or meaning, but as entire pages were written in the
seemed
as there
to
the lines and their angles,
exertions
made key
construct a
to
same manner
be something like system, in the very irregularity of
—
curiosity
was
excited,
and the most strenuous
some
particular part, and thus
discover the meaning of
for the
whole.
After
much
effort, the
—
characters given
above were discovered to represent the word " Mount Sepulchre." The translation of the Cipher was then accomplished without much diffi-
which the word " Mount Sepulchre" occured was and the author discovered that it was a quotation from first translated some unknown Manuscript, entitled " the Manuscript of the Sealed Chamber," written by a Monk, in the Reign of the Eighth Henry, and
cult
.
The passage
in
;
connected with the events of the Wissahikon, by a thread of peculiar
and
important incidents.
The follows
first :
passage
translated
from
the
Cipher was
in substance
as
PROLOGUE.
5
" In order that these things which appear
to
you so
strange,
may
be in
some measure accounted for, I subjoin a passage from the Manuscript or the Sealed Chamber (written as you know in the reign of Henry VIII., by Prior Eustace) which connects the incidents of the present history, with an almost incredible tragedy, which happened more than two hundred years ago."
Then followed which
is
the passage from
the Spirit of the Original
MSS.
Sealed Chamber,
of the
You cannot
etc.
although
preserved.
is
" i*.
the
subjoined with some modifications of style, language,
MOUNT SEPULCHRE."
picture to yourself a nobler image of Feudal grandeur, than
which was embodied in the Castle of Mount Sepulchre. (Even I that write these words, Father Eustace' once, and
that
'
now
the Monastery,' near the Castle, but that
know
4
Prior of
plain Eustace Brynne, even
I,
so well the terrible deeds enacted in the Castle, can scarce
believe that a scene so fair to the eye,
was ever made
the theatre of such
unnatural crimes.)
The shire,
traveller
who might chance
to
journey through the woods of York-
suddenly emerged from the shadows, and stood upon a rock which
overhung a magnificent prospect of woods, and
hills,
and valleys, with
tranquil waters gleaming here and there, like the shattered fragments of a
great mirror framed in emerald.
And
in
the midst of this prospect, nay, in the very foreground, arose
the grand old castle of
A
Mount Sepulchre.
bosom of a forest. It was a woven branches shut out the sun, and invested the turf with a rich twilight shadow. It was a wide forest, and, yet standing upon the jutting rock, you might behold a wide expanse of green meadows, and luxuriant orchards, abrupt hills and vallies threaded by silver streams stretching beyond the limits of this forest to the far disThen, there were mansions too, breaking suddenly upon tant horizon. here a fortified grange standing amid oaken trees on the summit the sight massive
wide
hill
forest, full
rose suddenly from
the
of oaken trees, whose
—
of a gentle trees,
hill,
there
a farm-house, lifting
its
gray walls from orchard
and on the slope of some meadow dotted with sleek
cattle, the
sombre towers of a Monastery, rushed suddenly on the view. But, in the midst of this varied and beautiful prospect
which met the eye It
— arose the old
Castle of
stood alone on the summit of that broad
bosom of
the forest.
It
was
a
hill
strange structure
your sight massive walls, and lofty towers
;
—
the noblest thing
Mount Sepulchre. presenting at once
white, and gold floating into Heaven, and there a huge
gloomy parapet.
to
its
banner of
mass of dark stone
rose in the sunlight, with the green vines trailing about its
the
here a slender pillar like the
minaret of a Pagan Mosque, pierced the blue sky, with
flowers fluttering from
*
which arose from
its
windows, and
PROLOGUE.
6 In fact, the Castle of
Mount Sepulchre presented
at a glance, a gor-
geous combination of Gothic and Oriental Architecture.
upon
seemed Western world had met in
from the jutting crag,
it
ern and the
and reared
Many
this
though the
as
— when
was
the third Richard
East-
beautiful valley of England,
this
in the land
—
skill.
this Castle
image of dark stone, with four rude towers rising
a stern
heaven, and cell-like windows indenting the surface of
Then,
As you gazed
spirits of the
magnificent pile, as a trophy of their combined
ages ago
was only
it
its
sombre
into
walls.
a solid wall encircled the base of the hill, with a gate rising to
the west, and
beyond
wide and deep moat, seperated the
this wall a
hill
from the surrounding woods.
But the Lord of Mount Sepulchre followed King Richard, the Lion to the wars of Palestine, and were thousands only fought to win
Heart
a grave, he fought and
won more
fame, more
titles
and more gold.
Therefore returning from the holy wars, he added new lands
He hung
main of the Castle. glories of
Oriental architecture,
to the do-
gloomy walls the fantastic and between the sombre walls Pagan around
its
minarets arose, and where had been dark courts paved with unsightly
new gardens bloomed,
stone,
and foliage fluttering about the
their flowers
old castle, like rich drapery around a rugged warrior's breast.
This Lord of the day of Richard, the Lion- Heart, even changed the
name of
the castle
ancestors, but in
Tomb
the Sacred
And
so, as
:
it
had been called by the rude Gothic name of his
memory
of the
of Christ
— he called
you see
it
now
Holy it
the
in
—
perchance in memory of Mount Sepulchre. reign of Henry the Eighth, our wars,-
glorious King, he left the Castle to his heir, and lies buried in a Chapel
somewhere amid the mazes of yonder Castle, a Chapel which resembles a Pagan Mosque, with its mosaic pavement, its swelling dome, and quaintly fashioned lamps, even burning over altars of sculptured marble.
We
will stand
upon
this jutting rock,
Castle by the light of the It
summer
crowns the summit of the
and trace the features of
this
day.
hill,
with
its
towers and pillars gleaming
in the sun.
The
base of the
hill is still
encircled
adorned with towers, and two massive
mark
ing spires, t
Beyond
by
a
heavy
pillars
wall, but that wall
crowned by long and
is
taper-
the position of the castle gate.
which encircles a space of twenty acres or more, in hill, there is no longer an unsightly moat filled with stagnant water, but a stream of silver, which flows from the woods in the this wall,
fact, girdles
the entire
west, winds arounfl the wall like a belt of shining silver beside a belt of iron,
and then disappears
The base,
is
in the
woods toward
the east
space between the castle on top of the diversified with gardens, divided
hill,
by walks
and the wall
at its
fantastically arranged,
and adorned with shrubbery and flowers of almost every clime.
It
seems
PROLOGUE.
7
by some enchanter from the valley of down on English soil amid the scenes of Yorkshire. The Baron of Mount Sepulchre can gaze from the loftiest tower of
indeed, like a garden stolen
the
Arno, and set
his
Castle, and turn his eyes to the east, to the west, to the north, and to the
south, exclaiming as he turns,
For he
Henry
is
who
took to his arms a
New
bed a
—and
This
this
—
mine
is
Sovereign
our
!"
Lord,
the other day sat aside his Spanish Queen, and
New
Queen,
in the person of the witching
maiden j
be remembered that
It will
behold
all that I
a powerful lord, high in favor with
the Eighth,
Anne Boleyn. his
*«
Queen, he also took
at the
to his Altar a
now reigns at once Pope and many queens and religions as it
same
new
time, he took to
He
Religion.
set
aside the Pope, and
King, with the power
to set aside as
shall please his dread
Majesty.
The Lord Harry Mount Sepulchre powerful Lord, but he
is
of
Mount Sepulchre
young, gallant and
twenty-four years of age, with a form of iron and a
not only a
is
look upon.
fair to
fair face,
Only
shaded by
golden hair, he can wield a sword, back a steed, or win a peasant maid,,
with any Lord in Christendom.
He
is
the Last of his
he has taken no bride
Race
race, richer with the gifts
young heart with
—
the last of the
Mount Sepulchres, and
yet»
Rich with the possessions of his and favor of the King, he cares not to load his
to his lordly bed-
the chains of wedlock, or darken his
gay bachelor
life
with the frown of some jealous dame.
Would at the
I
might pierce the castle walls, and show him
head of the well-loaded board, goblet
some score of gay
in hand,
lords like himself echoing his
merry
to you as he sits with the faces of jests,
and copying
his courtly smiles.
He
and yet, his father the old Lord is not dead. gloomy tower, which seperates itself from the body of the castle, and mocks the glad summer with its sullen grandeur, sits an old man, very old, in faith, with the snows of ninety winters upon his white is
the last of his race,
In yonder
beard.
Many ness.
It
years ago he was stricken at once with palsy, and with blind-
was soon
after his eldest son, a dark-haired boy,
who
loved the
book better than the sword, and the air of the woods better than the perfumed atmosphere of the Count, left the Castle suddenly for other lands,
—
without once bidding Lord Hubert farewell.
For many years the old man awaited the return of his Son. He had now from Hungary, now from Italy, and again from Spain. But, the eldest son never returned. He was a wanderer upon the face of the earth the old Baron knew not
heard of him from various parts of Europe,
;
wherefore, but sat looking day after day from the tower of his castle, turning his eyes to every quarter of the horizon, in the hope to behold his returning Son.
— c
When Ranulph
" the
sway
of
Mount Sepulchre
of the Castle and
Ranulph was the name of
Long
man waited
the old
upon himself
returns, and takes
domains, then
its
I
can die in peace."
his dark-haired Son.
— not a day shone, but found him
in the
tower
But Ranulph never came. messenger with a letter, which enclosed a lock
waiting for his eldest born.
One day of hair.
knew in
was dark
The
ness.
came
there
It
a
Baron looked upon the lock of
old
that his eldest born
Florence
—
among
hair, with a thread of silver turned
was dead.
hair, read
Ranulph had been
its
black-
the letter
his ashes slept beside the Arno.
Blindness smote the old man's eyeballs, palsy withered his limbs sits
and
killed in a duel
even now, mourning
over his gaunt chest
— he
—he
in
the old tower, his white beard descending
sits
alone with his blindness, his disease and his
ninety years, while his gay Son, Lord Harry
Mount Sepulchre
holds high
festival in the great hall of the castle.
be remembered, that in consequence of the age, the blindness
It will
shall I
say idiocy
—of
all his
rights and
powers
Lord Harry had been invested with Supreme Lord of Mount Sepulchre, even before his father was dead. This had been done by our gracious Lord King Henry, who having power to set aside queens and religions at his the old Baron, as
oleasure, certainly has the right to invest an heir with all that pertains to
man
Lordship, even before the old
his father is gathered into the grave
vault.
And merry are his nights
are the days of the
anger of living
He
care
;
comes
man make
young Lord
riot to chill
in his castle,
and joyous
his ardent heart, neither can the
his soul afraid.
spends his days and nights bravely with his redoubted Twenty-
Four.
His redoubted Twenty-Four
!
Yes, for he hath gathered
from country and from Court, nay, even from lands
Twenty-Four noble Knights, who know no
altar
to
himself,
beyond the Sea,
but a well-filled table,
They share his gold, they partake of his pleasures when he wiles some buxom peasant maid with his dainty tongue they laugh, and when he points to them a man who hath done no God save a brimming Cup. ;
him wrong
A
— they
kill.
merry time they have
By day hounds
they hunt over ;
sure, that
together,
hill
and
at night the wine-cup
might
with mettled steeds and baying
and the board, with
suit the luxurious
not befit a page like mine to
Lord Harry and his Twenty-Four.
plain,
now and
then a plea-
gloom of an Eastern Seraglio, but does
tell.
Oftentimes at dead of night they issue forth from the castle gates,
mounted on
fiery steeds
and with torches
through the silent country, like so
The
many
in their hands,
go thundering
devils on devils' steeds.
peasant sleeping on his rude cot after the hard day's
toil, starts
up
'
PROLOGUE. sound of
at the
their
9
horses tramp, but ere he can look from his
window
Now
and then, a knight madder than the rest, flings his blazing torch into some farmer's hayrick, and the band go dashing and tramping on their way, by a light more vivid than the sun. Then, how their shouts echo through the woods as the hayrick fires the farmer's they are gone.
home, and forces the rude peasant and her bosom, from their slumbers
his
dame, with the
little
child
upon
!
merry band, Lord Harry and his brave Twenty-Four. wood, not far from the castle hill, stands a gloomy fabric, whose dismantled walls makes the wayfarer turn aside, even by the light of day, and grow cold with fear at dead of night. This deserted fabric was not long ago a Monastery tenanted by an idle •
O, they are in
faith, a
In the depths of the
swarm of monks and nuns, but, our Lord King Henry took a new wife, and a new Religion, and therefore our Lord Baron Harry went forth not long ago, near the break of day, and
and
story,
I
have not time
said they
It is
smoke and forth upon
to tell
it
but
'tis
a long
now.
had a merry time scourging the affrighted monks through
As
flame.
for the nuns,
some were
old,
and they turned them
Some were young and
fair to
look upon, and the brave Twenty-Four took them on their saddles
to the
and
castle, It
the night into the rude world.
made
a great stir
among
upon
their breasts
Some
the peasants of the Baron's domain.
affrighted ones with their garments torn,
were found,
and the marks of rude hands
after a lapse of three or four
days wander-
ing in the forests, startling the stillness with their ravings, and uttering the
name of Lord Harry coupled with
curses.
But they were nuns. It is
when
also said that the peasant talks in
low tones of
the
good old times,
old Baron Hubert held the sway, and his dark-eyed son
came kind-
ly to their cottages, and broke bread at their tables, yes, broke bread even
with these, the rude peasant people.
There is a prophecy among these base born folks, that one day Lord Ranulph will return and unseat his younger Brother from the saddle, and assume the rule of the broad domains of Mount Sepulchre. But 'tis only a vague superstition of these vassals,
who
are born for the
good pleasure
of such Lords as the brave Harry, and such Kings as the high and mighty
name, sovereign of England and France, DePope of the New Religion. low in the heaven. There are broad shadows over
Henry, the Eighth of
his
fender of the Faith and
The sun
is
getting
the distant fields, and the base of the castle hill
is
lost in twilight,
the pillars and towers far above, shine through the clear air like
while
columns
of living flame.
We
will descend
from
and enter the grand old
this jutting
castle of
rock which overlooks the prospect,
Mount Sepulchre.
PROLOGUE.
10
To
And sits
came
Italian
Lord Harry leaves the wine-cup to visit the old man, who in yonder tower, and from the old man's cell he
moaning
communion with
hold
to
since
'tis
to-night,
to
—
poor
—and
who
but a few days
tell
it.
'Tis said the
As
therefore a Sorcerer.
but our history will
said that
Little did
the dark-visaged Italian,
Mount-Sepulchre with his youthful page.
a Scholar
is
Twenty-Four hold
his bold
1
Hall of Palestine.
in the
blind and
goes
Harry and
night, at set of sun, the brave
high festival
for his page,
all.
they think, even Lord Harry, the Italian and the Page, that
which shone so brightly over Mount Sepulchre as it sunk below the horizon, would not rise again until the Three were linked together, in the sun
a
Crime
The
makes
that
the blood
festival begins
Thus
reads the
;
first
grow
chill but to
remember.
us enter the Castle gate.
let
MSS.
passage of the
in
The
of the Sealed Chamber.
reader will find the Sequel embodied in the pages of the present
work
;
connection with the events which took place on the Wissahikon, in the
years '75, '77 and '78.
It
will be seen that so far as
our history
is
con-
cerned, a chain of peculiar incidents connects our Revolution with the
Reign of Henry VIII,— the Wissahikon with the
hills
of Yorkshire.
With regard to "Paul Ardenheim, the Monk of Wissahikon," not a word more in the way of preface is necessary. The book is now before the reader stage of
;
its
it
has been with the author for years, always, and in every
progress, a book
That subject comprises
which he wrote from love of
the subject.
the lights and the shadows, the superstition and
the heroisms of our Past, and moreover covers ground hitherto untrodden the influence
which
the
German mind manifested
in the case of the
early settlers has exerted upon the history of Pennsylvania, and the cause
of
human
progress.
To
gentlemen of a
all
critical
ply necessary to say, that
World.
It is to
this
the
read a book, but simply
it is
Most Improbable Book
to
all
those gentlemen
misrepresent
to readers of a different
its
has been lingering about
kind
my
whose
object
contents, and bark at
—readers who
read a book with something of the spirit in which
A Dream
—
in
are
sim-
the
be hoped that this statement on the part of the author,
will be perfectly satisfactory, to
One word
is
who
turn,— especially gentlemen
witty in small papers, and profound in fashion-plate magazines
it
was
heart for years
is
never
its
to
author.
are willing to
written.
— a dream
whose
and shadows, strong contrasts and deep passions, I have found embodied, in actual form, in the rocks and hills, the streamlet and the gorge
lights
of Wissahikon. That Dream it " Paul Ardenheim."
I
Wissahikon Sep. 25, 1848.
have attempted
to
put on paper, and called
GEORGE LIPPARD.
BOOK THE FIRST.
THE LAST NIGHT. "I will send a Deliverer to this land of the New World, who shall save my peo; le from physical bondage, even as my. Son saved them from the bondage of spiritmi death.*'
(ii)
—
CHAPTER
FIRST.
THE WARNING.
Night came slowly down upon
the wintry scene, as the travellers,
narrow
the road, entered the
turning from
lane,
which
led
toward the
wood- hidden stream.
was a winter evening, sad and
It
beautiful as a pure angel, looking
from heaven upon the crimes and agonies of Man.
Do you behold the scene ? Come by this oaken tree, which stands beside intermingled timber and stone we will stand and
—
—
the rude fence, built of
gaze upon the valley,
bathed in the tender solemnity of winter twilight.
There
is
snow upon
these hills
The
shroud over the valley. gold
it
;
glows as with the
;
a white mantle glitters like a shining
western sky
last
one soft mass of purple and
is
impassioned kiss of day.
that sky, so pure, so transparent
and serene, the
And
up, into
leafless trees raise
their
dark branches.
Not a cloud
in
broken by a
dome, nothing
the
The very
blushing into gold.
slight breeze
— so keen, so
over the frozen snow, and hover near in the light of the
The
to
air is full
mar
that vast
bitter cold
it,
expanse of blue,
of rest, a deep repose, scarcely
as
it
— which seems
to
skim
scatters the shining particles
darkening day.
lane leads through the valley, winding along the ridge, above the
frozen streamlet in the east.
which towers
And above
that frozen streamlet,
on the
dark grey walls of a cluster of buildings, grow crimson in the flush of the western sky. Look upon them knoll
in the east, the
are they not beautiful
of
some
tering like
is
;
diamonds on
ears peeping from
This
A
?
leafless trees
the
its
rugged farm-house, seen through the branches
a mill, built of huge logs, with the icicles
motionless wheel
its
;
glit-
a corn-crib with the golden
snow-white bars.
view toward the
amid
east, but in the north, the
course of the
mass of rocks and woods. Do not turn your eye from these rocks and woods, nor pass them by as devoid 1 of interest, for they shelter the Wissahikon.
lane
is
lost to view,
They shroud from your
the dark
sight that stream,
which bears the name of
who
a
buried her love and her wrongs in its clear waters. By those strange waters we will discover the scenes the men and the women of this, our Solemn History.
love-maddened Indian
girl,
—
—
(13)
— PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
14
For
a solemn history, telling in every page of the strong agonies
it is
of love, fanaticism and madness
now
;
where a secret brotherhood celebrate
glow of an olden time
the cheerful
tory of
on
my own
this drear
fable
— no
winter night, to I
!
and passing again into
Think not
fire-side.
Think not
production.
solemn chambers,
gliding in the
their rites,
that I
that
have but
a his-
it is
sat
me down,
an idle romance, to coin a marvellous
tell
but write again the dark story which
is
—
many a dusky and blotted page dusky with age, and I am but the translator of that dread story, which in mystic ciphers, for seventy years.
It is
my
already written, on blotted with tears.
has been recorded
task to give the ciphers,
which look so unmeaning and sometimes appear so grotesque, the tongue and language of e very-day life. And when the shadows of this history gloom terribly before you, and its phantoms rouse wild and contending emotions in your hearts, and the words which fall from their weird lips, sound in
your ears
like the
you, the wizard
words of the dead, do not too harshly blame,
craft of the author,
who
has only invoked
I
beseech
—not created
these Ghosts of the Past.
Along
this valley, at the
hour of sunset, on the
our Lord, 1774, two travellers took their way.
last
As
day of the year of
their footsteps
broke
the frozen snow, their faces were bathed in the mild light of the winter
evening. It
needed no second glance
It is
true
tell
you the
you gained no knowledge of
They were
garb.
to
The youngest
relation
They were Master and
farers bore to each other.
attired alike in the
which these way-
Servant.
this fact,
from survey of their
costume of humble
toil.
of the two, not more than twenty years in age, was at
His step was firm and graceful
least six feet in stature.
;
his coarse garb
could not hide the muscular beauty of his chest, nor altogether
From
round proportions of his sinewy limbs.
waving masses of
was
light,
light
brown
veil the
his cap of coarse grey fur,
hair floated in the light.
His complexion
sanguine, almost florid, and his features firm and regular in
their well-defined outlines.
As he turned to the western sky, you might by the fading light. They were clear,
discern the colour of his eyes
large and brilliant, and in color, trembled between a deep azure and mid-
night black.
As he walked along
the narrow lane
cloth reaching to the knees
cast
its
The
distinct
shadow
far
—clad
and buttoned
in
a coat of coarse grey
to the throat
—
elder wayfarer presented a strange contrast to his
some companion,
or, to
his
manly
figure
over the mantle of glittering snow.
young and handThere was
speak more correctly, his .Master.
something intensely ludicrous in his look, his
gait, the outline
of his form,
the very twinkle of his small black eyes.
That
outline, described
on the frozen snow, was
in itself a grotesque
;
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON.
15
Imagine a round paunch, supported by long and spider-like legs arms whose excessive length is only matched by their intense want of high shoulders, surmounted by a small face, flesh hands huge and bony picture.
;
;
red as a cherry, round as an apple, with a wide mouth, small nose, and
diminutive eyes, shining like flame-sparks amid laughing wrinkles.
This was the servant, clad like
his master,
wearing the same garb, a fur
cap precisely similar, and yet presenting in every outline a contrast so
To
laughable.
of hair
to
complete the picture, you must not permit a single lock
wander from beneath
tightly over the forehead,
round
red,
No
that cap.
while beneath
it
—
The grey
!
fur
beacon
like a
is
drawn
— shines
the
face.
In the calm silence of that winter evening they journeyed on, their faces bathed in the
The
the snow.
same mellow
light, their
long shadows trembling over
red-faced servant beguiled the
way, with many singular
substitutes for conversation, but dared not speak.
bidden him
unclose his enormous mouth.
to
His master had
for-
Therefore, while the young
man, with a stout oaken staff in hand, strode steadily on, his eyes fixed upon the ground, a sombre thought stealing over his face the servant amused himself by a sort of dumb show, that gave a deeper grotesqueness to his round face and spider-like form. He walked like a man afflicted with a distressing lameness he inflated his round cheeks, until they seemed
—
;
ready
to burst
until his face
;
he rolled his eyes in their sockets, and distorted his mouth,
resembled a frog in the agonies of a galvanic spasm
last of all, placing
;
and
one hand on his hip, and twisting one leg into a ser-
pentine shape, he advanced with the graceful gait of a belated
Muscovy
young Master did not pay the least attention to his antics, nor suffer his eyes to wander to the ridiculous mimic who limped at his side. Presently they stand on the verge of yonder bridge of dark stone, which spans the narrow streamlet. Two roads meet beside the bridge one, the continuation of the lane, winds around yonder cluster of cottages duck.
Still
the
;
and
skirts the mill-dam,
which, framed in woods, sparkles before us.
The
other road, a narrow path, rough with deep ruts, and scarcely wide enough for the passage of little
two horses, when journeying
stone bridge, and
green pines. "
Which
silence,
road,
John
is
lost to
—"
view on yonder
abreast, leads over the
hill-top,
among
the ever-
said the servant, venturing at last to break the
and laying a strange emphasis on the Italicized word.
" Over the bridge, and
up among the pines.
It is
the nearest to the
farm-house."
They moment
crossed the bridge and rapidly approached the shadows.
In a
they will have passed from the soft glow of the twilight into
the darkness of the hill-side,
where the
pines, almost touching from either
and depending from the high banks, enclosed the road as in two high and almost contiguous walls.
side,
—
"
—"
"
PAUL ARDENHEIM OR,
16
;
"
We
are near the Wissahikon,
the
young master began.
you please," whispered the servant, with a peculiar contor" In Italy we were called Jacopo Jacopo, you remember Hang
"Jacopo, tion
— Jacob "
;
Jacob.
if
—
!
low, and smells like a greasy penny.
It's
Jacopo has a silvery
sound." "
We
What
?
Near
Wissahikon, Jacopo.
are near the
understand
course do you advise
the
In a few
?
farm-house— you moments we will
be there—"
The young man
hesitated, as though afraid to trust his voice with the
He
thought of his heart.
and seemed pines,
among
cast his eyes along the dark and
the silence and
to feel
shadow
narrow pass,
that brooded in those thick
In that gloom, even the cherry-ripe face
those grey rocks.
of Jacob, or Jacopo, as the reader pleases, grew sad, and his beacon-like
nose lost "
freshness.
its
What
course
Can
?
me
be possible that you ask
it
A
?
beautiful
pair of ankles, a fine bust, an eye like a star after a shower, and a cheek like a
—
its ripest side Bah What have month back? In Italy Corpo di Bacco ! " we managed these things much better
peach with the sun shining on
you been doing
—
(Fine oath that !) " Come to the point, Jacopo," and the master with his oaken " I'm
touched the servant
staff.
Give
coming.
month, wasting your time
The
!
for this
me
with
Some few
pass grew darker.
through an aperture
Here you have been
time.
in toying
among
this forest
for
a
when
damsel,
whole "
paces ahead, a belt of 'light broke
the trees, and
glowed brightly upon the summit
of a solitary rock. "
When ?"
echoed the young master, laying his hand upon his
ser-
vant's arm.
Jacopo halted
;
the strange
leer, half-comical, half-satanic
"
When
a
feiv
expression of his small black eye,
—were
visible
grains of white powder, quietly mixed in a cup of
wine, would do the work of a whole year of boyish courtship "
— that
even in the gloom.
What mean you
?"
The
voice of
—
John sounded deep and hollow
through the silence of the pass. " You remember Florence ? She was a proud lady You know how it happened, when we were in Pshaw !
this is but a
Peasant Girl
that
—but
Italy.
And
!"
These incoherent words and broken hints had a powerful effect upon young man. You see his nether lip move tremulously his bright eye grow brighter, his broad chest heave like a wave. " That was a proud lady, Jacopo, who first loved, then scorned me the
;
he gasped. " tone
4
"But Madeline
But Madeline,' " mimicked the servant, speaking
— " A peasant t
girl.
—
—
in a dolorous nasal
Lives on this out-of-the-way stream they
call
—
—
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. Wissahikon— or Wiskeysikeen
— or
girl in the
woods, and
you, Mister John
— spend our
meet the
little
that
is
we
should trap- the
Bah
little
We
We
visit
romance by
come from
the farm-house,
We
the dozen.
time, in saying soft nonsense,
We
I'm ashamed of you, John.
!
talk
and cage
bird,
17
some such name.
Philadelphia, disguised as a merchant's clerk.
it,
;
when
without a moment's delay.
managed these things much
better
in Italy."
As he spoke, back
started
a strange vision broke
— stood spell-bound with
glow of the winter's day. pines,
its
On
and uncouth
It
Was
figure.
a
man, or
the lonely
rose before them, a stunted figure, with arms folded over
hump
broad chest, an uncouth
rising
above
its
flaming coals, glared from
Two
waving hair above, and streaming beard below. The travellers saw those thin lips move, they those eyes, and between them
and the
eyes, bright
half-human visage, with
hideous,
that
its
shoulders, long hair and
beard, waving black and straight in the winter wind. as
it
them on the summit of
strange beast, perched before
?
the last the dark
crest shining like gold.
that crest arose a shapeless
some rock
stood alone, a bright thing
It
They
the wayfarers' eyes.
whose rugged brow broke among
the rock, over
They had reached
upon
involuntary terror.
felt
light, right
the vivid light of
across their path, a
long arm, with bony lingers, was extended. " Go back !" a voice was heard speaking through the intense silence
which had
—last man from
fallen
the pass
of an illustrious
this soil.
again.
upon
There
Back, is
— " Go
race— I
I say,
back
!
Heir of a noble house
stand in your path, and
and never
let
warn ye back
your footsteps press
this
sod
danger for you here.
death and judgment
to
your race.
That word Wissahikon means Even now, in England your father
—^ind here you come to plot the ruin woman, and grasp your death over her dishonored corse !" The echo of that hollow voice died away the travellers looked up the rock was there, glowing in the light, but the uncouth shape had van-
prays for the safe return of his son of an innocent
;
ished like a dream. It is
plainly to be seen, even through the gathering
side pass, that these
peared for a
moment
gloom of the
hill-
words of omen, uttered by the "apparition, which aponly, on the crest of the rock, had their
own
effect
— strange and deadening—upon the minds of the wayfarers. Jacopo sank on his knees, and began to pray in four or five languages. Having exhausted the calendar of Catholic saints, implored the assistance of Martin Luther, and other reformers, he concluded with the emphatic ejaculation
" Devil help
John
me
!
We
tottered forward,
didn't see
any thing
like this in Italy !"
and leaned against the rock, while the cold dew
stood on hi» forehead.
2
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
13
" Here
it
— " he madly pressed horrible phantom " — hands " Here — and warned me back
stood— that
rock with his
The words
Something there was
died on his lips.
night of that forest to impress his heart with it,
distinctly pictured in the twilight air, that
awe
the cold
in the gathering
saw phantom of a deformed man, ;
but even yet, he
human being, the cold lustrous eyes of a fiend. Come, Jacopo," he faltered, " we will go back This is an unholy Do you not see, that the very Devil warns us to adventure. Up, man with the face of a "
!
!
retrace our steps !"
Jacopo, still on his knees, glanced about him, with a nervous fear. " Let us forward to the farm-house. The night is cold as Iceland, and "
Come, my
we'll freeze to death.
" Fool
Dare you breathe
!
commanded you
lord
that
in
title
Remember, knave
?
—
woods
these
Have
?
I
not
he finished the sentence by a
hearty admonition, administered on the cheek, with the palm of his hand.
Then,
as
if
ashamed of his recent emotion, he
I
am
led the
way
through the
darkness "
Come
!
Followed by
going
over the snow, and
farm-house.
to the
trembling
his
among
servant, the
Madeline awaits me
young man urged
!"
way
his
the withered leaves, while above, the thickly
clustering pines extended their canopy, blacker than the midnight with-
out a
star.
Soon emerging from the shadows, they stood upon the verge of a hill, with the sublime panorama of the twilight hour spread before them. Above, that cloudless dome, deepening every moment into a more intense Beneath, a wide waste of woods, stretched grey and dark under
azure.
the twilight sky.
And over
vague mass, just where
that
it
touched the
horizon, far in the west, hung a solitary star, glittering in lonely glory,
through the silent universe.
A
low, musical
murmur sounded through
the woods, echoing from the
was
the night.
the voice of an impetuous rivulet, forcing
of ice and rocks of granite.
Through
It
came through
shadows which no eye might penetrate.
way among
its
It
the rocks
was the Wissahikon. came one long and trembling ray of
It
the leafless trees,
light,
shining like a golden.arrow over the frozen snow. "
It is
the farm-house !" cried Jacopo, twirling his arms in grotesque
—" That's something Ah smell see — hearty, good-humored — — delight I
like
the fire
that
!
!
I
fire
the I
good things already
inhale the incense of
Come, John, let us forward !" Winding along a foot-path, that led through the valley, over a frozen brooklet, and up the opposite hill, they soon came in sight of the farm-house. It was a massive edifice, built of alternate logs and stone, two stories in height, with a steep roof and some five chimneys, of which the largest, It was a quaint structure altosent into the sky a rolling mass of smoke. the sausages
!
— THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKOX.
the porch before the door, fashioned
windows narrow and low,
gether, the
of rough cedar, the steep roof cumbered with the projecting eaves.
stood
It
—singular
as
it
19
may seem
—
many
rude ornaments along
lowest part of a circular
in the
have been- scooped out from the surrounding
hollow, which seemed to
woods.
On one
side the portly barn, looking, for
the world, like a rich and
all
self-complacent citizen retired from the business of active
up
at
once
horse-chesnut tree, with
Near corn-crib was
branches. the
Along the
was
the barn,
life,
and given
the other side arose a giant
ponderous trunk and many and far-reaching on one side of the enclosures of the cattle-yard,
seen, packed to bursting with the ears of golden maize.
which led
lane,
to
the farm-house door, a line of vehicles
discernible, with the horses attached to them, carefully tied to
the
Vehicles of every shape and pattern, from the massive farm-
rail fence.
er's
On
meditation and corpulence.
to
wagon, whose sides had often groaned under the heavy load of corn
and hay.
to
the quaint gig
— sulky or
—
which shall we call it ? Monk's cowl, and a seat perched Doctor made his circuit among the calash
that wonderful affair, with a top like a
high on springs,
in
which the
village
sick and suffering of the country-side.
From
afar, the light
of the fireside flashed through the farm-house win-
An
dows, out upon the starlight night. scene,
— yet hold
!
strains
Negro
old fiddle, in the hands of the blind is
air of
year
to his
to sing
far
There
and near the country
and dance and drink together, and send the old
grave, with a chorus of boisterous joy.
In the snmmer-time, this farm-house
Say, in the month* of June, dise,
chimney corner.
in the
From
a festival in the farm-house to-night.
people have come,
Sabbath repose imbued the
of music break on the silence, music from an
when
is
a pleasant sight to look
seems
the air
like a breeze
upon.
from Para-
and the Wissahikon goes singing on, among the trees that dip into
it,
among
it,
ready
the oaks that
to fall
shadow
and bless
its
it,
among
the flowers that tremble above
waters with their white bosoms
month of June, have you ever seen the farm-house, framed of leaves and blossoms
The
horse-chesnut stretches forth
There
is
a wild
say, in the
drapery
?
deep and rich in their virgin green ing, all the while, its
—
in the
its
arms, clothed with broad leaves
— and shelters
snowy blossoms around
honeysuckle
trailing
the steep roof, scatter-
the porch below.
over the dark timbers of the porch,
and the very lane, leading from the woods
to
the door,
is
enclosed in
green hedges, two winding walls of leaves and buds and flowers.
its
Then
the roof of the barn stands boldly out from the background of the forest,
and the
fields
of the
summer sky
the clouds
around, tufted with grass, spread their carpet in the smile
—
sweep over
that sky, it,
which only wears a deeper blue, when
unfolding their bosoms
to the sun.
—
!
PAUL ARDENHEtM; OR.
20
Thus, framed
But now of
summer-time, smiles the quaint farm-house, a dark image
in
that dark
walls
its
and verdure.
in freshness
image only looks more dark and dreary, as the gloom
The
contrasted with the roof, covered with snow.
is
around are white
—look!
how
fields
and
the rays of the fireside go sparkling
shiniHg over the white mantle which veils the sod, and shields beneath
it
the hidden seeds of spring.
The
horse-chesnut springs with leafless branches into the blue heaven,
marking each rugged limb and little branch, in black distinctness, on the Winter is on the scene, and the woods which encircle the clear azure. farm-house and
white
its
black and desolate.
fields are
upon
lane, our travellers stood, gazing in silence
At the end of the
the
prospect.
The young man, with bowed, fixed
He was
home.
hands clasped on his
his
upon
his dilating eyes
even
silent; but
seen his broad chest swell, his
staff*,
his
head slightly
windows of the forest dim starlight, you might have eye grow wild with a more in-
the lighted
the
in
brilliant
tense brightness. "
Only a month since
first I
saw
home
this
the wilderness ?"
in
he
murmured, and was silent again. And yet a great many thoughts may start into deeds Only a month It is but a little while, the humble twelfth Only a- month in a month. of the long year, and yet, in a month, only a month, battles may be lost !
!
and won, nations hurled from masters beneath
silk
and velvet,
may become
and bosoms that pant
into slaves,
cold and
under grass and sod.
still
month And yet, in a month, the heart of a pure virgin may be her form, the shrine of a love at once passionate and robbed of its bloom pure, become the monument of her dishonor. Only
a
!
;
'
;
How
my
heart
It is
She
!
innocent
is
—she
trusts
in
me
— she
is
pure
!
"
To-morrow vict,
has twined itself about the
the image of this wild forest girl
chords of
a terrible word, that to-morrow.
It is
doomed
taking his last sleep in the
murmured alike by the conand by the woman, who,
cell,
surrendering her purity into the arms of shame, shrieks
it
fearfully
amid
the frenzies of her guilty love.
To-morrow smile
and
!
Look upon
the lip of the
young
traveller,
curving in
a
read his dilating eye, warming with a wild yet voluptuous light,
;
tell
me what means
that smile, that look
7
A
fearful "
to-morrow"
for the wild forest girl
The " I
voice of Jacopo
would suggest
that is,
was heard
in the
Mister John
— and
most
:
delicate
manner
in the
world,
my
Lor
without the least desire to appear obtrusive,
that there are
two of us here, one of
or forest girls
— stands
whom — not being delighted
with stars
a dev'lish fine chance of being frozen to death.
'
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. Look
at
me, John
very well
head, and from
Did you ever see a human
!
to smile,
but
my
the blood in
all
head into
my
my
21
icicle before
Ah,
?
Did you ever see a nose
nose
it is
my
thin legs has rushed into
like
that before?"
He
placed a long and skinny finger against that intense carbuncle which
tip of his nose, and looked at his master with a sidelong leer. " Come," said John, with an involuntary smile, " let us hasten to the
formed the
Madeline awaits me."
farm-house.
As he hurried along the lane, Jacopo crept closer to his side, and taking the arm of his master within his own, whispered these jocular words " Music yonder, John,— d'ye hear it ? Supper too Ah One can And d'ye remember if the girl is willing, why you have smell that an elegant house in Philadelphia, which maj| be her home before mornwhy, trust the matter to me. If she refuses is obstinate, or stupid ing. :
—
!
—
—
—
—
—
l
A few grains
losopher,
*
!
of white
powder, properly prepared? saith an ancient Phi-
—
conveyed into the drinking-cup of an innocent maiden, will
D'ye hear the
fiddle,
John
?"
CHAPTER SECOND. YOCONOK.
Within
the farm-house the details of a strangely interesting picture,
lighted
by
the
warmth
Yet
ere
we
enter,
of a capacious hearth, awafit us.
we must go back
to the
hour of sunset, and gaze upon
a far different scene.
The
rays of the setting sun, streaming through the thick pines, gave
their faint It
was a
trunks of pine and
fir
trees,
impenetrable wall around together,
shadowed
a ray of light
and
is
to a lonely nook in the forest of Wissahikon. more than twenty yards in diameter. The starting side by side from the sod, formed an
and uncertain light
circular space, not
—that
it
it
;
their branches,
like a roof.
It is
meeting overhead. and woven
a silent place, enlivened only
by
streams over the frozen snow like a golden thread,
gone ere you can look again.
The deep green of
the branches forms a strong contrast to the slight
mantle of snow, which has drifted into
this lonely nook. Yonder, between those two huge trunks, you discern something, which
may
be the resting-place of a man, and yet looks like the
beast.
lair
of a wild
— PAUL ARDENHEIM
22
This
may choose The trunks of
or hut, whatever you
lair
simplest style of architecture.
of door-posts
;
and
OR, to call
it,
is
formed
after the
those trees supply the place
the skins of wild beasts stretched from branch to branch,
compose the roof the bed
;
some wild moss
;
Beside that hut, or
stands a
lair,
scattered on the sod beneath, at once
home.
floor of the rude
rifle,
with a stock of dark mahogany
inlaid with silver.
In the centre of the scene, seated on the trunk of that fallen tree blasted last
A
summer by
Man, though
the lightning
—you behold the
figure of a
A single tuft of snow-white hair waves from the A blanket, much worn and tattered, falls back from
years. skull.
Man.
wears the wrinkles of an hundred
his dark-red visage
centre of his his shoulders
and discloses the shrunken^outlines of that once broad and sinewy chest.
His thin limbs are cased
in leather leggings,
and he wears moccasins on
his long, straight feet.
The downcast at
head, sunken on the chest in an attitude of stolid apathy,
The
once arrests our attention.
like
high cheek-bones, the nose curved
an eagle's beak, the bold arch of the brow, the forehead lofty
portion to
its
width,
in pro-
indicate an organization once full of physical
all
and
mental power.
But age has
fallen
on
that noble
kles on either side of the
head and iron form.
compressed
lips, the
The deep
wrin-
cavernous hollow beneath
each cheek-bone, the muscles of the neck, resembling cords of iron, speak of
life,
Those sands
years.
eyes,
that stern
now
whose sands have been
A
are well-nigh run.
glaring with vacant despair
upon
falling for
little
all
an hundred
while, and those dark
the sod, will be darkened for-
ever by the shadow of the falling clod. It is
in this
an Indian that very
we
One hundred
behold.
King.
forest, the child of a
and looked, with a quivering pulse, upon the forms of
this soil,
warriors.
His
wigwam was
here
;
slumber upon yonder
They
are
all
dusky
in its
rude cradle, quivered in
tree.
gone now.
the strange white race,
his
here his squaw, with the brown cheek
and sad, deep eyes, and his child, encased its
years ago he was born,
Seventy years gone by, he strode
His race has passed they are forgotten by people the woods, and rear their stone ;
who now
wigwams on the plain. Of all his race, he is the Last. Think of the powerful People, who walked these woods an hundred the smoke of their wigwams rising from every dell, the gleam years ago
—
of their many-colored
wampum
belts seen
from every
hill-top
— and then
behold this stern image of their Destiny
— An old man, withered by
the long winter of an hundred years, seated
alone in the silent forest, suffering at once from intense hunger and cold,
and dying by inches
!
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. Go too
to the
proud
cold lips
will die
— Hark
you hear
!
for
lips
low murmur from
that
Death-Song of Yoconok, the
will die,
is
two
his thin,
last of his tribe.
— alone,—desolate as the winter which howls around him—
but die proud and uncomplaining. " Ghosts of my fathers, hear my voice, for
nok that
old Indian
?
It is the
He
The
!
even though no morsel has passed his
for that,
He
days.
white man's home, and beg for bread
23
calls
it
is
your
child,
it is
Yoco-
!
The old man Red Men
But he is coming, Fathers cold— no corn, no fire is coming to the happy hunting-grounds, he is coming to the land of Manitto He is cold now, but soon he will be He is warmed by the sun that never shines upon winter or snow hungry, the old warrior, but there, the deer wander without ceasing, through woods whose greenness never dies " You are there, my fathers. Yoconok sees you, as you stand upon the The sunlight high mountain, which guards the happy hunting-grounds. is upon your faces. The smoke of the calumet encircles your heads. Yoconok sees you all he is coming There, the squaw of Yoconok, "
of the
is
!
—he
!
!
!
there his child
—
the war-path, for
never
!
—
Yoconok
is
all
Ghosts of
!
coming
and the leaf never dies
sets,
Thus,
—
his People
in
to the
my
song of
fathers, sing the
happy
where the sun
land,
!"
our imperfect way, have
we endeavored
and simple death-song of the old Indian
the stern
to translate
When
chief.
he spoke in the
tongue of the pale face, his words were few and grotesque, but in his
own
tongue, the language of his fathers,
upon him now, with
that glassy
Yoconok was
eloquent.
eye brightening into new
life,
Look
that chest
throbbing with quick pulsations, that brow raised proudly in the wandering gleam of the setting sun
!
Fired with that last impulse of rifle,
and stood
erect,
life,
he started
to his feet
with his chest thrown forward, as
His eye was lighted with
confronting a mortal foe.
and seized the
if in
fire
the act of
of forty years
ago, his nostrils quivered with a quick nervous motion.
— the old
Yoconok is on the war-path once more Let the foe come is young again he knows no fear !" It was a glorious picture in the history of the Red Man that "
!
—
warrior
;
solitary
nook, walled and roofed by trees, mantled with a slight covering of snow, with the dying warrior erect in the centre, his chest bared, his arm raised in the act
But
it
of battle.
was only
for a
moment.
The impulse
died away, and the old
warrior sank helpless and exhausted upon the blasted tree. in his grasp, but his
arm was nerveless,
his sight
As he sank upon the log, the blanket murmured in his Indian tongue
—
falling
dim and
The
rifle
was
fast failing.
from his shoulders, he
"
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
24 m
She was
wam
the only friend of the old warrior, but she
comes
to the wig-
home of the pale face. When Yoconok was sick, the White Doe came when he was cold, she built his tire— her hands fed him, when the- old man could go forth on the hunting-path no more. But Yoconok is dying, and the White Doe comes The warrior is forgotten the home of the pale face has fire and not. The wigwam of Yoconok is dark !" water.
The White Doe
no more.
dwells in the
—
;
Chilled by the intense cold, fevered by the want of food, the old warrior
sank exhausted and insensible on the log.
arms hung nerveless by his side. There was a step upon the snowy moss
His eyes were glassy;
his
From an
the rustling of a withered leaf.
ward
form of a
the west, the
woman
—a
light,
interval
soft-echoing step, like
between the
trees, to-
appeared, and a woman's face looked
upon the gloom of the lonely covert. wandering ray of sunlight shone over her brown hair, and gleamed upon her humble garb, as she stood, with her hands raised in a gesture of in
A
surprise and alarm.
She was
more than eighteen years, clad
a girl of not
in the boddice
woman,
coarse linsey skirt, which formed the costume of a peasant
Yet
early days of Pennsylvania. full
bosom, and from beneath
and
in the
that boddice displayed the outline of a
that coarse skirt
appeared two small
feet
encased in rude moccasins.
From
brown
the folds of the
cloak,
which hung from her shoulders,
her round bare arms were visible, with a glimpse of the white neck and
bosom rising slowly Yoconok !" she cried,
into view.
fairer
"
and, springing along the sod, stood over the in-
sensible chief.
The lighted
wrapt
sunlight, gushing
up her in soft
suddenly through an opening in the boughs,
light,
which played over her brown cheeks, and shone
unbound masses of her chesnut
the
man were
while her form and the figure of the old
shadow.
sudden
In that
upon
face,
looked like the countenance of a virgin
hair, the face of the
young
girl
saint, encircled in a glory.
"Yoconok!" she cried, in the Indian tongue, "awake! the White She brings you food Doe is here she has not forgotten you ah !"
—
!
she exclaimed, in English, " he does not hear me, he
Her
voice
pulse of lips
"
life.
to
call
to
is
dead
—
the old warrior's heart, the last im-
His glassy eyes glowed with
faint lustre
;
his motionless
were unclosed again.
Good
!"
lin'— White It
seemed
back
he muttered in English, with a deep guttural accent
Doe— Good
— " Mad'-
!"
would have made your heart beat quicker,
to
behold the angel-like
tenderness of that brown-cheeked maiden.
"
You
are cold,
Yoconok"
— and she pressed
his chilled
hands
to
her
"
"
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. warm bosom, and wound beside him, she drew
the blanket around his shoulders.
some corn bread from
carried on her arm, but the old
"
"
throat.
"
fire-water !"
The
he
25
man
Then
sinking
which she
the small basket
could not eat.
cried, clutching her cloak, as he pointed to his
—Yoconok has not drank two days — not good the Red the ground — " The Evil Manitto veins and puts Wait, — bring you water from the Wissahikon
Yoconok
is
dry
for
1 have forgotten the flask !" she exclaimed, as she tossed the contents
of the basket on
fire-water is
for
the in his Man. It burns his heart, Yoconok I will As she whispered these words in the Indian tongue, bending her lips to his ear, a quick, pattering sound broke the deep silence of the shadowy !
—
nook.
The young
her eyes and stood spell-bound, with surprise.
girl raised
There, not ten paces from where she stood, a wild deer was gazing her face, with
its
large eyes dilating as in
beautiful doe, with sleek
The maiden
wonder and alarm.
It
in.
was a
brown skin and slender and tapering limbs. the gloom shadowed her from the view
stood like a statue
;
of the cautious animal, while the sunlight
fell
like a scarf of gold over
its
quivering nostrils and dilating eyes.
At once the brave "
The
girl's resolution
was
me many
old warrior has told
the neck of a dying doe, will save the
The doe gazed
for
started
—
its
began
stooping her head,
life
warm
blood from
of the sick and starving."
moment around
a
glance of fear and alarm
taken.
a time, that the
the covert, with that peculiar
—
short ears quivering
to
browse the
soft
all the while and then, and fragrant moss, which
from the intervals of the snow.
Even as the doe lowered her head, the young girl Her bosom heaved tremulously it seemed a terrible ;
gentle thing,
raised the sin
to kill
rifle.
that
which fed so innocently before her eyes.
Again the doe raised her head, again elevated her ears and gazed all the while the rifle, lifted in the soft arms o e the young girl, was levelled at her breast. around, and
Her aim was not she murmured
the
most
—"It
rifle
on the
At
is
certain in the world, yet as she raised the for
Yoconok's life!" and placed her finger
trigger.
this
moment
the sunlight,
shifting,
played more freely over the
head and graceful limbs of the doe. while all around was twilight gloom.
beautiful light,
She stood encircled by
life !" murmured the girl, her finger placed upon the a sharp, quick, almost imperceptible sound echoed from the opposite side of the forest. As quick as thought, Madeline turned, and
" For
trigger,
Yoconok's
when
her blood grew cold. For, glaring from the
two
brilliant points
shadow of
a pine branch
which touched
of flame sent their rays to her very breast.
the
ground
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
26
These
brilliant points of flame,
were the eyes of a female panther to spring upon the uncon-
which, crouching on the snow, was about scious deer.
The young
saw
girl
crouching form, darkly defined on the snow-
that
covered sod. I
need not
you
tell
that her heart beat
and came, while the
quickly, that her color went
was grasped by arms,
rifle
that
seemed suddenly
frozen into stone.
She could not fled
!
stir
terror held her paralyzed
;
side, in the sunlight
browsed
her mild eyes into the
A moment
and dumb.
those fiery eyes glared from the covert
Still
on the opposite
still,
;
the unconscious doe, raising every
sun— glancing round— and
moment
then stooping her head
to feed again.
"
The doe must
die, or else
the panther will spring
doe will escape
upon
Yoconok's
me— if I
life
is
turn the
gone
If I kill the doe,
!
upon
rifle
the panther, the
!"
Thus ran her wandering thoughts but at once she was resolved upon While her bosom heaved in gasps, while the hands ;
her course of action.
which grasped she
still
the rifle, seemed chilled in every vein, with the ice of death,
had the presence of mind
to retain
Again the doe raised her head.
It
was
her statue-like position.
For even
for the last time.
as
her large mild eyes glittered in that passing ray of sunshine, a whizzing
sound disturbed the dead silence fore the very eyes of the
maiden
—
a dark
body swept through
warm blood spouting over the panther's jaws. The maiden beheld it all. Saw the fur of the
its
and glossy
in the sun, as,
the air, be-
— and the doe lay mangled upon the sod, wild beast glow sleek
with a deep growl, she mangled the neck of the
quivering deer.
The
rifle
was
Woe to kill.
to
the
For
Hush
raised.
crashes on the silence
young
!
That sharp, quick report
;
how
it
!
girl
then, the
now, woe
to her, if
her trembling aim has failed
jaws of the panther, which
heart of the doe, will rend the
bosom of
the palpitating
tore
the maiden, and
grow crimson
with her blood.
She drew
the trigger, and
But the sound of the gaze, in
dumb
rifle
fell
swooning on the ground. back to
called the old warrior
life.
As we
surprise, he raises his head, starting into a sitting posture.
At a glance he beholds the dying doe, with the blood smoking as it pours He does not heed the panther, which writhes
from the mangled throat.
upon the sod, its skull cloven by the fortunate ball. But tottering forward, he falls upon the sod, gathers the doe in his arms, and applies
He
lips
—aye, pure and — he drinks crimson
to the
fresh, as
drinks the blood
heart of the deer
his
the
it
the
wound
warm body in the
of
throat.
pours from the palpitating
current, with a
mad
delight.
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON.
27
Yoconok will follow his foe on the "*Ugh !* Yoconok is a warrior !" war path and drink his blood Starting It was some time before the young girl unclosed her eyes. from her swoon, Madeline saw that dark night had fallen upon the woods, !
but the light of a cheerful flame shone in her face, and baptized those
canopy overhead, with a crimson glow.
giant trunks, the green
to
She passed her hands over her eyes, and glanced hurriedly from side Before her, in the centre of the covert, a mass of ponderous side.
logs
were blazing,
their heat imparting a delicious
by her
of the place, while in the
ruddy
light,
temperature
to the
air
crouched upon the sod, his face glowing
side,
was Yoconok.
In one hand he held the calumet, from which he inhaled the peaceinspiring fumes of tobacco
in the other a piece of peeled hickory,
;
which,
inserted in a slice of venison, held the savory morsel over the hot coals.
There was posure
a
calm expression
— a look of
deep quiet, and dreamy com-
— upon each corded wrinkle of Yoconok's withered
When
face.
Madeline awoke, she discovered that her head was resting on
He had
the Indian's knee.
over a sleeping babe light of the fire
—
built the fire, and, like a kind nurse
placed her head
would shine
upon
into her face.
watching
his knee, so that the full
In silence he guarded her
unconscious form. "
Ugh
!
her eyes told the
White Doe
White Doe,
old
Yoconok strong With his fingers he all
good"
is
— " White Doe
kill
—
he said in English, as she unclosed
deer.
Blood save Yoconok
man hungry,
old
man
tore the half-broiled venison,
life.
Manitto
White Doe came,
dying.
and devoured
it
with
the eagerness of famine.
Madeline rose, and placed her hand upon the Indian's shoulder, and stood in silence.
The
streamed over her, and you might
light of the fire
freely read the expression of her face,
and gaze upon' each waving outline
of her form.
Around
that face,
whose
rich
the full lips and swelling cheek, hair.
Her eyes were
brown hue deepened
into vermilion
on
swept the unbound masses of her brown
large and shaded
by long
lashes.
Their color was
a soft brown, darkening sometimes into black, but always brilliant and
come forth in the purple of the twilight hour. She was by no means tall, but that which her form lacked in height, was supplied by its full and flowing outlines. sparkling as the stars that
Her shoulders
wave that young bosom comes gently into view. The skirt of coarse texture which descended but a short distance below the knee, gave some indications, by its folds, of the warm beauty of the maiden's shape. Her cloak had fallen aside, and her arms glowed with are seen above the coarse boddice, and like a
swells without breaking, her
the clear hues and round outlines, in the light of the
fire.
—
!
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
28 Altogether, a picture
That
gined. lighting
crimson.
fire,
more
interesting in
-
varied details cannot be Ima-
its
flashing over the bark of the encircling trees, and
up the dark green branches above. The snow blushing into Here the old Indian, a stern image of decay, seated on the .
arms clasped on his knees, the smoke of the pipe winding
earth, his
about his wrinkled features
;
young
there, a
clad in peasant attire,
girl
brown
yet with a ripening bloom glowing freshly from her
waving
and
face,
in the outlines of her virgin form.
"You must warrior's
arm
been myself
forgive me,
—
for
— she
Yoconok"
hand upon the old
laid her
For two days I have not seen you. But I have not two days. I have been wild mad There is a dark
"
—
!
cloud upon the path of your White Doe."
As she spoke sadly *
he inclined his head
in the dialect of the Indian,
one side and listened in evident anxiety. " Does the old man hear the voice of the child
Doe speak
the language of
Dreams
—or
to
does the White
?"
Madeline crouched on the earth by his
side,
and clasping her hands
over her form, murmured with a faltering voice
"Yoconok
is
my
For years
only friend.
She comes
the poor orphan girl.
face of father or mother,
who
to
has lived
stranger, in
dependence on others,
—Tell me,
father,
his
him now.
words have been She,
her
all
now comes
life,
by
to the old
the
man
fire
;
bony
in his
The
old chief turned
shone in his lustreless eyeballs, as he placed her
" Shall the White
Doe become
the
squaw of
—
beautiful,
something soft
palm
Gilbert the Hunter, the
dwells in the forest, or of this Stranger, of the pale face, and has no name ?"
" Yes
;
fingers.
Man who cities
of the
I
with her large eyes veiled in moisture. like affection
to
the
for counsel.
must do, or I will die !" Her cheek was flushed, her bosom panting she looked very
what
life
who never saw
who tomes from
the
—
would ask of you three days since, " you the whole story " The heart of the White Doe inclines to Gilbert, the Man of the Forest, but her soul wanders against her will to the Stranger who has
before
that is the question I
I fell sick, I told
no name ?"
—
" Yes"— faltered Madeline—" Yes that is it I love Gilbert we were children together I have always loved him. But this stranger, ah I who. a month ago, appeared for the first time in our farm-house his voice fills me with a wild terror His eye deprives me of all power !
;
;
;
Wherever yet an
No
!
move,
see
—
!
at night
he
my dreams
him, and
unknown power draws me toward him, and makes j Not love him For I fear him too much. I cannot gaze
into his
I
is
in
!
!
eye without a shudder
The
him
I fear
I
No
!"
old warrior did not reply.
His eyes were fixed on the
fire,
the
— *
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. pipe was extended in his
left
hand, but he sate motionless as a stone.
much addressed
her agitation Madeline had not so tarily
shaped her thoughts
in
words. Wondering
of Yoconok, she laid her hand lightly
With a shudder she looked Yoconok Spe?k to your
"
upon
into his face
child
!
dark world
29
Do
!
— the
continued silence
at the
arm
his
—
was
it
me
alone, in the cold,
not, but a faint light, like the last
ray of the expiring taper,
She flung herself upon him,
girded his gaunt form in her bared arms, and pressed her against his withered face.
"
He
is
— "Mine back
•
!"
He spoke
the
'cold as ice.
eyes were glassy.
not leave
glanced from his motionless eyeballs.
upon
In
the Chief, as involun-
downy cheek
Cold the form, cold the cheek, cold as the
ice
Wissahikon. dead !"
The
wild shriek of Madeline rung through the woods
The blood
friend!
only,
to life for a
moment
— he
is
dwell, and without one parting
of the dying deer only called him
dead, gone
word
to the
land where his fathers
to his child I"
She was an orphan, one of those wandering children of God, whom Those words are full of Alone in the world calls, Child
no one
!
meaning, but
to the
the orphan they
!
orphan they speak
mean poverty and
But she was not yet altogether from the cold
lips
in tones of horrible emphasis.
neglect, temptation
A
alone.
To
and despair.
few muttered words quivered
With
of the dying Indian.
the
last
gleam of
life
Do
not
playing over his motionless balls, he spoke " Fear this
put your not
see,
—do
Stranger
as the
He
is
Manitto of Evil brave, he
is
true,
him
fear
!
but hands that he can-
guide him on to a deed of falsehood and blood. Fear the stranger
not trust Gilbert
shelter,
!
trust in Gilbert.
—but dread
the old
dread him worse than hunger
With these words,
man,
ivhose roof gives
—cold — or death
you
!"
— spoken not as we have written them, but in an In-
dian dialect, which compresses a hundred separate .ideas in a sentence,
— the old
Chief,
who had
once grasped the hand of William Penn, lay
on the snow, as cold as the wind which swept his tawny cheeks, as motionless as the great twunks light, like th-e
unhewn
which encircled the scene, pagan temple.
rising in the fire-
pillars of a
Madeline was alone.
The same the
cheerful glow, which lighted
up her young
face,
shone over
mangled deer, and revealed the cold features of the dead Indian.
The woods were very still. Now and then, a war-blast, down some midnight ravine,
like
save the crackling of
the wild-wood
fire
died
a gust of wind howled, and* again, every sound
away,
in
an unearthly
stillness.
Her arms
clasped, her beautiful profile cut distinctly on the dark back-
ground, her large lustrous eye, her
warm
nether
lip tinted
by
the
fire,
stood in an attitude of deep sorrow, gazing into the face qf the corse.
she
!
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
30
As
the old
man
had folded his arms, and knit his brows
died, he
looked stern and unrelenting, even as a corse
upon
fiance
he de-
man at the Farm-House when I was discovered in these But Yoconok was my friend; to him I
True, the old
!
— a poor, forsaken
sorrows, of him
Now
was not alone! more desolate than
I
Beside the
the hour
babe.
woods;
my
;
was a warrior's
his red visage.
He was my only friend gave me food and shelter, since li
brought
there
;
it
While he
asked advice.
I
is
changed!
the fate of the poor
lived, I felt that
This cold winter night
Orphan
Girl
she knelt, and raised her eyes, and spread forth her
fire
hands, and through the canopy of overarching pines, looked up
how
0,
"
— God.
of light
step aroused her from her prayer
— with
to
over her brown face, that expression of child-like Faith
softly,
stole, like a veil
A
not
is
!"
— a hand was
upon her shoulder
laid
a half-uttered cry of fear, she sprang to her feet.
The Wizard
!
The
Ghost-seer
she cried, clasping her hands to
!•'
her breast, with an accent and a gesture of shuddering fear. "
Nay, maiden, do not
a Watcher, in
and
I
will
this
come
to
knowledge of
the
fear
me.
Old Isaac harms no one.
The Lord
dreary world. thee ;"
the Life
and
lo
which
He
hath told him,
is
but
"Watch
Isaac watches evermore, seeking
!
Eternal
is
Dost
!
fear
the old
man,
maiden ?" In the light of the in
fire,
stood a stunted figure, not more than five feet
back bent, as
height, the chest narrow, the
with years, the veins
if
swelling black and distinct on the pale face and dead-white hands.
That
face
— sunken on
the breast
— was
marked by deep wrinkles, which
traversed the cheeks and brow, and added to the spiritual look of those blue eyes, which
white eyebrows.
seemed not so much
From
to
shine, as
head of the stranger, long locks of straight hair
fell
waved in white masses, in the light of the fire. He was clad after the costume of the olden time. faded and worn, with buttons of polished metal pels,
descending half-way
kles around
the
to the
knees
;
;
burn, beneath the
to
a small cap of black cloth,
which covered the
like snow-flakes,
A
dark coat, much
a vest with white lap-
black stockings, which
sunken limbs, and large shoes,
and
glittering
fell in
wrin-
with silver
buckles.
This was the costume of the old man, whose form indicated extreme old age, or premature decrepitude, while his blue eyes
gave an almost hallowed look
And
to his
wrinkled
and white
hair,
face.
yet the maiden shrunk from that withered form, with her hands
clasped on her bosom, and
felt
her blood grow
chill, as
she encountered
the glance of those mild blue eyes. »'
Do
— and a
not fear me, maiden. brain, eqten
by much
I
am
toil,
an old
man — a poor
withered frame
and the labors of long and dreary win-
—
—
:
—
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. Passing through the woods,
ters.
and
aged Indian
this
come "
to his aid.
Do
not
—
indeed
:
I will
man were
I
was about
cried Madeline, rushing forward, as the
!"
your hands upon him. For they
" they say, that you" What do they speak ill of me ?" asked the old man, raising eyes " Of me A poor old withered man, who lives apart from
say" "
a shudder pervaded her form
!
world, and cares not for
They
"
nor for
idle uproar,
its
you have sold yourself
say, that
its
to the
all
?" and a smile stole over his wrinkled face
my
fire-side gossip,
body of your
friend
—
good
will
girl.
have
it
of Christian burial. to the Devil ?"
rites
" But
let
— Does
that
the tranquil
— " Never
Now mark me — I will conveyed to my house
side of the Wissahikon, near the Schuylkill
the great
of Mankind,"
will, to
glance of the stranger.
" Is that
mild
his
petty joys ?"
Enemy
gasped Madeline, her eyes enchained, against her
such
to
placed upon the arms of the dead Indian
" For the sake of God, do not place
— —
his last, as
secure Christian burial for his corse."
—do not touch him
hands of the old
witnessed the scene between you
I
saw him gasp
I
31
—and
bury
heed
take the dead
on the other with
it,
look like the act of one
who
all is
the
sold
Yoconok rest among his woods and trees. What need of a him ? Let him be buried among his pines, where the
cold graveyard for
Song of the Wissahikon
slumber, and a granite rock will
will cheer his
pillow his head."
The Maiden,
in her earnestness,
advanced and
hand upon the
laid her
"Wizard's" shoulder.
Yoconok
11
shall
With
a
me
go with he
I will be his friend, after
!"
he calmly
dead.
is
Hah
"
said.
!
What
He
has no friends
is this I
;
see ?"
sudden gesture he seized the white hand, -which rested on his his blue eyes dilating until they seemed fired with mad-
— — turned the palm towards the
shoulder, and
ness
No
"
your sight the
!
I
read
it,
in the lustre of
of a changeless Destiny
fire
honor and a Sudden Death "
It
fire
Bridal ring shall ever cross this hand
is false !"
will
!
Alas
!
No
!
child shall ever bless
your eye, which Alas
!
I
pity and
is I
lighted with rejoice
!
Dis-
soon be yours !"
gasped Madeline, her cheek pale as marble— " In the loves us all, I defy your Master, who only hates and
name of God, who cannot love !"
She covered her
The
old
face,
and stood with her head bowed, near the fire. her trembling form with a look of overwhelm-
man gazed upon
ing compassion, which
was soon displaced by an expression of singular triumph. There was an unnatural joy in his parting lips, his eyes sparkling with lifht, his face flushed with crimson.
Not
a
word was spoken
the interest of the scene.
;
a silence, unbroken
by
a whisper, deepened
— PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
32
M Pity
me
me
cried Madeline, as she raised her eyes
!"
an early death, and of
to
Isaac did not answer;
ah
deaths,
all
I
not
dare not speak
doom !"
it
mingled expression of triumph and
the
still
!
—" Do
pity agitated his aged features.
Come
tS
Black David," said Isaac the Wizard, turning toward the
hither,
darker recesses of the covert
—
"
Take
this
body and bear
to
it
my
house.
Dost hear?"
From by
the
—already appalled — beheld with indescribable
shadows advanced a form, which Madeline
the
words of the old
man
fear.
was a miserable wreck of humanity, not more than four feet in height,' with the crooked limbs trembling beneath the huge body, the It
back
hump, and
rising in a shapeless
said, horse-like face, resting
mass of straight black " Y-e-e-s, Master
From
!
mass of
the long, unnatural,
we had
almost
on the breast, and hidden beneath a shaggy
hair.
here
I'se
!
What
wouldst do with 'un ?"
two large eyes shot a strange unnatural gleam, as the fire, rising in a sudden flame, tinted with strong light, the grotesque points of this deformed figure. that
He was
hair,
kind of mantle, wrapping the deep
a coarse garb, a
clad in
chest and the protuberant
hump, with
the
arms appearing from
covered with loose sleeves of dark cloth. in tangled masses,
Strange
His straight black
formed the only covering
to say, the
folds,
its
hair, falling
for his head.
hands were small, white and delicate, presenting a
to the chaotic physical vigor of the deformed man. body of Yoconok dost hear me ? I would give him ChrisBear it to my mansion. I will reward you. Go !" tian burial. Madeline for a moment seemed deprived of all power of motion or speech. All the wild legends which she had heard, concerning the old
strong contrast "
Take
—
the
man, Isaac the Wizard, and her brain
;
she
felt
his Familiar Spirit,
Black David, crowded on
awe pervade her
veins and pale her cheek.
a creeping
In this pale-faced old man, she beheld a Servant of the Evil one
;
in
whose physical deformity was at once hideous and pitiable, she saw an Incarnate Demon. Such was the Superstition of the olden time, when every old woman, not remarkable for personal beauty, was burned as a Witch, and old men, not regular in attendance at Meeting, and somewhat given to burning canthe poor wretch,
.
dles late at night,
"
Do
not touch
were choketl to death, as Wizards. He was my friend !"
him
!
Madeline started forward, and wizard. for
a
A
faint
moment
laid
her hand upon the arm of the
smile was visible on the old man's face
he regarded
;
her countenance, glowing with an intensity of fear, and
then taking her arm gently within his own, led her from the^kre. " Come," he said, " the wood is cfark, the way lonely. I will wait .
upon you
to the
farm-house door.
Come
—never
fear
me
!
They
tell
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. sad stories of
my
hear— and,
life, I
ha, ha
linked with me, in an infernal compact in those black eyes of thine,
He
her gaze
is
craft !"
is
all
looked up into his face with some-
more of
—he led her
the light streamed over the
there
— who
thing of reverence for his age, in
— more wizard —Remember, David
than in
led the trembling girl
manifested
my
poor Black David here,
!
Come
!
33
lore.
fear for his supernatural character,
shadows of the
the
into
covert, and
deer, the dead chieftain, and the de-
mangled
formed man.
Through
meshes of
the
his tangled hair,
and the maiden, and then, like a beast on the
fire,
his white
he gazed
its
man
the old
after
haunches, crouched beside
hands supporting his cheeks, while his elbows rested
on his knees.
The
was swept aside from ruddy fire-light.
hair
his face, and his features appeared
distinctly, in the
must be confessed that the face was hideous, and its unnatural length, manner in which it seemed to rest directly on the chest, made the resemblance which it bore to the head of a horse, more palpable and It
the
repulsive.
The brow was heavy chin round and
full
;
;
the nose long and thin, the
the eyes deep-set and
was the general character of straight
masses on either side
;
full
that face, with
mouth
of intense
small, the
Such
light.
thick
the hair falling in
but the sudden glow of the
fire
made
the
cheek-bones seem unnaturally prominent, the hollow beneath more deep
and cavernous, and gave the brow a bolder outline, the
lips a
more decided
scorn, the eyes a wilder light.
He
crouched by the
snow-mantled earth.
The massy
winter blast, and the
form darkly defined against the
his distorted
fire,
pine-branches
trees around,
above
bent slowly
glowed from black
to
the
into crimson.
Spreading forth his hands, which looked as white and delicate as the
marble hands of a sculptured Venus, he seemed absorbed in his
own
wandering thoughts.
He
spoke
the echo of his voice broke the deep silence, with a start-
;
ling emphasis,
and yet that voice was
tones of a beautiful
soft, thrilling
and musical, as the
woman.
— a wilderness of strange memories thus manner or his language — " In a long while — look back
" Three hundred years
!"
it is
he murmured, without the slightest indication of ignorance or vulgarity in his
truth,
There was
the bluff Harry,
the establishment of the to
be criminal
Mary
called
;
renowned
to
it is
!
number of his wives, and Pale-faced Edward, too young
for the
Reformation.
Lady Grey, who passed from
the throne
Bloody, and Elizabeth called Virgin
;
to
the block
;
James the Pedant;
—
Charles the Martyr and Charles the Libertine all are gone long ago. Dust and ashes, despite their fine linen and royal blood. Yet I see them all again, see them as plainly as when— Tut Tut M !
3
!
——
PAUL ARDENHEIM
3i
He more
glanced
around the covert, with his deep-set eyes kindling
vivid light
"They may
OR,
;
v
:
me
hear
—
me Madman
in a
—ho!
ho! Then to the Three hundred years A great while to live, but wearisome, very, very wearisome To see onecentury whirling along, bubbling and frothing just like the others, and call
with the old dotard
prison or the scaffold
!
!
!
only bubbling and frothing with a more the great abyss, called
Time
Past,
I am weary of it all, and" The body of the Indian Chief,
Ages
uproar as
goes
it
down
in
!
warmth of
He
"
pitiful
which has swallowed up the Dead
And
the
fire,
sleeps well
met
But
!
and motionless
resting stiff
in the
his gaze.
as for
me"
as he bent his face nearer to the fire,
as in a gesture of supplication,
and clasped
white hands,
his
might be seen that there were the eyes of the Deformed Maniac. it
tears in
CHAPTER THIRD. THE FARM-HOUSE. "
Come,
yourselves
folks, help
It's
!
and we'll send the dull old fellow good things under his easy
Some
!
down
You
see, neighbor, I
Hey
?
end of the table
there, at 'tother
Spurtzelditscher
Dutch.
and a bowl of good liquor
of the turkey, Parson
bor
in
belt,
?
—a-h
swear
the last night of the
English
in
There's something that
!
fat I
How
!
Try
?
There's
!
Old Year,
his grave, with a hearty store of
to
to
are
make him
a slice of this
and
lean
!
ham, neigh-
By Thun-der
sometimes wish
stirs the heart, in
sleep
you comin' on
I
!
could swear
a solid, deep-chested
—
Dutch oath! Now then, who's for the cider? a-h, that's the stuff! hisses and froths like an old maid, who has been caught lying about her neighbors— the rale October juice of the red-streaked Spitzenberger, as I'm an honest man
The
!"
old man, at the head of the table, raised the hot poker with one
hand, while the other rested upon the edge of the broad bowl, which was filled
to
the brim with the
steaming cider.
It
was a curious-looking
bowl, fashioned of some strange wood, hard as iron, with an uncouth
name, and crowded
all around most grotesque character.
its
capacious sides with carvings of the
"
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. an old man, but you must not picture
He was
35
yourself a spare form,
to
or lantern jaws, or eyes bleared and glassy.
Beneath the ample folds of his brown waistcoat, a rotundity that would have made the fortunes of a dozen Aldermen, was hidden his hair, eyebrows and long beard, were all white as snow, yet his round cheeks ;
glowed with
as
tints
warm and
which make an unbroiled liver. The eyebrows on his forehead, and hung
rosy, as those
look lovely in the eyes of a good
sirloin steak
were white, as though the snow had fallen moment, ere it melted before the summer of
And
his cheeks.
there for a
from beneath those shaggy outlines, two eyes, very small, very black,
yet,
and piercing as daggers' points, glittered like newly lighted coals. together
plump like a
As
it
was
a face that
would have warmed
and unctuous look,
outline,
huge red pear, ripening
in the
form of the old man,
to the
nothingness, by
its
Al-
hungry man, with
its
say nothing of the nose, which shone
autumnal sun.
would have scared
it
his chest that
a famine into
His broad shoul-
very picture of eloquent fatness.
sinewy arms,
ders, his
to
a
shook with laughter, deep and soshirt, his hands round and plump,
norous, beneath the lace ruffles of his
glowing
to the
very finger
who seemed
fellow,
icicles
floor,
from the
grasped the corpulent bowl, frothing
tion
health,
— " That's
while
I
think
As he
my
the stuff to
o't,
down
set
good folks
warm
!
fire-place to the
blazing point
its
in
In
the other he
the heart and set the brain a-fire
King George
here's a health to his Majesty,
And.,
!
!"
the bowl, he slightly inclined his head to one side, and
one eye half-closed, along the
was an
;
which
doorway.
to the brim with fragrant cider. A-a-h !" with a sigh of deep satisfac-
smoothing down his white beard, with his plump
It
a hale old
new bloom on
of age.
one hand he raised the poker, with
Your
time, and catch
seated in his great arm-chair, at the head of the table,
extended along the sanded
"
— ah, he was
with corpulence,
tips
grow younger with
from the very
his cheeks,
He was
to
fingers,
he glanced with
well-filled board.
In the foreground, a huge turkey, brown was lengthened out with a savory panorama of
interesting scene.
and smoking
;
the view
ham, chickens and venison, interspersed with white pyramids of home-made bread, and bowls of steaming cider. This long table, groan-
boiled
ing under the weight of substantial cheer,
some twenty-five
glowing between his farmer, with
country
black
bony hands and
girls,
"A
fat
ears,
little
—very—
was framed by
;
the faces of
the parson, with his red face
cap and blacker iron frame
gown
:
there the
portly
yonder a group of rosy-cheeked
and beyond them, a Philadelphia lawyer, lank as a bean-
pole and devouring as a Famine.
ened the
Here
or thirty guests.
The
knives and forks deaf-
clatter of
and was only interrupted by a chorus, something like
more of
the
ham
!" cried
the
Parson
;
this
:
"red lean and white
— PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
36
"Some of the chicken, Dolly ?" "legs or breast ?" n Cider
Your
exclaimed a gallant country beau
—
Royal stuff, that !" was the rewhose broadcloth shone beside the country home-spun " Did you say, you would like a piece of this chicken ?" " The salt, if you please. A little ham. There. Some turkey, A Thank you for the corn-beef. Pass the venison. touch of that rabbit. Cider— yes, sir, cider. Health, sir. Little more ham Pass the pepper. Just a hint of that 'possum." Some more turkey no This was the Philadelphia lawyer, whose knife and fork seemed impelled by a mechanical power of unknown capacities, while his plate went round the orbit of the table like a planet, somewhat hasty and His lank jaws were never still. He seemed to irregular in its motions. have been placed upon this earth, only to solve a great problem, to wit, how much can a man devour whose body resembles a lath or a bean-pole, and how long will it require for him to eat himself into an apoplexy ? " Dat rabbit ish nish Mein Gott Neighbor Perkenpine !" was the remark of Neighbor Spurtzelditscher, a short, thick, brown-faced farmer, in linsey-wolsey, who was commonly called " Spurtz" for the
mark
?
health, neighbor
!
of a city merchant,
—
!
—
!
!
!
sake of brevity and an easy
Two
life.
farmers sat beside each other, engaged in earnest conversation,
must be confessed was carried on with perseverance and ingenua wider field. You may see them, near the lower end of the table, both very old men, alike thin, withered and greyhaired, and The one this way, cannot speak a syllable of attired in linsey-wolsey. which
it
worthy of
ity,
any language but English, and his friend understands never a word, that But still, with all these obstacles, which to not spoken in German. the vulgar mind might appear insurmountable, they maintain a very inis
telligible,
nay, interesting conversation.
Neighbor Wampole, the farmer who speaks English and English only, poises the white breast of a chicken on his fork, gazes intently in his
neighbor's face, and utters distinctly his condensed opinion 11
Good /" he
To
this
word, that
cries,
and the chicken disappears.
emphatic remark, neighbor Schneider, is
not German, replies
opossum, and displaying
it
for
a
who
cannot speak a
by elevating a savory
moment
slice of the
before his neighbor's eyes;
which he significantly remarks "Goot!" and the opossum vanishes.
after
The bowls
are
significant glance,
touched
;
one drinks
to the other's health
;
again that
and again that interesting interchange of thought—
"Good/" "Goot!" Near these intelligent and communicative neighbours, and opposite parson, was seen a gentleman of some forty years, remarkable for
the his
THE MONK OF THE VVISSAHIKON.
G7
curls, his velvet coat, silver shoe-
immense wig, with flowing flaxen
This was the
buckles, and prominent nose, curved like a parrot's beak.
—
Doctor of the country-side, famous for the potency of his " hum ha 1" which was supposed to comprise a whole encyclopaedia of medical knowledge,
and
for the peculiarly
dexterous application of his gold-headed cane
to the side of his nose.
He
never had
much
and on the present occasion, merely
to say,
terrupted the important duty of supper, with such remarks as
and
in verity, this
For
his
stewed rabbit
in-
— " Soberly
a tooth-some dish !"
is
almost unbroken silence, he seemed to continually apologize
by drinking deep draughts of the steaming cider. Indeed, a superficial observer of human nature would have supposed, at first sight, that the Doctor was in liquor, or that the liquor was in the Doctor for his head went bobbing from side to side like a cork on a wave, and he brushed imaginary flies from the tip of his nose, with great energy and perse;
verance.
And while the supper-party went gayly on by the light of the homemade candles, which were placed along the board, there was a fire of huge
and crackling within the broad arch of the spacious
logs, blazing
hearth.
The
crimson flashes over the faces of
light of that roaring fire fell in
the guests, and lighted
up with
its
hearty glow every nook and corner of
the farm-house hall.
Would you like Time? Then strip your
to
look upon that Picture of Comfort in the Olden
imagination of
all
modern
ideas,
and prepare
for a
picture of 1774, as widely contrasted with 1847, as a hale old Revolu-
tionary soldier, with his rosy cheeks and snow-white hair, compares with
a Chesnut Street dandy, remarkable only for his slim waist and sublimely insipid face.
Do not expect No carpets from
to
behold any thing like imported carpet on the
Brussels or from
Smyrna conceal
floor.
the sanded boards,
nor are the walls covered with hangings of French paper.
There are
no chairs with narrow seats and dangerous backs, looking like chairs that never
ment of
were healthy, but stricken with consumption from the moNor is there any diminutive stove, glaring with the
their birth.
you behold tables with marble tops, or name, adorned with showy lamps, or winand sills as narrow as a bigot's soul.
pestilence of anthracite; nor do
mantel-pieces,
unworthy of
the
dows with Venitian blinds, Look around this farm-house
hall
and see what comfort was
like, in
the olden time.
The
upon the sanded floor, and which support the ceiling. The walls snow, and the window-frames deep-sunken and capacious*
light ef the great hearth-fire sparkles
glows along those huge are white as
rafters
— :
PAUL ARDENHEIM
38 In one
round Dutch
But
the hearth
hangs a
rifle,
cess on either
A
and
face,
its
opposite you discern the old clock, with
;
new moon
It
beneath some pagan archway.
looks like a
Above
the arch
on the antlers of the wild deer, and within the side of the fire, benches of substantial oak are placed.
re-
on the bench to the right, his fingers outspread towhich imparts its red glow to his ebony features, and
sits
the flame,
reveals the fiddle laid with is
its
broken cloud.
resting
blind negro
Opposite
rising over a
decidedly the centre of the picture.
is
fire built
great sacrificial
ward
cupboard, painted blue, and glittering with a
corner stands the
store of burnished pewter
OR,
;
its
bow
across his knees.
whose black face is contrastwound about the temples, while her
seated a corpulent old dame,
ed with a flaming red handkerchief
withered hands are crossed upon her linsey dress. " I say, Phillisey, dis am comfor'bl' !" " It ar, Sam, you blind nig gar /" Near the hearth, seated on huge arm-chairs, behold three white dames, whose rotund forms and full-moon faces, do not indicate any deprivation
of the comforts of
Their heads bent together,
life.
white caps
their
touching each other, they pass the snuff-box, and converse in earnest
whispers.
"
It is a strange world, Betsy !" " And, Nancy, we've all got to die
" But, Sally,
You
was not so when
it
I
sometime .'" was a girl !"
will at once perceive, that their conversation
The
resting character.
is
snuff-box passes, and the
of the most inte-
thoughts of the old
ladies take a different turn.
« Queer world
"
!
We
Laws-a-massy, Betz
'Dust must all go " " When I was a girl
But
by
!
at this
moment of
!"
to dust,' as the
Parson sez
I"
absorbing interest the conversation
is
interrupted
the bluff, hearty tones of the host
" I say, Parson, did Year's supper ?"
you ever hear
Hontz and
the story of Old
his
New
By way
of
commanding
attention,
he brought the handle of his knife
upon the table, with all the force of his right arm. " Never did !" responded the Parson, from the other end of the
table,
as he raised a dainty piece of rabbit to his lips.
"
Nor you, Lawyer Simmons
Did none of you ever hear
?
Nor you, Doctor Perkenpine
the story of Old
Hontz and
his
t
?
New
Hello
!
Year's
supper ?"
For At
a
least
moment
the great
work of
eating and drinking
was suspended. There was a
twenty faces were turned toward the jovial host.
wicked twinkle tion of his
head
in the old fellow's half-closed eyes, to
one side looked suspicious.
and even the
inclina-
— THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. "
Peter !" was the burden of twenty
story, friend
Never heard the
39
voices.
The
man
old
himself easily in his huge chair, smoothed his
settled
white beard with his
and took a hearty draught of
fat fingers,
cider.
Then, taking a pipe from a side pocket, he quietly tilled the bowl with tobacco, lighted it at the candle, and resting comfortably in his chair,
seemed
at
peace with
around his red " As you're
all
story, but very,
done supper, I'd like
very good
of stewed rabbit.
"
;
smoke
the
floated in wreaths
Talkin' o' rabbit,
— very toothsome,"
Could not be
better
you the
to tell
especially to those,
have feasted plentifully upon
I
Parson. " It is savory **
the world, as
all
face. It's a
short
eaten heartily Parson ?"
how
d'ye like
this
dish, friend Peter," replied the
it,
echoed the Doctor. the rabbits ?" inquired the
where did you get
!
story.
who have
lawyer.
"ThaVs the fun of it, Lawyer Simmons. Where did I get the rabbits ? ThaVs the very cream of the joke. Now mark me, everybody here, when I've told my story, they will be sorry that they did not try the stewed nous
For, as you will see, this story
rabbit.
taste for
" But concerning this
is
apt to give one a rave-
"
stewed rabbit
unknown person whom you
call
Old Hontz ?"
suggested the Parson. "
want you
I
all
to
be very
still,
while
I
tell
story.
this
G-a-ls
(turning to the three corpulent dames,) stop babbling and listen !"
guests were
all
attention
;
!
The
you might have heard a pin drop. " Once upon named Hontz, who had a house in a
a time, there lived a jolly old fellow
woods, and was well-to-do
world
in the
spite,
when
rich,
was old Hontz, and fond of
bachelor. lied
They
of,
gether
The
neighbors almost died of
and of a glass
he gained his money
and most dreadful
weje three persons, who cider,
fun,
telling strange stories of
said
horses, or his oxen, or his
think
his
!
He was
But he was a
Therefore every gossip in the neighborhood lied about him
murderously,
fellow.
;
they looked at his barn, or saw his sleek cattle.
cows
— but
to tell.
Old Hontz, the rare jovial
—not
from his farm, or his
in unheard-of-ways,
Now, among
fed at the old fellow's table,
and yet lied more horribly about him, than " jovial Peter paused, and
smoothed
horrible to
those neighbors, there
and drank of his all
the world to-
his beard, emitting a
volume
Even dames by the fire bent forward, in attitudes of absorbing interest, and the old Negro in the chimney corner remarked, in an undertone, to Phillisey "Berry bad neighbors, dem !" " " Now one of these persons was a lawyer
of smoke, as he glanced over the faces of the wondering guests. the three aged
—
—
"
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
40
" Su-r-e !" exclaimed lawyer Simmons, dropping his cider bowl.
"
" One a doctor
" Remarkable !" and the Doctor, in his surprise, permitted a savory slice of rabbit to fall
"
And
"
A
the other
Eh
parson?
from his
was
fingers.
a parson V
more firmly on
nose, and fixing the black cap
Yes—by
"
The
!
9
Neighbor Peter ?" cried the Parson, rubbing
!
his
his head.
lawyer, the doctor and the parson,
who
fed at
the old fellow's table, and drank of his cider, never spoke of him, save it may be, some who lives in the
with a shrug of the shoulders, or a wink of the eye, and
such kind remark as
woods
alone, but
1
this
— 'A
—here was
very clever old fellow,
the sore point
—
'
Where
does he get
all his
money V " It
was a very
remark the twinkle of neighbor
interesting thing, to
Peter's half-closed eye, as he paused again in his story.
A
singular silence had fallen on the supper guests
other's faces, and then cast their eyes
"Now,
do you want
know how
to
down upon
they gazed in each
;
their folded hands.
this jolly old fellow
(with a white
beard and a great round paunch, mark ye) revenged himself
?
He knew
the doctor, the lawyer, the parson, to be very fond of good eating, but of
kinds of eating, stewed rabbit, and of
all
The
all
kinds of stewed rabbit
story began to be very interesting.
Why
it
—
was we cannot
tell,
but certainly the greater portion of the guests began to cast stealthy
who
glances at the doctor, the lawyer and the parson, the supper-board.
Yes
apery of green leaves. It is
a sad,
still
The beams of the sun stream with fitful splendor That strange old mansion seems as sad and desoBut suddenly hark Do you hear the clanking of
hour.
over the green sward. late as the
—
tomb.
!
those bolts, the crashing of the unclosing gates
The
gates creak slowly aside
!
—
let
?
us steal behind this cluster of pines*,
and gaze upon the inhabitants of the Monastery, as they come forth their
for
evening walk.
Three
figures issue
from the opened gates.
features and white hairs are
long robe of dark velvet.
thrown strongly
On
An
old man,
one arm leans a young
in black, her golden hair falling
— not
whose withered
into the fading light
in ringlets
—but
girl,
by
his
also dressed
in rich
masses,
to
She bends upon his arm, and with that living smile upon her lips, and in her eyes, looks up into his face. N On the other arm, a young man, whose form, swelling with the proud outlines of early manhood, is attired in a robe or gown, dark as his her shoulders.
father's, while his reflect the silent
bronzed
face,
shaded by curling brown
hair,
seems
to
thought written upon the old man's brow.
They pace slowly along the sod. Not a word is spoken. The old man raises his eyes, and lifts the square cap from his brow — look how !
beam plays along his brow, while the evening breeze tosses There is much suffering, many deep traces of the Past, white hairs.
that golden his
—
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON.
67
written on his wrinkled face, but the light of a wild enthusiasm
from his blue eyes.
#
The young man — his dark moves by
the old
The
that
girl,
man's
eyes, wildly glaring, fixed
the sod
image of maidenly grace, nurtured into beauty within an
armband looks smilingly
hair waving in the
Who
upon
speaks no word.
side, but
hour's journey of the city, and yet afar from the world, that aged
beams
still
bends over
into that withered face, her glossy
summer wind. com$ hither, pacing
are these, that
evening hour, along the
at the
moss ? The father and his children What means that deep, strange light, flashing not only from
wild
!
eyes of the father, but from the dark eyes of his son
Does
need a second glance
it
cism, that distortion of Faith
Religion
ity of
The ground
it
is
the light of Fanati-
?
in silence, while the
—
you, that
to tell
the wild glare of Superstition, that deform-
comes slowly down.
night
the leaves.
—
the blue
?
Still
young
the
Still
the Father and
Son pace
breeze freshens and makes low music
the
among
bending over the old man's arm, smiles
girl,
tenderly in his face, as though she would drive the sadness from his
brow
with one gleam of her mifd blue eyes.
At
last
gleam of
— within the"
the
shadows of the
setting sun
— the
gate, their faces lighted
man and
it%ot a strange yet beautiful picture
one dense mass of shade
;
last
girl.
The
1
old Monastery forms
on either side extends the darkening
yet here, within the portals of the gate, the three figures
forest,
are grouped,
while a warm, soft mass of tufted moss, spreads before them.
manhood
by the
son stand like figures of
his
hand of the young
stone, while each grasps a Is
old
The proud
of the son, contrasted with the white locks of the father, the
tender yet voluptuous beauty of the girl relieving the thought' and sad-
ness which glooms over each brow.
Hold— the Father presses the Do you hear thaulow
— hush " At
!
last, it
pers and
is
" But the
comes
to
my
wrist of his
Son with
deep whisper
soul; the Fulfilment of
silent again, but his lip trembles
time— Father— Me lime?"
the
voice, while his eye, dilating, fires with the
a convulsive
grasp
?
Prophecy
!"
he whis-
and his eye glares.
Son replies in the same deep same feeling that swells his
Father's heart.
"7%e last day of this liverer will come !"
year— the
third hour after
midnight— the De-
These words may seem lame and meaningless, when spoken again, but had you seen the look that kindled over the old man's face, his white hand raised above his head, had you heard his deep voice swelling through the silence of the
quivered from a
woods, each word would ring on your
spirit's tongue.
ear, as
though
it
— PAUL ARDENHEIM
G3
Then girl
man and
the old
— looking
his son
on the sod, while the young
knelt
wonder and
in their faces with
awe— sank
silently beside
*
them.
The
tones of Prayer broke upon the stillness of the darkening woods.
Tell us the meaning of this scene.
whose dark Monastery ? walls
in its
OR,
;
Wherefore
logs are clothed in green leaves,
Who
are these
— father, son and
call
— from
this
year of Grace,
the wilds of the Wissahikon, a
man
in the
in a long,
— 1774, —
daughter
?
Seventeen years ago
huge
this
edifice,
by the old-world name of that dwell with-
there
came
to
prime of mature manhood, clad
With whose golden by the other
dark robe, with a cross of silver gleaming on his breast.
one arm he gathered
to his heart a
smiling babe, a
little girl,
hair floated over his dark dress like sunshine over a pall
hand he led a dark-haired boy. His name, his origin, his object
no one knew
in the wilderness,
purchasing the ruined Block-House, which bore on
;
its
;
but
walls and timbers
marks of many an Indian fight, he shut himself out from all the world. The voice his daughter, grew up together in this wild solitude. of prayer was often heard, at dead of night, by the belated huntsman, the
His son,
swelling from the silence of the lonely house.
By slow upon
degrees, whether from the cross which the old stranger
his breast, or
in the walls of his forest
and
its
wore
from the sculptured images which had been seen with-
home, the place was called
—
the Monastery
occupant the Priest.
Had he been drawn from his among the titled and
enrolled
home by crime
native
Was
?
his name Germany ?
the great of his Father-land,
was one of those stern visionaries, the Pietists of Germany, who, lashed alike by Catholic and Protestant persecutors,
Or, perchance, he
brought
For
to the
wilds of Wissahikon their beautiful Fanaticism
that Fanaticism, professed
driven from
Germany, came here
and worshipped God, without It
by
was a wild
be, yet still full
Protestants of
Germany,
The Monastery,
in
its
as
was by
it
which the brothers of
Here the Brothers had dwelt,
in
one evening they gathered father,
who
built their
to
man.
as its
it
may
Persecuted by the it
still
symbol.
the faith lived for long years,
not a mile from the old Block-House.
the deep serenity of their
in
Monastery,
beautiful.
the Catholics of France,
law and the Cross
hill,
was
?
who, years before,
dreams of Alchemists,
the
God, and love
was situated on the brow of a
dying
Wissahikon,
to
a written creed,
belief, tinctured •with
of faith in
treasured the Bible as
until
a band of brothers,
their garden,
yielded his soul to
God
own
hearts,
around the form of
in their midst,
their
while the setting
sun and the calm silence of universal nature gave a strange grandeur the scene.
to
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON.
69
But it was not with this Brotherhood that the stranger of the BlockHouse held communion. His communion was with the dark-eyed son, who grew up, drinking
many
the fanaticism of his father, in
watch; with the golden-
a midnight
whose smile was wont
haired daughter,
drive the
to
gloom from
his brow,
the wearing anxiety from his heart.
Who
was
No
the stranger?
one knew.
The
farmer of the Wissa-
hikon had often seen his dark-robed form, passi% like a ghost under the
solemn pines
;
the
wandering huntsman had many a time, on
mid-
his
night ramble, heard the sounds of prayer breaking along the silence of the
woods from
the
the stranger
were wrapt
Block-House walls in
Would you know more
yet
:
still
the
life,
origin, objects of
impenetrable mystery. of his
life
Would you
?
penetrate the mystery
of this dim old Monastery, shadowed by the thickly-clustered oaks and
by
pines, shut out from the world
Would you know
the
old man, on the calm
Come
summer evening
with me, then
will enter the
the barrier of impenetrable forests
?
meaning of those strange words, uttered by the
—
at
midnight
1
— on
We
the last night of 1774.
Block-House together, and behold a scene, which, derived
from a tradition of the past,
well calculated to
is
thrill
the heart with
a deep awe.
midnight
It is
:
there
is
snow on
the ground
:
the leafless trees fling
their bared limbs against the cold blue of the starlit sky.
The heavy
old
Block-House
rises
dark and gloomy from the snow, with the
trees extending all around.
The wind sweeps through
the woods, not with a boisterous roar, but
the strange sad cadence of an organ,
whose notes swell away through
the
arches of a dim cathedral aisle.
Who
would dream that living beings tenanted this dark mansion, mass from the bed of snow, its huge timbers revealed various indistinct forms, by the cold clear light of the stars 1 Centred
arising in one black in
in the midst of the desolate
or like
woods,
some strange sepulchre,
in
it
looks like the abode of spirits,
which
the dead of long-past ages lie
entombed.
There
is
no foot-track on the winding road
smooth white surface
—
— the
snow
presents one
yet the gates are thrown wide open, as
coming of a welcome guest. Through this low, narrow door also flung wide open
if
ready
for the
—
corridor,
we
will enter the
In the centre of this room, illumined candles, sits the old silver cross
chair.
man,
—along
this
dark
Monastery. his slender
by the
light of
two
tall
white
form clad in dark velvet, with the
gleaming on his bosom, buried
in
the
cushions of an oaken
PAUL ARDENHEIM
70
His slender hands are
— while
laid
upon
;
OR,
knees— he sways slowly
his
his large blue eye, dilating with a wild stare, is
fixed
and
fro
upon
the
to
opposite wall.
Hush
!
Not
man, wrapped
word
a
—not
even the creaking of a footstep— for
this old
in his thoughts, sitting alone in the centre of this strangely
furnished room,
fills
us with involuntary reverence.
room ? Yes, circular in form, with a single doorway; huge panels of dafk oaken wainscot rise from the bared floor to the gloomy ceiling. Near the old man arises a white altar, on which the Strangely furnished
candles are placed,
its
down
spotless curtain floating
to the floor.
tween the candles, you behold a long, slender flagon of of laurel leaves, fresh gathered from the Wissahikon Bible,
bound
in velvet,
Behind the
altar,
silver, a
hills,
Be-
wreath
and a Holy
with antique clasps of gold.
gloomy and
sullen, as if struggling with
the
shadows
of the room, arises a cross of Iron.
On yonder
small fire-place, rude logs of oak and hickory send up their
mingled smoke and flame.
The
old
man
sits
there, his eyes
growing wilder
in their gaze every
upon the solitary door. Still he sways to and fro, and now his thin lips move, and a faint murmur fills the room. "He will come /" mutters the Priest of the Wissahikon, as common rumor named him. "At the third hour after midnight the Deliverer will moment,
come
fixed
.'"
Yet while the aged man
in the
Block-house, after weary years
thought, awaits the great end of his long vigil of Prayer, the
footsteps of his
son, and witness
scenes of novel
we
of
will follow
and absorbing
interest. It is
now
While the
the hour of twelve, on the Last Night of 1774.
guests are feasting in the farm-house and dancing the old year to his grave,
way of Blood, and Paul on his errand of Peace, moon rises higher in the cloudless sky, and bathes the winding gorge — the snowy hills the wilderness of leafless trees, in light, at once sad while Gilbert goes on his
the
—
and sepulchral. Yonder, on the summit of the broad Wissahikon,
we behold
hill,
which
rises
on the south of
a stone mansion, centred in a grove of
whose branches are bent with the weight of snow. Through these thickly-woven pines, the moonlight comes gleams
;
now
the level space in front of the hall
of silvery light, that
move
door
is
tall
pines,
in uncertain
alive with belts
hurriedly over the frozen snow, and again a
dense shadow broods around the mansion. Its outlines
some heathen the
are
wrapped
in
gloom.
Before the door, a fallen statue of
deity lies half covered in
snow;
whole place wears an aspect of desolation.
the shutters are closed;
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON.
71
Yet, from the circular tower which rises from the centre of the roof, a vivid ray flashes far over the der,
beyond
And ern
snow,
until
it is
lost in the brightness, yon-
the grove of pines.
while this light flashes from the tower of the mansion, on the south-
more than
of Wissahikon, on the opposite shore, not
hill
five
hun
dred yards away, another ray gleams from the leafless trees, and trembles
on the bosom of the Wissahikon.
Deep sunken between two high
hills,
an old house stands there, encir-
cled with dreary brushwood, with the trees gathered
and the shutters on
out upon the night, while the subdued echoes from
break
we
First
em
sudden intervals upon the Sabbath
at
Then
It
to the
it,
Van Behme,
the house of Isaac
is
its
secret chambers
stillness of the air.
gaze toward the grand old mansion, on the south
will turn our
hills.
thickly around
like the portals of a grave-
the closed shutters, that faint and wandering ray streams
Through
vault.
narrow windows closed
its
called Isaac the Wizard.
deserted house, sunken in the sombre hollow, on the north-
ern shore of Wissahikon, where walls cannot altogether
drown
the closed shutters and impenetrable
the sounds
which awake
the echoes of
its
gloomy chambers. Strange sounds, gloomy echoes
!
The
deserted house
looked upon
is
with superstitious fear, by the people of the hill-side and forest.
haunted thickets
ghosts are seen gliding through the shadows of
;
;
the Great Fiend himself
Years ago, when foreigner,
who
it
was
hikon It is
in
folks, in
sojourned awhile in the city, and spent his
was murdered by
So run
its cellar.
its
summer hours
very hearthstone,
the vague superstitions of the Wissa-
regard to the ruined house.
indeed haunted, but by Ghosts or by living Men,
come and
The Great whom men
Fiend, in truth, does often visit fear,
who
appear like
go, under the mantle of an impenetrable
armed with grotesque
its
mystery
?
walls, but not the Satan
terrors, formidable with
hoof and
tail.
That Fiend
is
tends from these
and only speaks of the Old
is
comes nightly to visit its chambers. home, the country residence of a
ghosts, and
horns and
It
encircling
a comfortable
beside the Wissahikon, a guest
and buried
its
Head of a Secret Organization, which exwoods of Wissahikon, over the continent of America,
the Invisible
to
hear
World and
its
the
mandates re-echoed bv the thousand Lodges
New.
PAUL ARDENHEIM
72
CHAPTER
OR,
;
SIXTH.
THE WIZARD'S DAUGHTER.
Before
the mirror stood a Maiden, gazing
upon
the reflected beauty of
her dark eyes, the reflected loveliness of her half-bared
bosom
— These
words may seem very abrupt and somewhat rude, but when you have taken in the entire details of the picture, you will agree with me, that it was a sight altogether interesting perchance beautiful.
—
it
was not an oval mirror, framed
in a
narrow rim of carved walnut,
Nor was
and placed upon an antique dressing-bureau. frame of showy its
gilt,
it
encircled
by
a
with golden flowers and golden Cupids strown about
brightness. It
was
by
a square mirror, framed
the dark paneling of the maiden's
chamber, and reaching from the ceiling Before
to the floor.
with the light shining on her forehead, and a robe of dark velvet
it,
left shoulder over her form, and flowing in folds by no means constrained or formal, stood a girl of eighteen years, whose eyes, and brows, and hair were all intensely black. Her complexion was brown, but a clear, rich brown, more beautiful to
flowing from her
For
look upon than the fairest blonde. cheek, and on her that
lips,
in
the centre of each swelling
through whose intervals her white teeth were seen,
brown complexion bloomed
The eyes were dark and
into the rosiest red.
very bright, but the half-closed
long lashes veiled their brightness, and subdued
lids
and the
dreamy languor. Her hair was turned aside from her forehead, and bound at the back of But part of it, not so much a her head, in a mass of glossy blackness. two or three
tress, as
floated
In her
left
it
trembled over
marked
from the cincture,
her bared shoulder look more white
its faultless outlines.
hand she held the lamp, while, with her
she clasped the mantle folds
into a
tresses linked together, escaping
down her cheek, and made
and beautiful, as
it
to
right
arm
bent,
her bosom, that mantle, whose loose-flowing
the outlines of her shape, and
left
her naked feet bare to
the light.
The showed
streamed warmly over her face, tinted her dark hair, and
light
a gleam of the white bosom, heaving beneath the golden fringe
of the black mantle.
That lids,
face
is full
and the parted
veiled in
a
dewy
of character. lips
;
It
speaks the soul.
the cheek glowing into
moisture
all
The
languid eye-
crimson, and the eye
speak of a warm, nay, a passionate
organization.
But the white forehead, rendered more
distinct in
eVery outline by the
|
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. black hair, tossed aside in glossy masses,
tells
73
of an intellectual
chance an ambitious organization.
Nor does
whose
the form,
bared
left
arm glows
softly in the
light,
with
its
fingers
seem
bust
round,
The ment,
ripen
to
means
is
velvety
is
a rosy radiance.
demands another mo The waist is slender, but by no
like a flower, that only
full,
perfect bloom.
into
it
warmed by
like transparent marble,
and
clear skin
round outlines, and tapers into the white hand, whose palm
whose
»
by the loosely flowing once decided and bewitching.
outlines are betrayed
folds of velvet, lack expression, at
The
— per-
.
lieved by the dark matting
The
or a wasp.
like the waist of a fashion-plate
on which they
rest,
small
feet, re-
harmonize with the hands,
and indicate, by their delicacy of outline, the voluptuous fulness of the maiden's form.
And
in the mirror,
framed
in the
ceiling to the floor, she beholds •
dark paneling, and reaching from the
that form,
and gazes in dreamy languor
upon the warm loveliness of her face. The room, in which she stands, may claim our passing glance.
It
is
square, paneled with dark wood, with a door in the south, a recess on the
window looking
north, a silvered
by the
rising
The dark wood
to the
over a waste of frozen snow, just
east,
moon. carved with
is
the faces of
nymphs,
fauns, satyrs,
cupids and devils, with here and there a mask, or a cluster of flowers, or a garland of leaves.
The
recess
veiled from our sight
is
look black in the candle-light, and
by curtains of purple
fall
tapestry, that
with their golden fringe upon the
floor.
The
floor is polished, until
it
resembles a mirror
;
the
dark matting
on which the maiden stands, an ^antique dressing-bureau, and two chairs,
cumbrous with carvings and embroidery, alone break the uniformity of
its
glittering surface.
The curtains now drawn
are
of
snowy
aside,
whiteness, which sometimes veil the window,
and the
moonlight comes
through the
narrow
panes, and shines in a line of light along the floor. Altogether,
it
is
a beautiful
wood, with a beautiful
girl
picture
standing in
;
its
this
room, paneled with
head, revealing another maiden, as lovely as herself, smiling
from the mirror, into whose brightness she
And of her
by
upon her
gazing.
loveliness, reflected in the mirror, the dead silence
is
image
broken
a sudden, sharp sound.
The is
is
as she stands there, surveying with voluptuous languor the
own
dark
centre, the light shining above her
mirror moves
thrown
—
deep recess
it
—
is visible,
The maiden
it
trembles like a smooth lake into which a pebble
passes slowly aside, and disappears within the panel.
where, but a
moment
A
since, the mirror 6hone.
trembles, she utters a sudden cry of terror, and sinks on
—
—
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
74 knees, the robe
lfcr
still
clasped to her bosorn, her unbound hair wav-
ing over her shoulders.
Her cheek becomes
No
as pale as death.
longer veiled in languid
downcast
moisture, no longer hidden under the
lid,
her eye dilates
flashes with terror.
There is a form in the recess— is it but an Apparition roused from the shadows of the Other World, or the form of a human being 1 The maiden raises her eyes for a moment the deathly paleness of her
—
face struggles with a rosy
bloom— and
then, blushing over her cheek, her
neck and her bosom, which pants suddenly face with a
With
into light, that flush fires her
warm, voluptuous beauty.
a gesture of involuntary joy, she raises her arms, and casts her
fallen tresses aside from her white shoulder
"The Monk of Wissahikon !" And once more, over the cheek, and brow, and bosom, she like a new-born summer morning.
blushes
CHAPTER SEVENTH. THE PHIAL OF ETERNAL YOUTH. same moment, in another apartment of the Wizard's mansion, was in progress. Let us leave the chamber of the maiden, and pass along the corridor, lighted by a hanging lamp, which reveals the wide stairway, descending
At
the
a far different scene
to the
ground
floor of the
whose panels break
mansion, and also shines upon the narrow door,
the uniformity of the
oaken wainscot.
That narrow
door conceals the confined staircase leading upward into the tower, on
summit of
the
The lamp,
the mansion.
or rather lantern, hangs from the ceiling, right above the
wide stairway, and throws but a faint light over its windings while it glows brightly on the narrow door. A step is heard, like the subdued and stealthy tread of an armed man, and presently
we
slowly ascends
— and
discern a figure in the darkness of the stairway in a
moment,
Morgan, shadowed by a look of sullen
He one
—
it
the light discloses the face of Gilbert ferocity.
leans against the railings of the stairway, and bends his head to
side, in the attitude of
one
who
listens intently for the faintest
sound
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. One
on the stairway, and one on the corridor, railing, while his left hand, dropped
foot
mahogany
the
75
his right
arm
at his side,
on
rests
grasps the
unsheathed hunting-knife. as he listens, the light discloses that almost gigantic form, enveloped in the blue hunting-shirt, which, leaving the throat bare, falls to the
And
brown face— thrown into bold stairway— works in every nerve, as with
knees, edged with white fur, while the
by
relief
the darkness
of the
the impulse of plunder and carnage.
He
listens
— but
—
lips
compressed, eyes shadowed by the down-drawn brows
all is still.
One
toward the door of the maid-
step, stealthy as a panther's tread,
all silent, not His bent head touches the dark panels Then, underneath the swinging lantern he a sound meets his ear. stands again, and his face is covered by a dark mask, which, tied around
en's chamber.
;
the forehead, reaches to the mouth, and leaves only the lower part of the
proaches the narrow door,
the knife in his right hand, he ap-
With
visage exposed to the light.
lifts
the latch, and places his foot
upon
the
step of the dark staircase.
first
The sound
of voices, rendered faint
by
distance, breaks indistinctly
Without a word he enters the door, and
his ears.
cends the stairway. ceiling is so low, that
The he
in
walls touch his shoulders on either side is
on
the darkness as;
the
foreed to bend his head upon his breast, as
he ascends.
Those words become more
distinct,
and
after
twenty steps are passed,
a ray of light streams through the intervals of a curtain, and glimmers
out upon the blackness of the stairway.
That the
curtain supplies the place of a door, and separates the haunt of
Wizard from
Gilbert
As
tain.
the staircase.
on the topmost step
is
;
the ray flashes over his
knife in hand he approaches the cur-
masked
face,
he stealthily advances,
and looks within. "
It is
the appointed time !"
The rude hands
to
hunter, bent on
his veins, at the It
sound of
must be confessed,
chilled with
A
a deed of violence,
an act of midnight plunder,
awe
felt
swayed by
invisible
a superstitious thrill pervade
that voice.
that the
scene which he beheld, might have
a stouter heart, a bolder brain than his.
small lamp, glittering like polished silver, hung by a chain from the
dome-like ceiling, and cast a pure and spiritual light over the place. It
was a circular room, not more than twenty
walls were characters.
feet in diameter.
covers, and silver clasps, bore the traces of a venerable age. side,
hung
The
hung with parchments, inscribed with Hebrew and Arabic A recess* was filled with massive volumes, whose dusty a skeleton, the white skull
\
and hollow
orbits
On
one
glaring in the
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
76
Not
clear light.
far
removed, a shapeless mass, enveloped
cloth, tattered with age,
That shapeless mass was once
wall.
ago,
and covered with
it
the soil of the
'trod
battle, or
may
it
;
the
a thousand years
World, perchance a warrior armed
for
an Indian
Mummy, exhumed
from a mound
western prairies.
far
was
It
It is
a living soul
of some forgotten creed, with the knife of
be, a Priest
hand.
sacrifice in his
on the
New
brown
in a
dust, stood erect against
in the centre of the
room, whose walls were crowded with
strange and contrasted details, that a picture of
some
was
interest
dis-
closed by the rays of the hanging lamp.
An
man
old
shone from
gown, whose loose
black
a
in
bent over a corse, a knife in his hand, while his blue eyes
He was
his withered face with a wild unearthly light.
concealed
folds
of
outlines
the
clad his
shrunken limbs.
The
corse, extended
on a board which rested on
tressels,
was
half-con-
which swept in careless folds from the waist to But the broad chest, the sinewy throat, the dark-red visage, the feet. were bare the face, wrinkled by age, wore, even in death, a look of iron cealed
by
a white cloth,
;
defiance.
was
It
the dead
body of
the Chief,
Yoconok.
Opposite the old man, crouching on the
man, known
Black David, was
as
floor, the figure
of the deformed
Resting his cheek upon his
visible.
hand, he gazed upon him steadily, his eyes almost hidden by the thick
With
meshes of
his long hair.
beard and
hair,
looked
some Demon, summoned by
his
like
unholy
" It
is
ceaseless
my is
toil
—
beneath
cell
I
am
David
to aid in
about
to
behold the great result of the
me
on yonder
When
liquid
the gift 6f an intelligent soul.
its
Rise, David.
Watch
is
in
to
Thou
the hour-
sands are run, the dead will rise
become a young and vigorous man
Black David rose, and, gliding Its
The
But thou canst not comprehend me, body hideously deformed, has not sup-
manly beauty with
shelf.
eyes.
life.
with thy brute strength.
cold image of clay
my
those priceless drops, every one of which
nature, in giving thee a
canst but aid
again,
Wizard
For twenty-one years, by night and house, I have watched for the moment
this
this phial contains
;
plied the lack of
glass.
the dark
of twenty-one years.
worth an hundred years of
David
by
laughter, Black
the craft of the
the liquid of immortal life should greet
hand
glass
that pale face, encircled
half-suppressed
task.
the appointed time.
day, in the
when
quivering with
— this
!"
upon the hourThen, sinking upon the floor
the recess, glanced
sands were well nigh run.
he placed his face within his hands, and observed the old man,
with an unvarying gaze. It
face,
was wonderful
to
mark
the energy
and shone without ceasing,
which lighted up
in the clear
blue
eyes.
that withered It
was
the
— t
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON.
77
energy of a mistaken but sincere enthusiasm, the resolution of a Fanati-
cism nursed into unnatural vigor by the delusions of a long "
He
shall rise
Young and
!
instruments of
his youth, the unfailing
dead, changed death into plain and palpable.
beautiful, I will
my
make
life.
of his beauty and
When I have raised the my great task become
will.
then will the rest of
life,
First, the
dead must be raised, then baser metals
may
So read the lessons of the sages, so speak they all, from Apollonius of Tryana down to Paracelsus and Agrippa !" What will you do with gold " sneered Black Gold ? Ho ho be transmuted into gold.
—
—
!
"
David, as he looked steadily into the old man's face.
you've one foot in the grave already, and 'tother
— o-o-h
I
!
see
— you
want
it
your
for
is
coffin !"
" Poor wretch !" muttered Isaac in a tone of deep pity
But
the language of the world.
great design.
When
am
I
I
of a long
toil
the face wrinkled, the heart chilled
— shall
and young manhood sparkling
life
—
my
hand upon the frowning brow of
" Dost say 'un will
and vacant dead
—see
"
stare.
come
No
!
to life
It ain't
the dead
my
cold lips,
the limbs shrunken,
start into being,
in his
Eh
— " He speaks
with hope in
eyes !"
Black David drew near the corse, while Isaac was speaking his
Master, it.
will use him as an instrument in
dead, he will apply the liquid to
and the old man, withered by the
his veins,
Why,
slippin' arter
;
he
laid
man.
again?" he said, with an
possible, Master
Behme
!
idiotic smile
He
be stone
!"
Gilbert, from his place of concealment, beheld the
naked arm of the Indian
— sway
carelessly to and fro
it
Deformed
lift
the
— and then dash
it
with some violence upon his broad chest.
The
hunter trembled from head
to
foot,
not so
much with
fear of the
Wizard, as with a sensation of creeping awe, which chilled his veins, whenever he saw the cold gleam of the hunchback's eyes. But, trembling from head to foot, he placed the knife in his belt again,
and
in the darkness, felt the
" That
ar' cripple's
lock of his pistol.
a born devil
made of!" he muttered
— "He
;
but as for Isaac,
I'll
see
what he's
must'nt cut any of his shines over the !" Ingin's dead carcase, while I'm about "
Do
not touch the
Back from the
The
ment. this
corse,
dead—" I
He knife,
is
Isaac with an energetic gesture
I make the last experiwhen you will have to do a deed like you may call your Master back to life,
time will come, David,
— mark me, therefore, so
when he
said
say, and watch while
that
dead,"
bent over the corse, holding in one hand the scalpel, or dissecting-
while in the other he grasped a small glass phial.
Black David approached, and watched him with great earnestness, his face lengthening with an expression of vacant wonder, most ludicrous to behold.
—
—
PAUL ARDENHEIM
78
Master—" he drawled
" Y-a-a-s,
The
"
—
"
born devil !" muttered Gilbert, behind the curtain
bound he plays old Isaac some cursed Jist look
older.
— and
lickin'
When
"
OR,
;
sees !"
I
at his face
—
as simple as
moment
the
name
is
come, David,
God — which
of
which has been
lost to the
pour a drop of
mark
ye,
charm
it
the
describe a Cross
will
I
and the
"
Even
wound, made by the
Cross, which
gone.
man
old
the side
falls to
it
cut into
is
is
in
face, as
was young
I
my
eye.
I
home amid thronging,
Behme die
the
is
without power." twisting his fingers in the
— In
once
at
lips, kills
— so
will this
— kills dead
moments, David, you
it
a few
ere the
poured on the
liquid,
the flesh with the knife, bring the
will see
to life,
done
siood contemplating the slender phial, which was
A
with a colorless and transparent liquid. "
I
Yet,
knife.
into the very centre of the Cross, else
elixir
as prussic acid, applied to the
ere a second
over his
the name
thousands of years,
for
his hair.
that applied
The
—thus
Pronouncing
— pronouncing
mass of mankind
"Then, Master—" mumbled Black David,
hand
good
a school-boy arter a
High Priest of the Jews uttered but
this liquid into the
must be poured
in vain,
meshes of
be
I'll
yet the very Devil's in them eyes !"
once a year, and that in the Holy of Holies
will
—"
many minutes
trick before he's
with the point of the knife, on the breast of the dead man. the awful
I
look of strange sadness came
he muttered an incoherent soliloquy
my
;
step firm,
my eye
!"
tilled
bright
;
:
youth
loved; there was a wife, a child in
my
my
in
home.
veins,
A
hope
gorgeous
where the proud and beautiful came homage to the wealthy commoner. Isaac Van owner of millions. Ah, I was afraid that I might
the hills of Yorkshire, to
^s
pay
their
then the
— bei^athered to
a cold vault, and leave
my
wealth
yearning desire sprung up within me, and changed indeed, born again.
To
live
forever on the earth
create gold at will, from the baser metals
— to
to others.
my
— to
nature.
fear
be immortal
Then I
no decay
a
was,
—
to
at once, in the
—
My wife died I cared not. That one depower of youth and in gold became the great passion of my being. I interrogated the Past wrung knowledge from the writings of the ancient seers I grappled with Death itself, and besought the answer to my question, In what part of ?' the human frame does the Principle of Life make its dwelling !
—
sire
—
'
"Nay— I after
tracked the dark avenues of the gold mine, and sought day
day, year after year, to look upon the Great Laboratory of Nature,
and learn the process, by which she turns base lead and copper into gold.
The end
of
my
toil is
near.
valley, shall soon go forth again into
once more the comrade of Kings of a crown upon her brows !"
With
his large blue
;
The
old
man, hidden
the great world
his child
;
may perchance
eye fixed upon the slender
phial,
in this lonely
he shall become feel the
weight
he paced along
— —
—
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. gown
the floor, the
floating loosely
around his shrunken limbs, while the
lamp shone warmly upon
clear rays of the
As he paced
79
his venerable hair.
absorbed in his wild fanaticism, Black David,
along,
crouching near the corse with his face resting between his hands, looked up, from beneath his bushy eyebrows, laughing
all
over his colorless face,
as he muttered " Fool
Would he might
!
gain his wish, and
know
has no curse so horrible, as the blessing he desires
at once, that hell
eternal
life
on earth,
gold without end." Gilbert
every withered line
There was an overwhelming as the eyes
;
shone
he gazed upon
rude heart, as
a strange pity melt his
felt
the old man's face.
in
deep clear
on
desire, written
light,
and the
grew
lips
tremulous, the hunter heard him whisper without ceasing these words
Youth-Gold Gold- Youth Youth— Gold !" And so the withered Fanatic paced the floor of
«
!
!
the strange room,
grasping, in those two words, the great desire of the whole world
mankind, while, crouching like an embodied scorn, near his
David muttered " Death
his
Sleep
!
answering echo Sleep
!
his sneering face there
!
To
as
knee.
I
would give
I
die
and
to forget !"
and over
came an expression of unutterable anguish.
in
all
of
Black
:
— death
Isaac paced the day — " he murmured, these woods, saw sence — " To-day, ther's
feet,
floor,
" To-
unconscious of his pre-
dead upon
a child lie
the gold in the universe,
all
the
its
Mo-
life
in
eternity, to be that child !"
The face of the Deformed expressed the very intensity of despair. The time draws near. In a moment it will be here. David, rise take the dead man by the arms. It will need all your strength to restrain him, in the dread moment when he uncloses his eyes, and feels "
that
he lives again."
Black David, standing
by
at the
head of the corse, grasped
the wrists, and with head bent, and the tangled
face,
seemed
"
How
"
Have
to
I
commands
await the
know
dost
not read
its
bony arms
hair falling over his
of the enthusiast.
'un will rise ?" he muttered suddenly. it
in their
works
— the venerable Seers of the Ages ?"
exclaimed Isaac, pointing with a tremulous hand toward the recess " Yea the Dead have come to me, and spoken of the Great Secret, with
—
their livid lips."
He shook
paused, and stood motionless beside
the corse, while a
"Yes— He
has appeared
the Fallen Angels
!
to me, he, most sad and yet terrible of all His pale forehead, seared with the mark of eternal
anguish, his hair streaming in waves of lurid light,
again
tremor
his frame.
I
hear his voice.
dead will come
to lifer
'
"
1
see him
now
In the first moments of the new-born year, the
"
PAUL ARDENHEIM
80
Why
did Black David's distorted frame
winter wind
the
in
head
his
drooped
is
?
;
—a
time
quiver like a withered reed
We
cannot read the expression of his face, for the matted hair falls around it like a lion's mane.
How much money
"
OR,
;
hast spent, Master
very, very long time.
Twenty-one years
?
— a long — eh
has swallowed a world of gold
It
?
Master ?"
Have you not watched
"
beneath the house
with an unsparing hand Y-e-s
«*
"When
I
my
it
began
this
wealth
— you
pour the gold in the alembic,
at a time.
It
looks beautiful like, and clinks
was worth millions Now the last well, honest David is concealed in beyond yonder curtain, in the darkness, at the
search
which
lies
head of the stairway.
It
the small chest,
me
the round gold, the yellow gold, the sunshiny gold !"
so pleasant like
wreck of
seen
—
Handfuls on
!
the Sacred Fire, burning for ever, in the cell
You have
?
I
know
!
—
it
only a thousand doubloons
is
— only a
thou-
sand."
Black David raised his
and looked toward the curtain.
face,
upon him, and, with a
the glance of his eyes resting
felt
Gilbert
fear
that
he
could not master, saw the half-suppressed laughter of that mocking face. " At the head o' the stairs it,
for
It's
!
well, master, that no bad
— they might even rob you of your
The
old
man
did not
seem
men know
gold.''''
hear the last words, but they thrilled an
to
Gilbert's ear, as his extended foot rested
upon
the
oaken chest,
in
which
the doubloons were concealed.
sands are run !"
The
"
and
clear
ringing in
—
Isaac's
voice,
quivering
with enthusiasm,
emphasis, broke on the ears of the listening
its
hunter.
" Behold
With corse
the
;
started
The
!
Thus' I describe the cross upon the dead man's heart
the point of the knife,
wound was
he
laid
open the
flesh
A
form of a cross.
in the
!"
on the chest of the
single drop of blood
from the point where the transverse gashes met. old
man
raised the phial
rays of the hanging lamp.
A
;
it
glittered
above his head, in the clear
wild joy quivered over his face, agitating
every feature, and shining brightly in his clear blue eyes. "
It is
thus,
O
the time.
The
labors of a
Masters of the Divine Art,
darkest and most powerful of
mands
all
I
Thus,
are about to be repaid.
life
follow your teachings
the
Fallen Host,
I
—
thus,
O
obey your com-
!"
His right arm shook with an unceasing tremor, as he held the phial in the light, high over his grey hairs.
The
corse lay
stiff
and cold before him, with the figure of the De-
formed, bending like an Apparition over
its
face
;
the gash in the
form
of a cross, glowed vividly in the light, with the solitary drop glittering like a blood-red tear.
t
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. "
With
this liquid
—only a —
single drop, poured on the blood-drop in
Dead
I call the
the centre of the cross
pronounced a Hebrew word
He
81
;
to Life
it
was
V
that
name which we
call
Jehovah. Bending over the dead, he raised the phial in the light, and gazed inupon its transparent liquid, his narrow chest swelling* with a joy
tently
too deep for words. «
"
Thus
sharp report was heard.
A.
from a serene sky. trance to the
place,
crashed on the silence, like thunder
It
Through the curtain folds, which guarded the ena volume of blue smoke floated, like a veil of trans-
parent gauze.
The hand all
of the
Wizard was
still
upraised, but his
eye glared with
the despair of a soul forever lost.
The
For the hand was empty.
phial
was gone.
Fragments of
shat-
tered glass strewed the floor.
"
The Monk
While
of Wissahikon !"
that blush
like the first
—reddening over cheek and bosom and brow—glowed
pure glimpse of a new-born
summer
day, the Maiden raised
her dark eyes, and gazed upon the form which
where
the mirror
The
occupied the
recess,
had glistened only a moment before. on his dark dress, he stood there, like some
silver cross glittering
sad and beautiful image of his olive cheek, as, with
Memory,
head
the
brown
slightly bent,
hair falling aside from
he turned the
light of his full
eyes upon the maiden's glowing face.
"I come
to
save
you— your
father's life is in
danger"
— the
words
rose to his lips, but he could not speak them.
He
could only gaze upon that beautiful face, and feel the light of those
brilliant
eyes shining into his own.
He
heard the low musical voice, but could not distinguish the words which it spoke. Only its music melted on his ear.
For the
first
time, the delirium of passion seized his soul
cation of voluptuous
madness burned
He could not advance, he could not recede absorbed which blushed before him, he stood in the recess, with upon the face of the young girl. ;
And
she, with her
arms
form, as though about to
fall,
;
the intoxi-
in his veins.
half-raised, her
in the .loveliness
his gaze centred
loose robe trembling on her
could only return his gaze, and feel the
fire
of his eyes flashing into her soul.
The light which swung from the ceiling, tinting the dim old tapestry with mild radiance, shone clearly over the dark robe of the maiden, glowed upon the waves of her black hair, and revealed the figure of the young man, framed
in the recess,
and thrown into view by the darkness beyond. 6
—
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
82
At tion
he advanced
last
— he stepped
— his
senses whirling in an indescribable intoxica-
from the recess, and his
face,
glowing through
olive
its
hues, with the red blush of passion, appeared distinctly in the light, with
brown
the
And arms
hair tossed aside from the forehead.
with that step
like a
With
—he paused—looked
man who
upon her
— and
extended his
shrinks back from the verge of a dizzy
cliff.
the loose robe waving around her form, she sank on her knees,
clasped her hands, and while her lustrous eyes shone their passion into
which melted
his face, she exclaimed in that voice,
upon "
in strange
melody
his ears
You have come Paul started
He
dream.
!"
could not believe that
kneeling at his
feet,
comes her Lover
He
—
"
the intensity of a
murmur,
as
that beautiful girl,
reality
and whispering
You have come fire in
new
—
who
a Bride
like
wel-
!"
and hid his burning forehead
tottered to a chair,
There was
some bewildering
entangled in
was a
it
tossing her hair back from her shoulders, raising to
his gaze her voluptuous face,
hands.
He was
at the sight.
His ears were
existence.
in his clasped
His brain seemed
his veins.
to
throb with
with a lulling
filled
though the voices of Angels had mingled with the echo of a
distant waterfall.
« Paul !"
He fingers
He
upon
he
;
felt
then a hand
warm
the pressure of soft,
his forehead.
She was
raised his eyes.
der, that soft,
warm hand
by
there, kneeling
floating over her robe, her face upturned,
And
And
heard the voice, but dared not raise his head.
trembled among the locks of his hair
side, her hair
his
one arm resting upon
his shoul-
pressed against his brow.
again, raising her lustrous eyes, she
murmured
name
his
" Paid!"
There was some strange mystery in this scene. It confused, it beThis young girl,— whose cheek flushed with passion through the intervals of her dark hair, whose large eyes grew dim with moisture beneath the fringed lids,— kneeling by his side, looking into his face, winding her arm about his neck, her fingers trembling among the wildered him.
brown locks about "
his
forehead
You know my name
it
with
fired his veins
new madness.
?" he wildly gasped.
" Yes," she murmured, " the Voice whispered
it
to
me."
And
with
that look of boundless passion, she panted at his side.
"
The Voice
it
Y es — the
times by day,
!"
Voice that speaks after I
It told
me
to
have prayed of your
all
is still.
me
look for you To-Night
!"
in my dreams. God— sometimes
me to
coming— it spoke
of
I
hear
it
some-
by night, when your Love it bade
—
THET
MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON.
83
uttered with a child-like faith, and yet with the
These words,
tremu-
lous accent of passion, completed the bewilderment of Paul Ardenheim.
"
Do
dream ?" he exclaimed
I
—" You
the
young
my
soul with light
girl
— and
hand touched
his
that are so beautiful
— you,
that
speak
me
to
the forehead of
—you, whose
in tones that
dark eyes
madden
fill
—you,
whose very touch thrills me with a mad delight You speak my name, Oh, it is some dangerous you tell me that you looked for my coming dream it is the work of an Evil Angel, who would peril my soul !" And, darting from the chair, he fled affrighted from that beautiful girl. !
!
—
As he
by the window, gazing out. into the wintry night— the
stands
waste of snow, silvered by the rising moon, sparkles before him
young
girl,
kneeling where he
now crimsoned with blushes and wet with tears. How shall we explain the mystery of this scene ? The young girl has been reared from childhood in sion, her
her
friend,
whose mind
no temptation
to
some
;
man-
only companion, that old man,
her
She has
never mingled in the loves and hatreds
Like a wild flower, blushing into
of the great world. bling wall of
^ this isolated
bewildered by the Fanaticism of a Past Age.
is
been exposed
instructor,
— the
covers with her hands that face,
left her,
life
old ruin, she has blossomed, she has
on the crum-
bloomed
in soli-
tary loveliness.
Yet wherefore
madness
this
of passion, this child-like
tenderness,
impetuous love, with which she welcomes an unknown man, she beholds for the first time ! this
We may
whom
not pierce the Mystery now, nor unravel a single thread of
the strange secret, and yet, as
we gaze upon
the scene,
its
peculiar beauty
strikes our hearts.
Here we have a woman, blooming
into the ripeness of her loveliness,
and a man, whose eye indicates a strong fests the
while his form mani-
intellect,
grace and vigor of y^oung manhood.
Reared alike
these silent woods
in
—
afar
formed amid scenes of the same character bronzed face and eyes of strange power,
from the world— their souls
—
young man, with the
this
young
girl, so blooming with every hue of loveliness, so flowing with every line of voluptuous beauty,
have met
And
for the first time.
yet their meeting has
all
the intoxication of a Passion, ries as dear as
The
Heaven
tears rained
more tumultuous started
this
from the
the transport of a long-indulged love, all
which
is
hallowed by thoughts and memo-
!
while her young bosom rose with a and her face grew crimson with blushes, she and reached his side, with a proud and passionate
from her eyes
;
throb,
floor,
step.
"
It
hand.
was
false,
"You
love
then ?"
me
not.
She touched
You
his shoulder lightly with her
never thought of
me
?"
— !
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
84
He
heard the voice,
He
shook his frame.
the hand, and a tremor
felt
dared not turn his head, and gaze into her face. It is
"And
madness I
Only
!
loved you
—
a dream, from
God knows how
which
how
deep,
soon awake ! H
I will
my love!
absorbing was
In the daytime
I
thought of you, and pictured your form, and saw your
face,
wherever
I
turned
still,
and the Voice broke through the
breathing your
name
With
You
And
!
s^ky,
silence, telling
me
love
O,
not
—
when
O, at night,
at night,
my
me
all
was
of your love,
became mad, wild,
love
which gleams before
us, so beautiful with its
the Voice has spoken falsely !"
hand quivering on
that small
ing a strange
eyes
every word
at
boundless as the great countless stars.
my
his shoulder, its
very touch
thrill-
through his veins, he heard her voice, breaking in im-
lire
But he
petuous accents upon the stillness of the midnight chamber.
His heart was too
couft not answer.
full,
his brain too
crowded with
conflicting emotions.
He
dared not even turn to look upon her face again.
" If
I
look upon her
Lost!
Lost
to
I
am
God and
lost
!"
Lost to Purity,
Lost
to
all
those serene
—
Thoughts which dwelt on the Majesty of the star-lit heavens the tenderthe divine beauty of sunrise and sunset those ness of a Sister's Love
—
—
Thoughts which ascended from a full heart, to the Great Father of all the World, and even as they arose, became Prayer. Lost to all that was spiritual and ideal, in the mad agonies of sensual passion.
"
Lady"
— he
said, not daring to
ing breath on his cheek
intoxicating dream.
some
your touch
my
before
fills
eyes
my
—
look upon her, though he
—" Forgive I
am
me,
as
O,
her pant-
felt
one bewildered in
affrighted at the beauty of
your face
But there
woven
—
is
a mist
together, in
though the hand*)f death was there
!
my
Forgive
away from her extended hand " forgive and pity To look into your face you, without adoration. upon cannot look tottered
I
like
a sound as of voices and echoes,
—m y heart swells me, lady" —he is to
am
veins with an agony of delight.
ears
For
for I
forget
how
my God
!"
bloomed on her cheek again, and the soft languor of She gazed upon his averted face, her red her eyes
the roses
passion shone in
!
bosom throbbing above snowy wave, encircled by
lips parting like a severed rose-bud, her
the glit-
tering fringe of her black robe, like a
rays of
golden
light.
Then, on her white forehead, from the crescent-shaped brows to the roots of her hair, a single vein, slender and serpentine, swelled distinctly into light, and darkened, without distorting, the transparent skin. That sinuous vein, so light as to be scarcely perceptible, seemed to indi-
cate the resistless Will of
of Pride and Passion.
an organization, which combined the extremes
— THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. "You shoulder
me
love
ske gasped
!"
— "You love me !"
—her
hand
And with
her
85
gently laid upon his arm she dashed her long
still
left
hair aside from the bare shoulder.
—
Love you ?" echoed Paul " There is a love which I feel when I gaze upon my sister's face. A Love as serene as the midnight stars, O, it is not shining over yon waste of coldly glittering snow. But you ? "
—
—
No It is as though it is not intoxication. it is not enchantment you had stolen from me every impulse of my own Will had said to me, *Thou canst not move, save where my will permits nor breathe, save in the light of my eyes nor live, save by my side, and in my arms V Love you?" his voice sunk into a whisper "I dare not turn and gaze into love
!
;
—
—
your
face, lest I
But he did his every
—
my God !"
should blaspheme
As though an
and gaze.
turn'
irresistible influence
swayed
motion, he turned, and beheld her panting before him, her
limbs trembling beneath the robe, while her bared arms gathered
it
to
her passionate breast. It
seemed
to
him
though a golden mist floated
as
in
waves about her
form, as she stood there, with those large eyes flashing amid their tears,
while the dark hair, waving
deur
to the
You
"
love
" Not love
"You
love
" Pity
me
You
"
her shoulders, gave an indescribable gran-
to
white forehead, seamed by that darkly swelling vein.
me me
—
love
And she came toward him, with I am mad"
I"
—no— no
and her white arms were upon his shoulder.
!"
me
pity
me
a gliding motion.
!
!"
—
for the
was
sionate lips, as he felt her
sake of God, do not peril
my
soul."
her exclamation, breathed through her pas-
still
arms around
his neck, her
form quivering upon
his breast.
And
her cheek was against his own, and over his arms and shoulders
her unbound hair streamed, in waves of jetty blackness.
His brain reeled round him in
—
the antique room, with
its
quaint wainscot, floated
—
phantom of some unearthly dream from head every nerve he trembled like a dying man. But still her arms were about his neck, still she panted on his
her
like the
warm bosom
rising,
from
its
sable veil, in
to foot,
breast,
passionate jfirobs, while
her breath mingled with his own, as their lips trembled together.
There was a moment which seemed an Eternity to him ; not an Eternity of calm rapture, but of passionate tumult, of voluptuous madness. It
was when her eyes shone
their
deep brightness into his own,
when
and breath were one, when, trembling in her embrace, he felt his consciousness gliding from him, in a languor that stole upon his senses, like
lip
some enchanter's
spell.
Enchanter's spell sorcery of a
blossom into new
What
!
first kiss,
from
life at
spell like the
magnetism of a
lips that cling as
the touch?
first
love, the
they touch your own, and
what wizard-craft so maddening
in its
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
86
power
your own,
ing throb "
bosom,
as the pressure of a
closer to
You
that throbs benfiath
your heart hears
until
it,
its veil,
and throbs
and echoes with an answer-
?
love
virgin form
me
was
The Voice was
!
not false !" and the burden of that
in his arms, the wild beauty of
that face
glowed
in burn-
ing blushes beneath his gaze.
"Yes tones,
—
love— love beyond the power of words !" he exclaimed in broken and his eyes answered her with a gaze as passionate as her own.
But even as she clung
on
brow
his
— saw at
warm
— while a
a glance
Saw
round, white arms.
wound
him, he
to
he held her from him, and
hands around her wrists,
his
frown gathered
sudden darkness
in
her heaving breast, her naked
the face,
whose brown hues were
vermilion on the cheek and on the
lip,
feet,
her
lighted with
while the languor of
dewy
eyes came through the meshes of her streaming hair. " O, beautiful " he gasped, his voice sinking 0, fairer than a dream
—
—
into a whisper, his eyes moist with passion.
At that moment a crash "
It is
a knell !" cried
like thunder
Paul—" The
rung through the old mansion. knell of
my
lost soul !"
As he spoke he withdrew his hands from her wrists of a madman, he dashed her arms from his grasp and ;
;
with the gesture
tottered
backward,
gazing vacantly into her face.
She trembled
for a
strown over the
moment — grew
floor,
pale and
Her long
fell.
black hair,
with the golden fringe of her mantle glittering
against the transparent whiteness of her shoulders.
She lay there like a dead woman, pale and unconscious, the blood from the wound upon her brow, a wound which she received, as
starting
her sudden
And
fall
dashed her head against the
yonder, hurrying from the room,
boiling like molten fire in every vein his head bent
on
his breast, as he flies
—
floor.
mad
with passion, the blood
yonder, behold Paul Ardenheim,
from the beautiful woman, as from
a fiend.
He
does not seek the shadow of the recess.
No
!
Without turning
his head, without one backward look, he grasps the door in the southern
wall
—
it
yiefts at his touch
— he
is
in the corridor,
with the light of the
lamp, which shines there, glowing over his brow.
But
as his foot is
delirium,
when
in a veil of
face, a
on the
first
step,
even in the moment of passionate
the face, the form of the beautiful
misty
light,
he
is
girl, floats
before
him
conscious of the presence of a far different
widely contrasted form.
Black David stands beside him, folding his white hands upon his breast, while his head is bowed, and his face is hidden by the uneven locks of his matted hair.
" Black David was wrong, Master Paul," he mumbles in an idiotic tone, with his great eyes wearing a vacant
look—" There's never
a robber
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. Master Paul,
if
dream
in a
Black David heard the voices
in the wizard's house. give,
87 for-
;
Black David was foolish—"
came from the lips of Paul. He looked in the face of man, as though he saw him not he dashed his hand aside, and plunged down the stairs with a madman's step. As his face glowed into the light, ere it passed into the darkness, Black David saw it distorted by a convulsive emotion as his step was
No
reply
the deformed
;
;
David also heard his incoherent cry and the clear sky for me for I am in the
heard in the hall beneath, Black
"Air
air
!
The
!
free air,
:
—
Power of the Evil One, within these walls !" The echo of the voice and the footstep died away, yet Black David upon
stood at the head of the stairway, leaning his arms
its
and
railing,
gazing silently into the darkness beneath.
His face
makes
his hair, which,
;
the outlines of his large head
the lamp, but lips,
by its tangled locks, seem yet more massive, is tinted by features, nor mark the expression of his
turned from the light
is
we cannot
see his
nor read the meaning of his eyes.
And yet
his
—
form trembles
or with laughter
it
quivers like a falling leaf
—with agony?
?
" Isaac lies insensible on the floor beside the corse, and, even in
The
unconsciousness, clutches at the broken glass. blighted
;
Paul goes from the wizard's house, flushed
his heart broken.
with agony, and shrieking for
and with
it,
light, for air
!
The
wizard's gold
Huntsman. And the bosom who, reared by the
Gilbert, the bold
—
dark eyes and stainless
his
man's hopes are
old
fair
is
daughter,
man from
old
gone,
— with child-
hood, in this mansion, treasures in her virgin-soul certain vague images of the Future, certain glen of Wissahikon
warm
—what
creature to look upon.
warm
her
imaginings of the great world beyond the of the beautiful girl
So queenly her
step, so
?
She
is
so beautiful the gloss of her dark hair, as
lip,
shoulders white as snow
!
Very
beautiful,
indeed a
fair
impetuous her glance, so
and yet the
it
over
floats
light of
her eyes,
from darkness, brings to mind Catherine Queen of Past Ages, who ruled France, with the Poison-
their very brightness, flashing
De
Medicis, the
Phial for a sceptre !"
Once more
the
form of the hunchback shook
like a falling leaf, as
he
leaned over the railing and looked into the darkness below.
A
pale face
was
raised from the floor, and eyes glassy and vacant in
head spotted with blood, she breast, as
she hurried to and
rose,
and clutched the dark mantle
fro, like
her hair with an involuntary grasp, face and back
With her
Maiden's chamber.
their gaze, glared in the light of the
one bereft of reason,
now
tossing
it
madly
now
fore-
to
her
clutching
aside from her
from her shoulders.
There was a
terrible
beauty in the sight.
A
lovely
woman, with
her
!
PAUL ARDENHEIM;
86
OR,
white forehead stained with blood, her hair dishevelled, and her robe disordered in every loosened fold, striding, with an impetuous step and flashing eye, over the floor of that silent and
"
He
does not love me.
was
It
false, that
gloomy chamber. Voice which whispered
his
name to my ear, told me to wait his coming, and yield my lip to his kiss Not love, but scorn ah !" She uttered a cry of terror, as the hand
—
which she raised
to
her forehead was wet with blood.
The mark of the hand which dashed me to the floor !" She pressed her clasped hands over that slowly bleeding wound, and stood before the mirror, which had glided to its place again. " Blood, too
am
" I
!
not lovely
hideous to
all
— no, no, no
other eyes
He
!
beautiful girl, who has not dwelt shut out from the world !"
And, tossing
to
and
Hideous
!
his
to
eyes, as I will be
has seen a fairer form, and loved some her
all
life
alone
from very childhood,
;
her hands on her forehead, her bosom swelling
fro,
under the white arms, she looked madly into the mirror, and saw the reflection of her trembling form, her lips
compressed, her face pale with
agony.
At
moment, while she
this
dumb and
is
her conflicting emotions, a Voice startles the silence of the
"
You
—
deathlike with the violence of
seems
to
break from the air-
chamber.
You have
have seen him, Maiden.
wild, unearthly
that
seen Paul
" Seen him," she answered, as though speaking to
her side—" Seen him, and he has dashed " But he^ loves you, maiden—" " Loves
Witness
!
!" there
this bleeding
me
some person by
at his feet, in
scorn !"
mark upon my brow. Love /" come again, and kneel at your
" Loves you, to madness, and will
and bathe them with his
She was
was a
music in that voice.
With her
silent.
feet,
tears !"
" Will seal his love with a
fingers
vow
on her tremulous
in the sight of
great world.
this lonely valley into the
lip,
she listened.
God, and lead you from
The unknown Maiden
of the
Wissahikon may become the courted and flattered Lady of some royal court, with a queenly robe upon her form, the eyes of the great, the noble, centred on her beautiful face."
But
Still silent.
in her
eyes the tears were dried, and from her
tremor has passed. " And he will triumph with you, and ascend with you heights of rank and power. in his ears,
his
and
all
men
How
dizzy
Yet, even, while the praises of a world ring
hasten to scatter gold and laurels in his way,
deepest joy will be thy kiss,
embrace
the
lip the
O
Maiden, his only heaven in thy
!"
the
full
glowed through
eyes shot forth a sudden the rich
brown
light,
of that velvet cheek
and the warm blood !
—
"
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. "
He
will
" Thine to
speak
The
Thine only, and forever.!" said the voice— which seemed air and all was still.
!
at
light
89
— be mine
—
her side, from the
shone over the chamber, glowing upon
its
antique furniture,
glittering on the mirror, over the floor, and tinting the quaint carvings on
the wall, until the
oaken flowers bloom
like
life.
Her mantle of black velvet, Through the white cur-
But the Maiden does not meet our eyes. fringed with gold, lies neglected
moonlight
tains the
lamp, and
steals,
all is silent
Would you behold
on the
and mingles
in the
floor.
rays with the faint light of the
its
Wizard's mansion.
the passionate girl,
the mirror, convulsed with the
who, not long ago, stood before love, repulsed by scorn ?
agony of a
Yonder, through the dark hangings of the bed, turn your gaze, and behold a gush of light trembling over that face, sunken deep into the silken pillow, with black hair floating all around it; a face closed, while the lips are parted,
treasured
whose
are
lids
murmuring, even in slumber, some
name
» Paul !"
The
dim ray
lantern shines over the corridor, and flings a
darkness of the stairway.
Black David
is
no longer here
;
into the
the place
is
gloomy and desolate. But there is a footstep on the narrow staircase, leading from the Wizard's tower the small door springs open and Isaac Van Behme .
;
appears in the
;
his
light,
face deathly pale, his
sockets, with the glare of apathetic despair.
eyes dilating in their
His slender form
is
still
enveloped in the loose gown, and, with his head bent on his breast, he
from the door, toward the descending stairway.
totters
In a
moment he
is
gone
into darkness
;
gone without a word, his hands
clenched on his breast, his white hair hanging in tangled masses over his
wrinkled brow.
With
a footstep that has no echo, he descends the stairs, and presently
stands in the darkness of the spacious hall, on the ground floor.
He
does not pause a moment, but, opening a door in the side of the
staircase,
he descends, without a light
to
show
the way, into the vault be-
neath his mansion.
Along a dark passage he passes with that uncertain impenetrable gloom, extends his hand
;
a door opens
;
step,
and
in the
the vaulted arch
is
bathed in sudden light.
He
enters
that chamber, or vault,
Twenty-One Years. his
own
has crossed
Through
the
which has witnessed
his
toil
for
In that period, no footstep save Black David's and its
threshold.
gloom of
that
wide
vault,
whose stone archway
is
sup-
PAUL ARDENHEIM
90
;
OR,
ported by four massive pillars, struggles a pale and blueish flame, which
whole scene with a funereal
invests the
That flame shines not
glare.
from a hanging lamp, but through an aperture in the surface of the white
which
altar,
It is
two
an
rises in the centre of the space
altar
in width, with
pillars.
more than
three feet high,
a small door in one side.
That white form,
rising
from the stone
gushing from the aperture in
whose massive
the vault,
between the
of marble, an oblong square, not
floor,
with a pale blueish
surface, alone breaks the stern
its
and heavy
ceiling
pillars
strike
light
gloom of
the soul with a
sensation of vague awe.
This
is
the Wizard's
most secret
cell. t
his art, ters,
There are no
indications of
no grinning skulls, nor parchments, darkened by strange charac-
nor alembics, crucibles, or other details of Astrology or Alchemy.
The pure
flame, shining in a flood of tremulous light, from the top of
the white altar, glowing like a spiritual presence through the gloom, alone indicates the old man's
He
toil,
his earnest search of
stands beside the altar,
all
fested in the contortions of his
thin hands clenched,
Twenty-One Years.
the anguish of his blighted hope
withered face.
mani-
Silent, motionless,
his
and his head bowed on his breast, he gazes on the
flame, and
its pale light glows on his vacant eyes. There are no words to picture the despair of that old man's heart. The brown sailor, gazing on the wreck of that ship, which has been his home, in calm and storm, for half a century the renowned general, suddenly disgraced into a prisoner, and standing amid the bodies of his ;
mangled comrades the father looking into the dead eyes of a beloved daughter— these all are subdued by agony that is too deep for utterance But the despair of the Alchemist was deeper than all these or tears. ;
woes, though linked in one convulsive throb.
He
beheld not the wreck of a home, or the slaughter of an army, or
the solitary death of a daughter, at once beloved and beautiful, but an
mortal Life palpitated
— almost
on
its
The Thought
While thus he
of a
life
into the
into nothingness,
Im-
even as he
Shattered with the
and sprinkled the
floor
brittle -phial,
with the priceless
Youth. stood, absorbed in his despair, his blue eyes glowing in
was blasphemous. He drew from the
A
swept
was dead.
in his grasp,
the light of the flame, there
the flame.
— was
threshold.
which had broken liquid of Eternal
achieved
came
to his
soul
a thought as sudden as
folds of his dress a pacquet,
it
which he extended over
stream of sand, or white dust, descended from the pacquet,
aperture.'
And
as
feathery columns over the
it fell,
altar,
a luminous
and
float
smoke began
to
wind
in
through the gloom, in waves
of rolling mist. It
wound over
the old
man's white
hairs, encircled his form,
and ere an
:
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. had passed,
instant
with a cloud of perfumed
the dreary vault
filled
91
vapor.
From M
bosom of
the
Even
that cloud his voice
as the seers of the old
was heard
wisdom, bewildered by the clouds of
communion with
their physical existence, sought to gain
Spirits of
the
the Invisible World, though at the peril of their deathless souls, so do
the
name
of the Seven Fallen Angels,
— who once stood
of Eternity, bathing their wings in the light that never dies
darkest and most powerful of the Seven
my
beneath
feet
communicable
—
I
pray no longer
Name
— "but
to
—"
— invoke
the
The Cross
!
is
he muttered the awful and
Ashtaroth,
to
Behold
!
in
I,
by the Throne
in-
the Prince of the Fallen !"
With these words were murmured the mystic formula of the ancient Cabalists
— those Prophets
ration alike from
man
of the old
of the far-gone ages,
Good and
Evil, from
who
God and
derived their inspi-
Satan
— and
as the voice
echoed, clear and deep, through the vault, the smoke-
clouds swept aside from his face, and
on the brow, and burning
showed
the dauntless Will, written
in the eyes.
There was a pause, and, stricken with sudden
terror,
he
fell
on his
knees, as though a strong arm had dashed him to the floor. " I
am
here," answered a sad, low-toned voice.
Before the
altar,
by clouds of undulating mist, appeared a
encircled
The
face of wild, unearthly beauty.
pale features, invested with a lurid
were seen amid a mass of dark hair, waving in snake-like locks, and with a red glow glimmering through its intervals. The eyes were large and dazzling in their unchanging brightness. The lips wore a light,
smile of undefinable meaning
The
forehead was
wide and
;
now
lofty,
it
was tenderness, and now scorn.
growing wider as
arose, in an out-
it
was white as a corse. That face, seen amid the clouds which floated to and fro, seemed like the face of a dead man, with an unnatural life just flashing into its eyes. line of swelling boldness
;
the skin
There was a mark upon the forehead in hideous distinctness
"
Thou
here *
!
gone
his hands, as
brow
—"
I
— the
what wouldest thou ask ?" of my life-long toil—" shrieked
fruit
obeyed thy commands.
to
floor, the
Ashtaroth
is
this
Water of Life— the
when
cold
dew
Isaac, wringing
starting
from his
For twenty-one years, night and day,
burned within
fire
place the
breast of the dead,
,
clay,
he grovelled on the
without ceasing, the
was about
which blackened
a livid cross,
hast invoked the most powerful of the Seven.
Poor child of
It is
;
on the death-like brow.
altar, atid
the phial crumbled in
—
this
result of all
my
grasp,
my
very night, toil
— on
and— my
I
the
toil is
become old for naught in vain this \rain racked by the agony of eternal fever— in vain this withered form, in vain these wrinkles, which have gathered while my task wore on in vain these grey hairs, which only tell how near that Grave, without a hope V
in vain
!
I
have
—
"
'
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
92
" The Water of Eternal Youth, for which thou didst seek, in the long dream of a life-time, has been wasted by thee wasted as the dead was
—
about to feel
influence VI
its
"
Not wasted hand dashed the
"And
No
!
By
!
phial from
for that
the despair
my
grasp
priceless liquid
—
which
— wasted
labor twenty-one years, every year a century
"Dark Angel, it is not may have done this deed It
my
was
utterable boon.
deed.
I
whole
unseen
— thou
didst
circle of years,
to taunt
me
with
my
Your hand
ruin.
"
saw
demanded, ere thou wilt be worthy of
is
Man
the First
Look
!
wert not yet worthy of the un-
that thou
trial
which
Twenty-one years
you
for
Another
the Forbidden Fruit, "
the
An
!
moment
a
in ;
—no
!
an Eternity
"
I feel
at these
and
Woman
grey hairs
sought
to
grasp."
Ere twenty-one
!
" hours are past, I will be dead. Dead And the Hereafter " Thou shalt not die. Nor is a trial of a life-time asked of thee. !
—
No
intense study, no brain-cankering toil no anxious watch by night, and Before the rising of another sun thou maddening thoughts by day mayst raise the Dead, and from his lips gain the knowledge of the great secret, which transmutes all base metals into Gold.'" " Speak Ashtaroth and I will worship thee !" " Within this altar, warmed by the fire that never dies, still is conceal!
—
—
ed the Sacred
" I
It is
there
created the
Urn 1" now as
it
has been for twenty-one years.
" Pour into that a tempted but
still
Urn
a single drop of blood,
stainless maiden,
once more will greet your eyes. throbs with the last pang of
life
is
too horrible
—
« Dost thou talk of crime it
its
bosom,
it
?
takes
demands
What
the heart of
must be taken from a heart
It
it
warm from
and the Water of Eternal Youth
—from a heart
impulse of the soul, fluttering ere " But this
Within
Water of Eternal Youth."
a
its
that
that quivers with the last
flight."
A
Murder.
crime
"
crime hast thou not committed
?
Is
for thee to hesitate ?"
Have I been unkind, even in thought, to my only child ? Crime my hand ever been closed at the call of suffering, the prayer of " houseless misery ? Of what crime do you accuse me " It is not for me to accuse. But woe to thee, sad and mistaken man, The crime of all woe to thee, when the Hour of Judgment comes crimes will be laid to thy soul, the blasphemy of daring to be Immortal The Unpardonable Sin is on thy head it will weigh thee down, in the fathomless anguish of an Eternity of Crime !" "
!
Has
!
!
:
"
A
single drop of blood,
stainless
maiden, and
of boundless gold."
lo
!
warm from
the
the heart of a tempted- but
Water of Life
is
mine.
Mine
still
the secret
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. "
Listen Thine before the dawn of another day a pure virgin struggles in the Tempter's arms
form, throbbing with the last pulse of
"I obey
Then,
I
!
in a
obey
at this
Hasten, ere
low whisper,
While
life,
to her side, and from her snatch the priceless boon !"
!"
that pale face, seen
half-luminous and transparent, tongue.
!
and dishonored thing, hasten
a tainted
is
Even
!
!
moment she
93
his face
was
murmured
dimly among misty clouds,
the syllables of an
distorted and his form
unknown
cramped by the
vio-
Van Behme bent hishead on his woven brow, gazed into the lurid
lence of preter natural emotions, Isaac breast, and,
from the shadows of his
visage of the
Unknown.
Those words, spoken in the mysterious tongue of the Cabalists and Magi of the ancient ages, thrilled on the listener's ear. He heard them with a shudder, and then a dark cloud rushed upon the scene, and Isaac fell forward on his face, unconscious and motionless as a dead man. "When he again unclosed his eyes, the pure spiritual light shone calmly through the aperture in the summit of the altar, and glowed upon the massive pillars, the gloomy arch, the floor of solid stone. But the mist had rolled away, and with it, the Unknown Face had passed into nothingness.
The maiden," he murmured, as a cold shudder shook his stiffened The maiden whom I met to-night by the forest fire, weeping over the dead body of Yoconok !" He hurried from the vault. The door closed behind him, with a sud"
limbs, "
den
Along the dark passage, with unsteady steps he hastened, and,
jar.
ascending the stairway, soon reached the hall on the ground the light shining feebly from the second story, over
As he hurried
to the door,
its
"
It
is
but the poor brainless hunchback !" he exclaimed
A
!
with
he missed his footing, and stumbled over a
dark form, which lay crouching near the stairway.
beside the door, too
floor,
gloom.
faithful
knave
—
" Sleeping
!"
And, stepping gently over Black David's form, he opened the door, and passed forth into the clear, cold moonlight.
No
sooner had his footsteps died on the
to his feet,
Softly,
and hurried up the
on
tiptoe,
air,
than the Deformed started
stairs.
and with a gliding footstep, he approached the door
of the Maiden's chamber, and bent his head close to the dark panels.
There was no sound
;
she slept on her virgin bed, with her face sunken
in the silken pillows.
Black David opened the door without a word,
and passed the threshold of
that sacred retreat.
The lamp, swinging from dreamy light. With the same noiseless
the ceiling, invested the place with a soft,
luxurious,
step, the
hunchback approached
the bed,
and
—
—
PAUL ARDENHEIM
94
OR,
;
winding the tapestry about his uncouth form, looked glowing on one cheek with the dim It
was a strong
ing from
its
contrast.
huge forehead
in
within, his face
light.
That pale face, with the tangled hair floatuneven locks, down to the matted beard
;
and the glowing countenance
of
slumbering
the
girl,
who
rested her
cheek upon her bent arm, while the dark fringes of her closed
warm
the
beauty of her parting
lips,
wandered
complexion, as her black hair
new
gave a
unbound
in
lids,
and
loveliness to her olive tresses over the
silken pillow.
And, like some Demon, watching, with flaming eyes and
livid lip, curv-
ing in scorn, the slumber of an Angel, Black David stood in the folds of
and looked upon the sleeping
the faded hangings,
" She
name
Who
her lover.
of
tender, all that in her face,
loving,
is
So,
—
fair
it
and
could not that
is
predict her future
— swells
to the roots of
is
—upon her — almost im-
Yet hold
her hair, a slender vein
from the clear skin, and quivers like a serpent there
beautiful, a similar fate
All that
?
virgin in voluptuous beauty, centres
was many hundred years ago
What was her curtain,
all
and marks each outline of her form.
brow, from the eyes perceptible
girl.
very beautiful, and in her dreamy sleep, she murmurs the
is
?
—
It
and lay bare that
upon
the
brow of woman,
!
as
dark vein swelled through the stainless skin.
seems but yesterday terrible
Memory.
;
the ages roll back like a
What
shall be the Fate of
Through the clouds of the Future I behold it, and see the serpent, which now darkens on her forehead, glide into her heart, and drop its venom from her rosy lips " It is enough to force a smile, the folly of these cowled Mummers, who picture the Enemy of Mankind in a grotesque shape ha ha
this
sleeping girl
?
!
—
with hoof and horns, and all the details of a puerile fancy. " No one could be deceived by a Devil so pitiable as that
who
!
— not
!
—
even
him thus " But a Devil that comes panting on your senses from a white bosom; that fires you with the that kisses you with warm, voluptuous lips the Priests
paint
!
;
.
brightness of
who
eyes languid with passion
wears, on her
" Fear Satan at
and pray
for
fair all
;
a beautiful Devil altogether,
brow, a single black and serpent-like vein
times, brave Paul of Ardenheim, but kneel to God,
mercy, when he comes
While the crazed hunchback low, melodious voice, the young
to
" Mine, and mine only !"
in a shape like this !"
uttered these incoherent words, in his girl, in
arms over her bosom, and murmured, desire
you
her slumber, clasped her white
in a voice languid with passionate
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON.
95
CHAPTER EIGHTH. B. H. A. C.
On
Wissahikon shore, where,
a rock, beside the
in
the summer-time,
on without a ripple, wider and deeper in its tranquil now, as it nears the Schuylkill, stood Gilbert, the Hunter, bending upon his rifle, it
glides
with his eyes cast upon the waves, which looked black and dreary, as they swept onward, amid white masses of
ice, glittering in
the rising
moon. It
was
sailing there, in the pure winter sky,
a broad
which sank
hill,
to
its
cold light shining over
the shore, "mantled with frozen snow, and
sparkling like a sheet of undulating silver, as the dark forests girdled
on every This
it
side.
hill
rose before
Wissahikon
to the
him
to the south,
ascending from the ice-cumbered
dreary woods, over whose leafless branches shone the
transparent sky.
Behind him was a wall of brushwood, and trees,
which towered suddenly
a precipitous
mass of
forest
into the heavens, with the forms of gi-
gantic rocks thrust here and there from the dark branches.
And from
the
gloom
in the east, the
she flows by the snow-mantled
hills
;
Wissahikon comes
and into the gloom
glittering as
in the
passes as suddenly, 'her echo breaking in a low, monotonous far
—redoubled by the
along the woods
west she
murmur,
craggy rocks— and rising, in
soft-
ened music, into the sky.
There
is
a ray gleaming from the pine trees on the southern hill
;
it is
the light from the Wizard's tower.
From
the
gloom
at the hunter's
answering ray trembles
forth,
back
—he stands
facing the south,
and dies upon the waters.
It is
— an
the light
stealing from the closed shutters of the deserted house.
0, it is beautiful to stand thus alone, at dead of night, on the Wissahikon shore beneath your feet a rock which, thousands of years ago, ;
was
by the footsteps of some dark-cheeked Indian maid, by the white robes of the Sacrificial Priest, who raised his hands to yonder sky, to yonder moon, and, in the deep silence of a midnight universe, uttered a Prayer to God, in a tongue, now lost in the lightly pressed
or swept
chaos of the centuries. It
is
beautiful, in the
ment
summer-time, when the broad
hill
of tufted grass, and the world of foliage bends
wears a gar-
leaves and blossoms into the calm waters, while the distant cry of a night-bird mingles with the unceasing chirp of the katy-did, and the soft voice of Wis-
sahikon.
its
PAUL ARDENHEIM;
06
OR,
But now, in Winter, and at midnight too, when the breathless stillness —deepened rather than broken by the monotonous murmur of the waves dashing against the ice awes every throb of your heart into a solemnity which is Religion, while the eye beholds only that great vault of transpa-
—
moon
rent azure, arching over the leafless woods, with the
gliding
away
and flinging a blessing on your forehead as she glides
in cloudless light,
in winter, at midnight, that the glen of Wissahikon is a holy which the Angels might come as to a temple, and breathe their pity for the Crimes of Man, and raise their hymns of thankfulness to God. Are you sick of the World ? Do the crimes of the Great City wear it is
place, to
your soul
like an iron fang into
that
drunken with
is
cious with a
blasphemy
to
God
Great City, come
Whose
in
into hideous birth,
Man
fero-
Man,
Come,
forth.
the world
forget
;
the Slave, and be full of Peace,
an hour, by the Wissahikon Waters.
for
For, by the Wissahikon, at dead of Night,
when there moon in a
you grow nearer
your God, and
to
feel
snow upon
is
the ground, and ice upon the waves, and a clear
'
is
to
bosom, the Plagues of Mo-
foul
— come, and forget
the anguish, the blood and tears of
though but
your heart but a curse
to
streets of the
from that clouded atmosphere,
Death swelter
panorama of wealth,
the great
?
Then, from the crowded ral
seem
sullen endurance,
its
Does
?
boundless sensuality, and Poverty, that
its
cloudless sky,
your heart reach out
its
arms
to
grasp Eternity.
Then, is,
with Peace that
filled
such a
in all the world,
unutterable,
is
you even forget
that there
on the Universe as a Man, ground
libel
into
dust by the footstep of a Brother
But hold
my
crowd
you, of
still
me
that
of his
full
I
talk too
dumb
waters and serene skies,
for the Rich,
now and
my
Be
friends.
all night, if it^please
—but never
tell
us that
and only Graves and Gibbets
merciful to me,
me
it
my
you sneer very
feet, will
For myself, inflicted
For
has not been
my feet. Will you forgive me, my Teacher's face, the iron
taught to
And when
?
the
flint
of the rough road cuts
bitterly, if I but dare to
I will be silent.
Not
a
moan
?
word of orphanage, and wrongs
by godly hands not a whisper. wrongs of those who have suffered ;
the
sand pangs, where
I felt
go, dragging their
weary
less too
silken People.
The world
then, I dare to fling back into
lesson which
No.
it
speak, I have learned in a bitter school.
I
But
of suffering man, and
Talk
— they say
a very soft road, sprinkled with roses, to if,
much
anguish.
Poor.
Pardon me,
what
tell
Banks and Churches
there are for the
they
;
pages too
one,
— the
feet, to
like
me, and endured
anguish of those miserable graves
who
— shall
suffer
a thou-
now, and
they be voice-
?
Not while
the good
God
gives to
me
the strength to grasp this
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. mine
friend of
—
this
well-worn pen, which has cut a
— no
the granite wall of poverty and orphanage
97
way even through
Not while
!
the Father
Redeemer of the Poor, permits one throb one word to quiver from my tongue.
of the Fatherless, the at
my
heart,
For I
am
I
am
want one flower
I
word like this " Here moulders the hand In
of
bloom upon
to
my
some Poor Man, who can
planted by the hand of
name
When
Ambitious with a wild, insane ambition.
ambitious.
dead,
to pulsate
that dared to write
grave
bless
;
my
that flower
ashes with a
one brave word
in the
Man."
my
crude"
way
of thinking, there
by
that solitary flower, planted
something more beautiful
is
Poor Man's hand, than
a
in a
in
marble
monument, built by a King, in Westminster Abbey, over some dead Conqueror, whose hallowed epitaph bears words like these "He slew, in a hundred battles, at least one hundred thousand of his Brothers."
But
this
midnight scene of Wissahikon, hallowed by
snow and moonlit sky, has won me from Leaning on his
The
waters.
moonlight, glowing on his face, revealed the look of tender
sadness which, for a moment, softened the rock,
which jutted from
bank
the
Beneath the
hardy
a brass padlock,
wreck of the Wizard's. wealth, was hidden. " There's a turnin' pint in every man's on the waves
his eyes fixed
eddy, near that chunk of
—
"
ice,
And
He
features. its
stood on
hard surface,
and bound with
that box, the wealth, or rather a
of
lid
its
one foot resting on
;
by
the other on a square box, secured intricate cords.
life
stainless
history.
gazed sadly into the dark
Gilbert, the Hunter,
rifle,
this
my
the thread of
life,"
muttered Gilbert, with
that ar' twig quivers in the
jist as
as if unsartin
which way
my
so
to go,
quivered this night."
Associating his
own
destiny with the fate of the withered twig, which
trembled in the eddy created by the waves dashing against a block of
watched
the middle of the stream, Gilbert
its
ice, in
course with involuntary
in-
terest.
" It trimbles tow'rd the channel on the a little
whirlpool
— so
the quiet channel,
It
!
curses on
it
tosses in the whirlpool
The
By
!
—
there,
it is
it
left,
where
the
turns to the right It
!
goes to the
eddy grows ;
it
left,
into
swims along after all
—
it
safe !"
hunter's face glowed with unfeigned pleasure, his breast heaved
with a deep respiration. " That
'ill
be the
which channel after all.
way
to take,
But no
!
with
and
By
my
tossin' !
life.
Quiverin' for a moment, unsartin
on the waves, only
to
go safely onward,
the twig snaps in pieces, and scatters
the waters, in broken fragments !"
7
on
— PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
98
Do
not smile,
when you
from his forehead.
dew
see the cold
For by a
superstition,
standing in beaded drops
common
phecy of
So
14
bold
'ill
be with
Well
— well!
me
Tossed on the waves only
!
had married Mad'lin'
If I
his rifle to his shoulder,
enemy was
" That's what
my
bullet for every
wild
all
to
be bruk to
would have been
life
past,
and took deliberate aim, as though
standing on the opposite shore. life 'ill
" the
be
man who
rifle
dropped by his side again
has gold, which
bullet or a knife, a shot or a stab
is
with
tightened the lips, and drew the brows over the flashing eyes.
line,
a mortal
A
life,
the twig as a Pro-
expression darkened over his brown face, which distorted every
"Now'" He raised
"
own
now"
but
An
his
his destiny.
it
pieces! right,
humblest and
to the
most exalted natures, he had associated the Future of the course of some trifling thing, and taken the fate of
And
!
I
of one like me, into somethin' quiet and
and
I
must go where
I
am
would
have
like to
;
a
Mad'lin' might ha' turned the full
But
of Peace.
it
led."
Turning from the rock, with the box under one arm, and his good rifle on his shoulder, Gilbert entered the shadows of the brushwood, and pursued the windings, of a foot-path, which led far into the gloom of the dense forest, now passing through some open space, silvered by moonlight,
in
in
and again
lost in the
maze of
giant trees.
emerging from a thicket of briars and brushwood, interwoven one almost impassable wall, Gilbert beheld the old house, deep sunken the glen between two high hills.
At
It
last,
was
a two-storied structure, built of dark grey stone, with four win-
dows on its front, whose shutters were closed. Before the door, on whose dingy panels the moon shone brightly, a huge stone, worn smooth Around by the pressure of many feet, supplied the place of a step. The stony ground was covered it the prospect was wild and desolate. with withered brushwood, even to the walls, and the front of the edifice alone was visible, in that wilderness of giant trees.
The
evergreen pine stretched
its
branches over the roof, mingled with
The scyamore, wjth its moon from the darkness of the
the leafless limbs of the chesnut and the oak.
white trunk, glared out in the light of the
woods.
Behind the deserted mansion, the
hill
rose suddenly,
its
summit smoke
seen through the trees above the chimney, which sent a volume of into the sky.
Altogether, that house, rude and
sented a sight of position, in trees
interest,
monotonous
from
its
in its architecture, pre-
very desolation, and
the hollow of the glen, encircled on every side
of the
trunks.
some
forest,
its
by
peculiar the great
with brushwood spreading darkly between
their
THE MONK OF THE WISSAKIKON.
99
Gilbert advanced through the space in front of the edifice,
moonlight shone
paused still,
by "
a
for
On
in clear radiance.
where
inclining his head toward the panels.
moment,
the
the stone before the door, he
All
was
yet a confused sound, like the songs and shouts of a revel, drowned
came ever and again
thick walls,
The
at
sudden intervals
to his ear.
dream what kind o' ghosts haunt this here old house !" he said, with a smile upon his sunburnt face. Then, with his hand clenched, he knocked thrice upon the door, folks of
Wisseyhik'n
little
and heard the echoes dying away within, as through the arches of
a
corridor.
The door was opened, and utter darkness
;
Gilbert passed the threshold, and heard the
He
was suddenly closed behind him.
hinges grate, as the door
stood in
not a ray of light shone into the intense night of the
place.
The word ?" said a rough voice. "Death .'" answered Gilbert, in his accustomed " What would you here ?" "
"I would
enter the
tone.
Lodge of the B. H. A. C," replied the Hunter. C, you will know the way. Advance and
"If you are a true B. H. A.
Word
give the explanation to the
Through
When
footsteps. his hand,
!"
the midnight gloom, Gilbert advanced, counting his
and
felt
the panels of another door.
He knocked
each knock rising above the other, and a circle of light the
darkness.
It
measured
he had measured ten paces from the door, he extended
was
a
warm
ture in the door, and flinging a
light,
faint
four times,
shone through
shining through a circular aper-
glow over the place
in
which he
stood.
By
that uncertain light,
small apartment, the
it
might be ascertained that he had entered a walls, and uncovered floor,
monotony of whose bare
was only broken by a dimly-defined figure near Gilbert's side. The Hunter applied his lips to the circular aperture in the door, and whispered these words :
"
to the
As he spoke, like
Rich!" the door opened, and in a
moment, Gilbert stood
room, lighted by a lamp which hung from the
the dark hangings, the floor strown with sand. the door, and leaning
from head
On "
its
A
in a cell-
and revealed
single chair stood near
high back, a veiled figure appeared, shrouded
foot in a dark robe, with a
cowl drooping over the face. cowl which concealed the face, two letters were ingolden embroidery " B. H. A. C." to
that part of the
scribed in
on
ceiling,
Your name
—
?" a deep voice exclaimed, speaking from the folds of the
monkish cowl. " Gilbert Morgan, a Brother of the Rifle Lodge,
B. H. A. C."
Number
256, of the
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
100
Word
" Give the
and
its
explanation, so that
I
may know you
for a
Brother." 44
Death— to
44
It is
way
the
Rich /"
Clothe yourself with appropriate Regalia, and work your
well.
Lodge.
into the
Placing his
rifle
The door
on the
floor,
is
before you."
and with
ard's gold, Gilbert lifted the dark curtain
it
the box, containing the
which concealed
Wiz-
the walls, and
took from a recess, or closet, a collar of scarlet velvet, edged with gold
and with a dagger emblazoned on one
lace,
side, a skull
and cross-bones
on the other.
He
placed
of the
same
around his neck, and then took from the closet an apron
it
material, also edged with gold, but with the letters, B.
C, embroidered
in the centre.
He
secured
ending in a tassel of gold, and thus arrayed
H. A.
round his waist by a cord,
it
in the Regalia of the Order,
whose narrow panels appeared among the sombre hangings of the room. The box was under his left arm, the rifle on his shoulder, as he knocked five times, with a pause between each sound. Who comes there ?" a voice was heard speaking through a square advanced toward
a door,
44
aperture in the centre of the door. "
4
Brother of the Knightly Degree,' " answered Gilbert, in the tone
A
who repeats some carefully remembered The word of the Knightly Degree ?"
of one 44
444 44
44
" answered Gilbert.
FJfe'
To whom To
444
formula.
?"
Poor!' "
the
Enter, Brother Knight of the B. H. A. C.," exclaimed the voice,
which was heard through the circular aperture
And after
ere a
moment had
in the door.
passed, Gilbert, passing the door, which closed
him, found himself encircled by the details of a scene of peculiar
interest. It
mid
was a large room, with a lofty ceiling, and a dim light quivering in The high walls were hung with dark cloth, on which was em,
air.
blazoned various
and symbols, some of the most grotesque, others
letters
of the most impressive character.
At the eastern end of the room, rose a platform, attainable by three
wide steps, covered with dark cloth.
was seated There was a
On man
this platform
a
almost regal splendor.
glittering
—a
scarlet robe
upon
in luxurious folds
cross-bones. letters,
The
a
crown upon
his forehead
his form, drooping from his shoulders to his feet,
— and
blazoned on one side
was placed
of muscular form, attired in
chair or throne, in which
on
his breast a collar of
witli the dagger,
black
veil
dark purple velvet, em-
on the other with the skull and
which concealed
his face bore the golden
B. H. A. C.
This was the Worthy Master of the Rifle Lodge, No. 256, of the B.
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. H. A. C.
His purple
101
Right Venerable or
collar indicated the
Priestly-
degree.
Opposite
this platform, in the
western extremity of the Lodge, was a
smaller platform, rising two steps above the floor, with an oaken chair
Here was seated a figure, veiled in a light-blue robe, gleaming with emblems, on his breast, and a coronal His face, covered by a veil of silver leaves entwined about his brow. of black cloth, with spaces for the eyes, also bore the letters, B. H. A. C. This was the Honorable Warden of the Lodge, clad in the regalia of
upon
its
summit.
with a scarlet
collar,
the Venerable or Knightly Degree.
And between
the
Warden and
men, every face covered with a
the Master, veil,
were seated some hundred
every form bearing the regalia of
the order, either the white scarf of an Initiate, or the scarlet collar of a
In the dim light, the effect of
Knight, or the purple insignia of a Priest. this scene
The
was
floor
at
once solemn and dazzling.
was of dark wood, polished
appeared a large
star, inserted
like a mirror.
in the polished
wood, and
In
its
centre,
glittering like
burnished gold.
To
this
the
star Gilbert
Then,
feet.
advanced, and placed the box and the
raising his clasped hands above his head,
Worthy Master, who slowly
rifle
at his
he bowed before
imitated the gesture, after
which Gilbert
spread forth his arms, with the fingers of each hand extended and separate
from each other.
" Right, Brother !" a voice sounded from beneath the Master's veil.
The Hunter, luted
him with
Then,
lifting
turning on his heel, faced the
same sign. the box and
Worthy Warden, and
sa-
the
the rifle from the floor, he took his
seat
among
the veiled brethren, covering his face with a veil similar to the
others,
which was extended to him by plume waving from
robe, with a dark
Worthy Herald of the Lodge. "Let the rite of Initiation begin!"
a figure clad in a shapeless black
his shrouded forehead.
This was
the
low
said the
Worthy Master,
in a hol-
voice, which, evidently
assumed, echoed through the spacious room, with a strange and unnatural emphasis.
And from
the dark hangings near the
Warden's Platform, the Herald, plume waving over his veiled face, led forth a halfnaked man, whose eyes were covered by a white scarf, bound tightly around the brows. His form, bare to the waist, was marked by a broad chest, and arms of iron muscle. And yet, as, with his eyes blindfolded,
clad in black, with the
he followed the Herald, he trembled like a It
could not have been with cold,
man
for, either
seized with an ague-chill.
from the heat of a
fire which was invisible, or from the numbers gathered in the darkened room, the air was hot and stifling. Not a word was spoken for the space of ten minutes, but in that space,
—
"
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
102
the senses of the Candidate
and
to
now
fro,
suddenly turned
He was led now
were completely bewildered.
crossing the room,
now
traversing
and forced on
in his course,
entire length,
its
his knees,
by
the hands of
the Herald.
was plainly
It
be seen, that the dead silence of the place awed the
to
senses of this strong man, while the manner in which the Herald led
him, gave him the idea of traversing winding corridors, long passages,
and a wide range of rooms.
For as, in his blindfolded career, he approached the eastern or western extremities of the Lodge, the doors appearing amid the hangings were opened and closed, with a harsh, grating sound. And every time he passed the golden star, glittering from the crowd of waved a burning flambeau in his face. This impressed him with the idea of a fire, blazing in his path, and about to envelop him with its flames. Indeed, the silent ceremonial, altogether, was calculated to chill with awe the firmest nerves to weaken, with the rapid alternations of suscentre of the floor, a figure robed in white advanced from the
brethren, and
;
pense and
The
fear, the stoutest heart.
eternity to the blindfolded
ten minutes
man— were over
—which
A
at last.
deep
seemed an
bell, striking
one, and echoing like a knell, broke on his ear.
Thou art here, in the hallowed circle of C," said the Herald, in a guttural tone.
"
A.
the Free
Lodge of the B. H.
Then chains were dashed upon the floor, and clanked at his back. The harsh sound, breaking, in sudden violence, from the dead stillness, seemed his
"
complete the terror of the
to
His bared arms trembled
Initiate.
;
knees quivered, and shook against each other.
Do
not
— do not — " he gasped — "
no voice was heard While the Herald bound
Still,
in
I will
obey
—
answer; an unbroken silence prevailed.
the chains about his bared chest, and twined
around his naked arms, four figures clad in white, with
their cold links
torches in their hands, bore from the
shadows a
on which was
bier,
placed a motionless figure, in a sitting posture, with two hands extended
from the black "It thee,
is
on
which covered
pall
body of the Dead
the
Its face is
its bier.
!"
its
outlines.
whispered the Herald—"
covered by a
are extended, to clasp thee in the :
pall,
embrace of Death.
beside
It is
but the cold,
stiff
hands
Art thou ready
for the trial ?"
And the
as he spoke, a chorus of hollow whispers
Candidate—"
died in
him "
the
act of
at the altar,
The
trial
It
is
the corse of one
crime"
—
"
who
The vengeance
in the ear of
of
the
— " He
Lodge overtook
even as he heard the voice of his Bride"
?" faltered the Candidate.
" Yes, the solemn ordeal of the dead hand
low voice.
echoed
betrayed his trust"
" Give
me
thy hand.
!"
spoke the Herald
Press the hand of the dead
in his hol-
—thus
11
—
—
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. The
shook
Initiate
103
reed, as he felt those cold fingers in his
like a
grasp.
" Clasp
it
me
and repeat with
firmly,
the obligation of a Free Brother
my
heart there is hidden one thought of treachery to the Order, in whose Lodge I stand, may my hand become
of the B. H. A. C.
like the
my
'If in
hand which I grasp hand of the
lips the cold
The Candidate
and in witness of
;
Bead.''
faltered the words, with a
as though his fears
had choked
this
my
vow, I raise
to
" pause between each syllable,
his utterance.
— spoke the deep
" Raise the hand to your lips"
voice in his ear.
arm trembling in every nerve, he slowly lifted the dead hand, and felt its fingers grow colder in his grasp. He pressed it to his lips, and as the moist, clammy skin filled him with a sensation of intolerable loathing, he let it fall, as though it was a hand of red-hot iron. " Examine the hand, Honorable Herald" spoke the Worthy Master from his throne " If there is a drop of blood upon the palm, this Candi-
With
his strong
—
—
date will prove a Traitor !"
A
The
dead silence ensued.
with
shuddering
Initiate,
awaited the result of this strange ordeal. " There is !" shouted the Herald in tones of thunder
drop of blood upon
suspense,
—" There
is
a
dead hand."
this
" Then," exclaimed the Master, starting erect on his platform, with
dim
his regalia glittering in the
to his
A
doom
Then have we
a Traitor in our
feet,
and rustling robes, and sharp
clanking from the sheath, crashed on the Initiate's ear. ;
prostrate
on the
floor,
with the bandage
over his eyes, he faltered the incoherent prayer
Mercy
He arms. "
"
!"
His knees sank beneath him "
—
confused sound, as of trampling
steel,
still
light
Brothers, arise— arise with daggers drawn, and hurl the wretch
midst.
No
!
Traitor, but a true
the points of the
felt
He was
Death
encircled
to the
Traitor
— he
by
man — do not" —
drawn daggers touch
his face, his
breast, his
a wall of deadly steel.
— death !"
must not leave
arose from an hundred voices.
"
He
—
Lodge alive the drop of blood on the hand of the dead, bears witness against him !" Then a voice, deeper and bolder than all the others, was heard through will betray us
the uproar
the
:
" Prepare, Brothers, prepare your daggers
plunge them, one and
all,
and
at the
!
When
same moment,
I raise
into the
my
hand,
body of the
Traitor !"
There was a pause.
A
breathless silence reigned.
his lips, but he could not speak. his
arms
At
this
fell
The
His head sunk upon
Initiate
motionless in their chains.
moment, a whisper disturbed
moved
his breast,
the breathless stillness
and
—
—
;
PAUL ARDENHEIM
ig-4
" Shall be true !"
And Master
A
!
is
spare
him
He may
?
repent
Even
!
yet, Brothers,
he
may
answer other whispers arose
in
No
*«
we
OR,
;
we cannot about
to
spare him. his
lift
picture of terror
hand
more
He
is
Look
doomed.
The Worthy
!
!"
was presented
abject cannot be imagined, than
in the prostrate figure of that
strong man, bound in chains, and surrounded
by the crowd of veiled forms, flashing with
regalia, a
dagger glittering in
each uplifted hand.
The
suspended from the ceiling grew
light
fainter,
and a gloom more
than intense darkness, sank on the scene, confounding the
impressive
forms of the brethren,
from
like flame-sparks
in
one vague mass of half-shadow, from which
a cloud
— their regalia glittered in tremulous
points
of radiance. "
What wouldst
was
Initiate could not
it
answer.
Let the bandage be removed from his eyes.
doom and
a
He
mingled sound as of whispering voices and steps hurrying
with the sharp clang of steel encountering
fro,
shall behold the
him."
that awaits
There was to
—
the disguised voice of the Herald.
The "
thou do, to obtain light and liberty ?" said a voice
steel,
heard through
the confusion.
The
Initiate felt the
bandage drop from his eyes.
before he could recover the use of his sight, but
It
was
a
when he gazed
moment around,
he discovered that he was kneeling in the centre of a room not more than ten feet square, with a lofty ceiling,
and hangings of midnight darkness.
Before him stood a man, enveloped in a shapeless garment of coarse cloth,
grey in color, and with a
hand he held a light
veil of black
crape over his face.
glittering axe, in the other a flaming torch,
imparted a lurid glare
to
the terror-stricken face
of the Initiate.
Beside this figure was an elevation, covered with black velvet. block of the scaffold. " I
upon
am
thy executioner !" said the figure
In one
whose red It
was the
— "Advance and
lay thy head
ruddy hues,
a corse-like
the block !"
The
face of the Initiate,
was
pallor,
changed from
agitated in every nerve.
its
He
to
raised his chained hands,
and
gasped "
"
am no Traitor !" Come The moment
I
!
you hear
He
it ?
It is
of your death
is
here.
Hark
!
That
bell
your funeral knell."
awed by the terrors which he had With one step he reached the block, and knelt and laid head upon it. He saw the axe flash in the air, in the red light of
dured.
torch
tottered to his feet, entirely
enhis
the
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. He
105
closed his eyes.
There was
The axe
a pause.
did not
Tremblingly the
fall.
Initiate
them blinded by a dazzling light. The four curtains, which, descending from the ceiling of the Lodge, had formed the cell-like apartment, were rolled aside, and the sight which met the eyes of the affrighted man, was brilliant beyond the power unclosed his eyes, and
felt
of language.
An hundred
torches, each grasped in the
—
arm of
a Brother of the Order,
up the spacious Lodge room, and shone on the stars and jewels, symbols and robes in one vivid flood of brightness.
lighted the
—
High on
platform, his breast heaving under
his
its
purple collar, ap-
peared the Worthy Master, with lines of veiled forms, extending from his
down
side,
platform, to the floor
the steps of the
torch blazed brightly, and
and in every hand a
;
on every neck the gorgeous
regalia glittered
with blinding radiance.
Advance! We hail you as "Arise! Worthy Master, in a loud and ringing voice. Trembling arms
still,
the Initiate rose; the chains
guided by the
;
a Brother!" exclaimed the
hand,
Herald's
he
from his breast and
fell
approached
the
Master's
platform.
And from
He
sweat started even yet
his pale face the
in
beaded drops.
glanced from side to side, on the array of veiled figures, clad in
robes of linen and purple, and decked with symbols that shone like stars,
and then his eye was centred on the Master's form,
upon
Thou
"
we
his platform, with a golden torch held in his
hast passed the
try thy courage,
charge
to
The
and
first
test
ordeal.
thy
faith,
who
stood motionless
extended arm.
Another yet remains. with the Ordeal of Blood,
Yet, ere 1
have a
impress upon thy soul." beheld a Brother clad in white advance, holding in one
Initiate
hand, a coarse garment, flaming red in hue, and in the other, a knife, rusty and dim, as with the stain of blood. "
Endue
the Candidate with the
Blood-red robe.
Place in his hand
the rusted knife."
With
was done.
It
knife in
his
the coarse garment on
hand, the Initiate awaited the
his
broad chest, and the
commands
of the
Worthy
Master. " Canst thou
The V "
tell,
I
Initiate's
cannot
Candidate, whose blood
it
is,
that
dyes the sack-
It is
grey eyes expanded in wonder.
tell !"
by
he
faltered.
the Blood of the Poor," exclaimed the Master.
From a hundred " The sackcloth ages
O
which now covers your form ?"
cloth
the axe,
voices broke the chorus
bears witness
by the
cord,
by
of the the iron
:
Wrongs of
the Poor, slain for
hand of the Tyrant
!"
"
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
106
The
" it,
dagger in thy hand
"
I
"
It is
cannot the
tell
dimmed by
is
on
that gathers in blackness
—
"
The Blood is
Whose
stain.
blood of the Oppressor," said the Master
voice of the Brothers joined in chorus
which
dusky
a
of the Tyrant
crimsoned by
that
blood
is
sharp point ?"
its
;
and again the
:
Sacred, in the sight of God, be the steel blood !" !
" This sackcloth, stained with the blood of the Poor, this dagger, rusted
by
That
the blood of the Tyrant's heart, have for thee a solemn lesson.
lesson marks thy
first
Listen
step into the mysteries of our Order.
So
!
long as the blood of the Poor dyes the sackcloth, so long will the blood
The day comes, when the sackcloth as the snow, when the dagger Cross of dazzling light. Then shall the blood
of the Tyrant stain the dagger.
changed
shall be
garment spotless
into a
shall be transformed into a
of the Poor no longer flow, then shall the earth be no longer polluted by
But
the Tyrant's step.
covenant
;
day comes, we have joined
until that
Oath of
wilt thou take the
that covenant,
and bind
in
its
solemn
motto
to
thy heart?" !"
"I will " Warden, administer
The
the Oath."
Candidate, attired in the bloody sackcloth, with the rusted knife in
his hand, was led along the floor, through the dazzling array of the crowded Lodge. In a few moments he stood at the western extremity of the room, at the foot of the Warden's platform. The Warden, gorgeous in his light-blue robe, varied by the scarlet collar,
and with a group of white plumes tossing about
descended the steps, holding
hand a
in his
his veiled
brow,
goblet, filled to the brim with
a red liquid. " Kneel, and repeat the oath
obey forever the mandate of the secrets of this order
love of
woman, nor yet
***********
to
;
I
!
my
do swear,
superiors
in the
to
;
them up, neither
yield
the terrors of the grave.
of * * *
I
also
to
,
my bosom
in
to the fear
I
Furthermore, in case
*^
name
keep locked
of man, the
swear
*****
prove recreant
my
to
obey the commands of my superiors, or reveal the secrets of the B. H. A. C, or meet with any Lodge, not chartered by the oath, and refuse to
Grand Lodge of
this
order,
encounter be planted in
water fail to quench " So mote it be !
"
And
my
may
my
thirst,
Amen
and
the dagger of the
may
heart;
the
and earth deny
Amen
first
brother
sun refuse
me
the shelter of a grave."
in witness of this oath, and of this invocation, I place to
zied gesture, he raised
it,
I
I
!"
this goblet, filled with the blood of a Brother
may my blood be drunken, in case He did not refuse the goblet nor
whom
me warmth,
who
betrayed his
my
lips
trust.
imitate the perjury of the Traitor
fail to
utter the words.
and moistened his
lips
With
So !"
a fren-
with the loathsome liquid.
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. Once more, which
by
terror-stricken
this
horrible
formula of blasphemy,
had repeated, the candidate was led
his lips
107
to
the east,
where the
Master's platform rose.
know me
" Wouldst thou
and repeat with
the great
Then
watchword of our order?
listen
—
"'Death to the Rich Life to the Poor!'" The Initiate's eyes flashed, as he uttered the words
in a tone of violent
emphasis.
And through floated
—
"
—
Lodge, spoken slowly and in distinct utterance,
the
that fearful
Death to the Rich
" Prepare for the last in this,
At
On
—Life
trial.
to the Poor !" comes the ordeal of Blood.
Now
Fail
and thou canst never leave these walls a living man."
this crisis, a
door near the warden's platform was suddenly opened.
the threshold appeared a figure, clad in an array
shamed even
splendor
to
foot in
white velvet, sprinkled with innumerable
with a dove and olive branch, of gold, emblazoned on his
breast, this figure bore in his
bones affixed the
whose
the dazzling regalia of the Lodge.
Clad from head silver stars,
As
it
watchword,
to its
hand a black wand, with a skull and cross
upper extremity.
Worthy Master beheld this figure, he knocked four times in suchammer, which lay on the pedestal arising in
cession, with the gavel or front of his chair.
" Arise,
my
brethren, and greet the
of the B. H. A. C.
Grand Herald of
the
Grand Lodge
!"
With one movement they torches high in the air
rose,
with the
and bending their heads, held their
left
hand, while the right was clasped
upon the breast. "Hail to the Grand Lodge of the B. H. A. C, and ger, who deigns to walk in our midst."
hail to its
Descending from the platform, the Worthy Master knelt
Messen-
at its
foot,
while the Grand Herald took the vacant chair, and, through the apertures of his white veil, surveyed the dazzling array of the Lodge.
Thy
Most Honorable Herald ? Does the Grand Lodge subordinate Lodge ?" " I come from the Grand Lodge, Worthy Master, and come to claim a Brother who has betrayed our order, and broken his vows !" Thus speaking, the Grand Herald advanced to the edge of the platform, "
bidding,
communicate with
its
with his snow-white robe glittering in every It
was evident
that
his
star.
words produced a marked sensation.
The
kneeling Master started, with the same feeling of surprise which thrilled through an hundred breasts. Gilbert the hunter, with his face veiled— the
rifle
and the casket resting
at his feet
great eagerness, his curiosity excited
— started forward, and listened with
by
the message of the
Grand Herald
"
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
108
" A Traitor in our Lodge, Right Honorable Herald ?" " In your Lodge, Worthy Master. Let him step forth, ere his
name is With his face covered by the veil, let him follow me to the Hall of the Grand Lodge, and hear his doom pronounced without a murmur." That voice, soronous and bold, pierced every ear. There was a confused movement among the ranks of the Brethren the murmur of mingled voices and all was still again.
known.
;
;
" His Degree, Right Honorable Herald ?"
He
"
wears the collar of Knighthood.
Once more I extend to him demned and suffer, without
me
no answer was made
name being
his
;
this
moment
I
He
behold him. be con-
shall
revealed, in case he follows
Grand Lodge." Grand Herald might be seen, with
in silence to the Hall of the
Still
At
mercy of secresy.
the
the
his
toward a particular point of the room. Gilbert Morgan, gazing through his veil, beheld him looking intently upon the face turned
veiled
among whom he stood, and awaited with a vague some awe, the utterance of the Traitor's name.
brethren
curiosity,
tinged with
"
A
Knight," he muttered, " and a
man who's
traitor too
Traitor, to think o' betrayin' his trust
And
Hard
!
to believe
taken the Oath of the Degree, knows too well the
of a
!"
huntsman smiled and shuddered
the stout
for a
;
fate
he called
at once, as
to
mind the words of that fearful Oath. Smiled as if in scorn, at the elaboshuddered as he remembered the doom rate blasphemy of those words which had overtaken a recreant Brother. The revery of the hunter was broken by the voice of the Grand ;
Herald. " Once more
I
speak
to
His foot
him.
is
on the box, and by his side
the rifle—" Gilbert's torch
What
" It
shook with the same tremor which heaved
and quivered
chest,
in
I can't
!
seemed
to
him
an electric impulse
every nerve of his iron arm.
a-heerd
he saw the
" Stand forth, Traitor
—
the Traitor
ears
!
'His foot on the box! 1
as if every veiled face ;
go swimming round him, as he spoke
my
if
glittering
was turned toward him,
upon
chasm seat
—
has betrayed the secrets of his Order.
H. A. C. know Gilbert Morgan,
seat,
and take your
the star in the centre of the floor !"
at his it
by
Herald pointed with his wand as
Gilbert heard that voice, and seemed *
as
in a spectral dance.
—" the Grand
Brother of the Knightly Degree, descend from your place
—
forms and long lines of torches
" Stand forth, perjured Knight, and let the B.
who
his broad
feet.
He obeyed
was on the second range from
strode toward the golden
star.
to
behold the floor open
without a word.
Descending from
the level of the floor
— he
in
a
his
slowly
—
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. He saw
the fingers pointing
him
at
109
he heard the whispers, some of
;
pity, others of scorn.
«
The
And
"He
Traitor !"
law enjoins
the
false to
our order !" " Let him be dealt with as
!"
from his
yet, tearing the veil
he dashed
face,
on the
it
floor,
and
arms
Then with it his collar and his robe of Knighthood. over his blue hunting-shirt, he gazed towards the Master's platform with an unfaltering eye, though his brown cheek was very pale, his nether lip folding his
shaken by an involuntary motion. « If I am a « That's all !"
Traitor,
me have
let
death !"
dog's
a
cried—
he
" Worthy Master, in the name of the Grand Lodge, I demand from you body of Gilbert Morgan and at the same time direct you to cover* his collar and his robe with the colors of mourning, and hang them on
the
;
may know
the walls of the Lodge, so that all the brethren longer lives, but has gone to his reward !"
«
I
obey.
And
It shall*
the
as
that he
no
be done !"
Grand Herald descended from the platform, the Worthy
Master led Gilbert toward the door, and paused on the threshold.
At a
Grand Lodge, a brother bore the box and sign from the Messenger them in the hands of the Hunter. placed and the rifle over the floor, 44 Work your will upon him, Into your hands I deliver the Traitor. of the
and
doom which he own head !"
let the
upon
his
merits
fall
upon him alone
;
let his
blood be
Thrice the There was something very impressive in the scene. waved their torches to and fro, thrice they bent their heads, and
brothers
thrice repeated the stern decree 44
Let his blood be upon his
And with
his face reddened
threshold, and looked for
Lodge
— saw
mounting from
who
their voices
ready
by the torch
—"
own
he choked
stood beside him, pointing th^
closed behind them, and the
" Brother Scribe,
you
on the
degree waving their lorches with
down
the
and turned
way beyond
Into the darkness they
his robes, lifted the collar
glare, Gilbert stood
mingle in his death-chant.
his heart to his throat,
extended wand.
!"
the last time over the familiar array of his
the Brothers of his
— heard Come — I'm
the rest 44
own head
went
the
the threshold with
forth
Worthy Master, with
which was Grand Herald,
agitation to
his
together; the door
the torch flashing over
Doomed Man from the floor. from our roll the name of the Dead.
and the robe of the
will strike
Honorable Herald, you will cover these with crape, and suspend them behind It
my
chair, as a token of the fate of the lost brother."
was done.
The
Scribe
— who
sat in
one corner, before
a desk,
a
dark robe flowing round his form, with a dagger and pen emblazoned in silver
on the sleeve, erased the name from the book, which lay open
in
—
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
110
Ere a moment had passed,
the glaring- light.
Morgan was
to all the brothers, that Gilbert
"
Now
Candidate prepare for the
let the
This strange incident had not the foot of the platform
word of
ing to every a
line
was known
it
dead, from that hour.
last ordeal !"
make
failed to
While
sense of the Candidate.
every
the craped collar and robe
from the hangings behind the Eastern Chair, and
fluttered
impression on the
a strong
passed, he had remained standing at
it
— gazing in mute wonder upon every point, listen— and now, with his face manifesting in
the scene
pitiable terror, he
trembled
Worthy
the voice of the
as
Master announced the Ordeal of Blood.
— We may,
pages of this history, describe at length the ap-
in future
pearance and character of
Candidate, and reveal him in scenes of an-
this
other and far different nature.
"I am Do not much"
"
faint"
— do
Covered
as
— he
not
gasped, as the knife
—urge
me
fell
from his unclosing fingers
This scene
farther.
bewilders
he was with the blood-red sackcloth, he
fell
—
:
too
is
it
insensible to the
floor.
How
long he remained unconscious, he
knew
when he
not, but
re-
covered the use of his faculties, the dazzling light of the hundred torches
no longer illumined the
which swung from
who
ing men,
hall.
He
by
rose to his feet, and
An unbroken
bent their faces on their clasped hands.
On
the dim lamp,
high ceiling, beheld the floor crowded by kneel-
-the
si-
humble The other officers of the Lodge were as the humblest of the brethren. throughout that dimly lighted hall, nothing was seen also on their knees
lence reigned.
his platform the
Master knelt, his
attitude as
;
but prostrate forms, heads bowed, and hands clasped as
And
and tremulous
Prayer.
Suddenly
faint
light.
— while the Candidate, awed
to the soul,
ly for the slightest gesture, or the faintest
poured through an open doorway.
room
if in silent
through the gloom, the symbols of the order gleamed, with a
It
sound
—a
grew more
was watching intentflood of ruddy light vivid,
it
bathed the
sudden splendor.
in
And on
the threshold appeared
two
figures, in robes
shrouds, slowly advancing with a measured' step.
which resembled
They
held
lighted
torches over their heads.
As they passed
the threshold and took their
way through
the kneeling
brethren, two forms appeared behind them, at the distance of
Clad
paces.
or four
in
the
some
three
same shroud-like
robes, they also bore
moving with
same measured
torches above their heads.
Slowly and
it
was
coffin of
the
four advanced,
unpainted pine wood.
like robes,
the
seen that they bore a funeral bier,
shone
The
torch-light
in painful distinctness
step,
on which was placed a
glowing over their shroud-
upon the closed
lid
of the coffin.
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. They came slowly
on.
Still
star in the centre of the floor.
They
knelt.
no head was
lifted
reached the
not a hand
;
was
placed the bier upon the star, and stood around
They
unclasped.
the brethren Still
Ill
it,
their torches over the rude coffin.
waving
The
scene was wild and spectral.
that coffin of
These four
figures clad in white,
rough pine wood, were seen in the centre of the dazzling
array of robes and symbols.
The
who
figure
stood at the head of the coffin, on the right, suddenly
lowered his torch, and dashed
by one, lid
it
against the closed
lid.
The
others, one
imitated his action, and the extinguished torches rested
upon the
of the coffin.
Through the gloom, Worthy Master of
"
your hands
the voice of the
first
figure echoed, like a
knell—
C,
No. 256, of the B. H. A. the dead body of Gilbert Morgan."
I deliver
the Rifle Lodge,
into
CHAPTER NINTH. THE FATE OF GILBERT MORGAN. It
may
not be altogether without interest, for us to follow the stout
hunter on his way, and behold the manner of his
"
Come
!
Follow
me
!" said the voice of the
through the darkness of the passage into the ante-room of the GraiTd
In silence,
with
his
— " We
Doom. Grand Herald, speaking
ascend these
stairs,
and pass
Lodge."
heart chilled,
his
senses
bewildered by. this
They
mysterious incident, Gilbert followed the unknown messenger. ascended the
stairs,
and through a doorway, where a curtain supplied the
place of oaken panels, passed into the ante-room. It
was a small apartment, illumined by a lamp, which stood on a
table
covered with dark cloth, with a skull and an unsheathed sword by side.
The
its
place was hung with dark tapestry, on which the various
symbols of the order were emblazoned, with the " B. H. A. C."
glitter-
ing brightly in their midst. A*
man
dressed in a loose garment of white linen, with a dark mantle
from the shoulders, confronted the Grand Herald, with the veil on his face glowing with the mystic letters, and the point of his sword
floating
turned to the uncovered floor.
PAUL ARDENHETM; OR,
112
"Pass free
Through like
said, " the
Grand Herald," he
on,
Grand Sentinel gives thee
passage into the Hall of the Grand Lodge."
it,
the
doorway
with a curtain
— opposite
that
by which they had entered, and,
place of a door
in the
— Gilbert and
the
Grand He-
rald silently passed.
In a circular room, hung with purple tapestry, and lighted by candles, which were placed on four separate pedestals, covered with white cloth
and rising
at intervals
from the polished mahogany
floor, the
Grand Lodge
of the Order were assembled. Gilbert, led
by the Grand Herald, looked from side
some twenty men,
veiled
in
scarlet velvet, and
with golden
glittering
letters
and symbols.
was very impressive.
Altogether, the effect of the scene
Before the Hunter arose a platform, with
dark cloth.
and beheld
Their faces were concealed by a sort of cowl,
around the white pedestals.
made of
to side,
robes of dark purple, seated in a circle,
its
three steps covered with
In a chair, adorned with cumbrous carvings, with wide arms,
and a high back, surmounted by
golden crown, sat a veiled form, clad
a
from the shoulders
in a flowing robe of purple, glittering,
to the feet,
with
vine leaves, stars, a dagger and a skull, and other symbols of the Order.
This
figure
wore over his face a
bronzed features
to
be dimly seen
was twined, and from plume of raven darkness.
leaves
its.
which permitted
veil of white lace,
his
around his brow, a coronet of golden
:
centre
waved
a single long and slender
" You stand before the Most Venerable, the Grand Master of the " Grand Lodge of the B. H. A. The Grand Herald, as he uttered these words, laid his hand on the You are now in the pre" Kneel hunter's shoulder, and whispered '
C
—
sence of your Judge
!
!"
In the centre of the space, bounded by the four pedestals, the Hunts-
man
strongly contrasted with the purple
knelt, his plain hunting-shirt
robes of the encircling figures, his rude swnburnt features with the halfveiled face of the side, in the
Grand Master,
whom
to
white robe sprinkled with
his
By
gaze was turned.
stars, the
his
Herald stood, the wand
grasped in his extended hand.
The Hunter tery,
looked wonderingly around, while the sensation of mys-
and the terror that comes from mystery, began
crowd
to
his brain
with images of gloom and death.
Not
a
word was spoken.
grouped around face, the
;
Grand Master
his flowing robe,
" It
lifeless
sat
in
the voice of the
erect,
effigies,
with a
those
figures
over
veil
its
were frozen
on his throne, the lights playing warmly over
and shining on each
Have you no word, was
Like
like a corse placed
answer
to
brilliant symbol. our charge ?"
Grand Master, and broke with a sudden emHe could not answer the mysterious
phasis upon the Hunter's ear.
;
THE MONK OF THE W1SSAHIKON. summons which had
nature of the fallen
him hither
the fear which had him charged with the ;
Doom, which was secret all rushed upon the stout Woodsman once, and held him dumb. " Of what am I accused ]" he faltered at last " Whar's the man that
unpardonable treason
would be at
called
faces of his brethren, as they heard
upon the
113
the anticipation of an approaching
;
as terrible as
—
it
—
dar' say
Even
it
?"
he knelt, raising his clenched hand, while the arm shook with
as
a ceaseless motion, he uttered the words in a
husky
voice, and with his
head bent forward, awaited an answer. "
Deathsman of
H. A. C.
the B.
— advance
!"
Prepare the cord
!
Gilbert did not see the form, which, advancing from the circle, stood at
he heard the footstep, and
his back, but at
that his
felt
Executioner was
hand. It
was indeed
mask upon
a hideous figure, with a death's-head
the fleshless bones of a skeleton traced his hand, covered
upon
his breast
his face,
and limbs, and in
with a black glove, painted in resemblance of a skele-
wound once around
ton hand, he bore a cord, which,
the fingers, dangled
to the floor.
" Accuser of the Guilty
— advance
!'
T
again the Grand Master's voice
was heard.
And
in front of Gilbert,
on the
less robe, black as midnight,
gloomy
folds.
" Speak, Accuser,
what
ing cowl, or
Without
lifting the
is
right,
man
appeared a
and with no ornament
Crime of
the
the
cowl, the Accuser spoke
to
veiled in a shaperelieve
its
droop-
Accused ?" ;
Gilbert listening
tae
all
while with trembling earnestness. " I accuse Gilbert
our Order. Scarlet
Degree
« Accuse
Morgan
of the violation of his Oath as a Brother of
accuse him of betraying his sacred trust, as a Knight of the
I
me
!" It's
?
a lie— a
lie,
by
!"
shouted Gilbert, with an in-
voluntary impulse of anger and profanity. Half-starting from the floor, he flung his clenched
Grand Master, while the
hand toward the
pallor of his face vanished before a flush of un-
governable rage.
"Accuse me I
don't keer
o' violatin'
who
his face, with
ses
my
it
foot
—
my
upon
He towered in the midst own true rifle in his grasp. fearless scorn
Yet
at the
upon
;
one knee, gasped
he
this
my
the lie in his teeth
box, this
rifle in
trust as a
And
!
my
hands
Knight?
prove
I'll
it
to
!"
of the secret band, his foot upon the box, his
There was
a
look of defiance on his brow, a
his lip.
same moment,
round his neck
oath as a Brother,
I fling
felt
a cord
was thrown over
his
head
;
it
tightened
himself dragged rudely backward, and sinking on
for breath.
"
PAUL ARDENHEIM
114
Ah
"
dog
By
!
This
!
a
is
OR
;
coward's trick
—
murder a man
to
like a
!"
Struggling fiercely while that cord tightened about his neck, Gilbert
head from side to side, and saw the point of an unsheathed sword glimmering from the folds of every robe. The Accuser held a pistol to his throat, a grim weapon, huge in the barrel, with a stock of heavy mahogany inlaid with silver. At the same instant, the Grand
rolled his
Herald drew a dagger from beneath his white garment, and stood ready to strike its
keen point into the victim's
my
"Let me know thick and gurgling
by
crime
heart.
—" muttered
the tightening cord
Gilbert, every
— " If
a Free Brother, or betrayed the trust of a true Knight, let
"
You
—" At
obligation, never to desert the
Order
it
;
your
you took a solemn
initiation,
never
to
undertake any enterprise,
bonds of marriage, without the Decree of the Grand
less enter into
To-night, without consulting your
Lodge, affirming your purpose.
Lodge, or the Grand Lodge, you resolved with Madeline, the orphan,
You
!"
me know
have violated your oath as a Brother," exclaimed the Grand
Master, starting from his chair
much
word rendered
have violated the oath of
I
who
dwells
enter into marriage
to
in
the
home
own
bonds
of Peter Dormer.
resolved to desert our Order, break your vows, and renounce
allegiance to your superiors
—
I
hold the Accusation in
my
hand.
all
It
is
signed by a Brother of the Knightly Degree." Utterly confounded by this charge, Gilbert
saw the dagger and word in answer. " More than this
—"
his platform, with the
and could not speak
a
continued the Grand Master, as he stood erect on
parchment of
have perjured yourself to
the rope about his neck,
felt
pistol levelled at his heart,
the
the Accusation in his
are
bound
sums of money in your your own Lodge or, in case the sum to the Treasury of the Grand Lodge.
bring at once, without a moment's delay,
possession, either to the chest of
hand; "you
By your vow, you
in another point.
all
—
—
beyond an hundred doubloons Have you done this ? The box at your feet contains one thousand pieces You know nay, you dare not deny that it was your intention of gold. Appointed, at the last to appropriate this sum to your own purpose. meeting of your Lodge, to secure this money, appointed by your you have violated your trust. Lodge, at the Decree of the Grand Lodge is
—
—
—
—
And
in
proof of
this
also, I
hold the accusation in
my
hand, made and
signed by a Brother !" "
I
was
—
in the
Lodge, with the box
in
my
hand, about
to
when The words were interrupted by the gradual tightening of Thrown on his back, Gilbert lay without speech or motion, his
deliver
it,
the cord. face dark-
ening into livid purple, his eyes protruding and blood-shotten. " Brothers of the
Grand Lodge— you have heard
the Accusation,
made
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. by
not only
the Venerable Accuser, but affirmed
115
by your Grand Master
?
your Decree ?" " Guilty !" was echoed by every voice.
What "
is
Your judgment
?"
in chorus, they uttered the formula of the B. H. A. C. " Let him be stripped of all Regalia, for he has dishonored that Re-
And,
Let the name of Brother be torn from his heart, for he has covered that name with infamy. Let him be put under the Ban of the galia.
Order, and then surrendered to the vengeance of the
may that
encounter him
bound him
to
for
;
first
Brother
who
he has broken his vows, and severed every
tie
our protection and our love."
now
prepare for the solemn ceremony of the Ban Grand Master, descending from his platform. The cord grew hunter uttered an involuntary groan.
"The Grand Lodge
will
of Excommunication," said the
The
stout
tighter coil,
he struggled
;
fiercely, in the effort to free
himself from
its stifling
but the hue of his sunburnt face was changed to livid purple, his lips
became the color of bluish clay, and every vein, every muscle of his visage was distorted by the impulse of harrowing physical torture. false " he groaned, and then all became a blank his senses 'It is there seemed a blood-red light flashing upon his starting eyefailed him balls and all was darkness.
—
—
—
—
—
When
he recovered his senses, he found himself standing in front of
Grand Master's platform, supported on one on the other by the Accuser.
side
the
A
by
Deathsman,
the
pale bluish flame shone over the encircling forms, and gave their
That flame was only
robes a spectral and unnatural appearance.
combined
light of the torches,
which they held
made
Before the hunter was a large vessel,
with iron hoops.
And
as the
was
It
filled
of dark wood, and encircled
with a red liquid.
Grand Master. waved
his
hand, the Brethren advanced
between the hunter and the Grand Master, and plunged torches into the vessel, filled with the red liquid. as torch
after
False Brother
The twenty
torch
was extinguished
— " Thus
"
their lighted
Thus—"
they cried,
perish the soul of the
!"
torches were plunged into the
wooden
vessel, their flames
A
extinguished, their handles projecting from the red liquid.
held by the
the
in their uplifted arms.
Grand Master, shed
its
faint light
candle,
over the scene, and dimly
disclosed the circle of shrouded forms, with the half-naked figure of the
Hunter
in the centre.
His arms were pinioned
;
the cord
was about
his
neck
;
but half-
aroused from a deathlike swoon, his senses were deadened by a leaden apathy.
more
As torch
after torch hissed into the vessel,
vivid brightness, as
it
sunk
in
and flashed with a
darkness, Gilbert thought he was
entangled in the horrors of some unutterable dream.
—
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
—
The False Brother is degraded," said the voice of the Accuser "His name has been inscribed on the Book of Judgment; he has been laid "
under the irrevocable Ban of the Covenant " Accursed
— accursed,
forever !"
the
!"
words broke
whispers
in faint
through the gloom.
Then do
"
him over
give
I
death be secret
let it
;
Deathsman of our Order.
the
to
be speedy, so that his form
may
Let his
no longer pollute
earth, and shame the broad canopy of heaven with the sight of a Living Traitor !"
the
Gilbert
Deathsman on
the gripe of the
felt
he suffered himself
to
Without a word,
his arm.
be led along the floor, and saw, with an apathetic
gaze, the shrouded figures kneeling on either side.
He
reached the curtained wall, and
—while
Deathsman,
the
hideous mask, with the form of a skeleton traced upon his limbs the candle, and extended his hand, as
voices of the Brethren, speaking in a
" Farewell," they whispered
The
hangings were
appeared
lifted
in
—
his
lifted
point the way, he heard the
if to
murmur
—" Farewell
by
the
to the forsworn and fallen !" Deathsman, and a narrow doorway
in the light.
His arms pinioned, his neck encircled by the cord, Gilbert passed
under the raised hangings, and ness.
A
and shrouded
Not
in an instant
cloth had been placed
on
hunter could see clearly
but
;
vision, he found himself in a small fire,
It was some time when he recovered the use
his eyes.
table of unpainted
oak stood
On
in
the centre, before
this table
were placed a
What
does
all
wine, a cup, and It
He
fire,
with an
turned from the ruddy
Deathsman standing by his side. this mean ?" he asked " a comfortable
—
means, that a half-hour of
are allowed the
and wine.
Yet,
fire,
a pipe o' tobacco !" life is still
permitted to you
voice, echoing from within the death's-head mask.
you
the
bottle, a goblet of'
and a clay pipe.
blaze, and beheld the
"
before
of his
room, with wainscotted walls, and a
Gilbert could scarce believe his sight.
"
his eyes,
smoking and crackling, on an open hearth.
arm-chair at either end. silver,
in thick dark-
hung over
;
The bandage was removed from
A
it
word was spoken, but he felt himself dragged onward, along a dragged by the cord, which encircled his neck.
a
cheerful
;
their sight.
narrow passage
the
was enveloped
his forehead
warmth of the
fire,
at
hand.
—"
said the
that half-hour,
the cheerful influence of tobacco
when you have exhausted
hour of your death will be
"In
a bottle o'
the pipe and the bottle, the
— Until
that
moment comes,
I
leave you."
There was but one door
to
the
room.
It
was opposite
the
fire.
\
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. Gilbert beheld
key turn
the
it
close, as the
He
in the lock.
117
Deathsman passed the threshold, and heard stood for a moment, gazing about him, with
a bewildered glance. " Is there no
way
of escape ?" he muttered, pacing rapidly around the
"
room, and feeling every panel of the wainscot. o' this
cursed den the
"nitiated into
my
benefit of
Little did I think,
?
order, and took
firmly jointed into each other.
new
with a
secret passage out
when
ago,
the oath to rob and
A
surprise.
the arm-chair,
first I
was
murder, for the this !"
Lodge, that I'd ever be caught in a trap like
There was no way of escape
hung over
No
some years
were perfectly smooth, and The hunter turned to the fire, and started the panels
;
coat of dark-green velvet, faced with gold,
and beneath
it
appeared a shirt of
fine
was
linen,
with ruffled collar and bosom, and a waistcoat of bufl-colored cloth, glittering
"I'm
with small buttons of gold.
cold," he laughed
—and
shuddered
the
at
same moment— for*
even in his merriment, the incalculable Power of the Secret Order awed his iron
heart—" An'
this fine
hunting-shirt, leather belt,
gear will do for me,
was not long ere he stood
It
in front of the
coat, with the lace ruffles protruding
jist as
well as
my
!"
and powder-horn
hearth, clad in the green
from the
This costume
buflf vest.
displayed the outlines of his massive figure in strong
relief,
and
its
bright
colors threw his sunburnt features boldly into the light.
He pipe,
flung himself in the chair, filled the goblet, and lighted the clay
whose long stem reached from
his lips to his waist.
" Anybody, to see me, now, 'ud think takin'
He
my
ease,
and
was a gentleman
I
nobody
carin' a cuss for
smoke of
drained the goblet, and the
o' fortin'
!"
the pipe floated in bluish
wreaths above his head. "
That
,
wine goes through the veins
'ere
like
life,
Ingies, as
I'm a poor miserable Devil, doomed
in this cut-throat
And
as
den
fire
!
Sich tobacco
Cuba, rale Cuba, from the
as this, a feller don't often see in these parts.
West
melted
to
be choked out
o'
!"
— warmth of imparting —he became, by degrees, cheerful and
he drank and smoked
fluence to his chilled limbs
the
the
fire
its in-
excited,
and then a leaden drowsiness sank on his senses, and dulled his eyes and
ears.
The bowl was shivered
fell
from his hand, and lay upturned on the table
into fragments at his feet.
After
all
that he
;
the pipe
had endured,
with the certainty of death before him, the hunter sunk into a dead slumber.
His hands were crossed upon his buff waistcoat, and, with his
head resting against the back of the
chair, his
mouth wide open, he
slept
the dreamless sleep of weariness and exhaustion.
As
the pipe
fell
from his hand, the door opened behind him, and the
Deathsman, hideous
in his
mask and
skeleton disguise, once more appeared.
PAUL ARDENHEIM
1X8
OR,
;
CHAPTER TENTH. THE GOLDEN SIGNET AND M
The
drug has done
its
work—"
COUNTERPART.
ITS
he exclaimed, in a voice whose joy-
ous intonation could not be drowned, even by his mask
We
done his work.
have used him
when an
Scarce had he spoken,
important influence on the
— he
incident occurred,
doomed
of the
fate
—"The fellow has
no more !" which exercised an
shall trouble us
hunter.
At the back of the Deathsman, treading at his very heels, appeared a man, whose sharp features were shadowed by a three-cornered hat, while his slender limbs were clad in dark attire, made after the fashion of the olden time, the coat with
its
skirts
drooping
to his
knees, the vest reach-
ing far below the waist, and the ends of a white neckcloth dangling on the breast.
The
face of this
man—clad,
not in the robes and symbols of the secret
order, but in the attire of a plain citizen
nose, pinched lips, sharp eyes, and
brown
— was marked by a long hooked
high cheek-bones.
It
was dark-
and the hair which straggled from beneath his was of jetty blackness, with here and there a lock of
in complexion,
three-cornered hat, silvery whiteness.
" While he
in this stupor,
is
we
have him conveyed on
will
City, placed on shipboard, and then
!
— ho,
Gilbert Morgan will never trouble woods again." A smile was perceptible on the sharp features of the the Slave Trade.
in black, as he stole softly
on
to
the
Coast of Africa, and
for the
the
Wissahikon
stranger, dressed
behind the Deathsman, and touched
tip-toe
his shoulder with the forefinger of his right hand.
" Tell your Grand Master that moments' conversation with him,"
deepened over his "
Hey
?
I
wish
to see
said the
him, and have a few
unknown, while
the smile
face.
who spoke
?"
The Deathsman wheeled
the slender form of the stranger
—" Who
suddenly, and saw
you ?" your Grand Master ?" are
" Will you convey my message to And taking handsome snuff-box from his waistcoat pocket, he tapped the lid, and conveyed some portion of its contents to his nose. The hideous mask covered the face of the Deathsman the surprise, the overwhelming wonder stamped on his features, was not visible, but as a
;
he spoke
again, the intonation of his voice
—but harsh and
—no longer deep and measured
hurried, told the story of his
amazement.
"
And who
—
"
—
"
!
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON.
119
—
you ? You dare intrude upon the councils of our Order you you not—" " Pooh, pooh That is sufficient," said the gentleman, smiling all " Convey my message, and let the Grand Masover his sharp features are
Know
!
ter attend
—
me."
The unknown
crossed his hands behind his back, and advanced to the »
hearth.
For a moment the Deathsman seemed to hesitate, and again he asked— " Who are you ? Your name, your business here ? If you belong to the Grand Lodge, give me the Word and the sign
—
"
I shall
do no such thing, for
merely wish
do not belong
I
Grand Master.
to see the
you understand me now ?" " This
against
is
have penetrated
our laws.
It
—
a person altogether
Without
lot.
Brotherhood or authority, you desire
cannot be
—
The Deathsman
Grand Lodge. I enough ? Can
unknown-
house, and dared to spy out those mysteries in
into this
which you have neither part nor to indicate
You
to the
Is that not plain
regalia
— without one
to see the
sign
Grand Master.
hand on the chair of the unconscious
stood, resting his
hunter, with the light playing freely over his grotesque disguise, and
showing, in bold
relief, the contrast
between
it
and the plain, dark apparel
of the unknown. "
It
can be
—"
the slender gentleman wheeled suddenly, and tapped the
lid of his snuff-box
— "It must
!"
the slumbering Gilbert, he seated himself in the
Then, passing before
unoccupied chair, and stretched his spare limbs, with silver buckles on the knees and shoes, in the cheerful
The Deathsman "
A
huge fellow
retired in silence
— brawny
might be made of him. stand
any
upon
trifles,
or
form
glow of the
—
a vast
That forehead
— once
fire.
again the key grated in the lock.
;
aroused
tells
—be
fund of nerve. the story of a
held
Something
man who won't
back by scruples of
sort."
Glancing upon the brown visage of the sleeper, the unknown very coolly applied himself to his favorite stimulant— the dark tobacco dust
crossed his limbs in a posture of great complacency, and, placing his
thumbs
together,
seemed
to
be altogether
at
home
in this
mysterious
chamber.
The key
grated in the lock, and as
Master entered, his
tall
the door flew open, the
and somewhat commanding form clad
ple robe, dazzling with embroidery, the white veil features,
shadowing
Grand
in the purhis
bronzed
and the solitary plume waving from the coronal of gold leaves
on his forehead. Advancing one step from the threshold, he paused, and exclaimed, in assumed
that deep tone, evidently
^
"
—
V
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
120
" Who is it that demands audience with h. a. a?" "A-h you have come," the unknown
—
over his shoulder
—"
—
I
have waited
The Grand Master which veiled
started
and features
—sharpened
come
have wailed.
his
head
Be pleased
hither."
instant he stood as if completely con-
this slender
as
I
the B.
his eyes flashed, even through the lace
;
For an
his features.
founded by the words of
carelessly turned
for you.
# to close the door, turn the key, and
Grand Master of
the
gentleman, whose neat black
by the systematic
attrition of traffic
attire,
— indicated
the plain citizen, the restless merchant of the large city.
However,
as
though mastering his indignation for the moment, he
quietly closed the door, turned the
key
in the lock,
unknown. "
Now,
will hear you.
sir, I
After
have heard
I
and approached the
—"
his voice,
growing
bold and harsh with anger, was interrupted by the sharp tones of the
gentleman
in
dark
attire.
" After you have heard, you will obey. permit me to ask you a question ?" "
Speak on."
"
To whom
That
plain, sir.
is
Will you
does the Initiate into a subordinate Lodge of the B. H. A.
C. swear allegiance ?" " To the Honorable Master of the Lodge, of course. Did you know any thing of our Order " Bah Enough of that kind of talk. Let me ask you another To whom does the Honorable Master of a subordinate Lodge question.
—
!
of the B. "
To
H. A. C, swear allegiance." Most Venerable Grand Master of
the
Continent of
And
in kingly robes,
if I
my
may
it.
The
and standing
and careless
"And, 44
B. H. A. C. for the
the dazzling robe fluttered with the impulse of the broad chest
Which swelled beneath attire
the
America— to me/" entire appearance of this personage, clad
erect,
was
attitude of the slender
dear friend
—"
in vivid contrast with the plain
gentleman.
the snuff-box
be so impertinent as
to press
was again
called into play
—To whom does
the subject
the
Right Venerable, the Grand Master of the Order for the Continent of
America, swear allegiance ?" "
The Most
" No,
sir.
Venerable, you
The Right
mean
—
Venerable.
*
Most' does not belong
to
you
nor to your office."
The Grand Master was silent. " You seem to hesitate. Is not
the question easy
the last act of your installation into the
?
Grand Master's
You remember when the
chair,
box or casket containing the Will of your predecessor was placed
in
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON.
121
your hands, sealed with the Great Seal of the Order, which no one save
Grand Master dare touch ?" was an obligation a charge but there is no such body in existence as the Supreme Lodge of the Order, controlling its operations throughout the World." There was a strange hesitation in the manner, a perceptible tremor in the voice of the Grand Master. the Elect
" True
Ah
" the
— there
— ha
—
You have
!
Supreme Lodge'—"
4
and small black eyes
—
discovered at
there
last, that
is
such a body as
the sharp-featured smiled in his parched lips
— "And
you
the obligation that
took, invoking
upon
your head the vengeance of God, the tortures of Eternal Death, in case
vow— do
you broke your word ?"
Who
"
you ?"
are the
dared
question me, and
question
to
yours
;
I
and most important
Grand Master, unconsciously Deathsman had asked " You have
the
—
Unfold
sign from me, the
or, at a
it
is
my
turn
once your name, your
at
room, and mete out
this
Now,
have tamely answered.
answer.
to
mission within these walls,
Order will throng
last
its
fiercely exclaimed the
question which
echoing to
you remember
to
you
members of the
doom
the
of the
-spy-"
He
raised his right arm, and his eyes flashed through the veil with
the glare of ungovernable rage.
" *And in case
I refuse at
Lodge, when conveyed shall be absolved
are from that
C,
from
to
all
any time
me
allegiance to
moment empowered by
disown
my
sway, dishonor " under the irrevocable ban.' to
As he repeated these words,
man
obey the mandate of the Supreme
to
in ancient form, the Brothers of the
me
;
the
Lodges on
this
the sacred customs of the B.
my
name, and hunt
me
Order
Continent
H. A.
to the death,
slow and measured tone, the gentle-
in a
dressed in black arose, and passing before the sleeping hunter, con-
fronted the
" This
Grand Master. the last word of
is
dead body of your Predecessor.
the Obligation
which you took over the
Do you remember
it
now
?"
was a singular thing to see the change which came over the gorgeously arrayed Grand Master, as this plainly attired man uttered these It
He was
words.
silent
;
he
tottered,
and only saved himself from
falling
by placing his hand upon the back of Gilbert's chair. " And I will recognise the Messenger of the Supreme Lodge, when•
ever he appears holding in his hand the counterpart of the golden signet,
which
I
wear on
my
the Great Seal of the
heart as the
Grand Lodge
emblem '
of
my
authority, and also as
"
Extending his hand, the unknown grasped the golden medal, describe
it
more properly,
the Great Seal, which, supported
—also of gold —shone on the Grand Master's breast.
by
a
or,
to
heavy chain
—
"
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
'
122
You behold
"
upon
which
the figures on this medal,
the melted
wax — appear
in
Temple
in
his throne, with the
characters, traced on the Mosaic
tfye
— when
it
is
impressed
shape of King Solomon on
distinct
Hebrew and
the distance, and floor at his feet
Now
?
Arabic
look upon the
counterpart of this signet."
He
placed in the hands of the Grand Master a small casket of dark
wood, the
Hah
"
lid
of which flew open at his touch.
the casket contained
" Like
He
It is
as he beheld
the
medal which
indeed very like the signet—"
the same, only on your
It is
?
—"
Do you want
here they are raised.
The
Grand Master,
!" ejaculated the
medal the
sunken
figures are
;
further proof?"
took the medal of the Grand Master, and placed his
own upon
it.
raised figures on the one, fitted into the sunken spaces on the other,
with so much exactness, that the two seemed but one piece of solid gold. " What do you demand ?" the voice of the Grand Master was changed
—
from to
me,
that this
preme Lodge
" I
and indignant tones.
fiery
its late
may
must confess
be only an imposition
1
that
it
appears
never heard of the Su-
"
body in actual existence " You thought, my good sir, that it was only a masonic expression for the Power of the Almighty, and, governed by this thought, have assumed titles and privileges which do not belong to you have in fact invaded the Prerogative of the Supreme Lodge, and usurped its functions !" as a
—
The gentleman
in dark attire placed the casket within his waistcoat,
and again supplied his nostrils with tobacco dust, as he remarked " Right Venerable Grand Master, you will take one arm of this insensible
man, and
assist
me
to
convey him
into the presence of the
Supreme
Lodge—" " But the Grand Lodge await strangely of
"
They
my
absence
—
my
return.
The
Brothers will think
will have to continue thinking strangely, for a great while,"
ominous smile. " Was it not enough, your grasp the revenues and power of the Order ? At your word, a thousand men all bold and unscrupulous, and fitted by
said the dark gentleman, with an sir,
that
you held
in
tinent of America. sails of at least five
—
—
on every part of the ConAt your mandate, the ocean was whitened by the hundred ships, whose dark flags bore the same skull
desperation for any deed
started into action,
and crossbones with the dagger and the motto of the order. You had in any of the cities of the North or South, your to speak, and lo bidding was done— property and life became, through the ten thousand hands of the Order, your easy prey. But this it seems was not enough. only
!
Not enough
to
hold a power, which, striking from the dark
fabulous by the great mass
— rivalled, in
of an absolute Monarch, and, at the danger,
all
responsibility,
by
its
same
— deemed
certainty of action, the
time,
sway
was secured from
the cloud of an impenetrable mysterv.
all
Not
—
—
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON.
123
enough to dwell in a splendid mansion, in the great city, and be caressed by the rich and aristocratic, while every Minion of the Crown thought it but a proper reverence for high birth and great property' to do you es'
This did not
pecial honor.
supreme power
own
your
— ay,
only
sir,
satisfy
You aimed
your ambition.
night, laid
this
your plans
at the
convey
to
hands the thousand doubloons, which were ordered
into
to
bt
secured for the use of the Supreme Lodge."
Even beneath the blast.
Grand Master trembled
his royal robe, the
•
—
You know my name " he faltered. The slender man tapped the lid of his
"
offered
its
like a reed in
contents to the
snuff-box, and, with a deep
bow,
Grand Master
you take the arm of was done. They raised
man ?" man from
" Will
this insensible
It
the sleeping
the chair, and, sup-
porting his unconscious form between them, departed from the room.
As
they passed the threshold, the gentleman in black whispered pleasantly to the
"
Grand Master
You do
not
thought that
know
all its
all the
You
secrets of this old house.
doubtless
rooms were occupied by your subordinates, and quite
forgot the fact, that the second story of the back part of this
communicates with the steep not ten feet from where
we
hill
mansion on the north, by a door and a passage
stand.
Do you
believe in the
Supreme
Lodge now ?"
They passed
the threshold, and, instead of descending the stairs into the
Grand Lodge, traversed the corridor in an opposite direction. Presently, as he grasped the body of the unconscious hunter with his muscular right arm, the Grand Master heard a key turn in a lock.
room of
the
At the same moment, the whisper of the unknown even through the darkness " Let us enter.
thrilled
on
his ear,
:
This passage leads us
into the
bosom of
the hill, at
the back of the mansion."
Scarcely had the Grand Master and the unknown, bearing the form of
warmed by the cheerful wood fire, and by the candle on the table, when a figure crossed its threshold, and the Deathsman appeared once more. " Strange The Grand Master not here, and the Traitor also gone !" Gilbert, left the small apartment,
lighted
!
"
he ejaculated, as he surveyed the vacant apartment. that so boldly desired an audience with
He
left the
Who
can
it
be,
him ?"
room with a hurried step, and Grand Herald by his side.
in a
few moments reap-
peared, with the
" This
is
indeed singular," said that personage, as his white robe, daz-
zling with stars, glittered in the light
— " Gone, did you
say
?
The Grand
—
"
"
PAUL ARDENHEIM
124
:
OR,
;
Master, the doomed and the unknown ? Have you no traces ? By what means could they have obtained egress from the house ?" To this hurried question, which he propounded without raising the veil from his face, there was no answer. These two ministers of the Grand Organization of the B. H. A. C. left the apartment, and descended into the Hall of the Grand Lodge together.
Day was candles
breaking without the desolate mansion
;
on the pedestals, were burning
standing
and
in the hall, the
toward
fast
their
sockets. Still
seated in a circle, their purple robes glowing in the wavering light,
Grand Lodge awaited the return of their Chief. His the Grand Herald, leaning on his wand, stood near and by his side, the Deathsman. Through the masks which
the Brothers of the
platform was vacant foot,
its
;
covered their faces, they gazed over the forms of the brethren, •
versed in whispers
Head
pearance of the Great "
cannot be done
It
the Lodge.
of —" whispered
custom, for even a Right Venerable It
who
the
Deathsman
Warden
—"
It
is
against all
adjourn the Grand Lodge.
to
cannot be done without the presence of our Chief."
—
what else can we do ?" interposed the Grand Herald "Our who opened this session, is absent. It is near daybreak, and we
" Yet, chief,
con-
their all-absorbing topic, the unaccountable disap-
;
do not wish
be seen leaving this house in the broad light of morning. cried aloud, " in the absence of the Grand Master, I
to
Brethren," he
would suggest session
The
that
—
Grand Warden be empowered
the
sentence was never completed.
the sockets, the
hangings
opposite
platform
were
office,
might be seen that the golden signet was his
and a
strode slowly, and
with a measured step, through the ranks of his brethren.
from his neck, while
raised,
—
!
it
close this
For, as the lights were burning in the
murmur of surprise broke the stillness " The Grand Master At last he has come The Grand Master, clad in the robes of his the platform,
to
As he ascended still
bronzed features were covered by the
" Brothers of the Grand
Lodge—"
suspended veil.
he began, but paused— as four veiled
figures, bearing a coffin, crossed the threshold
and advanced toward the
Every member could not fail to observe that the voice of the Grand Master was strangely changed, as he continued " Behold the corse of Gilbert Morgan, who was executed in my presence by the Ministers of the Supreme Lodge !" platform.
The
effect of his
cernible, for as
words upon the members of the Order, was not
he spoke, the
lights, flickering for the last time,
dis-
went out
in
—
the monk: of the
wissajhikon.
125
darkness, and, amid the whispers which echoed from every side, only-
words were audible
three
—" The Supreme Lodge
The Grand Master had been gone
for the
!"
space of three
—perchance
four hours.
we
Shall
lift
the curtain from the councils of the
reveal the history of those hours
Supreme Lodge, and
?
CHAPTER ELEVENTH. THE SUPREME LODGE.
We now return known whisper 44
to the
moment when
the
Grand Master heard
This passage leads us into the bosom of the
He
also heard the door close behind him,
and
the
Un-
hill." felt
the
form of Gilbert
upon him. All was dark, but he was conscious that the passage which they traversed was narrow, the atmosphere dense, the ceiling but an inch or two higher than the top of his plume. Urged repeatedly by the unknown, to be careful of the form of Gilbert, to grasp him firmly, and by no means loosen his hold, even for an instant, the Grand Master counted twenty paces, when his course was press heavily
suddenly ended. " You will enter the room on the
The Grand Master extended
right,
his hand,
and await
and
felt
my
coming.'*
the panels of a door.
It
opened, and, as he crossed the threshold, closed again. It
was
a cell-like apartment, with ceiling, wall and floor of roughly
In the centre, on an old chest, a small lamp was placed.
plastered stone. It
was
evident, at first sight, that this
sunken
in the
bosom of
the
hill,
room, resembling a grave-vault, was
which ascended precipitously
in
the
rear of the old house.
Seating himself on a chest, the Grand Master gathered his robes about
him
—
for the air
surveyed the
He
was
chill
and damp
— and, with an ejaculation of wonder,
cell.
had heard of the wealth of the Order, had, indeed, been intrusted
with the control of a great portion of that wealth, but a sight,
The
which exceeded the bounds of floor
all
this
room displayed
reasonable credibility.
was covered with chests of every shape and form.
Some
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
126
were open, others closed here they were thrown together in a confused and again massy and iron-bound they stood apart. The unclosed chests were stored with gold and silver coins of every mould and form, from the uncouth Chinese money, to the round and substantial Spanish ;
—
—
pile,
doubloon.
On the closed lids were scattered stores of gold and silver plate and from the aperture of the half-opened chests, projected cloths, velvets and ;
laces, of the richest texture
and most costly dyes.
every part of the world had sent of this narrow
Wherever
cell.
It
seemed
as though
tribute to swell the countless
its
wealth
Grand Master turned, he saw nothing
the
but gold and silver coin, cloths of every pattern and hue, plate of the
most precious metals, worthy "
The
—with
heavy goblet
the veil
the delicate sculpturing
grace the board of a crowned. Despot.
to
Supreme Lodge
treasury of the
!"
he exclaimed, and, raising a
drooping over his face— he examined
still
which adorned the narrow stem and capacious
bowl. " Will no one
wake me up from
this dev'lish
Gilbert unclosed his eyes, and found
whose unearthly solemnity resembled
dream ?"
himself encircled by a scene, the
vague spirit-pictures of a
dream.
A
lamp hung from
faint light before his
only served
the dome-like ceiling of a
The
eyes.
to reveal
the
narrow
cell,
and shed
corners of the cell were dark
brown visage of
the Hunter,
who,
;
its
the light
clad in the
coat of green velvet, faced with gold, looked about him, in blank wonder.
Before him was a circular table, on which a book, huge in size, bound
was placed. Its golden clasps glimmered in the light. Around this table, three figures attired in gowns, with cowls, resembling the monkish robes of the Old World, were seated in arm-chairs of The figure, seated, directly opposite where the Hunter unpainted oak. stood, rested a small white hand upon this large volume. in white parchment,
It
was
senses
;
a long while before the hunter could recover his wandering
he remained standing before the table for the space of a quarter
word was spoken
of an hour, and in this time, not a
;
the three figures
were motionless as stone. Gilbert advanced a step, determined to touch the extended hand, and
assure himself that
it
was but
a
hand of wax or marble, not the hand of a lifted he fell
Yet, as he advanced, the hand was slowly
man. back into his original position, crossing his arms, while his features as-
living
sumed an expression of " Gilbert Morgan "
—
ness and music of
you cannot
its
sullen determination.
somewhat remarkable Condemned to death by
said a voice,
intonation
—
"
see, about to be stricken
darkness, a chance of
;
life is
by
the
hand which
offered unto you.
for the soft-
a
power
strikes
Will you accept
that
from the it
?"
"
"
:
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. It
was
the central figure that spoke, with his white
cover of the book
I'll
2?
hand resting on the
the while.
of the Hunter was characteristic
The reply "
all
J
accept most anythin'
— do
:
most everythin'
— only get
me
out of
The
wealth,
this wolf- trap."
" Not only the
you
power of
life,
but wealth and
H. A. C.
the B.
power
are offered to you.
We
are within your grasp.
as the Candidate for Initiation into
have selected
Degree of Grand Master of
the
the Order
" Initiation!" echoed Gilbert. the
Grand Lodge
him from scene
Who
?
to
"Ain't the Grand Master elected by
are you, that trap a
scene— pen him up with
man
three
in this 'ere
way— drag
unknown men,
dressed
in black, in a grave-vault, like this ?"
Without seeming
to take notice
of his words, or of the flushed cheek
and indignant glance which accompanied their utterance, the central figure continued
" There
is
no such thing as an election, or the power
The Honorable Master
by
to
elect in our
Grand Master in his turn the Grand Master is designated by a higher authority, whose exThat higher authority, is istence is unknown to the rest of the brethren. Its chief is known, not as Supreme Master, but as the Supreme Lodge. the Invisible Head of the Order. You stand in his presence now." "Grand Master !" muttered Gilbert "That were a prize indeed, for Why, I kin hardly sign my name one like me " You will never need to sign your name. The signet will bear witThe man who becomes Grand Master, must be ness of your authority. known to the world, only as the dead are known. From this hour, the name of Gilbert Morgan will only be pronounced as the name of a dead man. Again I ask you, are you willing to pass from the edge of the grave which yawns beneath you to the Grand Master's chair ?" Like a flood of light, pouring suddenly over a mass of dark clouds, a multitude of thoughts and memories rushed through the hunter's brain. He was a rude man rude in speech, bold in deed but his forehead inUtterly uneducated, dicated a mind of great and peculiar natural power. like sparks among the ashes— there lurked in the recesses of his nature the elements of a wide and grasping ambition. His eye grew brighter his as he heard the words of the figure, who called himself the Invisible clenched hand was pressed upon his forehead. " Grand Master You don't mean to say, that I, a rough backwoodsI man o' the Wissahikon, can become that ar' I sit on the throne, and, with a word, manage the Lodges of Canada, the New England ProOrder.
designated
is
—
the
;
—
!
—
—
—
;
!
!
vinces,
New
kind of you,
York, Pennsilvany, and to
make
fun of a dyin'
all
man
the South
—
—— ?
Gentlemen,
it's
not
"
PAUL ARDENHEIM
128 "
have said
I
it,
and
it
can be done
Holy Temple !" Show me the way," cried
I
!
OR*
;
swear
by
it,
Seven Watch-
the
ers of the
"
Gilbert
— " Name
the
manner
o' th' Initia-
tion."
" Listen, and in silence.
I will read to you the preparatory Lesson of Grand Master's degree." The Invisible unclosed the Book: with his white hand laid on the parchment page, inscribed with the characters of
—
the
an unknown tongue, he continued
Covenant, written
Lodge, and
in a tongue,
intelligible
to
" This
:
known only
the great
is
to
Book of the Supreme
the Elect of the
them, whatsoever their country or language.
This Book was written thousands of years ago, and bears witness of the Covenant made by the Great Being in the Temple of Jerusalem with the millions of mankind, in the
— as you
That Covenant was
day of Solomon.
are well aware, having been initiated in the Knightly degree
words
As long
:
night, so long
as the sun shineth by day,
the Jehovah,
ivill I,
listen
Poor, redress their wrongs,
and
forehead of the oppressor.
— Solomon
and
in these
the stars give light
cry of
to the
scatter the bolts of
—
my
my
by
people the
vengeance upon the
betrayed the Covenant, and died
under the Ban of the Order, the Curse of his God.
Even
his countless
wealth, his superhuman intellect, could not save him from the Traitor's
doom
!
" Yet
High
must impart
I
to
you
the preparatory lesson, or the
termed the Grand Master's degree
Priest, otherwise
—
Degree of
that would take upon himself the great work of a High must cut loose from his heart every tie of friendship or love. He must have no friend; he must love only the Brotherhood over which he desires to rule. And in order that an unworthy person may not obtain this
"
'
The Brother
Priest,
great office,
it
is
decreed
the
that
Candidate for Initiation shall pass
through a certain ordeal, the manner and form of which is left to the will of the Invisible Head, while its certain tendency must always be, to sever the heart,
devote
by an
irrevocable blow,
forever
it
to the
from
all ties
of friendship or
love,
and
Brotherhood.
" Are you ready for an Ordeal of this kind, however terrible ?"
"I am
!"
« Are you willing that your name shall never be heard on earth again
name of a living man ?" Yes willing even for that
as the
u
—
« Will
you consent
shall qualify
you
i I consent
The its
Invisible
clasped
for the duties of
You
!
!"
to enter at
Head
can't
name
once upon the Ordeal, or
your great
trial,
which
office ?"
the thing that I'm afeerd to do!"
closed the volume, and rested his
hand again upon
lid.
He seemed
gazing, from the
hunter, while a dead silence
shadow of his cowl, upon the upon the gloomy chamber.
fell
face of the
Gilbert, in
—
""
—"
—
"
THE MONK OF THE WISSAfllKON. arms
his green and gold attire, stood before the table, his
brown
features
still
crossed, his
still
compressed by an expression of unshaken resolution.
"Madeline .'"
—
The Hunter
started, but did not utter a
like electric fire
129
the
word came from
the lips of the Invisible.
word, though the name thrilled
through his veins.
" At this moment, while you stand before me, she struggles in the em-
—
Seducer You, the Plighted Husband, stand before the Supreme Lodge of the B. H. A. C, and not one mile from the spot, Madeline, your Sworn Wife, yields to her Unknown Lover." Gilbert did not speak, but shaken by an agony that he fiercely
brace of her
!
—
endeavored m
to
master
night,
and not
clenched hands
murmur 1 kisses of a man unknown groan ? Then have you the
Can you hear
returning the
— raised his
think of your wife
and on your wedding
her,
to
forehead.
to his
Can you
without a
this
become our Minister;
heart to
then have you the iron nerve, requisite for a Grand Master !" " Go on " said Gilbert, as his brown face was deformed by swollen veins
—
—
You
"
arms of it
see
don't flinch.
I
Go on
already.
" Let
it
—
the
end of
can bear even that
I
Yes, even
her lover.
that.
is
your
Mad'lin' in the
!
trial,
I'm through
?"
all this
be spoken in few words.
are willing to test your truth,
If this
If
you are
your nerve, by a
the
man we
trial that will
seek,
if
you
bind you to the
Order, and bind the Order to you, at once and forever, then take this knife " Well I see the knife go on !"
—
—
Take
— chamber of your — her lover — and
the knife, seek the
clings to
"Strike laughter
it
" True
his
to
— " That
steel into the
high purpose
is
exhibited in this ;
nothing more.
partner in his act of
shame
woman whom you demands
demand from you.
Invisible does not
Seducer's heart, and are avenged.
cowardly murder
this
Gilbert, with
a wild burst of
not hard to do."
is
that would, indeed, be an action without difficulty or danger.
;
Such a deed, the
the
heart?" shrieked
plighted wife, even as she
;
None
?
But
!
You
What
A mere
plunge your
self-denial,
what
brutal revenge, a
to punish, not the seducer, but the
man whom you hate, but who has so terribly wronged you common thoughts, an iron nerve, a heart strike,
to
not the
love, but
a soul above
unyielding as the grave
—
all
" Mad'lin' !" shrieked Gilbert, as the blood congealed in his veins
" Strike Mad'lin'
The words some ble
fell in
Strike the girl— who
broken accents
had suddenly darkened
spell
Head, pressing his hands
" Mad'lin' i
!
!
;
only— to
night
—
he could not go on.
As though
his reason, he stood before the Invisi-
to his
forehead, and muttering in
gasps—
Mad'lin' !"
And m answer, was heard the musical voice of the Invisible " Even now this girl, whom you so madly love, returns 9
his kisses.
"
" "
PAUL ARDENHEIM
130
Yes, she suffers him
;
OR,
wind his arms about her neck, and twine his At this moment, her eyes hazy, her bosom
to
fingers in her flowing hair. full
with passion, she trembles
" Mad'lin'
wished good
human shape
Strike her
!
at his touch,
won me
not love, but thou hast
—
be thine
— the girl
world.
to all the
to
who
and whispers,
'
— thine forever
never harmed a
Gilbert
could
I
"
!'
and
livin' thing,
Stab her for the villany of this Devil in
" Go, miserable man, go to her chamber, in the Farm-House, not one
Look through
mile from this hall.
chesnut
tree,
and see
all
the
window
that passes in her room.
:
you can climb
Go
the
—see her pant and
swell as her moist eyes are fixed upon her lover's face
;
hear her words
of passion, broken by the heavings of her naked bosom, and then refuse the knife, then say that Gilbert's hands
The
knife, a long
fell
you
will not
ascend the Grand Master's throne !"
from his brow, and he tottered toward the
and serpentine blade, shapen
like the
table.
dagger of the
Malay, flashed brightly on the surface of the sombre mahogany.
Which way — " he said in a whisper, that was scarcely audible— Which way — do I pass from this place ?" He seized the knife, his hand trembling in every nerve. "
"
—
" First,
you must swear an Oath,
again before the rising of the sun
" Quick
!
that you" will
appear in
this
hall
Your Oath—"
" That you will permit no one
no one, while absent on "
—
Your Oath!"
to see
this errand
—
the knife, agitated
by
your
face, that
you
will
speak
to
the tremor of his hand, clattered
against the table.
» Kneel
With
!"
the
knife
every syllable of
beams
to the scene.
his shapeless
hand
;
in its
his
hand, he knelt, heard the Oath, and repeated
The lamp gave
crowded imprecations.
On
one side of the
table, the Invisible,
its
faint
shrouded in
dark robe, with a silent and motionless figure on either
before the table, kneeling on the stone floor, the huge form of the
Woodsman, his head bowed, his hand, which grasped the knife, agitated by an unceasing motion, while his eyes shone with a mad glare, and his lips,
compressed over his
set teeth, indicated at
once the firmness and the
horror of his resolve.
"Brethren, blindfold the Candidate, and lead him forth from this
cell to
the house of Peter Dorfner !" said the Invisible.
With one movement
the silent figures rose, and approached the kneel-
who still clasped name of the Orphan
ing Hunter, tering the It
was
the knife, and gazed
might be seen, even by the dim that of a stout, perchance
and slender.
upon the
floor,
mut-
Girl. light, that
one of these cowled' forms
Herculean man, while the other was spare
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHfKON. The
bound
stoutest of the twain
a dark handkerchief tightly around the
Hunter's eyes, and, at the same moment,
A
features.
131
lifted the
cowl which veiled his
red round face, with hair and beard as white as snow, and
glowed
bright eyes, almost buried among- laughing wrinkles,
with the cowl encircling
like a dark frame around a
it,
in
the light,
warmly colored
picture. It
was
And,
the face of Peter Dorfner.
same
at the
sneering from
its
instant that his laughing face, with a deadly malice
very laughter, was revealed, the other figure raised his
cowl, and disclosed the sharp features of the
Unknown, who had
led Gil-
bert to this cell.
"
We
conduct him
will
Lodge
!" said
—
—
Most Venerable and after he more to the hall of the Supreme
to the scene
has passed the ordeal, bring him once
Peter Dorfner, in a tone of lugubrious depth, while his eyes
twinkled, and his lips grimaced in sneering laughter. "
Even
so
Thou
!
hast
said
it,
and
it
shall be
done
slender gentleman, in a tone as guttural, and with the
!"
added the
same grimace and
sneer of his partner. " Let
it
be (jone
And
await you !"
Away
!
!
Three hours from this moment, I will waved his white hand. the shadows of the cell, in the charge of
the Invisible
The Hunter disappeared in two disguised men the sound
the
;
of a door, quietly closed, was heard,
followed by the echo of foot-tramps, and
all
was
still.
CHAPTER TWELFTH. THE INVISIBLE HEAD OF THE ORDER.
The
Invisible
was
alone.
Alone, in the centre of the gloomy place, with the hanging lamp shining
down over
volume.
his
cowled head and white hand, resting on the massive all was gloom the walls of the place were lost
Around him,
;
in the darkness.
The
light
only served to illumine that solitary figure, seated beside the
table, with the
cowl over his face, and the marble-like hand extended from the black robe. We may not see his face, but a deep sigh breaks on the silence, and the white hand trembles in every slender finger.
/
PAUL ARDENHEIM
132
And while
the hour passed, this
cowl and robe, but
his
sunken
of the
the cell,
which was
the table, under the
hand placed upon the Book.
his pale
" Fools
They
!
and laugh
own
words of audible language.
soul, in the
pretend
sneer while they bind the Initiate's eyes,
to
him which they think
in scorn as they lead
this Organization,
Mystery and Power
of the humblest Lodge,
than
being, shrouded not only in
the while, he talked aloud, as though conversing with his
all
tions of
unknown
shadow and secresy of hill, remained seated by
in the
hanging lamp, with
light of the
And
bosom
in the
OR,
;
is
to his
And
!
They
work.
known
is
to
them
They
grimace, ha, ha!
complica-
its
the while, the humblest Initiate
all
not more the dupe of the Master of that Lodge,
Dorfner and his friend are mine.
Peter
affect to despise
in all
fancy that they share
and
sneer
they
Yet,
my
power, and partake
with me, in a perfect knowledge of the incredible Machinery of the
They, indeed
Order.
it
!
a pitiable
is
life
of Madeline
may
be their death, while
Both stained with
delusion.
cowardly crimes, both urging the Woodsman I,
to
in the
rough granite of that
rude Hunter's soul, already can trace the outlines of a
my
" In
deed, because the
this
Man
of Genius.
hands, he will control the Order on this Continent
hands he will go forth
to his great
my
in
;
work, prepared for every extremity, by
which will cut him off forever from all sympathy or Man. " And yet they dream those creatures of an hour, who have no thought beyond the gratification of an appetite, or the gorging of an insatiate avarice that the Order is but a cunning trick, invented yester-
this
nighVs
trial,
fellowship with
—
—
day, to cheat and bewilder baser
men
than themselves
!
" That Order has flourished for thousands of years,
known
while
10 history,
been stolen by ies of all
"Far
symbols
— the
its
very name un-
Altar, the Ark, the
forms of religion, and adapted
Urn
—have
mummer-
to the childish
shapes of Secret Organization.
—
back into the Night of Ages, we can trace the Order.
far
arose in the or King,
all
its
dawn
first
of the World,
began
to
when Man,
crush his Brother.
putting on the
name
Back, farther than the era of
Babel's Tower, back even farther than the Deluge, even into those
whose memory
ages,
is
now
It
of Priest
we may
called a fable,
dim
surely trace the
Great Secret Order. " At
first, it
had been in the
was
lost
was,
in a
among
word, the expression of Natural Religion
Altars and
Thrones
—by
the multitude of
forms and with the solemnities of symbolic worship.
the earliest form of an Idea, and therefore, the
are few, distinct and natural. civilized
man and
They have been
the savage
They who is
A
symbol
symbols of the Order
themselves
address
— which
Mankind,
alike
to
the
only one grade above the brute.
among
his pyramids,
by
by the wavelets seas of
his
received alike by the Egyptian
the polished Grecian under the clear skies and
;
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. Roman,
beloved clime, by the warlike and practical in his
Druid
and ridden
to the dust
intellect
Religion
all
by
a ferocious Religion.
known
nations have
of Moses, to his
;
the half-naked Briton
and the Hindoo, entangled among the mazes of castes,
rites,
"All ages,
133
appeared
it
People of a
Moulded anew by
Order.
this
the
Jewish
the elaborate ceremonial of the
in
later day, in the apparently unintelligible
dreams of the Cabalists. The Greek beheld it in the mysteries called it observed in the camp of the Romans its rites were Eleusinian ;
;
became manifested Chivalry, and now,
to
Europe
in
in
Europe,
in the
Truths of the Order
;
and
bolder
life
?
•
" Behold the Eternal
called
Masonry
;
a
of childish observances*
not revive the Order, and bid
than ever
it is
the place of the Great
simplicity of form and serene grandeur of
its
maze
ceremonial, are lost in a 1
year 1774,
Solomon and Hiram takes
ridiculous Fable of
" Shall
Middle Ages, under the form of
the
For Good or
Wisdom
Grand Master, who now awaits
for
live again in a stronger
it
Evil
manifested in his
doom
and
?
laws and
its
in the next
ritual
!
This
chamber, did not
dream, one hour ago, that there was such a Power in the world as the Yet, at his Initiation, he had sworn fealty to Supreme Lodge. Lodge; he had bound himself to recognise it, when*lt appeared certain form, and
by a minutely described symbol, and
holds the form and the symbol
for the first time.
by the conception of a Power, beyond and above him, he yields "And this band of Pirates and Robbers
but, bewildered
secret
the desk and counter
mense organization
The
;
he hesitates
like a slave to the master's rod.
the Pirates of the sea,
not merely the Robbers of the highway, but of
—become subject
in the
to-night he be-
first,
and incomprehensible
—not only
but of the counting-house
At
that in a
palm of
my
to
my
control.
I
hold their im-
hand."
Invisible stretched forth his white hand,
and the
light revealed his
eyes, dilating with inexplicable emotion.
" Shall
it
be for
Good
?" his voice broke in musical cadence
breathless stillness of the cell
His head drooped in his hands,
;
upon the
" or for Evil ?"
once more his cheeks, unnaturally pale, rested with-
while his eyes, almost shadowed by his hair, which
his projecting forehead,
fell
over
or gesture, to indicate that there
was
shone with a fixed and dazzling
In this posture, without a life
—
word
light.
or thought in him, he remained for the space of an hour.
No human hand may dare
to picture the
dark wilderness of his thoughts.
PAUL ARDENHEIM;
1U
OR,
CHAPTER THIRTEENTH. the ancient
Madeline
coin.
!
The moon gleams
through the narrow window, whose white curtains
are turned aside from the small panes, framed in lead, and shining over
dark coverlet of the bed, discloses the
the
snowy form reposing
in
centre.
its
by no means
It is
by
a spacious room, nor are the walls concealed
rich
purple tapestry, nor do the creations of the painter's soul glow in the moonlight, from frames profuse in gilding and decked with elaborate carv-
The
ings
windows
floor is bare
;
the walls covered with panels of dark oak
Between these windows,
the other to the south.
small bed
;
two or three quaint
chairs,
it
two
is
in the corner, stands
a
and a walnut dressing-bureau, sur-
mounted by an oval mirror, complete the scanty
And
;
give light to the narrow apartment, one looking to the west and
furniture of the room.
a very pleasant thing to see the moonlight gushing over the
dark coverlet from the southern window.
While
all
is
dreary winter,
white snow-drifts, and leafless woods, and cloudless sky without
;
while,
from the room below, echo the sounds of the midnight carouse, here, in the Maiden's bed-chamber, all is silent, and the only light that comes to bless her
slumbering form,
is
the clear moonshine, gushing through the
narrow window-pane.
She
rests
upon
the bed, her form enveloped in the folds of a white gar-
ment, which, covering her arms with
something like a hood or the
brown
its
loose sleeves, and her head with
cowl,, suffers her clasped hands,
hair twining round
moonlight comes lovingly
its
to bless
warm
and face with
But the
cheeks, to be visible.
her slumbering form, and in
its
pale
glow, she seems not a living woman, but resembles the form of a dead
Nun,
laid
upon her
sinless couch, with every limb
and feature composed
in the sleep of death.
The shadows and the moonbeams struggle for the mastery, in the dim now the light glares on the mirror and widens upon the The tread of the dancers, the mad music of the revel, echo from bed. and narrow room
the
;
room beneath, but
still
she slumbers, her virgin face looking very
pure and altogether loveable, as the white hood and brown tresses contrast her
with
dark brows,
delicately
defined
eyelashes,
warm
lips
and
rosy cheeks.
And
the clasped hands gently rise and as gently
regular pulsations of her virgin breast.
fall,
moved by
the
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. As she slumbers, her
lips
move, and the silence
135
broken by an inco-
is
herent ejaculation. "
It
is
valleys
and
field
so beautiful * * * And thou art indeed the Lord of these * * this gloomy hall where we stand, looking forth upon the !
—*
forest, the lake
and
river, smiling in the
summer
Strange dream, that speaks altogether of lordly
and valleys, with no shadow
hills
to
sun,
is
thine
!'*
and magnificent
halls,
dim the sunshine, no cloud
to
darken
the brightness of the Future
" Madeline !"
The
rays of a lamp
fell
softly over the face of the sleeping girl,
and a
countenance, almost deformed by the struggle of contending passions,
looked in upon her slumber. It was the young stranger, attired in the gray surtout, with curls of brown hair clustering around his white forehead. Lamp in hand, he had
crossed the threshold with the stealthy footstep of a
man
conscious of a
Guilty Thought; he had closed and bolted ^the door, drawn the curtains
over the southern window, and
now
stood by the couch,
—alone with
his
sleeping victim.
"Madeline!" It
was spoken
a whisper deepened by passion, but the orphan
in
girl,
wrapped in her dreams, did not hear the voice that uttered her name. Turning in her slumber, she rested her cheek upon her right arm, and Like a slumbering nun in her face was beneath the gaze of the intruder. her white garment and hood, she lay before him, a soft flush stealing over her clear brown cheek, her eyelids moving gently as their fringes shone
with moisture, her
lips parting until the
ivory teeth shone through their
glowing red.
He
laid his
hand upon her arm, and there was a sad look of determined
passion on his handsome face, as he heard the sleeper in
murmur
his
name
her dreams.
With glowing
hand grasping her arm, the enticing loveliness of her face gaze away, and his eye wandered to
his
in the light, he turned his
It was yet time to relent he might cross that threshold moment, and the sleeping girl would be saved. Ah, that some good Angel, whose solemn care it is to watch over the sleep of child-like maidenhood, had warned him back and in that moment
the bolted door.
;
in a
;
when he paused his footsteps 44
But no
!
in trembling suspense,
even beside the bed, had guided
from the room, and from the home of the Orphan Girl
The world would laugh when
Jacopo would jeer
dreams she speaks
!
She loves me, and
my name
heard the story
already mine
;
for
!
— even
even in her
!"
In silence he surveyed the sleeping
ance over her face.
is
it
girl, as
the light fell in mild radi-
—
;
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
136
"An hour
only an hour
!
•
!
And
yet a great
many
things
may
be done
an hour !"
in
His hand pressed her bared arm
;
his fingers encountered a stray tress
of her brown hair.
Hah
'
— she
She wakes
!
will utter a shriek as she beholds
me
—
all is
lost!"
While John stood spell-bound, unable up
started
into a sitting posture, her feet
to utter a
word, the young
girl
hanging over the side of the bed,
her hands slightly clasped, and resting upon the white folds of her dress.
Her eyes unclosed. John uttered an involuntary cry of terror for was unnatural and glassy they did not look into his handsome ;
their light
;
face with the
impetuous glance of voluptuous impulse, or the moist ten-
derness of powerless passion but glared upon him with the cold stare of death.
The
"
unable It
potion has killed her
to turn his
was with
glance
away from
am
guilty
—"
faltered the
young man,
those glaring eyes.
a feeling of unutterable surprise, mingled with a terror that
made
chilled every vein, and
pulsation, that the lips of the
1
Unknown
his
heart beat with a sluggish and painful
heard the
first
words which came from the
Orphan Madeline.
" Reginald Lyndulfe !" she uttered, in a voice of unnatural intonation.
The
face of
My
¥
name
John expressed the very extremity of apathetic wonder. !"
The Maiden, resting on
on the edge of the bed, her gently clasped hands
sitting
her dress, the light shining
upon her eyes, whispered,
full
in that voice, unnatural as her glassy stave
still
A great lord, the son of a- lord, he comes to home, eager to win a noble victory. With soft words and gentle smiles., eyes whose glances thrill, and tones whose music maddens, he comes to the home of the poor Orphan Girl, and comes to win her from purity and innocence, into pollution and shame. It is a noble deed " Reginald Lyndulfe
one so noble and
for
!
forest
this
look upon
fair to
!
And
the poor girl, sitting
her virgin couch, her senses wrapped in the delirium of an
upon
unknown
poison, speaks these words in the ears of Reginald, Lord of Lyndulfe, and feels that in a
moment she
forget the teachings of that
will
dream
—
wake from her dream only awake to be more completely
— only awake
to
in
her Seducer's power !"
The young man speech or motion. his
The ruddy hue
of health had passed from his face
dark blue eyes grew large and wild
nether
He was
stood beside the bed, the light in his hand, but without
to
;
an
idiotic
smile agitated his
lip.
could not speak
;
he could not find in his heart the word which
answer these incredible words of the Somnambulist, nor had he
the physical
power
to
frame an audible sound.
"
:
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON.
137
« Yes, Reginald—" she said, her large eyes yet veiled by that deathly glassiness
—"
is true.
it
In this strange sleep
name, and know your secret purposes.
real
moment
I
awake from
will
— listen
chamber,
Not one
to
line of her features
She looked
life.
;
— wonder
your words, and yield
nor a smile of the set
the coffin
dream
this
lips,
to
know your
you,
also true, that in a
is
you here,
find
in
my
a tremor of the expanded lid,
Somnambulist the appearance of
the
to
know
to their deceit."
moved; not
gave
I
It
image of Death, freshly gathered from
like a beautiful
and yet her beauty was more terrible
to
behold than the most
loathsome skull or skeleton of the charnel-house. Spell-bound, unable to advance or recede, John stood by the bed, the arm which extended the lamp, stiff and rigid as an arm of iron. He felt he could not look to the right or the the cold damps upon his forehead ;
left
him motion-
the glassy eyes of Madeline enchained him, and held
;
and dumb.
less
The wind howled dismally without he heard it, and fancied it was some strange funeral knell, tolling from an unearthly bell, rung by demon ;
hands.
Even
as the grotesque conceit flashed over his bewildered brain, there
came, crowding together, a .mass of incoherent thoughts "
The drug
has the influence of
some
devil's spell * * * It has destroyed
her reason * * * It is not her voice which I hear, but the voice of a spirit * * * So pale, so beautiful, so like a dead Maiden half-restored to life !"
Thoughts
like these
crowded over
his brain, but he could not speak a
word.
With a
She rose from her bed. over
floor, but to glide
the form of the
on the vacant "
Here
He as
—on
it,
footstep that
seemed not
like the footstep of a spiritual
young man, her hands extended, and her glassy eyes
this
very spot where
now
I
stand
—my Mother stood !"
though the same spell which wrapped her senses in
sake of God,
And
I'
Her
if
And
mercy
!
*
Spare
me
!
—
if
not for the sake of mercy, for the sake of
yet they killed her
voice, hollow
like accent, as
"
seemed
It
this
delirium,
veins with ice.
" Here she stood, and begged for
child
fixed
air.
heard the voice, but could not turn and look upon her.
filled his
touch the
to
thin^ she passed
—
and unnatural as
she said these words
yet they killed her
!
it
not for the
my
unborn
was, thrilled with a more ghost-
:
Upon
this floor, ere the first
cry of her
babe had melted on her ears, ere she had seen the face of that new-born child, they murdered her, in her very anguish and travail Mother, your !
robes are very white, but there
your
face is
very
on the brow and
fair,
lip,
but there
is is
—
blood upon their whiteness. the stain of blood
blood everywhere !"
upon
it,
too
Mother, ;
—blood
— PAUL ARDENHEIM
138
OR,
;
man
with the light shining over the untenanted bed, the young
Still,
stood there, conscious that the Orphan Girl was near him, but unable to
upon her deathly eyes, although her voice penetrated
turn and gaze
very blood.
"In
moment, Mother
a
sured tone, she spoke
and plead, not
—"
is
And,
The
brass, a heart that
light,
that slow,
as, in
daughter will kneel upon
for her life, but for her honor.
derer, but with her Seducer.
ear that
he heard her voice,
—" your
is
this
Plead, not with her
shining over the young man's shoulder, lighting
glow
faint
Murto
an
stone !"
graceful form and livid face, also shone
and imparted a
mea-
very spot,
Mother, she will pray
like you,
his
upon
the white
image
up
his
at his back,
and motionless eyeballs.
to the pale face
How shall we explain this scene ? This Orphan Girl, with her blood wrapped in a spectral somnambulism, chilled at its fountains, her bosom pulseless, her eye glassy while her soul seems to burst into a
—
—
new
life,— a
Future
once conscious of the unknown Past and the unknown
life at
we
Shall
?
—
say that
this
all
was the work of the drug adminisOr shall we boldly ?
tered not an hour ago, or the result of witchcraft
imagine that but that
lips,
bosom
it is
not the soul of the Orphan Girl which speaks from her
some
Presence from the Other World
spiritual
Let us look round the walks of our everyday thousand incidents, which
summon the
now
fills
her
?
to
life,
and explain the
us appear so dark and inexplicable.
Let us
wisdom which was called Magic, or modern Philosophy, which bears the name of Magnetism. Where our aid
to
the old-time
all
will our explanations end
the facts
— or what
for another and
and brighter
?
Where they
us appear like facts
to
more
intelligent age of the world,
reserved
is
perchance for another
state of being.
now
learn the mystery of poor Madeline's
— broke
fiercely
the stupor
Distinctly he heard that
breath for the voice of Madeline
—
blood flowed freely again
was gone
;
;
all
we can only
this history,
we may
life.
Suddenly a sound, as of a corse hurled rudely on the hard floor of the stranger.
before us,
Perchance, in future pages of
picture, not explain.
The
can only record
— the explanation
So, in relation to this incredible scene,
speechless
We
began. ;
was
from
its
coffin
— dashed
which paralyzed the senses
sound— listened with hushed
still.
the strange terror
which had held him
he could speak, but could not muster courage
to
turn himself, and look upon the maiden.
"Ah — this shall
He
is
pay dearly turned
some
devil's
for this !"
wizard-craft!
Jacopo!
Jacopo
!
You
"
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. At
his feet,
with the
first
;
139
no longer pale and spectral, but throbbing and panting, as pulses of a
new
life,
was stretched
the
Maiden Madeline,
her cheeks glowing redly against the brown curls and the white hood
;
her eyelids, half-unclosed, gleaming with the moist radiance which they could not altogether veil. " She awakes from this wizard spell
you may choose
to
—"
faltered John, or Reginald, as
designate him.
Bending over her,
light in hand,
he soon forgot
all
his terrors
— so^pn
forgot the pale, glassy-eyed maiden, in that half-slumbering image of vo-
luptuous loveliness.
" Madeline !" he softly said, while his cheek was flushed, his deep blue
warm and Lover ? He
eye,
—"Awake
passionate in
its light
It is I
!
—
it is
your
—
and as for " Husband,"
could not speak the word it only him coupled with the sneer of the World. " Marry her!" Even as she bloomed beneath his gaze, trembling softly " Reginald of into a warm and passionate life, a sneer curled his lip The world will forgive Lyndulfe, and the Peasant Girl of Wissahikon ;
—
rose .before
—
!
the
— the outrage, but a marriage — never !"
Merrily from the room below came the sounds of the midnight revel sad and knell-like the wind howled through the glen of Wissahikon
;
but
young man, bending over the half-conscious girl, did not heed the echo of the dancers' tread, nor mark the roaring of the blast. His gaze was centred upon her eyes, shining dimly through their half he seemed to gloat upon the freshness of her parted lips, the closed lids the
;
glowing warmth of her cheeks.
The bosom which, only robe, like a dead
bosom
a
moment
in its
suddenly stretched forth her arms
— started
had rested beneath the white to rise and swell. She with eyes wide open, glared wildly
shroud,
—
past,
now began
and shrunk away from the Stranger, as though his very gaze filled her with indefinable anguish. " " chamber at this lone hour about her
You
She
here
to
her
feet,
— in my
—
!
—
faltered the words, and, joining her hands, stood in her white robe
before this
unknown man,
her hair coursing freely over Her neck and
shoulders.
" Madeline, you do not love me," he slowly uttered, his voice
"
Ah — it
some dream.
is
not be so base of night
—
low and
gaze centred upon her face.
distinct, his
to
!
To
It
cannot be.
pass the threshold of
whisper words of love
plighted to another.
Ah
—
it is
to a
You
my
—
—
you would not could chamber at the dead hour
poor forest
not your voice that
I
girl,
whose
faith is
hear."
Without removing his gaze, the young man raised his clasped hands, was almost hallowed by the deep reverence which
and, in a voice that
was mingled with
its
passion, he continued:
" Madeline, will you listen to
me 1
Hear me, before you '#
reject
my
"
"
PAUL ARDENHEIM
140
Do
suit with scorn.
from
we
tence
?
Oh, when
I
"
could kneel at your feet and thank
covered his face with his hands.
Did he
— was he
of
name
afraid to take the
"Madeline, will you hands outstretched,
listen
his voice
me?"
to
fear to
God upon
face, flushed
by passion, and
her with an emotion as
"John — " she
?
broken by emotion. She could see his chest it
;
and his manly
by earnest eyes, seemed wild and singular as his own. lighted
impress
to
muttered, sinking into a chair beside the bed, as though
her strength had failed her
When
Gilbert Morgan.
— leave
complete the sen-
his lips
he cried, starting forward, his
heave and swell beneath the coarse garb that covered
Depart
stand thus
I
are indeed alone with each other, shut out
the world, and think «how often I have longed, prayed for this
all
moment,
He
OR,
condemn me unheard.
not
before you, and feel that
;
me
—" You know last
we
—leave me—
met,
I
cannot
I
—
that I told
am
the plighted
you the story of
Wife of
my
life.
Her words were incoherent, her accents tremulous and broken. As the warmed over her brown cheek, she absently tossed the tresses of
blushes
her hair aside from her face, and cast her eyes
—
— shining with
moisture
to the floor.
—
"You cannot love him!" cried the young man " That is it, Madeline. Nay, do not attempt a denial. Your own heart confirms my words." Madeline raised her eyes her face was very pale, her voice earnest
—
though tremulous as she spoke
:
" Only a month ago, beneath the withered chesnut tree that stands near
your voice. That hour saw you, my life was calm thoughtless but it was happy. An humble peasant girl, I had been cherished beneath the roof which now shelters reared in these solitudes us my only adviser, a rude Indian man, who, but an hour ago, warned me to fear you, John aye, to dread you as the Manitto of Evil. There was another friend a man, now aged, who dwells in the Monastery up the stream, and who, from the hour of earliest childhood, unclosed to my eyes the pages of the Bible, the knowledge of the world's past history. It was Father Luke, of the Wissahikon Monastery, who taught the friendthe water-side, I first beheld you,
brought
woe and madness
to
me
first
listened to
Before
!
I
—
—
;
;
;
—
Girl the speech of the great world, and the lessons of that
Orphan
less
holy Religion which says blest
— There '
is
a
to all of us,
God, and he
is
a better and a brighter world, and
even
to the
our Father.
it
shall be our
poorest and the
There
is
hum-
another World,
Home, when our bones
are dust.'
She paused, her pale cheek glowing ing,
into
sudden
life,
her eyes gleam-
and a look of almost hallowed purity trembling over the lineaments
of her face.
"And fear
you
Father Luke has warned me, John." she said, "warned as
I
would
fear the
Enemy
of
Mankind!"
me
to
"
;
THE MONK OF THE WISSAfllKON. "Madeline,
month.
true that
it is
when
since the hour
I
have only known your' name
your love dawned suddenly upon
true that
It is
Ill
saw you,
I first
I
a brief
for
my
But
soul.
own late. For love of you, Madeline, I would sacrifice all that is away from your in your presence alone I exist to me in the world ;
my
life is
dark
night withont a star
waste, without a flower
Listen to me, Madeline
!
humble
call the
I
would
girl
fling title
and lands
my
of Wissahikon
— instead
were
but the poor clerk of a wealthy Merchant,
princely estate,
dear side,
;
— Oh, dark — a dreary
my
have not been the master of
gloomy
of being as
I
am,
some
the titled heir of
I
your
at
a
;
and be proud
feet,
to
bride."
Seated on the chair beside the bed, her flushed cheek relieved by the
brown
which swept
hair,
freely from the folds of the white
hood, over
her shoulders, Madeline looked up into the face of her lover, with a senIt was not love, it was not fear. He stood some paces from her side, in the centre of the floor, the light which he held disclosing his manly face encircled by curls of waving brown hair,
sation of peculiar character.
muscular and
his
buttoned
form enveloped
agile
to the throat, relieved
outline of his chest, the
" this
are
may
It
world
lie
sinewy proportions of his arms.
am the plighted Wife Your very name —
apart. to
on the
floor
;
— " Our paths
in
You — you
—
of another.
I
me.
cast her eyes
which,
and displayed the bold
not be," she said, in a voice almost inaudible
unknown
She
in the suit of coarse cloth,
his countenance,
brighter and deeper the blushes
glowed
over her cheek.
John placed
the lamp upon a small table of unpainted pine, which stood Then, seating himself upon the edge of that couch, he took the hand which she had not the power to withdraw. Her eyes were
near the bed.
downcast, but he could
feel the
hand which he clasped grow cold as
ice,
and the tremulous motion of her white robe marked the throbbing of her bosom. "
Madeline—" he
to
say
foa
said, in a voice
to
when
You
you.
will listen to
She did not answer
unknown man
;
girl
me — listen
—
"
I
its
ac-
have a few words
silence and in patience
in
you
those words are said, I will leave
with an emotion that of this
which, low and faltering in
once enchained the heart of the poor
cents, at
for ever."
with her eyes downcast, and her bosom swelling
was denied
the blessing of speech, she felt the
hand
pressing her own, and could not withdraw her hand
from his grasp. "
You have
forest,
dwelt a beautiful
though the stream told
waves
;
girl, it
to
who
when compared with
like
did not
her, as
the
this
know
her face
and the wild rose which bloomed
withered,
Have you
read of other lands, Madeline.
book of romance, read a story something
in
that she
was
some
not, in
?— Once,
in
was
reflected in
old
a wild
beautiful, its
clear
her path, seemed pale and
warm hue
of her cheek, the moist
" \
142
PAUL ARDENHEIM
ripeness of her lips.
It
was
in
OR,
;
England, Madeline,
some shadowy
in
valley of a Yorkshire forest, that this orphan girl dwelt
and many hun-
;
dred years have passed since the dust was laid upon her bosom
As
if
—
absorbed in the memories of his narrative, Reginald pressed the
hand which trembled
his grasp,
in
and toyed absently with her flow-
ing hair.
One
"
day, as, bending over the waves, she
her, in all
its
saw her
face smiling
upon
youth, hallowed by the innocence of a stainless heart, there
came suddenly to her At once the
an
side,
peasant.
unknown man,
had won her heart, she could not look
dressed in the garb of a
him, aye, as though some spell
forest girl loved
into his face without emotion, nor
She loved him, from the very moment stream, she saw his face reflected beside her own.
hear his voice without trembling.
when, gazing in the Loved him with a love
that
Madeline shuddered.
was not without
a strange and indefinable fear."
Something there was
in.
the story of Reginald
that penetrated her heart with an indefinable agitation.
"
And
yet he
was unknown
She was even ignorant of
to her.
his
name."
The young
girl raised her eyes, and for an instant glanced upon her handsome face. Again an involuntary shudder shook her form. " For him, Madeline, this unknown man, she forsook her wild-wood valley she followed his fate into the great world. She forsook, for him, those dear old woods, in whose tranquil solitudes her form had ripened
lover's
;
beauty
into
face
;
forsook the calm waters which had reflected her virgin
;
forsook
the peace
all
and quiet of her lonely
life,
and went
forth,
unknown world." Reginald could not Madeline's head drooped slowly on her bosom read the expression of her face, nor mark her tears, but he heard her with the
unknown
stranger, into the
;
gasping breath, he "
felt
They wandered
that gently tremulous hand.
forth together
— " whispered
" Yes, unblessed by priestly rites
;
Madeline.
they went on their way, hand
One
linked in hand, and hearts hallowed in the bond of a stainless love. day, Madeline, just as the sun was setting, they stood
summit of
a
east, centred
hill,
the
with the banners of a lordly race floating from rich,
Around
on the
dusk woods stretching toward the west, while
on the wide sweep of a grassy lawn, arose an ancient
strains of music,
casements.
together
its
loftiest
deep, festival music, gushing from
that noble hall, Madeline, invested as
it
in the
castle,
tower, and
its
vine-clad
was with
the outward indications of rank and weaUh, bands of marriage guests
gay costumes
scattered, their
They
glittering
old,
from the verdure of the lawn.
awaited the return of the lord of this
land, he had taken to himself a bride.
they
knew
all
were
fair
Whether
domain.
In
rich or poor,
some far young or
not; but word had been received that he would return to
his castle, at the
hour of sunset, with
this
unknown
wife on his arm."
"
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. The
story
bosom
seemed
143
Her
absorb the very soul of the Orphan Girl.
to
her face averted, she surrendered her hand, her arm, to
fluttering,
the grasp of Reginald, and awaited in undisguised suspense the conclusion
of the old-time Legend. " The peasant girl, standing on the hill-top
— her
rudely clad lover
her side, beheld this scene, as the soft warmth of the invested her face with
"
'
new
loveliness.
indeed beautiful V she said, her eyes enchained by the scene
It is
—
which stretched beneath her distance,
"
Her
by
summer evening
feet
'
comes gently over the lawn lover did not answer her.
wrinkled, you
may
Hark
how
!
the music, softened
His
face, not altogether
hideous or
be sure, although his rough garb indicated a
—
by
!'
life
of
was shadowed by an emotion which the peasant girl could not comprehend. There was a sad look upon his brow, but around his lips, a smile hung trembling; it was as though joy poverty and want,
his face, I say,
—
and sorrow contended
He "
for the
did not speak to her
He
—
did not speak to her
mastery on the lines of his countenance.
— " echoed Madeline, without
seeming con-
scious of the words.
" No, Madeline
down
but led her gently
;
the hill-side.
which stood by the roadside, they went
lofty gates
Through
bling nearer to him, afraid, in her peasant garb, of all this
He
splendor.
and through the marriage guests, in
his side, they passed over the lawn,
the
"
and up the great steps of the ancient
his Bride."
Let us depart,' she faltered
poor and humble
upon our mean "
And she «
Look
*
This
is
no place
attire.
—
for us.
We
are but
" '
waved over
his shoulders.
up,' cried her lover, speaking the
I
castle,
awaited the coming of
buried her head upon his breast, clinging to his arms for
'and behold our
" Need
—
office,
these great people, so richly arrayed, look with scorn
;
support, as her long hair "
solemn
a Priest, in the robes of his
young Lord and 4
music and
took her silently by the hand, and as she clung closer to
their glittering costumes,
where
the
together, she trem-
home
!'
name
of his Peasant Bride,
"
pursue the story, Madeline
?
Need
I tell
to
you the wonder
and the joy which covered the face of the Peasant Girl with new beauty, as she heard her
unknown Lover addressed by his Lordly home ?"
title,
and
felt
her footstep press the threshold of her princely
His voice deepened by emotion, his hand entwined about her neck, her cheek drooping nearer
to his
own,
his eyes
of her face, which seemed to ripen into a his gaze.
She trembled
at his
tears.
"
It is
a beautiful
dream
touch
— " she
;
devoured the warm loveliness
more luxuriant beauty beneath her downcast eyes were filled with
faltered.
—
"
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
144
No
"
dream, Madeline, no dream
M Truth
!"
mean you
?"
She
lifted
It is truth, all
!
" Pardon the deception, Madeline.
I
said that this
valley of England, in the ages long since past. beautiful valley
own
her
;
truth."
form the incarnation of
maiden
is
and here,
set with countless stars. at
her
feet,
It
is
in a in a
all that
is
beautiful in
when
the valley of the
the blue
Wissahikon
;
behold her lover in his rough peasant garb !"
He sunk beside her, clasping her hands within his own. No peasant, but the heir of a lordly line. Yes, Madeline, "of
What
lived
"
Lord
"
She does dwell
cloudless skies, or unruffled waves, or the deep sileat night,
heaven
—
her gaze, and beheld his earnest face
Reginald,
Lyndulfe, asks your love, and beseeches the Orphan Girl of
Wissahikon
become
to
his bride."
"Reginald of Lyndulfe their tears,
assumed
!"
murmured Madeline, and her which had
the glassy appearance
eyes, even amid
veiled their bright-
" moments before. " I have heard that name With her hands upon her forehead, she seemed absorbed in some painful memory. Meanwhile, Reginald, clutching her robe with a tremulous ness but a few
grasp
— passion
heaving violently, his
flashing eyes, his breast
his
in
parted lips and brow deformed by swollen veins
more
half-veiled face, as he whispered once
"
Be mine, Madeline
was broken,
his
!
Be mine
— looked
up
into her
the frenzied request.
power
rank
"
his voice
words incoherent.
No answer came
lips of the forest girl. While her hands became death-like and crimson by turns, and the folds of her robe, or garment, call it as you will, were violently agitated by the impetuous swelling of her bosom. She could not speak a word It was the decisive moment of her fate. but, as if enveloped by the frenzies of a dream, she felt his in answer
from the
veiled her eyes, her cheek
;
arms
encircle her waist, and could not resist their pressure.
burning kiss upon her
lip,
She
and could not turn her face away.
felt his
His hand
—
toyed with the loose tresses of her hair his gloating eye surveyed the bosom she trembled in his embrace, and,
half-revealed whiteness of her
;
unable to move, sank on his encircling arm, her eyes swimming in the light of
powerless passion.
" Reginald
—
•"
she faltered, as though some
memory had flashed upon " On this very spot
her, like a lightning spark from a midnight cloud
eighteen years ago
—My Mother— — pleaded
destroy the honor of her child
—
for her life
— do not—do not
!
The kiss of the lover drowned the maiden's earnest words. The sound of the dance, the echo of song had died away.
All was room below a deathly stillness reigned throughout the farmThere was no sudden blast of wind, howling through the gorge house. No voice was of Wissahikon, to break the midnight quiet of the scene. silent in the
—
,
"
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. heard
warn
to
back
the Seducer
145
in his career of treachery
;
in his arms,
blushing and powerless, the maiden hung, her lips pressed again and
by
again
his guilty kiss.
But, from the withered chesnut tree,
the panes of the western
window,
whose
branches touched
leafless
by agony more
a face distorted
terrible
than death, was gazing on the Maiden's peril with glaring eyes. " Mad'lin' !" exclaimed a rough voice,— but
of the
it
did not reach the ears
nor excite for an instant the attention of Reginald Lyn-
girl,
dulfe
Arid on the outer side of the bolted door, a crouching figure bent in the
darkness, his ear laid against the panels, as the words
broke the deathly
Tempter
of the
stillness.
" She- yields !" muttered the tremulous voice of an aged
man
—"In
a
mocked me And while the figure of Gilbert, revealed by the cold moonlight, was seen upon the limbs of the chesnut tree, his face against the window
moment,
Ah
all is lost
The
!
!"
fiend has
frame, the knife shining in his hand
— while
the old
the darkness of the passage, listened for the fatal the maiden's
man, enshrouded
word which was
shame, Reginald of Lyndulfe, pressing
in
to seal
his lips to the burn-
ing cheek of Madeline, gathered her closer to his breast. "
Come
Fly with
!
me
to
night
— this
hour
— this
"
moment
Frenzied by his guilty passion, he said these words, and did not that the Lie of his heart
was written upon
his forehead,
feel
darkened by the
swollen veins.
—
—
Mercy I am but a poor weak girl alone in the world With a last effort, she endeavored to free her lip from his kiss, her The effort was vain'. Her loosened hair waist from his tightening arm. "
!
floated over his shoulders, as his kisses
burned her
lips.
Gilbert, clinging to the withered limb, beheld the flushed face of Regi-
and
nald,
laid
one hand upon the sash of the narrow window.
pressed against the glass, was hideous with hatred and despair.
would
of his sturdy arm, and the sash
him
before
fall
There silk
your
a
is
kisses
—"
Gilbert muttered through his
gay dress beneath your coarse gray coat
By
and di'monds. "
The Huntsman,
* * *
ber, felt the withered to
grasp
a^
I'll
make
it
teeth
— "Hah!
a spangled dress of
gayer and brighter with
laying one hand upon the sash, grasping the knife with
the other, his eye dilating as
vored
!
set
—
face,
with his right
;
hand he clutched the knife.
"Warm
His
One blow
it
was
rivetted
by the scene within the chamWith an oath, he endea-
limb bend beneath him.
higher branch of the tree, but the knife
fell
from
his
hand, as the withered limb, with a sudden crash, snapped under his weight.
He fell
;
the knife clattered
upon a heavy mass of granite 10
at the foot
of
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
146
For an
the tree.
instant the
Huntsman saw nothing but
his consciousness,
a vague blank,
When
heard nothing but the echo of the snapping branch.
he found himself hanging by the arms
limb of the huge chesnut, his
dangling near the earth.
feet
he recovered the
to
lowest
Above him
shone the window of Madeline's room. " Curses on
ment it
They
!
it
!
I'm crazy,
does not need their watchin'
Releasing his hold, he and, placing
believe
I
are watchin' me, too
it
fell
between his
clomb from limb
to limb,
the clear heavens the
to
on
teeth,
To
!
my
lose
— watchin'
make me go
hold at sich a mo-
from yonder thicket.
from the stone,
his feet, picked the knife
began
to
But
forrad now.'"
ascend the
Once, as he
tree.
he turned his head over his shoulder. Through
moon was
The
shining brightly.
thicket near, and the distant woods,
farm-house, the
were darkly contrasted with the
glitter-
ing waste of pure white snow.
They watch me from the thicket !" muttered Gilbert, as he sprang upon a limb, which commanded a view of the interior of Madeline's "
chamber. As the stout Huntsman, whose brain was somewhat bewildered
by the events of
this
crowded
an oath escaped from his
He saw
that
night, looked through the
window
panes,
lips.
chamber by the rays of
the lamp, the bed yet bearing the
impress of the maiden's form, the quaint, old-fashioned furniture, the dressing-bureau, and the door which led into the corridor of the farm-
house.
—
But neither Madeline nor her seducer were visible. the limb— on which Gilbert poised his weight, grasping a branch
From
above him
—
window, was a dangerous leap, but he did not pause to bound he reached the window, dashed the sash hung on hinges and opened like a door and in an instant
to the
think.
With
before
him— it
a desperate
—
stood in the centre of the chamber, beside the maiden's bed. All
was
silent there.
— she has
" They've gone together
fled
with him
— " the
features of the
Hunter, distorted by rage, became softened suddenly by a look of rude but unutterable anguish. "Mad'lin'
!
This
is
a
little
too hard to bear.
gfood and pure as you was, that an angel couldn't scarcely be a " Now in a few hours all your goodness gone thing
"
clenched the knife, and gazed wildly round the chamber.
Yer
Bible's thar, gal
'a torn his
—and you could do
it
!
But
heart into splinters for you
Leave the man it's
his
tnat 'ud
work, his devil's
"
tongue
He
—
—
—
He
So
better
turned, and, with a cry of surprise mingled with hatred, beheld that
the door leading into the corridor "I'll follow you,
yer blood
my
fine
was open.
feller,
and paint yer spangled feathers with
!"
As he rushed
to the door, his
purpose
—
it
was Murder
— written on
his
""
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. sound
face, a
was scarcely
that
147
audible, so low, and like the echo of a
rustling leaf, arrested his footsteps.
Again he turned, and, near the foot of the bed, beheld the unconscious
She was stretched upon the floor; her eyes were by her side. The dress had been torn from her bosom by a rude grasp; upon those globes, whose veins, like threads of azure, were traced beneath the transparent skin, the livid print form of Madeline.
closed
;
her arras lay stiffened
of a brutal hand was visible.
His face was from the
Gilbert knelt beside her.
which streamed The agony
light,
over the back of his head, glowing upon his chesnut curls. that convulsed his features
No
was
shadow.
lost in the
groan came from his compressed
lips
;
perchance the light of con-
tending love and hatred grew deeper and wilder in his eyes, but not a
sound betrayed his agony. " Beautiful
which, as be
my
with yer brown hair about yer pale face, an' that bosom,
gal,
much
as
loved you, and as often as you had said you'd
I
wife, I never yit dared to touch, or look
bare, with the
print of his
hand upon
upon
Beautiful
it.
— an' !
that
An Angel
bosom fresh
from 'tother world couldn't be purtier; but—"
The
knife
which he grasped, rested
At once the memory of trembled like a
bed
at
man who
shining point
came over
upon
the floor.
he
the hunter
beholds some horrible Apparition rising by his
dead of night.
" She don't breathe. she'll
its
his strange mission
only wake up
be a blessed thing
her
to kill
The bosom moved motion of a
It's
By
* * *,
by
girl.
think
it it
is,
'ud
as gentle as the
And as it fluttered ribbon, wound about the
a sleeper's breath.
with that soft motion, Gilbert beheld a faded
neck of the insensible
I
!'
— very slightly— with a pulsation
feather, agitated
As
dead already.
likely that she's
misery and shame
to
To
this
ribbon was attached a small coin,
which lay upon her breast, and rose with the almost imperceptible pulsation. The huntsman lifted her head, and took the ribbon from her neck. In the action his hand encountered her luxuriant tresses, and the strong
man
felt
the tears start into his eyes.
Not
for the world, or the
wealth of
a thousand worlds, would he have touched that bosom.
M
It
was
stainless once
— pure
as the drifted
snow
Holding the small coin, or medal, toward the
— now —
light,
he endeavored
in
vain to decipher the strange figures which were inscribed
The
metal was gold
;
it
was very
bright,
upon its surface. and worn smooth as glass, as by
the pressure of countless hands.
"
I can't
read
In silence he
it,
gal, but I'll take
wound
it
as a
of you
—
the ribbon round his neck, and then, with a qui-
vering hand, placed the point of the knife
" In the name of the
memory
Covenant—" he
upon her bosom.
gasped, and at the same
moment
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
149
She beheld that face, convulsed with agony, the girl unclosed her eyes. wet with tears she felt the sharp point of the knife. Behind the hunter, with a stealthy footstep, which he did not hear, came the bent figure of an old man, whose blue eyes shone with a cold, ;
beheld the knife resting upon the beautiful bosom of
icy light, as he
Madeline. " Gilbert !" even in that
Nearer
stole the old
moment
man,
"It ain't no use now, Mad'lin'
with a
profound despair — "
His hand was upon the
of half-consciousness she
knew him.
his pale face writhing in every nerve.
It's
hilt
—"
said the Hunter, his face
glooming
too late !"
— and the blood
started, as the point entered
the white breast of Madeline.
A
sound of half-suppressed laughter disturbed the
silence,
and in the
door-way appeared the rotund form and white-bearded face of the jovial Peter Dorfner.
CHAPTER FOURTEENTH. THE INSCRIPTION ON THE ANCIENT
COIN.
"For Good or for Evil?" muttered the Unknown, whom we by his own title The Invisible Head of the Brotherhood.
can only
—
call
His hour of
silent
tures, as he glanced its faint
thought was over
around the silent
;
cell.
warmed his The hanging lamp still
a slight flush
fea-
cast
rays over the gloom, and lighted up that solitary figure seated by
the table, his cheeks buried in his hands.
"
A
footstep
— one only —
he return alone
?
is it
Morgan
the footstep of Gilbert
Has he braved
?
Does
the peril of the Ordeal ?"
While these thoughts, only half-spoken, occupied the mind of the Invigrew more distinct a figure approached from the dark-
sible, the footstep
ness of the
A
cell
—
— a clanging sound disturbed the
stillness of the place.
knife lay on the table, before the gaze of the Invisible,
At first, he did not notice the wretched man who stood before him, his muscular form agitated by an involuntary tremor, his gay apparel of green Nor did he remark the cadaverous face, and gold torn and disordered.
whose
livid
cheeks only made the wild eyes and restless
lips
more
pain-
fully distinct.
His eyes rested upon light.
the knife, as, grasping the hilt,
he raised
it
in the
— THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. "It
is
The
well!"
blade was red
;
shone no longer
it
but, as the Invisible held
;
his grasp, a blood-drop, oozing from the point, fell
" Is
149
done
it
?
—"
he surveyed
the
on the
horror-stricken
it
in
table.
features
of
the
Hunter.
The wretched man made an by
moved
lips
as
if
agitated
a spasm, but he could not utter a syllable.
He
his agitated face,
"
like a
"
Man.
He
"
fearful
eloquence in
was
the Ordeal
;
but you have passed
fearful,
it
Yes, like a Brother of the Covenant."
has," said a voice, speaking from the dark recesses of the cell
saw him
I
something of
;
and sunburnt hand, pressed forcibly upon his chest.
need not ask you
I
There was
pointed to the knife, and laid his hand upon his heart.
something impressive in his silence
"
The
without success.
effort to speak, but
muscles of his throat writhed convulsively, his
And
strike the
blow."
also beheld the knife as
I
it
bosom" — another
pierced her
voice
was heard. Shading his eyes with
gazed in the direction
his hand, the Invisible
from whence these sounds proceeded, and beheld the rotund form of Peter
Dormer, with Master
—" and
at the
of their footsteps presently died away.
was with an expression of
And
so
you buried your
it
your victim crouched
your
at
scorn, that the Invisi-
Morgan.
bosom
knife in her
loved her in a rude way, but with as
by
pity, imbittered
ble looked into the face of Gilbert
"
his side.
proper signal, conduct the late Grand
to this cell."
The echo It
companion by
his slender
" Retire !" he said
all
feet,
your
?
You
loved her, too
;
Did your hand tremble,
soul.
and saw the
steel flash
over her ere
fell?"
Gilbert did
by
not.
Trembling, pale, his hands hanging motionless
speak.
his side,* he looked vacantly into the face of the Invisible.
"
It
seems
to
me
that
her
attire
bitter
can imagine the scene.
I
warm upon
the kiss of her lover yet
her
lip.
You found her, with own chamber, with
In her
disordered, and her cheek flushed with passion.
words between you
—
fierce
There were
reproaches on your part, sullen replies
lips. Yet no impulse of love, no touch of compassion, held you back in your work of murder. She knelt to you a very beautiful a kneeling girl, with her brown hair floating thing it must have been
from her
—
—
over her bare bosom.
which not long ago in
your eye
'
Gilbert
thrilled
—resolved to do
!'
she cried, speaking in the same voice
your heart-strings. the deed,
you
But there was no mercy
raised your arm, and
bosom that heaved before you.—" The hunter tottered backward, and, sinking on one knee,
mangled
the
face to droop
toward the
floor.
suffered his
"
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
150
The
hand
Invisible raised his
moment. " Yet let me ask another
and was
his forehead,
to
Was
question.
the girl
who
silent for
a
received her
death at your hands a pure or a dishonored thing ?"
Bending over the
he saw the kneeling form rock to and
table,
but
fro,
received no answer to his question.
"
Ah
—
She was dishonored
perceive the truth of this matter.
I
—you
could not have plunged your knife into a virgin heart." Gilbert's face
was
toward the
lifted
Again his
speechless despair.
light,
every feature agitated by a
moved, but he could not frame a
lips
sound.
Where
"
did you leave the
Tottering to his his clenched
hand upon
"Look ye — "
enough
to do, jest
say
I'm afeerd
to do.
Where
did
he
V
body
Hunter advanced one step forward, and flung
the table.
cried, his voice
husky and
done your devil's work
that I've
you might have Thar is the it.
"
feet, the
a little pity for
knife,
You
me.
and here
I
am.
Even
?
Arter this night's work,
it.
me
told
If
—
— "Isn't
you are a born
it
devil,
her— I've done for me
to kill
you've anythin' more I
don't
Speak out — speak out you leave the body ?" repeated
hand with a peculiar motion,
indistinct
if
know
the thing that
the Invisible, waving his
as he fixed his eyes
upon
the huntsman's
face.
As though
that
waving hand, those eyes,
fired
with peculiar
light,
been the outward indications of a supernatural power, the Hunter's tures
became suddenly
eyes fixed and glassy, his form
rigid, his
stiff
had fea-
and
motionless.
Like a dead
man
placed in an erect posture, he stood beside the table,
while the Invisible surveyed his stiffened form and rigid face, with a calm delight, or rather a look of smiling
"
Where The lips
complacency.
did you leave the body ?"
moved
of the Hunter
languidly, while every other feature
was
rigid as the features of the dead.
" In her
woodsman's
own room — "
said Gilbert, speaking no longer in his blunt
accent, but in a voice that
cation and refined manners.
" In her
seemed
to indicate a
own room,
man
of edu-
with her bosom covered
with her blood, and her glassy eyes fixed upon the ceiling."
" Are you willing to obey
me now
—obey me
in
every command, with-
out a look or gesture of disobedience ?"
"I am
The
!"
Invisible
knocked
thrice
upon
the table with the hilt of the knife,
and ere the sound had died away, the form of the Grand Master, clad the
glittering
robes
of his
office,
advanced from the shadows.
bronzed features were dimly discernible through the lace
veil
which
in
His flut-
"
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. As he came near,
tered from his forehead.
151
drew the cowl
the Invisible
over his face. " Take the coronet from your brow."
The Grand Master head, and with
The
outlines,
plume and white
His face was
veil.
features
re-
;
—
— indicated a proud and sensual nature.
eyes shone wildly with "
the coronet of golden leaves from his fore-
lifted
the slender
were not altogether unhandsome their regular powdered and curled after the fashion of relieved by dark hair
vealed.
the time
it
What would you
terror,
But
moment, the
at this
and the forehead was damp with moisture.
?" he exclaimed, in tones
by no means calm or
firm.
"Place the coronet upon the brow of the Grand Master Elect—" the white hand of the Invisible pointed toward Gilbert's rigid face. It
was with a look of
terror that the
His terror was not without
deposed Grand Master obeyed.
sufficient cause, for the glassy eyeballs
fixed features of Gilbert resembled the face of a corse.
wound
bled as he
the golden leaves about the
brown
hair of the hunter,
and arranged the plume over his forehead, and saw his ghostly
by the veil. The deposed Grand Master turned once more to " The Robe " and again the white hand was
and
His hand tremface, but
half-concealed
—
the cowled figure. stretched toward Gil-
bert's form.
There was a glance of sullen and curling of the cided
lip,
regret, a
momentary
flashing of the eye
as the gorgeously arrayed personage heard this de-
command.
• The Robe
— " the voice of the
The Grand Master seemed
was
Invisible
to hesitate,
stern and penetrating.
but in an instant stripping the
purple garment, glittering with the dagger, the skull, the vine leaves, and other emblems, from his shoulders, his form
costume of a silken vest
No
of the world.
it
A
was
disclosed, attired in the
wide-skirted coat, fringed with lace,
— he was altogether an elegant and finished upon the shoulders of the Grand Master —
and cambric
gentleman.
"Place
man
slave, crouching
ruffles
under fear of his master's lash, could have obeyed for he inserted Gilbert's
more readily than the deposed Grand Master, arms
in the flowing sleeves,
and fastened the garment over
his
broad chest,
without a word. Gilbert stood arrayed in the robes of the
C, his
rigid features
seen
—through the
veil
Grand Master of
— with
the B.
H. A.
a half-distinctness, that
made them look more unnatural and death-like. The late Grand Master, with the moisture starting from
only
every line of his face agitated by
mands of the Invisible. " To-morrow morning ton.
You
fear,
a ship sails from the City,
will take passage
his forehead,
awaited in sullen silence the com-
on board of
that ship,
on a voyage to Can" he drew
and
—
— PAUL ARDENHEIM
152
monkish gown
a letter from his
You
paper.
now
can
— " obey the orders contained — " looking toward the form of in
this
Brethren
retire.
Dorfner and his companion
OR,
;
—"
I
The deposed Grand Master
man
leave this
your charge."
to
turned, without a word, and disappeared
in the shadows.
Once more the Invisible was alone with Gilbert Morgan. "Cast your eye into the Hall of the Grand Lodge," said
the cowled
— " What do
you see and hear?" This command seems like an idle mockery
Figure
For thick walls and
to us.
from the Hall
which Yet the answer of Gilbert, conveyed guage of an educated man, was plain and to the point
dreary passages separate
Lodge "
cell
this
in
are assembled.
The
burning
lights are
fast
toward
The
their sockets.
the
Brothers look
toward the door, and murmur the name of the Grand Master. await his coming with feverish suspense.
exclaims
[
we
Shall
the presence of the
"
— well "
It is
fools of the
Stay
!
A
Grand
in the lan-
Brother
They
rises,
and
not close this session of the .Grand Lodge, without
Grand Master V "
and a smile
world would
stole over the face of the
call this
Magic,
or,
Invisible—"
perchance, doubt that
it
The ever
So, three hundred years, or scarce three hundred years ago,
occurred.
it
was Sorcery on the part of Galileo to say that the earth moved round the That Sorcery is now become Science. And ere an hundred years, sun. this Magic, which enables me to substitute my will for the will of this rude man, in a word, to fill his brain with my soul, will be no longer the wisdom of the devil, but the system of an acknowledged Science. So
—
goes the world
!"
was almost demoniac
It
in
its
scorn
—the cold smile which
agitated the
face of the Invisible.
"
You
will
words
to the Hall of the Grand Lodge," he said, upon the face of the Hunter, " and speak the your heart."
go without delay
fixing his dazzling eyes that I will utter to
Attired in the robes of his office, dazzling from head to foot in the
paraphernalia of the Order, Gilbert turned away, and, with measured steps, departed into the
his footsteps
The
shadows.
had ceased
Invisible laid his white
upon the
table, as
"They
are
all
Ere
a
moment was
hand upon the heavy volume which rested
he pushed the cowl back from here
gone, the echo of
to disturb the silence.
—"
his forehead.
he muttered, as he unclosed the volume
— "a
brave and bloody band, whose deeds extend over the history of two cen-
Some
turies.
children
nage
—
—
this
died in their peaceful beds, encircled by weeping grand-
others on the bloody deck,
rude fellow on Tyburn
amid the smoke and flame of carand his comrade at the yard-arm
tree,
of one of his Majesty's ships-of-war. signature
of Sir
Henry Morgan
—
Here
I find
here, the clerkly
traced the crooked
hand of the bold
—
"
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. Captain Kidd
—and
next comes
153
mark of Blackbeard— a roughly
the
A
sketched dagger, beside a skull and cross-bones.
bloody and ferocious
"
band
Turning over the broad pages, the Invisible continued— The time will come when their deeds will appear but as the
"
Then
fables of tradition.
the link
which bound
heroes in one great organization, will be lost
booter
— as
—
falsehoods.
'
Survive'
—
unknown
the light reveals the face of this
wet with womanish
bright eyes,
" Survive
have loved evil
to,
—
to
turies ago
It is
!
day
know
you
we may even
To
a sentiment that
words
you, never is
call
Chief of the Republic'
until the
4
embodied
The
Survive
'
Invisible started from the chair,
For the
cell.
in that
time
first
it is
— Survive '
Republic'
is
'
is
cen-
own
Yes,
!'
our Brother, the
crushed beneath the
There are a great many
!'
and paced along the
floor of the
whose
evident to us that his pale face,
gled hair waves from Beneath the cowl,
you
at the same time, be conscious you by name, never, never feel
not hatred and loathing.
—and word —
see
turned
whom you knew
our Lord the King' are displaced by
'
is
descendants of your
iron wheels of Despotism and Superstition. things
live until all that
while every good impulse
to live
your path, and,
in
we may
behold the large
tears.
children, nay, the
see their
to
that they can never for
—
I
personage, who, seated
walk around among the tombs of those
—
children, rise every
until the
yes,
;
indeed a horrible word.
grave-yard dust
is
And
brazen
at their
alone in his oaken chair, thus mutters absently to himself, the pale features quiver in every line
the free-
word—"
a fearful
it is
—
and murder.
and smile
I
Grave men
the pirate
isolated facts in the red history of piracy
— — may survive to read their grave volumes, As
— forgotten.
and speak of the buccanier
will write histories,
idle
these cut-throats and
all
tan-
supported by a strangely distorted
the disguise of the gown, we may discover the outhump, rising at the back of his neck, and his face seems be supported by a neck, as to rest upon the surface of his
Even through
form.
lines of a shapeless
not so
much
to
broad chest.
"Always condemned a
doom
raft,
to feel the
to the
like this
?
beauty of the Good, and
Even now
without rudder, oar, or
shines from the dark shore. his
arms as
if to
grasp
and surely away night.
The
it,
fate of the
sail,
his
but every
js
light is
gaze upon the
moment the
and farther
and yet
for ever
can
tide is bearing
raft is
which
light
him
beneath
—but every moment
silently
and the
my
feet,
the dark
farther into the blackness of hopeless night.
growing dim and
rival
light, stretch forth
into the blackness
The
mine.
the light shines faintly from the shore
me
it,
eye turned toward the
He may
mariner
to love
hell of priestcraft
behold a mariner, fixed upon a shapeless
I
— away, deeper
of Necessity bears
What
Necessity of Evil.
dimmer— soon
it
will go out in blackness
wave
The
—yet
—— PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
154
still the wave will bear me on, on, into that Sea of hopeless Evil which yawns beyond me !" The cowl was thrown aside, and with the cowl, the monkish gown. Beneath the light stood a deformed hunchback, whose long face, framed
in raven black hair, revealed, in every quivering lineament, a despair too
deep
for utterance, too hopeless for tears.
known
In the personage
the miserable maniac,
by
the
as the Invisible,
whom we
we beheld none
other than
have beheld before, and heard addressed
name of Black David.
Clasping his white hands, as that unutterable despair stamps his
face,
he glares upon the darkness with fixed eyeballs, muttering again, and yet again, the
word which has roused him
into this preternatural anguish
"'Survive.'" In the very midst of this inexplicable despair, his eyes wandered to the floor
—
a
bright object
glimmered
there, near
his
Without
feet.
down and grasped
appearing conscious of the action, he bent
it,
and the
which a faded ribbon was
light disclosed a small golden coin or medal, to
attached.
No
sooner did the hunchback behold
it,
and
at a
glance read the words,
and mark the characters which were inscribed upon
this
medal, then he
sank on his knees, uttering a cry of joy, which pealed upon the of the
cell.
turned
first
With one
the gestures of a
side,
then the other,
madman, he clutched to the light,
stillness
the medal
and examined
it
with an
intense scrutiny, that forced his eyeballs from their sockets.
" Here, where the hunter stood, once, and force
him
started to his feet,
back again. "
It is
upon
the
same
to reveal to
made one
I
found
me how
it
—the same — " and
wound — upon
He examined
Ah— I
will seek
him
into his possession."
step from the table, but as suddenly
at
He
came
#
lifting
the medal, he revealed the livid cross,
scar of a
it.
came
the tangled locks, as he gazed
which was stamped
—
like the
the fair skin of his forehead.
the bright side of the
Medal— it
bore the figure of a Cross,
—
!
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. with certain numerals inscribed
on the opposite
the medal, he beheld,
characters: " Eola
may
It
beneath — "
— November
12.
Then, turning
an inscription in old English
— Lyndulfe."
illegible.
6,
on the
first
side
seemed, as the light shone
It
represent either the figure 3 or 8, and thus the inscription either
to
it,
—9."
15
a. d.
be observed that the figure between the 5 and
of the medal, was dim and almost over
side,
155
designated the year 1539 or 1589.
The hunchback
was
held the faded ribbon, which
ture near the rim of the medal,
inserted in an aper-
and gazed upon the inscription which
it
bore on either side, with a delight that might have well been termed
madness. "
I
him
will to
— he
shall tell
me
With
!"
these incoherent words, he
turned from the table once again, and disappeared in the shadows of the
only
cell,
to
reappear after the lapse of a moment.
the' light, his
face
was flushed with rapture,
but,
upon every
beside the table, a ghastly paleness had fallen livid cross
on
—the hunter has torn — " he uttered the words with
ror,
mingled with anguish.
" Madeline
" 0, curses, eternal curses lies
mangled upon the
hunter's blow
— the his
my iron
floor of her
its
from her breast as a
Then came
difficulty.
fate
Behme
Madeline
!
chamber, or
scalpel of Isaac
the living heart from
As though
upon
it
—
Day
is
;
—she
of his
a groan of hor-
at this
moment
pierces her bosom, and tears
it is
too late ;
!
saved
This
girl
breast.
might have saved me,
me from the unseen hand which me the word which will
might have spoken unto
bring near the hour of
dered her
memory
blood was chilled, his limbs paralyzed, the deformed
breaking, and
me
The
shrine !"
not from Death, but from Life
crushes
again stood
feature.
in case she survived the
maniac stood motionless, with his hands folded over his "
he turned from
on the colorless skin.
his forehead stood out distinctly
love
When
when he
my
Death
—and — I,
fool,
dotard
!
have mur-
I
!"
Once more his gaze was rivetted to the medal " Many, many years centuries of torture since first it passed from my hand ah It is in vain I cannot pray. To whom shall I address a Prayer ? At this hour I would barter the gold of a world I would
—
exchange only
to
—
—
!
intellect
;
—
and destiny with the
have the power
to
vilest serf,
only to-be able
to believe,
"
frame one word of prayer
Strange and incomprehensible words from the lips of the Deformed
Maniac
—
He was on his knees, his hands crossed, his head bowed his lips moved slowly, but no sound was heard. The light, streaming above him, glowed upon the flakes of his matted hair.
His face was
lost in
shadow, but the heavings of his broad chest
betrayed the emotion that thrilled every avenue of his
life.
— —
—
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
156
—
To whom shall I pray?" he muttered, after a pause "To God? To saints or angels ?" his voice was marked by a horrible sincerity as he continued "There is no God to me. No Christ, nor "
To
Christ?
—
—
There
Saint nor Angel.
no other world.
is
the grave but vacancy and slumber.
here upon the earth, doomed gling in
my heart,
—
is
nothing beyond is,
to blight virtue
to
— —
do Evil
and beauty
to
crush pure hearts
to taint children
the leprosy of sin, and wither gray-haired age into a polluted grave. is
my doom — what
hath prayer to do with
Let us suppose
for a
truth.
That he has
Good always
of
crime
me
?"
that the reveries of this
some hundreds
for
with
This
man
are sober
of years, with the impulse
fresh within his heart, and yet the Necessity to do Evil
him
for ever hurling
moment
lived
am
that I
with impulses of good always strug-
to live
and yet always forced
misery
into hopeless
There
All that I can believe,
into the vortex of crime.
—say, the most
fearful
crime that
Man
That
for
some
can commit
incredible
— he has
been
doomed to live, and live beyond the circle of Almighty compassion. That the death which he seeks as an unutterable boon is denied. him that the Judgment pronounced by Eternal Power upon his head is comprised in this stern decree
There
"Live!
Good
is
all
around you, but you must blight
into
it
Live!"
Evil.
Can any thing be more horrible than this ? Once more, let us take it for granted that this deformed hunchback is a Madman. That it is only a fancy a mere dream of frenzy that he has lived for centuries, and is doomed to live until unborn ages are past. That it is only a vagary of his distorted reason, which induces him to believe that for him there is no God, no Christ, no Saint nor Angel. Can any thing in the Universe be more appalling than this?
—
—
To
both questions, your
first
answer, urged from your heart, by feeling
as natural as our love for a Mother,
is,
simply but earnestly
—
"
No
!"
Think again. Pause for a moment. What does the Creed of a Church, the dogma of a sect hold forth ? That the Almighty Father will inflict upon countless millions of his creatures, the* irrevocable Judgment of an Eternity of Existence, and an Eternity of Crime.
Which this
is
the
most
repulsive,
my
friend
?
The
tradition
crude history, or the Belief solemnly taught in the
Church? "Behold
—"
said-
embodied
dogma
a Reverend man, one Sabbath-day, as he surveyed
the thousand faces, mellowed
by
the mild
beams of an afternoon sun
" Behold the sands that stretch beside the waves of the Ocean.
number those sands the shore, and bears
the years
which
in
of a
?
Once every thousand years,
away
in
its
a
little
bird
beak a single grain of sand.
will be passed ere the bird has borne
away
Can you comes to Compute
the sands
on
THUj
shore— one grain
the
MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON.
in a
thousand years— and you will have some idea
woe which awaits somewhat fearful
of the duration of that Eternity of
This,
will be admitted, is a
it
kind of Religion.
fearful
157
While
the
the
Damned." a somewhat
figure
—
bird bears the sands from the
little
—
one grain, only one, in a thousand years— countless millions of God's creatures are growing older in deathless torture, older in infernal Can you imagine the depravity knowledge, in blasphemous Crime. of a Soul that has existed for only a thousand years in Misery and shore,
Crime
?
not too hastily deride this Legend of olden tradition, which
Then do
Man, created by the allwas condemned to live for ever on this earth to live at and, feeling all the least while Three Centuries went down to Night was impelled by an involunwhile the beauty of the Good and the Pure, asserts, that once, in the history of the world, a
paternal God,
;
;
tary Necessity to the Evil and Corrupt.
To
our Legend once more.
The
Invisible, kneeling
on the
wrecked mind, were raised
light of a
were clasped to
and
his pale hands,
Never
fro.
for
darkened by
floor, raised his forehead,
His eyes, dazzling
the livid cross, to the light.
dusky
to the
and a slight
at all times, as
with the
Over
his chest
ceiling.
locks gently
air tossed his flaky
an instant did he suffer the medal
to
escape from
his grasp.
He was lines, his
whose deformity was as marked with ineffaceable broad forehead, marked by
but a miserable wretch, with a body
grotesque as
it
was hideous, and yet
eyes shining with intense
his face,
light, his
the livid Cross, indicate an intellect of remarkable power.
Around him brooded the shadows and deep within the
hill-side
the silence of the cell, sunken
He was
of Wissahikon.
world, alone with the incredible reality of his " Could
I
but believe—" that voice, whose musical accents so singu-
form
larly contrasted with the hideousness of his in a
Father
tears
For when he
A
—" Could
I
but believe
!"
There were chaos.
shut out from the
fate.
upon
his cheeks.
tried to raise
his^houghts
leaden sky seemed
to
stretch
God,
to
all
was darkness and
hopeless wall between him
its
and the Great Father of mankind.
With
a curse, he started to his
feet,
and, wrapping the mantle
him, prepared to hasten from the place. " To-night has been to me by no means an idle minutes.
Much work
— much Evil
!
Had
bore this,— " the medal glittered before his all
would have been well.
A
I
but
flight
known
of hours and
that
eye— "This upon
quiet grave
—a
about
Madeline
her bosom,
pleasant repose
— peace,
peace, after the long night, the ceaseless storm of three centuries.
But
it
"
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
158
may
not be too late, even
Behme
cell of Isaac
—
now
—
first to
the farm-house, and then to the
The yearning desire that was written upon the face of the Deformed, no pencil nor pen can depict it was as though a preternatural Soul had suddenly filled his distorted frame, and lighted his eyes with the fire of
—
an immortal existence. "
The crime which
three centures has not effaced,
may
be blotted out,
before the rising of the sun !"
CHAPTER FIFTEENTH. THE COMING OF THE DELIVERER.
"He hour
will
The
come/" muttered
midnight
after
old
man
the Priest of
the Deliverer will
sat in the
oaken
Wissahikon— "At
the third
come /"
chair, his
hands laid on his knees, as he
swayed to and fro with a restless motion. It was in the circular chamber, panelled with oaken wainscot, and rendered almost cheerful by the wood-fire which blazed upon the hearth. In the centre stands the white altar, on which the candles are placed, their light, struggling through the gloom, shining upon the high forehead of the solitary watcher, as, with his hands laid on his knees, he sways slowly
to
and
fro, the silver
Thus, alone,
for
cross on his heart, glittering like a star.
hours he has watched, his eyes of an azure so deep
and serene, fixed upon the cross of Iron which the altar.
And
all
the while, as
the old
rises in the
man
gloom beyond
kept his watch, the
fire
crackled merrily upon the hearth, and the same light which revealed his pale enthusiastic face, also shone laurel, the Bible
upon
the flagon of silver, the wreath of
with antique clasps, resting between the candles, on the
f
surface of the altar.
The Block-house rises darkly amid moonbeam? shining over the frozen snow. Its gates are flung wide open the old man awaits his long-expected guest. " He will come ; at the third Jwur after midnight, the Deliverer will Without,
all
drear and cold.
is
the pines, with the
—
come /"
These words acquire a singular interest from the tone and look which accompany their utterance. Hark the door opens the young man with the bronzed face and deep
—
dark eyes appears
— —advances
to his father's side.
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON.
159
It is Paul, with the kiss of the Wizard's child yet warm upon his lip, her words of delirious passion yet echoing in his ears. Scarce an hour has passed since he left his Father's side— a momentous
hour
him— an
to
memories,
to the
hour that in future years shall come, clad
in impressive
Dreamer's soul.
As Paul beheld the pale face of his father, with the high forehead and dreamy eyes, all memory of the Wizard's daughter rushed suddenly from him. Shall that enticing
after
the
You can
see the old
by
grasps his son
the
man
Deliverer will
turn suddenly
my
I left
Seventeen years ago,
an outcast.
now darken
— " May
?
not be a vain fancy,
it
come
ere
the rising of
round— his eye
blazes as he
the wrist.
" Seventeen years ago,
even
young man the
that
this
all
ever return to him again
memory
—" whispers — Hope sun V
" Father
became an
father-land, and
forsook the towers of
I
over the bosom of the Rhine.
my
whose name was en-
I,
my
nobled by the ancestral glories of thirteen centuries, turned
once on pomp, power, In
my
castle,
native land, the broad
now own
—
all that
that,
—and
temple of the Wissahikon.
why
me dead
for
many
years
by the world's law, are yours,
we
here
Why
back
at
worshipped by the herd of mankind.
they have believed
domains
another's rule
answer me,
is
and
exile
race, that
this,
is
by
are, side
my
son
?
side, in
— the
my
this
son,
rude
— Speak, Paul,
do we dwell together, the father and his children,
and
in this
wild forest of a strange land ?"
The son
veiled his eyes with his clasped hands
father's look thrilled
"I of
will
my
tell
you why!
Seventeen years ago,. as
my
to
soul
— bade
me
there
bent over the body
I
castle,
resign
— bade me take my children, and go forth
"And
the emotion of his
:
to the soul.
dead wife, even in the death-vault of our
Voice of God spake toys
him
to a
all
on the Rhine, the the world and
its
strange land !"
await the Fulfilment of Prophecy!" whispered Paul,
raising his head from his clasped hands.
" For seventeen years
I
have buried
my
soul
in the pages
of that
book-" " I have shared your studies, father
vanity of worldly
life, I
have made
Together we have wept
!
Reared
my home
—prayed— watched
afar
from the
toil
and the
with you in this hermitage.
over the pages of Revela-
tion !"
"You
have become part of
my
soul," said the Priest of Wissahikon,
hand upon the white forehead you might have been noble in your native land yes, your sword might have carved for you a gory renown from the corses of dead men, butchered in battle or the triumphs of poetry and art might have
in a softened voice, as he laid his withered
of his son
:
"
;
:
— —
!
!
PAUL ARDENHEIM
160 clothed your
brow
with me, devoted
The dark eye
in laurel,
life
OR,
;
and yet you have chosen your
and soul
to the
lot
with
me
;
perusal of God's solemn book !"
of the son began to burn with the same wild light that
blazed over his father's face.
And our
"
which
Ante-Diluvian World even as the
to
knowledge of these
in a
manner
all
is
given
was
of crime, as
man
to
the
as a refuge,
his children.
altar of human freedom
has spoken, and
so
it is
left
on
the surface It is the
its soil.
— Amen
!"
old man's voice rung, in deep, solemn tones, through the lonely
The
God
voice of
dreams by night
who
Noah and
is the last
room, while his eye seemed "
sunk in
—the New World
God
hope of man.
The
is
Never shall the footsteps of Kings pollute
of the Globe. last
;
Ark was given
New World
" The
our view, has ended
The Old World
great truths
and painful search into the awful world,
studies, our long
the Bible opens to
the
burn as with the
Iicill send
to
me,
fire
my
in
a Deliverer to
my people from
shall save
them from
to
has spoken
of Prophecy.
thoughts by day, in
this
physical bondage, even as
bondage of spiritual death
my
land of the Nciv World,
my
Son saved
!
"And to-night he will come at the third hour after midnight, he will come through yonder door, and take upon himself his great Mission, to free the New World from the yoke of the Tyrant " Yes, my son, six months ago, on that calm summer evening, as, with ;
Catherine leaning on one arm, you on the other,
woods, that voice whispered a message "All
ready
is
I
strolled forth along the
my
soul
!
To-night the
!"
come
Deliverer will
to
foi his
coming!" exclaimed Paul, advancing
to the altar.
" Behold the Crown, the Flagon of Anointing Oil, the Bible, and the
Cross!"
The
old
man
arose, lifting his withered hands above his head, while
the light streamed over his silver hairs.
"
Even
as the Prophets of old anointed the
brows of men, chosen by
and — purified by the prayer, and self-denial of seventeen long years, — anoint the forehead of the
God
to
do great deeds
in
His name, so
will
I,
toil,
Deliverer
Hark!
As
the voice of the aged enthusiast, tremulous with emotion, the clock in the hall without, tolls the hour of One..
quivers on the
air,
An hour
New
of the
Only an hour
nity.
Year has been gathered
to
Block-House, like a voice from the other world
— the last minute As and
the great ocean of Eter
ago, as the tones of that bell rung through the lonely
—deep,
sad,
and echoing
of 1774 sank in the glass of Time, and 1775
was born.
the echo died away, they knelt silently beside the altar, the old
his son.
of Paul
opened
;
The white
their hands, clasped together, rested
at the
Book
of Revelations
upon
the
man
brown locks Bible, which was
hairs of the Priest mingled with the
"
THE MONK
OF.
THE WISSAHIKON.
Their separate prayers, breathing
went up
gled together, and
An hour
Hark
passed.
One
those sullen sounds,
hear the old clock again
—Two—swell through
they kneel together there
Still
—
min-
lip,
one.
in
Do you
!
low whispers from each
in
Heaven
to
1G1
How
?
the silent halls.
the voice of the prayer quivers
still
from each tongue. After a pause of silent prayer, the old
my
"Place your hand upon bings
Upon my brow
?
—ah
heart,
rises
son
and paces the
Can* you
!
burns like living
it
!
man
my
fire
— he comes Yes, my heart throbs, my brain firm — the Deliverer will come God
nigh
!
The hour draws
!
but
fires,
my
faith in
!"
is
Vain were the attempt Call
floor.
feel its throb-
him dreamer
that a great soul
—
call
to picture the silent
him
fanatic
agony of
—what you —
throbbed within his brain
will,
still
that old
man's face!
you must
admit
still
you must reverence
the
strong heart which beats within his shrunken chest.
must you remember that this old man was once a renowned lord all that the world holds dear, buried himself for seventeen
Still
that
;
he forsook
years in the wilds of this forest, his days and nights spent amid the dark
pages of the Revelations of Saint John.
Up
and down the oaken
now
over his brow,
nance were
lost in
with a wilder
—
the
was seen
floor,
now by
the altar, where the where the writhings of
the darkness,
man
shadows, the old his withered
light,
Meanwhile dimly
in
hurried along, his eye blazing
The
the son remained kneeling in prayer. a twilight gloom.
Still
lights
burned
the Iron Cross
broke through the darkness, with
altar still
shone
cheek with a warmer glow.
room was covered with
— the white
light
his counte-
its
silver
Flagon and Laurel Crown.
Hark
That sound
!
starts, quivers, listens
One
—
the clock
is
on the hour of three
!
The
old
man
!
rings through the desolate mansion.
!
"I hear no sound!" mutters passed on his
lips,
"He comes
when Two
not!" cries Paul, darting
They
with suspense.
But the words had not
the enthusiast.
— swells on
the air.
to his
feet, his
features quivering
clasp their hands together— they listen with fren-
zied intensity. "Still
Not a sound!" gasped Paul. come!" and the old man, sublime in
no footstep
"But he
will
!
cism, towered erect, one the
hand
to
his heart,
the energy of fanati-
while the other quivered in
air.
Three!
Trfe
away.
"He comes
last
of
the
It is
bell
swelled
— echoed— and
died
—"But yes! there not frozen snow Hark! Father, — do you hear on threshold now — advances
not!" gasped the son,
a footstep on the
footstep?
stroke
in
agony
Is
father!
?
the
it
11
that
"
PAUL ARDENHEIM;
162
"He
comes!" whispered
OR,
man, while the sweat stood out
the old
in
beads from his withered brow.
— "It advances, on the door — hah! come "At as
it
he
last
All
is
It is
—hark!
There
but a delusion
is
hand
a
—no!
He
is
is
come!" gasped the old man, and with one impulse they Hark! You hear the old door creak on its hinges,
their knees.
—a
swings slowly open
"Friends,
I
have
manly
in a calm,
The
silent again?
!"
at last
sank on
Yes, along the hall
father!
for the son,
he gazed
me
direct
to the right
way?" his lips.
As
his features
were
wonder trembled from
a cry of
in silence
the voice, speaking
in the forest," said
"Can you
tone.
man looked up;
old
strange voice breaks the silence.
my way
lost
on the Stranger, while
stamped with inexpressible surprise.
The
Stranger stood on the threshold, his face to the light, his form
thrown boldly forward, by the darkness
He of
at his back.
stood there, not as a Conqueror on the battle
many
field,
with the spoils
nations trampled under his feet.
Towering above
the stature of
common men,
his
form was clad
in the
dress of a plain gentleman of that time, fashioned of black velvet, with
on the bosom and around the
ruffles
wrist,
diamond buckles gleaming
from his shoes.
Broad
in the shoulders, beautiful in the
limb, he stood there, extending
sinewy proportions of each
hat in one hand, while the other
his
gathered his heavy cloak around the arm.
His white forehead overarched large eyes, which gleamed even through the darkness of the
room with
chin round and
;
tled
full
a calm, clear light
;
his lips
the general contour of his face
beauty of mature manhood, mingled with the
In one word, he was a
man whom you would
were firm
;
stamped with the
fire
his set-
of chivalry.
single out
among
a
crowd
of ten thousand, for his grandeur of bearing, his calm, collected dignity of expression and manner.
"Friends," he again began, as he started back, surprised of the kneeling enthusiasts, "I have lost
"Thou
my way —
at the
sight
hast not lost thy way," spoke the voice of the old man, as he
arose and confronted the stranger
;
" thou hast found thy
way
to useful-
ness and immortal renown!"
The
Stranger advanced a footstep, while a
commanding clear,
face.
Paul stood as
if
warm glow
overspread his
spell-bound by the calm gaze of his
deep eyes.
"Nay — do
not
start,
voice that speaks from to a great
Nearer
"This
nor gaze upon
my lips,
is
work; kneel before the to the altar is
but folly
drew
—you
me
in
such
wond*!
the voice of Revelation. altar
I tell
Thou
thee the
art called
and receive thy mission!"
the Stranger.
mean
to
mock me!" he began;
but the wild
.
"
""
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. man
gaze of the old
and stood
"Nay, doubt me
yonder
Habitation in
you
restlessness drove
"This
is
laid
with strange thoughts in regard
filled
down
yourself
But sleep
city.
paused,
.
To-night,
not!
He
fire.
1
your country's Future, you
to
with magnetic
thrilled his heart, as
and wondering
silent
163
sleep within your
to
from your eyes
fled
—
forth into the cold air of night
true J." muttered the Stranger in a
musing
— a feeling of
tone, while his face
expressed surprise.
"As you dashed your form
along,
mounted on
ranks of
in the
battle, the
which soon
the steed
will bear
cold air of night fanned your hot
brow, but could not drive from your soul the Thought of your Country!"
"How know old
you this?" and the Stranger
man suddenly by
Deeper and bolder
"The
rein
Still
your country.
— floating
Even
great hopes
battle
calm tones, the way through the
rose to your lips
"I confess
——
it!"
my
"Is
it
was
lips
"As
—
You
your soul was the
visions of ivhat
is to
come
— darted one by one over
the threshold of
yonder door, asking,
another and a deeper question
forest,
stood upon the threshold, the question that
I
lawful for a subject
"Man!
him wander, you
let
said the Stranger, his tone catching the deep emotion
of the old man's voice. rose to
— dim
and armed legions
you stood on
as
— you
the thought that oppressed
Still
panoramas of
your soul. in
thrilled the tones of the old Enthusiast.
loosely on your horse's neck
fell
.cared not whither! future of
started forward, grasping the
the wrist.
to
draw
King?"
sivord against his
read the heart!" and
this strange
form and thoughtful brow, gazed fixedly
in the
man, of commanding
eyes of the Enthusiast,
while his face expressed every conflicting emotion of doubt, suspicion, surprise,
and awe.
"Nay, do not gaze upon me
in
such wonder?
has been allotted unto thee, by the altar
— and
woods
Father
here, in the silence of night,
— will I
It
thee a great
1 tell
all
souls
!
work
Kneel by
anoint thee Deliverer of this great land, even as the
may have been
a
sudden impulse,
flashed over
the
this
amid the depths of these wild
of Judah, in the far-gone time, anointed the
the future
of
or,
men
brows of the chosen David!"
perchance,
Stranger's soul, but, as
some the
conviction of
gloom of
that
chamber gathered round him, as the voice of the old man thrilled in his ear, he felt those knees, which never yielded to man, sink .beneath him; he bowed before the
Book
altar, his
brow bared, and
his
hands laid upon the
of God.
The
light flashed
manhood
in its
over his bold features, glowing with the beauty of
prime, over his proud form, dilating with a feeling of in-
expressible agitation.
On
one side of the
altar
stood the old
man— the
Priest of the Wissa-
— PAUL ARDENHEIM
164
hikon
—
full
waving aside from
his silver hair
bronzed
his son,
!
OR,
;
brow
his flushed
in face, but thoughtful in
—on
the other,
steady gaze of his large
the
eyes.
Around
group
this strange
all
was gloom:
through the open door, but they heeded "
—
!
Thou
called
art
Soon thou people on
freedom
— soon
a
%
Champion and Deliverer
head of legions
wilt ride to battle at the to
the cold wintry air poured
not.
work of
the great
to
it
—soon thou
wilt lead a
thy sword will gleam like a meteor over the
ranks of war!"
As
the voice of the old
ing on his heart,
head, as
if in
thrills
man
in the
dark robe, with the silver cross
through the chamber
—
flash-
bows
as the Stranger
his
reverence, while the dark-browed son looks silently on
look yonder, in the dark shadows of the doorway
A young
form, with a dark mantle floating round her white robes, stands
As you
trembling there.
look, her blue eye dilates with fear, her hair
streams in a golden shower, is
pressed against her
lip
down
uncovered shoulders.
to the
Her
finger
she stands doubting, fearing, trembling on the
;
threshold.
Unseen by
all,
she fears that her father
What knows
Stranger.
may work harm
picture
which she beholds
lighted
by the white candles
— her
flushed forehead.
white
with
picture
The
?
— the altar rising in the gloom — the Iron
father,
The
kneeling
This small and gloomy chamber,
terrifies her.
confronting the kneeling man, like a thing of evil
and wondering
to the
she of his wild dreams of enthusiasm
hairs
omen
Cross
—her brother, mute
floating
aside
was singular and impressive
from his the winter
:
wind, moaning sullenly without, imparted a sad and organ-like music
to
the scene.
"Dost thou promise,
that
found ready, sword in hand, It
was
in tones
when
the appointed time arrives, thou wilt be
to fight for
thy country and thy
God ?"
broken by emotion, that the Stranger simply answered—
"I do!"
"Dost thou promise,
bow
before thee
— as in
in
the hour of thy glory
the fierce
moment
oehold thy soldiers starving for want of bread truth, written in these
words
1
1 am
— when a nation
shall
of adversity,— when thou shalt
— to
remember
but the Minister of
God
the great
in the great
"
work of a nation? s freedom V " Then, in His name, who gave
human
the
New World
to
the millions of the
race, as the last altar of their rights, I do consecrate
thee
its
Deliverer!"
With
the finger of his extended hand, touched with the anointing
oil,
he described the figure of a Cross on the white forehead of the Stranger,
who
—
raised his eyes, while his lips
murmured
as if in prayer.
Never was nobler King anointed beneath the shadow of Cathedral arch never did holier Priest administer the solemn vow A poor Cathedral, !
—
;
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. rude Block-house of the Wissahikon
this
kneeling Stranger
—
—
165
a plainly clad gentleman, this
man
a wild Enthusiast, the old
I
!
grant
in
reflected the con-
;
between the shrunken form of the
trast
the Anointed,
— both
with me, that
fess
Heaven, as that of
And
quivering with the
same
Consecration was
this 44
Priest," and the proud figure of agitation,
—you
Good King George." young man stood gazing on
warm glow
up the
lightens
would con-
as holy, in the sight of
full
the while that
all
awe, while a
silent
44
And
it all.
had you seen the Enthusiasm of the white-haired Minister, had you marked the Stranger's brow, and cheek, and eyes
yet,
the stranger in
face of the girl trembling
on the threshold, as she beholds the scene.
When
44
the time comes, go forth to victory
queror's blood-red wreath, but this
He
extends his hand, as
—
if to
crown of
On
!
He
!"
wreathe the Stranger's brow with the
crown yet look A young form steals up to crown from his hand, and, ere you can look again, it brow of the kneeling man. leafy
thy brow, no con-
fadeless laurel
!
looks up and beholds that young
girl,
his side, seizes the falls
upon
the bared
with the dark mantle gathered
over her white robes, stand blushing and trembling before the
though frightened 44
well !" said the aged man, regarding his daughter with a kindly
It is
smile.
From whom should
44
the Deliverer of a Nation receive his
of laurel, but from the hands of a stainless 44
altar, as
boldness of the deed.
at the
Rise
The Champion and Leader
!
woman
crown
!"
of a People !" spoke the deep
voice of the son, as he stood before the altar, surveying, with one glance,
and the bowed
the face of his father, the countenance of the blushing girl,
head of the Stranger.
44
Rise,
sir,
and take
this
hand, which was never
man! I know not thy name, yet, on this Book, I swear to be faithful to thee, even to the death !"
yet given to
The of his
Stranger rose
;
proudly he stood there, as with the consciousness
commanding look and form.
forehead
the cross,
;
formed by
Paul, the son, buckled a
hands as
if in
They
all
The
laurel-wreath encircled his white
the anointing oil, glistened in the light.
sword to his side the old man extended his young girl looked up silently into his face. ;
blessing, while the
beheld the form of this strange
won
while that face, whose calm beauty had in
every
From you, old man, From you, brave friend, all
And upon
sadly over
distinctly
now
emotion quivered
by
snow, yet these words, all
vow From you, fair girl, the sword On this Book I swear to be
I take the
the
frozen
the
by the stranger, were heard
44
unto
with
their hearts,
fibre.
The wind moaned uttered
man shake
!
!
laurel
!
faithful
!"
as the light flashed over his quivering features,
the
Book and kissed
the hilt of the sword.
he
laid his
hand
—
PAUL ARDENHEIM;
166
OR,
CHAPTER SIXTEENTH. THE OLD LONDON COFFEE HOUSE. "
Solemnly, gentlemen, and
truly, I must.
There's daybreak in the
chinks of the door, and you can hear the kuckerekoos I
over the town.
all
must indeed—"
The
man smoothed
little
narrow forehead, and arranged about his knees.
hands arranged
his white apron, with his big
much
his wig, which, sooth to say, inclined too
hose,
his
to
the left side
of his
which hung somewhat loosely
In one' hand he held a burnished candlestick, containing
the last remains of a flickering light, and as he spoke, in tones at once
bland and deprecating, he accompanied every other word with
a gro-
tesque genuflection, intended for a bow.
Around
the
table
which stood near the broad
fire-place
—a
circular
strewn with pewter mugs, long-necked bottles and broken pipes
table,
three persons
bloomed with
were
leadened with
rectly,
grasped a
seated
capacious
in
oaken
the freshness of Madeira, or, to
mug
chairs.
For every hand
stupor of malt and tobacco.
t$ie
Their faces
speak perchance more cor-
of shining pewter, and a pipe of plain clay was inserted in
every mouth.
was
It
some
a large room, with
white-washed walls and a neatly sanded
In one corner, certain vessels glittering on a range of shelves, gave
floor.
The
indications of the character of the place.
were carefully
closed, as
if to
of daybreak, and the remains of a glorious wood-fire
dered
among
smoked and smoul-
the ashes of the hearth.
In a word, this room, into which
was nothing
doors and windows
seclude the belated revellers from the light
we have
famed public
less than the
so unceremoniously entered,
hall or
bar-room of the " London
Coffee House," a quaint fabric, with deep gabled roof, which stood at the corner of Market and Front streets, to the great delight of the town-gossips
and coffee-drinkers of old Philadelphia.
Here
the
good people thronged
rum, discuss the
to sip
politics of the day,
their coffee, tipple their
Jamaica
and decide upon the merits of King
George, and the Continental Congress.
The persons who occupied
the
oak chairs
may
attract
our attention, as
appropriate types of certain classes of society in the year 1774.
One was
a burly fellow,
a lively image of the
full
whose round cheeks vividly brought to mind a Dutch clock, while his scarlet uni-
moon on
form might have scared whole legions of male turkeys, and frightened a herd of bulls into hysterics.
With one
leg
—encased
in a
huge boot of
—
—
—
"
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. black leather, Dplished to a charm
—
laid
Near him, with
a very long nose,
pings, gave evidence of
whose
pipe and draughts of beer.
of no character at all, was a by tobacco ashes and beer drip-
lips
attire, soiled
And
the night-long revel.
and
steel buttons
and
the table, this gentleman
upon
regaled himself with alternate whiffs of his
goodly citizen, whose dark
habits of a careful son of traffic,
beside the citizen,
spoke of the
economical
was a slender youth, dressed
daintily in a
knee-buckles
steel
167
wide-skirted coat of brownish velvet, with a buff waistcoat and
His
breeches.
large blue eyes lain pitcher
face, rather insipid
— looking
— were
in
character,
its
like the eyes of a
As he smoked away, sucking
altogether leaden.
and started
into caverns, fro in the
his leaden eyes
Must
you
The
"
— eh ?" said the
bowl of hot
I
at
must
Here Tadkins,
is
— indeed
to
I
must
— " What must
bed these three hours, and
two night-caps on
—
the imposing representative
his
—
in the
is
his
absence of the Land-
of the far-famed "
elaborated a strange performance in
head, stretching forth floor.
gone
the top of his speed, with
— of the dignity and beer
sanded
to
liquor.
scarlet gentleman, with a hiccup
you know,
landlord, as
away now
bald head, an'
lord
from their sockets, he swayed
Tadkins ?"
do,
sleepin'
at
his haggard cheeks
capacious arm-chair, with a motion that reminded you of
a crab-apple tossing about in a "
his
;
Chinese mandarin on a porce-
the stem of his pipe with an energy that hollowed
and
satin
was very pale
London Coffee House," gymnastics, by suddenly dropping his
arms, and
This, translated into
scraping his right foot over the English, was
intended
to
say, "I,
Christopher Tadkins, tapster of the Old London Coffee House, leave the of
drift
"
my
What
remarks
does he
his spacious
vow,
'fore
to
?" cried the gayly attired youth, from a corner of
mouth, very remote from the centre
— George "
his favorite
way
—" Speak man, and don't your wig " Yes — " remarked the elderly
fanity
!"
your good sense, gentlemen
mean
—" Tad,
of getting up a
it's
rather odd, I
little
genteel pro-
stand there bobbing your head until
out,
flies off
Translate yourself from
citizen
dumb motion
say so.
We're not severe
know The
"
enlighten us.
*t
Or,
into English.
to-night.
It's
New
if
Year's
lucid.
morning, you
elderly gentleman buried the tip of his nose in the recesses of his
pewter mug. "
Be
you're drunk,
Why,
gentlemen, you must see that's
its
—"
Tadkins
ax you
to reflec'
reether late
placed his right hand in the centre of his apron,
— "I
—you, Antony Hopkins, Marchant — " he bowed the elderly " You, Octavius Germin, Esquire — " the pale-faced bow to
a
to
citizen
youth
"an' you, Cap'in Grosby, of his Majesty's hundred and twelfth
ment—"
regi-
—
"
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
168
Poor Tadkins came
to a
sudden pause.
In the fervo^ of his speech,
commenced
he had suddenly lost the idea, on the strength of which he
profound appeal.
his
"
Well ?" grunted the
M There's no denyin'
bluff Captain it,
must g-wf" shrieked Tadkins
.
— —
"If
a latherin'
I let
—
as
Again Tadkins came "
you you stay any to-morrow that is, to-
as late as daybreak, and
it's
in utter despair.
me such
longer, the Landlord will give
day
Grosby— " Well ?"
gentlemen,
Germin
—"
to a
sudden
halt.
Captain waved
the
toward the pale-faced youth
ruffles,
poker, and while
There was
doing, hand
it is
me
hand, encircled by white
red
his
—" Just
me by
oblige
heating that
an empty mug."
Tadkins
a vast deal of significance in his bland whisper.
Germin handed
retreated a step in evident alarm, while
the pewter
mug,
with the remark
" That's easier to manage than a hot poker.
Shy
it
at his wig, but
don't hurt his head."
Tadkins retreated another step " in
Now,
your
you see me
Sirrah, do
face,
— " Gentle-men !" ?
If
and stop off your jabber,
rlesh off the right corner of
he gasped.
you don't put a cork
your cocoanut,
into that hole
just take the nicest piece of
I'll
that ever
you did
see.
I will,
!"
by
We
cannot decipher the oath, from the
threat, but tierce,
MSS. which
relates this striking
have no hesitation in giving the assurance, that said oath was
bloody, royal
— altogether worthy of
a sense of his dignity,
a British Captain, inspired
by
and a dozen mugs of beer.
Tadkins, without a word, retreated toward the shelves, where his candle
shone over the array of burnished pewter.
along, he muttered an inaudible rejoinder,
corpulent Briton, wishing to his face,
From
bitter
on the
other things that his nose would set
and straightway reduce him
ages.
future
among
Yet, even as he shambled
and grew very
the secure retreat
to
fire
a cinder, as a warning to all
near the
shelves, he
furnished
watched the drinking-party, with an earnestness that lasted only for an
No
instant.
sooner had Tadkins
straightened his wig
hered
to his fingers,
— blacking then he
placed the
candle
on
a, shelf,
and
one eye with the candle-snuff, which ad-
fell fast
asleep, and snored like a north-wind
whistling through a key-hole.
"To
resume
— where
did
I
stare into the faces of his
"At
we're from — " Now Grosby looked with a sleepy
leave off?
impertinent interruptions of this fellow
that
the
free
companions.
the stake in the middle of a dark
woods with
and a troop of Indian devils dancing round you
fire
at
— " suggested
your the
feet
young
gentleman, speaking the sentence in one short breath.
"One
in particular
was touchin' you up with a pine torch under your
—
"
—
"
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON.
—" nose
remarked the plain
secluding
again
citizen,
169
nose from
his
the light.
The obese Captain panted
" Yes, sirs !"
smoke
of his pipe through his large nostrils Injins
stake.
all
Tomahawks
around.
for breath, as
— " There
he forced the
Tied
was.
I
—pine torches—ugly
old
to the
women,
many walking Bedlams. I teas there, sirs. A tomahawk was brandished over my head, but 1 looked the red scoundrel in the screaming like so eye
— in
the eye, sirs
The Captain
— in the his
lifted
eye
mug
clinging to his large lips, quietly
"
I
why
wonder
mouth, and, with the beer froth
to his
remarked
he does stay ?"
does not appear that
It
—
this
abrupt remark was connected, in the most
remote degree, with the narrative which the worthy Captain had been so
His companions were too
impressively telling.
far
gone
in the abstruse
meditations engendered by the beer mug, to notice this sudden diversion
Indeed, Octavius was engaged in the
of the Captain's train of thought.
hopeless attempt to entrap an imaginary black beetle, which
tween
his eyes
himself the mysterious words
to
He
love
—not
so
does he stay?" repeated the Captain.
"Eh? ;
my
o'clock,
know—"
evidently imagined himself in the presence of his indignant spouse.
"Why 'up
— " Only ten
you think— New Year's Eve, you
late as
be-
flitted
and the unsnufTed candle, while friend Anthony muttered
I
vow
— " He said Were
break.
I
don't
know — "
cried Octavius, suddenly brightening
he would join us
that
and
at three o'clock,
now
day-
it's
there ever such lively roosters in your part of the world ?"
he added, as the trumpet peal of an early chicken-cock echoed through the silence of the town.
"
A
—
lord
a lord
—" muttered Anthony, with
an absent eye, and finger
mug
slowly undulating between his nose and his pewter in Philadelphia,
consigned by his father to
Nobody — except you
— —
—
my
—" A
live
Lord
and nobody knows
care,
—
and you and he, he and me." was no doubt an excellent joke, for friend Anthony chuckled over it, until his nose resembled a premium pear, at some horticultural exhibition.
it.
It
"What are you doing?" cried the Captain, with his sleepy eyes fixed upon the pale youth "In the name of his Blessed Majesty Octavius,
—
my "
— dear
Eight— nine
coin,
!
— — " muttered Octavius, surveying ten
which he had placed upon the
he don't,
The
I
win.
How
table.
do you think
individual addressed
seemed
will turn out,
it
to
a
little
" If he succeeds,
pile of gold I
lose.
If
Captain ?"
be wrapt in deep cogitations for a
moment, and then answered gravely " If she was a lady of quality, case you would lose.
I
could
Distinct-l-y, sir
!
tell
you
in
But, as she
a minute. is
In that
a peasant
girl, I
"
—— —
—
"
:
"
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
170
am
induced
to think that
our friend
— that
joke, to call himself John, plain John,
Reg"
" R-e-g, his
finger,
n-a-l-d,
John
is,
—eh
—eh?
John!
Capital
?"
muttered the decorous citizen, writing with the end of
moistened with beer, upon the white
table,
— nald,— Reginald /"
As though he had accomplished some problem of
—"
Regi,
i,
—
incalculable intricacy,
the good citizen looked around with a glance of triumph, and pointed to the name, inscribed
upon
smooth board
the
in characters
—not of
light
but of beer. "
When
1
you get a
did
letter
from the old boy?"
Grosby.
"Yesterday.
Mysterious
bered by a large an under-tone
'
—"
—
and holding
seal, 4
1
it
near the
light,
responded An-
charge you, have a care over
read from
my —my
spared to further the great object of his journey
effort be
—
very mysterious
Diving his hand into a side-pocket, he drew forth a
thony.
del
—ugh!
observed Captain
son to
cum-
letter
pages in
its
— and no — Philalet
Phil
very mysterious!"
"And
if
he succeeds,
earnest effort to
he stay?
draw
—
Ha. ha
it
I
win the guineas," said Mr. Octavius, making an
a cloud of
must be
listens to the insinuating stranger,
me
" Speakin' o' girls reminds
smoke from
a cold pipe.
and
—
The
a delicious interview.
—
"
Why
dear
does
little girl
of politics," remarked the Merchant,
commanding
arranging himself in a position of
gravity, with one limb
crossed over the other, and his chin very near his knee, while his thumbs
and the ends of
"Do you much?
his fingers
were placed
together, with due solemnity
think, Captain, that this Continental
Congress will ever come
of the Colonies, and
snuff the candle,
ministerial oppression.
Many
if I
words, a great
may trouble you, Octavius many words; and, if I may
— of— small-talk."
use so bold a phrase, an unlimited Ocean of "Sir.
The name
Si-r-r!
The Captain
inhaled an
tions to the beer
to
in the State-house yard, in these days, about the rights
Great talk
mug.
It
of his blessed Majesty
King George
is
—
immense volume of smoke, and paid his devowas quite a pleasure to hear him conclude his
remarkable sentiment " That
is
" Exactly
my opinion, Sir. my own way of
It is."
thinking," said Anthony.
" I have always
held those opinions."
Octavius said nothing, but continued to count his guineas. "
Eh
—bye
the bye,
when do you expect John
Captain turned his leaden eyes toward the
"Some months
will
elapse
—"
began
to leave the
city?"
—the
citizen.
the
Merchant, performing a
solemn pantomime with his thumb and fingers, when his words were suddenly interrupted by an alarming clamor at the tavern door. "Do you hear, Tadkins? Hello the fellow's asleep— suppose
—
—
—
:
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. you
him
let
in,
my
Octavy,
171
dear," said the Captain, in a mild, loving
way.
him
"It's very easy to say, Let
two or three
bottles of
of beer and tobacco smoke,
it
when
in; but
wine within
a
man
has deposited
some
his waistcoat, with a superstructure
becomes
how
question
a
—
a
man
— can
walk-" Octavius rose to his
movements to wooden bar, than the erratic
feet,
however, and reached the door,
the right and
was
latch
No
left.
lifted,
and a
figure
and moved with hasty strides toward the
old
"Hello!
Why,
You
"
rushed over the thresh-
table.
Rather an unpleasant object!"
you're white as a sheet!
cried the Captain, starting in his chair.
after several
sooner had he removed the
don't call
it
a decent thing,
plunge in upon us, looking like a corpse, do you?"
to
"What's
the matter?" drawled Anthony, gazing vacantly into the face
of the intruder.
was Jacopo, no longer red and blooming
It
dead man.
paunch, as he stood by the
small black eyes peering steadily
table, his
Even
into the lean visage of the merchant.
seen blooming and blushing like a
was
in the cheeks, but pale as a
His slender limbs trembled under the weight of his rotund
colorless
"Jacopo!
his nose,
which we have
coal about to kindle into a blaze,
fire
now.
How
goes
man?" —
it,
—
Octavius staggered to
his
side
"Where's John? I'm ready " he leaned for support upon the table, while his face was invested with the apathy of the last degree of drunkenness "How's your health, my boy ? Favor this company with a song." And then the bewildered Octavius favored the company with a touching
—
couplet from a pathetic ballad of the olden time "
My name And
K
As " Octavy,
my
is
Robert Kidd,
so wickedly I sail-e-d,
I
did
as I sa-i-l-ed."
love," politely interfered Captain
Grosby
— " Hold
your
jaw." Jacopo did not speak a word in answer. silently into the faces of the pallid
with a blank
Panting for breath, he looked
boon companions, while
were
his features
terror.
Anthony dashed his mug upon the table, and staggered to his "Where's your master?" he cried, as he beheld the terror-stricken of Jacopo. "
The
fact is,
my
friends,
I'm a
little
out
o'
breath
— " Jacopo
feet.
face
spoke
very slowly, looking over his shoulder toward the door, with the glance of a nervous man, who fancies that he is pursued by an Apparition. " But
you surely are jesting John) is not here?"
—
—you do
not
mean
to
say that
my
Lor
—
(that is,
—
"
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
172
A
The
dead silence ensued.
on the face of Jacopo
terror imprinted
The Captain
impressed the boon companions with an involuntary awe. rose,
and
the
three
around
gathered
the
companion of
Reginald
Lyndulfe. M What's this
Where
!
Out with
self.
at
it
is
once
he
YQur
?
face
— " and the burly
would
frighten the devil
officer
him-
shook Jacopo roughly
by the shoulder. " Out with
it,
!"
or I won't answer for your health, by
"
Has he come yet?" faltered Jacopo, sinking into a chair with a gro" Corpi di bacco ! This is very tesque sigh, which resembled a snore. singular
— " he
grasped a wine-bottle, and inserted the neck in his capa-
cious mouth.
"A-a-h!
weather in
new country
this
I
am —
They produce such
very chilly.
cold
—
" Would you be so good as to speak ?" thundered the Captain, when suddenly a footstep was heard, and a form, crossing the threshold, came rapidly through the shadows toward the table.
Every eye was turned with the same movement toward the face of the Not a word was spoken, and the breathless silence deepened the feeling of terror which had been communicated to the revellers by the
new-comer.
broken words of Jacopo, Reginald Lyndulfe stood disclosed color banished from his face
all
—
shoulders, with the gay apparel which
and torn
in
many
places.
in the light
—
silent
it
had concealed, covered with mud,
His entire appearance was wild and haggard.
silence he surveyed every visage, his blue eye discolored
while his hair hung in pressed
lips,
—motionless
gray surtout thrown back on his
his
damp
flakes
by
In
injected blood,
about his forehead, and his com-
no longer red with youth and passion, wore the color of
bluish clay. After this silent gaze, he flung himself into a seat, or rather sank into the chair, with the fatigue
manner of one who has been exhausted by hours of Still, no one broke the silence; the boon compa-
and suffering.
nions cast stealthy glances into each other's faces, and then as stealthily
surveyed the faces of Jacopo and his master. Reginald dashed his cap upon the
table,
wiped the moisture from his forehead. "Jacopo " he said, in a hoarse voice, "Have you any brandy?"
—
These words may provoke
that
a smile, but there
santry upon the countenance of those the
and with his colorless hand
was scarcely audible was nothing
who surveyed
like plea-
the haggard face of
young man. With a hand that trembled visibly, Jacopo reached the which was labelled "Brandy," and placed a capacious glass goblet
bottle
before his master.
Reginald's hand also trembled as he grasped the bottle, and held the goblet until
it
contained
at least
one half a pint of
it
over
that inspiring poison,
— THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. which cankers the blood with
demon.
into a
He
raised the goblet, and did not set
burning liquid had passed his
The
An
down
it
company now manifested
old trooper like
me
your abstinence.
for
or quarter-drunk, in
all
I
You,
known you.
the devil!"
"A
half a pint!"
ejaculated
Anthony
it if you were to cut me up somewhat mysterious remark of Octavius.
Jacopo gazed still
Zounds
boy, you are as half-drunk !
Enough
to
— "and without water!"
"I couldn't drink the
my
much
never saw you so
the time I've
words.
itself in
couldn't stand such a dose as that,
and I've swallowed the stuff these twenty years. remarkable
every drop of the
until
lips.
surprise, the terror of the
"Zounds!
kill
173
man
peculiar leprosy, and degrades the
its
coach-whips!" was
into
The eyes were The brandy did
in silence into the face of his Master.
blood-shotten, the lips livid, the cheek colorless.
not seem to have the least effect upon him; at
all
events
its effects
were
not in the most remote degree perceptible.
A
painful silence ensued.
Reginald held forth the goblet once more, with an emphatic gesture "
More brandy Jacopo
!"
he whispered.
lifted the bottle,
and paused when the goblet was
half-filled, the
bright red liquid shining through the clear glass.
"
Go on—"
said his master, in that almost inaudible tone.
Again he raised the glass, and drained
The surprise and man sank back in every
anxiety of the his
seat, 'and
Yet
Reginald sat before them, his cadaverous face, lighted by the
still
knees, trembled as
compressed
lips,
and
the spectators.
"It
is
very strange
His hands, which were
with an ague-chill
pallid cheeks, he
—"
he
;
upon
laid
Avith blood-shot eyes,
and
gazed vacantly into the faces of
said, in that
has not the least effect upon me. ill
to the last drop.
lip.
candle, as pale and ghastly as ever. his
it
company may be imagined. Every the same ejaculation quivered from
hoarse whisper
I believe that I
am
—"The
about
to
brandy
be taken
with some mortal disease."
At once the tongues of the spectators were unloosed. "
What
is the
matter?" cried Anthony.
"There's something dreadful happened "
to
you
—"
said the Captain.
The girl—"
At that word, uttered by the slender Octavius, his guineas, a
"Pshaw — I had night jilted
— she me."
who
laid his
hand upon
shudder agitated the face of the young man. quite forgotten our wager.
did not keep her appointment.
Have not seen her
— she — she — ha,
ha
to-
— has
""
""
"
"
PAUL ARDENHEIM
174
With
;
OR,
eye fixed sternly upon the astonished face of Jacopo, he
his
slowly uttered these words, with a miserable attempt "
The
wish
I
say a word
to
way toward
the door,
Go
once
at
— and saddle
light of the
Mr. Hopkins's house,
to
two of the best horses
the river, and wait for
you
you," whispered Reginald, and he
to
where the
breaking day
fell
upon
on
my
desk
haggard faces.
their
"
to force a smile.
guineas are yours!"
"Jacopo, led the
—"
"
me
in the
— secure
the package
Then you
in his stables.
woods
at
Cooper's Point.
will cross will join
I
there, within a half-hour."
—
"Two
of the best horses how shall I get them over the river?" was a ludicrous astonishment in Jacopo's face. *« There is a ferry from the foot of High street, or you can get the old Fisherman at Mulberry street wharf to take them over in his flat-boat. But they must be over the river in a half an hour, or His face became suddenly agitated. "Jacopo " he continued, abruptly changing the subject "You left the farm-house after I did. Was there any thing like surprise at my sudthere
—
—
—
den departure ?"
Jacopo answered aroused from
my
in a whisper, hoarse
and thick with emotion
sleep by a loud outcry.
I
hurried from
found that the noise proceeded from her chamber " Madeline — "
—
my
I
I
saw old Peter standing
"
Go I
I
was
crossed the
in their midst, pointing to
pressed through the crowd, looking for you, and "
I
Reginald shuddered, as he whispered the name.
" There was a throng of neighbors gathered there, and as threshold,
—"
room, and
the floor.
—
—go on —
on
did not see your face, but your
the crowd.
And —
name was spoken every moment, by
" Madeline ?" gasped Reginald, grasping his servant by the wrists.
"She was
not there
—
Reginald tottered backward, and would have fallen, had not the arm of
Jacopo held him firmly against the posts of the door. "
Go on
Madeline
She had
left the
stain of blood,
farm-house, but Old Peter,
which was
light disclosed not
"A
in the face of
—"speak
features-
it
Jacopo,
at
once.
— was not— there—
tated, pointed to the floor,
tures
own
reflected the ghastliness of his
which "
— " and Reginald cast a beseeching glance
only a
who was wonderfully
and called the attention of the neighbors visible at his feet.
Nay,
pool of blood
stain, but a
my
—"
agi-
to the
Lord, the torchReginald's fea-
became blank with vague horror. pool of blood * * * and Madeline gone
* * * *
but go at
" But,
my
once, Jacopo, and obey
Lord, you are not well
—
"
— There has been foul play
my commands. Not
a
word
—
—
"
"
"
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. "Fool! Do you hesitate? Let and
—"
175
will not suspect
and do not
— a vessel
New York
from
sails
more than
for there is
fail,
woods,
the horses be ready in Cooper's
he glanced over Jacopo's shoulder, towards the table
stake
life at
— " Hopkins
to-morrow
—
—
go,
I
say,
He pushed Jacopo faces of the into a seat. for
through the door, and hurried toward the table. The boon companions were turned toward his visage, as he sank Not a word was spoken, but it was evident that they waited
an explanation of
"Hopkins, chair
— " that
all this
was about
I
mystery, from the
head from his hands
— "in
Turning from one
to
—"
remark
say, Octavius
to
is
to
fact,
—"
lips of Reginald.
Merchant
the
up
started
in his
the leaden-eyed reveller raised his
Captain—" boon companions, and exciting
the other of the
the earnest attention of every one
by
his address,
Reginald slowly con-
tinued "
Have you such
a thing as a well-flavored
Havanna
He
cigar ?"
accom-
panied these remarkable words with a hearty burst of laughter.
There could not have been a more ludicrous surprise, had he asked the gallant Captain to pull a
Merchant
church steeple from
his
pocket, or desired the
merchant vessel of three hundred tons from the crown
to take a
of his cocked hat.
"He
is
drunk," was the muttered ejaculation of the young gentleman.
" Crazy !" thought Mr. Hopkins.
Had some tain, who was "
love-scene with the girl
man
a
—"
of the world, and
was the reflection of the Capsomewhat dangerous to the sex,
withal.
However, the Merchant drew from wrapped in yellow tea-paper. "
A
sample of the best Havanna
his pocket a small parcel, carefully
— received 'em yesterday from Cuba—
and he handed Reginald a*cigar, observing tone
—"White
as a sheet,
by George
at
the
same
time, in an under-
!"
Reginald lighted the cigar, and placing his feet upon the
table,
soon en-
circled his face with a fragrant cloud.
"
The
fact
gentlemen," he exclaimed,
is,
some previous
silently elaborating
do
will not dare to
And
in a
it.
moment
the
They
as
though
subject of discussion
—
he "
will talk, but they dare not act
company were involved
in the
had been
The Colonies
—
mazes of a
politi-
which, as the hour was daybreak, and three of their num-
cal discussion,
ber stupid with the bottle and pipe, and the fourth not far from crazy,
was, in every point of view, a remarkable event. " tea,
They may but
when
was decided
"The thing
is
dress themselves as Injins, and attack whole cargoes ol
it
comes
to
musket and bayonet
in his opinions.
fact is,
There was
— B-a-h — " !
the Captain
a profundity in his " B-a-h !"
gentlemen, to look at the subject philosophically, every
degenerated in this country.
Instead of a
Church Establishment,
—
"
PAUL ARDENHEIM
176
;
OR,
they have conventicles of drab-coated Quakers.
— and
The
general degeneracy, gentlemen, does not end here.
extends from the political roast beef
"
Brag
is
a
good
It
—
of their big talks, at Carpenter's Hall, in September
said the acute
last," 4
some
mob
The
the alimentary and convivial world.
to
tough, and the brandy worse than medicine
is
attended
I
Instead of a King, a
and Christianity, they have a Continental
in place of law, order
Congress.
;
dog,'
—" There
were some
fiery speeches, but
forth, as the
proverb has
it."
Hopkins and so
—
"The idea that any man would be so ridiculous as to " the young man possibly may have meant to advance some profound truth, or elabosome new theory
rate
in
political
philosophy, but he
concluded with
breaking his pipe, and calling on the Captain for a song.
While the discussion continued, Reginald smoked
in silence,
which was
only broken by an occasional word, evidently uttered with the intention of prolonging the pallor of his face
;
cigar,
no doubt whatever,
is
mild and peaceful in
gloom which clouded
dispel the sullen
" There
There was no change
argument.
even the
that
the proceedings of the Continental
exclaim, with
Captain,
The
my
an
the
King
is
Hopkins surveyed
informed of
fully
Congress," gravely exclaimed the the
all
indignation
facts
connected with
it
this
Zounds
truly royal
pipe has gone out, and I've no paper to light
sedate
unnatural
his features.
when
Merchant, " and put in possession of matter, he will
in the
its effects, failed to
again
!
!"
his pipe with an expression of indescri-
bable despair, as he placed these mysterious words in the mouth of his
dread Majesty, King George. I must confess that your figure is by no means lucid," the Captain remarked, with a profundity altogether significant of beer and tobacco " What in the d 1 has King George and the Continental Congress to
"
do with a pipe ?" "
Bah
!
Captain, this pipe, at which
I
for the last minute, is cold as an icicle.
you— it's
about
have been puffing hopelessly
Have you an
old newspaper
so unpleasant to light one's pipe at a reeking tallow-
candle—" " Not an old newspaper, but a new one. I received it from a friend toJust tear a strip off the border day, who came over by the last ship. It must last me for the next three months." don't spoil the reading.
The Captain
flung the paper on the table, and
great care, to peel a narrow strip from " British
What
Gazette
is this ?
*
and Chronicle.
its '
Hopkins began, with meanwhile Novem-b-er eleventh Hello border, muttering
—
—
!
Last dying speech and confession of Greeley, the notori"
ous Pirate hung on Tyburn,
The Merchant dropped
—
'
his pipe,
and with his eye rivetted by the dingy
type of the London paper, perused the paragraph which arrested his attention,
with undisguised, but by no means sober interest.
His
lips
moved
"
"
"
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. unceasingly in
a
grimace, and
ridiculous
his
177
grew
eyes
idiotic,
in
a
fixed stare.
" What's the matter ?" cried the Captain, taking his huge boot from the table,
and bending forward with sudden attention
Majesty taken cold, or
is
— the — Church
—
"
Has
his blessed
—
threatened with an attack of
the redoubtable Captain hesitated for a word, but quietly added, after a
moment
—
" epilepsy ?"
"Just read
me
Court news, will you ?" suggested Octavius.
a bit of fresh
Hopkins, however, did not answer, but, growing suddenly pale, continued absorbed in the perusal of the paper. " Reginald, will
you have the kindness
to read that ?"
placed upon the particular paragraph, he handed the
With
his finger
paper across the
him
table.
The young man, absorbed
at first,
but the Merchant, starting up from his seat, held the paper before
seem
in a revery, aid not
to
hear
his face.
"
Read
father's
that, if
is
it
agitation of
the date of the paper
to
eyes over
its
the attention of the
"
It
your
young man, whose-
columns, examined the date, surveyed the advertisements
nouncements of the "
as
Gazette and
Seizing the paper, he cast his
and the intelligence from court, the debates
here
1
you."
Hopkins excited
were Clouded by apathetic gloom.
features
same
the
is
had not seen the
that he
plain
when he wrote
Chronicle'
The
you please
but
letter,
in
Parliament and the an-
theatre.
does not interest me," he said, with a vague stare
—
That paragraph,"
cried
Hopkins
—"
I see
nothing
bending
in his shrillest tone, while,
over the table, his long nose almost touched the face of Reginald.
The young man beheld whose
face betrayed
paragraph designated
the
by
the Merchant,
such singular emotion.
In silence he read, while the boon companions anxiously
sudden changes of his handsome countenance.
was
appalling.
crushed
it
He
marked the
agitation of Reginald
surveyed the paper with the glare of a madman, and scattered it in fragments on the table.
in his hands,
—
"Look ye " he gasped, " You will find the
shoulder
The
—
as he placed his
hand on the Merchant's
object of your search in the valley of the
—
—
Her name is Madeline she dwells in As though maddened by some memory of this eventful night, he turned hastily away the half-finished sentence on his lips and fled with unsteady steps from the room. As he reached the threshold, the light of the Wissahikon.
—
rising lids
sun streamed over
his
haggard face, and disclosed his eyes, the
inflamed and the balls discolored by injected blood.
"I must away," he and
—
its
said in a
low
voice, as his back
occupants, his face to the rising sun
Cooper's woods, and a ship
sails
from 12
— " The
was
to
the
horses wait for
New York to-morrow—"
room
me
at
—
"
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
178
He
name pronounced by
crossed the threshold, and heard his
more hollow and
dawn, he beheld a
fresh winter tions of
despair-stricken than his face
By
own.
a voice
the light of the
on which were stamped the
indica-
an ineffaceable despair.
You here come you ?" **
— " he
cried,
and staggered backward
And a voice, faint and whispering, From Wissahikon !"
gave answer
While these scenes occurred
the
in affright.-—"
Whence
"
at
Old London Coffee House,
in
Philadelphia, events as strange and varied in their interest took place in the glen of Wissahikon, seven miles away.
Let us retrace our steps.
CHAPTER SEVENTEENTH.
" Paul, the Stranger wrote his I
name upon
have enclosed and sealed within
this
a piece of
have not looked upon that name, nor must you know action arrives.
There
it
may pass many battles
will be a battle
—
—
I
until the time for
cannot be long ere blood must be shed.
It
few months will elapse, or another year will flow.
parchment, which
paper, in the form of a letter.
Perhaps, a
before the
— armies
first
will be
blood
swept
away this new land grow rich in graves. But when the time arrives, you will break the seal of this letter, read the name of the Deliverer, and obey the words which you will find written beneath that name. Promise, my son, solemnly promise, that you will not break the seal, until a year has gone
The
—
light
minent veins
which the old man held
—
cast
its
— marked
by
pro-
rays along the gloom of the corridor, which
tra-
hand
in his thin
versed the Block-house or Monastery from east to west.
was fice
the ;
narrow
staircase leading into the
at the other the door,
the old clock,
whose monotonous
the stillness.
On
lower
floor of the
They
upper rooms or
opening upon the gate. ticking
the door stood
distinctly
either side appeared the doors of the
through
rooms on the
mansion.
stood before a door of dark walnut,
by spider-webs.
cells of the edi-
Near
was heard
At one end
It
had not been opened
for
whose panels were obscured
many
years.
— THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON.
Ii9
Paul surveyed the high forehead and clear blue eyes of his Father, with a glance which mingled reverence with something of awe. k
'
promise, Father," he said
I
—
" Until a year has passed,
I
will not
break the seal."
Come
11
robe, and inserted
chamber, and
this
The
man had
hither, Paul :" the old
folds of his
in the
it
listen while I
taken a rusted key from the
lock of the walnut door
" Enter
candle which the Father carried in an iron candlestick, revealed a
small apartment, square in form, and without kind.
—
speak."
was panelled with dark walnut.
It
windows or
furniture of
any
In the centre of the iloor arose
an altar or table covered with black cloth, moth-eaten and obscured by
was
spider-webs, and on this altar an urn of white alabaster
With
beheld the gloomy features of this coffin-like chamber.
was
face
visible.
a sensation of involuntary fear, Paul crossed the threshold,
and
His father's pale
by an emotion, which resembled the rapture or madness
agitated
His eyes shone with deeper light; a joy that
of an inspire^ Prophet.
might well have been called holy, radiated over his high narrow forehead
and trembled on " Paul
Kneel,
—
his lips.
you behold
my
sealed packet.
this
I
place
son. beside the altar, and promise that
within the urn.
it
you
will not
break the
seal until a year has passed."
At his father's
feet the
young man
knelt, while his
bronzed
by dark eves, and shadowed by masses of rich brown contrasted with old
"
pale face,
the
hair,
face, lighted
was strongly
blue eyes, and snow-white locks of the
man. promise, Father
I
The
!"
'
moment upon the urn, which stood out dark background, led the way from the chamber. He
Father, after gazing for a
vividly from the
locked the door, and again addressed his son
"Kneel once more.
Take
this
key, and swear that you will not un-
lock the door of this room, until a year has passed." " the
swear, Father !" said Paul, as he knelt in the dust of the corridor,
I
light
rusted
"
warmly over
shining
his
thoughtful face.
He
clutched
the
key with an involuntary earnestness.
Come
hither,
Paul ;" and the old
They
man
led his son for a
few paces
whose cobweb hung panels a cross was rudely traced. At the sight of that door, all that was calm or rapturous passed from the old man's face, and his down-drawn brow and tightened lips indicated emotions of a far difalong the corridor.
stood before a door of black walnut, on
ferent nature.
" Father,
you
are not well
— the night
air chills
you
—"
said Paul, with
evident anxiety.
The sical
old man's thin lips moved, but
power
to
it
frame an audible sound.
seemed
as if
he had not the phy-
—
"
"
PAUL ARDEjS HEIM
160
—
"
"
OR,
1
;
Paul gazed' upon his father with speechless anxiety and wonder. me see your hand, my son
—
" Let
Paul extended his hand "
a fair hand,
It is
—
yet—" The Father dropped spent
far
— and
moment,
In a
much
with so
it is
—
and delicate as a woman's hand
— and
hand with a shudder.
the
" Father, you are cold is
as white
let
me
you
assist
very cold in
to
this corridor
the peculiar emotion
your chamber
—
— the night
which stamped the old man's
He was calm
of horror and fear, passed away.
again
face his
;
blue eyes shining with steady light, while his long white hair trembled
gently aside from his colorless forehead.
"Kneel once more Paul knelt
The
old
—
at his father's feet.
man
extended his thin white hand, and placed
upon the brown locks of
gers
attired
in
robes
his
of dark velvet,
slender
iis
somewhat faded and worn firm, manly bosom of
on the
;
shrunken chest of the old man, and the shone a
fin-
Both father and son were
son.
his
son,
silver Cross.
Around them was
the
silence
of night, only broken
echoes of the winter wind. " Repeat after me, my son, a solemn
vow
by
knew
not
why,
at the
distant
—
Paul clasped his hands upon his breast, and cast his eyes trembling, he
the
to
the floor,
touch of his father's hand, at the sound
of his voice.
And
then, in accents bold
from the
lips of his
Father
"i, Paul, devoted to
and deep, he repeated the words which came
:
God from my
birth,
do vow by his holy name,
door of this scaled chamber, before which " whose surface bears the sign of the cross, until
never
to enter the
The
old
man
I
kneel,
and
paused, and veiled his eyes, while Paul looked up in
wonder.
He
awaited the conclusion of the oath, but his Father did not utter the
closing words, until a pause of
some moments.
— " repeated Paul, looking earnestly " Until my father dead— " said the old man,
" Until
into his father's face.
his voice tremulou;.
is
his
and
eyes shaded by his hand.
Paul hesitated for a moment, and then, his eyes swimming in moisture, slowly repeated the words "
And
if
you
fail
—
" Until
in this, Paul, the
and blight you into a hopeless grave
For
the first time in his
life,
my
father
is
dead."
Curse of God
will
descend upon you,
!"
Paul beheld an expression of fierceness
anger— rest upon the face of his " Dost thou hear,
my
Father.
son ?" continued the old man, clasping his wrist.
—
!
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. "
I
hear father, and will obey," said Paul, looking with reverence into
the venerable face, I
181
whose blue eyes gazed
ever disobeyed you
Can
?
fixedly into his
the time ever come,
when
"
own. I will
Have
cease
to
obey ?"
The
man
old
pressed his hand kindly upon the forehead of his son.
" God's peace be upon you, Paul," he said, and, light in hand, hurried
along the corridor toward his chamber.
which he had spoken.
his child
ing form of his
It
was
his nightly farewell
-and,
gazing upon the reced-
Paul arose,
father, entered
the door
opposite
that
of the
to
sealed
chamber.
Ere an
instant
light of a fading
The lamp head,
own room.
stood on a desk, and, struggling with the gloom, revealed the
details of a small its
had passed, he had crossed the threshold, and by the
lamp, beheld the familiar features of his
whose
chamber, with a rude couch
shutters
were
fast closed
one corner, a window
in
at
and bolted, and a range of shelves
near the desk, burdened with dusky volumes.
Paul seated himself
cheek upon himself
in the
oaken
chair, near the desk, and, resting his
his hand, fixed his eyes sadly
upon
the light, and surrendered
to his thoughts.
Those thoughts were
at
once varied and tumultuous.
in gasps, as he sat enveloped
grew
his eye
large and vacant in
What power meditation
Now
of language
His breath came
by the gloom and silence of the chamber;
may
its
glance.
picture the nature of that hour of solitary
?
his
eye wandered
with clasps of steel and
to the shelves,
silver.
burdened with massive volumes,
There were
the
works of
the Astrologers
and Alchemists of the past ages, mingled with the writings of the spiritual dreamers and religious mystics of Germany, in the sixteenth century.
From boyhood, nay, from very and as his mind peculiar
childhood, Paul had dwelt upon their pages,
—gifted by the Almighty with a power as strange as
—grew into form,
it
it
was
had been moulded and colored by these written
Thoughts of Astrology, Alchemy, and Mysticism.
And amid
the large
volumes were two small books, which more than
once attracted the gaze of Paul, as he sat absorbed in that silent self-com-
munion.
The only
of Astrology or ticism.
books, indeed, which were not devoted to the dreams Alchemy, or the bewildering frenzies of Religious Mysti-
Plainly bound, their covers indicating
much
service, they bore
two rudely emblazoned names; one was "Shakspeare
—"
the
other,
"Milton."
How the heart of Paul bounded within him, as he thought of the day when, from an obscure corner of a neglected chest, he had drawn forth these priceless volumes
Near
his
elbow was another volume;
bore the bold, firm characters of the
it
was open, and
Hebrew
tongue.
It
its
was
broad pages the Bible
— |
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
182
—
New in one language which Paul had read copy of the Book which he possessed. Dearer he
the Old Testament and the for years
;
prized
than
it,
the only
works of Alchemy or Astrology, dearer even than
his
all
the reveries of Religious Enthusiasm
more precious than
;
was,
it
to his soul, a
thousandfold
the pages of those seers of the heart, Shakspeare and
Milton.
For from
Hebrew volume, the Lord God of Heaven unknown Boy of Wissahikon, and talked in Other World. The Hebrew did not seem to him the
that boldly printed
and Earth talked
to
the language of the
him, the
language of men, but the awful and mysterious tongue of Angels. syllables of
music
rolled,
and deep,
full
though a
into his soul, as
Its
spirit
whose meaning pene-
stood by him, while he read, pronouncing the words, trated his brain.
Does
it
not seem to you a thought of
some
hikon Monastery, experience
its
And the
—
yet, as
its
sits the
Boy
— a vague
blank
into a distant land,
all the
world
from
his soul, escaping
where the palm
trees stand
the shore of the mysterious Jordan, or
waves, creeping up the beach of Galilee, break
God
of the Wissa-
cell
him.
to
he glances over the Hebrew page,
noonday sun, by
in the
this
of Nineteen, shut out from
love and hate
narrow room, goes out
and beauty?
interest
Here, enshrouded in the gloom and silence of
where
the
in ripples at the feet of the
enshrined in flesh.
amid the silence and shadow of that Eden whose1 joy was without a pang, whose flowers concealed no poison, whose naked Eve came, sinlessly and without shame, to the lake, and saw the serene sky Or, he
is
arch above her, the clear waters smile of the Babel
Tower
— with
at
the earnest
her
Then with
feet.
Moses, leading
forth
the builders
from Serfdom
a nation of slaves, and leading them to Civilization and Religion the warrior-poet David, after the lapse of the
and Job the sublime
whose love
many thousand
—
or, last
of
all,
to
Jonathan
centuries
— with
beautiful even
is
— with
now,
Isaiah the Beautiful
and most, beautiful of
all,
with that
toil-worn face, which one day looked forth from the hut of a carpenter,
and said
walk
to all the
world
like a Brother
The
—
"
God, enshrined
among ye
the sons of
thoughts of Paul, at this
still
in flesh
and
toil,
has come
to
men."
hour, dwell not altogether upon the
pages of the Hebrew Bible, nor do they wander in the fairy world of
Shakspeare, or with the "
It is
seem
strange
to call
— but
me suddenly
true
mine.
afar from the
!
into a
survey the Past, with fear
Bred
Phantoms of Milton.
terrible
it is
The words, the very tone of my father, new life. I stand upon the Present and
— with
A
trembling.
world— within
the only faces familiar to me, are the faces of
those faces, beyond the forest home whose darkness is not enlightened by
Beyond chaos,
singular
life
has been
the walls of this forest
my lies
home
Father and Catherine. the great world, a
a single star.
Our
life
dim has
— THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. Our
been very rude in this forest home.
We
was worn by our ancestors.
183
our
fare simple,
such as
attire
have neither decked ourselves
gay
in
pamper appetite. Water from grows in the fields, beyond the
apparel, nor slain a living thing in order to the spring \f oods
— bread
— the
from the corn that
fruits of
such has been the
summer and
the bloodless produce of the garden
of the old
fare, for years,
man
of Wissahikon and his
children.
Had
"
i
eaten of flesh, or drunken of wine, there might mingle with
blood an impetuous desire to see the great world, and join in
war
less
which
Men
"But
call
life
into that great
my
relent,
shall
Ocean
Death.
Oath
this
murmur,
flows, without a
it
my
But here, within these walls,
fame and gold.
for
glide gently on, until
its
— the
Sealed
Chamber
—
the
strange
my
agitation of
Father?
"What
are
his
plans
in regard
my
to
The
Future?
Deliverer for
—
whose coming we watched so long, came but an hour ago Wherefore does my father say to me, 'Wait one year P or Until I am dead, *
PaulP "I have never heard myself addressed by any other name than Paul Ardenheim my father's name is also unknown to me. Hold Black David, the deformed, who sometimes comes to the Monastery, and bears
—
messages
!
for
my
It is
not for
the
father to
city,
may know
our name.
Shall
I
ask him? "
No
secrets,
!
me
But
his feet, to wait in patience.
dwell for ever in this
home
heaven-like in her beauty,
—so
like
Prophet Shakspeare speaks, that within these walls, neglected and
You
my
will
remember,
that
— the
She
?
I
view.
It
for
is
fair,
so beautiful,
one of those could
father's to sit at
— Shall she —and yet so
future of Catherine
so
unknown
weep
women
to think
?
of
whom
the
of her dying
!"
Paul applied the word " Prophet" alike
They had
Shakspeare and Milton.
is
my me
which enshrouds
to lift the curtain
and conceals his purposes from
to
received their intellect from Cod, and
—
was good in them was God-like therefore so the crude Enthureasoned— they were his Prophets, whenever they enunciated a divine thought or embodied a holy truth. "I cannot banish the thought. It seems to encircle me, and force me It is the thought of the mystery to answer its mysterious questions. which overshadows our life, all dark as I look to the past, darker yet as
all that
;
siast
—
I
gaze into the future.
Father
!
Father
!
Would
that the time
were here,
when, placing me on one hand, and Catherine on the other, your could tell to us the history of your life, and the history of ours !" Paul felt his brow grow feverish as it rested upon his hand, while dilating eyes
were fixed upon
was an impressive scene.
the half-shadowed w.alls of his
That narrow chamber, dimly
room.
lighted,
lips
his It
with the
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
184
form of that darkly
Enthusiast seated
attired
in
the centre of
light
its
gloom, his bronzed face and earnest eyes manifesting thought
at
and
once
intense and bewildering.
Paul arose and paced the
came upon him
It
floor.
suddenly,' like a burst of voluptuous music, like a
gush of intoxicating perfume,
— the
memory
like a
dream of fragrance and moonbeams
woman whom he had
of the beautiful
seen to-night, for the
time.
first
His
cell
flashing
^ was
full
of gloom, but even in the gloom he could see her
eyes,— it was very
still
the old Block-house, but through the
in
he could hear her voice, whispering words of wild, boundless
stillness
passion.
Wherever he
saw
turned, he
a vision of a beautiful form,
half-reveajed, panted slowly into light, and throbbed into
whose bosom,
warm
loveliness,
beneath his gaze.
seemed
It
a fever
—
though the vision had rushed upon him
as
his heart beat in tumultuous
throbs
— he
like the frenzy of
gasped
for breath,
and
wildly stretching forth his hands, tottered to the chair.
Veiling his eyes, he endeavored to banish that voluptuous image.
she was there, before him forehead
— her
— he
breath upon his cheek.
Again, her darkly flowing hair
swept over his face; again his blood was voice whispered gently
— and
am yours
was
It
these words "
It
is
*
from
and
for the
To my
my
Deliverer came.
very
for
you, Paul.
Have loved you
midst of this voluptuous frenzy, that Paul cast his glance
light,
—
and flame by turns, as her
ice
have waited
I
for ever !"
in the
toward the
—"
But
her hand trembling softly over his
felt
first
time beheld a
letter,
inscribed with
son.'
He must
father.
I will
have written
banish the maddening
it
last night, before the
memory
—and yet— she
is
— very beautiful !"
He
broke the
seal,
and read the
letter, traced in
the tremulous
hand of
his father. Sunset,
December
31, 1774.
My Son— In case the hope, in which false,
and the Deliverer
years, does not
come
for
I
have lived
whom we
for
seventeen years, proves
have waited in Prayer, for so
even then, Paul,
it is
my
purpose
many
to fulfil,
with
command of the Lord. From your infancy you have been devoted to God. You have been sacred from the world, set apart from the faces of men. The relentless lust of traffic, the feverish desires regard to you, the
of ambition, the hollow sophistries and cold selfishness of the great world,
have not polluted your virgin the wilderness
—
a
life,
intellect.
You have bloomed
pure and serene as the
stars.
into life in
Therefore, to-morrow,
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. at the
hour of sunset,
dedicate
you
my
purpose of
will fulfil the
I
185
heart,
and solemnly
God.
to
Behold the manner of
this dedication.
The upper rooms of our mansion you have never seen. They But when you sealed to all human eyes, and have been for years.
which extends between those rooms, you will read on names of Anselm Joseph Immanuel.
verse the corridor
my
they
—
house and home,
left
Our creed was simple
Brotherhood.
— and
Together, in these woods,
derness together.
With me
brothers, not in the flesh, but in the spirit.
Germany,
left
—
—
those closed doors, the
These were
are tra-
While you were but a
—Love
we to
we came
into the wil-
reared the altar of our
Man
is
Love
to
God.
and Catherine scarcely a babe of two
child,
my
years, they died, these brothers of
heart,
and
left
me
alone in the old
vowed a solemn vow that you and Catherine should be devoted to the great work of our Religion. I vowed k, clasping their chilled hands, with their glassy eyes fixed upon me vowed it to each one as he sunk back in the wave of death. A month or more mansion. In their death-hour,
I
—
intervened between their deaths
were gathered
to the
— To-morrow brothers loved
will
I
— in
the space of half a year they
all their
solemnly dedicate you lives,
and clung
to
to the
will be called upon, first of
all, to
work which those
with unfaltering faith in the
hour of death.
You
all
grave.
take this
vow
— " In the presence
of God, and surrounded by the skeletons of the Brothers of the good
vow
cause, I do
my
"And or
devote
to
my
all
efforts, to
my
bend
life,
my
intellect,
wealth, to the progress of that cause.
my
further riage,
my strength may not
in order that
brain clouded
by any
solemnly vow,
nor
to
in the
look upon a
bride shall be the
be weakened,
my heart clogged,
of earth, or taint of earthly passion, I do
tie
presence of the dead, never to contract mar-
woman
good cause
My
only
life, its
final
with the eye of sensual love.
— my
only hope and aim in
success."
Are you ready
for this
vow,
my
son
?
Let your time be passed in
Prayer, so that the hour of sunset to-morrow does not find
you unpre-
pared.
Your Father. While the young man perused emotion.
There was no color
the last words.
of
all
The paper
fell
this
in his
paper, his face indicated powerful rounded cheeks, when he came to
from his hands, and, with a sudden
failure
physical or mental strength, he sank unconscious in his chair.
The lamp, glimmering with motionless form, seemed not stern mental contest
a faint lustre over his
to disclose a living
marked
features
but a dead man.
which had shook his reason
to its centre,
and
The
and de-
"
:
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
186
prived his strong mind of
its
him
native vigor, left
and cold
stiffened
in
every nerve.
was
It
after a
long pause that he awoke from his stupor, but with his
glance of consciousness he beheld his father's
first
started from his seat, and pulling forth a drawer,
the side of the desk, he
was about
At once he
letter.
which was concealed
in
place the letter with the manuscripts
to
which the drawer contained, when his attention was suddenly enchained by a new object of wonder. A slip of paper, not more than two inches on the manuscripts,
in breadth, lay
On
out from the white surface.
bold characters standing blackly
its
paper, IJaul beheld a few words,
this
The
written in a quaint and vigorous old English character.
scarcely dried
;
the paper
was
indeed, as Paul-, ere perusing
he beheld the date of
light,
mounted by
The
"
have
a British
ink
is
words, held
its
woven
fabrication,
its
Crown and
between
it
character
is
1590. scarcely dried — have no paper but
strange
let
me. read
it first,
texture, sur-
its
That date was
coat of arms.
I
in
;
and the
his eyes
like
my
this in
my
ever seen any thing of this kind in possession of
I
ink was
from any he used
different in quality
desk, nor
The
father.
before wasting the time in
vague conjectures—" ^timigljt, ©etemuet
31, 1774.
Co
Paul, -Baton of 2fitoenl)enn fitter tije boot mitlj tije €to$0 upon itg Cljau jsezke^t to fenotaj* panels .^earclj tiyz litn- iClje $a£t anu future toill uc openeo to tljee" There
is
no signature," exclaimed Paul, as he sunk back
bewildered
utterly
—
The mystery
"
my drawer that my father
placed this paper in
not
my
nerves
upon this mystery Again he examined the paper
The
i
—
must not think of
but, I
shame
moment hands
Search the urn
4
;
the ink
'
it.
there It
is
—
my
was very
it
ray of
black, the writing dis-
before the light— 1590. its
panels
!'
It
on
my
to
my
forehead.
half-uttered, flashed through
Chamber-
father It
thoughts, this idle message sent to
While these thoughts,
would be per-
an urn within the Sealed
would be treason
of falsehood would blister influence
for a
" water-mark," or date of the fabrication of the
Enter the door with the Cross upon
jury.
Oh,
!"
paper, was seen clearly, as he held "
—
not a single tremor of weariness or age.
and bold.
Who
faithfulness to the
not a few
light to shine
tinct
my
test
!
traced these singular
moments ago ? But no it is These words were written by a firm hand, whose
father's hand.
knew
wishes to
in the chair,
grows darker
life
Whose hand
?
words ? Can it be vow which I took upon myself
my
of
—yes, the
cannot for
a
me by unknown
the brain of Paul,
—
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. the
words: "Enter the door with the Cross upon
187 panels," rang un-
its
ceasingly in his ears.
The paper
from his hands, and rested on the desk beside his
fell
father's letter.
"
The Past and
!''
the Future will be opened to thee
Paul heard these words, as though a
spirit had,
spoken them gently
in
his ears.
"
I
" he uttered the words, swore a solemn oath, that I would not seat, paced up and down the floor of his narrow
and starting from his
room. All
was breathlessly
which stood that
at the
still
—he
could hear the ticking of the old clock,
—
remote end of the corridor, or hall
seemed
it
him
to
he could also hear the frenzied throbbings of his heart.
He was
He was
lost in a wilderness of conflicting thought.
possessed by a yearning desire
to
know
mystery of
the
his life,
once
at
and with
a terrible consciousness of the guilt which would darken his soul, in case
he violated his oath.
Baron
" Paul,
"Baron
of Ardenheim," he muttered
have heard those words before
I
To-night
!
—
Baron Ardenheim Is name by which he was known in the great world
rock of Wissahikon.
!
Paul took the lamp, and went from that hours of thought
— and closing the
An unbroken
dor.
all
it
my
—the
The lamp
stillness prevailed.
— shone
!
stood on the
I
father's
title,
the
?"
dearest
home
of his
gloom of the
door, stood in the
which the figure of a Cross was traced while
cell
of Ardenheim
was when
it
corri-
revealed the door on
distinctly
upon
its
panels,
Paul's features became violently agitated as
around was gloom.
he stood like a man bewildered by a superupon the dim Cross with expanded eyes. "The Past and the Future shall be opened to thee!" he murmured,
he glanced upon the door
;
natural spell, gazing
and advanced a single step.
Then came
another pause, in which Paul stood without motion in the
centre of the corridor, his
face
colorless, his eyes
expanded and un-
naturally brilliant.
"
Past
No
No
!
me
is to
by phantoms kiss to
upon
!
In the
name
a dim chaos * * *
his lips as
r
of God,
— the
No
!
I
I will
to
my
bury these fearful thoughts in Prayer
through the breathless stillness
It
own was
was
father's couch,
he slumbers, and then come back
Passing along the corridor
to his
dare not think of
it
!
— Yet
— the
and press
my
clock throbbing
all
that the door of the
the
was
still,
while
room next
chamber.
Inclining his head toward the dark panels, he listened All
my
room again
!"
old
—he saw
to
slightly opened.
his sister's
the
Future a starless midnight, peopled only
save the low, soft breathing of the sinless sleeper
188
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
•
" God's blessing upon thee
—no
thy rest yet
—
it is
a strange thought
the vow, and living thing
There are no
!
— thy
fate is like
swear with me, never "
to
dreams.
mar And
Thou must
take
phantoms
frightful
infernal temptation scares thy soul from
its
unto mine.
look with love upon the form of a
to
His brow clouded by a sombre expression, Paul passed on,
Next came
agitated in every feature.
Paul bent his head toward
its
panels
his face
the door of the old man's chamber.
—
all
was
silent
—
his father slept.
Softly unclosing the door, Paul passed the threshold, the light glim-
mering dimly over the one corner.
saw
With a
details of a cell-like place,
with a rude couch in
noiseless footstep Paul advanced to the couch, and
the form of his father, prostrate in slumber, the profile of his aged
He
face turned toward the light.
had flung himself upon the plain bed
without removing the dark robe from his spare limbs, and as he silver cross
His eyes were closed, his face very calm, and the
glow
faint
slept, the
shone like a point of flame upon his breast.
to his
snow-white
light
imparted a
hair.
Beside his bed, his lips firmly
set,
and his eyes glaring from the fixed
brows, stood his son, whose broad chest heaved with violent agitation, as
he silently surveyed the calm image of venerable age which slumbered before him.
Moved by the violent throbbings of his heart, the Cross which now disappeared, and as suddenly flashed into the light again. As
head of beheld
his couch, starting
this
had
father
this lone
from a recess
in
gloom of
many
came
times spoken to him,
at
the panelled walls.
statue with an involuntary tremor, for the
his
the
Paul
words which his
memory,
vividly to his
at
hour of night and thought.
"When Man
is
from
free
Redeemer has done
all
manner of bondage, when the mission of Lead become Gold,
perfect work, then shall the
its
and the Gloom be turned These words had often
upon
the
to
narrow room, he beheld a singular statue which rose
father's
the
became more accustomed
the eye of Paul
he wore
into unutterable fallen
Joy."
from his father's
the singular statue, half-revealed
by
lips
his light, he
—as
Paul looked
remembered them
with painful distinctness. It
was
a figure of the Saviour,
clad in the
humble garments of
unutterable sadness.
The
moulded or carved in lead, the form and the face stamped with a look of
toil,
large motionless eyes, the lips agitated
smile that had more of sorrow than joy for head, stamped with a sublime despair
—
all
its
mouldecl of lead
the heart of the gazer with sensations of peculiar awe.
"That Image, Paul — "
the old
man was wont
not of the Saviour triumphant over death and
among
the creeds
by a
meaning, the great fore-
to
evil,
and sophistries of the Church.
say
—impressed
— "Is
the Image,
but of Jesus imprisoned
There
is
a
singular
THE MONK OF THE WISSAIIIKON. tradition connected with the statue,
my
son.
189
was moulded by
It
the hand
of a Hussite heretic, who, imprisoned by the followers of Papal power,
was
offered
—
life
and liberty on one condition.
'
You
are an
they
artist,'
Your hand is cunning in the arts of painting- and sculpture. Carve for us an Image for our Altar, and you shall be free !' The heretic, encumbered by his chains, heard them, and lifting his sunken features from Of what the shadows of his cell, faltered a response to their request. metal will you have it?' Of gold !' Whose image shall I carve?' 'The Give me some lead, and let Blessed Saviour triumphant over death me have a furnace, so that 1 may prepare a model of the statue which you desire They consented. For weary days and nights, the Hussite was secluded in his cell, toiling steadily at his labor. They became imsaid
'
'
'
'
—
'
'
!
patient, but
he replied, pointing
'Soon
it
While
his form,
the statue, imprisoned in
wasted by persecution and
its
trembled like a
toil,
mould,
the door of his cell. leaf,
and
hollow and care-worn, looked like the cheek of a corse, he led
his cheek,
the throng of priestly
Image of
to
One morning he unclosed
will be done.'
Lords across
the. threshold.
the Saviour triumphant over death.
my
into gold, for I felt that
hour was near.
I
So
I
'You asked of me an could not mould a Lie
Him
moulded
and moulded him, not as he appears in the Bible, but as he
Church, chained by your hollow forms and blasphemous
— behold — the Image
of the Imprisoned Jesus
!'
while the Priests encircled him in fiery anger, he
That Image was hurled
into
some
He fell
of lead,
your
in
is
Behold
ritual.
said this, Paul, and
back cold and dead.
forgotten corner, for the Priests felt that
was an eternal rebuke upon their heathenish worship. followers of Huss lifted it from the dark corner, they bore it to
divine despair
its
But 'the
their secret place of
and now
worship,
it is
home
here, in the
of Wis-
sahikon, a stern Image of the Church, which imprisons the Soul of the
Blessed Saviour in a leaden aud lifeless
when
son,
the
Lead
into changeless
joy;
will
become Gold, and
when
ritual.
The day comes, my
the unchanged
the Lord, no longer imprisoned
walk freely once more, into the homes and hearts of
Such was
— lar
It
and nearer to
mass.
life,
it
seemed
to
him
that
;
but as Paul held the light near
he did not merely behold a face
lifeless metal.
A
my
is
imprisoned in that leaden
Soul enclosed/in the fixed eyes and despair-stricken forehead
of the Image side
it,
cannot banish the thought that a Soul
I
—a Soul
father's
which
is
that listens to
couch
—reads
dark and terrible
my to
me now heart
me
— watches me
— and
reads
as
I
stand be-
the Future
my
lips to
my
of
my
"I
will
!"
Paul shrunk back from the cold leaden eyes of the Image. press
shall
!"
been that the dull hue of the lead deepened the singu-
impression which the Image produced
**'
by creeds,
Men
the singular tradition of the Imprisoned Jesus.
may have
and form of
gloom be turned
father's forehead,
and then
retire to
my
bed
!'
— —
—
" 9
190
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
.
—
There was something altogether impressive in the sight that young face marked by the traces of powerful emotion, pressed against the withered countenance of the old man. As Paul bent down, the light which he held glowed more warmly over the leaden Image, and by the uncertain ray, the smile which dwelt upon the sad face of the Imprisoned Redeemer, seemed to change into a sneer. " Good night God's peace upon your gray hairs !" murmured Paul,
—
He
but his Father did not hear him.
calm slumber of a serene
slept the
Conscience.
Paul raised his head, and
wandered from hand, and
for the
the rays
time, as
first
lamp
of his
the face to the form of the Image, he beheld the extended
felt all
a sudden tempest of
his serenity of soul vanish before
temptation and thought.
For on the
hand an iron key was suspended,
forefinger of that leaden
bearing a label on which these words were written, and written in his
hand
father's
"
Can
" ther
it
—"
THE KEY OF THE SEALED CHAMBER."
be," gasped Paul, ''that
he extended his hand as
denly withdrew
which
He
No
it
the
—
bears has been written not
touched the key, and
felt his
The
to
me
tempt
Fa-
?
key suspended It
to
hand drop
hours ago
to his
—
hand of
all
temp-
key, and the
though de-
side, as
Image seemed
face of the
to the
and forget
a massive
is
many
it,
smile upon
to
deep compassion.
in
Paul extended the the
left
might become accustomed
I
tected in an act of guilt.
him,
he has
!
means
father
rouse the aged man, but as sud-
the force of mechanical habit.
tation in
label
4
it
the Image, so that
my
if to
light,
and regarded the key with a fixed glance, while
Image looked upon him with
that sad smile, and the aged
man slum-
bered unconsciously beneath his gaze.
His face manifested an intensity of mental agony of
life
upon
his
cheek; while his
lips
;
there
was no hue
were firmly compressed,
his large
dark eyes glared fixedly upon the leaden hand and the iron key. It
was
moment
a
Paul started it
was only
at a
of fearful thought.
sudden sound
" Father, the
trial is
brain with madness.
between
With
my a
terrible
light
moment
—"
Ah, there
an instant became calm again
is
faltered Paul.
a hope
—
I
may
"This ordeal for
fills
my
ever place a barrier
soul and this horrible Temptation;—"
father, he strode
old he paused, held the light
That
in
sudden grasp he seized the key, and casting one glance toward the
slumbering face of his
a
— but
the old clock striking the hour of four.
gleamed
madly
to the door.
On
the thresh-
toward the bed, and looked over his shoulder.
faintly over his father's face, but as its ray
^hone for
over the image, Paul with a shudder saw the leaden features
move, and the fixed eyeballs glow with red
lustre.
—
"
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. He
191
dared not look again, but holding the light in his
hand, and
left
clutching the key in his right, he closed the door of his father's room.
He hastened with unsteady steps along the own chamber. "The key shall tempt me no longer — " "In
a
he said as he hurried along
of
my room
stood before his chamber, but the
same ray
moment, through
the
window
I will
hurl
it
forth into
!"
snow
the darkness and
He
corridor in the direction of his
that disclosed the panels
—
upon the Cross of the opposite door the door which led into the Sealed Chamber. Paul rushed madly toward it, as though all power of self-control had While his face was marked with the suddenly passed from his brain. of his door, also shone
which boiled
traces of that frenzy
like
molten
in
fire
every vein, he ex-
tended his hand, and attempted to insert the key in the lock.
His hand
trembled, and the attempt was vain.
Paul sank on
When
For
knees.
his
were deadened by
a
a
moment
all
was
a blank
;
his senses
sudden stupor-
reason and consciousness returned, he found himself
still
knees, the key clutched in his cramped fingers, while the cold
on his
damps
moistened his forehead.
"Ah,
the fearful trial
Slowly he rose
is
passed.
his feet,
to
I
Cross on the door, when a hand was It
was not
saved."
laid
upon
his face
tionless as stone.
hand touched
away from
its
pressure was soft
yet that scarcely perceptible pressure held Paul as
He
the
his shoulder.
the firm clasp of a vigorous hand, but
And
and gentle.
am
and was turning
mo-
could not turn and look upon the person whose
his shoulder, but, conscious of the terrible danger
had just escaped, he feared
to
gaze into the face of a
human
which he
being.
The
blush of shame glowed on his cheek. "It
is
my
father!" the thought crossed the
mind of
"He has watched me, and seen me place the key in He was afraid of the old man's wrinkled face and The hand was gular
warmth
still
to his
upon
his shoulder,
its
the Enthusiast
the lock
—
deep blue eyes.
soft pressure
imparting a sin-
frame.
"Father—" Paul
began.
"Paul!" answered
a voice, that
broke
in
deep emphasis upon the
still-
ness of the corridor.
And its
the
fingers.
hand which had pressed Paul
felt
his shoulder,
ing the light in his quivering hand, gazed
Did
the pale face
touched his neck with
the bload burn in every vein, as he turned, and, hold-
upon the
and high forehead of the old
the soft eyes and golden hair of Catherine
intruder.
man meet
his
gaze? Or
?
"Paul, are you afraid of Fortune! Afraid to cross that threshold and stand face" to face with your future fate !"
"
"
"
"
1
PAUL ARDENHEIM
192
was
It
the beautiful faee of a
love, that
met
woman,
;
OR,
the large dark eyes of passionate
the gaze of Paul, as he heard the voice,
fired his blood.
"Ah — madness
—"
again
and Paul retreated from the vision of impe-
tuous loveliness which glowed upon him from »
The Wizard's She was
by glossy
child
whose every accent
the
gloom of
the corridor.
5
!'
form enveloped in a robe of rich velvet, bordered Around her face, gathered the dark hood, whose folds
there, her
fur.
gave new beauty
Her
her face and relieved the intense blackness of her
to
up with a clear unchanging radiance, flashed upon him from the shadow of their long fringes her velvet robe was agitated by the motion of her proud bosom. hair.
eyes, lighted
—
This vision completed the bewilderment of the Enthusiast.
Has
earth and heaven
combined against me
Is
?
not enough to be
it
Not enough to feel the key of the Sealed my own heart Chamber in my grasp, and see the door gloom before me, its Cross burnMust the air give forth ing my very eyes with an incredible fascination its Spirits, and .the image which haunts my brain take bodily shape, and Away — away I will not peril come in incarnate loveliness to my side my soul, I dare not break my Oath — I cannot, cannot fling a lie into my tempted by
?
?
—
!
father's face !"
Deep and echoing,
woman
lips of the
"I am no in copious
spirit,
The warm
his voice swelled through the corridor.
parted in a smile.
Freely and
Paul," she said, and flung back her hood.
While
waves, her raven hair descended upon her shoulders.
her olive cheek was fired with vermilion, and her large eyes moisture, and the ripe redness of her parting lips the whiteness of her teeth, she touched his
swam
in
was contrasted with
arm with her
soft
hand, and
glided nearer to his side.
"
Whence come you
"Is
it
?" cried Paul.
home
so far from your
to
mine
?
Only
a mile,
leads over the Wissahikon, and through the woods.
"But
the night
dark and dreary
is
—
cold
— the
ground
is
—
by the path
covered with snow
know it, Paul, but the Voice bade me seek your home "The Voice?" echoed the bewildered Paul.
" I
"Do you
not
remember
uriant hair from her face
?"
—"
She
laid
forest
—
— again she smiled, and dashed aside the lux-
It
was
and your love. And after you thrust me from you and—
—
— the
that
me many hour
the voice that told
left
her finger upon the slight
me,
nofe
wound which marred
long ago of you ago, after
you
the pale beauty
of her forehead.
"After all this had occurred, and I was desolate and alone, the Voice spoke again and told me that you loved me still, told me that you would
"
"
—
"
!
;
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. yes,— it
return,
told
me
that together
193
should climb the height of fame
we
and power."
How
Paul was spell-bound.
glowed
It
was no It was
voluptuous
into
hand upon
brightness, as, placing her
words
that trembled over his neck.
liness
new
her eyes flashed into
his neck, she uttered these
life,
spirit voice that
spoke, no spirit hand
woman, whose proud loveher lips murmured " We should
a beautiful as
—
climb the height of fame and power!" "After the voice had spoken these words of hope to me,
dreams
I
saw your
moment
thy lover in the direst
away
Again
face.
Away
of his fate?
The door
door of the Monastery.
is
open
—thou
Chamber and
"Do
fear not.'
obeyed,
I
In
my
of Paul
wilt find
at the
thy lover
Bid him enter the Sealed
trembling on the threshold of his Fortune.
head,
home
to the
path which crosses the Wissahikon, and terminates
by. the
"The
I slept.
heard the Voice—' Would'st thou aid
I
Paul— and am
here."
Sealed Chamber!" echoed Paul.
you fear?" and the touch of her hand, trembling over
rilled
his fore-
every vein of the Enthusiast with the frenzy of passion.
—
"Do
you hesitate? I am but a weak woman " how proudly her bosom " I may not pierce the cloud of mystery heaved as she said the words which encircles us. But to woman, in her very weakness, God hath given !
a
power akin
Prophecy
to
—
it is
the instinct of her heart,
it is
Paul
—
the inspira-
—
That power, Paul, tells me that your future our future, within the Sealed Chamber. Do you love me ? Enter, and do
tion of her love. lies !"
not fear It
seemed
Paul that he could
to
and while her eyes flashed in closer
his
to
all
listen for ever to the
their brightness,
own, heaved and swelled
in
music of her voice
and her form, gliding
every vein
;
the Enthusiast
could not turn his gaze away, even for a single moment, from this picture of voluptuous beauty.
"You new
life,
love
me!" he gasped
whose form seems
to
—"You, whose
me more
glances
beautiful than a
—you—" "
fill
my
soul with
dream of Heaven
—
Love you !" exclaimed the Wizard's daughter " Is it so strange, I have seen your form, in my dreams by night and dreams by day, more than a year? Do you still hesitate? The key of your Fate is
when for in
your hand
—
" But the Oath which spot, at the feet of
Upon
the
my
brow of
I
took, not one hour ago, kneeling
father
—
on
this
very
the beautiful girl darkened a slender vein, swelling
with a serpentine outline from the transparent skin.
"Father!" she echoed, her face so near the visage of Paul, that he her breath
And she
upon
his
cheek
—"I remember—
clasped her forehead with her hands. 13
felt
"
"
PAUL ARDENHEIM
194
;
OR,
" You remember — "
The words
of the Voice," said the Wizard's daughter: "as
seek your home,
— 'Tell him,
Paul, that the "' himself his Father, has no right to that sacred name it
also said
Paul shrunk back from her
•
"
Who
calls
"'Tell him
himself
my
father
also, that the
his father's
Had
name
—"
bade
me
calls
a
—
mystery of
walls of the Sealed Chamber.
—
it
man who
looking into her glowing face with
side,
glance of vacant terror.
tell
his life is concealed within the
Once beyond
its
know
threshold, he will
'
these words been spoken
by
the withered lips of age, the
glow of
anger would have crimsoned the face of Paul, the fierce denial risen
to
his tongue.
But they were uttered by and as they
fell
on the
lips that
were ripe with youth and passion;
listener's ears, his
whose eyes flashed with As he heard the strange
eye was enchained by a face
love, through the intervals of long flowing hair.
revelation, he
saw the tumultuous motion of her
velvet robe, he felt the trembling of her form, as she pressed nearer to his heart
CHAPTER EIGHTEENTH. PAUL ALONE WITH THE TEMPTER.
— " he exclaimed, as he led the way I would speak with you own room, and placed the light upon his desk. " Let me have — one moment of calm thought, — only a moment " and his gaze was "Lady,
into his
rivetted
to the
key of
the Sealed
Chamber, which he clenched
in his
right hand.
The
girl,
whose eyes shone with changeless
chair, her robe quivering with the
brightness,
sunk
into a
impetuous pulsations of her bosom.
Not
once did she remove her gaze from the pale features of the Enthusiast.
There were some moments of unbroken
stillness
—Paul was
alone with
the Wizard's daughter.
Not
in her
own chamber,
Block-house which had ing his
brow upon
as
some few hours
for years
ago, but in that cell of the
been the home of his thoughts.
his hand, he could only gaze in her face,
wild and bewildered with the dazzling beauty of her eyes.
Rest-
and grow
"
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. As he gazed,
mind
his
agitated
195
by contending memories.
All that
he had ever read of woman, came crowding on his brain, in a throng of
She seemed
contrasted images.
to
him
some form of which he had women, whose surpassing
like
read; like the fascinating image of one of those
beauty gives freshness and bloom to their memories, even after their love-
crumbled into grave-yard mould; and the shadows of dead ages
liness has
brood darkly over their dust.
Was by
Ruth, so pure and beautiful, who, with her brown cheek lighted
it
Judean sun, bent
the
toiling
amid the
sheaves of the rich man's
full
whose dazzling loveliness made the Poet-King a Traitor and Murderer? Or the star-eyed daughter of Eg^t, whose gorgeous beauty inspired the Son of David with that glowing Love-drama, called the Song of Solomon? Or the Juliet of Shakspeare, the Eve ot Milton, or some creation of his own brain? Did she resemble the voluptuous form, which, gliding one summer day before Herod the King, so maddened his soul, that he gave her, as a birth-day gift, the head of the Bathsheba,
field?
Baptist?
The impression which
made upon the She seemed
the beauty of the Wizard's child
soul of Paul, mingled these images with a darker association.
him something
to
like the tender Esther, the daughter of
Mordecai the
Jew, with a shadow of Shakspeare's Lady Macbeth, darkening over her white brow.
Yes, even as Paul
Thought. "
the inspiration of her eyes, she
felt
embodiment of some
tiful
You
hesitate
— " she
seemed a beau-
fearful deed, the splendid shrine of a Satanic
said, raising her
white hand and sweeping the
luxuriant hair from her face.
Paul was
silent.
He
could hear the monotonous sound of the old clock
— the throbbing of his heart— and
the death-like stillness impressed
omen of approaching Evil. " Hesitate, when there is greatness
him
with an
to
be achieved, glory
won by
a solitary
She bent forward, until the light shone fully upon her face her eyes grew brighter, her lips assumed a more passionate red. "Greatness Glory?" echoed Paul, in an absent tone; and then came a murmured thought " What grandeur of earthly power is worthy for a exertion of your will!"
—
—
moment
to
What
form?
—
be placed in the balance with the possession of this beautiful glory like the beauty of her eyes
" Listen to me, Paul.
with mystery. for
life
Your
Yet
life
has been like your own, strange and dark
that our fate
is
linked, through
good and
ill,
or death, either for purposes of glory, or for deeds of shame.
heart confirms
explain that which I
My
I feel
—
is
my
words.
Our destiny
so dark with mystery
—
is
I
one.
It is
not for
me
to
can only speak that which
feel—" "
Speak
— you
would have me break
my
Oath, scatter confusion and
"
!
;
196
PAUL ARDENHEIM
.
my
shame upon
gray hairs, and
father's
unpardonable crime
OR,
;
myself with the
taint
guilt of
—"
"No, Paul. I would have you as great, as noble as your destiny. I know not the world, have no intelligence of its people or its passing events, but I feel that the time comes, when a strong arm, nerved by a great soul,
may
grasp a crown, even from the hand of death, and carve a glorious des-
tiny,
even from the elements of carnage and ruin."
"It
well
is
— a crown, a throne
word with shuddering
the
"The The
"
hereafter?"
But
!
the hereafter
— " Paul pronounced
distinctness.
— and her
face
was stamped by
vague wonder.
a
Othe* World, that unknown sea, whose waves break
murmurs on Hereafter!
the
0,
shores of this
it is
That to-day we
To dream
"The Other World! perchance misery.
Or,
— " Paul
It is
for
— " The
we are and to-morrow we are
live,
no other world
instant, that there is
a mystery; perchance
may
it
an
in indistinct
wildly exclaimed
even for a moment, that
terrible to think,
as the beasts of the field.
loathsome decay.
life
may
it
but
but
—
be happiness,
be nothing but a long and dreamless sleep.
world we were born.
know
It is in this
world that we
that I live
the breath of the flowers, the joy of the sun, the thought of
moonlight
;
—
are dear to
all
For
live.
me.
this
But the other world
That
stretched over the eastern sky at early dawn.
may
like a vague mist,
is
Paul started from that lovely countenance with his blood.
So
beautiful,
away,
mist, passing
reveal the rising sun, or only disclose a darker cloud!"
chilled
I
.
Her words
affright.
and with no consciousness of a Better
World She was an
Atheist.
It
was
true.
With
all
her beauty, her grace of
step, and magic of look and tone, she had no definite conception of a future state, no actual belief in God. True, she prayed, but it was rather
a form of the lips than an inspiration from the heart.
by
his stern fanaticism,
ings
was
to
Her
had reared her thus, and the end of
impress her only with the joy of existence in
this
father, led
all
his teach-
world.
The
Voice, speaking from the stillness of her chamber, completed this singular education.
All that
was Religious
in her nature, bent
from
its
proper
tendency, became distorted into an insane Love, a grasping and boundless
Ambition.
That insane Love,
that unlimited ambition,
of Paul of Ardenheim.
He was
her Thought. it
thus
— only
were centred
She looked upon him
as
the
her Future, her Happiness, her
in the
image
embodied form of
—
if
we may speak
Hereafter.
Paul gazed sadly and with fixed eyes upon her glowing
face.
She
was near him her voice broke like music over the silence of his cell her bosom swelled beneath the dark robe, and her tresses, agitated by the wind which came through the aperture of the door, waved slowly to ;
and
fro.
— —
"
"
!
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. "Thou
very beautiful!" he
art so
completely intoxicated by the
face so fair to look upon, thy voice
music of a daybreak dream, thine eyes shining ever with to me like the brightness of a heavenly soul, and yet
like the delicious
seems
a light that
thou
said,
eyes—" Thy
strange brightness of her
197
—even
thou
—
He
Shrinking from her gaze, he covered his face with his Tiands.
Even
not the courage to complete the. sentence.
had
woman,
beautiful
this
with the voluptuous form and starry eyes, the voice that thrilled, and the
glowed with the warmth of passion, even she must he could not speak it.
lips
that
was
his thought, but
Absorbed
in his reverie,
to the charnel, the
worm upon
grave
be silent
thrills will
Paul murmured
There
!
will
to
die
This
!
—" The white bosom
himself
brow
the radiant
The
!
voice that
be no light in the face, for that face will
— dark — sealed forever."
be a skull, those eyes but hollow orbits, vacant
There was a hand upon his shoulder, and Paul heard her voice again. Heard it in every low whispering accent, but could not raise his eyes. " 'And thou must die!' This is your thought " her voice grew tremu-
—
hand tremble,
lous, nay, Paul felt the
must
true, I
But— " and
die.
as
it
touched his shoulder
Destiny
is
How
—
" It
is
her voice grew firm and strong again,
breaking in distinct emphasis on the listener's ear
accomplished
—
not until
our Fate
is
—
"
But not
until
my
made
the
fulfilled!"
the triumph of her voice pierced the listener's ear, and.
blood dance in his veins " Life
power.
Shall
the goblet as
we
before us, Paul, a goblet filled to the brim with love, with
is
raise
we
refuse to drink
Paul, ay, to the last drop, because
it,
held by a skeleton hand, or dash
is
it
to
our
lips,
it
Death stands mocking
down, untasted, because, as
he gives the cup?"
Radiant with beauty, she glowed before him, her eyes olive
"
full
of light, her
cheek glowing with fresh bloom.
Do
Come, Paul.
not falter now.
injunction of the aged
man
—
decides your fate and mine.
She
laid
To your
The
task.
oath
these are but a part of the ordeal,
—
the
which
Arise and seek your Destiny!"
her hand upon his arm, yes, upon the key clenched in his
right hand.
"
I
am
lost
—
I
tremble
— there are Phantom
forms before
my
eyes, and
strange music, like a chorus of angel's songs and the laughter of fiends, rings without ceasing in
"Do you
falter?
my
ears
—
Up, and know your
fate.
It is
from the Past and the Future, the shadows will
from the dawning day. Sealed Chamber, and
Pass the threshold
— Paul— canst
the hour, Paul, roll aside,
—know
thou not read
the
my
when,
as a mist
mystery of the
thought ere
it
is
spoken " Speak!" in her eyes
Starting from his seat, Paul endeavored to read her
meaning
"
"
PAUL ARDENHEIM
198
"This room
shall
be our Bridal Chamber," whispered the Wizard's
daughter.
"And
OR,
;
the hour of our Bridal
—" When you have passed Sealed Chamber — of
— " Paul advanced the Ordeal.
a single step.
will await
I
you
at the thresh-
the
old
" Our Bridal*" echoed Paul, and grasping the
room, and in an instant stood
light,
he hurried from
his
in the corridor again
CHAPTER NINETEENTH. THE THRESHOLD OF THE SEALED CHAMBER.
was not
It
new
life,
the
moment
for
calm thought,
for
every vein swelled with
and the heart within him throbbed with such violence,
that
even
in the cold corridor, he panted for breath, for air.
"
I
will dare the worst, for
you
—"
was
his voice
indistinct, hoarse
.with emotion.
With
a trembling
hand he placed the key
in the lock.
The Wizard's
daughter regarded his ghost-like face with a look of glowing triumph. " Enter," she softly whispered
Future
— " Enter
and learn the Past and the
!"
Paul turned the key
—the door
began
to
recede
—
the
passed
through the crevice, almost extinguished the
seemed
tainted with the odor of the dead;
it
heavy light.
which That air
air
resembled a blast from the
unclosed jaws of a charnel. The Wizard's daughter regarded him with an expanded eye, and love
and curiosity mingled
in the expression of her beautiful face.
you falter now?" she said. There was a soft footstep, and a gentle hand raised the hand of the woman from the neck of Paul. Between them glided a young girl, who
"Do
gathered a dark mantle around her white dress, and with her loosened hair resting in a golden
shower upon her shoulders, and her
eyes distended by a look of vague alarm, she gazed
voluptuous woman,
now
in the
now
clear blue
in the face of the
ashen visage of Paul.
"Catherine!" and he turned away from the innocence and angel-like purity of his sister's face.
"Paul," exclaimed the pure girl, in tones whose calm serenity by no means resembled the impetuous accents of the dark-haired woman "You stand on the threshold of the Sealed Chamber
—
—
"
"
"
"
;
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. There was a sad reproof
in her gentle eyes.
—what know you of
"
The Sealed Chamber
"
Do you frown upon me, at his
of breaking that
vow
feet, I
—
More darkly swelled
its
mystery?"
Are you angry with your sister? An sleep by the sound of father's voice, I saw
Paul
my
hour ago, aroused from
you kneeling
199
?
—O, Paul, you do not dream
heard your vow.
upon
the serpentine vein
the
forehead of the
Wizard's daughter, as she beheld the pure face of Catherine, holy emotion, as she clung "
He
not your father," she cried
is
Future darker even than the Past
The mild
fired
with a
her Brother's neck.
to
face of Catherine
—
— " He
has in reserve for you a
was turned toward the beautiful woman She shrunk trembling from
her blue eyes shone with wonder and alarm. the light of her flashing eyes.
— me with clasping Paul " whispered —"Can be? You stand on threshold of the Sealed Chamber, about your oath " Catherine— Catherine — "groaned Paul, hand which grasped " am key nerveless by tempted — my — not my own " This scene
the sister,
terror,
fills
her brother's wrist
the
it
!"
to violate
as the
the
his side.
fell
He hair,
will
terribly
I
turned wildly from that face, whose blue eyes,
symbolized a pure and child-like soul,
to
fair skin,
is
and golden
the dark cheek, flashing
eyes, and jet-black hair, which embodied the idea of a proud and voluptu-
ous It
spirit.
was
moment
the eventful
Peace from God,
as
of his Fate; the calm love which
he looked upon his
sister's face,
came
like
contended with the
frenzy of passion which fired every vein, as his glance encountered the
gaze of the dark-haired
—
"
Come, Paul beautiful by your
to
woman.
your own room
Paul surrendered his hand
away from
—
it is
an Evil Angel that stands so
side." to the grasp of his sister,
and turned his face
the door.
The eyes
was With one proud step she advanced, her flashing eyes and wildly floating hair, making her look like the spirit of some of the Wizard's daughter glared with a brightness that
almost preternatural.
feverish
dream
;
she grasped his wrist, and pointed to the door, while the
dark vein swelled more distinctly from her
"You white
teeth, until the
blood started—"
and you are afraid to stand face
upon me,
fair
forehead.
are afraid!" she sneered, pressing her nether-lip beneath her
that I ever
The door
sank so low, even
is
open, the threshold free,
with your Destiny!
to face
in
my
O, shame
thoughts, as to bestow
my
upon a coward heart like thine!" " Your hand from my neck, sister," shrieked Paul, maddened by the look of the proud maiden " There is no time for thought. I must go on
love
—
—
"
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
200
Grasping the
light,
which showed
his convulsed countenance in every
lineament, he dashed over the threshold of the Sealed Chamber.
The
door closed behind him, and
all
was darkness
in the corridor.
"Father!" shrieked Catherine, but there was a firm hand upon her mouth, a frenzied arm around her neck. " Be
Catherine
still,
strange
woman. "It
therefore, or
—"
—
said the fierce though tremulous voice of the
the dread
is
moment of your
Catherine struggled but feebly, as that arm
while the firm hand rested upon her
brother's fate; be silent
wound
closer about her neck,
lips.
" Or, if you must speak, let every word take the form of a prayer. Kneel and beseech the Angels to guide your Brother in his lone commufate !"
nion with his
was thick night
All
in the corridor.
ing eyes of the strange
gathered her in a
woman, but she
"
I
will be silent," faltered the Sister
my
lost
her writhing heart, as the arm
embrace, and trembled as the fevered breath
stifling
fanned her cheek.
ness and pray for
Catherine could not see the burnfelt
—"
kneel here in the dark-
I will
Brother!"
The
strange woman's arm no longer entwined her neck. ^ Catherine sank on her knees, and folding her arms, looked up to
Even through
heaven. ©ut
arms
its
What pen
gloom and darkness, her pure soul reached
the
God.
to
there to picture the horror of that
is
moment
to the
Wizard's
daughter.
While her bosom bounded beneath her clasped hands, she muttered
in
a half-coherent tone, her doubts and hopes mingling in strange confusion:
"
He
come
will
forth,
with joy on his noble forehead * * * * Have
shame
advised him to his ruin and steep
pathway of ambition
his * * * *
—
I
A
terrible
he will be noble, and
;
—should cry —
doubt
hear no sound * * * a
* * *
No
Better
answer
die
!
Ah,
tnis
I
we
will
mount
will kill
—a
me
than be
—
I
the
shall be his bride,
the voice deceive * * * * All is
silence
thousand deaths
a
* * * * Together
still
groan * * # Paul! Paul! I
can endure
tortured
it
no longer.
by suspense so hor-
rible !"
And
while the voluptuous
girl
murmured her hopes and
tremulous and broken, the pure Sister kneeling at her
Heaven
The
in a
fears, in accents feet,
prayed
to
calm voice.
voice of the old clock rolled through the Block-house, and "Five!"
pealed from the
bell.
There was no sound within the Sealed Chamber; Catherine ceased to
pray, and bent her head against
its
panels, but could not hear
the
slightest echo.
The proud
girl too,
sweeping her hair aside from her
face, listened in
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON.
203
voiceless agony, listened for the accent of her lover's voice, tor the echo All
of his step.
"Paul!"
was
still.
cried the gentle voice of Catherine.
u Paul !" spoke the trembling accent of the Wizard's daughter.
No
answer
At
last there
woman
haired It
was
know "A It
—
Within the Sealed Chamber silence and mystery in the it was an hour of unutterable anguish.
!
eorridor darkness and suspense
was a sound
—
— Catherine
uttered a prayer, and the dark-
an exclamation of joy.
groan of agony, and yet they were glad
a
that he lived
footstep
was a
—he comes — "
to
hear
Glad
it.
to
!
footstep, but
cried the Wizard's daughter.
unsteady and irregular as that of a
man who,
bewildered by wine, reels from the hot air of the revel, into the cool, fresh
atmosphere of dawn.
The door
unclosed, and Paul Ardenheim appeared on the threshold.
one hand the
light, in the oftier the
In
key.
Even
Catherine sank on the floor with a cry of horror.
the
woman
with dark hair and proudly voluptuous bosom, staggered backward, and
She buried
leaned for support against the opposite wall of the corridor.
her face in her hands, while the insensible form of Catherine lay at her feet.
The
Ardenheim thrilled the Wizard's daughter with a feelbeyond all power of language to define or analyze. She heard the key turn in the lock, but could not raise her face from face of Paul
ing of horror,
—
He was passing near her echoes— yet, winding the hair about her her hands.
his wild unsteady step
face,
awoke
the
she shrunk closer to the wall,
afraid of his touch.
He was gone — she heard the echo of footstep —shuddering she turned her face over her shoulder. his
hurried along
;
his
back was toward her
;
far
the light
down
the corridor
She saw him as he shone over his long
dark hair, but did not reveal his face.
He was
near the end of the corridor
the face of the old clock,
and a white-haired
when
man came
— she saw the
forth
upon was heard,
light shining
the sound of an opening door
and stood in the path of Paul Arden-
heim. " Back, old
man !" The Wizard's daughter heard the voice, saw the exall was darkness. The light had been hurled to the floor.
tended arm, and
By
its
last
gleam, she beheld the old man's white hairs waving round
his forehead, as
he tottered backward, while his face glowed redly for a dull sound he fell.
moment, and then with a
— PAUL ARDENHEIM
202
—
OR,
;
CHAPTER TWENTIETH. THE, CORSE OF MADELINE.
"Very
beautiful !" said the
Wizard
—" Even
in the last
moment, when
the soul hangs fluttering on the motionless lips !"
His voice, deepened by enthusiasm, awoke the echoes of the subterranean vault.
The
pale spiritual light, shining from the aperture in the top of the altar,
bathed his face in
rays, while
its
all
around was shadowy, and the farther
corners of the cell were wrapt in thick darkness. In that light, his features were
marked and impressive.
with age and care, made his face appear as though
it
His form bending
rested in the centre
Covered with wrinkles, the lines deeply traced, and the high forehead surmounted by a black skull-cap, from which the
of his shrunken chest.
hair escaped in straight flakes of silvery whiteness, the face of Isaac
Behme
Van
bore the stamp of a fanaticism, that was to terminate only with
—
The eyes in color now blue, now deepening into gray were expanded beneath the white brow, with a wild, unearthly stare.
his existence.
Around Clad
his thin lips trembled a smile of inexpressible joy. in a loosely flowing
upon
fingers, clasped
gown, with
his pale hands, with long attenuated
man
his breast, the old
stood near the altar; and as
the light imparted a rosy flush, his face appeared ten years younger; but
when it cast a glare of faint summoned to his task of evil, His eyes, dilating "
It
was
any thing but a with rapture, were downcast like
a brave thought, right brave,
a burst of shrill
her form upon
laughter—"
it,
Demon
azure, he looked like a phantom, a
—
To
by
my
living
soul !" he
man.
murmured, with
use the horse of friend Dorfner, and place
and thus convey her
—Dorfner
to
my home
!
The
horse
I
turned
wonder much when he seeks Wherefore did the Huntsman strike that blow and his horse to-morrow! Jealousy, I ween 'Twas a good star that led pierce her naked breast? me to her side, just as the hunter struck the blow and fled, with the bloody But I must not delay— look! knife in his hand— a most propitious star
down
the path
by
the stream
—
will
—
!
How
the soul flutters as
Near the
altar a
it is
about
to
take
its flight
!"
rough pine board was placed, supported by two rudely
constructed tressels.
On were
this
board was laid the form of a naked woman, whose outlines
distinctly defined,
amid the shadows of the
vault.
The
light
shone
mildly over the image of sinless purity, revealing the hands stretched by the side, the limbs disposed in the serene attitude of the grave, the face
—
—
!
!
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON.
203
wearing a calm smile, the eyelids closed, and the colorless cheeks relieved A soft brown hair, which descended over the neck and shoulders.
by
single lock strayed over the edge of the board It
was
like a
under the chisel of some inspired sculptor
The
was
face
and dangled on the
floor.
form of pure white marble, warming into heavenly
— so
fair,
life,
so pale, so beautiful
burned in the centre
pale, but a single spot of intense red
of each cheek, like a rose-bud peeping from the snow.
Beneath the bosom was a hideous stain of crimson-r-it was blood flowing from a fatal
wound, and spreading imperceptibly over the rough board
on which the unconscious form was
Poor Madeline There may have been no mercy gloated
upon your half-revealed
upon your uncovered form icy glare
Her
—
is
laid.
in the
eye of your Seducer, when he
eye
breast, but the cold
there
any thing of pity
now
that
gazes
and
in that fixed
?
moves
nether-lip
gently, almost imperceptibly, and a slight pulsa-
tion stirs the bleeding breast.
" She lives
warm from
The
!
great Secret
is
within
my
grasp
4
one drop of blood,
me
the heart of a tempted but sinless maiden,' will reward
these gray hairs
— for the
now simmering
within the
glorious thought
of twenty-one years,
toil
— and ripen the
Elixir of Immortal Life.
altar, into the
Blessed be the Star that shines upon
!
me
for
liquid, It is
a
at this still
hour!"
which covered the lower part of Madeline's became rigid in every outline as he pursued
Isaac examined the wound, breast with blood
his face
;
his painful scrutiny.
The wound is not fatal!" he said, with an accent of profound regret The knife glanced aside. The hand that struck the blow was tremulous "
"
— with a
little
care, the
maiden might recover, and go
forth in
youth and
loveliness again."
Isaac
was
silent.
His brow became corrugated, his mouth distorted
by an almost grotesque grimace. gerous thoughts.
" Shall I falter
He was now
?
occupied with dark and dan-
When my
footstep
my
threshold of Eden, and the fruit of Immortal Life within
Murder * * * scorn, the law consign me curse my name. Yet, with yet * * * a
knowledge life,
—
to
a single
the world to
would cover
the sacrifice of this one
— now
fluttering
on these
to
lips
on the
And
gray hairs with
the gibbet * * * not a child
thousands, and raise mankind life
my
is
grasp?
life, I
but would
may
give
life,
Only a between me
godlike power.
—only
this,
and Eternal Youth!"
More dark and singular grew the expression of Isaac's face. His downdrawn brows almost concealed the cold, icy glare of his eyes his mouth worked convulsively. ;
He
glanced over the unconscious form, and saw the
bosom swelling
— PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
204
warm
with the
first
began
spread into perfect bloom.
to
throb of returning
life,
"I will get my scalpel," said Isaac— " no time to be lost !"
while the rose-bud on the cheek
It is in
the
Tower.
There
is
Not once did he pause to contemplate the actual dangers of his position. Might not the body of Madeline be traced to his home, and the guilt of Murder be laid upon his gray hairs ? This might occur before an another hour, but the old
" There
is
man
no time
slowly, and the rose-bud
and from the
floor
moment pause to think of it. be lost !" he said, and while the bosom throbbed
did not for a to
bloomed
into a ripe flower, he hurried along the
cell.
Five minutes elapsed ere the sound of his returning step aroused the echoes of the vault. " The day is breaking, the day whose setting sun shall shine upon the
brow of an immortal being!" Thus muttering, the old man came from the gloom toward the altar, whose light suddenly changed from soft red to faint azure
"
—invested
Too much
life,
—
his agitated face
with an unearthly glare.
time has been lost already
it is
but the sacrifice of a
and—"
Brandishing a scalpel or dissecting-knife in his upraised hand, he stood
which the
in the pale blue light again, beside the altar in that, in the
fire,
out, or
even been dimmed by the
The
fire
burned
;
the
long watch of a lifetime, had never once gone
sacred
loss of
one pure ray.
cry of anguish which came from Isaac lips would have pierced a
heart of stone.
There was the rough board, stained with a small pool of blood, but the body of Madeline was gone. The Wizard's uplifted arm fell by his side his face betrayed the deathlike stupor which palsied his reason, and crushed his stern fanaticism ;
into a dull apathy.
He
pressed his hands upon the board, and stained his fingers in the
blood " It
is
a delusion.
footstep but
mine and
old of this vault
it
is
here, but
David the
mine eyesight
With mad
cannot, cannot have been taken
dim.
No
away by human
shrieks, gestures
lost to sight in the
as frantic, the
old
dark corners of the place,
man now
ran to and
—
fro,
tearing his thin
locks, while the light disclosed his horror-stricken features. all
is
Idiot has ever crossed the thresh-
!"
hands
now
—
The body that of
In vain were
wounded was nowhere to be seen. How had she disappeared ? Whose hands had borne her form from the his frantic cries, in vain his earnest search
girl
vault
?
the
body of
the
—
'
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON.
205
Isaac hurried from the place, while the dark passages echoed his frantic cries.
was the work of a moment
It
ridor at the head of the
ascend the stairway and attain
to
The
the ground-floor of the mansion.
lantern shone dimly from the cor-
main stairway.
Without an
instant's delay, Isaac
hastened up the stairway, and reached the door of his daughter's room.
He listened for a moment, pushed it open, and crossed the threshold. The hanging lamp shed a faint light over the room, glimmering on
the
surface of the mirror, and imparting a grotesque outline to the curtains
of the bed.
For
moment
a
his
A
Isaac bent his head and listened.
death-like stillness
he dashed aside the hangings and extended hand through the shadows. That withered hand rested upon a warm
Rushing
reigned.
to the bed,
cheek, and the regular breathing of an untroubled sleeper
man's
the old
"
It
well
is
came gently
to
ear.
My
!
she cannot by any chance
daughter slumbers
"
have
With
the sentence unfinished, the old
man
turned away, and hurried
from the room, closing the door with a sudden crash. Scarcely had the echo of his footsteps died away,
amid the cumbrous hangings, and, by the eyes and
" it
He
fair
does not suspect
How
would burst.
hall,
moment
only a
my
since, I
Ah
absence
shuddered,
I
a face appeared
vein,
My heart
!
large lustrous
were seen. throbs as though
standing in the darkness of the
as,
saw him go down
into the secret cells of the
!"
mansion
And
by a swollen
forehead, darkened
when
faint light, the
the Wizard's daughter, attired in her velvet robe, with the hood
drawn over her
"Had
hair, rose
from the bed, and slowly paced the
moment
floor.
—
would have been discovered O, it is indeed fortunate that I returned in time to fling myself beneath the coverlet, Had I been absent, when his exere my father came to my bedside " tended hand sought to press my cheek The proud girl shuddered, for there was something in the icy manner I
been
a
later, all
!
and lonely
of the old man, which impressed her heart
life
more with awe
than love.
Then,
floor,
she suffered her dark hair to
shoulders, while her
thoughts, only half-uttered,
as she
over her
paced the
float loosely
centred
still
upon her lover
He
"Paul!
will
come
—perchance
could unravel the mystery of that to the floor
?
I
cannot
She shuddered '•
at the
In the darkness
woods that he
to
my
home.
tell, for
fatal
within
room
his face
!
—
—
the hour would that I Did he strike the old man
memory.
I left
the Block-house, and hurried through the silent
And Paul
— where
were here, his hand linked
in
does he wander
mine, his
lip
now
Would
?
upon mine own
!
Then,
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
206
midst of our dream of love,
we would
even
in the
ture,
and read the bright landscape of the coming years, with the eye of
plan the glorious Fu-
Prophecy."
Do
not smile at the passionate extravagance of the proud
reared from infancy in the silence of these forests siast father
—
air, to
his face with the
Wild
mad
—has been
taught,
by
a Voice that
love the mysterious Paul of Ardenheim, to invest idolatry of a boundless passion
in her passion, extravagant in
beautiful,
and not
from the great world
afar
speaks from the
who,
girl,
— alone with her enthu-
her words, she
!
is
yet surpassingly
and might walk among the coronetted dames of a royal court, fairest of them all. was firmly clenched. Her small
abashed amid the noblest or the
feel
One hand
rested
upon her bosom
—
it
The
foot beat the floor with a nervous motion. in black distinctness
serpentine vein started
from her forehead, and, with her hair
floating along
her olive cheeks, she stood in the centre of her chamber, near the
light,
some dread though beautiful Angel. " What means this singular agitation of my father ? He cannot no Yet wherefore seek my chamber at the dead of night? It was but no like a statue of
—
!
!
an impulse of fatherly love.
She crossed to the
the
!
Will he ever return?"
which added a wild charm
voluptuous beauty of her shape, and, standing in the casement, saw
first
The
— Paul
the floor with that proud step,
blush of the coming day, glowing softly over the dark woods.
dawn
rays of the lamp and the flush of the
light at
mingled, and created a
once uncertain and spectral.
" Hast thou beheld
him
?" a low, musical voice, started the Wizard's
daughter from her reveries. It is
the Voice
—"
" Did he enter the Sealed Future in the face ?"
He
Chamber
Had he
?
"I did
—"
forth again ?"
she covered her face with her hands, and trembled
memory of that Face. " Where is he now ?" "I know not Speak to me and answer !
question, yours to reply.
my
Hast thou not spoken
soul with an idle delusion
some good Angel who watches over tell
me
at
he now, It
was
?
room
this
?
at the
brow darkened
— "It
falsely
is
my
turn to
Hast thou not
?
If thou art indeed a voice
the strange course of
once the mystery of that Sealed Chamber
awful countenance is
!" and, with her
a frown, the girl advanced to the centre of the
cheated
have beheld him.'
I
the firmness to look the
entered the Sealed Chamber," exclaimed the Wizard's child.
"Didst thou see him come
by
—"
ejaculated the ambitious girl
!
my
then
Wherefore
that
Where with mine own?"
wherefore the arm extended and the blow
Paul of Ardenheim, whose
life is
a singular thing to see the proud
girl,
linked
from
life,
?
gazing upon the vacant
—— THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON.
207 «
as she thus boldly questioned the
air,
Voice whose source ^as
invisible,
whose purpose incomprehensible There was a pause no answer came. The Wizard's daughter placed her hand upon her forehead, and with ;
her finger pressed the swollen vein. " All will be made known to thee in time !"
was
the response of the
Voice, uttered in a tone of profound sadness. "
Ah
world,
—
a delusion.
it is
am
I
read of madness
—am
I
Yes, reared afar from the
dreaming.
have become the victim of
I
my own
fancies.
I
have oftentimes
not a wretched maniac, an object of pity and
loathing?" "
Thou
Be
patient,
trate the recesses of
This
of idle frenzy, but the child of a glorious
art not the victim
Destiny.
and
last question, uttered in a tone
!"
ever dared to pene-
thy father's most secret cell?"
emotion, startled the beautiful
"Never
Hast thou
will be well.
all
girl,
that
seemed
affected
by sudden
with involuntary surprise.
she replied.
" Hast thou not this very night crossed the sacred threshold of that cell ? Pause and reflect. upon your answer."
"I have never crossed
Do
not speak falsely, for more than
that
life
depends
threshold—" was the firm answer of the
wondering maiden.
The Voice was heard no more. While
the kiss of
day grew rosier on the eastern sky, the
girl
remained
motionless and pale in the centre of her chamber, listening in speechless
no sound awoke the echoes. All was sml and breathless. Her face was very pale, the serpentine vein upon her forehead very dark and distinct, as she turned toward her
intensity for the accents of that Voice, but
couch.-
Meanwhile, the Wizard,
after a fruitless
search through every nook and
recess of his mansion, returned again to the silence his earth-hidden cell.
dark form crouching
"The
Idiot here
!
Advancing
to the altar,
and dim radiance of
he started as he beheld a
at his feet.
Wretch
!
Hast thou dared
to cross this threshold
unbidden ?"
He spurned " Arise, and # girl ?"
While
the
hunchback with his
answer me!
his thin features
foot
Didst thou remove the body of the dead
glowed with rage, he gazed upon the shapeless
form of the Deformed, and once more pressed his foot upon his neck. Black David slowly rose, and with the tangled hair drooping over his features, confronted the old
"
Eh
!
man.
Measter?" he muttered— "Dost touch Black David with thy foot?
—
—
"
""
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
205 Art angry, Measter?
arm
Have
a care
— Black David's brain
Measter must not strike him
strong.
is
The Wizard saw
is
thick
—but
his
in anger."
the angry light of the hunchback's eye, and took him
kindly by the hand
"Pardon, David, pardon
my
life
David
crushed
is
—
it
grieves
am
1
The
sore distressed.
but you cannot comprehend me.
me
that
was angry with you
I
great hope of
Speak
— speak,
to
my
Didst thou remove the body of the dead
woman?
hast hidden
Ha, ha, you merry knave
it,
and
shall be forgotten.
all
thought you would frighten your old master— is
it
me where
Tell
me,
friend.
thou
You
!
so?"
"Dead body?" growled Black David— "I know nothing
of your dead was asleep and thou didst spurn me with 'ee foot Sullenly the Deformed turned away, leaving the old man alone by the
bodies.
altar.
"He
—
—
I
has not taken her
away
—"
muttered Isaac— "It
seen that the poor idiot has had no part in this deed
—
plainly to be
is
And while
the Wizard, standing near the altar, murmured these words, Deformed leaned against one of the pillars of the vault, and placed his
the
hands upon his face
"This hope has not whither.
—
failed
tell
Ah!
His daughter, too I
The body
me.
Isaac cannot
— his
of Madeline
anguish
is
gone
—I
know
too deep to be feigned.
is
that in planning so
much
of evil
to
others,
only bring evil to myself!" Isaac heard the
voice of the Deformed, and, turning from the altar,
exclaimed " Come hither, Black David. Art angry with me ?" He took the hand of the hunchback within his own, and
toward the
"Why
lid
him
light.
man, dost thou cherish malice
saw "Dost weep?
gled hair, he
Again
?
Hah
me that I was angered with thee. A scalding tear fell on his hand
!
What
I tell is this
thee that
it
— a tear —
grieves
!
spoke; and even through the tanhunchback was bathed in moisture.
as he
that the face of the
Art angry with
me
again repeated the old man,
still?"
an expression of compassion softening his rigid lineaments.
But the Deformed dashed of the
The
his
hand
aside,
and glided
into the
shadows
cell.
silence
which ensued was scarcely broken by a sound, while half The pale face of the Wizard looked haggard and spec-
an hour elapsed. tral
by
the light of the altar-flame.
He
stood clasping his hands and
'gazing vacantly toward the light, every lineament impressed with despair.
The Deformed was utterance or for tears,
At
last a
lost in the
was buried
sound disturbed the
shadows
in the
;
his sorrow, too
profound gloom of the
stillness
Its
deep
for
cell.
unearthly emphasis came
through closed doors and thick walls, and broke upon the silence of the
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. cell, like
was
Low,
uttered.
walls
;
it
man, choked by the hand of a foe
the groan of a dying
which pressed the white
seemed
endued with
life
\nd smothered
lips
Wizard
as though the old
The Wizard's daughter approached suffered the light to penetrate the
Very beautiful she looked
name of Paul upon her
lips,
no ray of
ere
it
mansion was suddenly its
heart.
Parting the curtains, she
the bed.
her robe of velvet and
With
stream freely over her bosom.
to
a hand
gloom which hung over her couch.
as she laid aside
and suffered the dark hair
;
life,
sound pierced the thick
though he heard the throbbings of
as
curtains, so .that
the last cry of
muttering, that
indistinct
to the
;
209
fur,
the
she sank upon the pillow, drawing close the light
might break the gloom of the sacred
retreat.
Soon she resigned herself to slumber but in her slumber there came dream of a shadowy path, leading far down into the nooks of a summer wood. There were threads of sunshine quivering over the sod flowers ;
a
;
peeped from the vines that trees,
and
birds,
among the branches the murmur woven together, fell on her senses like
trailed
and streams,
blessing of good
angels.
;
But suddenly* from
bling from the vines, overarched her
the
flowers which, trem-
way with bloom and
jected the head and fangs of a beautiful serpent.
of the
She
fragrance, pro-
started
away with
drew her near and nearer to the snake, whose skin of bright green was varied by drops of gojd. A dreamy music issued from its expanded jaws there was a strange fascination in horror, but an inexplicable fascination
;
its
eyes.
Unable
to
advance or recede, she stood spell-bound, when the
serpent sprang from the leaves, and buried
saw
its
fangs in her bosom.
She
the blood, she felt the coil of the snake about her neck, and
The dream was pillow, with her
gone, but in
its
felt
move;
the
a hand
upon
Her blood grew
her breast, and heard the sound of deep-drawn breath.
cold; she could not speak or
Buried in the
place, a terrible reality.
couch shrouded by the hangings, she
overwhelming
terror held her
dumb.
The hand was for air, as
there
— she
heard the deep-drawn breath
though the chamber was
filled
— and
panted*
with the atmosphere of pesti-
lence.
She would have given the world for the power to move or speak; there was something fearful in the darkness which encompassed her, in the cold hand which pressed her bosom,
in
keard distinctly through the stillness.
deep-drawn breath which was Her senses were deadened by a
the
sudden stupor, which, while
it left her without speech or motion, also left her painfully conscious of the cold hand laid upon her breast. * * * *
By
a violent effort, she
dark in her chamber. the light of the
dashed aside the curtains of her bed
The
curtains, closed over the
—
all was window, shut out
dawning day; the hanging lamp was extinguished. 14
As
—" PAUL ARDENHEIM;
210
she rose in the couch, the
OR,
hand which had rested upon her bosom,
she was nerved by despair and terror
pressed her neck
— with
one
frenzied motion, she sprang from the bed.
Standing thus in the shadows of her chamber, her form, only covered, quivering with cold, she gazed toward the bed,
were but
faintly distinguishable,
sound of deep-drawn breath.
and listened
She heard
it
that
for
once more
whose
half-
outlines
almost inaudible
—
seemed
it
like
the gasping of a death-stricken man.
Then
her terror found utterance in a shriek which pierced every nook
and chamber of the old mansion.
Trembling
in the centre of the
toward the window, the
to move toward the bed or dawn growing stronger every mo-
room, afraid
light of the
ment, she looked fixedly toward the bed.
Was
it
a fancy
Did she
?
deed behold a white arm extended from the shadows of of the bed
There came
—
it
a light, a red light,
in-
?
somewhat obscured by heavy smoke,
flashed from the opened door, and disclosed that half-naked form, the
face unnaturally pale
The maiden
and the eyes bright with preternatural
fear.
turned toward the door, and by the sudden light beheld the
pale visage of her father, glowing in every line with singular triumph.
Over
his shoulder appeared the face of the
Deformed, the eyes shining
with supernatural lustre from the shadows of the matted hair.
And
then, turning her gaze from the door, as she beheld the eyes of
her father an^l the Deformed enchained by
Maiden beheld spectre
—not
some
object near her, the
the image of Paul Ardenheim, nor yet
summoned by blasphemous
rites
some hideous
from the shadows of the Other
World. It
was a naked form, with arms folded over
the blood-stained breast,
with brown hair waving freely, in glossy curls, over the white shoulders;
eyes uplifted, wet with a voice broken
" Save It
me
!
by
tears,
gazed
in the face of the
Wizard's
child,
the very intensity of fear, thrilled on the silence
Save
was Madeline,
me the
For I have no friend, no hope but Orphan Girl of Wissahikon. !
END OF BOOK
FIRST.
in
you
—
and
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON.
211
EPISODE. FROM JANUARY, 1775, TO JUNE, 1777.
Two
The Manuscripts from which
years pass away.
this history is
taken have not a word to say in regard to the period that elapsed from the
A shadow rests first of January, 1775, until some time in June, 1777. upon the history of the Wissahikon during that period a shadow unbroken by a solitary ray. Not a word of the fate of Paul, nor of the Wizard's child, nor of Madeline, the orphan girl,— there is silence and night upon the Wissahikon, while these years pass away.
—
The Manuscript speaks 1774
but after that night
;
there
is
in full
—so
a blank until June, 1777.
are to take
From
and
terrible details of the last night of
crowded with incident and
up again the broken thread of our the
but in relation to the American Continent
Two
years and six months
man
!
more
— who
is
over,
we
shall dare write
Wissahikon and
its
people,
traffic
freezes
?
— In times of peace, when
into a dull torpor, or only excites the soul
into a feverish lust for gold, this space of time
event
—
narrative.
the 1st of January, 1775, to June, 1777,
the history of that time, not in regard to
every noble pulsation of
fate
therefore in June, 1777, that
It is
might pass, without one
glorious than a rise in the price of dry-goods, or one thought
higher than the cobwebs of the counting-house.
was no time for mere men of It was the time of men epoch of deeds inspired by God. But
this
politicians.
When
traffic,
nor was
it
an age for puny
the age of noble thoughts
;
the year 1775 began, a Continent lay trembling in suspense,
happiness or
The
;
its
ruin hanging
destiny of three
upon
the changes of a
millions, the
fate
crowned
the
its
Idiot's health.
of hundreds of millions, yet
unborn, depended upon the health of an Idiot.
It
looks absurd, but
it
is true.
Behold him, ranging the
half-lighted corridor of
yonder palace,
receding forehead impressed with the curse which hangs his
upon
his
his race,
eye glassy and vacant, his nether-lip trembling in a meaningless
—
;
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
212
There
smile.
beautiful
are
on those
pictures
walls
lofty
;
the light
streams through windows which are shadowed by curtains of silk and gold
before and behind the wandering Idiot are ranges of lofty chambers,
;
furnished with every thing that can please a royal eye, or
wake
a royal
soul from the torpor of satiety into one quick pulse of sensation.
There
Royalty
is
the sunshine
very atmosphere
in the
and the Idiot wandering from room
King of England
— King of
the fate of America, and
crowned
Is the
army
Idiot cheerful to-day
America
he gloomy
Is
room, from corridor
to
Then
?
developed
reason
by
encircled
hurried over the waters, to crush the three
is
and slavery.
the last prescription of the royal physician failed
to
and
to
phantoms
woe to Ireland commands of this poor
America
to the
!
with his crown, than the
hurry
forms
grotesque
in
itself
a throng of hideous
Then woe obedience
the Arbiter of
a few guineas are given
creeping over the rich carpet at his
reptiles
;
;
to corridor, is
!
quicken his blood, and clear the fog of his brain
to
his
in
kennels near his palace gates, and an
in the
into silence
Has
?
World
the eighth part of the
of licensed cut-throats
millions of
Royalty glares upon him
three millions of people
its
who clamor
beggars
to the
;
broods in the silence of those great and shadowy rooms
it
;
feet,
Has the curse of Does he see foul or behold himself
?
woe
!
?
?
to
wretch,
Man
vilest leper of St. Giles
For at once, in more miserable
!
who
is
with his rags, armies
crushing into dust, into blood, the hopes of millions of
fro,
mankind.
The
Ministers of State are
chamber fall
;
near the door of the Idiot's
listening
Upon
they are awaiting for his commands.
from his
lips,
hangs the
the words
which
of England, Ireland, Scotland, America;
fate
the fate of one-eighth of the entire globe.
For he from age
is
to
King
King.
Pursued by the curse which has descended
!
age upon his race
frightened in his royal chambers
;
by
the
phantoms of a maniac's frenzy afraid of the motes that float in the sun and the drivelling of afraid of the shadow on the wall, he is yet a King his Idiot's lip is law and fate to some hundred millions of souls. ;
;
Beautiful picture of the divine right of Kings
These
fits
possess the Monarch, are
privacy
knOwn only
;
Yet he
is
!
of frenzy, this torpor of idiotic vacancy,
to
known only some nine or
God human
King, by Grace of
and murder, and
maim
to the
the
few
who
which by turns
are admitted to his
ten persons in a hundred millions.
too,
commissioned by Heaven
race, to convert
to tax,
whole nations
into
sepulchres, and drain the life-blood from a million hearts.
And lime In
yet they
in the all
tell
us that there
is
no beauty
atmosphere inhaled by Kings
the pages of history, there is no picture
compare with
this solitary
Fact:
in Royalty, nothing sub-
!
which
for a
moment
will
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON.
213
In 1775, George, the grandson of George the Second,
England
that
;
to
is
say,
King of England, Scotland,
was King of
Ireland, America,
He was thirty-eight years of age. He was subject to now threatened with madness, now moments of unutterable gloom torpid with blank idiocy. Of this fact, his subjects knew nothing if a In vague rumor crept abroad, it was crushed at once, as a blasphemy. and India.
;
;
lucid intervals, that is to say, ivhen idiocy quickened for thought, or
an
instant into
madness became for a moment calm, he governed
the eighth
part of the world, and decided the fate of the millions who then existed, and stamped his impress upon the fate of hundreds of millions yet unborn. Is
it
not a beautiful thought
Summon
?
crowd into one page the accumuyou have nothing half so horan Idiot, whose idiocy is unknown to the
the horrors of history
all
lated crimes of a
;
thousand years, and
rible as this solitary fact
world, should decide, of immortal souls
— that
by the
still
drivellings of his idiocy, the fate of millions
souls born of God,
;
as precious in the sight of
Heaven
redeemed by Christ
as the soul of
every one
;
any King
that ever
lived.
O
for a high mass,
chanted by devils, amid the carnage of a
honor of the Divine Right of Kings
in
was
It
Idiot
this
King who,
1775, held in his hand
in
royal pen, agitated by the tremors of
At
command,
his
—under
minute
the
America.
fate of
the leper of the jail and the cut-throat of St. Giles,
the scarlet uniform, took
into all the
lunacy— the
wretch of the factory, and the peasant of the
the starved
assumed
battle-field,
!
details of
Divine Right of the King
murder, and sent over the ocean
among
field
—
all
sword and bayonet, were disciplined
the valleys of the
New
to assert the
World.
Because the people of the New World .refused to pay a ? would not do obeisance to the petty ministers who encircled the petty King? No. This does not comprise the whole truth of the con-
Wherefore
tax, or
test.
It
was, in a word, because King George of England wished to bind
the land of the cial all
New World
domain, subject
Kings
—
Idiots or
The people
to
to his
crown, as his property, his
every impulse of his
Murderers
will,
— who might come
and after
own
espe-
to the caprices
of
him.
of America did not recognise with any favor this idea of the
King. Therefore, roughly clad in the garb of farmer and mechanic, they met the vassals of the King, on a pleasant day in April, 1775, and shot
them
from the shelter of the hedge by the roadside, and confronted them in the centre of the highway, opposing their rude fowling-pieces to the glittering arms of the royal soldiers.
The day was April 19th, and the place was Lexington. The blood, smoking on the roadside and in the fields spoke
to the hearts of millions,
and roused a people
of Lexington,
into arms.
;.
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
214
was on the 10th of May, 1775,
It
band of farmers and mechanics,
that a
with here and there a lawyer or a rich man, assembled in Philadelphia,
and were known
This congress, with pro-
as the Continental Congress.
fessions of love for the King, coupled scorn for his Ministers, and resist-
ance
They were
to his laws.
yet in that twilight which descends upon
the souls of men, just before the daybreak of freedom.
by
ties
Joined
to
England
of ancestry, by the language of Shakspeare and Milton, by English
customs and English laws, they trembled
at the idea
They were afraid of independence. And while the Congress of the New World was came
phia, there
King — in one of
to
of a separate destiny.
in session in Philadel-
Boston another British Army, sent by the British
his lucid intervals perchance
gallant soldiers, Clinton,
— and with
Burgoyne and Howe.
army were
this
This was on the 25th
May, 1775.
of
moving on the were boats upon the waves, and the sub-
But, on a clear starry night in June, there were shadows
.
hill
and along the shore
there
;
dued tread of armed men broke through the all at
Then
stillness.
there was,
;—
once, the peal of musquetry mingled with the hurrah of conflict
were smoke-clouds rolling into the sky, like shrouds for the dead there was fighting on the hill-top, where peasants, behind a bank of there was a mud, levelled whole lines of splendid soldiers into dust there
—
;
brave young man, named Warren,
who
—
grappled the bayonet that stabbed
him, and poured forth his blood upon the grass as a holy oblation unto freedom.
The British were driven back, defeated and mocked by a peasant army, encamped near Boston, on the heights of Bunker Hill. That word, Bunker Hill, coupled with the name of Warren, spoke like the voice of
God
to the
Continental Congress and to the people of the '
Thirteen Provinces.
Blood had been shed
was no time
:
;
Lexington found an echo in Bunker Hill
for hesitation
;
;
there
no thought of submission.
The Congress determined to raise an army. Where should a leader ? The British King had generals of renown, who were skilled
found
shedding blood, perfect in the
art of leading
uniformed slaves
But where should the Continental Congress
Murder.
their peasant
army
to
be in
deeds of
find a leader for
1
There was no time for hesitation, It was a question of awful moment. however, and the eyes of the farmers and mechanics, the rich men and the lawyers, who composed the Continental Congress, were turned
He was
towards one of their number.
His stature was commanding a
man
to
;
a
man
of forty-three years of age.
his face full of energy
and
be remarked in a crowd of ten thousand.
he speak, but his words were concise and bodied an idea, and overwhelmed with
to
its
the point truth
fire.
Not
He was often
did
— every word em-
the hearts of all
who
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. This man, plainly
listened.
215
attired in the garb of a planter,
He
as the Leader of the Continental armies.
was chosen
sat listening to a speech,
which rung in words of fire from the lips of bold John Adams, and the word of the speech was his own name. Covered with blushes, the but soon the people of Thirteen Planter fled from the Hall of Congress last
;
Provinces recognized their champion Planter, and
King George
name
for the first time, the
Then began
New
World, and
the person of this
in
Virginian
one of his lucid intervals
in
—heard,
of George Washington.
epoch of
the
Washington, secluded the
—may be
laid his
The young Commander map of
illustrious deeds.
near Cambridge, surveyed the
in his tent
sword upon
it,
the hilt resting
upon Labra-
dor, while the point touched Patagonia, thus symbolizing the great
of his soul
— the possession of the
purpose
Continent of freemen.
From this camp near Cambridge went, one autumn day, a man who was bold enough to think of the conquest of Canada. He was followed by eleven hundred men. He was determined to traverse three hundred miles of untrodden wilderness with this
ness
ice,
;
snow, trackless ravines, impetuous
and nights of hopeless extremity
—
all
army, and then attack the
little
Gibraltar of America, the rock of Quebec.
He
did traverse the wilder-
torrents,
days of starvation,
these he dared, he and his band of
iron men.
On r the
last night of
1775, he stood on the rock of Quebec, under a
leaden sky, his uniform whitened by the fast-falling snow. the hand a youthful soldier,
bold outlines of his to
meet
in
Quebec
own
whose handsome
visage.
They
face
took
by the
plighted faith together; they swore
On the rock which had borne, Montcalm and Wolfe, the little army
in victory or in death.
not fifteen years before, the corses of
of Continentals prepared to attack and possess Quebec.
was yet
the daybreak
faint
sullenly under rocks of ice,
When
He
was contrasted with
day was
and dark, while the
was whitened by
St.
This was when
Lawrence, heaving
the falling snow.
and the sun shone vividly over the City and rock, covered by frozen snow, there was a mangled body amid five other the
bright,
on Cape Diamond.
corses
It
was
the
wreck of
the youthful soldier,
Richard Montgomery.
There were heaps of dead by the upon the barriers
There was the as he
arm
;
corses and
St.
wounded
Charles
The
attack
dismal stains of blood
soldier of the wilderness, covered with
sank upon the frozen snow, fighting on,
stiffened.
;
dark streets of Quebec.
in the
wounds, and
until his sight
fighting
was dim,
his
His name was Benedict Arnold.
was
glorious, though unsuccesful
possess the town, but they
won
Lexington they added Quebec.
another name.
These names
;
the Americans did not
To Bunker
Hill
and
are greater than armies in
a good cause.
And
all
the while, as the
hand and brain of Washington gave impulse
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
216
to the Continental armies, as battle after battle
added
the
to
George's victims, and the smoke of the conflict ascended
Americans were
the souls of the dead, the
to
fighting, not for
but for a change in the British Ministry.
They were
list
of King
heaven, with
Independence,
still
afraid of that
word, Independence.
While Arnold
fell
covered with wounds, and Montgomery lay a crushed
and bloody image upon the rock of Quebec, there was a another part of the Continent.
was a
battle fighting in
fearful battle.
It
was not a
with rnusquet and cannon, or with scalping-knife and toma-
battle fought
hawk
It
men called up on gory fields, opposed to each upon each other like rabid beasts, in this contest. was a battle fought by one man, his only weapons a quill,
nor were armies of
;
other's throats, and set
No
It
!
some sheets of paper, and a bottle of ink. While Arnold was bleeding in Quebec, garret in
this
man was
sitting
in
a
Philadelphia, surveying certain loose sheets of paper, which
were crowded with the intense workings of his brain for the last six months. From June until December, he had been engaged in this battle; that
is to
say, he had been
embodying upon those loose sheets of paper,
an idea which would work more judgment, more ruin for King George, than
all
the armies of the world.
While the scripts, and,
groan of Montgomery arose to
last
of Quebec, this
man
in the Philadelphia garret
God from
the dark rock
gazed upon his manu-
with a brightening eye, beheld the idea which was
to
con-
quer King George embodied in a single word.
Soon
the
news of Quebec came to Philadelphia, and soon the manuunknown, poured into the alembic of the printing-press, ap-
scripts of the
peared in the shape of a Book.
The name
of that
Book was
Ticonderoga, Lexington, Quebec,
in
the
a Battle. To Bunker Hill, American people now added the
itself
name of the book, " Common Sense." The Idea of that book entered Congress, and spoke to the hearts of the To Jefferson, to great men there, and awed the little men into silence. Adams, to Franklin, to Sherman, and to all who were like them, the idea spoke
in the
still
small voice of a Truth, armed with the omnipotence
of God.
At
last the
Idea fought
embodied forever
On
a calm
in the
summer
its
battle in the hall of
Congress, and
it
became
word, Independence. evening, the 9th of July, 1776, the Continental
encamped near New York, were informed by American Congress had declared these Colonies
troops
their General, that
the
to
be Free and In-
dependent States.
The names grew on
the
scroll
of American glory.
Another name,
enshrining a thought even as body does a soul, was added to Lexington,
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. Bunker
Hill,
The King
Common
Quebec,
Sense.
It
was
name
a
names, and the embodiment of
sult of all the other
all
217 that
was
the re-
—Independence.
of England, in one of his lucid intervals, heard of this word,
New World, and chorused by Pharaoh of a more ancient kingdom,
proclaimed from the Council Hall of the the battle-cries of Armies.
Even
as
grew more blind and drunk with fury, as the hour of God's judgments came near and nearer, so King George vented his royal rage in new mea-
new
sures, It
the
armies,
new
assassinations.
was toward the close of 1776, that the darkest cloud gathered over " Independence" seemed doomed to vanish in Idea of a Nation.
There was ice upon the Delaware, near Trenton. Did one compact mass, and spread a firm pathway from Then the cause of the New World was lost. Upon so shore to shore ? slight a fact hung the destiny of Washington and the cause. For, on the eastern shore of the river, was the British Army, strong in mists of blood.
this ice freeze into
arms, in discipline, very comfortable, with well-spread
tables
and
fine
apparel.
On
the western shore, with a
mob
of half-clad men, was Washington,
with scarce a place in which to lay his head, scarce a roof
To
starving soldiers.
about his camp, was added a sadder and darker phantom
Upon
to shelter his
nakedness and starvation, hovering like spectres
— Treason.
the freezing of the Delaware, therefore, depended the fate of
The
Washington and the cause.
river once frozen
these Britons and Hessians, cozily
encamped
from shore
to shore,
on
in Trenton, will cross
and make an easy prey of the starving mob who skulk along the
the ice,
western
hills.
There was a God
in
Heaven,
at this
dark hour, and Washington did not
His men suffering from hunger and cold, Treason scowling upon his camp, Congress almost hopeless of the cause, Washington did
despair.
He even wished to add another name Quebec, Common £>ense, Independence.
not despair. ington,
some time
Therefore, his starving their guns,
men
in the dark
in boats.
and keep
guns and powder.
He
to
Bunker
Hill,
Lex-
hours of Christmas Night, he placed
besought them to look to the priming of
powder dry. Those who were
That
their
is,
destitute
such of them as had of powder and -guns,
almost destitute of rags, took such arms as they could find
— perchance
a
broken sword, maybe a rusted bayonet.
While the British and the Hessians were combating legions of turkeys, parallelograms of roast beef, and hogsheads of ale,
drunken Christmas in Trenton starving side
mob.
Bunker
—Ere
the
—Washington
dawn was
Hill, Lexington,
bright,
Quebec,
Common
Trenton And thus, enlivened now and then by
— cozily keeping
their
came upon them with another name was written
his
be-
Sense and Independence.
!
a sudden glare, the dreary Night
213
PAUL ARDENHEIM;
,
The day was
of Revolution passed on.
many
still
OR,'
to brighten at last, but there
were
dark hours between Washington and the light of perfect
freedom. It is
How
June, 1777.
We may
not enter into
stands the cause of freedom
all
compress some events of the Future into pictures.
som
— what says
autumn and
the
now?
the details of the history of our land
June
is
now
;
let
us
in blos-
the winter, of the cause of freedom
?
— Gaze along this meadow, embosomed in the foliage of a lovely valley, gemmed
with orchards, and sparkling with a stream of clear cold water. sunshine upon the tops of the trees, and shadow
There
is
From
clusters of forest trees, gray stone walls are visible
peaceful homes, protected it
by
utterable peace
—and
mock
And
soul of quiet
And
crimson. ripened into
Is
—peace—un-
the petty greatness of wealth, the swelling ?
its
own
There will be cold faces in the the grass will be wet with a bloody rain the stream will be, ere the blossoms on yonder trees have
soon be rich in graves.
light of a setting
For it There
to the
peaceful valley, secluded from the world, shut up in
this
loveliness, will
around.
the solitude of this world-hidden valley.
not one of those scenes which speak
vanity of ambition, to scorn
all
the walls of
;
sun this
;
;
fruit.
Brandywine.
is
the valley of the
is
a house of dark gray stone, standing in a sort of rural majesty,
at the eastern extremity of a
smooth green lawn.
To
the north and to
the south, from this mansion, spread the tenements of a quiet town,
whose
gables peep from gardens and orchard trees.
the stone is
mansion
lingers the last ray of the
Upon
the roof of
June sun, and not
a breeze
there to shake the white blossoms from the boughs, or stir into motion
the
smooth verdure of the lawn.
— Ere
these trees are touched
rainbows of autumn, there
will
by
winter, yes, as they are clad in the
be some hundreds of dead bodies stretched
in horrible confusion over this lawn, in all the grotesque shapes of
sudden
and violent death.
For the mansion mantown.
is
Chew's House, and
the village
is
called
Ger-
Behind these pictures of the pleasant valley of Brandywine, and town of Germantown, I see a range of snow-clad hills, crowned with
the
huts, and
crowded with half-naked and famine-stricken men.
written there
—
to be soothed
We
it
by
A name
is
speaks of suffering that has no tongue, of anguish only tears of blood
—
for that
will follow the thread of this
name
is
Valley Forge.
singular history of the olden time,
— of the Wizard's
and while we learn the fate of Paul —-we may perchance behold some
child
—of Madeline
traces of the fight of
some tokens of Germantown, and come
at last to the
Brandywine,
huts and
snow
!
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON.
We
of Valley Forge.
§19
may, perchance, converse with Washington, and
hand the Boy-General, Gilbert La Fayette. take by But neither the great facts, nor the great names of general history, Let shall win us from the individual narrative of the Wissahikon people. the
us translate the dark cyphers of the ancient record— let us give voice and
speech
to the
bronzed
face,
shadowed by dark
spiritual
manhood
Even now I behold that by eyes, whose strange Even now I see the pure
?
hair, lighted
awes and wins the hearts of men.
lustre
of
dim Chronicle of old. of Ardenheim again
we behold Paul
Shall
of that virgin soul battling with the physical realities
with the base and gross temptations of the world.
life,
Shall the spirit of the
blemish or scar
Dreamer come
forth
from the ordeal, without
?
But even as we ask the question, Paul is a perjured and dishonored Man, for an overwhelming thought crowds upon our souls. The Sealed Chamber, and the secret, which drove Paul out into the world, a scorner of his father's gray hairs, with the stain of Perjury upon his soul A secret armed with supernatural power, darkened by mystery, as impenetrable as the blackness which rests upon the World beyond the
Grave
!
We may
enter the old Monastery once again.
we may
We may read
the
name
Gathering courage for our task,
of the Deliverer concealed in the Urn.
even confront that door whose dark panels are traced with the
sign of the Cross.
And
Sealed Chamber.
Shall
Shall the Deformed,
then but a step between us and the Secret of the
we look upon that fatal mystery ? now known as Black David, now as
the Invisible,
ever rush before our path again, like a lurid cloud before the light of a
summer day
?
Winding among those quiet shades, and by those still waters of the Wissahikon, shall we chance upon a new-made grave, and find upon a tombstone the name of Madeline
rustic
Jovial Peter
ever talk with thee again, or
draughts to Christmas
Or
?
Dormer, with beard of snow and cheeks of flame,
Eve
sit
shall
we
beside thy broad hearth and quaff deep
?
the Wizard's child, so queenly in her bearing, so like a spirit in her
starry loveliness, with her dark eyes fired
serpentine vein swelling like a prophecy
behold the beautiful Atheist again
The Wizard
himself,
a
by ambition and upon her brow
love, with the
— shall we
ever
?
haggard
old
man — old
before
and withered by fanaticism into premature decay— shall
his
we
time,
converse
with him once more, and learn the result of his life-long meditation? Is
his
dream of Immortal Life upon earth only a dream
?
or shall he
appear before us, clad in the vigor of young manhood, irresistible with the
power of boundless wealth.
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
22fl
Then another face comes faintly to our view; the face of the aged man, who, companioned only-by his children, waited in the Block : house of Wissahikon, not for the secret of immortal life on earth, or for the power of unbounded wealth, but for the coming of the Kingdom of the We have seen him reel beneath the blow of his son we have seen that son rush forth from the Monastery, with the stamp of Fate upon
Lord.
;
Does
his forehead.
the old
man
yet survive
?
Treading gently through the dim corridors of the Block-house, shall
we once more meet
the vision of that gentle face, with blue eyes and long,
flowing, golden hair
?
We may
behold the Secret Brotherhood again, assembled in mysteri-
ous council, and bound
A
repetition.
to blind
strange
obedience by oaths too blasphemous for
with
Brotherhood,
Lodge
rising
Degree above Degree,— an inexplicable complication of
by One Man. Deformed, or
That
These questions
new Epoch
solitary ruler, either Gilbert the
yet, perchance,
in
our
start to
our history
some man
;
lips, as
these,
altogether
we
stand
new
upon
into
Lodge,
castes, controlled
huntsman, or the to
our
sigljt.
the threshold of a
and a thousand others,
full
of the same
pervading interest and mystery.
Let us translate the dusk cyphers of the ancient record voice and speech to the
dim Chronicle of
old.
— let us give
I'
BOOK THE SECOND
THE
SEC RET OF THE
SEALED CHAMBER.
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON.
223
9
CHAPTER
FIRST.
AFTER TWO YEARS.
Under an
arbor fresh with
virtes,
and fragrant with flowers, sat Peter
Dorfner, his rotund form resting in a stout oaken chair.
was a very
It
pleasant thing to note the contrast between his red cheeks and white beard, and the deep green of the leaves, the varied tints of the flowers.
Before him was placed a table of unpainted oak, on which sundry sus-
And
picious bottles stood like the sentinels of the scene.
half-closing his
eyes, with his limbs resting on a bench, old Peter resigned himself to the
calm delights of rum and tobacco.
was
It
a pleasant arbor, standing at one end of the garden, near the
windows looked summer sun.
farm-house, whose closed doors and
beneath the cheerful light of the It
must be confessed,
that old Peter
man peaceful murmur of the
that can render a
the unceasing
was surrounded by
all
the delights
with himself and the world.
Lulled by
who sung new-mown hay
among
bees,
flowers, with the fragrance of fields,
black and desolate
Peter Dorfner, with his red cheeks and
their songs
the
stealing gently over the
snowy
beard, his capacious
form spreading lazily in the oaken chair, looked altogether like a picture
some corpulent satyr of Grecian story, clad in brown cloth, with a pipe mouth, and a bottle of rum near its hand. Or, in case this comparison should seem unjust, we might compare him to some Hermit of the middle ages, who disgusted with the vanity of the world, had retired to some secluded forest, and sworn a solemn oath, to devote himself forever of
in its
and sleep, those cardinal duties of the monks of old.
to fatness
Beyond green
field
the garden,
amid whose plants and flowers the arbor
rose, a
smiled in the June sunbeams, and stretched to the south and
west in gentle undulations, until
it
was bounded by
the
Strong men, with arms bare and scythe in hand, toiled scattering swarths of fragrant
were grouped
in the shade,
hay
summer woods. among the grass,
as they hurried along.
on the verge of the wood
and matronly cows, snuffing the scent of the
;
Tired
cattle
aldermanic oxen
new-mown hay, from which known in grave an-
they were separated by that kind of rural architecture, nals as "
Worm
Fence."
plied to the scythe,
Now
and then, the sound of the whetstone ap-
came merrily over
of cattle, and the subdued
murmur
the field, mingled with the lowing
of the hidden stream.
—
"
—
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
224
Summer was upon There was
white bosoms
was
the scene, in
a serene sky,
the sun, and floated
to
drowsy fragrance
a
the freshness and beauty of June.
all
only varied by passing clouds,
in the
very
air,
who
turned their
slowly over the woods.
There
a fulness of intoxicating odours;
and the bees among the flowers, the lowing
cattle
grouped
in the
shadows,
the clang of the scythe, and the indistinct sound of the wood-hidden Wis-
sahikon, formed the music of the scene, a very lulling music altogether, full
summer and voluptuous
of
as June.
There were green
But the old farm-house looked sad and deserted. vines trailing about
its
steep roof, and flinging their leaves, their flowers,
from the very point of the high gable
;
\he chesnut tree was glorious with
verdure, but the doors of the farm-house, the closed shutters, gave
it
a
lonely and desolate appearance.
Secluded
arbor, his only
in the
companions the pipe and the
bottles,
Peter Dorfner took his ease, and winked sleepily at care, as though there
was never
Two
a thing like trouble in the world. 1
years have passed since
we beheld him
last,
two years
of in-
full
and incident, and the face of Peter discloses more wrinkles about
terest
the eyes,
Brown
more
fatness in the cheeks, a sublirner rotundity about the form.
waistcoat loosened, hose
ungartered, and cravat thrown
aside,
Peter languidly, smoked his pipe, and seemed hesitating for a moment, ere
he entered the domains of that ancient empire,
known
to
philosophers and
Land of Nod. Rousing himself for a moment, he exclaimed, in a sleepy tone, "Sam Where are you, you blind devil ?" I say In answer to this bland inquiry, a voice was heard "I'se here, Massa. I is," and, starting from a nook of the arbor overshadowed by foliage, the blind Negro appeared in the light, his sightless poets as the
!
eyeballs rolling in their sockets. " Fill
my
The good
and
glass
fix
my
pipe, or
Peter Dorfner was
fast
— or — asleep.
With
his head resting on
one shoulder, and his gouty hands placed on his paunch, he had dropped dreams.
into the land of
ness, with pipes
between
Corpulent dreams, no doubt, blooming their lips,
and beakers of rum-punch
in fatin their
hands.
Black Sam, dressed
in a suit of coarse
gray homespun, stood behind
his master's chair, listening with great earnestness, while his forehead
became corrugated with distorted in a grin,
innumerable
wrinkles,
his
thick
lips
were
and his eyeballs rolled unceasingly in their sockets.
—
Massa?" he whispered then listened for a moment by gum," he added, in a tone that was scarcely audible. Then, raising his black hands, seamed with scars and knotted in the joints, above the white hairs of the sleeping old man, Black Sam stood
"Are yo'
"He am
for
a
'sleep,
'sleep,
moment
with his sightless eyeballs
lifted
toward Heaven.
An
^
——
"
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. expression as sudden as
it
was
came over
frightful
his face
by
black as soot, contrasted with the hair, which, frosted 1
white wool, was in truth most horrible
to
225 ;
Clenching
behold.
that visage,
age, resembled his knotted
negro uttered certain words, not in broken English, but in
fingers, the
some unknown tongue, perchance
the language of his clime and race.
The good Peter Dorfner snored which, had
it
taken a form to
slumber
in his
;
a substantial snore,
might certainly have appeared
itself,
in the
shape of a full-blown poppy, overcome with liquor and tired for want of In his corpulent slumber, lulled by obese dreams, with pipes in
sleep.
and mugs of rum in their hands, the convivial Peter did not for moment chance to think of the black visage which scowled above him,
their lips
a
while lips distorted by rage muttered vengeance upon his head. "
Punch
sleep,
—don't
know how
with a chuckle that seemed choked
his chest to his lips.
—-a
make punch
to
sp^ce of
"
lemon peel
Some
first-rate
——— a
?" Peter
to death,
whiskey
—
murmured
while on
Irish, if
its
in
his
way from
you can
get
it
a
Peter ended the injunction with a snore, while the negro cautiously placed one hand upon the breast of the sleeping man, and with the other
brandished a
common
Again those words
sharpened
table-knife, in
the
unknown
to a point.
tongue,
accompanied by the
hideous cortortion,' and then the Negro muttered in broken English " For sixteen seventeen year, dis nigga watch his time. Sometime
—
Sometime come
ho tink he put pisen in yo' drink. yo' in yo'
How
dam
sleep.
Now
he no
bed an' choke
brawny left hand touched the breast of the slumbering mark the point of the intended blow, while the knife,
lightly that
man, as
if
to
clenched in the uplifted right hand, shone with the old
to yo'
fail !"
man's head
Certainly the negro
and reason.
its
sharpened point over
!
was
a maniac
;
a poor wretch, deprived of sight
Else wherefore should he wish
who had fed him at his table, and given him many years ? Perchance some memory of years before, nerved the negro's
man had been stolen from Africa, member of the white race. The knife glittered faintly in
to
to
stab the
good old
man
drink of his cup, for so
a petty slight, received long
may have been that the b/ind and cherished a mad resentment against arm
;
the
negro's
it
every
foliage of the arbor,
"
Sam
little
kin feel yo' heart, ole boy
—
by the work of murder.
grasp, as, hidden
he silently prepared himself
for his
dere's for de white
woman
and de
chile— dere—
The
knife descended, urged
by an arm
that
was nerved by madness
perchance by revenge.
"Wait
a minute,
my dark
friend,
and you
may
kill
him
at
your leisure,"
said a bland voice.
The negro
could not see, but he
felt that
15
a third person
was present
at
'
—
"
226
1
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
.
this
scene; he was seized with an ague-like tremor; the knife
his
hand.
fell from sank on the gravel which formed the floor of the arbor, and, in a whispering tone, begged for mercy.
"By
He
gum,
nigga no 'tend to hurt Massa Dorfen one
dis
Dat am trut, so it am "Will you be still,
Or
labaloo?
shall
I
— Massa! my
Massa!
Don't hurt ole
hair!
little
Sam —
Will you stop your cursed hul
dear charcoal?
just put a pistol to
your head, and blow you
into
several pieces?"
The poor the cold
tered faintly
The
wretch, cowering on the gravel, heard the bland voice,
muzzle of the
— " Kill de I
say
yourself, or
bottle in
!
I'll
felt
pressing against his temple, and then mut-
nigga, but don't
unknown was heard
voice of the
" Dorfner, stir
pistol
Hello, man,
is this
wake de
old
boy!"
again, rising into a jovial shout
the
way you
treat
your friends
drink your liquor and stick the neck of an empty
your yawning jaws.
Dorfner,
I
say!"
Started by the clamor, Peter unclosed his eyes, and looked around with
the peculiarly vacant glance of a corpulent gentleman aroused* from a
pleasant slumber.
"Good morning, friend," he slowly said have we here ?"
—"Why,
what
in
the d
—
Peter removed his feet from the table, started erect in his chair, and
looked in the face of the intruder with an expression of ludicrous surprise.
was
It
gentleman
a very grave, sober-looking
with his back
to the
who
stood before him,
afternoon sun, and his head and shoulders relieved
A
very
grave, sedate personage, indeed, dressed in black cloth from head to
foot,
by
a glimpse of the blue sky, smiling
with cravat and
beyond the
ruffles of inexpressible whiteness,
distant woods.
and silver buckles about
the knees and feet. true that this
It is
to the
and
marked
in the
excessively
and
sombre costume gave a somewhat singular boldness which in the body resembled a barrel,
outline of his figure,
lower limbs suggested the idea of bean-poles, or something lank
and
thin,
supporting
something
particularly
round
fat.
Beneath the black hat which the stranger wore, appeared or rather shone a very sober countenance, with eyes
like
sparkling in a flame, cheeks red as Etna, a
little
minute points of
glass,
nose that could hardly
be called a nose, and a mouth which threatened every
move
to
invade the
ears and take possession of the back part of the head. It
sion,
a marked face, no doubt, and, notwithstanding was well calculated to excite tears of laughter.
was
"Peter," said the stranger, quite blandly, half-concealed by an enormous " Peter,
its
demure expres-
—
my
friend, allow
this interesting occasion.
me
to
It is
ruffle,
as,
with his large right hand,
he described a
subside into a
little
a long time since
I
circle in
the air
decorous emotion on
have seen you, Peter
— /
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON.
—
seems a
it
my
old,
boy
renowned was that
trifling
old
—
that
The
Peter— and
— shall
I
But we grow
nine or ten centuries. the
remark of an ancient
sage, no less
his
my
shows an expansive thought,
it
repeat the remark,,
man passed
old
it
majesty of his head, than the strength of his heart,
for the
his remark,
some was
matter of
—we grow —
227
my
it
dear Peter?"
hands over his white beard, thrust
his fingers
corners of his eyes, twitched at his gaiters, and shook his
in the
—
boy,
fat
frame,
who has been indulging in a bath. "Am I awake, or am I dreamin' ? Sam I say, Sam come here, you scoundrel, and let me pinch you, so that I may know whether I am asleep like a frolicsome dog,
!
Sam
But
!"
S-a-m
or not.
!
did not appear .
—crouching
behind the oaken chair of his
master, he wished to seclude himself from public view, with a modesty
worthy of an ancient hermit. "Shall
repeat the remark, Peter?"
I
profoundly. " In the
first
who you
us
are,
your legs
as
The
place,
continued the stranger, bowing
—" grunted Dorfner — "You'll
be so kind as to
and what you want, and then take yourself
You
you.
will carry
off,
tell
as quick
have legs-reh?"
March day, relenting all at once no means discomposed, the stranger placed his
old fellow smiled like a blustery
into the First of April.
By
hand upon
lowered his head, and stood for a moment in an
"To whose
his breast,
profound meditation.
attitude of
think of an event and a day like this!" he exclaimed, in a tone shrillness
reminded one of the voice of some demure spinster, who,
having refused fifty-one offers of marriage, has settled
Censor of a small neighborhood
the
and there it!
I
Peter!
is
come
—
•«
Here
I
am
down
at last, into
long absence,
after a
—dreamed of — not encompassed by the cares of the world,
have thought of the blessed meeting
I
at last; I see
him
but sitting in an arbor, with a white beard and a bottle of rum, and five
mowin' hay
strapping fellows
—thus —regaled strap,
and he does not
The poor
the distance.
in
It
is
thus
I
see him
by the combined fragrance of new-mown hay and black
fellow
know me
was
!"
Burying
lost in grief.
his face in his large hands,
he stood opposite the astonished Peter, a picture of despair.
"Sam, S-a-m, I say! You black name of Satan, who is this fellow?"
"He
don't
know me
rascal,
dim
all
vistas of
"
Why,
it is
" Jacopo to
memory, and
got drunk together
remind
?
me
— Will
—Jacopo!"
That was of
it
—
tell
me, in the
yet," soliloquized the stranger, rubbing the tip of
his nose with the forefinger of his right
the
come here and
my
call to
you,
my
hand
mind
— " Cast
your eyes through
that touching night,
when we
dear ?"
ejaculated Dorfner, with eyes like saucers.
name,
painfully.
my
love.
Your venerable
But now, since
I
exterior serves
have taken orders, and
"
228
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
.
been commissioned by an Archbishop or two,
to
wear
—
I
a
gown,
I
am
called
Reverend Jacob James."
the
You wear a gown you
"
!
preach
!
Git up on that bench and give us a
Ho, ho, ho
should like to hear you.
you?"
slice o' divinity, will
Jacopo, or the Reverend Jacob James, as he
now
designates himself,
took a seat on the bench near the chair of the old man, and in affecting silence proceeded to
portion of water.
a glass with a great deal of
fill
After
which he drank
rum and
a very small
the mixture with a sigh of calm
delight.
"How
is
He
with you, old boy?"
it
Dormer on
slapped Mr.
the
shoulder. " Purty well, I thank you,
"Poorly
— poo-r-ly,"
—how's yourself?"
sighed Jacopo,
my
regeneration of
pipe, and striking a light
filling a
from a tinder-box, which stood among the
bottles
— " My
species, and so on, have struck into
labors for the
my
pulmonaries.
how thin I am ?" The old man struggled with a fit of laughter, which seemed determined choke him to death. The wide mouth, little nose, diminutive eyes and
Don't you see
to
cheeks
red
sobriety,
of Jacopo,
all
subdued by an expression of exemplary
somewhat
contrasted
ludricrously with
spider legs.
"Droll as ever," laughed old Peter
Where have you been
dog.
around the arbor
—"You'll be
these two years, and
rotund form and
his
the death o'
me, you
— " Peter glanced stealthily
—"Where's your master — John — eh?"
"I have discharged him. He did not suit me," replied Jacopo, elaborum and water. " By-the-bye, how do things go It's now a matter of two years and six months since we with you ? What's the matter— hey? Your house shut up like a tomb? parted. rating another glass of
Where's
the
girl
little
— Madeline — Hello
death, with a gallopin' consumption
The
—
!
the old
cheerful visage of the benevolent Peter
man's choking
to
grew pale and then deep
purple; his eyes were fixed, and indeed his changed countenance manifested various indications of an apoplectic
fit.
him by a copious bath of rum and water, dashed It was some moments, however, before the good face.
Jacopo revived violently in his
man
revived.
" Sich a pain as
I
had
— sich a stitch in my
side
—ugh
!
I feel
quite cold.
rum and light me a pipe, will you?" Jacopo obeyed. With a tenderness that was quite filial, he prepared the draught and the pipe. The old man's white beard was presently obscured by a veil of tobacco smoke.
Mix me
"
a leetle
You
asked
after
Madeline,"
twinkling from the half-closed lids night.
There was blood upon the
he said, quite calmly, with his eyes
— " We never heard of
floor,
but that was all."
her since that
"
"
"
I
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHI£ON. "And
the hunter
" Gilbert,
—
—Tom,
Gilbert
229
him?" him nayther," mumbled Peter, with-
think they called
I
—never heard
o'
out removing the pipe from his lips.
You
" if
A
don't say!
"
Or
and a boy disappear on one night
girl
they went off together
—
—
it
looks as
— " suggested
he took her off and then made tracks himself
as if
Dorfner, with a singular twinkle in his half-shut eyes.
"How's matters about here Which way do you drink?" " That
just
you won't object
him!" The good old man
Eh? King or Country ?
?
There's a great deal
a ticklish question.
is
sides, but I s'pose
now, anyhow
to
fill
be said on both
to
a glass to His Majesty,
God
bless
but finding nothing
hand
his
lifted
like a
as if to raise his hat
from his head,
he apologized by raising the glass to
hat,
his lips.
"King, God bless him," cried Jacopo, "or, Continental Congress don't care a tuppence which."
Hey? what
"
—
"
Man
kind of
man
are you,
A—
anyhow?
yourself, fond of peace and plenty, quietness and
just like
tobacco, sound principles and Jamaica rum.
should you and does
it
make
I
quarrel about these
to us,
—
whether
we have
Tut
a
—
things
trifling
Why
Peter.
tut,
What
?
difference
King George or a King Wash-
ington?"
Jacopo winked rather familiarly shanks upon the
table,
at the old
man, and placing
his spindle-
leaned against the frame-work of the arbor, while
each corner of his extensive mouth emitted a cloud of bluish smoke.
Dorfner regarded him with half-shut eyes, and yet with a look of search-
Two
ing scrutiny.
years had not indeed given more wrinkles to the bluff
countenance of the old man, or stolen a solitary
seemed impaired,
cheeks, but his intellect
Even as he gazed sidelong into mured-r" Queer fellow queer
— queer "
—
his
tint
from his blooming
memory confused and
Where have
!
I
seen him
?
Odd
—
droll
!"
That was quite a touching incident," exclaimed Jacopo, I was all brandy and tears." "It melted me.
after a
—
pause
dim.
the complacent visage of Jacopo, he mur-
"What
are
you
drivin'
at?" cried Peter,
still
eyeing his
long
eccentric
companion. " It
It
was so very
seemed
to
affecting.
It
worked upon me
touch you a little—just a
little
—
peppered brandy.
like
Jacopo uttered these words without the slightest change
complacency of his face lips,
;
his feet
were on the
table, the
in the grotesque
pipe between his
and the glass of rum in his hand.
Peter opened his eyes.
"You were
He
regarded his friend with a wild stare.
saying something, but
whether
my
head
is
thick, or
—
"
^PAUL ARDENHEIM
230
whether you are drunk,
same
the
"
to
Why,
you, speak
cannot
I
telL
in English
it
—
OR,
;
Speak
out, will
Peter," said Jacopo, eyeing with calm
you
— and
satisfaction
if it's all
a puff of
smoke which floated slowly upward toward the fragrant ceiling of the arbor "I was just thinking of the poor girl Amelia Caroline, I think you
—
call
—
her ?"
man
" Madeline," said the old
"Madeline:
that's
looks like his blessed Majesty
it
What
name.
the
night!
rather sharply.
(Do you observe
it.
—
when she woke from her
a scene
my
never could get her words out of
I
What words The old man laid
smoke? how much nose)— Madeline. That's
that cloud of
there's his
mind
faintin'
fit
on that
— could you, Peter
?"
"
on the
table,
and rested his cheeks between into
immovable Jacopo.
the face of the
"Just watch Turk's head
his pipe
growing brighter and larger as he gazed steadily
his hands, his eyes
that puff, will
— the nose
you?
perfect!
is
Did ever you see sich a
— Oh,
capital
as to the girl's words, I can't of
course remember them, but you know, that she said something about her
"
mother being put out of the way, some eighteen years before *
The
d
she did !"
1
Peter's lips parted, disclosing his white teeth
set firmly together.
" Can't you call
brought
to the
mind
to
mother's anguish
—
his
How
are dull. 4
old
man
man
;
indeed he
But, had he looked into that face, he would
have encountered an expression of ferocity, such as coupled with venerable hair and white beard.
The
her mother was
while in the pains of a
gaze toward the face of the old
avoid his glance.
to
you
You remember, Peter?"
'
Jacopo did not cast
seemed
Peter,
?
farm-house of Wissahikon, and
did not speak
a
word
is
not oftentime
reply, but sank back into his
in
chair and closed his eyes.
moment, Jacopo ventured
After a for
to
turn his gaze
—ventured, we
say,
he seemed conscious that he was provoking the rage of a man who
was neither to be trusted nor despised. "There he sits, like a venerable Pope, Cardinals.
It is
a glorious picture
Godfrey Kneller, or
a
Michael Angelo,
all
— such,
traits
amid his ripeness
the
among
pencil of a
What
!
a dear old
a
that
man he
is,
!"
as these, in
Jacopo watched the slumbering man,
an undertone
—
"
What
a perfect old devil
shouldn't wonder' if he had a hoof and two claws." « The dear old 'possum !" he resumed in a loud voice
make
make
of virtue amid his fatness, such streaks of worth
With ejaculations such murmuring now and then
he'll
seventeen
Vandyke,
sketch that nose, and
to
beard eternal in white paint and canvass after
fast asleep
for
!
—" He
thinks
believe to be fast asleep, so that I can drink his liquor at
my
—
"
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON.
231
I
leisure, without
But no
— he
monk
nose like a
— Peter,
ness
The
— ah,
that snore
in a cloister,
say
I
my
shocking the delicate modesty of
asleep
is
Good man!
nature.
snore that seems to
sit
in his
and sings hoarse anthems in praise of
Wake up
!
—a
and drink,
will
corpulent Peter unclosed his eyes.
"You " Did
there yet ?" he said, in a gruff tone.
you think
you
I'd leave
Why,
?
I
mean
to stay all night with
may
you, and we'll have a good time together, and then to-morrow you over -'persuade
me
When
position.
manner,
'
My
to stay for a I
was
dear
together in a private
—
The remark bottles of
few days more.
in Italy, the
says
Jack,'
chamber
me Jack
he called
for
uttered by the
—we
in the Vatican
for short
—
Pope
For
am
I
Pope remarked he
were
of an obliging dis-
most
in the
taking
delicate
few
a
—'My dear Jack —
bottles
says he
'
Jack, while taking a few-
to his friend
wine together, was no doubt very
hopeless oblivion.
beautiful, but
lost in
is
it
was about to Peter, the good
as Jacopo, calmly puffing his pipe,
repeat the said remark, for the gratification of his friend old
fat-
you ?"
man, with an abrupt exclamation, bearing some resemblance
broke his pipe, and wished Jacopo and the Pope
to
the
to
an oath,
— end
of the
He did not say end of the world,' it is true, for he named a dark personage who commits all the sin in the universe, leaving poor mortality world.
1
scathless and innocent.
" I
want 11
Peter
to
know what you mean by makin' fun me these cock-and-bull stories, and
Tellin'
the idea- that I'm a-goin' to invite
Why — Mister This was
you
What's-your-name,
to
you.
?" continued
yourself with in
my
house.
11
seen the old man's face flushing with
the roots of his
hand descended heavily upon the
me
up your abode
J don't know
Had you
to the point.
anger from his white beard
to take
o'
fillin'
table,
hair, while his
clenched
you would have realized the
full
force of his words.
Jacopo smoked away, looking neither to the right nor left, nor down whole attention riveted by the fragrant
his nose, but straight forward, his
clouds which floated around the bowl of his pipe. " Do you hear ?" thundered the old man, " I say your
company. Tramp !" "Peter," said Jacopo very mildly, without turning
room
than your
insinuations are indelicate.
our sworn
friendship,
A
his
head
is
better
—"Your
stranger listening to us, and ignorant of
might draw unfavorable
inferences from
your
sly hints."
The good
To
Peter Dorfner could not believe his eyes or trust his ears.
own table, and in man whose body resembled
be bearded at his
by
liquor,
sticks
a
riis
own
arbor, over his
a barrel supported
own
by broom-
!
There were strange rumors among the country
folks in regard to Peter
PAUL ARDENHEIM
232
He was
much mistaken man.
either a basely slandered, or
was ferocious
;
OR,
;
His temper few of the neighbors
the source of his wealth mysterious;
came any longer
to
his farm-house,
man
him, regarded the good old
and even the men who worked
for
Had he
not
with an indefinable
fear.
turned law, divinity and physic into ridicule, by beguiling
mons, Doctor Perkenpine and a grave Parson
— cats
Every farm-house of
?
Wissahikon was
the
and even the firesides of Germantown grew pale with this grave matter, there was a
trifling
Lawyer Sim-
supper of barbecued
into a
full
of the Legend,
Mingled
at the idea.
suspicion of Murder hanging
around the history of the benevolent man. Peter was somewhat proud of his reputation
guished literary gentleman of the modern day,
is
even as some
;
distin-
delighted at being com-
—
— called pork when it is dead so the good man grew merry at the epithets " Beast and Bear !" You may therefore imagine the amazement, the indignation struggling into life on Peter's face, when he beheld himself defied and insulted by
pared to a certain animal,
!
—
old
the sublime impertinence of Jacopo.
"Sly
hints,
indeed!" he exclaimed, panting
grew purple with
" Shall
rage.
Jacopo smoked
1
kick you
meanwhile
in silence, glancing
paper which he had taken from his pocket.
somewhat
of an old newspaper, and was
for breath as his
over
all
my
visage
farm ?"
at a piece
of printed
looked like the fragment
It
triangular in form.
A
singular
grimace agitated Jacopo's face as he perused the irregular sentences and
broken words, which appeared upon
dingy
this
relic
:
was cealed
looks
with
rfner,
the
to
poor
the
and
rchments lead
out
some victim.
a
in
closet,
upon
a
Corpse,
large also
which
papers,
knowledge of the This
all
occu
Twenty-third of November, 1756; and in this confession, I
share in
Such was
this
ma
ask forgiveness of mankind for
detestable Crime,
the fragment, on
and Pray the
L
which Jacopo gazed with great
satisfaction,
his eyes twinkling with an expression of quiet malice, while his enor-
mous mouth displayed "
Now
its full
that looks very
magnitude
much
of an old newspaper after
all,"
may
another piece of paper,— newspaper too it
read quite sensibly.
of a Philadelphia merchant
hideous grin.
and
it's
but a dirty piece
Jacopo murmured, without removing the
pipe from his mouth, " and yet there
make
in a
like nonsense,
exist,
somewhere
— which, attached
in the world, to this,
would
By-the-bye, friend Peter, did you ever hear
named Hopkins
?"
—
!
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. The
last
words addressed
to
Dorfner only
elicited
233 an oath, coupled
with the words
The
¥
affairs,
scoundrel
!
and wanting
to
He was here some time, years ago, prying into my know what had become of Madeline. The dog
Will you travel, sirrah ?"
Jacopo rose from his
Then looking
seat,
and carefully placed his pipe upon the
into Peter's face, which, purpled
by
table.
rage, glared in a ray of
sunshine, Jacopo placed his hand within the breast of his waistcoat.
"Do pistol,
Peter
A
you see this little bit. o' convenience? mounted in silver and loaded with ball.
— you can see me tremble,
and another
trifle
like
it,
for I
if
I
you look sharp. told that you
am
pistol,
am So
nothing but a
a great coward, I
carry this
trifle,
are afflicted with
mad
dogs on the Wissahikon.
Jacopo spoke the
He was
truth.
coward
a
—
a pitiable coward, afraid
of the report of a pistol, frightened at the smell of burnt powder.
Yet,
on the present occasion, nerved by an inexplicable influence into something like courage, he dared
him on his own ground. " Sam, I say, where's
—
bring
me my
confront the irritable old man, and defy
to
that nigger
Sam, go
?
into the
farm-house and
pistols."
There was
man's gray eye— his lips were But the blind negro did not appear, and Dorfner,
a deadly light in the old
violently agitated.
purple with rage, and unable, from a delicate twinge of gout, to
accustomed vigor, was
his
left
exposed
to the
round
face,
move with
wide mouth and
impertinent eyes of the intruder. ff
man
Your impertinence is only a cloak, by "You have some deeper motive
—
As
if
* * * !" thundered the old
conscious that he had said too much, old Peter suddenly halted,
took up his pipe and began to
smoke
again.
The hand which
held the
pipe trembled like a leaf.
Amid all his bravado, there was delicately endowment of cowardice. Once or twice he shuddered as his eye rested upon the inflamed visage of Dorfner, but, disguising all marked indications of emotion, he silently examined his Jacopo resumed his
seat.
perceptible an inexhaustible
pistols.
—
"Ha, ha " a hearty laugh almost frightened Jacopo from his seat— "Ha, ha, my boy, did you think to make the old boy mad with you? You Capitally done, by * * * But you did not succeed, ha, ha, ha !
!
shall stay all the night with
You and me
only,
the neighbors. will
sing and
boy! you don't
Had
my
I'll
me, and we'll have a good time
good fellow,
brew you
fiddle,
know
for I don't care
about the
o't
together.
company
a punch, an old-fashioned punch, and
and we'll go reeling
to
our beds
—ho,
ho,
of
you
my
old Peter yet!"
the table taken wings and flown through
the top of the arbor,
"
PAUL ARDENHEIM;
234
OR,
Jacopo could not have been half so much confounded as he was now, by the sudden hilarity, the extemporaneous good-fellowship of the old man.
"We
we
boy,
will, old
command
will !" he shrilly shouted, as
power of speech
the
— "A night of
together
it
drink to your white beard, and you will drink to
I'll
added
Peter— "I'll take good
in a tone inaudible to
my
put medicine in
my
liquor, or steel to
soon as he could
—
my
that's the
and
legs,
word!
—" he
you don't
care that
throat."
—
" Where have you been all this time these two years and six months?" kindly inquired Dorfner. "Engaged on business of state," responded Jacopo "Settling a little ;
—
my
Emperor of Germany. But let me ask a question in return how have you been all tjiis while ? Any news stirring about the region? The old Wizard alive yet?" "Gone these two years. His house is shut up nobody at home. Supposed by some — ha, ha that he is gone to his Master — ho, ho!" It was a lame jest, and yet the fat old fellow laughed heartily, until his between
difficulty
friend
the
Pope and
the
—
—
—
broad paunch and white beard shook in sympathy.
"Then
Paul
"Paul Ardenheim,"
— " He
of voice
whom you
was a queer body,
there
they called him?
said the old
man, with
feared
—how's
that the
name?"
all
— Paul — Birmingham — was
this
sudden and marked change
a
has never been seen on the Wissahikon, since the last
night of Seventy-four."
"Had a sister
do
:
We
"
Was
he no family]
somewhere up
here,
us
tell
among
all
not there an old house, castle or monastery,
woods
the
not
safe
speaks of
to
him
The young man had
—
trifle
that
is,
—
"I'll not call
"You
much in devils, but Nobody about Wissahikon
—
—
you know, Paul or of his people what in the deuce do you
it
any thing just now.
don't believe in devils
My
?
God, but
one.
as to a Devil
believe in Devils.
I
As he
said this,
— human
It
is
You may
that
not believe
nature could not get along without
Pity the poor devil
who
we have
don't."
given to the reader, and glanced over
with a peculiar grimace, muttering with a chuckle
six
it '?"
Jacopo drew once more from his pocket the fragment
of printed paper, which
chant, but he
call
Talk about something else." dear old boy, don't you know
impossible to doubt the existence of a Devil?
in a
;
" I don't believe
with such matters.
" But the monastery, or castle, or
it's
a father
mention those people" said Dorfner, glancing over his
never
shoulder with an uneasy gesture it's
?
about him !"
sharp, dev'lish sharp
!
is
I
it
a mer-
Twenty-third of November,
those kind o' dates are like Devils.
"What's that?" cried Dorfner !" is mine I'll swear it
—" Hopkins
fifty-
believe in 'em."
— "Where did you get
that slip of
paper?
—
He
started from his chair, reached over the table, and attempted to
grasp the fragment.
His features were agitated by a mingled expression,
f
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. which Jacopo could not altogether comprehend. not
but seemed
rage,
like
fear
It
235
was not
fear,
it
was
and anger, struggling with a darker
emotion.
—
was going to light my pipe with it," said Jacopo, very quietly " I picked it up near the garden-gate. Take it, my old boy. By-the-bye, what does that Twenty-Third of November, fifty-six,' mean ? Day of your birth, I suppose and yet you look older than twenty-one." "
I
4
;
Peter took the paper, and pressed
same time drawing from
at the
it
against the table with his thumb,
a pocket another fragment,
which
fitted
it
with great nicety, thus producing the appearance of one piece of paper, square in form, and
filled
with the same printed characters.
Jacopo would have given the richest
tint
on his infinitesmal nose
for the
which was evidently a part of the first. He beheld Dorfner gazing upon it, with his eyes downcast, and his head bent upon his broad chest he saw the fingers of the old privilege of perusing this second fragment,
—
man shake
with an irrepressible tremor.
Rising from his
seat,
he glided
with a noiseless footstep to the side of his aged companion, and looked stealthily over his shoulder.
His small eyes dilated as he beheld the printed characters, and he could not repress an ejaculation which his surprise forced to his lips.
CHAPTER SECOND. THE FACE AND THE SHADOW.
"Hah I
vow
The two
!
paragraph— it reads
pieces form one
But the next moment he sank back, man,
quite sensibly,
!"
startled
by
his ejaculations,
The
affrighted and trembling.
had raised his head
;
his face
over his shoulder, and his eyes rested upon the visage of Jacopo. veins
stood boldly out
upon
that forehead
;
old
was turned
The
the cheeks, at other times
—
almost livid. flushed by the tints of good liquor, were now pale was mischief in the expression of the old man's lips, and a quiet
There ferocity
in his gaze.
"Who
told
The good
you
to
look over
my
shoulder?"
Peter did not swear; his tone was very even and subdued,
and therefore Jacopo
felt
that
there
was danger
in his eye.
Confused,
PAUL ARDENHEIM
236
power Dormer.
afraid, without- the
the gaze of Peter
Jacopo was
a
as frail as the
to
coward, and
now
he
knew
that his
life
hung on
Should he
he clasped his hands.
;
a chance
He changed
binds the withered leaf to the bough.
tie that
on his knees and beg
fall
mercy?
for
Did you read
— scoundrel ?"
voice unnaturally
low and calm.
"
OR,
frame an answer, he stood trembling before
knees shook together
color, his
;
There was something
was
pitiable in the contrast
muscular frame, with his face
by Dorfner,
the question asked
—stamped with
in a
—here, Dorfner, a man of
a sullen ferocity
—
his face
turned over his shoulder, thus presenting his forehead, nose and beard, in profile to the light
— there
Jacopo, with his face distorted into an expres-
sion of grotesque fear, while his slender limbs trembled under the weight
of his rotund body. In his terror he had forgotten his pistols.
was caused
abject fear as
as
much by
by the determined ferocity "Did you read, I say?"
Was the
it
courage
frenzied
born
of
the words
may have been
that his
of Dormer's visage.
the
energy of despair?
limbs trembled no longer;
It
which he had hastily perused,
consciousness
of a
Truth,
fatal
or
Jacopo became suddenly calm; his
something
was impressed upon
like dignity
his face.
Gazing over Peter's shoulder, he beheld the foliage
a face, through an interval of
— a face which seemed not the visage of a living
Apparition from the Other World.
At the sight of that
thing
face,
— but an
whose eyes
were fixed upon him, a strange energy filled the soul of the coward; calmly, his voice unbroken by a tremor, he uttered these words " I did read. And more than this, I only read what I knew before.
—
That you, Peter Dorfner, fifty-six, in
the
did,
on the night of November Twenty-third,
room near yonder chesnut
tree,
commit
a barbarous and
cowardly murder!"
As he meet
uttered these words, he folded his arms, and stood prepared to
his death.
The eyes were gazing upon him
the interval in the foliage he
with a
new
saw
the face, and
all
felt
Through coward soul filled
the while.
his
life.
He had no weapon, but a desperate strength, the fury of a madman, fired his veins. His chest swelling, the veins on his face standing black and protuberant Peter Dorfner rose from his seat, his face livid with rage.
from the
livid skin,
he advanced a single step, while his glance announced
his deadly purpose.
Jacopo did not move the fury of the old
;
pale and motionless, he did not wish to avoid
man.
For a moment, Dorfner, roused contemplated his victim.
into all the vigor of his early
manhood
"
;
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. "I
will
a tone
237
—" throttle you — will crush you with one grasp I
whose measured emphasis indicated
vengeance, better than
said Peter, in
nature of his
the relentless
the oaths, or boisterous language, that ever rose
all
the lips of madness.
to
At
moment
this
a
shadow passed between Dorfner and
As
the sun.
the
passed, a footstep was heard.
shadow
He turned his face to the west, and sank back in his chair, like a man who had received a bullet in his heart. His face expressed surprise dismay—his extended hand pointed toward the west.
—
Surprised beyond the power of language, Jacopo turned and gazed in
by the extended hand.
the direction indicated
The garden
walk, extending from the arbor,
stretched before
him, a brown path leading
the
to
western wicket,
among beds
of foliage and
flowers.
There was a form dark
attire,
the
in
path
young man dressed
in
down
steps, his
could not be seen, but as he went
dark
the form of a
His face
form thrown into distinct his
;
with a black mantle floating from his shoulder.
attire,
relief
the path with
by the western sky,
and fringed with a pale golden
measured
the
lustre
sunbeams
tinted
locks of his
the
black hair. It was a muscular form, tempered by the grace and beauty of young manhood; the step was firm and regular; though only the back of the unknown was visible, it was evident that he was attired in a costume, altogether different from the fashion of the day a dark dress, which fitted closely to his limbs, was only relieved by the graceful drapery of
—
a cap,
whose
His locks were surmounted
from his shoulder.
the mantle, that floated
by
solitary
plume rose
in
the sunlight, blackly defined
against the western sky. It
was
this
form which, passing before the arbor, had thrown a shadow
arm was nerved for a deadly blow and now, as unknown, without once looking back, went toward the western gate, the old man, stricken into his chair, as by a bullet, extended his hand, while his features were blank with amazement and terror. upon Peter's
face, as his
;
the
Jacopo could only gaze from the face of Peter the scene deprived "'It's
him
—
I'd
swear
and blood
"Who?"
it!"
gasped the old man, without moving his arm,
"I can't see
or changing his gaze. flesh
— a rale
livin'
his face, but I
man, but
exclaimed Jacopo, as the
his sperrit
memory
know
—
of the
eyes had nerved him for a desperate accusal, only a
back
to
him with overwhelming
"Who?
Don't ask
me — "
agitated, while his forehead
—we've
all
form
to the retreating
him of the power of speech. it's
Not
him.
unknown moment
face,
in
whose came
since,
force.
cried the old
was bathed
man,
his features
in perspiration
still
— "You
violently
know who
seen him afore, but since that night he has not been seen alive
— PAUL ARDENHEIM: OR,
233
on Wissahikon. him,
say;
1
It's
swear
I'll
a sperrit
—
I tell
you
—
if
he'd only look back
—
it's
to 't!"
With these incoherent words, old Peter still pointed towards known, his emotion growing more like madness every moment. "It's a living man," cried Jacopo "It is
the un-
—
—
name," the old man exclaimed with a shudder " I tell you he's no livin' man. He has not been seen on the Wissahikon since the night when Madeline disappeared There was a mangled body found, some days afterwards— it was him! No! no! No livin' man, by " Don't speak that
—
A
* * *!
To
sperrit
—
a sperrit!"
Jacopo the violent emotion of Peter Dorfner was altogether incom-
Peter, who had grown gray under suspicion of various who was said to fear "neither God nor Devil;" Peter Dorfner, who, only a moment since, stood prepared for a work of murder, now a
prehensible.
crimes,
and abject thing; stricken as by a supernatural hand
pitiable all
was
it
a mystery to the eyes of Jacopo.
True, he had himself beheld a face,
brilliant
with eyes of unutterable
power, looking upon him, through an interval of the
memory came his
to
lips,
A
foliage.
and, as
we have
seen,
was drowned by
the
vague
name
over him of having seen that face before, and a
rose
ejaculation
of Dorfner.
He
"Look! sperrit,
men
passes through the gate, but don't once look back!
He
say!
I
workin'
goes
down
the hill-side into the
the fields drop their scythes and
in
It's
meadow — hah! look
Does a
him.
at
a
The
man start up from the ground, walk between you and the sun, and steal away without once lookin' back ? Look yonder He is passin'
livin'
!
—he woods — Ah,
through the midst of them hurries toward the
Paul Ardenheim
And by
this
turns
him, not in body, but in sperrit
it's
man, who believed
ember of a great
in " neither
religious
With
ashes of a debased nature.
back insensible
God
That
—
it is
nor Devil," was conquered
superstition
principle, burning
the
Jacopo advanced
to the
been
amid the
word " Paul Ardenheim," he
table, eager to
Only one fragment met
may have faintly
fell
white foam.
in the chair, his parting lips spotted with
paper, and read at his leisure the their words.
Without lookin' back, he
!"
the mosj improbable superstition.
the last
—no!
grasp the fragments of printed
Revelation which was embodied in his view; the other had disappeared.
make head nor tail on't," he exclaimed, with ai) oath. "And yet Hopkins must have some hint of the matter, or he would not have "
I
can't
me
directed
to
search the room near the chesnut
room, Jacopo, and search every
way how
closet.
tree.
of paper or parchment, bring to me, and your fortune did old Peter obtain this paragraph of a
that he
is
suspected
o' doin'
Sleep
'
Whatever you discover newspaper?
is
in
made.'
that
the
But
— He must know
somethin' not altogether pretty."
I
in
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. While the
light playing
shone over the
among
the leaves and
239
flowers of the arbor,
and snowy beard of the insensible man, Jacopo
pallid face
'
anxiously perused the fragment.
After the deed
was done,
The body was
taken away,
the child
near
con
window which
Do
tree.
concealed
pa
certain
the
chesnut
suppose
I
may
name
real
of
on
rred
the
king
my ord
Jacopo examined the paper with a look of ludicrous dismay. I might make something out o' this. was taken away. There was a child, then? The body teas con'' — there was a 'body* also — Zounds! Where is that fragment? Why could not Hopkins have told me all about the matter,
" If
had the other fragment,
I
'After the deed
was
1
done, the child
1
me
instead of sending
my
that
in the
my
the chance of having
Here
dark on such a fool's errand.
throat cut twice, and
even
now am
I've stood
not certain
lungs will not be perforated by some dirty piece of lead or other
— ah, that fragment,
fragment!"
that oracular
As Jacopo thus gave vent to his feelings in a crude soliloquy, he did not cease to examine alternately, and with a searching glance, the piece of paper which he held in one hand, and the white-bearded face, which glowed
in the sunlight at his side.
The more
"
I
it, the more I am convinced that he knows someAnd Madeline is no common peasant girl a stray
think of
—
thing of Madeline. slice cut off
from the fruit-cake of aristocracy
such an interest
Let
the matter?
in
Hopkins and
my
me
!
Why
should Hopkins take
Two
think!
years and six
There was some talk about a mysterious affair; in fact, the merchant and the lord were never done muttering, whispering, and counselling with each months
other.
ago,
— Oh,
my
late
master were thick as thieves.
unpropitious stars,
why
did
I
incur
thus
your ven-
geance?"
As though some his
terrible
memory had
crossed his brain, Jacopo clasped
hands piteously, and cast his eyes toward the top of the arbor.
"Why sinful
me
sent
did I thus depart from the strict line of
weakness? to
Hopkins's house,
important papers. seal
!
Yes, on the day when
I
Pitiable frailty
to
had them !
Had
I
his in
my
my
lord
own chamber,
my
duty, and betray a
left
Philadelphia,
in fact, to get
he
certain
hand, and yet forgot to break the
even moistened the seal with
warm
water,
— PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
240
be some excuse
there would
That
effort.
been revealed
— but as
have no security
me, but as
for
the case stands,
my
for
the breast
thumb. "
know
I
only get
I
Oh,
!
The
right
little
about
it,
and
hand was clenched
apoplexy
a vagrant catalepsy to throw
finger
and
cry of joy.
to a
—but he may recover—hah
it
for a stray
Advancing
dev'lish
was a fragment of paper between the
there
;
Jacopo gave utterance
Could
again
make an
throat or lungs !"
His eye rested upon the insensible man.
upon
did not even
I
it is,
once removed, the whole secret of the matter would have
seal
He
!
begins to breathe
touch old Peter on the neck, or even
to
into a trance !"
him
he touched the hand of the insensible man, but
stealthily,
Peter did not move.
"I know you
— you
Makin' believe
old dog!
me
hear; and in a minute you'll spring upon
He was
touched the fragment; gently, very gently, but the old man's hand
Trembling from head
like a vice.
did not unclose
Jacopo's In a ;
The paper
eyes.
his
Jacopo seized the hand,
to foot,
The
and pressed the thumb and forefinger apart.
ment
you don't see or
that
like a she wild-cat!"
fluttered
man
old to
stirred, but
the ground, near
feet.
moment he had and here
is
seized
the result,
of
concealed
with
lead
some
to
upon
This
all
Twenty-third of November, this
confession,
share in
Jacopo shook
was
it
1756
near
concealed
also
which
I
suppose
name
real
occurred
and in
;
the
chesnut
large
on
the
making
crime, and Pray the
like a withered leaf.
feared above another,
a
ask forgiveness of mankind for
I
detestable
this
was taken away.
knowledge of the
poor victim.
the
within the other frag-
closet,
a
papers,
it
:
Corpse,
the
parchments and
child
in
out
looks
Dorfner,
certain
may
he had placed
;
was done, the
After the deed
The body was window which tree.
it
which he beheld
If there
the monosyllable
'
my
Lord
was one word which he
Corpse.'
Corpse!' "I have no objection to 'body,' used in a funeral sense, but Dorfner' oh, ho, my dear old So unpleasantly suggestive No wonder you start and swear, and go off in faintin' spells— no boy 4
Augh
!
!
!
wonder. an eddy
A
«
Poor victim'
—
'
child'
'
—
—my brains goes whirling
like a cork in
!"
black face rose slowly over the chair of the insensible Peter.
Jacopo
shuddered as he saw the sightless eyeballs glowing redly in the sockets, while the sun streamed over the dark visage. A knife gleamed over the grey hairs of Dorfner
;
it
was clenched
in the right
arm of
the negro.
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. Jacopo
left
the arbor on tip-toe, passed around
He
noiseless step toward the farm-house. the chesnut tree, that fatal tree,
and strode with
will
a
passed under the shadows of
Up
and cast an anxious glance toward the window.
you
remember, Gilbert climbed on the
Jacopo stood on the
1775.
it,
24]
stone
threshold
— the
last night
farm-house
of
door
was open.
He
cast a searching glance around.
All
The sun shone gayly solitary bird chirping among
the farm-house.
there
To
was a
among
new-mown
the piles of
scythes rested
upon
the grass
;
hay.
still
and desolate about
the foliage of the chesnut tree.
with the laborers grouped But they labored no longer their
west stretched the undulating
the
was
over the roof of the barn, and
field,
;
every face was turned toward the western
woods.
Even sill
as
he stood upon the threshold stone, one foot resting upon the
— while his hand —Jacopo turned gaze
of the door
printed paper
direction indicated
A '
the
torn fragments of
far to the west,
and gazed
shadows gathered thickly beneath the luxuriant
was
in the
by the extended arms of the laborers.
dark form was seen on the verge of the distant woods,
for the It
grasped
still
his
the form which, not long ago, had passed
and the sun, and with
its
shadow
stricken
— dimly seen,
foliage.
between the old man
him down
in the
very act of
murder. " Paul Ardenheim," cried Jacopo, as he crossed the threshold—" Or
Ghost." He closed the door and was lost to sight. At the same moment, the dark figure disappeared among the shadows
his
of the distant woods, and a deep groan resounded from the arbor
CHAPTER THIRD. THE DOVE.
The its
dark form which come between the old mart and the sun, and with shadow struck him down, even in the act of Murder; was it indeed
Paul Ardenheim, or but an apparition gliding sadlyand noiselessly through the light and
shadow of
the
summer day
?
In the woods which bloom so fragrantly around the Wissahikon,
may
find an
answer
to
we
our question.
There was a narrow path leading from the 16
field
of
new-mown- hay,
PAUL ARDENHEIM
242
dow
nooks of the
into the
>
Where
hikon.
grouped
one rich contrast of foliage
in
the
shadows
the
field
— such
was
new-mown
Wissa-
where
:
the sunlight came lovwhere a tiny thread of
gray old rock, and made low music among
a
wild-wood path, which
the course of the
hay,
;
to the
led from
verge of the Wissahikon waters.
measured step, never backward glance through the
path, the dark form hastened with a
this
once looking light
to the waters of the
of gold upon the sod
down
liquid silver trickled
Along
down even
the oaks and chesnuts, the maples and the pines, were
ingly, scattering patches
of
forest,
OR,
;
to the right or left, or casting a
and shadow of the woods.
Now
in the sunshine,
where every
outline of the shape, every lock of
the waving hair, and point of the dark
attirr,
was
and now
fully disclosed,
where the thick leaves spread a tremulous canopy, and the low voice of the tiny rill sung through the silence. Now turning the breast of this gray rock, crowned by a clump of saplings, now along this level slope, where the moss, softer than any carpet,
into the shade,
glowed
brown
in a
passing ray, and
now
along this barren strip of earth, whose
leaves are darkened by the twilight of the withered pines.
Thus, without once looking back, or glancing
to
the right or
left, the*
and
of 'fresh
dark form wandered on.
At
last there
came
a
narrow
dell,
open
to the sunlight,
full
A
narrow
with walls of leaves on either side,— or rather with the
foliage
wild grass, whose vivid green was sprinkled with flowers. dell,
spreading from the grass to the sky, like
immense
A
rendered surpassingly beautiful by fairy hands.
whose wild grass the tiny thread of whose silence the low song was ever At the western extremity of
The shadow which
beautiful,
—shone
the dell,
a glimpse of
at the kiss
And
— above
where
it
widened
into a slope of
making
the water
among more calmly
a flood of
an opening
hazy
light,
in
vague
which came rushing
in the trees.
the calm sheet of water,
undimpled by a ripple
Heaven, whose deep azure was blushing
into gold,
of the afternoon sun.
the dark form
striking
through
and through
and wrapping the giant trees on the opposite shore
like a golden rain through
Above
dell,
singing.
this dell,
rested there,
was only broken by
twilight,
narrow
silver sparkled fitfully,
of tapestry,
calm sheet of water, embosomed
carpet-like moss, sparkled a
leaves.
folds
which had passed between the old man and the sun, its shadow, hastened along the dell, without once
him down with
looking back.
As
it
came
in sight of the
silence, uttered
by
calm sheet of water, a word arose upon
the
a voice of sad emphasis.
That word was " Wissahikon !" last the form drew near the water-side, and
At
without a ripple, in
its
frame of rocks and
that
calm sheet, spreading
trees, reflected a face.
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. was
It
a
bronzed
243
shadowed by locks of dark brown
face,
beard upon the firm lip softly relieved the
— dark beard,
There
hair.
were large lustrous eyes beneath the boldly marked brows.
There was
which clothed the round chin, and There was a broad forehead,
dark olive complexion.
power of language to describe. in its young manhood, so darkened in every lineament by some memory of the past, or prophecy of the future, the Wissahikon waters never reflected before this hour. shadowed by
gloom beyond
a
all
Altogether, a face so bold, and yet beautiful
The dark form
stood by the water-si*
though he
he was palsied, but his
own
stricken his veins with palsy.
fever,
the
old
man was
hurled
—
— — ;
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON.
485
and loathsome cell; his sight was gone, his brain was dead, Son brought him into light again, and chained him to the tower floor. Your young Lord wished the Lordship of Mount Sepulchre ere his father was dead." "It is false! Knave the lie blisters on thy tongue!" shouted Ralph of Grey-wolf, but the rest of the Twenty-Four was silent. Murmurs such into a dark
when
his
from the Ghosts that haunt accursed burial
as the belated wayfarer, hears
places, began to creep from lip to lip.
"And
I
first
yes
And
struck off his chains.
floor of that foul den.
And
I,
word of kindness he had heard
—
I
him from
raised
the loathsome
the Italian, the Sorcerer, spoke to
something
his dead brain throbbed into
him
the
in the long night of blindness, yes, like life at the
sound of
my
Meanwhile your young Lord, crept into the chamber, sacred with the presence of a pure woman, and in the darkness, aye, like a coward who does a coward's murder in the dark, he went to his infernal words.
treachery.
He, pressed that
lip
which
I
had never touched, even with a
brother's kiss, he dishonored that form, which
I
had never looked upon,
but from afar and with the reverence of a holy worship."
" She was thy leman," said old Ralph bluntly for the loves of a
—
" This castle
is
no place
wandering beggar and his mistress."
But the Twenty-Four did not chorus
his words.
Something
pathy subdued the ferocious resolve, which had impressed
like
sym-
their faces
it was an Lord Harry of Mount Sepulchre, had deserved much on account of the Italian woman, as for the blind-
whispering one with the other, they said with a shudder that infernal deed,
and that
his death, not so*
my
ness and palsy of the old man, his father.
—
must answer for the deed " said the youngest of them ail, and an ominous murmur echoed his words, as sword in hand he advanced from the group— "Answer for it now, and with thy life !" "Still thou
" First uncover the corse !" said the Italian, clutching his dark robe
with trembling hands.
Old Ralph with his dagger between his teeth, and his sword under his arm bent down, and touched the dark robe, which veiled the dead, " Hold!" cried the young knight "Let him answer first how the deed was done. We all beheld thee cross this pall, an hour and more ago, on Thou didst not return this way. How didst thy way to the castle gate. Answer me ?" gain entrance to the castle ?
—
The
Italian
simply replied,
" Uncover the corse, and
in his
Old Ralph grasped the dark spectator, a
man
you
cloth,
manifested in their straining eyes,
new
low sad voice
I will tell
all
!"
and the
when
was was increased by a
interest of the group,
their circle
with haggard face and blood-shot eyes,
who
unobserved behind the grim knight, and looked upon the motionless with a vague and horror-stricken gaze.
As every eye was
fixed
stole
Italian
upon the
:
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
486
bony hands of
new
which covered the dead,
old Ralph, grasping the robe
this
spectator of the scene passed unobserved, until the Italian raising his
glance, beheld that haggard face, with
eyeballs discolored with injected
its
blood.
At the sight the
"
The Lord
face,
of
back, wavered to and fro like a
Italian started
drunken with wine, and then which pierced every soul
gave utterance
his lips
Mount Sepulchre come back
to life !"
man
an ejaculation
to
and dropping his
covered by the cowl, upon his breast, he stretched forth his white
hands toward the haggard form.
They
raised their eyes, and a cry such as never
was heard before within
dome ''The Lord of Mount Sepulchre come back to life !" It was even so. The haggard form, w'th dress disordered and golden hair matted upon the brow damp with oeaded sweat and blood-shot eyes rolling in a livid face, was none other than Lord Harry of Mount
those walls, pealed echoing to the
:
—
—
Sepulchre.
He gazed
into their affrighted faces without a
with an idiotic glare.
" If thou
art the
Lord of Mount Sepulchre
—"
word
;
his eyes rolled
the Italian whispered, his
white hands extended and his head drooped on his breast,
was
it,
that
fell
beneath
my
steel in
—" Then who
yonder chamber?"
Old Ralph stripped the dark cloth from the breast and face of the dead.
And
every knight moved one step backward, even old Ralph shrank
shudderingly
away
;
haggard Lord and the Italian confronted each
the
other beside the corse. It
was an aged man, whose gaunt form was clad in to the breast, was dabbled in blood.
white beard, flowing
open, fixed in death stretched
man It
stiffly
;
the
jaw
fallen, the
rags, but
The
whose
eyes wide
hands cramped and distorted,
beside the lifeless frame
a sadder sight the eye
of
never saw.
was
the old Lord,
And around spectators,
The its face,
this
Hubert of Mount Sepulchre.
hideous image of Sudden Death, thronged the affrighted
—knights and
servitors
— every face blank, every
Italian knelt beside the corse,
lip sealed.
and stretched forth his hands over
muttering to himself in a low voice.
Lord Harry,
like a
man
ridden by a night-mare, looked vacantly into
the face of the dead, and then into the eyes of the spectators, as
if to
ask
meaning of the scene. The dead awe which rested upon
the
the hall of Palestine, was disturbed by a low and gentle step, and there came a woman's form, half hidden in the raven hair which flowed to her knees, stealing through the throng, and taking her place, in silence, between Lord Harry and the prostrate Italian.
Through
the
meshes of her
hair, her
white arms were seen folded over
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON.
487
her breast, and her eyes, unnaturally large, dazzled the spectators with their brightness, as they vacantly turned their glance
"
The
Italian's
from face
to face.
!"
leman
So pale and yet so beautiful she stood there, attired as much in the waves of her black tresses as in her loosened robe, that the spectators "
thought they beheld no living woman, but a
"Raphael innocent
1" she whispered,
spirit
down
bending
from the other world.
beside the Italian,
—"I am
!"
The words were
simple, but the sound of her voice seemed at once to
break the spell which chained the Sorcerer spectators in breathless awe.
At once the
the corse, and
bound the
Italian started up,
and dashed
to
her from him, yes, dashed her beautiful form upon the breast of the dead at
once the knights rushed forward, brandishing their swords,
Harry, recovering from his
idiotic
at
;
once Lord
apathy, raised his voice, and called for
vengeance upon the Assassin of his Father.
Amid
the infuriated throng, the Italian stood erect,
hemmed
in
by
a
interwoven swords, that glittered in the light like fiery serpents^
circle of
shut out on every side from hope and
life,
by brawny arms and
faces red-
dening with the lust of blood.
But
at
moment
this
thirty living
occurred a scene, which, witnessed as
men, seems so strange, so
Eustace Brynne, the writer of
my
this
it
utterly incredible, that
chronicle, tremble as
I
I,
record
was, by
humble it upon
page.
Even
as the
Knights rushed forward
to
sheathe their swords in the blood
of the Italian, the lights were obscured and the wide hall darkened by a
dome
cloud of vapor, which rolled from the lating columns.
the face of his
to the floor in vast
and undu-
This vapor blinded every eye; no one could distinguish neighbor they tossed to and fro like men bewitched, and ;
And from
grappled with each other in the gloom.
that rose-colored cloud,
their shouts and curses swelled into the dome, like the confused cries of
drowning men from the vortex of a whirlpool. When the vapor cleared away, and the lights shone brightly once more throughout the
hall,
and the knights beheld each others'
faces, they found
themselves standing sword in hand, around the corse of the old man; Lord the most infuriate of the throng, rending the shook his dagger over his head. But the Italian and the Woman had disappeared.
Harry
stillness
with curses
as he
In vain they searched the wide hall
behind the hangings servitors.
;
in vain their
There was no
had seen them
fly
;
;
swords
in vain they thrust their
angry questioning of the frightened
trace of the Italian and his mistress.
no door had been opened
to give
No
one
them egress from
the Hall.
But they were gone
They had
;
their place beside the
body of the dead was vacant.
vanished like forms of cloud before the morning breeze.
— PAUL ARDENHEIM
488
When
OR
;
consciousness was impressed upon the hearts of the Knights,
this
they gathered again around the body of the old man, resting the points of
swords upon the marble
their
his breast
upon
floor, as
Lord Harry was
the dead. ;
his eyes
they looked with fixed eyes upon
arms drawn tightly over sunken beneath the downdrawn brows, were rivetted in their midst, his
his Father's face.
No
one dared question him concerning his knowledge of
this terrible
deed, but that which no one asked, he told himself in broken tones. "
It is
work of Sathanas
the
I"
he muttered, as though speaking with
—"My hand was on the door of her chamber, when — voice and hers — mingling low and hurried
himself wit«hin
she was
telling
him
had been
that he
there, but an
he had pressed his kiss upon her lip, and my name trembled from his
angry tones, and
into the
which rushed
light
shadows
cell
;
thee,
followed by the sound
was
listening. 1 drew was opened, and by the blaze of I saw his arm lifted, and saw my father He, too, had been concealed within the
into the cell,
bleeding beneath the blow.
I
he had started up as the light flashed in his
me.
for
my Lord Harry
For, as the of
look upon the corse, he
stairway of his
cell
old man's chains
Sepulchre
How
face,
came
Then, without turning
/'
my
cheek and rolling eye,
to
work of Sathanas
and received the
he shrieked, 'this for
caitiff struck,
father there
opens into the Wizard's room, but It is
?
Mount fled.
listened;
the door
;
fall
blow intended
I
hour before, and that
he denied in cold and lips,
of a footstep, approaching the door by which
back deeper
heard voices
I
tones.
in
his
to
True, the
?
who unloosed
the
!"
he turned with a flushed his brave Twenty-Four, " Yes, the Enemy of
the
Mankind hath been among us !" There was no answer for the young Lord of Mount Sepulchre. The Knights, young and old, looked upon his face and upon the cold face of the dead, and kept their peace.
"What do poison
in
1
my
see
?
look
been here— let us
?
Do you Come
forget
shrink from
—
it all
the
in a
my
touch, gentle sirs
good old man
brimming cup
!
is
dead
?
Is there
— Sathanas
God's death,
my
has
good
companions, your pale visages are enough to make a man afraid !" The brave Knight seemed to have forgotten the wine-cup and the board, in the
dumb
horror of the dead man's face. Old Ralph alone gave answer
Lord of Mount Sepulchre « Cover his face, my good Lord, and let us to our beds. As for me, by or for some France other for land, where bound am light, I to-morrow's to the
there is Priest and Shrine, to wash out the stain of sin, from my Soul. This night's work my good Lord, hath made me think strangely of the wild life, we have led together." The young Lord answered him with a curse, when Iron Dickon's huge
form appeared in the Western door, his hand extended in the act of beckoning to his Master. The Baron crossed the marble floor, and conversed for a
;
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. moment with
489
more
to the
nothing yet of this" said the young Lord, pointing
to the
his vassal,
and
after a little while,
returned once
group, as Iron Dickon disappeared.
"He knows corse, "
my
And
as for
me,
I
had neither heart nor time
he waited tenderly upon the old
faith,
to tell
man while he
him now.
By
He
tells
lived
!
me now, gentle sirs, that an hour ago he secured the Italian, and conveyed him by a secret passage to the cell beneath Saladin's tower. You may make of that what you please, but for the present, Iron Dickon brings What say you, my good Knight? A messtrange intelligence to us all. He demands instant ausenger from our King waits at the Castle gate. Let the body of the dead be removed hide it behind dience with me. the hangings. I will await the coming of this Messenger, where I stand." They raised the corse, and wrapped it in the sombre robe, and. hurriedly concealed it, behind the drapery of the Hall. Lord Harry, with one hand laid upon the banquet table, and the other resting upon the hilt of his sword, stood in an attitude of calm dignity, awaiting in silence, the comHis cheek was bloodless, his lips withing of King Henry's Messenger. out color, his eyes blood-shotten, and yet he was calm. Behind him, ranged in a half circle were grouped the renowned Twenty-Four, their faces, one and all, wearing a look of blai^v awe, while their gaze was fixed upon the Western door of the Hall. They awaited the appearance of the ;
Messenger with a vague curiosity and suspense. " He will leave his men-at arms without the castle Hall alone," exclaimed Lord Harry
gate,
and enter the
" 'Tis a privilege of
Our Race, thus I' faith he does not seem in a to receive the Messenger of the King. Shall we wait for him, till morning dawns ?" jjurry to fulfil his message. The words had not passed his lips, when the Western door was opened, either by trumpet peal or the voice of by Iron Dickon, and unannounced Herald the Messenger of the King entered the Hall of Palestine. As he crossed the marble floor, advancing toward Lord Harry, every eye took
—
—
the
measure of
light
:
his form,
shone on his
He was
in
and a murmur swelled through the Hall, as the
face.
good sooth, a
man
of remarkable bearing.
and majestic, was clad
in a close-fitting garment of purwhich set off every grace of his figure, and gave new dignity The velvet, which looked black to the kingly composure of his carriage. by the rays of the lamp, was only relieved by a single diamond, which
His form,
tall
ple velvet,
shone upon his
left breast,
and dazzled every eye.
carried a mantle of dark velvet,
and his
left
which hung
On
his right arm, he
in easy folds, as
he advanced
hand, grasped his cap, shaded by a cluster of jetly plumes.
His brow was uncovered and every eye beheld his face. It was a noble countenance, every feature looking like the work of the Around the great Sculptor's chissel, firm, regular, and cold as marble. forehead,
unseamed by
a wrinkle, but pale as death, clustered his hair, in
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
490
profuse masses, which seemed even blacker than the mantle hanging on
His eyes, somewhat sunken beneath the brows, shone with
his arm.
expressible lustre
;
in-
they were black, and yet more bright and dazzling
than the star which glittered on his breast. In a word
if
would have
the form,
your gaze among a crowd
attracted
of a thousand, the face would have
won your
among
the form
While
thousand faces.
ten
Monk;
face brought to mind, the countenance of a
red
with
Monk
not a joyous
the juice of the grape, and swollen with good cheer;
too,
Monk, but
si
cell.
Your pardon,
Stranger,
gentle
sirs,
for this
unwelcome
that the
business of the King.
Will
said the
intrusion,"
he surveyed the knightly throng, " But
Tts
Mount Sepulchre, on him
it
buried in the awful silence and breathless solitudes of his earth-
hidden "
eye, and chained
indicated the warrior, the
I
it
seek the Lord of
please ye, to inform
Count Capello, craves an interview on behalf of
his dread
Majesty Henry the Eighth ?"
These words pronounced
in a
measured
voice,
and with an
produced an impression as sudden as
it
was
air of great
Not a few murmurred such words as, " Foreigner One of the outlandish favorites of the King !" others gazed in silence upon the commanding face of the Stranger, while Ralph of Grey-wolf exclaimed with Mayhap a Cardinal in disa deep sigh " A true Catholic by the Rood guise. I will confess to him !" As for Lord Harry, he felt the blood rush to his face, as the quiet tones of the Count Capello penetrated his ears " I am the Lord of Mount Sepulchre, Sir Count," he said, and drew himself up with a haughty air. "Thou !" cried the Count with a start. " I cry your mercy, noble Sir,, I pray you, lead me but I was told that Lord Hubert was an aged man. to him, or at least, give me audience with Lord Ranulph his elder Son." " I am Lord Harry, Baron of Mount Sepulchre," cried the young Lord
dignity,
various.
of the knights,
!
—
!
:
in
a burst of indignation, for
roused his blood
—"As
for
the gaze and
Lord Hubert, he
look of the foreign Count, is
blind and old, and never
again will give audience to any one, not even to the King himself, were
he
to
honor
my
poor mansion with his presence.
abroad years ago. Beautiful
it
Sir Count,
is to see,
I
And Ranulph
—he died
await the message of the King !"
the native dignity of a high-born English
Lord
!
There was Baron Harry, as gallant a Knight as ever rode to battle, raising himself to his full stature, his proud lip curling, and his blue eyes full of icy scorn, while the Foreign Count, abashed
drew back
a step,
bowed
his
head and held
by
his
commanding presence
his jetty
plumes before
his
face.
" There
is
the message of the King, gracious Sir," he said, and with-
THE MONK OF THE W1SSAHIKON
491
out raising his face, extended a folded parchment, which was burdened
with a heavy seal. "
The
Seal of his Majesty !"
murmurred Lord Harry,
as
he opened the
Thy Brother Lord Ranulph parchment, "Hah! What is this I behold " with a flashing eye, he drank in the briaf words of that Royal lives 1
—
!
'
missive.
The hand which grasped the parchment dropped by his side. He — now bloodless and ashy toward the Foreign Count, who still preserved his attitude of mute respect, and held his plumed cap,
—
turned his face
before his face.
"The King Mass
me
writes
by
the
my
good Knights
that
!
?
my
that
Brother, Lord* Ranulph lives, aye, and
he will be here in a few days.
Has
What say
ye,
some
per-
not our dread Lord, been deceived by
Pope !" There was wonder and consternation painted upon the faces of the Murmurs perKnights, beyond the power of my poor pen to describe. vaded the air, and old Ralph swore somewhat blasphemously, that he was
fidious follower of the
bewitched, and given over
Stahanas on account of his sins.
to
Count, perchance you will make plain
" Sir
b
mystery," said Lord
this
Harry, in a tone by no means bold or deep, while his pallid cheek and quivering
contrasted
lips,
and red-brown beard. " jest of the
The
was
it
his
my
is this
seen
brother, or
golden
curls
but a merry
good King ?"
Count
stranger
sage, as
somewhat strangely with
You have
agitated
raised his head, and the light fell
by
his pale vi-
know me, even yet?" he whispered
"Brother, dost thou not
know
upon
a smile of singular sweetness.
—"My
methinks some pulse of our father's blood, throbbing about thy heart might have told thee ere this, that it was features
I,
I
are changed, but
Ranulph thy Brother
The son
—
!"
—
Harry staggered back reeled wildly like one and would have fallen to the floor had it not been for gallant
bereft of rea-
the extended
arms of old Ralph. "
Thou
!"
he cried with chattering teeth and corpse-like visage, as he of the old knight: "Thou my brother Thou,
struggled in the arms
Ranulph
Nay
!
—nay —Ranulph
dust long, long ago.
Then
was
It is all
!
is
a cheat
Ranulph has been grave-yard mockery !"
dead,
—a
that the Stranger, rising
to his full height, surveyed the gaze and a sad sweet smile. Every one confessed the majesty of his presence and the noble lineage written on his brow.
silent
"
it
throng,
He
with a calm
does not
come back
know me
!"
to the castle of
know me !" He raised
he sadly
my
said, "
Alas
and mine
fathers .
* ft*
the
plumed cap
as if to hide his tears.
!
the woeful hour
own
!
I
brother does not
:
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
492
m Lead me," he muttered, in a voice broken and hurried, " Lead
man,
the old
he
my
at least, will
know
me
Let
father.
feel his
his long lost son
my
hands upon
brow
me
!'
Silence reigned throughout the hall, silence dead and leaden as a
The Knights
ard's spell.
to
again,
fixed their affrighted eyes
and with curdling blood, confessed within
their
upon
Wiz-
the stranger,
inmost souls, that he was
indeed Lord Ranulph, or his Ghost. the
arms of the old Knight,
" Brother— forgive
— " he gasped—"
Forgive and take
last.
Lord Ranulph
— lifted his
—
for
it
my was
hand
I
was but
a child,
when
I
saw thee
!"
the elder son of
Baron Hubert,
in
good sooth
pale face once more, and his dark eyes shone with tears, as
once sad and sweet, hung on his
that peculiar smile, at
"
tottered
Meanwhile, Harry struggling from forward and extended his hand
Thy hand my
Hah
lips.
makes the heart swell, to touch the palm of a Mount Sepulchre once more. Wine, my gallant Sirs, wine For I would pledge my brother in a brimming cup, and my fair dame, brother.
!
It
!
shall press
"
it
with her
Thy dame
he drinks, in token of her sisterly love
lips, ere
?" exclaimed Baron Harry, and his surprise was
!"
echoed
by the Knight. " Behold her
!
The Lady
Eola, wife of Ranulph of
and from the shadows, came a
woman
Mount Sepulchre V
of beautiful shape, clad in a garb
She had
of rich velvet, with a dark veil drooping over her face.
unperceived over the threshold, and
now
glided
stood by her husband's side, her
white hand, laid gently upon his mantle.
The dark
habit
which she
wore, disclosed the outlines of a form, at once slender and voluptuous, while the thick folds of her veil could not altogether hide the dazzling brightness of her eyes.
Beshrew
my
heart, but
it
was
right wonderful, to behold the thunder-
stricken faces of the gallant knights
"
He
brings his good
"'Tis Venus herself
"A "
in funeral garb,
form like Anne Boleyn
And
all
!
dame with him, from other !"
with a black
veil
lands," cried one,
over her face !"
exclaimed another.
the dignity and presence of our late
Queen
!"
added a
third.
Lord Ranulph took a golden cup, brimming with old wine, from the hand of Sir Ralph, and spake to the beautiful lady, in an unknown tongue.
She answered in a voice, low and sweet, but the wondering knights, could by no means comprehend her words. " The Lady Eola cannot master the rude syllables of our English tongue," said Ranulph, turning to his brother, " But she greets you as a Brother, my true Harry, and consents to press her lips to the cup, ere passes to yours, in token of her sisterly love !"
True a
man
cup
;
it
it
was, that the brave Harry, pallid and amazed, looked not unlike
enchanted.
He saw
he bent forward eager
the white hand of the beautiful to
dame
lift
the
gain a glimpse of her face, as she parted
— THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. the folds of her veil
but the sight of her lips,
;
golden rim of the goblet, was
And
in a
he took of no
moment,
that white
their fingers slightly
it,
moment
warm and
rewarded
red, pressing the
his gaze.
hand held the cup towards him, and touched each other. 'Twas it
was,
to the
Lady Eola,
his
own
a
as
circumstance
blood with
filled his
fire.
Lord of Mount
brother, drink to the return of Ranulph,
Drink
!
that
but that touch, slight as
;
my
" Drink,
Sepulchre
all
493
dame, and henceforth
fair
thy loving Sister, Harry !"
As he spoke, the Lord Ranulph contemplated his brother with an earngrew radiant, as with a joy too deep
est look, while his great forehead, for utterance.
Harry of Mount Sepulchre,
— Brother,
younger
veiled Eola to the
'
—no
longer Lord, but simply,
1
the Lord's
slowly raised the cup, turning his gaze from the
Lord Ranulph,
The golden rim touched his lip From that instant the place of
as the golden rim touched his lip.
the brave Harry, in
the Castle of his^
Race, was vacant forever.
Even resting
rim of the cup, he
as his lip touched the golden
Brother's
feet, his face
by
pressed against the marble
he
nor did his eyes
fell,
No
one convulsive tremor.
his side, without
his lips, as
and glare, as
roll
fell
floor,
dead
at his
and his hands
groan came from if
struggling, with
He touched the cup— he fell. That was all. Every When old Ralph came to him, thinking that he had fallen
the night of death.
eye beheld into a
it.
swoon, and
tried to raise
him from the floor, the body slipt from wood or stone. The gray-haired knight face was seen by every eye. There was
his grasp like a pulseless thing of
turned him to the light, and his
no blackness on
it,
but a rosy blush pervaded the cheeks, and the eyes,
fixed but not glassy, lay dull
and leaden, under the half-shut
He
lids.
— the wine, mingled with the scent of laurel blossoms — pervaded
The golden cup
was dead.
perfume of old
lay near him, and a strong odour,
like
the Hall of Palestine.
Never in all the world was there such a Night as this, whose every hour was marked by a Death or a Crime. The nameless wrong committed by Harry upon the Italian Sorcerer
these deeds
Randulph,
The
woman— the
murder of the old man, by the
Harry, before his brother's eyes
took place on the night, which marked the return of Lord Castle of his ancestors.
all
to the
hearts of the spectators
were too
full for
speech
gay Knights, gay no longer, looked
tival attire, the
brave Harry, in
The known
Italian
— the sudden death of
dumb
;
in the
clad in their fes-
dead face of the
apathy.
veiled lady clasped her hands, and
murmured
a prayer, in an un-
tongue while a shudder, agitated her beautiful shape, from head
to
foot.
Lord Ranulph stood
for a
moment, horror-stricken and spell-bound
like
:
494
PAUL ARDENHEIM;
the rest, his gaze fixed
upon the
OR,
face of his dead brother, while his broad
high forehead was darkened by a single vein, swelling upward, from be-
tween the eyebrows.
At
broke over his face; a smile
smile
last a
sad as a star-beam twinkling through the gloom of a charnel
"He
is
dead
My
!
Brother?" he said
died of a strange disease of which
I
He A
subdued tone: "
in a
have heard
in foreign lands.
ease that turns the avenues of the heart to bone, while the cheek
of
*Slowly,
life.
through the course of long years,
silently,
builds up the channels of the heart, until at last,
makes the blood bound
tion,
throbs no longer, and
died of joy
He
life
knelt beside his
A
terrible
disease,
was too strong
And
these are the deeds
who have
brother
!
—
a right strong smell of laurel
soul !"
which took place on the
which
night,
And
I,
when Lord Ra-
Eustace Brynne,
intended to be deposited in the
is
Mount Sepulchre, do hereby avow, on mine own knowledge,
spoken, on that all
for
the Castle of his fathers.
to
that these are the deeds
And
my
by
written this history,
archives of
My poor
:
by the Mass, and
leaves, or laurel blossoms,
nulph came home
done,' the heart
is
him A terrible disease !" dead brother, while old Ralph of Grey-Wolf mut-
tered with an idiotic stare
"
full
is
this disease
when some sudden emowork
passes away, without a sigh.
the emotion
;
like a torrent, 'the
has dis-
which were done, and these the words which were
fatal night.
other histories of that night, and
this chronicle are lies,
all
rumors which
conflict with
born of the Devil and the Pope, and uttered by
their minions, in order to taint the
good fame of the House of Mount Se-
may
be known, and branded forever, with
pulchre.
So
that their lies
their proper infamy, I will here,
add certain of the rumors, which have
been raised by the Pope and the Devil aforesaid, against the House of
Mount Sepulchre. That the Italian magician, and
I.
In support of this
person.
rumor
my Lord Rannlph is stated, that my
it
studied the black art in outlandish parts, and
Harry, disguised
in his Sorcerer's robes,
Lord Harry, who besought him ardently
him some lead
turn his
own
eyes,
how
to
into gold straightway.
the
young Lord bore
came
to
ivere the
same
Lord Ranulph
the Court of
King
and was there encountered by
come
to
Mount Sepulchre, and
Ranulph wishing
to
see with
himself, to his Father and to the
vassals of the Barony, accepted the proposal of Baron Harry, and
came
the Castle, with his outlandish wife, disguised as a page, having at the
to
same
*
time, the letter of the
An
anachronism?
circulation of the blood
King about
Had Lord Ranulph ?
his person.
of
This
is
a
most
atro-
Mount Sepulchre, any idea of
the
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. .
Were
cious falsehood.
be forced
to
it
to
495
be believed, only for a moment,
we should
regard Lord Harry, as the wronger of his brother's wife or
mistress, and
Lord Ranulph
as the
Murderer of
his Father.
"FL; a fiend-
calumny.
ish
II. That the death of Lady Eola, which took place on the Twelfth of November, 1539, (something more than a year after the events recorded,
Lord and Husband, Ranulph of Mount Sepulch re, because he ic as poisoned with the thought, that the child sleeping upon her bosom was not ***'****. This is indeed a lie worthy of Satan or the Pope. In order that future generations may know as aforesaid,) ivas the ivork of her true
the truth of this matter,
now
but
tery,
Chronicle,
I,
Eustace Brynne, sometime Prior of the Monas-
a true believer in
at the
command
our gracious King, have written
of the noble Lord Ranulph of
this
Mount Sepulchre.
the Manuscript, written by the Monk of the Sixteenth was connected with other Manuscripts, written by various hands, and narrating the history of the House of Mount Sepulchre from
Thus ended
Century.
age
It
to age, until the
middle of the Eighteenth Century.
But the beautiful reader had not courage Manuscripts floor, the
fell
from her stiffening
fingers,
to
The mass
proceed.
and as they
fluttered
to
of the
harsh sound disturbed the breathless stillness of the place.
CHAPTER FORTY-FIRST.
•
WHAT PAUL BEHELD
IN
THE SEALED CHAMBER.
The Father murdered by his OAvn child, by the brother, and the beautiful woman sacrificed A maze of misery and crime! It is indeed ternameless outrage. the very paper on which these deeds are written, breathes of ihe
"It
is
too horrible for belief!
the brother poisoned
by
a
rible
—
charnel.
me.
You do
But Paul, you turn your gaze away.
Tell me,
I
beseech you, what has
this Revelation
not look upon
to
do with your
fate."
And
the beautiful
woman, whose
death-like cheek contrasted with her
raven hair, gave a wierd and spiritual loveliness
long ago
to that face, not
so ripe with passion, glided over the floor, with noiseless steps, and laid
her hands upon the shoulders of Paul Ardenheim.
He
He
stood motionless, his averted face buried in his hands. I
felt
her
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
496
upon
touch, but did not turn and look
Chamber
Sealed
the
those embodied
— revelations
in the
Manuscripts
stifling horror.
" Paul !" she whispered
The
courage.
Tell
Paul.
—"
I
her, for the
— now clouded
the secret of this
"Read on," muttered
Paul,
my
chills
still
voice
— yours — persuaded
the forbidden chamber.
Read on
in,
a
have not the
I
;
Speak
blood.
hiding his face in his hands
portion of the madness which has cursed
when your
whole being with
mystery."
on, and learn the history of our race, and drink
hour,
his
dare not read farther
very touch of those pages
me
nameless revelations of
even more dark and harrowing than
me,
to
— "Read
with every page, some
my
existence, since the fatal
me
to
cross the threshold of
!"
Do you reproach me, Paul ?" whispered the Wizard's child. He turned and confronted her, grasping her wrist, while the
"
upon "
so
his
Reproach you
much
No
!
!
No
!
For
so
much sorcery
witchcraft in your tone, that even now, as
once conscious of your presence and of that for
you
from you
He
would
I
would
I
at
my
immortal soul,
father's
— mad —
my own
there
I
dark
fate, it
in
—yes —
at
seems
to
at
me,
a word, a look
now
before, but
his
pale face and
His wild reproaches,
this
settled
beautiful
wandering ejacu-
his
eyes rolling vaguely, his cheeks flushed with passion
this
your look,
gray hairs into dust!"
she could have borne, and borne with a secret triumph
madness,
is
stand before you,
once fixed and dazzling, overwhelmed
with a freezing awe.
lations, his
my
sacrifice
strike
had been wild,
tone, his look
woman
light fell
ashen and colorless visage.
— but
—
all
these
this
calm
conscious despair, palsied every vein with the leaden apathy
of terror.
"Take up his hand, as
the dark record, once more," he exclaimed, while she
clasped her wrist, grow cold as ice:
it
of the charnel fright you,
your soul
afraid.
steep your soul in
Mount Sepulchre,
let
not the atmosphere of unnatural crimes
Read on! Learn the every damning detail.
felt
" Let not the breath
history of our
make
Race by heart;
Learn how Lord Ranulph of
stained with the blood of father and brother, crept be-
hind the chair of his beautiful wife, and sheathed his dagger in her bosom,
even as her babe was sleeping there. Learn how the man who had stabbed his father, and poisoned his brother became the Assassin of the
woman, whose
love and
life
had been mingled with his in the veins of
Nay, do not tremble and turn pale you have asked of me, the Secret of the Sealed Chamber; I will tell that secret, although every word costs me an agony, deeper than the tortures of the damned." that innocent child.
He
paused
beautiful
"
The
for a
;
moment, and passed
his
hand over
his forehead
;
the
woman
shuddered as she beheld the expression of his features. The blood that flowed in its veins, was child was not his own.
poisoned in
its
every throb, by his brother's unnatural crime.
Thoughts
I
a
MONK OF THE W1SSAHIKON
THE; like these
suspicion. at least,
497
cankered the soul of Ranulph; his heart became corroded by Therefore, he stabbed his wife
had been no partner
stabbed the pure
;
in his brother's
child smiled in his face from her mangled bosom.
woman, who
She was dead
wrong.
the
;
But the history of our
Race does not end here. That child grew to manhood, and became the Lord of Mount Sepulchre. He, too, became a father: and he, like his Since that hour, through the Grandsire, died by the hand of his son.
Mount
course of two hundred years, there have been eight Lords of
Se-
pulchre, and every one has gone to his grave a Parricide, slain by the
You will say that there is madness lurking in moment of birth; you will attempt to explain this red
hand of Parricide.
our
blood, from the
his-
tory of unnatural murder,
by the idea of
a constitutional malady, trans-
mitted from father to son, for two hundred years.
But no! no!
yon crossed the forbidden threshold, and seen what to face
with Fate, as
stood, hollow
I
words
I
saw, and stood
like these could
Had f;ice
never pass
your lips."
Your words fill me with horror beyond the power of utter"Paul ance " cried the Wizard's child, attempting to free her wrist from the clasp !
of his icy hand.
Read on
Take up
!
discover, that
my
You
the blood-red record once more.
father, the
younger son of
this
will there
accursed House, soon
which took place not more than twenty years ago, Old World, and bury himself and his children in He was resolved to save me, his the profound solitudes of the New. after the last Parricide,
determined
to leave the
only son, from the curse of our house.
Therefore, he renounced the'
No human eye human eye recognized in the pale old man of Wissahikon,the Last Lord of Mount Sepulchre. He had defied fate he had The hand of his Son should never be stained with the evaded destiny. world, gave up his very name, and crossed the Ocean.
tracked his course, no
;
guilt of Parricide.
This was
his thought;
a thought
which breathed a
blessing on his solitude, and turned the wild Wlssahikon into the very
Now
garden of God.
woven
mark
day, not in an hour, but a
the sequel.
All his plans
together through the years of a life-time
woman !" He fixed upon
in a
moment.
—were
Scattered to
—elaborated and crushed, not in a
air,
by the breath of s
the
Wizard's daughter the
light of his eyes, flashing
with scorn, and every lineament of his face was agitated by a smile, smile which was Satanic in
"A woman!" life-time."-
" Nay, you must listen. all
in
My
"
Her breath destroyed the Hopes of
a
mockery. father
his wanderings.
whose door was marked with
Son should never know
—
very mockery of joy.
he repeated;
Again he smiled
Sepulchre, in ber,
its
had preserved that Record of Mount
He had a cross.
concealed It
was
it
his
within the chamthought, that his
the history of the parricidal race, until the Father.
—
PAUL ARDENHEIM
493
was
And even
dust.
then, this
OR
;
Son could not be won from
his seclusion,
by the temptations of rank and power, for the name of Mount Sepulchre had long ceased to the title of his Kace. It was the into the great world,
name which our house had borne hundred years
for a
in ages past, but
it
had been replaced,
by other names and more swelling
at least,
titles.
Therefore, Paul, the son, reading that Chronicle after the death of ins Father, would not dream that his Race, or their once
He would
had an existence any longer.
Mount Sepulchres
of the
that
;
immense possessions^
only know, that he was the
he was buried
Last
Wissahi-
in the forests of
kon and that the once boundless domains of his fathers, their Castles in England and Germany, their gold counted by millions, and their broad lands measured by leagues ruined Block all were now embodied in the ;
—
—
House of Wissahikon. That the great name of the Race, their fame ennobled by titles only second to Royally, had dwindled down into the name " of the friendless boy Paul Ardenheim !'
—
Again he paused
'
—looked sadly
in
her face
— while
her eyes brightened
with a Thought which she dared not speak. " His race may exist at this hour, in all their wealth and power.
An-
may count his gold, and wear his titles, while the true Lord remains unknown and friendless among these forests." And as Paul stood gazing in her face, his death-cold hand upon her other
wrist
—
—
the music from the
lawn came gushing through the window,
like
the joyous peal of a Bridal Festival.
"
Read
pause.
Then you
chamber; but the I
woman!" Paul know something of
continued, after a breathless
that record, beautiful
"
spent there
—
will
full
mystery
—
never
tell
may
I
the mysteries of that fatal
the complete history of the to
within that Sealed Chamber, which
I
mortal
!
There,
— ente maddened me —
with Ranulph of Mount Sepulchre,
to face
hour which
listen
had entered by a Perjury
because the sorcery of your eyes and voice had stood face
But
ears.
there,
who
I
lived three hun-
dred years ago." " Ranulph of
Mount Sepulchre
!
This
is
:lasped her wrist, had changed from ice to "
—
was not a Corpse which touched me with its hand it was not like Samuel of old, which conv
It
a Spirit
evoked from the Sepulchre,
it
The hand which
stood face to face with him, and looked into his eyes, and heard his
I
voice.
with
a dream !"
fire.
me
as
seemed
I
to
stood enveloped in the horrors of that forbidden place.
me, as
if I
Even now, my
living Soul.
remembrance of
But
stood in the presence of a Corpse, animated by
a
heart writhes and grows cold at the mere
that hour."
As though the memory of that incredible interview, had transformed him into the very image which his imagination pictured a dead bod// Paul Ardenheim paused, his lips moved !>;u living Soul, dinct with
—
fib
framed no sound
;
his
form was motionless,
his face
without
life
or color
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. bis eyes alone, shining with intense light, told that the
49 J (
still
lingered
so imposing in her voluptuous beauty, this
incarna-
life
in his breast.
And
the
Woman
tion of all that
lovely or bewitching,
is
ture, this creature
among
the forms of external na-
whose touch was madness, whose
kiss kindled every
throb into living flame, whose glance paralyzed the reason, or only roused it
into frenzied action,
breast, as if to
him through At
this
like in
meshes of her unbound
moment she looked
form and
stature,
one hand placed upon her
lip,
hair.
like Esther, beautiful
and voluptuous, queen-
and yet with an unutterable
every vein, from her heart sioned Jewess,
shrank with terror from the face of
on her dewy
finger
throbbings, she retreated a step, and gazed upon
still its
the
— even She
Her
Paul Ardenheim.
to
fear,
creeping through
Yes, she seemed like the impas-
her eyes.
summoned suddenly from
of her luxurious
the silence
chamber, by the death-shrieks of her murdered People, or by the blind anger of her Monarch-Husband. " Paul you spoke with Ranulph
who
lived three
hundred years ago,"
she exclaimed after a pause, and her low voice, resounded through every
nook of
the
still
chamber
"
:
You
stood face to face with this living Soul,
enshrined within the breast of a Corpse
?
was a dream Paul, only
It
Your imagination was
dream, believe me.
a
excited to madness, by the
revelations of this manuscript."
Paul fixed upon her a vacant gaze, which looked into her eyes, without
seeming conscious of her presence. "
I
crossed the threshold, and
at
once
nous radiance, which shone around the
my fatal
that radiance appeared the corpse-like form,
was drowned
light
chamber.
in a lumi-
In the centre of
and from the dead
eyes gazed upon me, and at the same time,
filled the
face, the
place with light,
unlike the rays of sun, or moon, or star, but resembling the pale radiance
which
me;
flutters
over the graves of the newly-buried dead.
move, there was no sound, and yet
his lips did not
seemed, as though that Soul, enshrined
in
I
And he spoke
heard his voice.
to It
breast of a Corpse, con-
the
versed with mine, in the language of the other World, without one accent or syllable of mortal speech. tried to ality, as
hug
that idea to
Was
this a
dream
soul, but in vain.
cold and palpable, as that which thrills
?
Oftentimes
I
have
was no dream, but rethrough your frame, when
It
first
time, encounters the dead face of a beloved one."
Do you remember
the words, Paul ?" faltered the Wizard's daughter.
your hand, for the "
my
" Could you look
upon
my
heart, after death,
you would behold those
—
words written there yes, stamped upon my very being. 'Until the last descendant of that incestuous Child is swept from the
am condemned to live. From the hour, when bosom of Eola, until this moment, when I stand face
earth, I
the
Paul Ardenheim,
I
my
hand, smote
to face,
have walked beside the Lords of your
with you,
race,
and
in-
•
; a
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR
300
my
One by one by the hand of the Parricide son it was my Soul, that prompted every murder; it was I, that nerved every arm, and I in spite of all my Remorse have stood smiling, while Parricide after Parricide, was gathered to the grave-yard dust. 'Think not to escape me, Paul of Ardenheim, in whose soul I recognize some portion of my own. Your father has traversed half the globe; he has forsaken the wealth, the honor of his race he has reared you fused the poison of
they have died
accused existence, into their being.
the Parricide father
;
—
—
;
from the world, reared you
afar
in ignorance of
your
race,
your fortunes,
Ranulph of Mount Sepulchre have been near you, from the hour of birth have watched every moment of your existence have loved you, as I saw your Mind grow into shape and
and your very Name.
But
I,
;
;
power, and
at
the appointed time,
I
will nerve
your arm,
deed of
for the
Parricide. f
'
When
the hour
Because
comes your Father
have looked upon your
I
by your hand.
will die
with love, because
life
I
have been
somewhat won from the cold horror of my existence, by the spectacle of a heart, so young and brave as yours, nurtured into vigor, even amid these virgin solitudes, do not think that my arm can spare, or my soul relent. '
can never
I
know
the blessing of Death, until
the incestuous Child, even the child of Eola, are
— — of
all
all
the race of
swept from the face of
the earth.
When
'
'
It
the last
is
dead, then, and then only,
sometimes,
true, that
is
hope has dawned upon
my
—
after
From
soul.
I
can
die.
long intervals of hopeless Evil a
—
woman, descendant from Eola,
mind and form, I may obtain the blessed words, which die. Those words, nothing more, than the last acaccents which will assure me, that she, cents, which fell from her lips no willing partner in my brother's crime, and that the child which slept
and
like
Eola
will permit
in
me
to
—
;
upon her bosom,
Woman
this
as
I
killed
her, derived
its
life,
my
from
veins.
Yet
cannot appear, until the eighth Lord of your race, has fallen
by the blow of Parricide. And she must wear upon her bosom, a Medal, which I hung around the neck of my dead wife, and buried with her a medal, which I had precorse, on the Twelfth of November, 1539 pared in anticipation of her death, bearing her name, the date of her mur;
and the sign of the Cross. This medal, or this embodied record of
der, '
years ago
— saw
of a beautiful ration
it
my
crime,
for the first time, since Eola's death
woman.
But
was not yet dead. beautiful
saw twenty-one the breast
the Eighth Lord, the head of the eighth gene-
With
the consciousness that this medal,
once, the token of past crime and future forgiveness, ihe neck of the
I
— and upon I
replaced
woman, descended from Eola, and
peared
:
was
his face
—"You
— of
Man
!
race and
You
are
—
unworthy of
you have yielded yourself a willing victim to the very abhor, and— it is enough to bring a smile to a cheek Father !' you have called this Demon by the name of of marble " Woman You blaspheme the dead !" cried Paul in a voice hoarse with agony, and yet her words penetrated his soul, and overwhelmed with your Destiny,
for
Demon whom you
—
!
a Conviction which he could neither banish nor confute.
—
'
«
— THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. "
I
will not, I dare not think
!"
it
507
he cried, wringing his hands
very
in
frenzy, as a flood of memories, swept over him, bewildering every faculty,
with their confused voices
My
"
:
No — no — by
chre the same?
His voice rising with
all
my
immortal soul
the emphasis of despair, mingled with the
%dv, which burst gay and thrilling through the curtained window. He buried his face in his hands for a moment, and then started the mirror with outstretched
"Away!" ruin.
Evil
he gasped
arms and distorted features
—"Thou
Thine eyes looked Death
— Remorse — Despair
My
!
art the
into
my
father
troubled slumber of the grave, and left to
—no!
"
blasphemous
It is false, it is
Ranulph of Mount Sepul-
father and
the salvation of
I
Thy
is
dead
am
left
voice whispered
very presence breathes
my
;
toward
:
Thy
Demon.
soul.
me-
sister sleeps the
un-
alone upon the earth, but
work out a solemn duty, which permits no communion with
Away
passions or hatreds of mankind.
—
the
hate thee !"
I
His hands grasped the mirror, as he sought madly
for the secret spring,
while his face was turned over his shoulder.
"Hate
thee! Dost read
beautiful as thee,
it
who wrecked
in
my
the
life
'Twas
eyes?
despair, for the brutal appetite of his Brother
And he sought for the The beautiful woman, his reproaches,
a
Woman
base and
of Ranulph, and bartered his eternal !
Away
Thou
Eola
!"
She did not reply
to
!
art
secret spring with trembling hands.
glided calmly to his side.
nor return him scorn for scorn. Her eyes were downcast;
her face and bosom hidden in the folds of her luxuriant hair. "
You
"Behold
will leave !
The door
me, Paul," she whispered, extending her hands is
open.
her voice — "
Your way
is free.
And
yet
— " there was
would not part in anger." own, as it sought for the secret spring. She was by his side the hair which shadowed her face, waved against his breast, swayed by the breeze which came through the opened door, and
a tremor in
Her hand had touched
I
his
;
gave him a glimpse of her faultless throat, and one white gleam of her He could not see her face it was lost in shadow. But panting bosom. ;
upon
a tear glittered
voice die
away
Paul began
in
to
that
gleam of the snowy
tremble
;
and he heard her
he was ice and flame by turns
moment, ere he and shadow of Night.
the threshold, yet he lingered one
went
breast,
an inarticulate murmur.
forth into the silence
left
;
his foot
was on
her Presence and
i
— !
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
508
CHAPTER FORTY-SECOND. " TO NIGHT
I
AM TO BE MARRIED, PAUL."
One moment It passes ere the pen can write the letters, and may come and go, within its compass. One moment It may be, only the last pebble which tops the pyramid, or the !
yet ages
of Thought
which "
pivot on
a world spins round.
Go
forth," she faltered, "
She touched
his hand,
But not
in
anger."
and clasped his fingers with an almost imper-
ceptible pressure.
Paul's face was no longer wild and distorted
was subdued by
a
vague melancholy, but his heart beat tumultuously, and he was forced
to
;
it
lean for support against the frame of the secret door.
A
breathless pause ensued, while she stood near him, her face in sha-
dow, while her hand gently touched his own. The door was free. Beyond was the darkness and silence of night; here Paradise, made beautiful by Eve. Paul lingered
Where was
the anger,
which had swelled
burning accents from his tongue
She raised her dark hair
;
face,
and looked
moved
her lips
his heart,
at
him
"Tonight," she murmured,
Her
I
am
breast
to
in
silently through the intervals of her
as if in the effort to speak, but without a
and then she stretched forth her arms, and sank upon
"To-night
and quivered
?
sound
;
his breast.
as she buried her face
upon
his
bosom.
be married Paul."
was throbbing against his heart; her arms were round his waved over his arms and shoulders. It was as though
neck, her hair
Hquid
He
had been poured into his veins.
fire
gathered her form
to
breast with one arm, and closed the secret door with the other.
mirror in his face,
its
his
The
place once more, reflected her head pillowed on his breast;
glowing with the
fire
and quivering with the tumult of a sudden
rapture.
" Married !" he echoed, and white couch,
among
its
snowy
— looking
over her shoulder, he saw the
curtains, and
knew
at
once that he beheld
the Bridal Bed.
He was
lost
in
a tumult of conflicting emotions
;
he was
mad
with
boundless joy. "
Thou
wilt be
my
wilt take the nameless
wife !" he gasped, "
wanderer
to
Thou
so young and beautiful,
thy arms !" S
— THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. The dim
509
luxurious light of that silent chamber, the pictures glowing
from the walls, the statues gleaming from each shadowy recess, the music bursting in merry peals, through the window, the Bridal Bed, enshrined in twilight, all these
clung
conspired
to
inflame his senses, but the
bosom
neck, and suffered her
to his
Woman who
to beat against his breast,
com-
pleted his delirium.
"
My
"Forme
wife!" he cried,
me
peals of marriage music, for
Bed
riage
It
!
much
too
is
— my
me
these marriage guests, for
brain
these
room, made sacred by the Mar-
this silent
mad.
is
For me the wanderer
without a name, the outcast without one rood of land, with no heritage but Poverty and Despair."
And
came over
then the Thought
had discovered
his real
Name
wealth of his race, and planned
beautiful
his soul, that this
had found the clue
;
the
to
woman and the
tide
scene as a merry surprise, for him
this
her Husband. "
or
me the secret of this mystery with thy lips ripe with me with thine eyes. Nay be silent. Do not speak, grow mad indeed. Thy heart beating against mine own, speaks
Speak
passion. shall
1
Tell
!
Tell
it
to
which needs no words to be understood." She gently unwound her arms from his neck, and removed
a language
from her waist, and stood before him, radiant, glowing
— with
all
his
hand
her love-
liness about her like a veil
"
We
you. is
—
love you Paul," she whispered
I
between each word
— and took
will love
ness clouds your soul. there
is
"Never can
:
we
are dead.
together.
In
for
But Paul,
I
will
I
I
you, in
am
all
pause
the world, there
all
We
moment
the world,
a
any one but
love
be near you,
cheer you in the
will
I
no resting-place
your head.
measured voice, with
in a
linked with mine, but you.
is
power
the heighths of fame and
pillow
hand
each other until
no man, whose destiny
When
his
will clknb
when
dark-
of Despair.
my bosom
shall
be married to-night, but not to
to
you."
seemed
It
room, the
to
him, that he was cursed with sudden blindness.
lights, the
Marriage Bed, and the voluptuous form,
His brain
in thick darkness.
death bells in his ears
"
I
am
to
;
swam
he was
at
;
he heard sounds
once blind,
be married to-night, but not
These words he heard
;
you
to
all
were
The lost
like the ringing of
mad and dumb. !"
they sounded again, and again
;
they mingled
with the tolling of the death-bells.
There was still in
by
the
a long pause, ere he saw clearly again, and tound himself room, the Marriage Bed before him, and the beautiful woman
his side.
" Pity
me!" he
faltered
—
"
I
am
in a
myself beside the Wissahikon, with a fearful dream.
If
I
dream. Soon
I will
the moonlight on
do not soon awake
1
whl die."
my
awake, and face.
Yet
fin
I
it is
—
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR
510 Rising to her her face, **
Married
married.
sence of Heaven,
speak
The
A
history
intricate
the Wissahikon,
nay
shut up in the Rich Man's coffers,
My
house of 'Law.'
auction of Marriage
;
my
the creditor of
my
Death
or
and long, but
father in his
body, Paul,
be
to
will
I
power
;
is
the externals of wealth,
all
Priest, to
father will purchase
That
!
at least
me,
father, are
and frozen in the charnel
be sold
to
my
very liberty of
— coffined
by the
sold
the
to-night, in
the
pay the debt of
and secure his gray hairs from the ignominy of the Soul, Paul, the Soul
am
hollow and fantastic as the gold of
is
This mansion, adorned with
by
these lands
I
shines brightly, but turns to withered leaves, be-
it
;
is
Rich man has
wealth which you behold,
your eyes.
To-night
real, terribly real.
Wealth, joined in solemn vows, uttered in the pre-
Gold.
to
the Arabian legend fore
to
— but calm and pale as Death.
It is
Paul, in few words.
it
all this
beautiful
no dream, Paul.
It is
she swept her dark hair aside, and revealed
full stature,
—unutterably
solemn
my
father,
The Rich Man,
jail.
— yes, buy my body — but the
cannot be bought;
it
free, as
is
air
!"
As the first man in Eden, suddenly awoke from dream of innocence, and found himself naked and was ashamed, so
Paul did not answer. his
Paul Ardenheim, started up from his wild dreams, and found himself
Poor.
Poor
The Woman whom he worshipped
!
have bartered
his Soul
— was
—
whom
for
he
would
be sold, into the arms of sanctified
to
lust,
some thousands of round and bright and beautiful doubCould he redeem her body from this unCould he save her
for the price of
loons.
holy
!
traffic
The
could not of the
agonies
—
bells
sounded
in his ears
call
one piece of gold his own.
damned, are sometimes written
" I am poor." Come," he muttered,
syllables
"
He
?
as the
—" We
hill-side, will give us shelter.
He was in
room swam round him, and
Some
will leave this place.
Our
souls are rich,
Poor.
those three
the death-
cabin by a
what need we care
for
body and damns the Soul ?" His eye was vague and wandering; his accents broken and faint; he spoke like a man half roused from some horrible dream. " Love in a cottage !" she whispered, while her face was radiant with the
Gold
that
pampers
the
which gave a Satanic lustre Wouldst not mad enough for that.
that laughter of scorn,
Paul.
We
are
face of a Child,
and
Poverty upon
brow
its
feel that ?
thou hadst given
The Leper
it
to
its
like to
beauty.
" No,
gaze upon the
being, with the curse of
of old, had no right
to
love or marry;
Leprosy which poisoned his blood, he might bear in the silence of despair; it was a sin darker than Parricide, to communicate that Plague Which is most fearful Paul, the Leprosy which to the veins of a Child. the
corrodes the blood, or the Poverty which
one hideous ulcer ?"
transforms
body and
soul, into
—
THE MONK OF THE VVISSAHIKON. Paul was
but the blindness had passed
still silent,
and deep again
clear
was possessed by
his Soul
;
511
away;
his eyes
shone
a fixed and irrevocable
Resolve
To
11
night
am
I
be married, Paul.
to
window words which make
through the
sic peals
repeat the
The
!
Hark
How
!
the marriage mu-
Priest will say his Prayer, or rather,
The
the sale complete.
guests will throng
around the Bride, and while the Rich Man, contemplates
Purchase,
his
they will prepare Her, for the consecrated orgies of the Marriage Couch.
This
is all fair
is it
;
buys a
thing,
— has
he not
eyes
"Suppose
:
Woman
not
and gives
But hold
?
Legal, too, aye and Religious
?
his gold for
— " she
the thing that
it,
he has a right
use
to
When
?
it
as
a
Man
he pleases
grasped his hand, and looked into his sold, has a Soul
is
—
a Will.
Suppose
the
bought with Gold, meets her Buyer on the threshold of the Bridal
Chamber, and taught by
own Golden 4
his
Rule,' whispers in his ear
Husband by law, but Another has married the Soul. Soul and body, are not to be separated I am fearful, Husband by law, that you cannot enjoy the one, without the possession of the other. You have bought the body with your gold Husband by law, that gold is now your Curse. For with that gold, I will raise the Husband of my soul, to rank and power aye with your gold, I will unloose the pri-
'You have purchased
the body,
:
;
;
son bars of Poverty, and
let
Genius spread
its
wings, and seek the Sun.
murmur, Husband by Law; before the world, I will be, your Wife. I will submit to be surveyed, by the noble and the rich, as your Purchase But the threshold of this chamber, you may never pass while there is a throb in my veins, or a Soul in my bosom you shall never mount that
Do
not
;
Bed— Husband
Bridal "
He
will be base
by law
enough,
!'
to
" hear
while his Resolve gave a terrible light
this,
and obey ?" murmured Paul,
to his eye,
an unnatural glow
to his
cheek. i4
The man who buys only purchased,
that
is
And
then Paul, do
like this ter of
?
my
When Soul.
I
I
a is
woman
with his gold, and
look like a
Woman, who
look into your eyes, Paul,
And
shall
I,
armed with
turn pale, at the cunning or the gold of the
Paul did not answer her
content, with lote
is
base enough, cowardly enough, for anything".
in
will be foiled I feel
this
you
that
by
a creature,
are the Mi
consciousness, falter and
Husband by Law?"
words, but his gaze, spoke the purpose of
She was before him, in all her transcendant loveliness, a boh] and fearless soul embodied in a voluptuous shape. His bronzed cheek was growing with a crimson flush his eyes deep and clear and yet flashing his soul.
;
as with liquid
warm
devoured
at a glance the witchcraft of her face, the
palpable beauty of her virgin form.
drew her bing
light,
in
to his breast.
And
He
extended his arms,
girdled in that arm, with
all
her bosom, and throbbing against his breast, she
her
felt
life,
— he
throb-
his touch, as
— PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
512
hand gently parted her
his
burning, passionate,
And their
their
tresses,
— as his
mad
broken sighs
—
gaily through the curtained
And
clung
dark
attire
— and
same glow, her eyes kindling with over the arm, which held her
—her
the
snow
impassioned by the
of his gaze, her hair, streaming
fire
upon
assent
Behold our Bridal Bed." ere the kiss
lips, the
his
which answered
mirror glided silently
two forms entered the apartment, with noiseless
aside, and
pealed
to his breast.
Thou art mine," he gasped, " And noiv. And ere the words had died on his tongue, full
still
robes like the driven
their faces, both
,k
him, had sealed her
half-drowned by
Music, which
window.
the mirror reflected their forms,
floating about his
their love,
the Marriage
in
his gaze,
felt
her own.
to
low murmur of
the
mingling lips were lost
over her forehead, she
lips
Reginald of Lyndulfe, gay and magnificent
footsteps.
wedding
in his
attire,
with
the pale face of Rolof Sener, smiling coldly over his shoulder. "
Leola
" Save
!"
me
cried the voice of Reginald.
Reginald save
!
me
!"
cried the beautiful
—
from the arms of Paul " Save me from And Paul turned and saw her clinging
stamped with
terror
— aye
with hatred
woman,
springing
this villian !" to the
—-turned
neck of Reginald, her
face,
toward him, while the pale
visage of Rolof Sener, smiled coldly at his side.
CHAPTER FORTY-THIRD. LEOLA, PAUL AND REGINALD. " Save
me from
this villian
He
!
entered
my
door, he assailed with threats, aye with violence
and more than
And
the
life
—my honor
chamber, by that secret !
He
assailed ray
life
!"
Wizard's Daughter clung, frightened and pale
to
the neck of
Reginald.
Paul was dumb.
Ardenheim that I behold. It some resemblance to the noble
»*
It is
not Paul
ard,
who
bearing
and name.
It is
not
—
it
is
some miserable cow-
Paul, has stolen his dress
cannot be Paul Ardenheim."
Reginald's cheek was flushed, his blue eyes flashing with concentrated rage, but his tone
was calm and measured,
in its
very mockery of doubt.
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHlkON. And
spoke he took the hands which encircled
as he
them gently,
at the
same
513
his neck,
and pressed
time, gathering all the sweetness of her volup-
tuous mouth, in a long and passionate kiss.
Paul was dumb.
Rolof Sener, who stood near the mirror, with folded arms, surveyed the three, with his cold and passionless
man, clinging
Here
smile.
neck of Reginald, arrayed
the
to
in
wo-
the beautiful
wedding dress
his
;
there Paul Ardenheim, standing alone, his arms hanging bf his side, his
and leaden
face colorless
"
Had
to think of
!"
it
room,
By Heaven,
later
and Reginald gazed fondly "
Wizard's daughter. this
as the visage of death.
been a moment
I
to find
you
Only
my
a
moment
makes
it
— tenderly —
later,
and
my
blood boil
in the face of the
should have entered
I
Leola, dishonored and a corpse."
Again he clasped her hands, and pressed a kiss upon her
lips.
Paul was dumb. Rolof Sener's sunken eyes began
to flash
with peculiar
light,
and the
icy smile played around his pale thin lips, but he did not speak.
" One moment, love," whispered Reginald, and he unwound the arms
woman, "I
of the beautiful
name and into her
eyes
every thing
—
" the guests
are waiting for
glimmered from
light,
"Leola
!"
mystery of passed his
us in
the
rushed
to
the color
;
his
he gasped, and with "the utterance of that scene,
this
lips
was revealed
he was pale and
stood face to face with Paul.
The muscular
cheek, and a
his
bloodshot eyes.
to
dumb
name,
fatal
When
his soul.
all
the
word had
the
again.
Reginald resigned the arm of Leola, and crossed the
contrast.
gazed fondly
room below, and
prepared for our Marriage."
is
Paul's chest began to heave
deadly
who — " he
has assumed the
will punish this villian,
dress of Paul Ardenheim, and then Leola
floor, until
he
Rolof Sener smiled as he remarked the
Monk
yet graceful form of the
clad in the garb of a Heidelberg Student
;
a garb
of Wissahikon.
worn with
bearing in every detail, the unmistakable indications of Poverty
travel, :
the
and
mus-
cular and military figure of the Lord, attired in the costume of a wealthy
gentleman, on the eve of marriage
the
hand of
his valet,
relieved with
dark
hair,
a
;
and eloquent of Gold.
vith jewels,
its
costume of
and carefully dressed
powdered
silk
and velvet, adorned
Reginald's chesnut hair, touched by after the fashion
locks, his clear blonde
flowed wildly aside from his
bfWze
of the time,
complexion; Paul's
visage, and only
made
cheek seem paler, his eyes more intensely bright. This was the contrast which fixed the icy smile on Rolof Sener's
"As "
regards brute strength, they
Only Paul seems
seem
fairly
33
lips.
matched," he muttered,
palsied in every nerve, while Reginald
ever, with settled rage."
his
is
stronger than
PAUL ARDENHEIM;
514
OR,
Leola clasped her hands, and awaited the issue, without the power stir
to
from the spot where she stood.
Reginald stood face
with Paul, and surveyed him from head
to face
with a glance of overwhelming scorn.
foot,
Paul returned his
to
with
ga'ze,
For a moment neither spoke; the color went and came on Paul's bronzed cheek now he was panting and gasp-
a vacant and apathetic stare.
;
ing as
and
if for life,
nald's cheek
At
hate.
giowed
pale and immovable as the dead; while Regi-
one scarlet
into
flush,
and his eyes shone with
settled
he broke the stillness
last
" Paul Ardenheim
though
teeth, as
now
it
!"
name through
he whispered, hissing that
was
itself the
in
bitterest scorn, that his
his
set
rage could
utter.
Paul did not answer " Speak
!
basest apology, and hurl
—
not
move
I
—
was
his eyes
upon
fixed
the lamest excuse;
will listen patiently.
In a
the floor.
frame but the
moment my
servants will
room and scourge you from the house. Speak with patience am I not? What means your presence
you from
waiting
— did
Speak Paul! Make but this
—
I
!
in
am this
chamber ?" Reginald bent forward as he spoke, until his breath inflamed by rage, fanned the very cheek of the
Monk
of Wissahikon.
Paul stood motionless and dumb, with his eyes cast
Rolof Sener smiled for Leola,
his icy smile, as
with her ringer pressed upon her bloodless
frame quivering like a
about
tigress,
to the floor.
he stood beside the mirror.
to dart
upon
prey, she
its
As
and her entire
lip,
silently
awaited the end of his tragedy.
"You
my
are
Paul," whispered Reginald, with scorn
friend,
"
look and in every accent.
vow
?"
and in no extremity
or
Do you remember
our
in
his
Paul shuddered.
"We
will be true to each other,
danger
desert
each other, but cherish forever the solemn symbol pf the Broken but not broken not divided for its seperate pieces are moved by tioo divided Coin
—
hearts, it,
joined in one byfhe holy
Brother Paul?
tie
Quite romantic
Paul raised his eyes, as
if
of Brotherhood.
Do you remember
— eh?"
about
to
speak, and at the
same moment
Leola started one step forward, and her gaze encountered the eyes of the
Monk
of Wissahikon.
felt it to
again.
That look was unperceived by Reginald. Paul glowed into life
the inmost core of his heart, and his pale face,
Rolof saw
it
was embodied
was
was madness.
entreaty,
it
No words
and smiled.
being of Leola,
proper moment I will
tell
you
that -single
in
glance.
said,to Paul,
It
all
can describe
!
Spare me!
'
Spare
It
for the whole was passion, it
it,
me ! And
at the
For I am thine!"
Paul therefore,, although his heart beat madly against his breast, was silent as the dead.
"You
still
wear the Broken Coin about your heart?" cried Reginald
— THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON.
515
"And
surprise and rage, struggling for the mastery on his face:
Coin upon your
you
heart,
stole coward-like
my
tempted the dishonor of
into
with that
chamber, and
this
at-
Wife."
" Your wife !" ejaculated Paul, and then #
again that look from the
flashing eyes of Leola.
"
My
—
betrothed," answered Reginald, " In a few
you from
servants have scourged
the mansion,
moments after mark ye she will be
—
my my
wife."
Reginald placed his hand within the ruffled his silken waistcoat
and
He
of the Broken Coin. it
my
up,
Brother
his breast,
cast
It will
!
Paul trembled from head at last
unsealed his
it
and
in
at the
lace,
which
fluttered
between
an instant, drew forth his half
"Take
feet of Paul, exclaiming,
serve to remind you of our vow." to foot,
he started forward as
if
his
agony had
but looking over the shoulder of Reginald he
lips,
He was dumb once more. He knelt Broken Coin, and placed it within his garment, close
again encountered Leola's gaze.
in
silence, took the
to
his heart.
The moment
rapidly drew near,
into a tone of biting sarcasm,
was
when
Reginald's rage
burst
to
all
at first settled
bonds, and vent
itself in
loud reproaches, perchance, in dishonorable blows. «*
Thou
paltry knave !" he cried, "
and give thee
Beggar
Did
!
I
not
?
form, with the very garment, which
The cup
Did
my cup Thou share my purse with
drink of
to
it
I
to
not feed thee of
my
bread,
meditate an act like this
thee,
now wears
?
and clothe thy coward's ?"
was full. Scorned for his treachery, cowardice, and now, tainted with his Poverty.
of Paul's agony at last
insulted for his
—
"Iam
poor!" he muttered wildly, and fixed his blood-shot eyes oi\ Reginald's face, his arms quivering to the very fingers as with a spasm. Was he about to grapple with the young Lord, and trample him beneath his feet
?
Roiof Sener smiled. Leola crossed the floor with noiseless steps, and stole gently behind Reginald, winding her arms around his neck as she whispered in his ear* but at the
same
time,
gazing
steadily into the very eyes of
Paul Arden-
keim. "
Do
"Do
not be angry with the poor knave, Reginald," she whispered
not so far forget yourself as
stands near us, and
whom
I
to
strike
him.
have seen to-day before,
This gentleman who will doubtless
charge
Will you not, good Rolof ? himself with the care of the poor wretch. Thrust him forth by the secret stairway, and our guests will not be disturbed by the scandal of his presence.
And her look which
voice spoke to Reginald ."
Spare
me !
I am
For
my
sake, Reginald !"
flashed into Paul's very soul, spoke to him, as her :
thine
!
When
the time comes,
I will
tell
you alll"
—
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
516
"Away Leoia !" cried Reginald, thrusting her gently from his side: " This knave shall answer to me, and without delay. Speak, coward
!
If within
your craven form, there yet lingers one throb of manhood, speak
and answer
me
Have.you no word
!
Paul raised his form
to
full
its
to
excuse
this
outrage ?"
and surveyed Reginald with
stature,
steady look, at the same time wiping the cold sweat from his forehead.
But he did not speak. There was a spell upon
upon
his Soul.
was the Soul of Leola
It
his tongue,
upon
his blood,
flashing from her eyes.
Rolof Sener advanced; spoke a few brief words; extended
his hands,
was but the work of an instant, and yet his extended hands, placed a sword in the hands of Reginald and Paul, and the words which he had spoken were
and then retreated
full 44
to his
former position near the mirror.
It
of meaning.
Do
not forget that you are gentlemen.
peal of the Marriage Music will
The
women.
drown
There
are
The
two swords.
Leave scolding
their clashing.
outrage was attempted in this chamber, and here
it
to
must
be atoned for." Reginald surveyed his sword, with an exclamation of joy, as wild as
Paul
incoherent. the
felt
the hilt in his grasp,
saw
the sharp blade glitter in
and with an involuntary glance, measured the form of his
light,
antagonist. 44
Defend yourself
!"
cried Reginald, glowing at once with the con-
sciousness of muscular power, and with the fury of revenge
This matter can be
moment!" Demon, he could
:
44
Come
!
settled in a
Had Rolof Sener been
a
not have looked more coldly
calm, or more serenely delighted than at the present moment.
As
for Leola, like
some
beautiful Statue of Terror, she stood rooted to
the floor, her hands hanging
by her
stiffly
side, while her eyes flashed
vividly in her death-like countenance.
Paul grasped the sword, and his blood-shot eye brightened with a feroHe gazed upon the breast of Reginald, gay with marriage
cious instinct.
and seemed
attire,
to
meditate the blow, which would crimson that mar-
He had
riage attire with the Bridegroom's blood.
forgotten the
solemn
mission which forever separated him from the loves and hatreds of mankind; forgotten his dead Father, and the stern Prophecy uttered by the
Living-Corpse in the silence of the Sealed Chamber;
lie
was only con-
scious of the three-fold taunt of treachery, cowardice, and poverty.
blood bounded once more in his veins, as he felt that sword the lust of bloodshed possessed him from head to foot. grasp ;
sured his antagonist, and stood ready 44 !
ome
—
it
his discolored
is
enough
ovfb;
lis
—" he
— to
His
hilt in
his
He mea-
kill.
cried, in a voice
gave an unnatural look
almost inaudible, while to
his visage
44
Here,
beside the Bridal Bed, thou shalt die."
And
at the
same
instant, his
sword
fell
from his nerveless hand, and
:
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. He
clattered at his feet.
upon
his fallen
"
Coward nald. Thus
—
stir a
caught the gaze of Leola,
grasp— and trembling from head
his iron
—
that look unloosed
he stood gazing vacantly
sword. Said
!
to foot,
517
not so
I
—thus —
I inflict
?
He
dare not confront his Brother Regi-
upon you,
the last
shame which might even
craven into manhood."
And he
struck Paul across the shoulder with his sword
not with the
;
he would strike a man, but with the side of the blade as he would
*»dge, as
strike a dog.
Then
the smile
which had lingered about Rolof 's
lips,
mounted
to his
eyes, and radiated over his massive forehead.
— calmly, although eyes. — and looked Reginald
Paul calmly folded his arms with fearful agony
his chest
was swelling
in the
" Strike higher next time :" he quietly said, " Let the scar upon
my fore-
head, direct your aim."
The
scene which then occurred defies
power of
all
description.
as Paul, raising himself to his full stature, placed his finger
upon the
Even scar,
while a singular calmness overspread his face; even as he spoke of that scar,
which had been received
in the defence of his friend's
life,
Reginald,
man
blinded by his rage, raised the sword, and struck the defenceless
As before, he used not the edge, but the side of his blow was violent, and the scar received for Reginald,
across the forehead.
sword.
Still,
the
bled afresh.
Paul, with the blood upon his forehead, staggered to and fro for a
ment, then, conquered as
dead
man
much by
his
agony as by the^low,
fell
mo-
like a
to the floor.
His arms were outspread without with the features fixed as
if in
death,
life
or motion, and his ashen face,
was half-concealed by
his dark hair,
which was damp and matted with his blood. Reginald struck the blow, and before a moment passed, stood gazing upon the prostrate form, the sword still clenched in his right hand. Near
him Leola, without the power to speak or move, her hands clasped, and her head bowed on her breast, while Rolof Sener, in front of the mirror, looked on the scene with his
brilliant
eyes and icy smile.
For a moment, something like regret struggled with the mad anger of Reginald's face, as he surveyed that noble forehead, half-hidden by the dark hair drenched in blood.
But Rolof Sener, gliding over the
floor
with a soundless step, was
at
his side '«
R eyes
Reginald,
let
us remove the body," he whispered, in his softest tone.
sginald felt an to the floor,
Sener
told him, that
blow— but
a
unknown
fear creep through his veins
he cast his For the words of Rolof man, stunned by a sudden
and trembled in every nerve.
Corpse
he beheld not a living
—
;
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
518
He
"
is
dead," whispered Rolof, "
He
died, not so
'Twas
as from the breaking of his proud heart.
And
life ?
ter
may
lost
— quick,
Leola had
all.
But come, we
remove
will
the body, and to-morrow this mat-
be duly explained to the wedding guests.
turned
hand,
Received in your defence, when he saved
Reginald!"
Reginald wondered
He
much by your
a noble fellow, after
— eh, Reginald?
the scar
your
f
to
There
no time
is
be
hear him speak thus in the presence of Leola.
to
look upon her and mark the expression of her
Without a
swoon.
fallen in a
to
N
face, but
broken on
sigh, like a flower
stem, she had sunk insensible, her hair waving over her face as she
its
fell.
" She will not awake until we return," whispered Rolof, " tell
how we
her a merry story,
scourged the
*
And we can Monk' from her father's
grounds."
And without another word, they bore the body of Paul Ardenheim down the narrow stairway. We will not
through the secret door and
body of his grow cold as he
aver, that Reginald's hands did not tremble as he grasped the
dead
4
Brother,' nor dare
felt the
we
assert that his heart did not
dark stairway, Reginald, gazing upon the face of
light into the
— illumined
Rolof
in
every feature by that
view by the darkness of the stairway flit
But the moment before they went
head of Paul upon his breast.
from the
over his brain.
It
stamped with
thin lips
by short gray
hair,
—
light,
felt
was a remarkable
visage,
that eternal smile, with
— a single lock
falling
and thrown distinctly into
something
down
its
you
the centre
dim memory
remember,
its
—
up
its
eyes sunken
a visage
whose
complexion reminded you of the waxen face of the dead.
"I have seen
that face
among
the family portraits of our Race," the
thought flashed over the mind of the young Lord face of
will
great forehead relieved
deep, yet gleaming with dazzling lustre, and lighting colorless
like a
Ranulph-John,
who was
—" And
it
looks like the
found dead beside the dead body of
my
Grandsire."
And
thus they took the body of Paul Ardenheim from the voluptuous
light of Leola's
The
night.
upon
chamber, into the silence and darkness of the summer
marriage music which smote their ears,
his pulseless brain.
the shrubbery
And
which encircled
the light,
which came
fell
cold and dead
in fitful rays through
the opening of the secret, stairway, shone
upon his marble visage and dark hair drenched with blood. Meanwhile Leola, stretched insensible upon the floor of her Bridal Chamber, with her dark hair waving over her face, was all unconscious that the Rich Man, who had bought her with his Gold, had borne away the lifeless body of Paul, the Husband of her Soul. It was not many moments ere Reginald again stood in the secret door, gazing upon the voluptuous images of Leola's chamber, ere his footstep crossed
its
threshold.
His eye lingered
for
awhile upon the statues
gleaming from each recess, upon the pictured walls, wrapt in luxurious
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON but rested last of
light,
Then
gloom. red
519
upon was gone from
the Bridal Bed, half-hidden in twilight
all,
his face, and the smile of his gleam of his deep blue eyes, the heaving of his broad chest,
lip, the
the pallor
all
his thoughts
all told, that
had passed from the dead Paul
to
the living
The wedding
guests are
Leola.
"And
ere an hour passes, she will be mine.
now
even
waiting,
and the good Clergyman, the Reverend Jacopo
;
!
stands impatient, book in hand, and eye cast toward the floor.
And
handsome Reginald smiled
the
as he crossed the threshold, and
looked around, impatient for Leola's bewitching glance. Leola, however, had gone from the Bridal
Chamber.
Reginald's face manifested something like disappointment, but sinking
with his back
in a chair,
to the secret door,
he surrendered himself
to his
thoughts. "
She has gone
to
array herself for the marriage ceremony," he thought,
and a smile crossed his
A
good
—" The most
lips
friend, that Rolof,
my
for,when
beautiful
woman
assorted marriage, Rolof will quietly point to Jacopo, the
And he
man.
lies
Twice he saved
Wissahikon, when the huntsman's knife was the streets of London.
to
me some day You must not
for
even
Dead,
never confessed
I
as they
ever beheld! ill-
amateur clergy-
dead, out yonder, in the darkness, with his bloody fore-
head against the damp grass.
although
1
father storms and talks of an
it
now
to
I
!
my life. my throat,
Once on
the
and again in
have always had a lurking fear
myself, that the
But now he
or other.
at
is
man would
?
be dangerous
dead.*'
imagine that thoughts like these found utterance in words,
crowded upon him,
a far different language.
in all their vivid hues, his lips
spoke
/
" Leola, the beautiful !" he said, aloud, " She will be mine, ere an hour
happy together, here on the Wissahikon. He is Heaven Only a fainting fit it was a hard blow, but it But I must leave this place ha, ha It would not do could not kill. for me to be summoned to the marriage, from the Bridal Chamber, and I can enter the hall therefore, I will make my retreat by this passage. passes, and
not dead
we
door, and
tell
rose,
forward,
;
!
—
my
good
That
moonlight.
He
will be
— no by
friends, that
will do.
Pshaw
I
!
have been taking a solitary
He
!
is
and turned toward the secret doorway.
when
a
new wonder paralyzed
stroll
by
not dead !"
He made
his entire frame,
but a step
and drove the
hues of passion from his handsome cheek.
The frame
of the
doorway was occupied by
a beautiful picture.
Had
the hand of Rolof Sener stretched the canvass there, and placed before
him, this Picture which smote his heart, no less with
with
its
terrible
the Other It
was
memory
?
Or was
it
its
calm beauty than
an Apparition from the shadows of
World. the picture of a
young woman, whose brown
hair
was gathered
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
520
and glossy mass, on either side of a serenely beautiful
in a*dark
Eyes
face.
of deep and tranquil hazel lighted that face, and gave an expression
pure and virgin,
was young,
to
the
womanhood
liness of
warm cheeks and
ripe
and dewy
The form
lips.
graceful, and yet swelling in every outline with the ripe love-
— but
womanhood
that has only a
moment passed
from maidenhood into perfect bloom. It
was
a picture of Madeline.
"Madeline in
!" faltered Reginald, as the
And
then the Picture
moved from
chamber, and spread forth floated over its
blood
his cheek, and gathered
left
tumultuous throbs about his heart.
white robes, and
its
its
frame, and
came forward
into the
arms, from beneath the dark mantle which
its
fell
upon Reginald's neck with
tears in"
hazel eyes.
"It
Madeline!
is
No
more
ghost, but Madeline living, and
beautiful
!"
than ever
And he
pressed his kiss upon her
and wept upon his bosom.
It
lips,
was not
even as she clung
a Brother's kiss.
and passionate and clinging; the kiss of a Sensualist.
to his It
Then he
her face from his breast, and gazed long and ardently upon
bathed as
it
was, in tears, and held her form
at
neck,
was warm raised
beauty,
its
arm's length, and with a
womanly
She outlines. was not so queenly as Leola. There was not the witchcraft in her eyes, that gave such overwhelming power to Leola's glance. There was no wild ambition on her young brow, no daring Thought written upon the warm lineaments of her young face. She was but a Woman, with only a woman's purity and a woman's holiest instincts written upon her countenance, while Leola was a bold and fearless Spirit, embodied in a voluptuous form. And yet there was something in the very Innocence, something in the very Womanliness of Madeline, that roused the senses of the young
gaze as long and ardent, surveyed
its
ripe and
made his blood beat with a wilder throb, than ever when encompassed by Leola's surpassing loveliness.
Sensualist, and his breast
And she was
not his Sister
Catherine Conwell, the Poor
A
;
stirred
she was only Madeline, the daughter of
Woman.
thousand vague plans for the Future, already shone in Reginald's
sensual gaze, plans which rushed upon him in a flood
shapeless
—
yet
all
fraught
with danger
to
the
— vague, misty
innocence
of
and
Made-
line.
"
My
beautiful bird,"
he cried
Have you
risen from the grave, have
Madeline,
my
beautiful,
and have I found you again ? you dropped from the sky ? Tell
gaily, "
where have you buried yourself so long?
" Brother !" she answered, while something like
bosom
as she felt his ardent gaze
upon her
fear
pervaded
her
was
fear,
face; and yet
—
it
overshadowed by the very Innocence of her virgin soul " I received your letter only an hour ago. I am here to claim your promise. You
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. marriage with
in
my
pliglr.ed
Reginald did not suffer the being head,
appear
to
in
Husband, Gilbert Morgan." surprise which pervaded his
unmingled
one lineament of his handsome
— thought deeply, intensely
for a
moment
"So
my
murmured without
did Sister," he
I
You
pretty one.
He bowed
face.
his
— and then drew her gently
him, and pressed his kiss once more upon her
to
my
and that you would join
said the Past should be forgotten, Brother
hands
521
lip.
"and
raising his face,
shall be married to Gilbert.
I
vow
it
on
so
I will,
my
soul."
CHAPTER FORTY-FOURTH. MADELINE, GILBERT AND ROLOF SENER.
And
at the
same moment,
footstep echoed from
echo of the
the door of the
the secret stairway.
step, nor the
But when he raised
Reginald heard neither the
sound of the opening door.
his head,
lips curling in scorn, her
chamber was opened, and a
lie
saw Leola standing by
eyes flashing with wild light
beautiful in her Bridal Dress, with her dark hair
and a diamond Leola was
glittering
at his side,
on her proud forehea
his side, her
— Leola surpassingly
crowned with pale
lilies,
!.
and before him stood Gilbert Morgan,
his
almost
giant form attired in green and gold, trembling in every nerve, his sun-
burnt face darkening with deadly anger, his hands clenched, and his brown hair falling in disordered masses over his corrugated brow.
Gilbert had entered by the secret door, as Leola
came through
the other
door of her chamber. "
Go
on," she cried laughingly, in a tone of withering scorn, " This
Go
drama amuses me.
on,
husband of mine.
I
would not disturb your
love scene for the world."
And
the future
might have
killed
"And.soh,
my
Duchess of Lyndulfe
cast
him, had glances the power
gay
friend,
we've met
upon him
at last," said
Gilbert,
hunting knife from his belt: "I've waited a long time for
we have can
met, an' face
settle
And
to face
our long account
in the face
at
too.
a glance,
which
to kill.
There's no mistake
once, and without delay.
drawing a
this meetin'.
this time.
Come
But
We
!"
of his plighted wife, and with her scornful gaze upon him,
and in the face of Gilbert, and with his uplifted knife flashing in the light, Reginald drew Madeline to his breast, and kissed her rosy lips once more.
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
522
Gilbert uttered a blasphemous oath; Leola bit her red lip until
was
it
stained with blood.
"For
Madeline," he cried, "for
this,
have defied the power of
this I
the Fiend, and resolved to shake off his infernal sorcery, and be a
agin
Ah,
!
girl,
your words and heart are alike— false
—
Fiend himself!" Leola did not speak, but her thoughts was have sacrificed Paul Ardenheim !"
full
of agony
man the
as
false
—"For
this, I
Reginald's handsome face was convulsed with laughter. " Leola
by
Behold
!
my
long lost sister !" he cried, and taking Madeline
the hand, urged her gently into the
"
Ah
That
!
face
stamped upon
is
arms of
my
soul.
his Betrothed.
Yes, yes,
I
have seen you
before !" and the proud damsel extended her arms to clasp the
Orphan
Girl to her heart.
But Madeline did not respond
to
her caresses, nor look into her eye?.
For Madeline's warm cheek was warm and glowing no longer, and Madeline's bright eyes were obscured with a misty film. Trembling in every limb, she had suffered Reginald to press her lip, and lead her toward his Betrothed, but from the moment,
had
ears, she
when
the voice of Gilbert broke on her
And
consciousness of anything but his presence.
lost all
yet she had not seen him
;
she had not the power of will
to turn
and gaze
upon him.
Even faintly
the queenly
as
— "You saved my
of Gilbert
— every
woman
pressed her hands, Madeline
on that
life
murmured
night!" but her thoughts were
fatal
instant she expected to clasp his
hand and be gathered
to his heart.
"You
are not well
;
this
excitement has been too
much
for
you,
my
sweet sister," exclaimed Leola.
And
like a
Gilbert.
maiden walking
Stood face
to face
in
her sleep, Madeline turned and beheld
with him
—surveying
not his glitter'nr
so different from the rude huntsman's costume of other days, nor yet his
sunburnt face^ with brown curls about the brow, and a thick beard around the muscular throat
— but looking into his
eyes, as though she would grasp
his very Soul,
Gilbert his arras.
only thing
saw her look so wildly on him
"Come, Madeline," he left to
me on
this
earth,
— trembled — and
said, in
a
husky voice
reached forth
—"You're the
and you only can save
me from
the
Fiend."
She did not glide to him, she did not dart into his arms, but she was upon his breast her maidenly form, which looked slight and dimin-
there
—
—
utive beside his giant frame, quivering in his convulsive grasp. tears of that strong
man
fell like
rain
upon her
face,
of his joy, he muttered incoherent ejaculations,
with his adventures, might comprehend.
and
And
in the very
the
agony
which no one unfamiliar
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. " True
True
!
True by
!
True
!
523
as light to-day, or an angel to
God. There aint no blemish in you, girl. Spotless as the driven snow. And you'll pray for me, and God will hear your prayer. Wont its
you Madeline ?" He did not suffer her to answer him with words, but took his answer from her lips. How that kiss, the first that had pressed his mouth from Madeline's lips, since the fatal night thrilled poor Gilbert's soul
was
It
!
And
"
I
like a token of
Peace
murdered you, Madeline
savage beast, or a devil in you ever forgive ?"
human
—of Forgiveness. yes, stabbed
;
you
" Gilbert," she answered softly, pressing her hands face, as
he held her
to his breast, as
has gone from us forever.
It is
you would hold
She suffered them
to
if*
Did
upon
a child
morning with us now
Leola proud and beautiful, as she was strain her tears.
as
shape, like myself.
41 :
you'd been a n't
I
Can
?
his sunburnt
The
darkness
!"
in her bridal attire, could not re-
flow freely, and did not attempt to
hide them, as they flashed over her glowing cheek.
Reginald with a
veyed the scene
moody brow, and
in
lips
pressed between his teeth, sur-
silence, only muttering a
sullen
with some gallant ejaculation, such as this: " peasant grub turned butterfly, as
I
He
deep curse or two,
carries
Zounds!
live!
it
bravely
!
The
He'll strangle her
with his clownish kisses !" " And as you intend to marry the Lady Madeline, sister of
my Lord humble friend of the family, presume so far as to' request the favor of your name ?" It was a very mild voice, low and gentle, and yet it thrilled Leola and Reginald with the same shudder forced a shriek, half joy, half fear from Madeline's lips, and as for Gilbert, it seemed to transform into a statue may
Reginald,
I,
as an
;
;
a sort of quaint effigy of the giant Sampson, with a face of marble, and
costume of velvet It
was
He
glittering
with gold.
the voice of Rolof Sener.
had glided unperceived from the secret door, and
tween Gilbert and Reginald, as
he gazed
something
at
— with
his pale face slightly
upturned eyes
—
now
Gilbert's visage.
into
he stood be-
drooped upon his breast,
There was
once grotesque and sublime in the horror manifested by Gil-
Rolof Sener. Fiend himself!" he gasped, " save
bert, at the sight of
"The
me
from him, Madeline
—save
me, or I'm lost. He put his Soul upon me an hour ago, when I was in your room, at the Haunted House, away yonder at Germantown, and I
was
him
forced to obey
willed
me
— but
—and
—
walk where he wished and do as he power. To break his power, I
I've resolved to break his
say, and cast off his spells, and be
Madeline while
— you
this
pure
only
!
girl is
Back! on
my
my own man
Back!
breast
!"
I
say
!
agin.
You
You
can help me,
dare not touch
me
PAUL ARDENHEIM;
524
"Why
this
my
"is
OR,
good Rolof Sener," cried Madeline, amazed
father,
at Gilbert's horror.
You
"
back
when
my
see,
children,
blow from
a
Rolof with
if I
meant
arm would crush me
his
arms
his
to strike
him.
indeed!
I
powder."
to
head drooped on his breast, gazed
folded, and his
around with upturned eyes, while a sad sweet smile hung on his thin Leola shuddered
me,
like the
why, she could not
;
Rolof Sener,
me
have not moved an inch, and yet he bids
I
and shrinks away from me, as
!
who
tell
talked with
me
lips.
" His face does not seem to
:
to-day !" theUhought darted
over her mind. "
Ranulph John
!"
memory
muttered Reginald, as a singular
agitated
his brain.
You wish
"
marry
to
who now
continued Rolof,
this lady,"
This
gaily dressed.
is
"
Back
Back
!
Your eyes from
!
are
Unless indeed, your beautiful plumage
well.
But we wish
covers a vulture's heart.
kept his
— " You
gaze fixed immovably upon Gilbert's horror-stricken face
to
my
know your name
?"
my
your curse from
face I say,
soul!" shrieked. Gilbert, and in his despair he clutched poor Madeline with an embrace like Death itself; "You're spinnin' your infernal
around
me — I know
at last,
but while this girl
The words had stretched, with a
and motionless
;
it,
I
know
near
is
An'
it.
my
I
heart,
stiff,
mechanical movement
swooning she sank
Now my
"
into the
who
while
still
fair lady,
I
The
"The least
real Gilbert,
thought It is
it
It
Have
arms were
shone with a
is
out-
became
rigid
dull leaden
a Corpse !" and half-
may come
life,
I will
ques-
and cowardly
the goodness to remain per-
you,
my own
Madeline,
like a bird against the
not
let
bars of
its
back some day."
Gilbert?" cried Madeline, " This
real
— " she gazed
his
his features
with your permission
And
question him.
your heart throb against your bosom, cage.
when ;
thinks to hide his criminal
designs, under the cloak of madness. fectly
web
your clutches
extended arms of Reginald.
Lord, and you
cunning knave,
tion the
—"
into
defy you."
his eyes, fixed in their sockets,
not Gilbert !" shrieked Madeline
It is
I
scarcely passed his lips,
lustre.
"
must come
into the corpse-like face
is
Gilbert
Morgan,— at
and hesitated—" At
least I
was a moment ago."
not to be denied that Leola and Reginald awaited the issue of this
scene with a breathless interest.
And
as they stood, perfectly silent
and
motionless, their eyes alternating between the remarkable visage of Rolof
and the face of Gilbert,
on
his feet,
Music, dal
still
who
looked in truth, like a frozen man, placed
by some strange
fancy, the
merry sound of
burst in one bounding peal, through the
Chamber.
,
the
Marriage
window of
the Bri-
— :
\
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON.
525
" Answer me," said Rolof Sener, never for an instant removing his face, " Where was you, this night one year ?"
gaze from Gilbert's
A
horrible smile distorted Gilbert's lips, while
other part of his
the
face remained fixed as Death.
On
44
board the brave Ship Avenger, with as tight a crew as ever trod a
Ha, ha
pirate's deck.
—"
it
was not a burst of laughter, which came from
but rather a series of spasmodic groans
lips,
East Indiaman,
"
How we
why
then, the
moon came
hundred of them walk the plank, and struggle
five
waves
saw
up, and
their last,
among
the
as red as blood."
You
"
his
boarded the
and raked her decks, and drove her crew
at set of sun,
and then
into the hold,
—
hear ?"
whispered Rolof, turning
lover.
Madeline
to
—
this
is
your
—
Madeline was silent, but Leola muttered "If he was brave, and only made war upon the strong, I could love hirn in spite of all." Rolof again turned to Gilbert, whose face still retained its corpse-like
"You were the Captain of the Ship? answer me truly; know your life, and can punish falsehood with a halter." 44 The Captain — ha, ha !" again that burst of unearthly laughter 44 You should have asked my men, as they gathered about me after the immovability. I
,
fight,
who was
Captain of our Avenger
of the East Indiaman, and lot,
and made a night
o'
You
my
44
are listening
t
women,
too,
We
together.
We
!
had wine from the stores
— aye, we did.
I
saved the best of the
and
my
jolly crew."
child?" and again Rolof with his sweet smile
turned to Madeline. 44
only a frightful dream
It is
!"
she faltered and gathered her hands,
across her breast with a clash like iron.
and he
Gilbert,
my
is
44
And
yet in spite of
all, it
is
plighted husband."
Leola reached forth her hand, and pressed the cold hand of the Orphan Girl, while a tear glittered in her
Meanwhile Reginald's
the extremes of surprise and he muttered and retreated a step from Gilbert would have stolen my sister, and made her the toy of his brutal 44
horror. 44
He
The wretch
!"
Fraternal Reginald
orgies!" 44
proud eye.
face, manifested
!
my
Listen once again, Madeline,
child.
Tell me, Sir Pirate, did you
ever encounter a rude landsman in your travels,
You
lately
assumed
shallow knavery 44
1 did.
44
The
He
is
West
word ?"
!
tells
me,
it is
named
Gilbert
Morgan
?
but his rugged honesty would put your
Indies, I
By
it
saw him two years ago he often spoke was the last word on his lips !,' ;
cried Madeline, starting from the
dead, then, but no
My heart Gilbert
last
;
blush."
to the
In the
of the Wissahikon.
44
name
his
—no
you.
What means
this
!
It is
a mockery.
Wherefore these scene ?"
-
idle
You
arms of Reginald. are here, Gilbert.
words
?
Speak
to
me
— PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
526
Man whom
But the
she addressed did not answer her with a word
His leaden gaze was
not even with a look.
To
of Rolof Sener.
folded arms, looking into his face, with
gaze
" This
s
Yet Rolof without pausing
You saw the last " He died in my
Father
It
!
unworthy of your
is
answer her, continued
to
Morgan
of Gilbert
Girl sank back as
my
Courage,
"You line
" it,
was
Sister
not so dark as
It is
!
Not
do.
a doubt of
ever
if I
came
to
How
And
Morgan?"
Gilbert
My comrades often
!
Made-
laughed about
resolved that I'd turn
I
to
it
Philadelphia." ;
the last hope had gone out.
?" asked Rolof Sener.
the
Man
with the motionless form and corpse-like visage, uttered
a burst of hollow laughter as he replied
pretty lass
Had
named Madeline.
crets. of his love affairs,
to wit, the lover I
appears."
it
to
was dead,
tie
Madeline buried her face again "
;
who whispered—
question with quivering suspense.
by Jove
it,
when
while he lived, and
advantage,
to this
the answer.
had penetrated her bosom
a bullet
if
bear a great personal resemblance
awaited the answer I
:
arms, scarcely two years ago, of the yellow fever too,
she buried her pale face upon the breast of Leola, 4
questions
his
V
raving to the last about Wissahikon and Madeline,"
The Orphan
his
!"
generous nature "
upon
her soul, in the intensity of her
all
my
not kind of you,
is
centered on the visage
still
Rolof, Madeline turned and laid her head
even come
and the sweetheart. I
So
dead Gilbert.
planned
I
in fact, those dear
Says
I,
—
it,
of the se-
little
two persons, he died
—
if
Wissahikon, and make
be living
to
and so I've
to
that is after
will seek out this
Madeline— if she happens
love to this
" Gilbert had spoken
:
me,
which are generally only known
Philadelphia,
to
told
—
in the
tried to
name
accomplish
of the it,
but
to
the
"
you
" Villian
have
I
!
foiled
your cunning and brought your knavery
light,"
interrupted Rolof, his eyes for the
"Now
depart!
warning
!
Once
this
day, have
I
time, flashing with rage.
first
warned you;
I
now
But remember
This time you depart unscathed.
repeat !
my
Should
you ever appear upon the Wissahikon again or dare again, to assume the name of poor Gilbert Morgan remember I will deliver you into the clutches of that Justice, whose very name, makes your face wear the !
look of death, and the heart within turn
Peace
And
to
ice.
This time depart
in
!"
the
man, clad
in the
green doublet embroidered with gold, turned
his fixed eyeballs from the light, and with a measured, but mechanical stride, crossed the threshold of the secret stairway.
" Gilbert
!
Gilbert !" shrieked Madeline, darting forward with panting
bosom and outspread arms, "Do not bert
"
leave
But he did not turn back, and
me!
Do
not leave me, Gil-
cast one farewell look
upon her
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON.
527
Without a look, without one accent of farewell, he crossed the
face.
was gone. "Let me arrest his flight," cried Reginald, starting from his stupor, which had bound his senses while these events transpired before his very threshold, and
eyes
«
:
A
wretch like
self into a bailiff
That
is
on
not
this, is
"
Rolof waved him back. his
fit
wedding
Lord of Lyndulfe convert him-
the
night.
Let him depart
sufficient.
to live !"
Would in
have unmasked the wretch.
I
peace."
" Unmasked, indeed," murmured Madeline, sadly, gazing upon the spot where the Pirate had lately stood " But at the same time, good father, you have unmasked my grave. It was concealed by flowers, only a few moments since. I see it clearly now, and my foot is on the brink." :
—
Was it
it
a tear that subdued the stern light of Rolof
gaze?
's
Very sad
was, to see her standing there, the centre of the silent group, her pure
and virgin loveliness frozen "
by the hand
by
at its fountain,
Come, Madeline, you need repose,"
the corpse-hand of despair.
said 'Rolof, kindly, as he took her
" This house must be your home, until you depart for Eng-
:
your Brother Reginald, and your sister, his Bride." Even the thought of leaving Wissahikon, brought no glimpse of color
land, with
she took his hand in silence, and with faint and uneven foot-
to her
cheek
steps,
moved with him toward
;
"Reginald," he
said, as
again, before the marriage
a whisper, "
the door.
he passed the young Lord, "I will join you
ceremony.
Jacopo waits below" he added,
in
and
'when Leola cloys your appetite, the daughter of Catherine Conicell will lead on the drama of your loves." There was a strange significance in his look and smile, as he
Then passing onward, paternal tone tiful
now,
—" he
and yet
it
spoke these
where Leola
" Arrayed, for the bridal,
:
before, but
dulfe,
to
seems
to
my
child
me, you look
hissed the words in
Ardenheim will yet be yours .'" With Madeline clinging to his arm, he
latter
stood, he ?
words.
addressed her in a I
thought you beau-
Duchess of Lyn-
like the
an emphatic whisper: "Paul
left
the Bridal
Chamber, while
the Bride stood gazing on vacancy, her cheek flushed and
her
bosom
heaving; and the Bridegroom, with his gaze fixed upon Madeline's treating form, felt all the sensualism of his nature,
mount
to his eyes.
re-
The
words of Rolof Sener had thrilled like molten fire through their veins. u Paul Ardenheim will yet be yours !" murmured Leola, as she laid her
last
hand upon her voluptuous
And Reginald,
as he
over his breast, exclaimed well and Leola!
A
breast.
smoothed the snow-white cambric which to
himself
— "The
delicious contrast,
upon
fluttered
daughter of Catherine Con-
my
soul
!"
With thoughts like these stirring in their hearts, they took each other by the hand, and looked into each other's eyes. Never stood nobler pair before the marriage altar.
Reginald magnificent
in
his
young manhood )
«
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
528
his entire form presenting a perfect type of physical beauty
once graceful and muscular
;
his blonde
dark blue, his forehead relieved by hair of chesnut brown.
Leola, well-
developed in every rounded limb, her bosom swelling with
brown complexion blooming
into vermillion
on the
intense blackness of her hair, encircled with pale
The Soul
the darkness of her eyes.
form
—
Woman.
her clear
and cheeks, the
lips
only exceeded by
lilies,
embodied
There they were, hand
eye, looking into one another's faces, with
all
in hand,
in the
manly
was
shape of
eye gleaming in of an
the frankness
Faith, and meanwhile, in their hearts
trusting
life,
of a sensualist embodied in a
the Soul of a proud and ambitious Spirit
a voluptuous
his limbs at
;
complexion lighted by eyes of
all-
Lust and
written,
Pride. "
"
A A
beautiful animal !" he thought, as he pressed her hand.
me
convenient stepping stone for
!"
and Paul
she thought, as she
looked into his eyes.
There
is
Survey
it
sermons ever
a lesson in this scene; a lesson worth all the
preached in grand marble churches, with your
own
eyes
;
to
paint
it
ears of lead and hearts of brass. in
your memory.
This luxurious chamber, so beautiful with the pictures that seem breathe from the canvass, and marble images that look like
whose thought
by
have only been arrested
footsteps ;
this
for
a
human
moment by
a passing
luxurious chamber, whose very atmosphere seems hallowed
the sacred Marriage Bed, while
its
curtains
move
to
and
fro, to
the
Is
not
impulse of a breeze that comes ladened with Marriage Melody. a beautiful scene
And
to
beings
here, in
it
?
the
centre of the place, stand the
Bridegroom and the
seem to speak of which trembled from the gaze of Adam into the and after all, this Bridegroom and Bride Eve, and
Bride, looking into each other's eyes, with glances that
Love, as pure as that heart of spotless are only a Rich
Man
and his Purchase.
The Marriage Bed Priest ordained
—ah
!
What words spoken from
by a Bishop, what vows uttered
a book,
in the sight of
what
God and
man, can render holy that Marriage Couch ? " This night has beheld many dark and troubled scenes," whispered Leola, as her eyes wore a vague and dreamy light. .
" But, Leola," whispered Reginald, as his passionate breath fanned her cheek, while his eye, gazing over her snowy shoulder, beheld the Mar" But, Leola, after all it is our Marriage Night." riage Bed
—
moment, what scenes are passing yonder, within House of Wissahikon ? And Paul Ardenheim— does he live ? At
this
the
Block-
— THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON.
529
CHAPTER THE LAST. THE END OF ALL.
When
Paul awoke again, the luxurious chamber had passed away.
found himself alone, in the silence and shadow of Night. prostrate; his
brow was pressed
against the
and looked around, and endeavored
self
There was blood upon
He was But how was
that only the
solid walls
remembrance of a dream ? which shut him
light,
— came
And
"Ah — it was seems
that
brow
his
?
I
to
in,
and the murmur of music
came
fitful
— music
and broken
pealing within
faintly to his ear.
"Where am I?" he it
mark of blood upon
the shrubbery
rays of festival
Yet
this
brain.
This much he knew.
of the Wizard's Daughter, clinging to the neck of Reginald
And through
brow.
Why
?
raised him-
shattered senses.
smote his very
his forehead; a sharp pain
had he come hither
He
grass.
shrubbery, near the secret door.
in the
The form
damp
to collect his
He
His form was
muttered, and placed his hand against his bleeding all
me, that
saw her
a dream.
I
knew
heard Reginald
I
that
I
would awake
her by the
call
A
clinging to the neck of Reginald.
name
at last.
of Leola.
troubled dream
nothing more !"
A
and
:
drew near
at the
his side,
of Rolof Sener.
Face before.
that
"
hum of merry voices, rushed upon same moment, a form emerged from the shadows and and by a ray of broken light, he saw the pale visage
burst of music, mingled with the
his ear
The
smote the heart of Paul, that he had seen
But where?
Bride has gone
sweetness, "
Do you
A memory
And now
to
the
her chamber," said a voice, singular in
young Husband goes
hear the shouts of the marriage guests
its
to
claim his Purchase.
?
Leola
is
young and
— and married. Or Sold the word And the Rich Man who bought her — do you remember how an hour ago, he smote you on the cause How he forehead, — aye, smote the very scar you received beautiful
is
?
in his
?
this
you from the chamber, and flung you, bleeding and insensible, upon an hour ago and now he sod ? Reginald, your friend, did this
goes
to
thrust
—
—
claim his Purchase.
in the Bridal
His footstep
is
on the threshold
Leola
couch awaits him."
And Paul Ardenheim speaker; he clutched
it,
felt
something pressed into his grasp by the
and raised
it
until
it
met a
fitful
ray;
it
was
a
dagger, with a hilt of iron, and a long blade sharp and glittering.
"That door
leads to her chamber," whispered Rolof Sener
Ardenheim, without a word, went through the narrow door
ness of the secret chamber, the iron-hilted dagger in his grasp.
84
;
and Paul
into the dark-
— !
PAUL ARDENHEIM; OR,
530
As he disappeared,
Ralph WyttonkursU Rolof Sener's •
side,
you
will
His pallid
hands were clasped, as
face,
Have no
in the act of
if
murmured,
the face of Rolof Sener, and
"
from the bushes, and glided
to
Rolof Sener's
at
seen by the wandering rays, was stamped with awe
feet.
is
—crept
and then sank trembling and prostrate
—
his
Van Behme— or Sir
the withered frame of Isaac
as
worship
—"Satan!"
— he
gazed into
sweet voice of Rolof Sener, " Paul Ardenheim
fear," said the
mine, and Paul Ardenheim
gone
is
bring the precious blood for
to
which thou dost seek."
Up
the
hand, went Paul Ardenheim, and
dark stairway, dagger in
pressed the spring of the secret door, but in vain.
touch; the mirror was fastened in laid
his
hand upon
garment, and
felt
its
It
Then
place.
move
did not
at
his
Paul, in the darkness,
hrow, and thrust that hand within his
his bleeding
Broken Coin.
the fragment of the
Then, as
every
if
relenting pulse had turned to ice, he pressed his weight against the door it
yielded
without a sound
—and
;
he crossed the threshold of Leola's
chamber.
A
solitary
lamp was burning there, and its rays left the shadow, while the Bridal Bed, its white
pictures in twilight together,
gleamed
on
distinctly
his sight
sound of murmuring voices met
bending over
their folds
her with his gold ;
her form was
she was standing beside the bed,
;
and with an arm around her snowy neck.
it,
Paul stood on the threshold
chamber with noiseless
the
drawn
folds, the
Leola in the arms of Reginald
who had bought
Yes, her white robe appeared in the interval of the curtains
dimly discernible through
curtains
— and from those snowy
his ear.
Leola in the embrace of the Rich Man,
statues and the
—glanced
steps,
around
for
an instant
— crossed
and over Leola's shoulder, struck
his
dagger into the breast of Reginald, even as he reclined upon the couch.
And
then Leola turned to look upon him, and Paul, tearing the curtains
with his frenzied hands, rushed forward, eager
dying man.
It
uttered shriek,
to
catch the last
loo.* o;
uie
was too dim; he could not see; he heard Leola's halfbut the face and the visage of the Dying was lost in the
shadow.
—
Then, suddenly a burst of warm radiance filled the place Paul turned, light which gushed through the doorway of the chamber,
and by the glad
And at the saw Leola and Reginald encircled'by the marriage guests. same time, from the secret door appeared the face of Isaac Van Behme, quivering with an infernal desire
— while
Rolof Sener calm and smiling,
stepped into the room with folded arms.
Paul turned
to the
the ashen face.
whose golden
It
hair
Bed once more, and saw
was His Father.
waves aside from
But a
the prostrate form, and
this
face,
Woman
knew
by the bed-side,
serenely beautiful, with
eyes of clear, deep blue, lighted by an Angel's love
?
It is
its
Catherine.
—
;
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON. The
sister
by the bed gazing into agony
his hand, writhed his last
She took him by
the
her voice and lived
buried in the pillow.
why, and turned explanations
;
Father stricken by
his face, while the
!
hand "
man.
features of the old
531
—" But
—
his Sister
He
— and
Paul
dies,
pointed to the quivering
— " she
As you
struck,
I
aside the deadly aim.
raised
my
—
let
—yes —he !
The
heard
knife
is
hand, scarce knowing-
Away, Paul
Away
no time for thought.
said
Look
not by your hand.
;
no time
this is
for
not your footsteps pause
you stand within our Home once more. To the Block-House, Paul, and when you have rescued the Deliverer, and looked upon your true
until
Destiny, then
I,
Catherine, your Sister, will
tell
you
all."
Paul heard her voice, and looked into her eyes, and drank the God-born
Thought, which gave them Sister's
hand
to his lips,
For a moment he lingered
light.
—even
sculptured Mary, mother of the Lord
— and then with
press hie
to
as a Catholic might the marble
hand of a
an agitated counte-
nance, but with eyes radiant with a holy Resolve, he turned away, and
passed through the door, passed between the forms of Leola and Reginald
— without a glance, The
rest of the
chronicles of
without a word. events of that
Mount Sepulchre?
night
—
are
they not written
Some day we
will again take
in
the
up the
Record, and from the mysterious cyphers translate the history of Paul
Leola
;
Reginald
:
of Madeline and Gilbert, and of the dread Ranulph,
whose corpse-like visage, Paul beheld in the shadows of the Sealed Chamber. But now, we linger only for a parting word As Paul crossed the threshold, Rolof Sener rushed to the Bed, saw that the dagger was harmless and then with a livid face approached Reginald, even as Leola, pale and beautiful, hung on his arm " Behold the Son of Gaspard-Michael !" he cried and pointed to the re-
—
—
:
treating
form of Paul Ardenheim.
And Catherine chilled
kneeling by the bed, and pressing her Father's death-
hands within her own,
and thanked the God of
all
plans and infernal cunning,
lifted
life,
all
that
up her eyes and voice the
to
Malice of Satan, his
had been brought
and crushed by the instinct of a Sister's Love.
END OF BOOK SECOND.
to nothing,
Heaven, intricate
conquered
PAUL ARDENHEIMj OR,
532
EPILOGUE. WORD TO THE READER.
A Thus scripts,
far
Monk
heim the present
We
it
progressed in our translation of the Ancient
Manu-
Cypher, the history of Paul ArdenMuch we have written, and yet at the
in their peculiar
of Wissahikon.
moment we have
have seen the
seen
scarcely passed the threshold of that history.
Paul Ardenheim's Soul
fearful education of
;
we have
We
writhing into shape, in scenes of temptation and despair.
have yet at
we
have
which record
look upon that Soul, in
to
matured
its
What pen
once generous and sublime.
embodied
vigor,
in deeds,
shall dare attempt the portrait-
of Paul Ardenheim, and trace
him step by step from Step by step through the American Revolution, among scenes which written History has blazoned to the ure of the entire the
life
chamber of Leola
to his
grave
among scenes which
world, and
the charnels of the Past reveal Paul
?
Ardenheim gliding
dumb and
slumber,
still
What hand
?
shall dare to
—
Ghost
like a
like
lift
unrecorded,
m
the curtain, and
an embodied Fate-
through the incredible horrors and gloomy triumphs of the French Revo? For glancing over the untranslated volumes, which in their diffiCypher, enshroud these Legends of a past age, we read the name of the Monk of Wissahikon, not only in connection with the history of Washington and the New World but also on the red page, which tells
lution cult
;
of the Old
World
freedom with Robespierre the Messiah
in travail for its
of Blood, presiding over
glorious agonies.
its
neither our time, nor the limits of this tire
of Paul Ardenheim
life
;
and array
its
who
and calm fixed
—
speak a word
after traversing
many
attain the last hill-top,
you.
to
a hill
upon the wide landscape of to
attempt
to
Let us
yet, at this
for a
to
in
talk together like
my two
—
their pilgrimage.
word
moment,
it is
side by side, in storm moment, with their eyes
and valley
and linger
let us talk together, and say a frank
now,
And
are about to part after journeying together so long,
heart, Reader, to friends,
to translate the en-
various and mysterious inci-
dents in the familiar garb of every-day speech.
when we
At the present moment,
work permit us
Like friends,
each other.
explain the mysteries of the present
It is
work
;
I
say,
not for me,
many
things
— THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON.
which appear dark and obscure, might easily be made plain
in its pages,
by a simple reference
as sunlight,
day
in our
Magnetism.
called
is
to that great
But
any explanation of these mysteries from *
that
all
But
now appears
work
this
tions like these,
*
is
in a future
;
work
not attempt
I will
may
I
—
its
events are wild
in a frank
the veil
lift
Ardenheim.
—unnatural —
based upon supernatural agency
might answer,
I
science of the Soul, which
the present,
for
incredible in the history of Paul
Improbable
is
machinery of the story friend
533
the very
To
!'
objec-
my
and confidential way,
:
Truth
Wherefore
stranger than Fiction.
is
Because Fiction only
?
revels and glows in the Probable, while Truth in her noblest form, dares,
and conquers the Impossible.
Was
ever Fiction so wild, so romantic, so
utterly defiant of all your rules of criticism, as the actual
Bonaparte.
Fiction in
its
life
of
Napoleon
present form as displayed in the poems and
novels of the present day, does not present extravagant views of paint pictures that transcend probability
;
its
life,
or
delineations, or the contrary,
are only extravagant in their tameness, and transcendant in their mathe-
The truest of true histories never look at first sight, man of Franklin's day, that a time would come — was coming, and the boy of ten years old might live to see it when carriages would go by themselves when ships would cross the ocean without sails when a man in Boston would converse with his friend in New Orleans, by means of a wire stretched along an infinitude of poles Ten matical probability.
like Truth.
Tell a
—
;
;
!
chances
to
one, but Dr. Franklin himself would have put you out of his
wild as these
office, for assertions
:
without a doubt, any one of Dr. Frank-
neighbors would have quelled your lunacy in a mad-house.
lin's
man
veriest
of " common-sense''' of Franklin's day,
—
The
the merest gossip of
newspaper could have told you, that your brain was your blood red-hot with fever. How many years is it since a crowd of our most respectable citizens men of common-sense, mark you none of your vague dreamers, but suba neighborhood, or a
mad, your skull
soft,
—
stantial
men, familiar with business, and eloquent
in
bank notes
— stood
laughing and jeering on a Philadelphia wharf, while crazy John Fitch
tempted steam Fact
!
to be
?
to
propel a boat without sails
Poor John Fitch, how they
He
starved
to
;
pitied him, these
death, while his " Folly" that
is
propelled by the agency of paddles and steam
some muddy
hole, near Kensington.
John Fitch's
folly,
And now,
in
of Matter-of-
the boat intended
—
rotted snugly
;
in
which was
and the steam
car,
Franklin's day, would have scared a
whole church of common sense' men '
men
the steamboat
has become Robert Fulton's fame
and Magnetic Telegraph, which
at-
merely by the aid of paddles and
into
spasms, are admitted
to exist,
even by the most respectable newspapers. '
The Thing, we deem Improbable, my about which we know precisely
thing,
friend, is
—nothing.
many
a time just the
Everything great
in
—
—
PAUL ARDENHEIM
534
history or religion, has
science,
men
at
OR,
;
view been the most improbable
first
mad when he spoke
Paul was
thing in the world.
;
among
of Brotherhood
mad wen he said the earth moved round the sun Washmad when he said that he could defeat the tyranny of an Anointed
Galileo
;
ington
;
King.
The
'
rule that
literature.
Mad
mad
at the
three
is
good
and
in history, science
Paradise Lost
religion,
also true in
is
—mad Childe Harold— mad Zanone
All
!
time of their publication, and their respective authors,
worthy of nothing so much as a dark
with shower baths and straight
cell,
jackets innumerable.
works
If
*
like these
have been called "
mad
!"
and their authors
how
ed as either harmless idiots or malignant demoniacs, thor like your
book
Now
'
humble
friend, ever
Paul Ardenheim
like
I
— true
altogether impossible.
— herod,
written " the
The
mmt
critics
book and
its
The
print a
French school," to invent a
springs of
author,
grown
—horror
expect to
true to the feelings,
They
;
he prides himself
etc. etc. will
new vocabulary
on
having
''
own
choice language) this
Their
their thunder stolen before hand.
"Monk
are
reckless of the critical stilleto,
use up' (in our
'
all
it
down human
every clime.
in
1
who
—
incidents are utterly improbable.
out-horrors
author, will find
to the
man
improbable book in the world.'
withering sarcasms about the
to
time and place, as they are set
and
in all ages
same time these
'At the
have
at the
to the secret history of the heart of
which sway mankind,
out-herods
—
do not claim for the present work, that the incidents, which
I
do claim for these incidents, that they are true
action
'
Courage, to write
assail-
poor au-
?
embodies, occurred precisely, but
summon
shall a
Lewis," "Mrs. Radcliffe," "works of
They
not avail them in this case.
become
of slang, and
familiar, with
will
some-
thing more venemous even than their souls, in order to abuse a book which stares them in the face, with its motto "the most improbable BOOK IN THE WORLD." The very title of the work will appal the writings of the small papers, ?
4
and shock
Monk
wrote the hikon.
into spasms, the portentous
of the Wissahikon !"
Monks
of Monk-Hall, and
"
thugs of the Magazines.
" This author
is at
now he
Will he never have done with monks
his old tricks again
writes the
1
Who
Monk
The ;
he
of Wissa-
ever heard of
Monks
you come to that, "what is the Wissahikon, but an obscure mill-stream, hidden somewhere among big hills ? Will he never have done with horrors ? He wrote the Legends of the Revolution we all know that the Revolution is past and gone our people demand
on the Wissahikon, or
if
—
something more practical than
—
all
this
worn-out matter of the Revolution, and
He crowds his skulls; Monk Lewis is
that sort o' thing.
corpses; daggers;
and he distances poor Mrs. Radcliffe
pages with horror a fool to
in the
way
him
;
skeletons
;
in the horrible,
of the monstrous.
Be-
;
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON.
535
works smack of the French School a school made infamous by George Sand, the profligate Sue, and the unnatural Dumas. Why does he not attempt something in a quiet vein,—founded on fact touched with unpretending pathos, and pointing to some impressive moral, sides his
;
the licentious
—
such as the immaculate purity of our banking
institutions, or the spotless
integrity of the Corporation which built Girard College, or the myste"
what ever became of the Funds of the United States Bank?" a critique ready mad and at the serfriend, you have it
rious query,
any gentleman, connected with the
vice of
Or, should your taste, incline
ture.
adorn the
me
Take
elaborated.
—break
capitals
you an
give
and marks of admiration
These
down.
gentlemen
who made
it
—
is
it
some choice obsce-
manner and an
wit, turned
slavers
last
why
Death Scene of
when
when
laughter,
its
obscenity there.
its
free, lively vein,
elevation of tone,
by "
capers about, over the bones
it
its
it
mounts the
can take up any
It
write Divinity into a
worthy of the
Indeed things like
able critics"
—
thief,
who
scoffed his
have been done,
this,
good
mention these persons,'
I
life
my
I
'
No,
sorry that
mon for
fac
I
friend.
who
— Do you expect '
let
me
turn to you,
my
friend.
A to
that pulsates
at.
my
heart,
by pages
heart,
like
I
And
friend neither bought with
my
my
labors.
room, writing these closing words,
but gathered
And on
reflection I
am
with even the mention of these " com-
this page,
— But now,
—repress the throb
woman;
the divine lesson of Brotherhood,
;
have never taken you by the hand.
my
our
of the Redeemer?'
have blotted
stabbers."
God, more
figure in certain of
hear you exclaim
expect nothing of the kind.
your generous sympathy with
ness of
my
man
in the heart of universal
as displayed in the
in
" withering burlesque writers," precisely
impress their natures, with any such ideas, as the purity of
the
which
peculiar wit of these
newspapers and magazines.' But
put
is
remember
hour of the Dying Redeemer, with a freedom of
— died blaspheming.
'
I
the last sigh,
The
of the same class, as the respectable gentlemen
to
He
burlesqued.
is
capital fun out of the
boisterous, in
quite
and mock the
than one case
£ is
in all the garniture of big
it
well, with
author
by a clever piece of
passage of the Bible, and with
and
The
never so vivacious, as
is
'
he grew quite merry over the dying struggles of the Mar-
;
Altar of Religion, and
jest,
— array
his livid lips, into a laughable joke?
of the dead
Mr.
kind of literature
writers of 'burlesques' are terrible fellows.
tyr and Hero, and
came from
burlesque of
'
peculiar
this
— slime
done.
is
one of the select band,
Nathan Hale
litera-
the purest thought that ever flowed from an author's
into short paragraphs
it
and your work
nity,
how
idea,
department of our
critical
those delectable productions, which
to
under the head of
literary' papers,
'
style? let
pen
—
my
'There,
I
friend,
and thank you
have never seen your
yet, as I sit in the loneli-
cannot,
when
—even
I reflect,
if I
that
would
you are
money, nor won by baseness which I now send forth to
these,
— 536
PAUL ARDENHEIM
you.
Pages, written
by
slander, or
but which so,
4
still I
amid various circumstances; amid the clamor of a candle held in the skeleton hand of Poverty?
hope, are true to the best instincts of humanity.
our familiar talk
of the
"
One
Monk
is
over, I
and
I
once more glance
— And
into the pages of the
some
chronicled, an incident of
of Wissahikon
interest in the
:
night, in a miserable garret, hidden
bourg of the great vigil
THE MONK OF THE WISSAHIKON.
the light of
Ancient Record, where life
;
away
in
some obscure faukeeping the
city of Paris, there sat a lonely student,
of his thought, and even as he gazed with his vacant eyes, upon the
flame of the expiring candle, tracing absently upon a sheet of paper, his
unknown name,
*
Maximilien
And even
Robespierre.''
as he sat there,
so sad and lonely, with half-formed thought, glimmering in his vacant glance, there appeared to
a
told
him of
him
a stranger,
And he
Sorrow unutterable. his Future,
whose
face
was impressed with
took the lonely youth by the hand, and
and pointed him
to a path,
which covered with
blood, and strewn with crowns and thornes, ended at the foot of the Guillotine.
last
own
'This path you will walk
— yonder
your stern mission accomplished, you Guillotine.'
And
the Boy-Student trembled at
unknown, who passed from the place ere echo, but
left
The names
King you
the record of his
together read thus
will kill
— and
at
upon your the prophecy of the
will die abhorred
his last word, had
ceased to
name, beneath the name already written.
—
«
Maximilien Robespierre
Ardemheim,' "
THE END.
* * *
»
Paul