M W&mm " vr ..;...l; w&msmm vmmmmm*m* mnmvM W M t w mmi v-6" *>' %, ,0 Oj a o v* H \ v , .** A V V 5 *$U i a , > •/> °/- * V V ^ ^" % & >. ^ v < J , ^ SO* ■>. Cl rV vV ■/> %/ ', vV .A A < j ^ *>. v> A*' > ,\V * : - % ,^ v ■5> -h. ^ ,*° / . • - Y- >y <*> * .., N «0 lV ,0 c / ^,- cv ■ * ^ oo v # V. \. <2> A" r >, < '* > - * .,■■ ^ -\ ,H -v. ,0o. c- & ^ A - V '+,. / ,0o. ^t-^&fj&fp*' THE Condensed Library Being a Condensation of the Choicest and Most Popular Works of Fiction by the World's Best Authors Also, History, Biography, and Scientific Knowledge In Condensed Form for Busy People BY A WELL-KNOWN AUTHOR ILLUSTRATED f rDEC 1* 1893 ) DAYTON, OHIO ^T ^"~X" | The Historical Publishing Company \j I H f ^ 1894 fi 7 Copyright, 1893, By O. O. Ozias. A INTRODUCTION. It is not the purpose of this book to displace any of the high-class standard works found condensed herein; but that the class of busy humanity who imagine they have not the time to read, may have the helpfulness to be derived from even a casual acquaintance with some of the world's best authors, this volume is prepared. Its mission is one of education and entertainment com- bined: of education, because it not only introduces to the busy person those authors and characters in literature with whom it is so desirable to have an acquaintance, but is suggestive of further reading along the same lines, its influence extending more and more broadly, as do the ripples on the quiet water when a pebble is dropped therein; of entertainment, because the writer has woven into the condensation such a beautiful thread of the story or book, that one is ready to believe it an entirely new one, instead of a condensation of several hundred pages into so small a space. That it may cause two blades of grass to grow where but one grew before, that it may stimulate a desire for a higher order of literature in those who read it, and that it may in the fullest sense realize its mission of education and entertainment, is the devout wish of a A Busy Man. m TABLE OF CONTENTS. Name of Book. Name of Author. Page. Sketch op Shakespeare 9 The Merchant op Venice William Shakespeare 13 As You Like It William Shakespeare 31 Romeo and Juliet William Shakespeare 53 Hamlet, Prince op Denmark...... William Shakespeare 75 Macbeth William Shakespeare 101 Sketch op Dickens 129 Nicholas Nickleby Charles Dickens 133 David Copperfield Charles Dickens 157 Dombey and Son Charles Dickens 181 The Pickwick Papers Charles Dickens 205 Bleak House Charles Dickens 231 Sketch op Cooper 257 The Spy James Fenimore Cooper.. 261 The Last op the Mohicans ...James Fenimore Cooper.. 283 Sketch op Hawthorne 309 The Scarlet Letter -Nathaniel Hawthorne 313 The House op the Seven Gables Nathaniel Hawthorne 341 Sketch op Irving 367 Rip Van Winkle Washington Irving, 373 The Legend op Sleepy Hollow Washington Irving 395 SHAKESPEARE. WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE. Born April 23. 1564— Died April 23, 1616. Shakespeare was born at Stratford-upon-Avon, in War- wickshire, of a family that was above the common rank. His father was a wool dealer, and had been an officer of the corporation of Stratford, and was also a justice of the peace, and at one time was possessed of considerable property. Shakespeare's mother was the daughter and heiress of Robert Arden, of Wellington, in the county of Warwick. Shakespeare was the eldest son in a family of ten children, and probably received his early education in a free school, and was then placed in the office of some county attorney. The extent of his education will per- haps always remain a matter of controversy. Though it is not thought that he received a thorough literary training, he knew enough of Latin and French to intro- duce both into his plays without blunder or impropriety. When but eighteen years old he married Anne Hatha- way, who was eight years his senior. His conduct was not very exemplary, and being caught in the act of robbing the deer park of Sir Thomas Lucy of Charlecorte, near Stratford, he was obliged to leave his home and family and find shelter in Jxmdon. He accepted some inferior position in a play-house, and it was here that he seems to have discovered those talents which will forever make him " The applause, delight, the wonder of our stage." 9 10 WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE. It is said that he was not eminent as an actor, but that he appeared to best advantage as the ghost in Hamlet. His plays became very popular, and he enjoyed the gracious favor of his sovereign, Queen Elizabeth, to whom he dedicated some of his poems; and of King James, who wrote a very gracious letter to him with his own hand, probably in return for the compliment he had paid -to his Majesty in the tragedy of Macbeth. It is not known how long he continued an actor, but he used his pen in writing plays till 1614. He acquired considerable property before he retired to his house in Stratford, where he spent the latter part of his life in ease, retirement, and the company of his friends. He died on the anniversary of his birth, aged fifty-two years, and was buried on the north side of the chancel of the great church at Stratford, where a monument is placed in the wall, on which he is represented under an arch, in a sitting posture, a cushion spread before him, with a pen in his right hand and his left resting on a scroll of paper. He left a family of two daughters and one son. The latter died in his twelfth year, and the daughters, who married gentlemen of the upper English class, died with- out leaving children, thus making the name of Shakes- peare, in the line of his descendants, extinct. "Shall I not have barely my principal? THE MERCHANT OP VENICE. Principal Characters. Duke of Venice. Prince of Morocco, } . Suitors to Portia. Prince of Arragon, Antonio, the Merchant of Venice. Bassanio, Antonio's Friend. Solanio, Salarino, J> Friends to Antonio and Bassanio. Gratiano, Lorenzo, the Lover of Jessica. Shylock, a Jew. Tubal, a Jew, Friend of Shylock. Launcelot Gobbo, a Clown, Servant to Shylock. Salerio, a Messenger from, Venice. Leonardo, Servant to Bassanio. Balthasar, >> J , Servants to Portia. Stepnano, Portia, a rich Heiress. Nerissa, Waiting-maid to Portia. Jessica, Shylock's Daughter. Scene, partly in Venice, and partly at Belmont, the seat of Portia, on the Continent. 12 THE MERCHANT OF VENICE. By William Shakespeare. Shylock the Jew sat in his house in lovely Venice. All around him were the beauties of the city by the sea; but these he cared not for, because his soul, narrowed down to nothing save the love of gold, saw no beauty nor merit in anything but that which was found in the coffers which contained the riches to the attaining of which all the years of his life had been given. Jessica, his pretty, motherless daughter, felt the need of love, but scarcely looked for it from the father whose passion was gold, and gold alone. In bonds of strictest securities he was accus- tomed to put out his money. Rates of highest usury he always demanded. On the Rialto, where the merchants met and transacted business, Shylock had frequently met Antonio, a rich merchant, whose name was public every- where for honorable dealing and an upright life, and whose methods of business were very widely different from his own. In scorn of Shylock's birth, but more in scorn of his character, Antonio could not fail to let the proud Jew see the contempt in which he held him. Quick to discern this, day after day the sting was stored away in Shylock's memory, and he waited in silence for the time when he could return, in malice and with an unscrupulous usurer's rate, the grudge he bore against him. That time came, unlooked for and unheralded, to Antonio. His wealth, his 13 14 THE MERCHANT OF VENICE. all, was invested in ships and merchandise that had gone to many and distant parts of the world. In their being widely scattered he felt security, as disaster could scarcely come to all at once. Ships had gone outward and others were expected home, when his friend, Bassanio, came and sought his name upon his bond. Three thousand ducats had Bassanio asked for from Shylock for three months, and the -loan was granted, with Antonio's name responsi- ble for its payment. A strange condition was annexed by Shylock. Now was his hour for revenge. Shylock. This kindness will I show: Go with me to a notary, seal me there Your single bond; and, in a merry sport, If you repay me not on such a day, In such a place, such sum or sums as are Express'd in the condition, let the forfeit Be nominated for an equal pound Of your fair flesh, to be cut off and taken In what part of your body pleaseth me. Antonio. Content, in faith; I '11 seal to such a bond, And say there is much kindness in the Jew. Bassanio. You shall not seal to such a bond for me: I '11 rather dwell in my necessity. Antonio. Why, fear not, man; I will not forfeit it: Within these two months — that's a month before This bond expires — I do expect return Of thrice three times the value of this bond. Come on: in this there can be no dismay; My ships come home a month before the day. Beyond the city, amid the groves whose fragrance THE MERCHANT OF VENICE. 15 scents the air of Italy, in a stately palace dwelt Portia, the beautiful heiress of a father who, in bequeathing to her his great wealth, made strange restrictions concerning her marriage. Something like a lottery he had devised in her disposal, in her settlement for life. Three chests, of gold, of silver, and of lead, were guarded in the palace, and in one of these lay the picture of Portia. He who came and happily chose the casket containing this picture, was to be her husband and the sharer of her riches. Gay lovers of princely or of lordly birth came and stood their chances in the presence of the quiet arbiters of their fate. From the four quarters of the earth they came. Before deciding on their choice of casket, each one was required to subscribe to a solemn promise: — "I am eiTJoin'd by oath t' observe three things: First, never to unfold to any one Which casket 't was I chose; next, if I fail Of the right casket, never in my life To woo a maid in way of marriage; lastly, If I do fail in fortune of my choice, Immediately to leave you and be gone." Suitors came and went away ungratified, misled by the inscriptions engraved upon the caskets. Upon the one of gold were the words, "Who chooseth me shall gain what many men desire." The silver one was different: "Who chooseth me shall get as much as he deserves"; while upon the leaden one were words whose uncertain meaning had misled all who had stood and looked upon it: "Who chooseth me must give and hazard all he hath." Invariably the silver or the golden one was chosen, and he who sought Portia went away in chagrin and disappointment. Portia herself became weary of 16 THE MERCHANT OF VENICE. these suitors for her wealth and hand, and to Nerissa, her maid, declared her longing to be free from them all. One day her servant brought her word that one ap- proached, unlike all his predecessors. She bade him bring him in, and he proved to be Bassanio, the friend for whom Antonio had risked so much. Passing by the gold and silver, he chose the leaden casket, which, upon opening it, he found contained the much-sought-for pic- ture of Portia. Their marriage quickly followed, and, as well, that of Gratiano, the servant of Bassanio, and Nerissa, Portia's maid. News had reached Venice that disaster had come to Antonio in the wrecking of a ship of his richest lading. News had also reached Shylock that Jessica had fled with Lorenzo, her lover, going aboard a ship belonging to Bassanio and bearing with her much of his hoarded treasure. In rage he paced the streets, vowing revenge. Two men who knew him well met him and asked the truth of Antonio's loss. His feelings at the flight of Jessica and his loss therefrom were changed upon hearing that Antonio's argosy coming from Tripoli was cast away. Tubal, the friend whom he had intrusted with the search for Jessica, not only brought him word that he had not been successful in overtaking *her and her lover, but confirmed the statements he had heard in regard to Antonio. Shy loch. I thank God, I thank God! — Is it true, is it true ? Tubal. I spoke with some of the sailors that escaped the wreck. . . . There came divers of Antonio's creditors in my company to Venice, that swear he cannot choose but break. THE MERCHANT OF VENICE. 17 Shy lock. I am very glad of it: I '11 plague him; I '11 torture him: I am glad of it. . . . Go, Tubal, fee me an officer; bespeak him a fortnight before. I will have the heart of him, if he forfeit; for, were he out of Venice, I can make what merchandise I will. Go, Tubal, and meet me at our synagogue; go, good Tubal; at our syn- agogue, Tubal. In some strange way Lorenzo and Jessica found their way to Portia's palace soon after her marriage to Bassanio. A letter had been borne to Bassanio by Salerio, a messen- ger from Antonio, which hastened his immediate depart- ure from his bride. Thus it read: "Sweet Bassanio, my ships have all miscarried, my creditors grow cruel; my estate is very low, my bond to the Jew is forfeit; and since, in paying it, it is impossible I should live, all debts are clear'd between you and I, if I might but see you at my death. Notwithstanding, use your pleasure: if your love do not persuade you to come, let not my letter." . Bassanio and Gratiano started immediately for Venice, being urged thither by Portia, bearing each of them a ring as pledge of constancy during their absence, and bearing that also from Portia which she hoped would re- lease Antonio from her husband's bond. Lorenzo, who knew Antonio well, told to Portia more fully all of Antonio's troubles and the dangers that threatened him. Said he: — " Madam, ... if you knew to whom you show this honour, How true a gentleman you send relief, How dear a lover of my lord your husband, I know you would be prouder of the work Than customary bounty can enforce you." 18 THE MERCHANT OP VENICE. Portia. Lorenzo, I commit into your hands The husbandry and manage of my house Until my lord's return; for mine own part, I have toward heaven breathed a secret vow To live in prayer and contemplation, Only attended by Nerissa here, Until her husband and my lord's return: There is a monastery two miles off, And there we will abide. I do desire you Not to deny this imposition, The which my love and some necessity Now lays upon you. My people do -already know my mind, And will acknowledge you and Jessica In place of Lord Bassanio and myself. So, fare you well, till we shall meet again. Instead of going to the monastery, — where Portia had not thought of going,— she called her confidential ser- vant, and bade him go to Padua, delivering a letter which he carried to Doctor Bellario, and bearing back in speed and safety such notes and garments as he should send to her. Portia. Come on, Nerissa; I have work in hand That you yet know not of: we '11 see our husbands Before they think of us. Nerissa. Shall they see us? Portia. They shall, Nerissa, but in such a habit, That they shall think we 're men. The time had come and gone, and Antonio's bond was forfeit. Disasters had multiplied and come trooping upon THE MERCHANT OF VENICE. 19 him in each other's tracks until all hope had left him. Shylock, intent upon the payment of the bond, with malignant spirit urged that it be paid, according to agree- ment, from the merchant's body. No offer of twice or thrice three thousand ducats could turn him from his cruel purpose. The court that was to try the case con- vened. The duke mounted his throne. Around him stood his officers, ready to carry out any decision that might be given. Antonio and he for whom he was to suffer all this, — Bassanio, — attended by their friends, made their appearance. Duke. What, is Antonio here ? Antonio, Ready, so please your Grace. Duke. I 'm sorry for thee; thou art come to answer A stony adversary, an inhuman wretch Uncapable of pity, void and empty From any dram of mercy. Antonio. I have heard Your Grace hath ta'en great pains to qualify His rigorous course; but, since he stands obdurate, And that no lawful means can carry me Out of his envy's reach, I do oppose My patience to his fury; and am arm'd To suffer, with a quietness of spirit, The very tyranny and rage of his. Not to be daunted of any purpose he had made, Shy- lock entered the court at the summons of the duke. No reasoning could change his determination. The only answer which the duke could extort from him was: — " By our holy Sabbath have I sworn . To have the due and forfeit of my bond: 20 THE MERCHANT OF VENICE. So can I give no reason, nor I will not, More than a lodged hate and a certain loathing I bear Antonio, that I follow thus A losing suit against him." Antonio made answer, knowing well the man with whom he had to deal: — " You may as well go stand upon the beach, And bid the main flood bate his usual height; You may as well use question with the wolf, Why he hath made the ewe bleat for the lamb; You may as well forbid the mountain pines To wag their high tops, and to make no noise, When they are fretted with the gusts of heaven; You. may as well do anything most hard, As seek to soften that — than which what's harder? — His Jewish heart. Therefore, I do beseech you, Make no more offers, use no farther means; But, with all brief and plain conveniency, Let me have judgment, and the Jew his will." Bassanio made offer: "For thy three thousand ducats here is six." Shy lock stood unmoved: — "If every ducat in six thousand ducats Were in six parts, and every part a ducat, I would not draw them: I would have my bond. J> The duke asserted his authority: — " Upon my power I may dismiss this court, Unless Bellario, a learned doctor, Whom I have sent for to determine this, Come here to-day." THE MERCHANT OF VENICE. 21 Just then a messenger from Padua was announced, with letters from Doctor Bellario. The clerk took the letters and read: — "Your Grace shall understand that at the receipt of your letter I am very sick: but in the instant that your messenger came, in loving visitation was with me a young doctor of Rome; his name is Balthasar. I acquainted him with the cause in controversy between the Jew and Antonio the merchant: we turn'd o'er many books together: he is furnished with my opinion; which, bet- ter'd with his own learning, the greatness whereof I cannot enough commend, comes with him, at my impor- tunity, to fill up your Grace's request in my stead. I beseech you, let his lack of years be no impediment to let him lack a reverend estimation; for I never knew so young a body with so old a head. I leave him to your gracious acceptance, whose trial shall better publish his commendation. Bellario. " Just then the doctor of laws entered. "Are you acquainted," asked the duke, "with the dif- ference that holds this present question in the court?" Balthasar. I am informed thoroughly of the cause. Which is the merchant here, and which the Jew? Duke. Antonio and old Shy lock, both stand forth. Balthasar. Is your name Shy lock? Shylock. Shylock is my name. Balthasar. Do you confess the bond? Antonio. I do. Balthasar. Then must the Jew be merciful. Shylock. On what compulsion must I? Balthasar. The quality of mercy is not strain'd; 22 THE MERCHANT OF VENICE. It droppeth as the gentle rain from heaven Upon the place beneath: it is twice bless'd; It blesseth him that gives, and him that takes: Tis mightiest in the mightiest . We do pray for mercy; And that same prayer doth teach us all to render The deeds of mercy. "My deeds upon my head!" said Shy lock. "I crave the law, the penalty and forfeit of my bond." "Is he not able to discharge the money?" questioned Balthasar. Bassanio. Yes, here I tender it for him in the court; Yea, thrice the sum: if that will not suffice, I will be bound to pay it ten times o'er, On forfeit of my hands, my head, my heart. "There is no power in Venice can alter a decree estab- lished," said the Roman doctor. "A Daniel come to judgment ! yea, a Daniel ! " — shouted Shy lock in his joy. "0 wise young judge, how do I honour thee ! " No attempt at persuasion for mercy could dissuade the Jew from his horrid purpose; he vehemently insisted on the pound of flesh from Antonio's body. "Why, then," said Balthasar, " thus it is : you must pre- pare your bosom for his knife." "0 noble judge! excellent young man! .... How much more elder art thou than thy looks!" exclaimed Shy lock. Balthasar gave order to Antonio that he lay bare his bosom. "Ay, his breast," said Shy lock: "so says the bond: Nearest his heart: those are the very words." THE MERCHANT OF VENICE. 23 Balthasar. Are there balance here to weigh the flesh? Have by some surgeon, Shylock, on your charge, To stop his wounds, lest he do bleed to death. Antonio took leave of Bassanio, commending himself in tender remembrance to Portia, his wife. Shylock became impatient. "We trifle time," said he: "I pray thee, pursue sentence." [thine: Balthasar. A pcund of that same merchant's flesh is The court awards it, and the law doth give it. There is something else. This bond doth give thee here no jot of blood; The words expressly are, a pound of flesh : Take then thy bond, take thou thy pound of flesh; But, in the cutting it, if thou dost shed One drop of Christian blood, thy lands and goods Are, by the laws of Venice, confiscate Unto the State of Venice. Shylock. Is that the law? I take his offer, then; — pay the bond thrice, And let the Christian go. Bassanio answered him, "Here is the money." But Balthasar was not to be outwitted. Balthasar. Soft! The Jew shall have all justice; soft! no haste: He shall have nothing but the penalty. Therefore prepare thee to cut off the flesh. Shed thou no blood; nor cut thou less nor more But just a pound of flesh: if thou tak'st more Or less than a just pound, — be 't but so much 24 THE MERCHANT OP VENICE. As makes it light or heavy in the substance Or the division of the twentieth part Of one poor scruple, nay, if the scale do turn But in the estimation of a hair, — Thou diest, and all thy goods are confiscate. Shy lock. Shall I not have barely my principal? Balthasar. Thou shalt have nothing but the forfeiture, To be so taken at thy peril, Jew. Outwitted, the Jew made motion to withdraw, but Balthasar was too wise to permit it. The laws of Venice were laid before him in a way different from that which he had expected. Balthasar. It is enacted in the laws of Venice, If it be proved against an alien That by direct or indirect attempts He seek the life of any citizen, The party 'gainst the which he doth contrive Shall seize one-half his goods; the other half Comes to the privy coffer of the State; And the offender's life lies in the mercy Of the Duke only, 'gainst all other voice. Thou hast contrived against the very life Of the defendant; .... Down, therefore, and beg mercy of the Duke. Shylock. Nay, take my life and all; pardon not that: You take my house, when you do take the prop That doth sustain my house; you take my life, When you do take the means whereby I live. Shylock had learned the lesson intended to be taught him. Before the court adjourned, the disposition of his THE MERCHANT OF VENICE. 25 goods was made. One-half, by Antonio's advice, was given to the state to pay the fine which he had brought upon himself in seeking the life of a citizen, the other was held in use by Antonio till Shylock be dead, to be then transferred to Lorenzo and Jessica, and for this favor Shylock was to embrace the Christian faith. He answered meekly : — "I am content. I pray you, give me leave to go from hence: I am not well: send the deed after me, And I will sign it." " Get thee gone, but do it," was the duke's reply. The duke and all his attendants withdrew, leaving Balthasar with Antonio and Bassanio in the court-room. The three thousand ducats were tendered Balthasar by his two companions, including all the love and service they could offer him. Bassanio also urged him to take some personal remembrance as a tribute of esteem, not as a fee. Being close pressed, he chose the gloves Bassanio wore and the ring which Portia had given him on their mar- riage day. Kemembering his promise that he would neither sell, nor lose, nor give it away, Bassanio made excuse about it, urging, — "There 's more depends on this than on the value. This ring was given me by my wife; And, when she put it on, she made me vow That I should neither sell nor give nor lose it." Balthasar accepted his excuse, but after he had left the room Antonio urged that the ring be given him, and Gratiano ran after him and presented it in his master's 26 THE MERCHANT OF VENICE. name. In accepting it, Balthasar begged him to show the youth, his clerk, old Shylock's house, so that ere they quitted Venice — which they were in haste to do — he might sign the deed of property in favor of Lorenzo and Jessica. It was a bright moonlight night, and all nature con- spired to make it a perfect one. Lorenzo and Jessica, in the happiness of their young lives, wandered in the gar- dens of Belmont, Portia's beautiful home. No cares were theirs, for youth and innocence and inexperience drove care away, and their talk was pure and guileless and sweet as the winds that swept through the trees over- head. The hours passed by, as arm-in-arm they walked, not heeding aught around them, — so happy were they in their love, — when a messenger intruded, and bore the news that Portia and Nerissa, accompanied by an aged monk, would be at Belmont before the break of day. All things were in readiness in the house, and Lorenzo ordered that music should welcome its mistress to the beauty of her home. Off in the distance, as Portia drew near, she saw the lights and listened to the sweet sounds wafted to her on the breeze. " That light we see is burning in my hall. How far that little candle throws his beams ! So shines a good deed in a naughty world," she said. When she entered the garden amid its welcomings, she asked of Lorenzo if Bassanio and Gratiano had returned. Being assured that they had not, but that they were hourly expected, she gave orders that no word should be told them, on their return, that she and Nerissa had been absent. Just as she gave the order a trumpet announced their coming, and soon Bassanio, Gratiano, Antonio, and a train of followers entered the gates. THE MERCHANT OF VENICE. 27 "You're welcome home, my lord," said she. "Sir," to Antonio, "you are very welcome to our house: it must appear in other ways than words, therefore I scant this breathing courtesy." Gratiano and Nerissa had withdrawn and walked apart, and earnest words were heard passing between them. " In faith, I gave it to the judges clerk," was Gratiano heard to say. Their talk grew loud and warm, and those who heard it surmised it to be a quarrel. Portia inquired what it was; and then Nerissa's husband told the story of the ring she gave him, and said that after the trial he had given it to the judge's clerk, who had begged it as a fee, and whom he could not refuse. Portia, I gave my love a ring, and made him swear Never to part with it; and here he stands. Now, in faith, Gratiano, You give your wife too unkind cause of grief: An 't were to me, I should be mad at it. Gratiano replied that Bassanio, too, gave his ring away to the judge, who begged it of him, and who deserved it well, and that the clerk, who had assisted in the writing of the trial, begged his, and that neither man nor master would take aught but the two rings. "What ring gave you, my lord?" said Portia to Bas- sanio. " Not that, I hope, which you received of me." Bassanio, If I could add a lie unto a fault, I would deny it; but you see my finger Hath not the ring upon it, — it is gone. Warm words and reproaches followed, and no end was seen to the dispute, till Antonio — whose presence they 28 THE MERCHANT OF VENICE. seemed to have forgotten, and who had heard it all — interposed : — "I am th' unhappy subject of these quarrels." "Sir, grieve not you/' said Portia; "you are welcome notwithstanding." "Portia, hear me," said Bassanio: "by my soul I swear I never more will break an oath with thee." "I dare be bound again," said Antonio, "my soul upon the forfeit, that your lord will never more break faith advisedly." " Then you shall be his surety," answered Portia. " Give him this; and bid him keep it better than the other." Antonio. Here, lord Bassanio ; swear to keep this ring. Bassanio. By Heaven, it is the same I gave the doctor! Portia. I had it from him: pardon me, Bassanio; I was the doctor. Nerissa. And pardon me, my gentle Gratiano; For that same boy, the doctor's clerk, was I. Portia. You are all amazed. Here is a letter, read it at your leisure; It comes from Padua, from Bellario: There you shall find that Portia was the doctor; Nerissa there her clerk: Lorenzo here Shall witness I set forth as soon as you, And even but now return'd ; I have not yet Enter'd my house. — Antonio, you are welcome; And I have better news in store for you Than you expect: unseal this letter soon; There you shall find three of your argosies Are richly come to harbour suddenly: You shall not know by what strange accident I chanced on this letter. ..3 Is •8 ■ O o It Is r 5 * S3 cq 5fl AS YOU LIKE IT. Peincipal Characters. Duke, living in exile. Frederick, the Duke's usurping Brother. Amiens, us, 1 3 > J . Lords attending upon the Duke in his banishment. Jaques, Le Beau, a Courtier attending upon Frederick. Charles, a Wrestler. Oliver, Jaques, [> Sons of Sir Roland de Bois. Orlando, Adam. lis, J , Servants to Oliver. Denis, Touchstone, a Clown. Sir Oliver Martext, a Vicar. Corin, } r Shepherds. Silvius, William, a country Fellow, in love with Audrey. A Person representing Hymen. Rosalind, Daughter to the banished Duke. Celia, Daughter to Frederick. Phebe, a Shepherdess. Audrey, a country Girl. Scene, partly near Oliver's house; partly in the Forest of Arden partly in the Court of Frederick. 30 AS YOU LIKE IT. By William Shakespeare. The landed estate of Sir Roland de Bois, with all the revenues thereof, was, according to the laws of France, inherited by his eldest son, Oliver de Bois; but provision was made by will for the education and settlement in life of two younger sons, Jaques and Orlando, the former of whom was sent away to college and was soon in the way of winning honors in the halls of learning, while from some strange, unnatural dislike felt toward him by the eldest brother, Orlando was neglected and left idly wandering about, uneducated and uncared for, even the patrimony left by his father's will being withheld from him. To the pride of his noble birth was added the pride of a noble-minded, thoughtful youth, who aspired to be something more than the great, ignorant fellow that his brother Oliver would have him become, and his com- plaints against the injustice shown him were poured into the ears of Adam, an old servant, who had reasons of his own why he should sympathize with him. Unable to submit longer to his unfair treatment, Orlando finally re- proached Oliver, who angrily retorted that he would give him part of his inheritance and see what he would do for himself. Oliver, in his secret soul, hated Orlando. To himself he owned that he could not account for this, as there was much in the character of the younger brother that was lovable, and he knew that his noble disposition 31 32 AS YOU LIKE IT. and gentle, winning manners made him beloved by all the servants, and had, besides, won for him the esteem of many friends. Though no advantages of education had been provided for him, he had risen above the degra- dation of ignorance to which Oliver had doomed him, and had become learned in spite of all hindrances. The youths of his day practiced wrestling and boxing and sparring, and Orlando had become expert in these and was quite famous among his friends for his proficiency. A change had taken place in the government. The old duke, who had for many years been at its head, was deposed and banished by Duke Frederick, a younger brother, and his exile was shared by several lords, who voluntarily withdrew with him, thus forfeiting their lands and revenues, which the usurper seized upon and added to his own. The deposed ruler found a temporary home in the great Forest of Arden, and here, being joined by many young men who were filled with the spirit of the romance and chivalry of the age in which they lived, they led a life similar to that of Robin Hood, whose fame they tried in several ways to emulate. Between Rosalind, the old duke's daughter, and her cousin Celia, the daughter of Frederick, who now held sway, the strongest bonds of love existed. It was said that if the former had been banished with her father, the latter would have followed her rather than submit to a separation. They were of nearly the same age, and from their, cradles every childish joy and sorrow had been shared between them; and now, in the new court of her uncle, Rosalind divided the honors and favors bestowed upon his heiress, Celia. The court of France was one of freedom and of pleas- AS YOU LIKE IT. 33 ure. One day the skill and prowess of a famous wrestler was to be tried with anyone who would enter the ranks against him. Oliver de Bois had heard of Charles the wrestler, and had him brought before him. Oliver told him that he had heard that his brother Orlando had ex- pressed the wish to try a hand-to-hand contest with Charles, and he hoped that he would humor the wish. Believing in his heart that his brother would never be able to bear up under so powerful an opponent as the strong man before him, he secretly hoped that in the match Orlando would be disabled, or — what would have pleased him better — slain, and thus he would be rid of his hated presence. Rosalind and Celia were seated on the lawn in front of the palace, when Le Beau, a courtier of the duke, ap- proached and told them of the wrestling-match which had begun, and in which Charles had already vanquished and laid aside three men, sons of one father; and that now, near the very spot where they were sitting, he was to try his skill upon Orlando. Ready for any new pleas- ure, they both decided to remain and witness the contest. Frederick saw them and drew near, informing them that the contestants were unequally matched, and that both he and Charles had tried to dissuade Orlando from engag- ing with the well-trained wrestler, but that he would not listen to their entreaties. He asked the young ladies to call Orlando and use their eloquence, so that he would withdraw. It was of no avail. All the reply that he would give them was: — " Let your fair eyes and gentle wishes go with me to my trial; wherein if I be foil'd, there is but one shamed that was never gracious; if kill'd, but one dead that is 34 AS YOU LIKE IT. willing to be so. I shall do my friends no wrong, for I have none to lament me; the world no injury, for in it I have nothing; only in the world I fill up a place, which may be better supplied when I have made it empty." Encouraged by tne ladies with their best wishes, and knowing that their eyes were upon his every movement, Orlando began to wrestle, and did his very best to beat his opponent. He was successful. Charles was thrown and carried away insensible. Frederick. What is thy name, young man? Orlando. Orlando, my liege; the youngest son of Sir Roland de Bois. Frederick. I would thou hadst been son to some man else. The world esteemed thy father honourable, But I did find him still mine enemy: Thou shouldst have better pleased me with this deed, Hadst thou descended from another House. But fare thee well; thou art a gallant youth: I would thou hadst told me of another father. The girls called Orlando to them and gave congratula- tions on his victory. Rosalind took a chain off her neck and handed it to him with the words, — "Wear this for me, one out of suits with fortune, That could give more, but that her hand lacks means." Rosalind became deeply interested in Orlando, — so much so that, after the wrestling-match was over and he had gone away, her seriousness was so pronounced that Celia felt it and chided her about it. Then, too, each day she felt the separation from her father more and more. AS YOU LIKE IT. 35 The splendors of the court palled upon her, knowing that the throne was rightfully her father's, and that she was receiving from another what belonged to her in virtue of her birth. Celia would tease her about Orlando. One morning the two were talking of him. Celia. Is it possible, on such a sudden, you should fall into so strong a liking with old Sir Roland's youngest son? Rosalind. The Duke my father loved his father dearly. Celia. Doth it therefore follow that you should love his son dearly? By this kind of chase, I should hate him, for my father hated his father dearly; yet I hate not Orlando. Wishing to drop the subject, Rosalind exclaimed, " Look, here comes the Duke." " With his eyes full of anger," answered her cousin. It may seem strange, but for some time her uncle had been looking upon Rosalind with displeasure, though for Celia's sake he had detained her, against her strongest wishes, from joining her father in his forest home. He could not but see that the memory of her father, joined with her many personal excellencies, had made her a favorite with the people. He drew near the girls, ex- claiming as he looked at Rosalind, — " Mistress, dispatch you with your safest haste, And get you from our Court." She begged to know his reasons, and pleaded innocence of any offense. He hinted treachery, and told her that he could not trust her. Frederick. Thou art thy father's daughter; there's enough. 36 AS YOU LIKE IT. Rosalind. So was I when your Highness took his dukedom; So was I when your Highness banish'd him. Celia interposed, urging that if Kosalind was a traitor, she herself, from her constant intimacy with her, mast also be one. Frederick. Her smoothness, Her very silence, and her patience, Speak to the people, and they pity her. Thou art a fool: she robs thee of thy name; And thou wilt show more bright and seem more virtuous When she is gone. Then open not thy lips: Firm and irrevocable is my doom Which I have pass'd upon her: she is banish'd. Celia. Pronounce that sentence, then, on me, my liege : I cannot live out of her company. " You are a fool," he said, and turned away. Rosalind knew not whither to turn her steps, but Celia insisted that no matter where she went she would follow her. Whither and how? they asked each other many times. But ten days being allowed Rosalind to be gone, her life being forfeit if she were found within a radius of twenty miles, her preparations were necessarily hurried. To save themselves from insult and detection they de- cided to go disguised, Celia in poor and mean attire, with face darkened with umber, and Rosalind, who was very tall, dressed as a man, carrying an ax and a spear in her hands. As they would wander from place to place, Rosalind was to answer to the name of Ganymede, Celia to that of Aliena. They gathered up their jewels and all the money they could command, and, as an afterthought, AS YOU LIKE IT. 37 decided that they would persuade Touchstone, the clown of the court, to accompany them. Knowing that Celia's flight must be secret and that she would be pursued as soon as it was discovered, they made these preparations very quietly, and yet with great precision, and success- fully carried them out. Rosalind's father, the exiled duke, was not unhappy, shorn of the pomp and glory which attached to the duke- dom, but enjoyed the freedom of the new life he led, and discoursed of its advantages to his friends: — " Sweet are the uses of adversity; Which, like the toad, ugly and, venomous, Wears yet a precious jewel in his head: And this our life, exempt from public haunt, Finds tongues in trees, books in the running brooks, Sermons in stones, and good in every thing: I would not change it." Amiens, one of his friends in banishment, answered: — "Happy is your Grace, That can translate the stubbornness of fortune Into so quiet and so sweet a style." Quite different from the sweet content that the aged duke and his followers felt, was the dismay that followed the flight of Rosalind and Celia and their humble friend, the clown. Frederick was in a rage when he heard of it, and cried: — "Can it be possible that no man saw them? It cannot be: some villains of my Court Are of consent and sufferance in this." Hesperia, Celia's waiting-maid, told of having over- heard the cousins speaking in praise of Orlando, and 38 AS YOU LIKE IT. immediately it was concluded that he was a party to their flight. Messengers were dispatched to bring him to the palace, or in case of his absence, his brother Oliver was to be brought instead. After the wrestling-match, hearing Orlando's praises sounded everywhere, Oliver had grown suspicious and hated him more than ever; and with murderous intent decided that he would put him out of the way, so that he might never again cross his pathway. Adam, the servant, watched Orlando's interests with an acute ear and a sharp eye, and clung devotedly to him. He overheard his master making arrangements to burn Orlando's lodg- ing place the night after he would return home from a visit, when he would be sound asleep and there would be no possibility of his escaping. Adam watched for Or- lando and told him of his brother's designs, and, when the latter resolved to leave home, declared his intention to go along with him, saying that he would furnish the money for their support till Orlando could obtain employ- ment. No time could be lost; and gathering together what they needed, they left the place to seek a home where they would be more welcome, and where one at least would be free from apprehensions of danger. Weary, tired, and sick at heart, did Rosalind and Celia and Touchstone pursue their lonely way, the last in a more complaining mood than either of his companions. Passing two shepherds just as they entered the great Forest of Arden, they entered into conversation with Silvius, the younger of the two. Not far off from them were lords, self-exiled with the duke, — Amiens, Jaques, and several others, — talking merrily, and singing songs suited to their simple, sylvan life. AS YOU LIKE IT. 39 "The Duke will drink under this tree," said Amiens, and they made ready the meal of such food as they had at hand. In nearness to them, and yet far enough away to remain undiscovered, two men journeyed, the one an old man with tottering steps, the younger one assisting him and trying to comfort him with the prospect of food and rest before them. Scarcely were the duke and his attendants seated at their primitive repast, when Orlando came unannounced into their midst, and, being asked to share the meal, begged food for one who, he told them, was in want, gen- erously saying, — "Till he be first sufficed, — Oppress'd with two weak evils, age and hunger, — I will not touch a bit." " Go find him out, and we will nothing waste till you return," answered the master of the meal. As Orlando went out, Lord Jaques observed: — "All the world's a stage, And all the men and women merely players: They have their exits and their entrances; And one man in his time plays many parts, His acts being seven ages. As, first, the infant: * * * ^ >jc Last scene of all, That ends this strange eventful history, Is second childishness and mere oblivion, Sans teeth, sans eyes, sans taste, sans every thing." Orlando returned, bringing Adam with him, and here they found an asylum from the malice of the wicked Oliver. 40 AS YOU LIKE IT. When Frederick's messengers went to Oliver's house to fetch Orlando, the latter could not be found, and his brother was borne back to the palace instead. Angry at his protestations that he knew nothing about Orlando, and not believing him, Frederick bade him go and seek him, and to bring him dead or alive into his presence within a twelvemonth, or to leave France himself, all his possessions being confiscate to him, the duke. " 0, that your Highness knew my heart in this ! I never loved my brother in my life," said Oliver, willing to confess his dislike so that he might clear himself. The duke replied: — "More villain thou. — Well, push him out of doors; And let my officers of such a nature Make an extent upon his house and lands: Do this expediently, and turn him going." Into the forest with him Orlando carried the memory of Rosalind. Sad and alone, he thought of her more each day and hour. Perhaps it was the sadness of his state, perhaps it was the quiet and the surroundings of the great wood that turned his thoughts to poetry, but he began to be sentimental — to write verses and hang them on the boughs of the trees, — -verses about Rosalind, whom he thought so far away from him and so far above him that he never hoped to reach her. Disguised in the dress with which she had escaped from her uncle's palace, Rosalind was wandering in the wood and found one of these poetic effusions, with no clew to the writer, nor a hint of what Rosalind was meant. Celia also picked up one of the papers, and made a discovery besides. She saw Orlando himself sit- ting under a tree, the embodiment of unhappiness. AS YOU LIKE IT. 41 Whilst she was telling Rosalind of this, he and Jaques were seen in the near distance, and the ladies, who in their disguise were free from detection, thought best that they immediately withdraw. The two men were talking of Rosalind, and Jaques was twitting his companion about her. Evidently they did not agree in what they were saying, and Jaques walked off. Not apprehending recognition, Celia and Rosalind approached Orlando and the latter began talking to him. Before they separated he had promised to call at the cot where they lived and continue their acquaintance. Before they separated, Orlando and Ganymede had agreed to play at Orlando and Rosalind — he not knowing that in the youth before him dressed as a man he beheld the true object of his love. The play was carried out successfully, and the acting of Rosalind was so good that he did not discover who she really was till it was all over. She, or rather he, Ganymede, had promised Orlando that if he would visit him he would cure him of the love he had for the absent Rosalind, whom he had left but re- cently at her uncle's court receiving the attentions that belonged to her rank. The hour passed and another appointment was made. He did not call at the hour appointed, and Rosalind was very much distressed. Both she and Celia freely expressed their opinion of one who would not keep an appointment, and words were passing about him, when Corin, a shepherd, appeared and asked them to go forth and look upon a scene that he thought would please them. Just then Orlando called. Orlando. Good day and happiness, dear Rosalind. 42 AS YOU LIKE IT. Rosalind. Why, how now, Orlando! Where have you been all this while? You a lover! An you serve me such another trick, never come in my sight more. Orlando. My fair Rosalind, I come within an hour of my promise. The forest, great and vast and wide, the sylvan home of those who had no other, was witness-ground of many pretty little love scenes — shepherds wooing fair shep- herdesses — even our simple-minded Touchstone falling deeply in love with Audrey, a maid as unsophisticated as himself. How many acts, how many scenes there might have been in Rosalind's play we know not; for Oliver suddenly appeared upon the stage and interrupted the carrying out of her program, or rather, helped her to make her play successful. He appeared to the two cousins as they were seated under a great forest tree, and asked the way to the very cottage where they dwelt. They gave him fullest directions, but notified him that at that hour he would find no one at home. Oliver. If that an eye may profit by a tongue, Then should I know you by description; Such garments and such years: "The boy is fair, Of female favour, but bestows himself Like a right forester; the woman low, And browner than her brother." Are not you The owners of the house I did inquire for? Celia. It is no boast, being ask'd, to say we are. Oliver. Orlando doth commend him to you both; And to that youth he calls his Rosalind He sends this bloody napkin; — are you he? AS YOU LIKE IT. 43 Rosalind. I am: what must we understand by this? Oliver. When last the young Orlando parted from you, He left a promise to return again Within an hour; and, pacing through the forest, Lo, what befell! Under an oak, whose boughs were moss'd with age, And high top bald with dry antiquity, A wretched ragged man, o'ergrown with hair, Lay' sleeping on his back: about his neck A green and gilded snake had wreath'd itself, Who with her head, nimble in threats, approach'd The opening of his mouth; but suddenly, Seeing Orlando, it unlink'd itself, And with indented glides did slip away Into a bush: under which bush's shade A lioness Lay couching, head on ground, with catlike watch, When that the sleeping man should stir: .... This seen, Orlando did approach the man, And found it was his brother, his elder brother. Celia. 0, 1 have heard him speak of that same brother; And he did render him the most unnatural That lived 'mongst men. Rosalind. But, to Orlando: Did he leave him there ? Oliver. Twice did he turn his back, and purposed so; But kindness, nobler ever than revenge, And nature, stronger than his just occasion, 44 AS YOU LIKE IT. Made him give battle to the lioness, Who quickly fell before him: .... From which miserable slumber I awaked. Celia. Are you his brother ? Rosalind. Was it you he rescued? Celia. Was 't you that did so oft contrive to kill him? Oliver. 'T was I; but 't is not I: I do not shame To tell you what I was, since my conversion So sweetly tastes, being the thing I am. Rosalind. But, for the bloody napkin? — Oliver . . Upon his arm The lioness had torn some flesh away, Which all this while had bled; and now he fainted, And cried, in fainting, upon Rosalind. Brief, I recover'd him; bound up his wound; And, after some small space, being strong at heart, He sent me hither, stranger as I am, To tell this story, that you might excuse His broken promise; and to give this napkin, Dyed in his blood, unto the shepherd youth That he in sport doth call his Eosalind. Rosalind fainted when the napkin was handed to her. Celia. Why, how now, Ganymede! sweet Ganymede! Oliver. Many will swoon when they do look on blood. Celia. There is more in it. — Cousin! — Ganymede! Oliver. Look, he recovers I must bear answer back How you excuse my brother, Rosalind. Rosalind. I shall devise something: but, I pray you, commend my counterfeiting to him. — Will you go? If Orlando loved the absent Rosalind, to whom in her AS YOU LIKE IT. 45 disguise he was playing a part without knowing it, Oliver was deeply in love with the one whom he knew only as Aliena, the sun-browned sister of the wandering Gany- mede. Orlando was surprised to learn that, on so short an acquaintance as Oliver had made during his brief call to tell of his brother's mishap, he would return to tell him of this love. Oliver. Say with me, I love Aliena; say with her, that she loves me; consent with both, that we may enjoy each other: it shall be to your good; for my father's house, and all the revenue that was old Sir Roland's, will I estate upon you, and here live and die a shepherd. Orlando. You have my consent. Let your wedding be to-morrow: ... Go you and prepare Aliena; for, look you, here comes my Rosalind. Orlando told Ganymede of Oliver's love for Aliena. Oliver told the story for himself and expressed his desire for a speedy marriage. Orlando. They shall be married to-morrow; and I will bid the Duke to the nuptial. But, 0, how bitter a thing it is to look into happiness through another man's eyes! By so much the more shall I to-morrow be at the height of heart-heaviness, by how much I shall think my brother happy in having what he wishes for. Rosalind. Why, then to-morrow I cannot serve your turn for Rosalind? . . . If you do love Rosalind so near the heart as your gesture cries it out, when your brother marries Aliena, shall you marry her: . . . it is not im- possible to me ... to set her before your eyes to-morrow, human as she is, and without any danger. . . . There- fore, put you in your best array, bid your friends; for, if 46 AS YOU LIKE IT.. you will be married to-morrow, you shall; and to Rosa- lind, if you will. In another part of the forest, Orlando sought and found the old duke and told him of what Ganymede had said, — that he, Ganymede, would produce Rosalind, the duke's daughter, and that she should stand as bride to him. Duke. Dost thou believe, Orlando, that the boy Can do all this that he hath promised? Orlando. I sometimes do believe, and sometimes do not ; As those that fear to hope, and know they fear. Just then Rosalind approached them, and addressing the duke, said,— "You say, if I bring in your Rosalind, You will bestow her on Orlando here?" Duke. That would I, had I kingdoms to give with her. Rosalind. \_To Orlando.] And you say, you will have her, when I bring her? Orlando. That would I, were I of all kingdoms king. Rosalind. I 've promised to make all this matter even. Keep you your word, duke, to give your daughter; — You yours, Orlando, to receive his daughter: — .... and from hence I go, To make these doubts all even. As Ganymede went off, the duke said, — " I do remember in this shepherd boy Some lively touches of my daughter's favour." To which Orlando rejoined, — " My lord, the first time that I ever saw him AS YOU LIKE IT. 47 Methought he was a brother to your daughter: But, my good lord, this boy is forest-born, And hath been tutor'd in the rudiments Of many desperate studies by his uncle, Whom he reports to be a great magician, Obscured in the circle of this forest." The marriage hour arrived. Not only was there to be a double wedding, but a third and fourth couple were to appear and be joined in holy matrimony. Touchstone and Audrey had asked permission of the duke to join their fates, Touchstone saying, — "A poor virgin, sir, .... but mine own; a poor humour of mine, sir, to take that that no man else will: rich honesty dwells like a miser, sir, in a poor house; as your pearl in your foul oyster." Silvius, the shepherd, who had long loved and wooed Phebe, only to be repelled and disappointed time and again, was to be present, too. On the occasion, one dressed as Hymen approached the duke, holding the hand of Celia, dressed in her bridal robes, and on his right leading Rosalind, looking herself in woman's garb. Rosalind. [To the Duke and Orlando.] To you I give myself, for I am yours. Duke. [Embracing her.~\ If there be truth in sight, you are my daughter. Orlando. If there be truth in shape, you are my Rosalind. Rosalind. [Bowing to the Duke.] I'll have no father, if you be not he: — 48 AS YOU LIKE IT. [To Orlando.] I '11 have no husband, if you be not he. %. * * * * Duke. [ Turning to Celia.] my dear niece, welcome thou art to me, Even daughter-welcome, in no less degree ! Just then a stranger — one who had but recently left Frederick's court — came into the presence of the duke and the nuptial company, and said:— "Let me have audience for a word or two: I am the second son of old Sir Roland, That bring these tidings to this fair assembly: Duke Frederick, hearing how that every day Men of great worth resorted to this forest, Address'd a mighty power; which were on foot, In his own conduct, purposely to take His brother here, and put him to the sword: And to the skirts of this wild wood he came; Where meeting with an old religious man, After some question with him, was converted' Both from his enterprise and from the world; His crown bequeathing to his banish 'd brother, And all their lands restored to them again That were with him exiled. This to be true, I do engage my life." The duke had listened intently to every word. When the stranger guest had ceased talking, he made answer: — "Welcome, young man; Thou offer 'st fairly to thy brothers' wedding: To one, his lands withheld ; and to the other, A land itself at large, a potent dukedom. First, in this forest, let us do those ends AS YOU LIKE IT. 49 That here were well begun and well begot; And after, every of this happy number, That have endured shrewd days and nights with us, Shall share the good of our returned fortune, According to the measure of their states. Meantime, forget this new-fall'n dignity, And fall into our rustic revelry. — Play, music ! — and you, brides and bridegrooms all, With measure heap'd in joy, to th' measures fall." Jaques, who was standing by, addressed himself to Jaques de Bois: — "Sir, by your patience: — If I heard you rightly, The Duke [Frederick] hath put on a religious life, And thrown into neglect the pompous Court?" Jaques de Bois. He hath. Jaques. To him will I: out of these convertites There is much matter to be heard and learn'd. — [To the Duke.] You to your former honour I bequeath; Your patience and your virtue well deserve it: — [To Orlando.] You to a love that your true faith doth merit : — [To Oliver.] You to your land, and love, and great allies. Jaques started off. Duke. Stay, Jaques, stay. Jaques. To see no pastime I: what you would have I '11 stay to know at your abandon'd cave. The duke, anxious that the festivities should be no further interrupted, cried, — "Proceed, proceed: we will begin these rites, As we do trust they '11 end, in true delights." 4 ROMEO AND JULIET. Peincipal Characters. Escalus, Prince of Verona. Paris, a young Nobleman, Kinsman to Escalus. Montague, } , Heads of two opposing Houses. Capulet, An old Man, Uncle to Capulet. Eomeo, Son to Montague. Mercutio, Friend to Romeo. Benvolio, Nephew to Montague, and Friend to Romeo. Tybalt, Nephew to Lady Capulet. Laurence, a Franciscan Friar. John, a Franciscan Friar. Balthazar, Servant to Romeo. Sampson, "'} . Servants to Capulet. Gregory, Abraham, Servant to Montague. An Apothecary. Musicians. A Boy, Page to Paris. Peter, Servant to the Nurse. An Officer. Lady Montague. Lady Capulet. Juliet, Daughter to Capulet. Juliet's Nurse. Scene, during the greater part of the Play, in Verona ; once, in the Fifth Act, at Mantua. 52 ROMEO AND JULIET. By William Shakespeare. Montague and Capulet, heads of two noble houses in the ancient city of Verona, for some cause, undoubtedly plain to them, were at deadly variance. So fierce and angry was this feud sometimes, that even their servants, thinking that they had a part in it, took sides, and would meet in public places and boast and swagger of the power and prowess of the men they served. Often, in those who stood by idly looking on, these words incited ridicule, but yet the bootless farce went on and on, and no one saw an end to it. One day, the story goes, two servants met from each opposing side and talked long and loudly of this and that, and boasted of law and vengeance, uttering chal- lenges which boded no good, and finally drawing their swords, when into their midst came Lord and Lady Capulet and joined in the fray. By some strange fascination, Lord Montague and his noble wife were drawn to the spot. One cannot tell what might have been the outcome of the meet- ing, had not Verona's prince and rightful heir suddenly appeared in sight, surrounded by his attendants. One glance convinced him that danger was near to those concerned, and in stern tones he addressed them:— " Three civil brawls, bred of an airy word, By thee, old Capulet, and Montague, 53 54 ROMEO AND JULIET. Have thrice disturb 'd the quiet of our streets; And made Verona's ancient citizens Cast-by their grave beseeming ornaments, To wield old partisans, in hands as old, Canker'd with peace, to part your canker'd hate: If ever you disturb our streets again, Your lives shall pay the forfeit of the peace. For this time, all the rest depart away: — You, Capulet, shall go along with me; — And, Montague, come you this afternoon, To know our further pleasure in this case." Under a heavy penalty they were bound to keep the peace; and one would think that men as old as they would be too wise ever to forfeit the penalty. Romeo, the handsome son and only child of the Mon- tagues, from being a bright and happy man, had sud- denly changed, and no means of affection or attention on the part of those who loved his interests best had been able to draw from him the reason of his sadness. In the early morning hours he would rise, unrefreshed by sleep, and wander off alone to spots secluded from the presence of his friends; and in the hours he passed within his home he locked himself in his own room, keeping closed doors against any who would seek to enter. His mother, even, had lost her hold upon his confidence, and grieved and wondered at the cause of his unusual con- duct, yet was she powerless to draw the secret from him. Benvolio, his cousin, a youth near Romeo's age, in con- versation learned that he was in love — in love with Rosaline, niece to Capulet, his father's bitterest enemy. A party celebrating an anniversary was to be given at her uncle's house, to which many rich and noble guests ROMEO AND JULIET. 55 were to be invited — Rosaline among the number. By a strange chance, the servant who was intrusted with the invitations, and who could not read a word, in his perplexity ran against Romeo. Not knowing who he was, he handed him the paper containing the names of the expected guests and asked him to read them to him. Benvolio was standing near by, and advised Romeo that now was his opportunity to meet the lady he loved, and prophesied that in a mask no one would know him. According to the custom of the times most of the men wore masks, and it would be easy for Romeo to attend in this way. Benvolio had no trouble in per- suading him to go, and on the appointed night he made ready for the party. Lord and Lady Capulet had but one child, a daughter, Juliet, only fourteen, just in the promise of her beauti- ful girlhood, whose hand was now sought in marriage by Paris, a kinsman of the Prince of Verona, and on this evening she was to make her first appearance as a young lady admitted into society. Paris had obtained permission from Juliet's father to woo and win her. Unsuspicious of any designs upon her heart, she moved among the guests with all eyes fixed upon her in her youthful loveliness. The halls were brilliant with the beauty and elegance of the guests. Almost im- mediately upon Romeo's entrance to the dancing hall, his attention was attracted to the lovely Juliet, and it was not long till he drew near and managed to make her acquaintance. Not knowing who she was, he talked unrestrainedly to her till her maid appeared and told her that her mother desired her presence. Romeo forgot all about Rosaline, so completely had Juliet 56 ROMEO AND JULIET. won his favor. When the guests had all withdrawn, the young girl, flushed with the admiration she had received, was talking to her maid of them and asking who certain of them were. On learning that she had been freely- talking to Romeo, the son of an enemy, she exclaimed, in an undertone: — "My only love sprung from my only hate! Too early seen unknown, and known too late! Prodigious birth of love it is to me, That I must love a loathed enemy ." Romeo loved, — yes, Juliet loved also, but both knew that his love for her would receive no countenance from her parents. One evening, soon after, he scaled the wall surrounding her father's orchard, seeking an opportunity to see and speak with her* He discovered her seated at an open window, and in the darkness heard her say:— "0 Romeo, Romeo! wherefore art thou Romeo? Deny thy father, and refuse thy name; Or, if thou wilt not, be but sworn my love, And I '11 no longer be a Capulet. 'T is but thy name that is my enemy; Thou art thyself, though not a Montague. 0, be some other name! What's in a name? that which we call a rose By any other name would smell as sweet. ifc jfc JJS JJS * Romeo, doff thy name; And for that name, which is no part of thee, Take all myself." ROMEO AND JULIET. 57 Romeo made his presence known by suddenly answer- ing:— "I take thee at thy word: Call me but love, and I'll be new baptized; Henceforth I never will be Romeo." Till near the morning hours Romeo lingered near her window; it was on the side of the house that fronted on the garden, and so he was not detected. Knowing the deadly hate with which her father regarded everyone in any way related to the Montagues, and that she could never gain his consent to a marriage with Romeo, Juliet herself proposed a secret marriage, which was to take place at an early hour on the following morning. Romeo left her and made haste to wait upon a priestly father who he knew could be depended on to perform the rite of marriage, and made his errand known. Looking at the future, where he thought he saw the family feud forgotten in the union of the young son and daughter of the rival houses, as well as desiring to per- fect the happiness of the lovers, the priest assented and made ready for the wedding. Juliet found little trouble in winning over to her side her nurse, the good woman who had taken care of her since her birth, and she sent the nurse to meet Romeo and learn of the arrangements which he had made. So that she might not be suspected of a clandestine meeting with him, Juliet went to church apparently to make con- fession of her failings and to obtain priestly pardon. The words of pardon were changed to words of benedic- tion, Romeo and Juliet became one, and the fair bride thought that henceforth no fear of an angry father or of the unwelcome attentions of the princely suitor whom 58 ROMEO AND JULIET. her father favored would bring a trouble to her. The future boded no ill, the rainbow of hope spanned the sky of the future of the inexperienced girl; but even while she was in the sunshine of hope on her wedding day the darkest cloud of her life was hanging over her. Tybalt, her cousin, a nephew of her mother, had dis- covered Romeo under the mask he wore the night of the party, and had sworn revenge. With jealous eye he watched Romeo, with zealous steps he followed him, awaiting his hour. Mercutio and Benvolio were sitting in a public place on the afternoon of Romeo's wedding-day, when Tybalt and some of his friends drew near. High words followed, in the midst of which Romeo, who was the occasion of them, appeared. Seeing him, Tybalt exclaimed : — "Romeo, the hate I bear thee can afford No better term than this: Thou art a villain." Romeo answered in kindly words, which only angered his adversary the more. The words ended in a fight, in which Tybalt himself was slain, and Mercutio received a wound of which he died soon after. Just after the tumult, the prince, attended by his retinue, appeared, and near him came, from opposite directions, the heads of the houses of Montague and Capulet, with their wives and many others. The prince halted, and inquired into the cause of the murder. Benvolio gave him the account truthfully, but was not believed, and all the blame was put upon Romeo. The prince seemed prejudiced, and without further investiga- tion, pronounced the sentence of exile against him: — ROMEO AND JULIET. 59 "I will be deaf to pleading and excuses; Nor tears nor prayers shall purchase out abuses, Therefore use none: let Romeo hence in haste, Else, when he 's found, that hour is his last. Bear hence this body, and attend our will: Mercy but murders, pardoning those that kill." Romeo fled and hid himself in the cell of the priest who had so recently married him. Juliet's nurse carried to her young mistress so conflicting an account of the affair as to nearly craze her. Of one fact she was sure, — Tybalt was dead. Juliet, not knowing of the enmity he bore Romeo, mourned for him piteously, as to her he had always been a most fair cousin and devoted friend. One moment the nurse would declare that Romeo was dead, that she had seen him slain; the next that he was banished; and at last she affirmed that Friar Laurence had him under his care, and that she would arrange to have him meet his bride. Romeo had fled from the avenging hand of justice, even though he knew that his hand was not stained with Tybalt's blood by premeditation. He hoped to make the whole affair plain when the excitement had died down, but the priest's words were not reassuring: — "Hence from Verona art thou banished: Be patient, for the world is broad and wide." Romeo's grief at the news of his banishment was dread- ful. To him the word meant more than death. The priest attempted consolation: — "I '11 give thee armour to keep off that word; Adversity's sweet milk, philosophy, To comfort thee, though thou art banished." 60 ROMEO AND JULIET. Eomeo in bitterness answered: — "Yet banished? Hang np philosophy! Unless philosophy can make a Juliet, Displant a town, reverse a prince's doom, It helps not, it prevails not: talk no more/' While they were talking, Juliet's nurse, having recov- ered from her fright, knocked at the friar's door. She was admitted, and brought news of Juliet's sorrow which alarmed the young husband. Acting on the priest's advice, with the secret assistance of the nurse Eomeo planned to visit Juliet after nightfall and make all things plain to her, convincing her that it would be safer for him to go to Mantua and remain there till the proper time came to tell the world of his marriage. Then he thought friends would be reconciled, the pardon of the prince could be obtained, and he could return and take up his residence again in Verona. The day, begun in brightness, brought sorrow to more than Eomeo and Juliet. The latter's father and mother knew naught of their daughter's alliance with the son of their enemy. They favored the suit of the young Count Paris, and in the evening, of the day of Tybalt's death were sitting in a room in their house talking of it and of the offer he had made. Capulet. Things have fall'n out, sir, so unluckily, That we have had no time to move our daughter. Look you, she loved her kinsman Tybalt dearly, And so did I. — Well, we were born to die. — 'T is very late, she'll not come down to-night: I promise you, but for your company, I would have been a-bed an hour ago. ROMEO AND JULIET. 61 Paris. These times of woe afford no time to woo. — Madam, good night: commend me to your daughter. Capulet seemed more in haste for Juliet's marriage to the count than did the count himself, and made promise that on the Thursday following (it was then Monday) the wedding should be consummated. Lady Capulet was told to carry her father's decision to Juliet ere she retired that night. The morning was advancing. Notified by the faithful nurse, Romeo, who had spent the night with his bride, made good his escape ere Lady Capulet entered her daughter's room. Morning was lighting up the world, and Juliet was up with the morning. Upon her mother's announcement of the arrangements that her father had made, Juliet gave most decided opposition to marrying Count Paris, whom she scarcely knew, and who, she stoutly averred, had never made any attempt to woo her. Lady Capulet was perplexed, and was glad when she heard her husband's footsteps coming in the direction of Juliet's room. He was enraged when he heard that Juliet refused the count's offer and dared to defy his authority over her. Nothing that she could say, no plea that she could make, softened his anger toward her. Thus he raved: — "Disobedient wretch! I tell thee what, get thee to church o' Thursday, Or never after look me in the face: Speak not, reply not, do not answer me; My fingers itch. — Wife, we scarce thought us bless'd That God had sent us but this only child; But now I see this one is one too much, And that we have a curse in having her. 62 ROMEO AND JULIET. It makes me mad: day, night, late, early, At home, abroad, alone, in company, Waking, or sleeping, still my care hath been To have her match'd: and having now provided A gentleman of princely parentage, Of fair demesnes, youthful, and nobly train'd, To answer I HI not wed, — I cannot love, I am too young, — I pray you, pardon me." He bade her make all her preparations for Thursday, and declared that she should have his blessing if she did so, but that if she refused, his doors would shut for- ever upon her, no matter what happened. He left the room with dreadful threats upon his lips. Juliet sought her mother's influence and interposition, begging that more time might be allowed her. She was as firm as her husband: — " Talk not to me, for I '11 not speak a word : Do as thou wilt, for I have done with thee." Even the nurse advised that, considering Romeo's ban- ishment and the dark outlook ahead, Juliet had better accept the count's offer and become his bride. Driven to distraction by those she had always trusted, and seeing desertion and want ahead, she resolved to seek comfort from another friend. Said she: — "I'll to the friar, to know his remedy: If all else fail, myself have power to die." In haste she fled alone to Friar Laurence's house for his advice. Whom should she meet there but Paris, ROMEO AND JULIET. 63 the man whom above all others she would have avoided. He showed great joy in meeting her, and, not knowing of her determination never to marry him, spoke in loving words of the day that was to make her his. She evaded giving him answer, and parried all his words so success- fully that no suspicion of her refusal to marry him entered his mind. As he passed out, she cried, — " 0, shut the door ! and, when thou Uast done so, Come weep with me ; past hope, past cure, past help ! " The priest told her that he knew all, and that there seemed but little hope of escape for her, and that he knew not how to help her. Her despair was desperation. Juliet. Tell me not, friar, that thou hear'st of this, Unless thou tell me how I may prevent it: If, in thy wisdom, thou canst give no help, Do thou but call my resolution wise, And with this knife I '11 help it presently. Friar. Hold, daughter: I do spy a kind of hope, Which craves as desperate an execution As that is desperate which we would prevent. And then the friar told her to go home and give her consent to marrying Paris, and seem to make ready for the event. He advised that on "Wednesday night, when all the preparations were finished, she insist on being left alone till morning — that her nurse should rest in some other room. He gave her a vial that contained a drug of anaesthetic properties. He told her how to take it, and of its effect upon her — that she would become cold and drowsy, and that her pulse would be so low that to one 64 ROMEO AND JULIET. who felt for it it would seem to have stopped; that no breathing could be detected; that her lips and cheeks would turn to ashy paleness; that the eyelids would sink as if in death; that the whole body would be stiff and stark and cold; and that under the influence of this medicine she would lie as one dead for forty-two hours, when she would waken refreshed as from a pleasant sleep. Friar. In thy best robes, uncover'd, on the bier, Thou shalt be borne to that same ancient vault Where all the kindred of the Capulets lie. In the mean time, against thou shalt awake, : Shall Romeo by my letters know our drift; And hither shall he come: and he and I ! Will watch thy waking, and that very night 1 Shall Romeo bear thee hence to Mantua. And this shall free thee from this present shame; If no inconstant toy, nor womanish fear, Abate thy valour in the acting it. Juliet. Give me, 0, give me ! tell me not of fear. Love give me strength ! and strength shall help afford. Instructed by the priest how to act, Juliet hastened home and sought her father's pardon for her seeming disobedience. Delighted with the prospect of the con- summation of his wishes for her settlement in life, he gave orders to make ready for the wedding-feast, and that confectioners and cooks should furnish a repast 'befitting the occasion. Deceived by Juliet's unwonted cheerfulness, which he took as an augury for good, he sought the count to offer congratulations. Night came on, and everything being complete as to ROMEO AND JULIET. 65 her attire, Juliet begged that she might be left alone for the night. Lady Capulet and the nurse withdrew, and then a dread uneasiness concerning the result of what she was about to do seized the poor girl. "What if the mixture which the friar had given her should not work as he had told her; or what if, instead of a sleeping po- tion, he had purposely given her a poison? What if she should waken before the time appointed for Romeo to come and rescue her ? What if she should waken all alone in the dismal vault and be frightened into real death by the terrors of the tomb which contained the bones of a century of her dead, with Tybalt's fresh corpse before her ? Almost distracted with these dread thoughts, she yet was true to her love for Romeo, and had the courage to swallow the medicine that Laurence gave her. The father saw the count, and returned home too delighted to allow himself to seek sleep that night. He went through the house giving commands in such pro- fusion that the servants were almost beside themselves. In the early morning Count Paris and his brilliant suite approached the house, heralded by a band of musicians. Capulet gave orders that Juliet should be wakened and made ready for the bridegroom. The nurse went to her chamber, opened the door, and entered, surprised that Juliet should be so unmindful of the day as to be still sound asleep. Approaching the couch, she perceived that her charge had arrayed herself in her wedding clothes and then lain down and gone to sleep, as she supposed, for the second time. Instead of sleeping, she appeared to be dead, and in wild tones the nurse screamed for the family to come and share her grief with her. Lord Capulet's delight and joy were suddenly turned 66 ROMEO AND JULIET. into mourning. His wife hung over Juliet's body, ex- claiming, — " She 's dead, she 's dead, she 's dead ! " Looking upon her apparently lifeless body, the father said, — "Life and these lips have long been separated: Death lies on her like an untimely frost Upon the sweetest flower of all the field." Expecting to see his bride waiting to meet him, Paris, the bridegroom, with Friar Laurence, who was to perform the nuptial ceremony, entered the garden, the musicians playing their gayest music. With no warning that the house had been turned into a house of mourning, the count advanced to claim his bride. Friar. Come, is the bride ready to go to church? Capulet. Eeady to go, but never to return. — O son! the night before thy wedding-day Hath Death lain with thy bride. Death is my son-in-law, Death is my heir; My daughter he hath wedded: I will die, And leave him all; life, living, all is Death's. Overwhelmed at the suddenness of his bereavement, Paris stood and looked upon the still body. Paris. Have I thought long to see this morning's face, And doth it give me such a sight as this? * * * * * Most detestable Death, by thee beguiled, By cruel cruel thee quite overthrown! — love ! life! not life, but love in death! ROMEO AND JULIET. 67 Her father heeded not the count's grief, so great was his own: — "0 child! child! my soul, and not my child! . Dead art thou, dead ! — alack, my child is dead And with my child my joys are buried!" Laurence, deep-plotting Laurence, who was looking to Juliet's reanimation, here offered consolation: — "Heaven and yourself Had part in this fair maid; now Heaven hath all, And all the better is it for the maid : Your part in her you could not keep from death; But Heaven keeps His part in eternal life. The most you sought was her promotion; For 't was your Heaven she should be advanced : And weep ye now, seeing she is advanced Above the clouds, as high as Heaven itself?" The bridal party changed their songs of joy to a funeral dirge, and moved with solemn tread to the gloomy tomb, and there placed in safe keeping all that was left of Juliet, the fair daughter of the house of Capulet. Laurence had sent Romeo a letter with full account of all that concerned Juliet, and of the plans that he had made for reuniting them, but on account of the dread pestilence that was then ravaging Mantua, the messenger was not allowed to enter the city, and returned to Verona bringing the letter back with him. Romeo, exiled from home and ignorant of all that had transpired during his absence, was trying to lessen the dreariness of his condition with dreams of return to Juliet, when his musing was interrupted by the entrance of Balthazar, his friend, who brought him news of Juliet's 68 ROMEO AND JULIET. decease and sad burial. His errand done, Balthazar had turned away, leaving Romeo with the resolve that he would join Juliet's spirit by a quick method of which he had heard — poison. He went to an apothecary, bought the drug, and hastened to Juliet's tomb. Laurence, seeing his plans frustrated, made ready to be near by when Juliet should waken, so that he might bear her to a place of concealment till he could get Romeo word to come and bear her away under cover of darkness to Mantua. Paris, whose grief at Juliet's death was sincere, went in the darkness of the night to strew her grave with flowers. No one accompanied him but his page, who stood off at some distance to give warning should anyone approach. Paris. Sweet flower, with flowers thy bridal bed I strew: woe, thy canopy is dust and stones! Which with sweet water nightly I will dew ; Or, wanting that, with tears distill'd by moans: The obsequies that I for thee will keep, Nightly shall be to strew thy grave and weep. Just then the page gave the appointed signal that some one was drawing near. It was Romeo and Bal- thazar. The latter had not been apprised why Romeo sought the tomb, but seeing in his words and whole appearance the determination of a desperate man, received his last commissions and hastened away, not leaving the grounds, however, but seeking a place of concealment near by. Romeo began his work of break- ing open the door of the monument, talking to himself meanwhile, when a voice interrupted: — "Stop thy unhallow'd toil, vile Montague! ROMEO AND JULIET. 69 Can vengeance be pursued further than death ? Condemned villain, I do apprehend thee: Obey, and go with me; for thou must die." He recognized the voice of Paris. The latter, being in ignorance of the love of Juliet for Romeo, was so ab- sorbed in his own grief that Romeo's words seemed to him fraught with evil omen, and he answered him in such a way that a desperate fight followed. Paris was killed, with his dying breath begging, — "If thou be merciful, Open the tomb, lay me with Juliet." Romeo took up the body and laid it in the tomb, and seeing the body of his own loved bride lying so lifelike near him, he said: — "Ah, dear Juliet, Why art thou yet so fair ? shall I believe That unsubstantial Death is amorous ? 0, here Will I set up my everlasting rest. Here's to my love! — true apothecary! Thy drugs are quick. — Thus with a kiss I die." He drank the fatal poison, lay down near Juliet, and died. Friar Laurence, knowing that the hour had come for Juliet to waken, entered the churchyard to be near her when the moment came. Discovering Balthazar in hiding, he inquired the reason, and was told of Romeo's actions. Balthazar refused to go where he had left the latter, and Laurence entered the tomb alone. He saw 70 ROMEO AND JULIET. that the entrance was covered with blood, that two gory swords lay near by, and that inside the monument lay the dead bodies of Paris and Romeo, the one covered with his own lifeblood, the other, rigid and colorless. He exclaimed, — "Romeo! 0, pale! Who else? what, Paris too! And steep'd in blood? Ah, what an unkind hour!" Just then Juliet opened her eyes and stirred. " Where is my Romeo?" she asked. Fully awakened, she saw the dead bodies of the two men who loved her, and no persuasion of the priest could draw her from the place. Hearing a noise outside and fearing capture, she snatched the dagger of Romeo, which was lying near, and thrust it through her heart. Falling on Romeo's body, she almost instantly expired. In life they were separated, but in death their spirits were inseparably united. As the watchmen paced their nightly rounds they came in different places upon Balthazar and the friar, and, suspecting something wrong, placed them under arrest. Early in the morning the prince and his attend- ants entered the churchyard. Not long after, the Capulet family and some friends appeared, bearing in every look and movement the presence of the deep sorrow which had fallen unheralded upon them. As they passed along the street they heard a strange outcry of the people — " Romeo ! " "Juliet!" "Paris!" — and everyone was running towards their monument. Following not far behind the Capu- lets came Romeo's father, Montague, mourning as he walked along over the sudden death of his wife, who had died of grief when she heard of her son's exile. The prince cried out, as he saw Montague drawing near the multitude, — ROMEO AND JULIET. 71 "Come, Montague; for thou art early up, To see thy son and heir more early down." Laurence, whom the whole populace respected, was called upon to give explanation of the triple tragedy. He told of Romeo's secret marriage, and of the sleeping potion he had given Juliet to thwart her second union to a man who was unloved, and of his intention to have her transferred to Mantua at his earliest convenience after her return to consciousness. Balthazar and the page then testified of what they knew of Romeo's visit to the tomb, and of his encounter with Paris. Juliet's death spoke for itself. The prince was moved, and cried aloud so that all men near by might hear him, — " Capulet, — Montague, See, what a scourge is laid upon your hate ! " Capulet. brother Montague, give me thy hand: This is my daughter's jointure, for no more Can I demand. Montague. But I can give thee more: For I will raise her statue in pure gold; That, while Verona by that name is known, There shall no figure at such rate be set As that of true and faithful Juliet. Capulet. As rich shall Romeo by his lady lie; Poor sacrifices of our enmity ! The prince looked upon this ending of the ancient feud, and exclaimed: — " A gloomy peace this morning with it brings; The Sun, for sorrow, will not show his head. 72 ROMEO AND JULIET. Go hence, to have more talk of these sad things; Some shall be pardon'd, and some punished: For never was a story of more woe Than this of Juliet and her Romeo." 2» V o ■SI HAMLET, PRINCE OF DENMARK. Principal Characters. Claudius, King of Denmark. Hamlet, Son of the former King, and Nephew of the present King. Polonius, Lord Chamberlain to the King. Horatio, Friend to Hamlet. Laertes, Son of Polonius. Voltimand, Cornelius, Eosencrantz, Guildenstern, . A Priest. Marcellus, > Courtiers. } 'Officers. Bernardo, ■ Francisco, a Soldier. Eeynaldo, Servant to Polonius. Ghost of Hamlet's Father. Fortinbras, Prince of Norway. Gertrude, Queen of Denmark, and Mother of Hamlet. Ophelia, Daughter of Polonius. Scene, at Elsinore. 74 HAMLET, PRINCE OF DENMARK. By William Shakespeare. The clock struck twelve. 'T was midnight's solemn hour. The moon and stars with a mellow light hung over the ancient city. In palace and in cot the lamps had been put out or were burning low, and the busy- citizens were seeking, in rest and sleep, relief from the cares and toils of the day gone by, and fresh vigor for the one that was just approaching. An officer, Bernardo, and a soldier, Francisco, who were watchmen of the night, stopped as they passed in their round and hailed each other. Francisco moved off, and Bernardo was joined by Horatio and Marcellus. In mysterious whispers they talked of some strange apparition that had been seen the previous night by two of them, and Horatio, who was in- credulous, asked for the story in full. Bernardo began to rehearse it, when Marcellus suddenly, exclaimed, — " Peace, break thee off ; look, where it comes again ! " Horatio was convinced, and to Bernardo's question, "Looks it not like the King?" answered, — "Most like: it harrows me with fear and wonder." Turning to the stranger, — whether man or spirit, — he asked, — "What art thou, that usurp'st this time of night, Together with that fair and warlike form 75 76 HAMLET, PRINCE OF DENMARK. In which the Majesty of buried Denmark Did sometimes march? by Heaven I charge thee, speak!" At these words the unearthly visitant walked away. Marcellus. Thus twice before, and jump at this dead hour, With martial stalk hath he gone by our watch. Horatio. In what particular thought to work I know not; But, in the gross and scope of my opinion, This bodes some strange eruption to our State. Horatio and Bernardo began talking of matters con- nected with the late king, and a treaty which he had made with Fortinbras, Prince of Norway, when, lo! the ghost (for such they both now regarded it) reentered. Horatio again addressed it: — "Stay, illusion! If thou hast any sound, or use of. voice, Speak to me: If there be any good thing to be done, That may to thee do ease, and grace to me, Speak to me: If thou art privy to thy country's fate, Which happily foreknowing may avoid, 0, speak!" The two men attempted to catch and hold it, but just then the crowing of a cock was heard and the ghost dis- appeared. Horatio. I have heard, The cock, that is the trumpet to the morn, HAMLET, PRINCE OF DENMARK. 77 Doth with his lofty and shrill-sounding throat Awake the god of day ; and at his warning, Whether in sea or fire, in earth or air, Th' extravagant and erring spirit hies To his confine: and of the truth herein This present object made probation. Marcellus. It faded on the crowing of the cock. Some say, that ever 'gainst that season comes Wherein our Saviour's birth is celebrated, The bird of dawning singeth all night long : And then, they say, no spirit dare stir abroad ; The nights are wholesome ; then no planets strike, . No fairy takes, nor witch hath power to charm; So hallow'd and so gracious is the time. They agreed that Hamlet, the son of the old King Hamlet, ought to be told of what they had witnessed; they thought that the spirit would converse with him, though it had refused to speak a word to them. Hamlet, the young prince, had been a student in the famous school at Wittenberg. Between him and his father there had been strong bonds of love and confidence, as well as the natural bond of kinship. His father's sudden death, with strong hints that it was one of violence, followed in a month by his mother's marriage to Claudius, his uncle, cast a gloom over him that nothing had yet dispelled. The court had met in stately council to take action against the threatened invasion of their borders by Fortinbras, nephew of the reigning king of Norway, and son of the former king, to recover certain lands ceded to Denmark by his father; and after due de- liberation they dispatched envoys to the court of their royal neighbor. Hamlet was present, and when the king 78 HAMLET, PRINCE OF DENMARK. and queen and councilors withdrew, he remained in the council chamber in deep study. He was interrupted by the entrance of Horatio, Bernardo, and Marcellus. After cordial greetings, Horatio turned the talk to the elder Hamlet. Hamlet. He was a man, take him for all in all, I shall not look upon his like again. Horatio. My lord, I think I saw him yesternight. Hamlet Saw who? For God's love, let me hear. Horatio then told Hamlet of the spirit, and of the per- fect resemblance it bore, both in appearance and in man- ner, to his father. He said that it wore a countenance more in sorrow than in anger; that it was armed, and looked steadily at him; but that when he spoke to it, it made no answer, but vanished with the crowing of the cock. Hamlet. I will watch to-night. Perchance 't will walk again. Farewell. The messengers were gone. Hamlet was greatly troubled, and exclaimed: — " My father's spirit in arms ! all is not well ; I doubt some foul play: would the night were come! Till then sit still, my soul. Foul deeds will rise, Though all the earth o'erwhelm them, to men's eyes." Ophelia and Laertes, daughter and son to Polonius, lord chamberlain to Claudius, the king, loved each other HAMLET, PRINCE OP DENMARK. 79 as sister and brother rarely do. The brother was almost like a mother in his tender care of his sister, and Ophelia loved Laertes too well not to respect his word and value his thoughtfulness. Hamlet had been showing her many favors, which she had received apparently with pleasure, as scarce a fair maiden in the kingdom would have failed to do from so noble a prince as he, who, besides possessing rare personal endowments, would sometime succeed to the throne. Laertes was on the eve of his departure for France, and he and Ophelia were spending the last mo- ments at home together,, when they were interrupted by the entrance of their father. He came to tell the youth that the sails were spread and his ship was waiting for him. Laying his hand upon Laertes's head, Polonius said: — "There; my blessing with thee! And these few precepts in thy memory See thou character. Give thy thoughts no tongue, Nor any unproportion'd thought his act. Be thou familiar, but by no means vulgar. The friends thou hast, and their adoption tried, Grapple them to thy soul with hoops of steel. * * * :K * Give every man thine ear, but few thy voice: Take each man's censure, but reserve thy judgment. Costly thy habit as thy purse can buy, But not express'd in fancy; rich, not gaudy: For the apparel oft proclaims the man. Neither a borrower nor a lender be : For loan oft loses both itself and friend; And borrowing dulls the edge of husbandry. 80 HAMLET, PRINCE OF DENMARK. This above all: To thine own self be true; And it must follow, as the night the day, Thou canst not then be false to any man. Farewell ; my blessing season this in thee ! " Laertes. Most humbly do I take my leave, my lord. Polonius. The time invites you; go, your servants tend. Laertes. Farewell, Ophelia; and remember well What I have said to you. Ophelia. 'T is in my memory lock'd, And you yourself shall keep the key of it. Polonius. What is % Ophelia, he hath said to you? She told her father that Laertes, having noticed the attentions that Prince Hamlet had been paying her, had warned her not to receive them as if every word he said were sincere, but to think upon his extreme youth, and re- member that, even though he might make constant pro- fessions of deepest love to her, and might indeed love her with his whole soul, the state, which would con- trol his marriage, might, for politic reasons, choose some other lady to be princess, and set all thought of his love for her aside. Polonius indorsed what his son had said; and to her brother's entreaties that she should be chary in her inter- course with Hamlet, added his word of authority that she see but little of him, and that when she did see him, the rule of conduct which he gave her was to be observed in the future between her lover and herself. Hamlet, with Horatio and Marcellus, was watching for the ghost. Just at midnight it appeared, and, drawing near the three friends, with finger pointed at Hamlet it beckoned him to follow. He started at its bidding, but Horatio and Marcellus both interposed. HAMLET, PRINCE OF DENMARK. 81 Marcellus. You shall not go, my lord. Hamlet. Hold off your hands ! Horatio. Be ruled; you shall not go. The ghost motioned again, and Hamlet, breaking from them, cried: — " By Heaven, I '11 make a ghost of him that lets me ! I say, away! — Go on; I '11 follow thee." When out of the hearing of the others, the ghost ad- dressed Hamlet: — "I am thy father's spirit; Doom'd for a certain term to walk the night, And for the day confined to fast in fires, Till the foul crimes done in my days of nature Are burnt and purged away. But that I am forbid To tell the secrets of my prison-house, I could a tale unfold whose lightest word Would harrow up thy soul; freeze thy young blood; Make thy two eyes, like stars, start from their spheres; Thy knotted and combined locks to part, And each particular hair to stand on end. If thou didst ever thy dear father love, Revenge his foul and most unnatural murder. Now, Hamlet, hear: 'T is given out that, sleeping in my orchard, A serpent stung me; so the whole ear of Denmark Is by a forged process of my death Rankly abused: but know, thou noble youth, 82 HAMLET, PRINCE OF DENMARK. The serpent that did sting thy father's life Now wears his crown. Brief let me be. Sleeping within my orchard, My custom always in the afternoon, Upon my secure hour thy uncle stole, With juice of cursed hebenon in a vial, And in the porches of mine ears did pour The leperous distilment; whose effect Holds such an enmity wi' th' blood of man, That swift as quicksilver it courses through The natural gates and alleys of the body; And with a sudden vigour it doth posset And curd, like eager droppings into milk, The thin and wholesome blood: so did it mine. Thus was I, sleeping, by a brother's hand Of life, of crown, of Queen, at once dispatch'd; Cut off even in the blossom of my sins, With all my imperfections on my head. Fare thee well at once ! The glow-worm shows the matin to be near, And 'gins to pale his uneffectual fire: Adieu, adieu, adieu ! remember me." The spirit made Hamlet promise that he would avenge his father's death upon his uncle, but that in all he did naught must be done against Queen Gertrude, his mother, whom his father had in life devotedly loved and trusted. Horatio and Marcellus, on the watch for the return of HAMLET, PRINCE OF- DENMARK. 83 the prince from his strange interview, hailed him as the ghost vanished, and begged to know its import. Know- ing that he could not tell what he knew about the king without implicating the queen, he refused to divulge anything; but instead, he persuaded both of them to swear upon his sword never to make known what they had seen that night and never to speak of it, no matter what the inducements might be to tell. Just then a voice from beneath them said, "Swear." Hamlet recog- nized it as the voice of the ghost. Horatio exclaimed, — " day and night ! but this is wondrous strange." Hamlet replied: — " And therefore as a stranger give it welcome. There are more things in Heaven and Earth, Horatio, Than are dreamt of in your philosophy." A strange event occurred in Polonius's house. Ophelia was sitting in her room engaged in some light employ- ment, when Hamlet, hatless and shoeless, and with dress all disordered, with every appearance of a madman, rushed unannounced into her presence. He seized her hand and gazed long and piteously into her eyes. When he released her and left the house, she fled to her father and told him of what had happened. Polonius, anxious about Laertes, had just dispatched Peynaldo, a servant, to Paris to see if his son's conduct there was such as he would approve. As he listened to Ophelia, he exclaimed: — " This is the very ecstasy of love. I am sorry, — What, have you given him any hard words of late?" 84 HAMLET, PRINCE OF DENMARK. Ophelia replied: — " No, my good lord ; but, as you did command, I did repel his letters, and denied His access to me." Polonius expressed his regret at the turn affairs had taken, and said, — "Come, go we to the King: This must be known." There were others besides Ophelia who knew of Ham- let's sudden transformation. The king and queen were deeply exercised over it. They could not think that his father's death had so unnerved him, and they never suspected that he had feelings of his own regarding their unlawful and wicked marriage. They talked to Rosen- crantz and Guildenstern, two of his young friends of whom he was very fond, and begged them, if in their talks of confidence they should learn of him what his trouble was, to bring them word so that they might relieve him of it. Just as the young men withdrew from the room, Polonius entered, bearing the news that the ambassadors sent to Norway had returned from a successful mission, and, what was of more import to them at that time, that he thought he had discovered the cause of the strange actions of their son, saying: — "Since brevity is the soul of wit, And tediousness the limbs and outward flourishes, I will be brief: Your noble son is mad. ***** And now remains That we find out the cause of this effect." HAMLET, PRINCE OF DENMARK. 85 He told them of Hamlet's declarations of love to his daughter, and said that he, knowing the difference in their rank, had forbidden her receiving him. He pro- duced letters of love that Hamlet had written, and, to prove that all his statements were true, and that Hamlet was mad of love, he asked that Ophelia might be brought into the palace, and that they, concealed behind the arras, should watch his conduct towards her when she was allowed to go where he was. Lately it had become a habit of the prince to walk for hours up and down the lobby near to the private apartments of the king and queen, and as Polonius withdrew from his conference, with them, he met him in his accustomed round. Polonius stopped to talk with him, and to his questions Hamlet made such strange, incoherent answers that his visitor became convinced that he was really mad; and yet reason was mingled so well with his folly, that Polonius, turning aside, exclaimed, "Though this be madness, yet there is method in't." As he withdrew, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern came in. Hamlet threw aside his madness (it was only assumed), and was soon talking as freely to them as he had ever done. Hamlet. In the beaten way of friendship, what make you at Elsinore ? Rosencrantz. To visit you, my lord; no other occasion. Hamlet Were you not sent for?. Is it your own inclining ? Is it a free visitation ? Come, deal justly with me: come, come; nay, speak. The two evaded his questions, but he insisted upon an answer. Guildenstern finally answered that they had been sent for. SQ HAMLET, PRINCE OF DENMARK. Hamlet I will tell you why; so shall my anticipation prevent your discovery, and your secrecy to the King and Queen moult no feather. I have of late — but wherefore I know not — lost all my mirth, foregone all custom of exercises; and indeed it goes so heavily with my disposi- tion, that this goodly frame, the Earth, seems to me a sterile promontory ; this most excellent canopy, the air, look you, this brave o'erhanging firmament, this ma- jestical roof fretted with golden fire, — why, it appears no other thing to me than a foul and pestilent congregation of vapours. What a piece of work is man! how noble in reason! how infinite in faculties! in form and moving how express and admirable ! in action how like an angel ! in apprehension how like a god ! the beauty of the world ! the paragon of animals! And yet, to me, what is this quintessence of dust? man delights not me; no, nor woman neither, though by your smiling you seem to say so. You are welcome; but my uncle-father and aunt- mother are deceived. Gfuildenstem. In what, my dear lord ? Hamlet I am but mad north-north-west; when the wind is southerly I know a hawk from a handsaw. As had been planned, Ophelia was brought to the palace, and her meeting with her lover was so arranged that Claudius and Polonius would see and hear all of the interview. Hamlet was soliloquizing:— "To be, or not to be, — that is the question: Whether 't is nobler in the mind to suffer The slings and arrows of outrageous fortune, Or to take arms against a sea of troubles, HAMLET, PRINCE OF DENMARK. 87 And by opposing end them. To die, — to sleep, — No more; and by a sleep to say we end The heart-ache, and the thousand natural shocks That flesh is heir to, — 't is a consummation Devoutly to be wish'd. To die, — to sleep; — To sleep! perchance to dream! ay, there's the rub; For in that sleep of death what dreams may come When we have shuffled off this mortal coil, Must give us pause." Ophelia entered during this soliloquy. In an instant Hamlet was changed. The heights to which he had soared in his profound reasoning and philosophy were forgotten by the counterfeit madman, and poor Ophelia was made to feel the most utter indifference and coldness in the treatment he gave her. Claudius watched Hamlet sharply, and was convinced that love was not the cause of his madness, though Polonius still maintained that the origin and commencement of his grief sprung from neglected love, and advised that he be sent to England, or that he be confined in some place where he might be safe. Claudius said: — "It shall be so: Madness in great ones must not unwatch'd go.' ' A play, arranged to take place in the palace, was to be performed that night. Hamlet had given instructions to the players, and had himself arranged the play. He took the death of his father, with all of its details as they had been given him by the ghost, for the plot. Vienna, in- stead of Elsinore, was made the scene of the play, and names different from any that were known in the royal family of Denmark were given to the characters. 88 HAMLET, PRINCE OF DENMARK. The play began, with the royal family and their gay attendants present. Polonius and Ophelia were of the number. Much interest was shown in each scene and act, but to two of the audience it became too intensely realistic. When Lucianus, nephew to the king in the play, uttered the words, — " Thoughts black, hands apt, drugs fit, and time agreeing; Confederate season, else no creature seeing: Thou mixture rank, of midnight weeds collected, With Hecate's ban thrice blasted, thrice infected, Thy natural magic and dire property On wholesome life usurp immediately," and poured the poison into the sleeping king's ears, Claudius arose in terror, and all of his party except Horatio and Hamlet went with him. The latter ex- claimed to his friend, — "Why, let the strucken deer go weep, The hart ungalled play; For s6me must watch while some must sleep: So runs the world away." Word was brought Hamlet that his mother wished to see him. He feigned not to understand the urgency of her request, and remained in the box till the play was over. Remorse, remorse most terrible, was working upon Claudius. He sent Polonius out to make ready to secure Hamlet and convey him to England, and when left alone, he spoke aloud: — "0, my offence is rank, it smells to Heaven; It hath the primal eldest curse upon 't, A brother's murder! Pray can I not: 89 Though inclination be as sharp as will, My stronger guilt defeats my strong intent; And, like a man to double business bound, I stand in pause where I shall first begin, And both neglect. What if this cursed hand Were thicker than itself with brother's blood, Is there not rain enough in the sweet Heavens To wash it white as snow? Whereto serves mercy But to confront the visage of offence ? And what's in prayer but this twofold force, To be forestalled ere we come to fall, Or pardon'd being down? Then I'll look up; My fault is past. But, 0, what form of prayer Can serve my turn ? Forgive me my foul murder f That cannot be; since I am still possess'd Of those effects for which I did the murder, My crown, mine own ambition, and my Queen. May one be pardon'd, and retain th' offence ? In the corrupted ' currents of this world Offence's gilded hand may shove-by justice; And oft 't is seen the wicked prize itself Buys out the law: but 't is not so above; There is no shuffling, there the action lies In his true nature; and we ourselves compell'd, Even to the teeth and forehead of our faults, To give in evidence. What then? what rests? Try what repentance can? what can it not? Yet what can it when one can not repent ? wretched state ! bosom black as death ! limed soul, that, struggling to be free, Art more engaged ! Help, angels ! Make assay ! Bow, stubborn knees; and, heart with strings of steel, 90 HAMLET, PRINCE OF DENMARK. Be soft as sinews of the new-born babe! All may be well." Hamlet, by her request, went to his mother, and asked her why she had sent for him. She reproached him, telling him that he had offended the king, his father. He retorted that she had offended the king, his father; to which she, not understanding him, replied, — "Come, come; you answer with an idle tongue." Hamlet said to her, — "Come, come, and sit you down; you shall not budge: You go not till I set you up a glass Where you may see the inmost part of you." From his manner his mother feared that he would murder her, and cried aloud for help. From behind the arras, Polonius, who was hidden there, also cried for help for the queen. Hamlet, enraged at the hidden presence of a third person, thrust his dagger through the curtain and stabbed him, so that he died almost instantly. Queen. 0, what a rash and bloody deed is this ! Hamlet A bloody deed ! almost as bad, good mother, As kill a king, and marry with his brother. He drew a comparison between the two men whom she had married, and stated the different feelings that had prompted the marriages, as well as their attendant cir- cumstances. Queen. 0, speak to me no more ! These words, like daggers, enter in mine ears: No more, sweet Hamlet! Hamlet saw the ghost entering the room, and ad- dressed it: — HAMLET, PRINCE OF DENMARK. 91 " What would your gracious figure ? " His mother, not seeing the ghost, said:— " Alas, he's mad ! Alas, how is 't with you, That you do bend your eye on vacancy, And with th' incorporal air do hold discourse ? ^c :j< ^c >fc ^ gentle son, Upon the heat and flame of thy distemper Sprinkle cool patience. Whereon do you look ? " Hamlet. Do you see nothing there ? Queen. Nothing at all; yet all that is I see. Hamlet. Nor did you nothing hear ? Queen. No, nothing but ourselves. Hamlet. Why, look you there ! look, how it steals away ! My father, in his habit as he lived ! Look, where he goes, even now, out at the portal ! Seeing nothing herself, and hearing nothing, the queen was more convinced than ever that her son's mind was diseased; though his pleadings with her to do right savored of a very sound mind as well as very sound morals. Finally Hamlet bade his mother good-night, saying aside, — " I must be cruel, only to be kind." The queen was filled with sad forebodings of further trouble and sorrow with Hamlet. Claudius, noticing this, asked for the reason. She told him of the death of Polonius, and he prophesied worse things to come unless 92 HAMLET, PRINCE OF DENMARK. Hamlet were sent away to England, where he could be kept in a place of safety and where they would not be annoyed by him. Hamlet took the* body of Polonius out of the room where he had slain him, but his friends could not learn from him how he had disposed of it. That and his strange language convinced them, if they needed further proof than they already had, that he was insane. By order of the king, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern were to go with the prince to England, which state at that time was debtor to Denmark for some service shown, and Claudius sent letters secretly, giving orders for the death of Hamlet. To himself he said, — "Doit, England; For like the hectic in my blood he rages, And thou must cure me: till I know 't is done, Howe'er my haps, my joys were ne'er begun." Fortinbras, of whom we have heard before, having sought permission to pass through Denmark in order to seize a small portion of land from Poland, had entered Denmark with his forces, and had sent an officer to Claudius to announce his arrival. In going to the palace the captain encountered Hamlet, who learned of his errand to the king. When Ophelia heard of her father's death, her mind seemed to sink under her bereavement. She raved and uttered speech which, while it had but half sense in it, made those who heard her think that there might be more in the words than she meant, and they put their own construction on them. She begged audience with Queen Gertrude, and talked in such a manner that her 93 words seemed prophetic, and yet she won the pity of both queen and king. When Ophelia left them, Claudius said : — "0 Gertude, Gertrude, When sorrows come, they come not single spies, But in battalias! First, her father slain: Next, your son gone; and he most violent author Of his own just remove: the people mudded, Thick and unwholesome in their thoughts and whispers, For good Polonius' death; . . . poor Ophelia Divided from herself and her fair judgment, Without the which we 're pictures, or mere beasts: Last, and as much containing as all these, Her brother is in secret come from France." Laertes had indeed come from France, swearing re- venge upon him who had wrought the ruin of his house. He sought the king, who promised that the murder of Polonius should be avenged. A strange thing happened to Hamlet on his way to England. A pirate ship bore down upon the vessel in which he and his friends had sailed, and in the encounter Hamlet was secured as prisoner and was carried off from Rosencrantz and Guildenstern. He found means by which he could communicate with Horatio, who was requested to bear his letters to the king. While Laertes was talking to the king, a letter from Hamlet was handed him, informing him that Hamlet had been landed in Denmark and would see him next day. No time could be better for revenge, both for Claudius and Laertes, and the two arranged for putting Hamlet to death as soon as he should return home. Just as they had finished all arrangements for his death, the queen in great anguish came in, saying, — 94 HAMLET, PRINCE OF DENMARK. " One woe doth tread upon another's heel, So fast they follow. — Your sister 's drown'd, Laertes." Yes, poor, distracted Ophelia was dead. Decked in gay flowers she had gone to a willow that dipped its branches in the brook flowing by Elsinore, and in at- tempting to hang upon the boughs the garlands she had made, she was thrown into the deep water. For a while, as she was carried down the stream, her clothes spread out and bore her up; but these, soon becoming water- soaked, dragged her down to her death. Hamlet had come home again, and he and Horatio drew near where two men were digging Ophelia's grave. They listened to their merry songs and jesting over their grave work, and Hamlet began asking questions. Hamlet. How long hast thou been a grave-maker? Grave-digger. Of all the days i' the year, I came to 't that day that our last King Hamlet o'ercame Fortinbras. It was the very day that young Hamlet was born; he that is mad, and sent into England. Hamlet. How long will a man lie i' the earth ere he rot? Grave-digger. Here's a skull now; this skull has lain in the earth three-and-twenty years. This same skull, sir, was Yorick's skull, the King's jester. Hamlet. Let me see. — Alas, poor Yorick! — I knew him, Horatio; a fellow of infinite jest, of most excellent fancy: he hath borne me on his back a thousand times; HAMLET, PRINCE OF DENMARK. 95 and now how abhorred in my imagination it is! my gorge rises at it. Here hung those lips that I have kiss'd I know not how oft. — Where be your gibes now ? your gambols? your songs? your flashes of merriment, that were wont to set the table on a roar? Not one now, to mock your own grinning ? As Hamlet was moralizing about the dead, the funeral cortege drew near. Seeing the king and queen at its head, he and Horatio retired to a spot where they would not be noticed, yet where they could witness all the ob- sequies. Seeing the king and queen and Laertes, they wondered who the dead one was. Hearing Laertes say to the priest, "A ministering angel shall my sister be," Hamlet exclaimed, — "What, the fair Ophelia!" Queen Gertrude strewed the grave with flowers, saying while she did so, — "I hoped thou shouldst have been my Hamlet's wife." The coffin was lowered into the grave, and would soon have been hidden from sight, when Laertes, overcome by grief, shouted, — "Hold off the earth awhile, Till I have caught her once more in mine arms." He leaped into the grave, with the words, — " Now pile your dust upon the quick and dead." Hamlet followed him, and on Ophelia's coffin the foes grappled. By order of the king they were parted and induced to come out of the grave. Said Hamlet to his mother, — 96 HAMLET, PRINCE OF DENMARK. "I loved Ophelia: forty thousand brothers Could not, with all their quantity of love, Make up my sum." The funeral was over. Hamlet's friends thought him mad, and Claudius charged Horatio to keep watch over him. To Laertes he said that "they would look for their opportunity and soon put an end to him. Hamlet and Horatio were walking in a hall in the great castle, when Hamlet began to tell his friend of what had happened to him recently: — " Let us know, Our indiscretion sometimes serves us well When our deep plots do pall; and that should teach us There 's a divinity that shapes our ends, Rough-hew them how we will." He narrated the particulars of the sea-fight on his voyage to England, and told how certain papers, disclos- ing designs upon his life by Claudius, had fallen into his hands, and of the discovery he made, that his pretended friends, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, were willing agents of the king in his designs against his life. Their conver- sation was interrupted by the entrance of Osric, a messenger from the king, who sent to ask if Hamlet would enter into a contest with Laertes to show which one possessed the greater skill and prowess. Heavy wagers had been made, and the king was anxious that Hamlet should accept. Osric bore word back to the king that Hamlet would meet his opponent; and yet Hamlet had strange misgivings of evil to himself, and Horatio begged him to withdraw from his engagement, but he would not be persuaded. The contest began, and for 97 a while the contestants parried each other's thrusts with equal skill. Then Hamlet seemed to have the advantage. The king saw it, and cried, — " Our son shall win." The queen took up a cup standing near by, and said, — "The Queen carouses to thy fortune, Hamlet." Claudius made an attempt to stop her, but too late. The cup contained the poison which he and Laertes had prepared for Hamlet. Hamlet received a wound from Laertes, whose sword had been dipped in a deadly poison. In the scuffle, their swords were exchanged, and Laertes in turn was wounded by Hamlet. The poison which the queen drank soon took effect, and she fell from her chair. Claudius said, — " She swoons to see them bleed." With her dying breath the queen cried, — "No, no, the drink, the drink, — my dear Hamlet, — The drink, the drink! — I 'm poison'd." Laertes's wound was mortal, and he fell, saying to Hamlet: — "Hamlet, thou art slain; No medicine in the world can do thee good; In thee there is not half an hour of life : The treacherous instrument is in thy hand, Unbated and envenom'd. The foul practice Hath turn'd itself on me : lo, here I lie, Never to rise again. Thy mother 's poison'd ! I can no more. The King, the King 's to blame." In a rage Hamlet turned and thrust the poisoned sword 98 HAMLET, PRINCE OF DENMARK. into the king's heart. He also poured into his mouth the dregs of the cup of poison, which soon did its work, and Claudius lay dead beside his queen. Laertes died with words of forgiveness to Hamlet on his lips. Sounds of martial music were heard drawing near, and word was carried to the dying Hamlet that it was young For- tinbras returning in victory from Poland. Dying, Hamlet said, — " I do prophesy th' election lights On Fortinbras: he has my dying voice; So tell him." High on a stage erected for the purpose were the dead bodies placed, so that all could see them, and Horatio, the constant friend of Hamlet, delivered the oration. He told of "carnal, bloody, and unnatural acts; of accidental judgments, casual slaughters; of deaths put on by cun- ning and forced cause; and, in this upshot, purposes mistook fall'n on th' inventors' heads." By order of Fortinbras, the new king, the body of Hamlet was borne by four soldiers to the stage, the dead march being played meanwhile. Fortinbras. For he was likely, had he been put on, T' have proved most royally: and, for his passage, The soldiers' music and the rites of war Speak loudly for him. — Take up the bodies. — Such a sight as this Becomes the field, but here shows much amiss.— Go, bid the soldiers shoot. "Out, damned spot! out, I say!" MACBETH. Principal Characters. Duncan, King of Scotland. Malcolm, > the /Sons of Duncan. Donalbam, dn, J "} Macbeth, > Generals in the King s army. Banquo, Noblemen of Scotland. Macduff, Lennox, Boss, Menteith, Angus, Caithness, Fleance, Son of Banquo. Siward, Earl of Northumberland, and General of the English King's forces. Young Siward, Son of the Earl of Northumberland. Seyton, an Officer of Macbeth's. Macduff's Son. An English and a Scotch doctor. A soldier, a porter, and an old man. Lady Macbeth. Lady Macduff. Hecate and three witches. The Ghost of Banquo and other apparitions. Scene, partly in England, though mostly in Scotland, and chiefly in Macbeth's Castle. 100 MACBETH. By William Shakespeare. ' Duncan, than whom no better or more gracious sov- ereign ever reigned, was seated on the throne of Scotland. A part of his kingdom had revolted, and Macbeth, one of Scotland's bravest generals, had succeeded in reducing the rebels to submission. The army had returned and gone into camp at Forres. Duncan and his two sons, Mal- colm and Donalbain, attended by their usual guard, drew near the camp, and the brave deeds of Macbeth and Ban- quo, another general, were told to the king. Scarcely was the soldier through with his stirring tale, when Ross, one of Scotland's noblemen, entered to tell of the invasion of their country by the army of Norway, assisted by the Thane of Cawdor, and that the victory had been on the side of Duncan's proud country. The king was lavish and. sincere in his praise of Macbeth, not knowing, or even dreaming, that it was by his hand that he himself was to be slain. The Scot, though brave and thoughtful to a high degree, had nevertheless a vein of superstition in his character, and was not above consulting even witches when he wished to know of the future and of his own fate. Three of these weird creatures were out on the heather one day, practicing their strange deeds and utter- ing incantations, when they were interrupted by Macbeth and Banquo, the latter of whom exclaimed, as he looked at them: — 101 102 MACBETH. "What are these So wither'd, and so wild in their attire, That look not like th' inhabitants o' the Earth, And yet are on 't ? — Live you ? or are you aught That man may question ? You seem to understand me, By each at once her choppy finger laying Upon her skinny lips : you should be women, And yet your beards forbid me to interpret That you are so." The first witch then addressed Macbeth as Thane of Glamis; the second followed by giving to him the title of the Thane of Cawdor, whom he had so recently de- feated, and whose great name the king himself had said, in the absence of Macbeth and without his knowledge, should be conferred upon Macbeth; and the third witch surprised him most by telling him that, in the future, he should wear the honors of the king. Banquo congratu- lated him, and then asked of his own fortune, assuring the witches that he neither begged nor feared their favors or their hate. The first witch answered him that he should be lesser than Macbeth, and greater; the sec- ond one predicted that he should be not so happy, yet much happier; and the third one declared that, though a king he himself could never be, he should be the father of kings. Macbeth asked more, but received no answer. The witches vanished as they came. The title of Thane of Cawdor was speedily conferred upon Macbeth, but he saw no way by which the prophecy • of the third witch might be fulfilled. His wife, laying aside all her womanly instincts, and led by a boundless, unholy ambition, helped him to secure the throne. In her castle at Inverness, she sat reading a letter just MACBETH. 103 received from her husband. He told her of the inter- view with the witches and of the great title with which the king had honored him, concluding his letter with these words: — "These Weird Sisters saluted me, and referr'd me to the coming on of time, with 'Hail, king that shalt be!' This have I thought good to deliver thee, my dearest partner of greatness, that thou mightst not lose the dues of rejoicing, by being ignorant of what greatness is prom- ised thee. Lay it to thy heart, and farewell." She exclaimed: — "Glamis thou art, and Cawdor, and shalt be What thou art promised. Yet do I fear thy nature; It is too full o' the milk of human kindness To catch the nearest way: thou wouldst be great; Art not without ambition, but without The illness should attend it: what thou wouldst highly, That wouldst thou holily; wouldst not play false, And yet wouldst wrongly win. Hie thee hither, That I may pour my spirits in thine ear, And chastise with the valour of my tongue All that impedes thee from the golden round Which fate and metaphysical aid doth seem To have thee crown'd withal." Thoughts of how to secure the crown filled her brain, and doubtless many plans suggested themselves. In the midst of her meditations a messenger was announced, who brought the news that Duncan, the king, would lodge in her castle that night. She was incredulous, 104 MACBETH. knowing that he would not come when Macbeth was absent. The welcome news was then given that Macbeth would also be there. Left to herself, her joy was un- bounded. No better opportunity could ever be given her husband to secure the throne by putting Duncan out of the way than would be offered when he had him in his own castle, and she immediately arranged her plans to secure that end. If there was a struggle in her mind, it lasted but a moment. She invoked the aid of the spirits that wait on evil-doers, to unsex her, and to fill her with so cruel a spirit that nothing would keep her from the deed; that no remorse or workings of conscience should trouble her till after Duncan was disposed of. While she was full of her murderous resolves, her hus- band entered her room unannounced, and she told him of the transport of happiness which his letter had given her, and that in the present she saw his glorious future. He seemed to have no thought of himself, but only of the visit of his king, who would honor him with his presence overnight. She immediately told him of what she had arranged to do and that he must help carry it out. The herald of the king was heard, and soon in the stately home of the Macbeths Duncan and the young prin- ces, his sons, with Banquo and many lords in attendance, were being entertained in the most lordly manner. Lady Macbeth, hiding under smiles of welcome all her designs of evil, was most gracious to the king, placing her castle and all that it contained at his disposal while he chose to remain their guest; and Duncan believed every word she said. Hushed in the quiet of the night, the guests of Macbeth were sleeping, with no knowledge of im- MACBETH. 105 pending danger. Duncan was to be murdered in his bed, — so Lady Macbeth had decreed, — and her husband, an unwilling though weak tool of her imperious, over- mastering will, was to do the deed, every detail of which she had arranged. Macbeth wavered, and said, doubt- ingly,— "If we should fail,"— Lady Macbeth replied, with decision, — "We fail. But screw your courage to the sticking-place, And we '11 not fail." The two guards before the king's chamber were stupe- fied with wine which their hostess herself had given them. With their daggers the murder was to be com- mitted, and the instruments of death were to be put back into their hands, and blood sprinkled over them, so that the guilt of the crime might be fixed upon them. This latter part of the work was to be done by the lady herself. All things were ready. Macbeth hesitated, but at last he entered the king's chamber. Lady Macbeth awaited him outside, saying, — " Had he not resembled My father as he slept, I had done 't." She trembled with anxiety for the success of Macbeth's attempt at the murder, until he came back to where she was waiting and reported that he had done the deed. "Didst thou not hear a noise?" he asked her. Con- science was at work, and fear also. Macbeth looked at his hands, and exclaimed, " This is a sorry sight." Every sound disturbed him, and he told his wife that he heard voices while he was doing his bloody work. She tried to 106 MACBETH. divert him, and bade him wash his hands and get ready for his rest. The morning light was glowing in the east, and two of the king's attendants, Macduff and Lennox, knowing that the king's business would require an early departure from the hospitable home of Macbeth, were astir and knocking at the gate. The gate having been opened by the porter, Macduff thus addressed him: — "Is thy master stirring? — Our knocking has awaked him; here he comes." Macbeth was not reassured in his hopes of not being detected in his crime by what Lennox said to him, when they had exchanged the greetings of the morning. Lennox. The night has been unruly: where we lay, Our chimneys were blown down; and, as they say, Lamentings heard i' the air, strange screams of death: And, prophesying, with accents terrible, Of dire combustion and confused events New hatch'd to th' woeful time, the obscene bird Clamour'd the livelong night: some say the Earth Was feverous and did shake. Macbeth. 'T was a rough night. Lennox. My young remembrance cannot parallel A fellow to it. Macduff went to the king's chamber to waken him, and came running back, crying in horror that the king was murdered. The inmates of the castle were soon awake, and filling the air with their cries and lamenta- tions. Macbeth and his lady, feigning innocence, were more excited than any of their guests or servants. Mal- colm and Donalbain, fearing that the guilt of the murder MACBETH. 107 would be fixed on them, fled from the house, and sought refuge in foreign countries. Macbeth, attempting to avoid suspicion, threw the responsibility of the guilt upon the guards of the king's chamber, and took their speedy execution into his own hands. He slew them with the daggers which were stained with their sovereign's blood. The body of the king was borne away to Colmekill, and buried with those of his predecessors.' The flight of Malcolm and Donalbain made some suspicious that they might have been accessory to the murder, and Macbeth was nominated king. Lady Macbeth was now queen of Scotland, and she left her castle for the king's palace in the capital. Neither she nor her royal husband felt sure of Banquo's loy- alty. The king remembered the witches' prophecies. 'T was true, he was king; but he was childless. It was told Banquo that his issue should sit upon the throne, and Macbeth, knowing how he had ascended the throne, feared Banquo through his young son Fleance. A feast was to be held in the palace, to which Banquo was invited, and his presence was urged and insisted upon. He promised attendance, though he told Macbeth and his wife that business required himself and Fleance to be absent from the city till the time appointed. The king immediately determined that both Banquo and Fleance should be murdered, and he gave the cruel deed into the hands of two men who had received some slight from * Banquo. These were afterward joined by a third. Banquo and his son were riding along toward the palace that evening, not thinking that danger was near them, when they were sprung upon by the three hired murderers, who found a match in strength in Banquo, 108 MACBETH. who resisted them with all his might. The murderers found that they must center their designs upon Banquo, and in the contest Fleance escaped. His father was foully murdered and thrown aside into the ditch near by. The honors that had come to Lady Macbeth could not make of her a happy woman. She lived in hourly apprehension that her foul deeds might be exposed and her life be endangered. Thus to herself she one day voiced her feelings : — " Nought 's had, all 's spent, Where our desire is got without content: 'T is safer to be that which we destroy, Than, by destruction, dwell in doubtful joy." Neither was the king happy. His life was one con- stant dread that something might be seen or done which would show him as he was, not as he seemed to be. The guests had assembled at the king's banquet, when he was called to the door to see one who brought him important news. It was that Banquo was dead and his son had escaped. He had no time to parley with his minion, as the queen was waiting for him to be seated at the table so that the feast might begin. She urged him to freely express to the guests his welcome, and give cheer to the feast. He, hiding his real feelings, replied, — " Sweet remembrancer ! — Now, good digestion wait on appetite, And health on both ! " " Here is a place reserved, sir," said Lennox. Macbeth would not sit down, but stood looking with affright and horror at the chair offered him. The eyes MACBETH. 109 of the guests were all upon him. His gaze was unmoved, and he addressed some one who, he fancied, was sitting in the chair: — "Thou canst not say I did it: never shake Thy gory locks at me." Unseen by any other eyes than his, the ghost of Banquo was occupying the chair and Macbeth dared not sit down. His wife came to his aid: — " Sit, worthy friends : my lord is often thus, And hath been from his youth: pray you, keep seat, The fit is momentary; upon a thought He will again be well : if much you note him, You shall offend him, and extend his passion: Feed, and regard him not. — Are you a man ? Macbeth returned, — "Ay, and a bold one, that dare look on that Which might appal the Devil." She whispered something to him, and he answered her in words which showed his terror. Just then the image of the dead Banquo vanished, and with the queen's words of chiding for his unmanliness and words of encourage- ment how to proceed, he turned to his friends, explain- ing:— "Do not muse at me, my most worthy friends; I have a strange infirmity, which is nothing To those that know me. Come, love and health to all; Then I'll sit down. — Give me some wine, fill full. — I drink to th' general joy o' the whole table, And to our dear friend Banquo, whom we miss; 110 MACBETH. Would he were here ! to all, and him, we thirst, And all to all." Just then the ghost of Banquo again arose and seated itself in Macbeth 's chair. He cried: — "Avaunt! and quit my sight! let the earth hide thee! Thy bones are marrowless, thy blood is cold; Thou hast no speculation in those eyes Which thou dost glare with ! 5fC >K %. 5JS ^ What man dare, I dare: Approach thou like the rugged Russian bear, The arm'd rhinoceros, or the Hyrcan tiger; Take any shape but that, and my firm nerves Shall never tremble : or be alive again, And dare me to the desert with thy sword; If trembling I inhabit then, protest me The baby of a girl. Hence, horrible shadow ! Unreal mockery, hence ! " The ghost disappeared, and Macbeth quieted down, saying: — "Why, so: being gone, I am a man again. — Pray you, sit still." Knowing well that a terrible guilt was haunting him, but knowing not of Banquo's murder, again Lady Mac- beth interposed, — " You have displaced the mirth, broke the good meeting, With most admired disorder. One of the guests having inquired as to the nature of the sights which disturbed Macbeth, Lady Macbeth, in order to avoid disclosure, immediately dismissed the com- pany, as follows: — MACBETH. Ill "I pray you, speak not; he grows worse and worse; Question enrages him. At once, good night: Stand not upon the order of your going, But go at once." Left alone, Macbeth and the queen gave utterance to thoughts of which they were in the secret, the former saying, before they separated: — " I will to-morrow- Ay, and betimes I will — to th' Weird Sisters: More shall they speak; for now I 'm bent to know By the worst means, the worst. For mine own good All causes shall give way: I am in blood SterJp'cl in so far, that, should I wade no more, Returning were as tedious as go o'er: Strange things I have in head, that will to hand ; Which must be acted ere they may be scann'd." There were many sturdy, far-seeing lords of Scotland who did not believe that Duncan had been killed by Malcolm and Donalbain, nor that Fleance had murdered his father; and they were in secret watching every cir- cumstance, to fix the guilt upon the real murderers. Macduff was absent from the king's banquet, and had been dishonored in consequence by the king, and had gone to England to seek aid to rid his country of the tyrant. The king had heard this, and was making prepa- rations for a war, should it come. In a densely dark cave the witches had again met, and were standing over a boiling cauldron, into which they had cast substances too many and too sickening to men- tion. They were just through with their incantations and song, when Macbeth entered the cave and demanded 112 MACBETH. of them what they were doing. With one voice they answered that it was a deed without a name. Said he: — "I conjure you, by that which you profess, — Howe'er you come to know it, — answer me: Though you untie the winds, and let them fight Against the churches; though the yesty waves Confound and swallow navigation up; Though bladed corn be lodged, and trees blown down; Though castles topple on their warders' heads; Though palaces and pyramids do slope Their heads to their foundations; though the treasure Of Nature's germens tumble all together, Even till destruction sicken, — answer me To what I ask you." One of the witches said, — " Say, if thou 'dst rather hear it from our mouths, Or from our masters ? " Macbeth chose the latter, and an armed head appeared. The apparition spoke: — "Macbeth! Macbeth! Macbeth! beware Macduff ; Beware the Thane of Fife. — Dismiss me: enough." The head disappeared. Macbeth was not satisfied; the same spirit would not reappear, but another one, more powerful, he was assured, would answer him. The appa- rition of a bloody child appeared, and said: — "Macbeth! Macbeth! Macbeth!— — Be bloody, bold, and resolute; laugh to scorn The power of man, for none of woman born Shall harm Macbeth." MACBETH. 113 Reassured, Macbeth said: — " Then live, Macduff: what need I fear of thee ? But yet I '11 make assurance double-sure, And take a bond of fate: thou shalt not live." An apparition of a child crowned, with a tree in his hand, appeared, and Macbeth cried, — "What is this, That rises like the issue of a king, And wears upon his baby brow the round And top of sovereignty ? " The figure said, — "Be lion-mettled, proud; and take no care Who chafes, who frets, or where conspirers are: Macbeth shall never vanquish'd be, until Great Birnam wood to high Dunsinane hill Shall come against him." Macbeth was delighted, for it seemed impossible that trees could be uprooted and walk, yet there was one thing more he must know. Should Banquo's issue ever reign in the kingdom? The child spirit had disappeared, but a more wonderful sight met his gaze: eight kings ap- peared and passed over in order, the last with a glass in his hand, Banquo's ghost following. He was appalled at the sight, and suddenly the witches vanished, leaving him to interpret what he had seen as he would. Lennox interrupted his reverie by breaking to him the news that Macduff had fled to England. In his surprise and anger he vowed revenge upon Macduff by making his innocent wife and children suffer: — 114 MACBETH. "The castle of Macduff I will surprise; Seize upon Fife; give to trie edge o' the sword His wife, his babes, and all unfortunate souls That trace him in his line. No boasting like a fool; This deed I '11 do before this purpose cool," He arranged his plans for the murder of the family of Macduff and sent his agents to perform the deed soon after he parted with Lennox. Ross, a nobleman, a friend and kinsman of Macduff, carried to the latter's wife the news of his flight, and attempted to console her. He did not succeed in this, and left the castle hurriedly. Immediately afterward a messenger warned the lady that danger was near and that she had better seek safety for herself and her little ones instantly. No time was given her, for, following upon the footsteps of the messenger, came Macbeth's hired murderers. Her son was killed almost instantly, and she fled from the room shrieking "Murder!" and closely followed by the murderers. Over in England, in the palace of Edward the good king, Malcolm, the young son of the murdered king Duncan, of Scotland, and Macduff, who had but lately arrived, were talking of their country's woes. Malcolm, to test Macduff's integrity and loyalty to the interests of Scotland, portrayed himself in such black colors and made himself out to be so bad a man (with promise of being much worse should he ever be established on the throne) that the honest old general cried out at the pros- pect before him, — "0 Scotland, Scotland!" Malcolm. If such a one be fit to govern, speak: I am as I have spoken. MACBETH. 115 Macduff. Fit to govern I No, not to live. — 1* *|* *|* *S* *i* Thy royal father Was a most sainted king: the queen that bore thee, Oftener upon her knees than on her feet, Died every day she lived. Fare thee well! These evils thou repeat'st upon thyself Have banish'd me from Scotland. — my breast, Thy hope ends here! Then Malcolm cleared away the falsely drawn picture, and put himself under Macduff's direction in all matters pertaining to his country. Malcolm. What I am truly, Is thine, and my poor country's, to command; Whither, indeed, before thy here-approach, Old Siward, with ten thousand warlike men, Already at a point, was setting forth: Now we'll together; and the chance of goodness Be like our warranted quarrel! Why are you silent? Macduff. Such welcome and unwelcome things at once 'T is hard to reconcile. They were here interrupted by a doctor, of whom Malcolm asked whether the king, Edward, were going to appear in public that day, and learned that he was, as many wretched souls had gathered to have their malady, known as king's evil, cured by the touch of his kingly hand. Ross, when he closed his interview with Lady Mac- duff, left her and went immediately to England, where he sought Macduff. The doctor and Malcolm had just 116 MACBETJI. finished their description of the wondrous cures wrought by the king on people afflicted with ulcerous sores, after all hopes from medicine and surgery had failed, when Koss came upon them. Macduff welcomed him, and before he asked any questions about his family inquired after the welfare of Scotland. The answer was not reassuring: — "Alas, poor country, Almost afraid to know itself! It cannot Be call'd our mother, but our grave* where nothing, But who knows nothing, is once seen to smile; Where sighs, and groans, and shrieks that rend the air, Are made, not mark'd; where violent sorrow seems A modern ecstasy: the dead man's knell Is there scarce ask'd for who; and good men's lives Expire before the flowers in their caps, Dying or e'er they sicken." Macduff then asked about Lady Macduff and his children, and was told by Ross that when he left them they were well and at peace, adding that now was the time for him and his followers to strike the blow which would free Scotland, as the Scots were ready for an up- rising. He was assured that the aid of England had been secured and an invasion would soon be made. Ross then told him that he had other news too dreadful to be heard. Macduff. If it be mine, Keep it not from me, quickly let me have it. ***** Ross. Your castle is surprised; your wife and babes Savagely slaughter'd: to relate the manner, Were, on the quarry of these murder'd deer, To add the death of you. MACBETH. 117 Macduff was not prepared for this, and in his grief cried: — ■ "My children too? And I must be from thence! — My wife kill'd too? All my pretty ones ? Did you say all?— hell-kite !— All ? What, all my pretty chickens and their dam At one fell swoop ? " He was urged to seek revenge, — to dispute his wrongs like a man, — and answered that he would do so, but that he must also feel his sorrows and bereavements like a man; and then he blamed himself as the cause of the death of his wife and children, — that Macbeth had touched him through them. Macduff. 0, I could play the woman with mine eyes, And braggart with my tongue! — But, gentle Heaven, Cut short all intermission; front to front Bring Thou this fiend of Scotland and myself; Within my sword's length set him; if he 'scape, Heaven forgive him too ! Malcolm. This tune goes manly. Come, go we to the King; our power is ready; Our lack is nothing but our leave: Macbeth Is ripe for shaking, and the powers above Put on their instruments. Receive what cheer you may: The night is long that never finds the day. Strange things were happening in the palace of the King of Scotland. The queen's strange actions were being 118 MACBETH. watched, and great fears in her behalf were entertained by her husband and attendants. By day she maintained her composure and kept her awful secret; but at night, when she was wholly under the power of sleep, she walked and talked and acted so peculiar^ that it told upon her waking hours; and Lady Macbeth, fight against it as hard as she would, was breaking down under the strain upon her. A doctor had been consulted, but there was some- thing in her case which he did not understand — something beyond the knowledge of his books. He had heard strange reports, and at last put himself on the watch of her actions during sleep. He asked one of her waiting women to tell him how the queen acted during her spells of somnambulism, and she said, — "Since his Majesty went into the field, I have seen her rise from her bed, throw her nightgown upon her, unlock her closet, take forth paper, fold it, write upon't, read it, afterwards seal it, and again return to bed; yet all this while in a most fast sleep." The doctor then asked, — "Besides her walking and other actual performances, what, at any time, have you heard her say?" The answer was: — "That, sir, which I willjaot report after her. Neither to you nor any one; having no witness to confirm my speech. Lo you, here she comes! This is her very guise; and, upon my life, fast asleep. Observe her; stand close." The doctor saw her enter with a lighted taper in her MACBETH. 119 hand, and was informed that she had a light by her continually. He saw also that while her eyes were wide open, she was unconscious of all that was going on around her. She rubbed her hands vigorously, as though she were washing them, exclaiming: — "Yet here's a spot. "Out, damn&d spot! out, I say! — One, two; why, then 'tis time to do't. — Hell is murky! — Fie, my lord, fie! a soldier, and afeard? What need we fear who knows it, when none can call our power to account? Yet who would have thought the old man to have had so much blood in him? "The Thane of Fife had a wife; where is she now? — What, will these hands ne'er be clean ? — No more o' that, my lord, no more o' that: you mar all with this starting. "Here's the smell of the blood still: all the perfumes of Arabia will not sweeten this little hand. , 0! O! 0! "Wash your hands, put on your nightgown; look not so pale. I tell you yet again, Banquo 's buried; he cannot come out on's grave. "To bed, to bed; there's knocking at the gate: come, come, come, come, give me your hand: what's done can- not be undone: to bed, to bed, to bed." She disappeared hurriedly, as if she would escape some one who she feared would see her. She had not heard 120 MACBETH. the whispered exclamations with which her words were received as she uttered them. Said the doctor: — "Foul whisperings are abroad: unnatural deeds Do breed unnatural troubles: infected minds To their deaf pillows will discharge their secrets: More needs she the divine than the physician. — God, God forgive us all! — Look after her; Remove from her the means of all annoyance, And still keep eyes upon her. So, good night: My mind she has mated, and amazed my sight: I think, but dare not speak." The army raised by the Earl of Northumberland, and led by him and Malcolm and Macduff, was nearing Scot- land, revenge being their watchword. Angus, one of Macbeth's noblemen, with many of his countrymen, was waiting to receive them. Word had been brought him that they would meet the enemy near Great Birnam wood, as they were coming that way. The question was asked if Donalbain was coming home with Malcolm, and it was said that his name was not in the file of the soldiery, and that he must still be in Ireland, whither he had fled. Macbeth was strongly intrenched in Great Dunsinane, and it was reported that he had gone mad and could not contain himself in his fury. His own army now suspected him of murder. Angus said, — " Now does he feel His secret murders sticking on his hands; Now minutely revolts upbraid his faith-breach; Those he commands move only in command, MACBETH. 121 Nothing in love : now does he feel his title Hang loose about him, like a giant's robe Upon a dwarfish thief." Another nobleman answered, with a hidden meaning in his words, — "Well, march we on, To give obedience where 't is truly owed." Macbeth was in his castle at Dunsinane awaiting devel- opments. The doctor and the king's usual attendants were with him. Something had excited him, and he exclaimed : — "Bring me no more reports; let them fly all: Till Birnam wood remove to Dunsinane, I cannot taint with fear. What 's the boy Malcolm? Was he not born of woman? The spirits that know All mortal consequences have pronounced me thus, 'Fear not, Macbeth; no man that 's born of woman Shall e'er have power upon thee.' The mind I sway by and the heart I bear Shall never sag with doubt nor shake with fear." A servant with a message approached him. Servant. There is ten thousand — • Macbeth. Geese, villain? Servant. Soldiers, sir. Sf» 5|C 3|C - 3|S , «|C The English force, so please you. Macbeth abusively ordered him from the room, and exclaimed: — ' "Seyton! — I'm sick at heart. 122 MACBETH. I have lived long enough: my way of life Is fall'n into the sere, the yellow leaf; And that which should accompany old age, As honour, love, obedience, troops of friends, I must not look to have; but, in their stead, Curses not loud but deep, mouth-honour, breath, Which the poor heart would fain deny, and dare not.— Seyton!" Seyton, an officer in attendance, entered, and confirmed the report. Macbeth turned to the doctor and asked, — "How does your patient, doctor?" Doctor, Not so sick, my lord, As she is troubled with thick-coming fancies, That keep her from her rest. Macbeth. Cure her of that: Canst thou not minister to a mind diseased; Pluck from the memory a rooted sorrow; Raze out the written troubles of the brain; And with some sweet-oblivious antidote Cleanse the stuff 'd bosom of that perilous grief Which weighs upon the heart ? Doctor. Therein the patient Must minister to himself. Macbeth. Throw physic to the dogs, I'll none of it. — Come, put mine armour on; give me my staff. — Seyton, send out. — Doctor, the thanes fly from me.— Come, sir, dispatch. — If thou couldst, doctor, cast The water of my land, find her disease, And purge it to a sound and pristine health, I would applaud thee to the very echo, That should applaud again. MACBETH. 123 Doctor, Ay, my good lord; your royal preparation Makes us hear something. Macbeth. Bring it after me.— I will not be afraid of death and bane, Till Birnam forest come to Dunsinane. The army from England was drawing near Dunsinane, and came in view of a wood. Siward. What wood is this before us ? Menteith. The wood of Birnam. Malcolm. Let every soldier hew him down a bough, And bear 't before him: thereby shall we shadow The numbers of our host, and make discovery Err in report of us. Macbeth, with others, entered the castle with drums and colors. Macbeth. Hang out our banners on the outward walls; The cry is still, "They come." Our castle's strength Will laugh a siege to scorn: here let them lie Till famine and the ague eat them up. What is that noise ? Seyton. It is the cry of women, my good lord. The Queen, my lord, is dead. Macbeth. She should have died hereafter; There would have been a time for such a word. To-morrow, and to-morrow, and to-morrow, Creeps in this petty pace from day to day, To the last syllable of recorded time; And all our yesterdays have lighted fools 124 MACBETH. The way to dusty death. Out, out, brief candle! Life 's but a walking shadow; a poor player, That struts and frets his hour upon the stage, And then is heard no more : it is a tale Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, Signifying nothing. — A messenger interrupted him, and reported, — "As I did stand my watch upon the hill, I look'd toward Birnam, and anon, methought, The wood began to move." Macbeth mused: — " ' Fear not, till Birnam wood Do come to Dunsinane'; and now a wood Comes toward Dunsinane. — Arm, arm, and out! If this which he avouches does appear, There is nor flying hence nor tarrying here. I 'gin to be a- weary of the Sun, And wish th' estate o' the world were now undone. — Ring the alarum-bell ! — Blow, wind ! come, wrack ! At least we'll die with harness on our back." On the plain near Dunsinane Macbeth and Macduff soon met and beg^n the fight which would last till one or the other was slain. Macbeth. Let fall thy blade on vulnerable crests; I bear a charmed life, which must not yield To one of woman born. Macduff. Despair thy charm; And let the angel whom thou still hast served Tell thee, Macduff was from his mother's womb Untimely ripp'd. MACBETH. 125 Then yield thee, coward, And live to be the show and gaze o' the time. * * # # * * Macbeth. I will not yield, To kiss the ground before young Malcolm's feet, And to be baited with the rabble's curse. Though Birnam wood be come to Dunsinane, And thou opposed, being of no woman born, Yet I will try the last: before my body I throw my warlike shield : lay on, Macduff ; And damn'd be he that first cries, " Hold, enough !" Malcolm, in another part of the field, announced to Siward, — " Macduff is missing, and your noble son." Ross added, — "Your son, my lord, has paid a soldier's debt: He only lived but till he was a man; The which no sooner had his prowess confirm'd In the unshrinking station where he fought, But like a man he died." Macduff returned to his friends with Macbeth's head on a pole, and addressed Malcolm thus: — "Hail, King! for so thou art: behold, where stands Th' usurper's cursed head: the time is free. I see thee compass'd with thy kingdom's pearl, That speak my salutation in their minds; Whose voices I desire aloud with mine: Hail, King of Scotland!" Then all cried, — "Hail, King of Scotland!" 126 MACBETH. Malcolm replied: — "We shall not spend a large expense of time Before we reckon with your several loves, And make us even with you. My thanes and kinsmen, Henceforth be earls, the first that ever Scotland In such an honour named. What 's more to do, Which would be planted newly with the time, — As calling home our exiled friends abroad, That fled the snares of watchful tyranny; Producing forth the cruel ministers Of this dead butcher, and his fiend-like Queen, Who, as 't is thought, by self and violent hands Took off her life; — this, and what needful else That calls upon us, by the grace of Grace, We will perform in measure, time, and place: So, thanks to all at once and to each one, Whom we invite to see us crown'd at Scone." Dickens and His Pets. CHARLES DICKENS. 1812-1870. Charles Dickens, "the world's heir of fame," was born at Landport, a suburb of Portsmouth, England, on the 7th day of February, 1812, and died at Gad's Hill, near the old cathedral, in the city of Rochester, in Kent County, on June 9, 1870. He was buried in Westminster Abbey, on Tuesday, June 14, 1870. The childhood of Dickens was an unhappy one, and he had but few pleasant memories connected with it. Perhaps it was this that made him feel so deeply and tenderly, and describe so pathetically, the wrongs and woes of oppressed childhood. He seldom alluded to his earlier years. He seems to have been misunderstood by his family and friends, as children of his natural endow- ments generally are, and some friend described him one time as a "very queer small boy." It was while living at Chatham that for the first time he saw Gad's Hill, which in after life became his home, the home which he so dearly loved and which almost formed a part of himself and of his family. When he was a boy, he would stand and gaze at and admire the place with so much enthusiasm that his father would tell him that if he would work hard and grow to be a good man, perhaps some time he might come to live in that very house. This was an inspiration to him, though it appeared impossible of attainment. His love for it was 9 129 130 CHAKLES DICKENS. a remarkable love, but Dickens was preeminently a domestic, home-loving man. He never had a joy or a sorrow, when a boy, but that he took it home to' have his friends share it with him. Everything connected with home, no matter how small or trivial, was to him something worthy of attentive consideration. He was tender and affectionate as a boy, and when the world brought its homage to him he was still tender and affec- tionate. His children loved and reverenced him. His daughter, Miss Mamie Dickens, has recently paid a most beautiful tribute to her father: "My love for my father has never been touched or approached by any other love. I hold him in my heart of hearts as a man apart from all other men, as one apart from all other beings." Dickens was married in 1837, or 1838. In 1858 he and his wife had an unhappy disagreement, which led to their separation by mutual consent. His children were thus deprived of their mother's presence, but were tenderly cared for, however, by a sister of Mrs. Dickens, who assumed this care by Mrs. Dickens's consent and advice, and between the sisters there was always esteem and confidence. The trouble was the constant exhibition of a peculiarity of temper on the part of Mrs. Dickens, which she could not overcome, and which she, as well as her friends, came to regard as a mental unbalancing. By consent of Mr. Dickens, when two separate establishments had to be maintained, the oldest son, Charles, went to live with his mother, and became her protector. Mr. Dickens gave her a handsome allowance, and she lived in as much elegance as did the family at Gad's Hill. As a writer, Dickens was the greatest novelist of his day, and indeed one of the greatest of all time. Every tale he CHARLES ' DICKENS. 131 wrote had a deliberate purpose in it. Follies and crimes were exposed with a master hand; and the aim of his writings was to make people more benevolent, more practical in methods of doing good, and to have the effect of exciting sympathy for those who were wronged and were suffering, no matter to what rank or class they belonged. Dickens was a man of method, as well as a man of preeminent genius. Every document in his possession, from his earliest effort to the last, was duly dated, dock- eted, and deposited where he could get it without any trouble. From the appearance of the famous Pickwick Papers, he continued, up to the very day of his death, to put forth book after book, each one of which was re- ceived with a warm welcome, and each one of which added to his constantly increasing fame. Dickens was an excellent reader, and he might have made a first-rate actor. He gave public readings of his own works, both in Europe and America, which were received with great applause. He died in the full ma- turity of his powers. He had drawn too freely on his vital force, and passed suddenly away, admired by the reading public of both continents, and greatly lamented by all classes. NICHOLAS NICKLEBY. Principal Characters. Nicholas Nickleby, Sr., Father of Nicholas Nickleby, Jr. Nicholas Nickleby, Jr., Hero of the story. Ealph Nickleby, Brother of Nicholas Nickleby, Sr. Mrs. Nickleby, Mother of Nicholas, Jr. Kate Nickleby, Sister of Nicholas, Jr. Newman Noggs, Clerk of Ealph Nickleby. Miss La Creevy, Artist, Friend to the Nickleby family. Mr. Wackford Squeers, Sr., Proprietor of Dotheboys Hall, Yorkshire. Mrs. Squeers, his Wife. Wackford Squeers, Jr. } r Children of Squeers, the Schoolmaster. Miss Fannie Squeers, Smike, a Boy at Dotheboys Hall. Madame Mantalini,"! ,, , T , .. ". > Fashionable Milliners of London. Mr. Mantalim, J J John Browdie, a Neighbor of the Squeers family. Lord Frederick Verisopht, 1 NoUes whom Kate K ick i eby - meets at Sir Mulberry Hawk, J her Uncle Ealph's. Mr. Vincent Crummies, traveling Showman. Charles and Ned Cheeryble, "Cheeryble Brothers," with whom Nicholas finds a situation. Tim Linkinwater, Cheeryble Brothers' Head Clerk. Madeline Bray, the young Lady whom Nicholas Nickleby marries. Arthur Gride, an old Miser, Suitor to Madeline Bray. Peg Sliderskew, the Housekeeper of Arthur Gride. Frank Cheeryble, the Cheeryble Brothers' Nephew, who marries Kate Nickleby. 132 NICHOLAS NICKLEBY. By Charles Dickens. Nicholas Nickleby, Senior, after a quiet, uneventful life for many years on a small landed estate which he inherited from his father, Mr. Godfrey Nickleby, decided that as his children, Nicholas and Kate, were nearing their majority and most of his ready money had been spent in educating them, he had better devise some way of repairing his reduced capital. He being slow in arriving at a decision, his wife, who was of a quicker and more ambitious turn of mind, came to his aid. She advised that he go to speculating, as his brother Ealph had done; who, instead of plodding along in the country, had taken his patrimony, as soon as he received it, and gone to the metropolis, and was now a comparatively rich man. Mr. Nickleby listened to her, went to speculating, lost all in the first game, and, in the disappointment that succeeded, died. After the funeral and the settlement of such little effects as the deceased Mr. Nickleby had died possessed of, Mrs. Nickleby and the two children — Nich- olas, aged nineteen, and Kate, seventeen — moved to Lon- don and found a temporary home at a certain number in the Strand. As was her duty, the widow immediately wrote a letter to Mr. Ralph Nickleby, informing him of his and their great loss, not failing to appeal to him for aid in this their hour of need. In a very ill humor Mr. Nickleby made ready for a 134 NICHOLAS NICKLEBY. call upon his relatives. He found them poor indeed, only able to take the apartments they were in for a week at a time. He himself was incapable of pity for any who were .unfortunate, and it was a very disagreeable thing, he told himself, that these people, even though they were of his own flesh and blood, should come to London without his permission, and without even notify- ing him of their intention of so doing, till they were in the city and had actually become settled there. He was avaricious and cunning; his face, from the grinding, narrow life he had lived, had become stern, hard-featured, and forbidding. There was nothing in the sad appear- ance of his sister-in-law or the beautiful young girl be- fore him, or in the manly bearing of Nicholas, that for a moment softened him or brought from him an expression of sympathy or offer of help. His remarks were un- feeling — so offensively so, that Nicholas answered him with more spirit than was, perhaps, consistent in a young man without means and with no present prospect of support. "Are you willing to work?" he asked Nicholas, frown- ingly. "Of course I am," was the haughty answer. "Then see here, sir. This caught my eye this morn- ing, and you may thank your stars for it." He took a newspaper from his pocket and read aloud an adver- tisement setting forth the great advantages of education that might be derived from Mr. Wackford Squeers's academy, Dotheboys Hall, at the delightful village of Dotheboys, near Greta Bridge, in Yorkshire, and other * items besides those of an educational nature, finishing the elaborate newspaper notice by announcing that an NICHOLAS NICKLEBY. 135 assistant was needed in the school, annual salary being five pounds sterling. Mr. Nickleby, anxious to get rid of Nicholas in some way, spoke in terms of praise of what he made believe he regarded as a very fine offer. That young man, anxious to make a beginning towards inde- pendence, signified his willingness to accept the situation, if he could but receive the appointment; but the thought of others was in his mind, and he asked what would become of those he would have to leave behind. His uncle stopped him by replying that he would care for them till they were in a way to care for themselves. "Make yourself of use to Mr. Squeers," said Mr. Nickleby, "and you'll rise to be a partner in the estab- lishment in no time. Bless me, only think! if he were to die, your fortune is made at once." Without loss of time Nicholas was hurried to the place in the city where Mr. Squeers might be consulted, and through his uncle's influence he secured the place in the school, and was under engagement to start to Yorkshire on the morning following. With words of affection from his mother and sister, which words were impeded by tears of regret at the thought of their separation, Nicholas packed his box; and even in his grief at parting, with the buoyancy of youthful hope he wove bright dreams of what he might do sometime, — have a home of his own, and have his mother and Kate keep house for him. It was six o'clock in the morning, and Nicholas had risen quietly so as not to disturb his mother and sister. He wrote a few lines in pencil to say the good-bye which he was afraid to pronounce, and laying them, with half his scanty stock of money, at his sister's door, shouldered his box and quietly crept down stairs. He made his way 136 NICHOLAS NICKLEBY. to Mr. Squeers's town office and found that worthy gentle- man waiting, with five forlorn-looking little specimens of boys, for the early morning coach. With scanty break- fasts, the children were huddled in on top of the coach, where they sat, hungry, sleepy, subdued. All that day they traveled in the cold, — made colder, as the night came on, by a cutting wind and blinding snow, — with still an- other day of hunger and suffering before them which not one of them dared object to or murmur against. At six o'clock they stopped at Dotheboys Hall, — or rather, some three miles from that place. "You needn't call it a Hall down here," said Squeers, significantly, to Nicholas. "The fact is, it ain't a Hall," he added, drily. "We call it a Hall up in London, be- cause it sounds better, but they don't know it by that name in these parts. A man may call his house an island if he likes; there's no act of Parliament against that, I believe?" "I believe not, sir," answered his assistant. Arrived at their destination, he observed that the school was a long, cold-looking house, one story high, with a few straggling outbuildings behind, and a barn and stable adjoining. A tall, lean boy, with a lantern in his hand, unlocked the yard gate to give the newcomers admission. "Is that you, Smike?" said Squeers. "Yes, sir. Please, sir, I fell asleep over the fire," an- swered Smike, humbly. "Fire! what fire? Where's there a fire?" demanded his master, sharply. " Only in the kitchen, sir. Missus said, as I was sitting up, I might go in there for a warm." NICHOLAS NICKLEBY. 137 "Your Missus is a fool," said Squeers. "You'd have been a deal more wakeful in the cold, I'll engage." Many unpleasant misgivings had Nicholas had during the whole journey, and now he felt a depression of heart that he had never had before. If the house was dreary- looking outside, the inside was its counterpart. Nicholas felt that over the very entrances might have been seen the words, "Who enters here, leaves hope behind." His attention was drawn particularly to the boy whom Squeers had addressed as Smike. When the master was emptying the pocket of his great coat of papers and letters, Smike glanced at them with a timid, though keen, expression, as if there might be a letter among them for him. The whole appearance of the boy was one of neglect and abuse, and no one could look at him for a moment with- out a great feeling of pity for him. "I'll tell you what, Squeers," said Mrs. Squeers, as Smike left the room, " I think that young chap 's turning silly." "I hope not," said her husband, "for he's a handy fel- low out of doors, and worth his meat and drink, anyway. I should think he 'd have wit enough for us, though, if he was. But come; let's have supper, for I am hungry and tired, and want to go to bed." Had anyone ever told Nicholas of the system carried out at Dotheboys Hall, of its horrible punishments and daily tortures, of the impositions practiced on the unoffending boys in the miserable institution kept by Squeers, ably seconded, or rather, ably instigated to all that he did, by Mrs. Squeers, he would have set the story aside as one invented to while away an hour, if amusement or enter- tainment could possibly be found in such a tale of horror. 138 NICHOLAS NICKLEBY. After his supper, which was so artfully managed that it was no supper at all, arrangements were made for his sleeping that night. He learned that he was to find some place among the boys in the miserable dormi- tory, where, huddled together, five in a bed, covered with rags whose scantiness was supplemented by the ill-assorted, ragged clothing which they wore in the day time, they slept the night away, having retired in fear and trem- bling, and awakening each morning with a dread of what they knew was before each one of them. A long ride of over two hundred miles softened the hardness of the part of a bed upon Which Nicholas slept, and notwithstanding his agitation and disappointment, he slept soundly, and his dreams were of a more pleasant nature than one might imagine. He was wakened next morning by the voices of both Mr. and JVCrs. Squeers, the former notify- ing him that he would have to dispense with his morn- ing ablutions, as the well was frozen up, and the latter angrily pursuing her search for something which she designated as the school spoon. Mr. Squeers tried to soothe her by telling her that the spoon was of no conse- quence that morning, to which she angrily retorted that it was of consequence, as it was "brimstone morning," and she must have it. "We purify the boys' blood now and then, Nickleby," said Mr. Squeers in explanation. Mrs. Squeers frankly added to what her husband said, by stating that the boys had brimstone and treacle administered, partly as a med- icine, and partly because it spoiled their appetites and cost less than breakfast and dinner. Smike was called in, and suggested that perhaps the spoon might be found in Mrs. Squeers's pocket, which proved true, Smike receiv- NICHOLAS NICKLEBY. 139 ing a boxing for his supposed impudence in contradict- ing his mistress — she having, previous to his appearance, told Mr. Squeers that she knew nothing about the spoon — and, further, being promised a severe thrashing if he were not more respectful in the future. Squeers led Nicholas to the rear of the house, and, opening a door, exclaimed, — "This is our shop, Nickleby!" , The place was nothing but a bare and dirty room, with a couple of windows composed of glass in small proportion and old paper preponderating; a couple of long, old, rickety desks, defaced in every way; two or three forms; a detached desk for Squeers, and another for his assistant; bare, dirty walls, and ceiling finished like a barn, — and this was the schoolroom to which Nicholas had so gladly looked forward, while his uncle was read- ing to him the advertisement in regard to Dotheboys Hall. If the schoolroom gave him horrors, what can be said when he saw the boys drawn up in line in front of Squeers, as he seated himself behind the teacher's desk? In their faces there was no trace of hope, but each one was pale and haggard, their countenances being those of old men; their bodies were deformed or stunted in growth; all the beauty in their young faces was marred with the scowl of their constant suffering; every kindly sympathy and affection which forms part of child-life was blasted, and all that was evil in their natures was taking the place of the pure. Painful though this was to the young tutor, the sight of Mrs. Squeers presiding at one of the desks over a great basin of the treacle, a spoonful of which each hapless boy in the school was compelled to swallow, was a great deal more so. The 140 NICHOLAS NICKLEBY. last boy had taken his dose. Squeers gave the desk a heavy rap with his cane. " Is that physicking over ? " he asked his wife. Being assured that it was, he said, in a mocking, solemn voice, " For what we have received, may the Lord make us truly thankful!" He opened school after this breakfast, and gave Nich- olas a specimen of his teaching. Before the class was through, the young master found that the man with whom he was dealing was a cunning knave, up to every artifice that could possibly enrich himself, rich in expedients whereby he might grind and reduce to servility the poor creatures whom indifferent parents or guardians had entrusted to his care. He had almost made up his mind to fly from the place, and yet the thought of his mother and sister, and of his Uncle Ralph, whose anger he knew he would thereby incur, kept him to the duties which he had assumed. Against Smike there seemed to be enter- tained, both by Squeers and his wife, a wonderful antipathy. Every mistake unaccounted for was visited upon this un- offending creature. All the sense with which he was endowed at birth had been beaten out of him by his cruel masters, because he had been sent to them and then forgotten by his friends. Nicholas was kind to Smike, who became tenderly attached to him. One morn- ing, a few weeks after Nicholas went to Dotheboys, the drudge did not answer to his early morning call, and on investigation it was found that he had run away. Search was instituted, and after several hours Mrs. Squeers re- turned in triumph, with the deserter from her ranks in close custody. In the afternoon the whole school assembled to witness NICHOLAS NICKLEBY. 141 Smike's punishment. Strengthening himself with a liberal allowance of spirits, and armed with an instru- ment of flagellation, strong, supple, wax-ended, and new, Squeers called the culprit to him from an adjoining room. Abuse was heaped upon him by both Squeers and his wife, and then the lash descended with an awful blow. Squeers had raised the whip and was about to give the "Stop!" he cried, in a voice that made the whole room ring. " This nust not go on" second cut, when Nicholas interfered. "Stop!" he cried, in a voice that made the whole room ring. " This must not go on." " Must not go on ! " said Squeers in mockery, enraged at the interference. In a moment he was con- fronted by his assistant, and high words passed between them. Squeers was almost beside himself with rage. He ordered Nicholas to be silent, and again took hold of 142 NICHOLAS NICKLEBY. Smike. Nicholas told him that he would punish the poor boy at his own peril. He had scarcely spoken, when Squeers spat upon him and struck him a blow across the face with the instrument of torture, which left its cruel mark. Smarting with pain, Nicholas wrested the whip from him, and, holding him securely, beat the great ruffian till he roared for mercy. Mrs. Squeers hung to her husband, but was a hindrance rather than a help. Miss Fannie Squeers, the daughter of the house, came to the rescue and hurled inkstands at her father's enemy, and then beat him to her heart's content. She being a young lady, he could do nothing but submit to her attack. Growing tired of the contest in which he knew that he was victor, he gave Squeers half a dozen finish- ing blows and, flinging the despicable object of his wrath from him, left the room, packed up his clothes, and in a short time had left Dotheboys Hall for good. His salary remained unpaid, and he had but a few shillings in his purse. That night he slept in a barn, and on awakening in the morning he found that Smike had fol- lowed him. . Seeing that he was awake, the poor fellow dropped on his knees before him and begged that he might go along with him, only to be near him. "And you shall," said Nicholas. "And the world shall deal with you as it does by me, till one or both of us shall quit it for a better." Nicholas started for London, followed by his shadow. He did not intend to let his friends know of the change he had made, till he had secured employment. Happening to think of Newman Noggs, his uncle's servant, who had treated him kindly when in the city before, he sought him and through his aid secured lodgings, and pupils also, in a NICHOLAS NICKLEBY. 143 part of the city where none but families in ordinary cir- cumstances dwelt. Glad of anything that would keep him above want, he accepted an offer .from a Mrs. Ken- wigs to become instructor to her little girls, and was faith- ful to his duties, though he was diligent in search for something that was higher and more remunerative. Where were his mother and Kate? Instead of taking them to his home to cheer and brighten it, Mr. Ralph Nickleby looked around for some place where work might be obtained for the daughter, and had, indeed, serious notions of consigning his sister-in-law to a respectable almshouse. In a way of his own he found that a place could be made for Kate in the millinery and mantua- making establishment of Madame Mantalini, wha had grown rich, presumably, and prosperous in her chosen business. At Kate's earnest request, her mother remained in the city with her; and for the present, her uncle informed them, he would allow them rooms in a building belonging to him, which was now unoccupied, and which was situated in a remote part of the city. He painted such beautiful pictures of the future, wherein Kate might be a rich woman if she attended closely to the claims of her work, that Mrs. Nickleby was soon even more enthus- iastic than he. Alas, poor Kate! With no natural fitness for the work, she made slow progress at first, but by constant effort soon began to succeed better. One day she was surprised, on going home, to find her uncle present. He seemed in evident good humor, and invited her next evening to his house to dinner, telling her to look her best, and that he would send a carriage at his own expense, but that on no account must she disappoint him. Kate was not flattered by the invita- 144 NICHOLAS NICKLEBY. tion, but her mother, who received every act of Mr. Kalph Nickleby with delight, urged her to go, and hours before the time appointed had her dressed and in waiting. Throughout *her life, Kate had cause to remember the whole affair with mortification and humiliation. She not knowing it, her uncle had wished her to be present as a candidate for the attentions of a young nobleman, Lord Frederick Verisopht, hoping that her beauty might win that young man's regard, and end in her successful establishment in life in a magnificent home of her own, — not only for her own good, but that it might reflect credit upon him also, as he thought that a title in the family should not be despised. His guests, men of easy manners and of still easier morals, saw through his schemes, and one of them, Sir Mulberry Hawk, was offensively familiar with Kate. The guests being elated by wine, unprincipled, having no respect whatever for the host, and seeing that the poor girl was unacquainted with the ways of such as they, and that her uncle did not protect her during the time that she remained in their presence, their insulting attentions became tortures. Not able to endure it longer, she left the parlors and fled up stairs, where she gave way to her feelings in violent sobs and tears. Mr. Nickleby, seeing that his scheme had failed, tried to comfort her, and sent her home. The next day he read a letter which Fanny Squeers had written to him, detailing her father's late unpleasant- ness; and he made his way to Mrs. Nickleby 's apartments to tell her of her undutiful son, his ungrateful nephew. Kate had said nothing to her mother of the unpleasant features of the party, and Mrs. Nickleby met him with her usual sense of his importance. He proceeded to tell NICHOLAS NICKLEBY. 145 them of the actions of Nicholas, and that he had not only lost his situation, but that he had also induced one of the boys in the school to go away with him, and that the officers were after him. Of course he had Fanny's letter for authority. Visions of her brother in prison were added to Kate's present trouble. Nicholas had gone that same day to the lodgings where he had parted with his family, and learning where they now lived had, in company with Miss La Creevy, a friend whom they had made during their first few days in London, come to their present home. Ralph had just concluded the story of his nephew's misdemeanors, when the subject of his remarks entered the room. He positively and emphatic- ally denied all that was untrue in Miss Squeers's letter, but told of the brutal treatment which the pupils at Dotheboys Hall received, and of how he had defended Smike and then left, being followed by the boy of his own free will. The meeting of the family was a stormy one, through Ralph Nickleby's being present. Nicholas again left home, and in company with Smike started towards Portsmouth, where, he thought, he and his humble friend might both obtain employment. At an inn on the road they were traveling, he made the acquaintance of Mr. Crummies, manager of a theatrical company, and in conversation showed such intelligence that the manager decided he would make a fair actor. Looking for work of any kind that was honorable, he accepted the situation; and as the remuneration was good, was not unhappy at the prospect before him. Smike, who, he thought, could take an inferior part in the play, was also engaged. Nicholas studied his part well, and on the night of his debut Mr. Crummies was 10 146 NICHOLAS NICKLEBY. delighted at his success, as he shared the applause with the star of the company. For some time the company remained in the same town, and Nicholas was increas- ingly popular. Greater achievements were prophetically before him, when he received a letter from a friend in London stating that Kate was in danger, and needed his protection. He quit the company immediately, and hastened home, to find his mother and sister in a miser- able part of the city, in lodgings such as Ralph Mckleby would be expected to furnish them; and learning from his sister what her temptations were, through the contin- ued attentions of Sir Mulberry Hawk, without notifying his uncle he moved his mother and Kate back to Miss La Creevy's neighborhood, where he knew they would be safe, and then began his search for employment. He did not need to seek in vain nor have his search pro- longed. Brighter days dawned upon them as soon as they were out of communication with Ralph Mckleby. There was something in the frank, noble bearing of Nicholas that would win respect wherever he might be; and one day he met one of the twin brothers of the well-known firm of Cheeryble Brothers, who, on learning his history, or at least as much as was necessary for their purposes, engaged him as assistant in their warehouse, at a salary of one hundred and twenty pounds per annum. The joy of Nicholas was unbounded. He could give his mother and Kate a home, without the latter's being compelled to go out and make associates who regarded her merely for her beauty or the value of her work, which work had been both uncongenial and unremunerative. The Cheeryble Brothers had a little cottage, pleasantly situated in the NICHOLAS NICKLEBY. 147 suburbs of the city, which they offered to Nicholas at reasonable rates, and in a short time the family of the lately deceased Nicholas Nickleby were as comfortably fixed as they had been during his lifetime. Nicholas was punctual and faithful in his duties, and soon won the favor of both the brothers, as well as that of Mr. Tim Linkinwater, who for forty-four years had been their con- fidential clerk and bookkeeper. Smike was found to be a useful member of the family, and took delight in taking care of the yard and garden belonging to their home. The poor Nicklebys were once more happy. Their rich uncle, who was steeled in his avariciousness and love of money, and who scrupled not to obtain it by very questionable means, was alone and miserably unhappy. Smike was as happy as it was possible for one of his limited capacities to be, but the poor fellow was once more to feel the iron grip of Squeers's cruel hand, before he would be put beyond the powers of torture. One day he had been at Miss La Creevy's, and was returning home, when Squeers, who was in the city on business with Ralph Nickleby, spied him. He captured him, and without any resistance Smike was put in a coach and carried to the inn where Squeers was stopping. Fortu- nately for Smike, John Browdie, a near neighbor of Squeers, was in London with his bride on their wedding trip, and Fannie Squeers, who had acted as bridesmaid, was along. Hearing that Smike had been captured, John determined that he would release him and have him returned to the Nicklebys. The bridal party were spending the evening with Squeers. John feigned sud- den illness, and begged that he might lie down awhile. He was shown to the room that Squeers occupied, 148 NICHOLAS NICKLEBY. where Smike was confined. He went to bed, and insisted that if he could have quiet and sleep he would soon be better. Mrs. Browdie, understanding him well, let him alone. In a few minutes he released Smike, and sent him, trembling, on his way to his friends. He never enjoyed anything more than he did the disappointment and rage of Squeers when, on his return, he found that Smike was gone. John feigned sleep and innocence, and his little ruse was successfully carried out. Poor Smike ! he was not intended for a long life. Abuse, neglect, and cruel treatment had done their work. Consumption was rapidly sapping his vitality; and one day a physician whom Nicholas consulted, advised that he be taken to the country, where his life might possibly be prolonged. Nicholas went with him to take care of him. Heaven was merciful to his weakness, and though he seemed better, one day, with Nicholas sitting by him, his release came to him; and, with love in his heart and upon his lips for those who had rescued him from his life of drudgery, he went to sleep. The mystery of his life was soon after cleared up. It would have been surprising, — nay, unnatural, — if Nicholas Nickleby, with all his capacity for domestic enjoyment and love of friends, had not fallen in love. He did, and with Madeline Bray, a beautiful girl over whose movements the Brothers Cheeryble had some kind of control. Learning that she was of superior family, though in reduced circumstances, he prudently kept his love to himself, feeling that a poor young man like him should not aspire to her hand in marriage. Secluded in her quiet home though Kate Nickleby was, it would have been an equally strange thing if her beauty NICHOLAS NICKLEBY. 149 and true worth had not in some way been known, and some one had not fallen in love with her. The Cheerybles had a nephew, Mr. Frank Cheeryble, recently returned from abroad, who became intimate with Nicholas in the counting-house, and. who visited him in his happy little home when work was over. Kate's lover came to her the first time Frank saw her. True-hearted and honest, it was not many months till he declared his love, and was rejected, even though she loved him beyond all others — beyond Nicholas even. She told him it could never be, as his station was so far above hers that his uncles would never permit it. He left London almost immediately, and Kate, loving on, unselfishly hoped that her lover would find some one worthy of him. Ralph Nickleby left his relatives to their own interests, though vowing revenge against Nicholas for withstanding his authority. He and an unscrupulous usurer like him- self, Arthur Gride, with Squeers as a hired tool, were working against the interests of Madeline Bray. Madeline's maternal grandfather had made a will dis- criminating against her, because he had an intense dislike for her father, who had led her mother a most unhappy life. He died after his daughter, and his will was pro- bated; some time after his death another will was found, made in Madeline's favor for twelve thousand pounds. Through duplicity, this will fell into Arthur Gride's pos- session; and he, knowing that Madeline's inheritance should be acknowledged, — Ralph Nickleby also knowing it, — kept the knowledge of the existence of the last will from both Mr. Bray and Madeline. One night, Arthur's old housekeeper, Mrs. Sliderskew, who had decided to leave him, fled from his house 150 NICHOLAS NICKLEBY. in his absence, and having often seen him handling 'this will and other papers which he kept in a strong box, carried them with her, hoping to make something out of them should they ever be needed. He was almost beside himself with fear when he found that, his papers were gone, and fled to Ralph Nickleby for advice. Ralph knew, as well as anyone in London, how to track her down; and as Squeers was in the city, under promise of a handsome sum, Ralph induced him to undertake getting the papers from Mrs. Sliderskew, if she could be found. She was found, and under the influence of liberal quanti- ties of spirits, which the old woman was partial to, she revealed her secret and produced the box. Ralph Nickleby's every action had been watched for years by Newman Noggs, his hired man, of whom Ralph had become suspicious lately, and who had heard enough in his master's office to know that evil was being plotted against Madeline, as well as against Nicholas, whom New- man regarded as his constant friend. He shadowed Ralph Nickleby's steps; he tracked Arthur Gride; he kept his eye upon Squeers, until he found him closeted with Mrs. Sliderskew. The old woman was too far under the influence of spirits to notice that, as Squeers handled the papers in the box, two figures entered the room and stepped quietly in his rear; and Squeers himself knew nothing of their presence. He was a slow reader, but as he looked over the papers he handed his companion such as he thought would be of no help to Ralph Nickleby, and she held them over the grate till they lay in ashes. The name of Madeline Bray was spoken, and the two men behind Squeers, Newman Noggs and Frank Cheery- ble, — for these were the men who had entered, — seized the NICHOLAS NICKLEBY. 151 papers, knocked Squeers over, and soon secured him and the old woman and placed them under arrest. In their trial, which followed soon after, Mrs. Sliderskew was found guilty of robbery; and Squeers, as an accomplice, shared her fate — transportation beyond the seas as a criminal. Arthur Gride escaped through some flaw in the law, but soon after met with a violent death. The law was stretching out its inexorable hands for Ralph Nickleby; and with an iron visage, but a quaking heart, he tried to escape it. Dishonest, unscrupulous, thoroughly wicked, an old man bent and wrinkled with his increasing years, he was being caught in the net which he had woven for others. Ruin and disgrace stared him in the face, when he was called upon, one evening, by Charles Cheeryble. Assuming all his old pride and haughtiness, he refused to let his visitor pro- ceed with the business of which he told him he had come to warn him, and Mr. Cheeryble withdrew. Later in the same day, Ralph thought that it might be wise to see Mr. Cheeryble, and called at his warehouse. He was nshered into the presence of the two brothers, who con- ferred together as to the manner of conducting the present interview. In answer to his question of what they had to tell him, he was told to prepare himself for intelligence which, if he had a spark of humanity left in him, would make him tremble. They told him of Smike, of harmless, innocent Smike, who, after years of suffering, in which they did not hesitate to tell him he was the chief agent, had gone home; and declared that he would be called to account for all that Smike had endured. He was confronted with Smike's paternity, by one con- cealed behind the curtains in the room, who told him that 152 NICHOLAS NICKLEBY. his own boy, whom for many years he had supposed dead, was none other than the ill-used drudge of his miserable tool, Squeers. The man faced him with the story of his secret marriage, — secret on account of a clause in the will of the father of the lady whom he had married, that if she married without her brother's consent, the property, in which she had only a life interest while she remained single, should pass away entirely to another branch of the family. The same love of gain which had led Ralph to the marriage, led him to its being kept strictly private; as the death of the brother, which was then looked for, would bring to Mrs. Nickleby quite a handsome prop- erty. When his son was born, he was taken a long way off and put out to nurse, his mother never seeing him but once or twice afterwards, and then by stealth; and Ralph, fearing suspicion, never went to him at all. The brother of Mrs. Nickleby lingering longer than had been expected, she urged her husband to avow their marriage, which he positively refused to do. Tired of the double life she was leading, and seeing no end to it, when her boy was seven years old, and within but a few weeks of her brother's death, she eloped with a young man and yielded her claims upon her inheritance, as well as upon Ralph Nickleby. She died not long after, and Ralph had his son brought home and lodged in his front garret. The child being sickly, the doctor advised that he be taken to the country, which was done. Ralph went away from home, and on his return it was told him that the child was dead and buried. This was done in revenge for the cruel treat- ment he had given the man who had his boy in charge, and with the hope of some day telling him the whole story and making it the means of getting money from NICHOLAS NICKLEBY. 153 him. The boy was placed in Mr. Squeers's school, and for six years twenty pounds each year was paid for him. The man who was telling the story — for it was none other than the one who had had charge of the boy — here said that because of continued hard usage from Ralph, he had quit his service, and was soon after sent out of the country. On his return, after eight years' absence, he had sought Ralph to tell him of his son, who, under the name of Smike, had been entered with Squeers, but was repulsed and did not approach him again, but sought out the boy instead. As the man finished his story, the lamp in the room where they were sitting went out. When it reappeared, Ralph Nickleby had left the room and was not to be found. Up into the front garret of his house, where he had almost made a prisoner of his unfortunate child, he went, and gave himself up to bitter reflections. Remorse, remorse, remorse ! That was for all that was past. Ruin and degradation, and perhaps imprisonment, before him ! He could bear neither, and throwing a rope over a strong hook firmly driven into one of the beams, he slipped into the noose which he made, and with a wild look around him, put an end to his miserable earthly existence. Upright and truthful and honorable, the other branch of the Nickleby family moved on. The Cheeryble brothers were wise men, and they saw what was going on in the lives of the young people in their immediate social circle, and wisely drew from Mr. Frank and Nich- olas their little difficulties. It was in the power of the brothers to adjust these, which they very happily and 154 NICHOLAS NICKLEBY. speedily did. The same day that Madeline gave her hand and fortune to Nicholas Nickleby, Kate became Mrs. Frank Cheeryble. The sign of " Cheery ble Brothers," above the warehouse, was taken down a few years later, and the one which took its place reads " Cheeryble & Nickleby." Tim Linkin water, much to Mrs. Nickleby's disgust, persuaded Miss La Creevy that in their old age one hearthstone would do for both, and they began house- keeping in the same old house .that he had occupied for four and forty years. The twin brothers in their retirement are very happy, and look out upon what is going on before them with young-old eyes, and see much of beauty all around them. Mrs. Mckleby lives sometimes with Nicholas and Made- line, sometimes with Frank and Kate; she always preserves a great appearance of dignity, and relates her checkered experiences in life with much solemnity, and with great enjoyment to herself. Not far off from Nicholas's country home, — which, by the way, is the old house wherein he and Kate were born, — is a little cottage in which our old friend Newman Noggs lives contentedly, superintending the affairs of Nicholas when business calls him away. Within a stone's throw of Nicholas's house is Kate's, and daily do they see each other. Their children are growing up together, sharing each other's pursuits and pleasures, watched over with delight by Newman, who becomes a child again with them and directs their play. Smike, in death, rests beside the uncle who in life knew nothing of him. The children wreathe garlands of flowers during the summer time, and put them on his grave; and their eyes fill with tears, and they speak gently, whenever the name of their poor cousin is mentioned. DAVID COPPERFIELD. Principal Characters. Mrs. Copperfield, Mother of David Copperfield. David Copperfield, Hero of the story. Peggotty, properly Clara Peggotty, Servant and Friend of the Cop- perfields. Miss Betsey Trotwood, Grandaunt to David Copperfield. Mr. Chillip, the Apothecary. Mr. Peggotty, *| Ham Peggotty I Eelatives °f Peggotty, Friends of David Copper- ' J field. Little Emily, J Mr. Murdstone, Second Husband of Mrs. Copperfield. Miss Jane Murdstone, his Sister. Mr. Barkis, afterwards Husband to Peggotty. Mr. Creakle, Proprietor of a Boys' School to which David is sent. Tommy »Traddles and James Steerforth, Schoolmates of David. Wilkins Micawber and Emma, his wife, Acquaintances of David. Dr. Strong, Proprietor of a Boys' School. Mr. Wickfield, Lawyer, with ivhom David is put to board. Agnes Wickfield, Daughter of Mr. Wickfield. Uriah Heep, Law Student in Mr. Wickfield's Office. Dora Spenlow, afterwards the Child-wife. 156 DAVID COPPERFIELD. By Charles Dickens. I was a posthumous child, my father having died six months before my birth. I was born on a Friday of a March day, at twelve o'clock at night, and it was re- marked by those present that the clock began to strike, and I began to cry, at the same time. The place of my nativity was Blunderstone, in Suffolk. Miss Betsey Trotwood, my father's aunt, was the principal magnate in the Copperfield family. She had married a man younger than herself, and on account of incompatibility she in- duced him to go to India for an indefinite time — which in his case meant ten years, as at the end of that period, whether willingly or unwillingly, the chronicle saith not, he received a summons and obeyed it (or so it was popularly believed, though it was not true,) to lay aside earthly cares and go "where the wicked cease from troubling, and the weary are at rest." My father had been a great favorite of his aunt, but he mortally offended her by marrying my mother; she cut him off, and never saw him again. The day of my birth, I have since been told, my mother was sitting before the fire, looking gloomily at the prospect before her. A strange figure entered the yard, and, contrary, to all custom polite and well regulated, instead of ringing the bell she pressed her face against the window, till her nose was actually flattened and looked like a great white button 157 158 DAVID COPPERFIELD. fastened to the glass. Her singular actions convinced my mother that this visitor was Aunt Betsey Trotwood, or, as she always called her, Miss Betsey. After several pointed questions into the personality and prospects of mother, Aunt Betsey informed her that she had a strong presentiment that the expected heir to the Copperfield name and limited estate would be a girl. She declared that from the moment of its birth she intended to be its friend and godmother, and bespoke for it the name Betsey Trotwood Copperfield. That night I was born — a boy. Aunt Betsey was so enraged that she took her bonnet by the strings and aimed it at Mr. Ghillip, the doctor in waiting, then put it on bent out of shape, walked out of the house, and never came back. My childhood, till I was eight years old, was a happy one, spent with my sweet girl-mother and Peggotty, our maid-of-all-work. I was a child of close observation, — I have heard that all posthumous children are, — and I not only paid much attention to birds and bees and ob- jects in the outside world that any healthy child would be interested in, but began studying character as well. I saw that there was a great difference between mother and Peggotty, who were opposites, and yet each of them was very beautiful to me. I would ply both of them with questions, which were answered intelligently, to the best of their ability. There was a character who came into my life about the time mentioned above, that I began to observe with my usual discrimination. He was a tall, black-haired, black-whiskered man, with the blackest of eyes, who frequently escorted my mother home from a neighbor's, where she was wont to spend an even- ing, or from church; and who, after several attentions of DAVID COPPERFIELD. 159 this kind, took the liberty of calling and spending an evening with mother, who, I must confess candidly, seemed highly delighted with every attention which Mr. Murdstone (that was the gentleman's name) paid her. Peggotty and I saw what was going on — the- former understanding the significance of each act, I in happy ignorance of everything except that mother had made a new friend. Not nearly so much of mother's time was now given to me as formerly, and consequently I became the constant companion of our faithful servant, between whom and myself the tie of friendship was uncommonly strong. About two months after Mr. Murdstone began coming to our house, a remarkable event happened to me. I was granted permission, without asking for it, to go with Peggotty to Yarmouth to visit her brother, and was wild with expectations of pleasure, as we would be near the sea, and could see boats and ships and fishermen and the beach and have delights innumerable. The fortnight we spent with Mr. Peggotty and his family of impecuni- ous relations — for Mr. Peggotty himself was a bachelor — is one of the bright spots in my life. Their seaside home, the only home they had, was in a boat which was no longer fit for seafaring purposes, but which the present occupants had made very comfortable, and which, from its uniqueness, was to me one of the most delightful places of abode imaginable. From the head of the house down to Emily, the orphan niece, the inmates of that boat-house were intensely interesting, and I soon learned to love them. Earthly pleasures end; my fortnight at the seashore was brought to its termination. We, Peg- gotty and I, arrived at home on the evening of a raw, 160 DAVID COPPERFTELD. cold day — no mother in sight, but a smart new servant moving around with significant looks, and a general appearance of strangeness throughout the house. "Where's mamma, Peggotty?" I cried. Peggotty, after more circumlocution than was neces- sary, finally answered my excited questions. "Master Davy, what do you think? You have got a Pa!" "Got a Pa!" How soon I realized the full breadth and scope of the words! That was why no mother had met and given us greeting; that was why, when I went into the parlor and saw mother, she rose timidly and came to me, all gladness and joy at my return suppressed .by the warning of Mr. Murdstone, the new Pa, who said : "Now, Clara, my dear, recollect! Control yourself, always control yourself! Davy boy, how do you do?" When the new Pa and I were left alone for a few moments that evening, his wicked black eyes grew more wicked as he said, making me stand before him and looking steadily into my eyes and pressing his firm lips together, "David, if I have an obstinate horse or dog to deal with, what do you think I do?" " I don't know," I answered. "I beat him," he replied. "I make him wince and smart. I say to myself, 'I'll conquer that fellow'; and if it were to cost him all the blood he had, I should do it. What is that upon your face ? " "Dirt," I said. I did not tell him that it was tears as well. I would have burst before I would have told him that. He ordered me to wash my face and go down stairs with him. "Clara, my dear," he said to mother, "you will not be DAVID COPPERFIELD. 161 made uncomfortable any more, I hope. We shall soon improve our youthful humors." If the new Pa was to be held in fear, what shall I say of his sister, Miss Jane Murdstone, — a metallic lady she seemed to me, — who arrived at the Rookery, our home, in the evening of- the day of my return. " Generally speaking, I don't like boys," she said, when I was introduced to her. I found that out before long, without any acute powers of observation. I found, too, the next morning after Miss Murdstone's coming among us, that she, like her brother, had come to stay. She had not been there a day till she demanded the keys; till she had been in every cupboard and bin and closet ; till in every act she showed to my mother and Peggotty and me that she was to be the real mistress of the house; and my pretty, gentle mother, with but a feeble show of resistance, let her have her way. I never knew my mother, after Miss Murdstone's regime began, to give an opinion on any matter without first appealing to the living metal, or ascertaining by some sure means what Miss Jane's opinion was. I was soon in disgrace with Mr. and Miss Murdstone. Mother was my teacher, but the two aforesaid sat during each lesson, with piercing eyes and inflexible determina- tion, watching the progress of my development, in conse- quence of which my thoughts became confused and words a minus quantity, and I was zero in their sight as well as in mother's and my own. The new Pa and his sister, disgusted with both pupil and teacher, decided that I must be sent away to school; and to school, to Salem House, a boys' school kept by Mr. Creakle, a bankrupt hopdealer, was I sent. Mr. Creakle himself, with his wife n 1G2 DAVID COPPERFIELD. and Miss Creakle, were absent when I arrived at Salem House, — indeed, all the boys were absent, it being vaca- tion time, which fact I was not aware of, never having been where vacations were necessary, — but it was on my first meeting with the proprietor of the school after his return that, standing in his presence almost frightened to death, I formed my opinion of him — an opinion which I " I must be sent away to school; and to school, to Salem House, a school kept by Mr. Creakle, a bankrupt hopdealer, was I sent." never had cause to change, and which was given to me in his own words: — " Do you know me ? Hey ? . . . But you will soon. . . . 1 11 tell you what I am," lowering his voice from the high key in which it was pitched. "I'm a Tartar, . . . and when I say I will have a thing done, I will have it done. I am a determined character. That's what I am. I do my duty. That's what I do." These declarations on Mr. Creakle's part I amply verified, especially the first, DAVID COPPERFIELD. 163 during the months following, in which I was an inmate of the Creakle establishment. Oh, the cruelties practiced in that dreadful school ! My first half year passed, I cannot tell how. I was saved many of the tortures which the other poor boys in the school had inflicted on them, by being the roommate of J. Steerforth, the son of a rich widow, who was the only parlor boarder that the school boasted, and to whom unlimited favoritism was always shown. I went home to spend my vacation. I found Mr. and Miss Murdstone the same, inflexible and masterful, ruling my poor mother with a hand of steel; I found Peggotty faithful and true to all that concerned the Copperfield interests; I found mother sitting with a puny baby in her arms, looking thoughtful, but oh! so solitary and alone that, child as I was, I felt like falling at her precious side and weeping for her. Her lynx-eyed guardians had not looked for me on the early coach, and were several miles distant from home. Mother roused herself on my arrival, and she and Peggotty and I spent such an evening as we had never known since Mr. Murdstone came into our little world. Alas ! it was the last time that I ever was to be happy and free with her. A law of conduct was laid down to me by Mr. Murdstone, which I was charged to obey during the month which I was to spend at the Rookery, under penalty of heavy punishment if I dared to disobey. I obeyed to the letter. I was not sorry when the day came for me to go away. Of the two evils of my life, I believe I preferred Salem House. There I had J. Steerforth to stand between me and Mr. Creakle's tyranny; at home I had no one to stand between me and trouble — mother 164 DAVID COPPERFIELD. endured in silence, Peggotty endured in silence for mother's sake. How I remember the agony of my birthday in March ! Only nine years old, and yet I felt a hundred when I was summoned to the parlor and told by Mrs. Creakle, who, as well as she knew how, prepared me for it, that my mother was dead. As plainly as if it had occurred but yesterday, do I remember the journey home and all its attendant circumstances. I still feel Peggotty's loving arms around me, telling me of mother's last days and of her death, and of the baby's — for the poor little fellow was mercifully taken away but a few hours after her. I still feel Mr. Murdstone's perfect ignoring of me, and Miss Jane's neglect; I remember the funeral, and — oh, that my memory of what followed might become a blank! — I was not to go back to school; Miss Murdstone told me that. Where was I to go, and what was to be- come of me, were the questions which burnt themselves into my heart as with fire. Peggotty settled the question for a fortnight, at least. She was going again to visit her brother, Mr. Peggotty, and his interesting family, and asked Miss Murdstone for permission to take me along, which permission was readily given. A strange thing happened while we were at the sea- side. Mr. Barkis, the driver of the coach between my home and Salem House, had, on certain representations that I had made to him in regard to Peggotty's accom- plishments in the pastry line, — assertions of which he had full proof in the tarts and cakes that I shared with him on that lonely journey of mine, — conceived a passion for the fair cook, and in a way peculiar to himself had persuaded me to write a letter to her, the substance of DAVID COPPERFIELD. 165 which was: "My dear Peggotty. I have come here safe. Barkis is willing. . . . He says he particularly wants you to know — Barkis is ivilling" Of what Barkis was willing it would be impossible for one of my inexperience to judge. Suffice it to say, his willingness had not been reciprocated till this visit of ours. Peggotty had been giving little hints of matters of her own, but I was so taken up with Emily that I paid no attention whatever to anything she might say, though to an older head than mine Mr. Barkis's visits, which were an event of daily occurrence, might have signified much. It was announced one day that Mr. Barkis and Peg- gotty were going on a holiday together to some place, and that Emily and I were to accompany them. As we started off, an old shoe was thrown after us — but what of that? — and we had not gone many miles till we stopped at a church, and Mr. Barkis, leaving Emily and me alone in the chaise, took Peggotty by the arm and went in — what of that? They were gone a long while, we thought; and when they came back, Mr. Barkis announced that the lady whose arm he held was no longer Clara Peggotty, but Clara Peggotty Barkis. Then we knew that they were married. After breakfast next morning the bride took me to her own home, — and a beautiful little home it was, too, — assuring me that as long as she was alive and had a roof over her head, I should find a little room, which she called mine, ready for me. Next morning she took me back to Blunderstone, and she and Mr. Barkis drove on, leaving me under the old elm trees looking at the house in which no face beamed on mine with love or liking any more. I entered it, and then began a neglect of me that was carried out in the most passionless, sys- 166 DAVID COPPERFIELD. tematic manner. I was but seldom allowed to visit any- one in the neighborhood, — cruelest of all, I was seldom allowed to visit Peggotty, who, however, was constant to me, and saw me every week, and that never empty- handed. In a few months I was put to service in the counting- house of Murdstone and Grinby, in the wine trade, 11 In a few months I was put to service in the counting-house of Murdstone and Grinby, in the wine trade, London." London, — a poor, lorn child, only ten years old, with no one to love me, with no one to care for me. It was here that I became acquainted with Mr. Micawber, a man who was always waiting for something to turn up, and who was to receive me into his house to lodge. Mrs. Micawber told me in a burst of confidence that evening, DAVID COPPERFIELD. 167 that the fact that Mr. Micawber was in pecuniary diffi- culties was why they were to take in a lodger. " Blood cannot be obtained from a stone," she said, " neither can anything on account be obtained at present (not to mention law expenses) from Mr. Micawber." At this time of my life, from Monday morning until Saturday night, I had no advice, no counsel, no encouragement, no consolation, no assistance, no support, of any kind, from anyone, that I can call to mind, as I hope to go to heaven ! Mr. Micawber's troubles reached a climax; he was imprisoned, made some kind of an arrangement with his numerous creditors, came home, and he and his family, who had been very kind to me, and of whom I had become quite fond, resolved to try their fortunes in the country. When they were gone, I, too, made a resolve; it was to run away and tell my story to my Aunt Betsey Trotwood, if I could find her. Through Peggotty I learned that my aunt lived near Dover, but just where, she could not say. I started on my journey Saturday night, all alone, with no experience in travel or the ways of the world, and had not gotten out of London till the boy who carried my box from my lodg- ings had robbed me of both the box and its contents, and a half-guinea that Peggotty had sent me in her letter, besides. With but a few pence in my pocket I hurried on the way to Dover. It was farther off than I had thought, and before I reached the town I was footsore, all my money was gone, I had parted with a portion of the clothing I had on when I started, and had been robbed besides. I presented a most forlorn and woe-begone 168 DAVID COPPERPIELD. appearance when I reached my aunt's and was ushered into her presence. Wonder of wonders ! Aunt Betsey- did not turn me away w T hen I told her w T ho I was, but ordered a bath for me, tucked me upon the sofa, and began pouring down stimulants and broths at the same time. After I had been dosed and coddled, I was taken upstairs and put to bed, my aunt locking my door on the outside, to prevent my running away, I suppose. At breakfast next morning she informed me that she had written to Mr. Murdstone about me. I was terrified; but my terror was increased a hundredfold in a short time afterwards, to see that gentleman and Miss Jane halt in front of our door. Aunt Trotwood laid my case before them, and told them in very expressive language what she thought about the treatment I had received from them. Mr. Murdstone offered to take me back, if my aunt would surrender me unconditionally to him. This she had no intention of doing, and the conclusion of the conference was, that as Mr. Murdstone had no legal claims on me, I remained without any opposition on his part with my aunt. Strange it may seem that, notwith- standing she had been disappointed in my father and with the accident of my sex, she should take a fancy to me — not only a passing fancy, but that she should take me into her heart and home, and do for me as if I were her own son. She decided that my education had been sadly neglected, and that I must be put in school imme- diately. She ordered out a chaise and pony, and being indifferent to public opinion, took the lines in her own hands and drove through the streets of Dover, stopping at the office of Mr. Wickfield, a lawyer whom she -could trust, to ascertain where she might find a school suited to DAVID COPPERFIELD. 169 her mind. A cadaverous-looking lad opened the door to admit us, and while my aunt and Mr. Wickfield were out looking for a school, I, being left in the office, watched with much interest the movements of this boy, whose name, I learned, was Uriah Heep. Aunt was pleased with the school kept by Dr. Strong^ and entered me in it; but she was not pleased with the boarding-houses around, and Mr. Wickfield asked that she would allow me to remain in his house while I attended school, as I would be company for Agnes, his motherless daughter. Mr. Wickfield frequently repeated to my aunt that he had but one motive in life. When I was introduced to Agnes, lovely Agnes, I knew what his motive was. I became acquainted with Uriah Heep, and he was a study to me. His humility was wonderful, if one might believe his frequent iteration of the fact. "I am very umble," he constantly assured his friends. " Perhaps you '11 be a partner in Mr. Wickfield's busi- ness, one of these days," I said, to make myself agree- able; " and it will be Wickfield and Heep, or Heep late Wickfield. " " Oh, no, Master Copperfield," returned Uriah, shaking his head, " I am much too umble for that!" I wrote and told Peggotty of my happy life and pros- pects at Aunt Trotwood's — for surely no boy ever had a life with more happiness crowded into it than mine. The retrospect of the years while I was silently gliding from childhood into youth under my aunt's care is very pleasant to me now, when a man's great cares are mine. Aunt was a diamond of the purest type, though she chose to make for herself a rough setting. In school, one of the 170 DAVID COPPERFIELD. very best; at Mr. Wickfield's, where kind consideration and love were the order of the day; at my aunt's beauti- fully kept home, where I was as a son beloved, — thus passed my days and years till I was seventeen years old. Before I decided on a profession, my aunt arranged that I should travel and visit for a while. Let me summarize briefly the events of the next few weeks. Went to London; met James Steerforth at the theater; we renewed our acquaintance; went with him to his mother's; in return, he went with me to Yarmouth to visit Mr. and Mrs. Barkis and the Peggotty family; we were notified of the engagement of Ham, Mr. Peggotty's nephew, and Emily; remained in the full enjoyment of all the simple pleasures which these simple-minded peo- ple could confer, till I received a letter notifying me that my aunt had seen an opening for me in the law and urging me to return home; went home and entered the law office of Spenlow and Jorkins; was invited to Mr. Spenlow's house, where, on being introduced to his daughter Dora, there came to me the rnqst interesting thing in my life — -I fell madly and desperately in love with her; soon after, I learned that Miss Murdstone, Miss Jane Murdstone, had been chosen confidential companion to Dora, who was a motherless girl; had an understanding with Miss Jane, at her own request, and doubtless for reasons of her own, when we met at Mr. Spenlow's, that bygones should be bygones and not be spoken of to the Spenlows, which agreement I kept; met Tommy Traddles, a former schoolmate at the Creakle school; was delighted at the reappearance of Steerforth, who, having been at Yarmouth more recently than I, brought me word of my friends there, also the news of DAVID COPPERFIELD. 171 Mr. Barkis's serious illness and a letter from Peggotty, confirming what he told me about her husband; resolved to go immediately to her, but was induced to go for a day with Steerforth to his home; was impressed with his strange manner and words at parting: — " Daisy [ a pet name which Steerforth had given to David when they were at Creakle's, and which he always afterward applied to him], if anything should ever separate us, you must think of me at my best, old boy. Come! Let us make that bargain. Think of me at my best if circumstances should ever part us!" That time came very soon, and the night he gave me his hand in parting at his mother's was the last time I ever touched it in love and friendship. I went imme- diately to Peggotty 's. Her friends, including Emily, were in the little sitting-room, attending upon Mr. Barkis, who, to use Mr. Peggotty's expressive words, was " a going out with the tide." " People can 't die, along the coast," said Mr. Peggotty, "except when the tide's pretty nigh out. . . . He's a going out with the tide." We remained in the house for hours. The dying man seemed to rally, and muttered something about driving me to school. "He's coming to himself," said Peggotty. . . "Bar- kis, my dear!" He opened his eyes and looked at me, and said, with a pleasant smile, "Barkis is willm'!" and then, it being low water, he went out with the tide. The funeral was over, and in the box that Barkis had never for years had out of his sight was found a will, — 172 DAVID COPPERFIELD. a will which showed that he died possessed of three thousand pounds and many little valuables. Peggotty accepted the inevitable without any great out- ward show of grief, but we all knew that she was loving and true to the memory of her husband. She was to go to town with me next day to attend to the business connected with the will, when something connected with Emily hap- pened that was far more dreadful than the death of all the family would have been. How can I write it? Emily, the pet and darling of her uncle and her aunt, — Emily, the betrothed of honest Ham, had eloped with Steerforth, whom I had loved and trusted, and had gone with him we knew not whither. She left a note, saying that she would never come back again to them unless Steerforth would bring her back a lady. God pity her! Steerforth was incapable of that. My pen refuses to tell of the agony of her uncle and of Ham; it never can express my indignation and detes- tation of Steerforth, who in this act proved himself un- worthy of sympathy and one of the basest among the base; and yet the old love for him was not dead — I could not forget the past, I thought of him henceforth as a cherished friend who was dead. Broken-spirited, broken- hearted, disgraced, Ham took up the weary burden of his life; Mr. Peggotty, his companion in sorrow, began a long, weary search for his darling. " I'm a going to seek her, fur and wide," he said. "If any hurt should, come to me, remember that the last words I left for her was, 'My unchanged love is with my darling child, and I forgive her ! ' " In the months that followed, my love for Dora Spen- low became deeper and stronger, and her image was ever DAVID COPPERFIELD. 173 before me. I applied myself to the duties of the office with greater assiduity each day. Suddenly, when my sky was brightest, a dark cloud passed over it. Mr. Spenlow died very suddenly, and Dora was entrusted to the guardianship of two maiden aunts, and went to live with them. It was only by their permission that I would now be allowed to see my idol, and I made my request for this according to the most approved form, and waited impatiently for my answer. At last it came. They presented their compliments to Mr. Copperfleld, and in- formed him that they had given his letter their best consideration, with a view to the happiness of both parties, and if he would do them the favor to call upon a certain day (accompanied, if he thought proper, by a confidential friend), they would be happy to hold some conversation, on the subject. To this favor I immediately replied, and waited on the Misses Spenlow at the time appointed. Thomas Traddles, my old schoolmate, ac- companied me. The two ladies welcomed me politely, and received my propositions in regard to the hand of Dora graciously. I was admitted to the latter's presence as soon as my dreaded interview was over, and was rewarded for the ordeal through which I had been made to pass, by the tenderest and most expressive terms of endearment. Dora and I were engaged. It was in the power of but one event to make me happier, and that would be on our wedding day. My aunt was immediately made acquainted with the successful issue of my conference with the ladies, and was happy to see me happy, and promised to call on the Misses Spenlow without any loss of time. Weeks, months, seasons passed along, and I came 174 DAVID COPPERFIELD. legally to man's estate, having attained the dignified age of twenty-one. I had learned the art of stenography, and having learned it well, made a respectable income by it, being a reporter of Parliamentary debates for a morning newspaper. I had developed in another way also — I took to authorship with fear and trembling, and met with success. I came to be regularly paid for all the articles I wrote, and altogether was well off. My aunt had sold her cottage in Dover, and we were going to give up. our apartments, she to remove to a tiny cottage of her own, and Dora and I soon to be married and set up house- keeping for ourselves. Such a bustle and stir as Aunt Betsey and the Misses Clarissa and Lavinia Spenlow were making! They were ransacking London for articles of dress or of furniture for Dora and me to look at. Even Peggotty had come to London, and her share in the excite- ment seemed to be to clean everything over and over again. Time waited not, and the wedding day was ushered in by a perfect morning. Dressed in their best, the elderly ladies in the wedding party entered the church with us. All that happened there is a beautiful dream to me, one feature of which I remember distinctly — my walking so proudly and lovingly down the aisle with my sweet wife upon my arm, and hearing people whispering, as we passed, of what a youthful couple we were and of the beauty of the bride. After the wedding breakfast, we entered a carriage, and amidst the congratulations of our friends we drove away to our own pretty cottage, which was furnished ready to receive us. How happy we were ! What if we were but "babes in the wood," as Aunt Betsey called us, in a loving, tender way ? What a time we did DAVID COPPERFIELD. 175 have with servants ! Of Dora herself making the attempt to supply their deficiencies, I have a loving recollection, as well as of her utter failure in the attempt. We would laugh over our housekeeping, and then I would make believe that I was very serious. Dora would be hurt and partly offended; but, as she never knew how to be really angry, we always made up, and our love went on and on in blissful sunshine. I was "now a successful author, and gave up reporting. Aunt loved "Little Blossom," as she called Dora. I hinted to her that perhaps she might induce my wife to an effort in improvement of home affairs. " Little Blossom is a very tender little blossom, and the wind must be gentle with her," she answered me. . . . "These are early days, Trot," she pursued, "and Rome was not built in a day, nor in a year. You have chosen freely for yourself; and you have chosen a very pretty and a very affectionate creature. It will be your duty ... to estimate her (as you chose her) by the qualities she has, and not by the qualities she may not have. The latter you must develop in her, if you can. And if you cannot, child, you must just accustom yourself to do without 'em. But remember, my dear, your future is between you two. No one can assist, you; you are to work it out for yourselves. This is marriage, Trot; and Heaven bless you both in it, for a pair of babes in the wood as you are ! " "Will you call me a name I want you to call me?" said Dora to me one day. "What is it?" I asked, with a smile. "It's a stupid name," she said, shaking her curls for a moment. "Child-wife. I don't mean, you silly 176 DAVID COPPERFIELD. fellow, that you should use the name instead of Dora. I only mean that you should think of me that way. When you are going to be angry with me, say to yourself, 'It's only my child-wife!' . . . When you miss what I should like to be, and I think can never be, say, 'Still my foolish child-wife loves me ! ' For indeed I do." The first year of our married life wore on — yes, a year and a half. Dora did not, could not, comprehend that the responsibilities of a woman were now hers, and she did not mature rapidly. She was not strong physically. I had hoped that when baby fingers touched her cheek, and baby smiles answered her sweet smiles, my child- wife would develop into a woman; but it was not to be. Her baby's spirit fluttered for a moment on the threshold of its little prison, and, unconscious of captivity, took wing. After that she faded day by day, and though I would not acknowledge it to anyone, I knew that my Little Blossom was doomed to an early death. It came sooner than we looked for it; and to-day, years and years having passed, I pause and gaze in retrospect upon a figure in the moving crowd before my memory, quiet and still, saying jn its innocent love and childish beauty, "Stop to think of me — turn to look upon the little blossom, as it flutters to the ground!" I do. All else grows dim, and fades away. I am again with Dora in our cottage. After Dora's death, both my aunt and I broke up housekeeping — she to go back to Dover, I to go abroad. Before sailing, I decided to go down to Yarmouth to see Ham and visit the old scenes once more. I put up at the old inn and went down to hunt for my friend. A terrible storm was raging, such a one as had never been seen before on this coast, and Ham was not to be found, either DAVID COPPERFIELD. 177 in his cottage or among the men standing in frightened groups looking out upon the angry sea. I went back to the inn, but could not rest, so passed the time in going from the inn to the seashore, and then back again to the inn. In the morning a frightful wreck was seen not far off. I went down to the coast and gazed again upon the awful scene. A fisherman, who had known me when Emily and I were children, and ever since, whispered my name. "Sir," said he, with trembling lips and ashen face, "will you come over yonder ? " "Has a body come ashore?" I asked. "Yes," he said. "Do I know it?" I asked then. He answered nothing, but led me to the shore; and on that part of it where Emily and I had looked for shells, — two children, — on that part of it where some lighter fragments of the old boat, blown down last night, had been scattered by the wind, among the ruins of the home he had wronged, I saw James Steerforth lying with his head upon his arm, as I had often seen him lie at school in our room at Salem House. Ham, too, faithful Ham, was drowned while making an attempt to save James, not knowing who he was. I went away from England, not realizing till I was among strangers how sorely I was bereft. My child- wife, my beautiful Dora, had gone out of my life into the new life so young, so unexpectedly; the friend whom I had admired and trusted, who might, by his talents, have won fame and honor, had met with so sad a death, his name tarnished irreparably; my home was broken up; my friends were scattered, — is it any wonder that I was sad ? 12 178 DAVID COPPERFIELD. I traveled over the Continent, looking at beauties in nature and art, in the former of which I took great de- light, but the sadness remained; and at the end of three years, I went home to my aunt, and Peggotty, and Agnes. I sought Mr. Wickfleld and Agnes, — the same lovely Agnes that she had been all her life, — and need I say that she who had been to me friend, sister, inspiration to all that was good and noble, was asked to be and became my wife ? After we were married, she told me something that Dora said to her just before she died. It was that she should occupy the place made vacant by the child- wife's death. So Dora knows it all now. To-night, sitting in my own loved home, with Agnes at my side, and our children, three in number (a real, living Betsey Trotwood Copperfield among them) about us, I look over the days of the years that are gone. How much of sadness, how much of joy, has been crowded into them! Dora, in heaven above, is watching over us. One face, shining on me like a heavenly light by which I look at all other objects, is at my side. I turn towards it, and see it in all its beauty beside me — Agnes's dear presence, without which I am nothing, bears me com- pany. I have achieved literary success, which has made me independent and brought me fame. Naught are these, naught is anything, compared with the approval of my Agnes, who, by her every act and word, is my con- stant inspiration, pointing me onward and upward to all that is good. Closing my eyes for a moment to shut out Agnes and our children, I see Mr. Peggotty, after years of faithful searching, reunited with his Emily, and Mr. and Mrs. Micawber and family, to whom something of real good DAVID COPPEKFIELD. 179 has at last turned up, settled and prospering in far-away Australia; I visit a prison, and in one of the cells, answer- ing to his prison number, I look upon Uriah Heep, the "urnble," whose false humility and hypocrisy and fraud have brought him to this place, where he properly be- longs; I look upon the Murdstones, who, I am told, are practicing upon young Mrs. Murdstone the same inhu- manities that they practiced upon my pretty young mother; Aunt Trotwood and Peggotty, in the beauty of a softened old age, are the last ones upon whom I look, in the panorama moving backward. I bid good-night to them all, open my eyes, and spend the remainder of the evening with my family. DOMBEY AND SON. Peincipal Characters. Paul Dombey, Sr., Head of the firm 0/ Dombey and Son. Paul Dombey, Jr., Son of Paul Dombey, Sr. Florence Dombey, Daughter of Paul Dombey, Sr. Mrs. Chick, Sister of Paul Dombey, Sr. Miss Tox, a Friend of Mrs. Chick. Mrs. Toodle, known in the Dombey mansion as " Richards," Paul's Nurse. Mr. Solomon Gills, a ship's Instrument-maker. Walter Gay, Nephew to Solomon Gills ; marries Florence Dombey. Miss Susan Nipper, Nurse and Maid to Florence Dombey. Mrs. Pipchin, with whom Paul boards at Brighton. Mrs. Wickam, Paul's Nurse after Richards is dismissed. Captain Edward Cuttle, Friend to Solomon Gills and Walter Gay. Dr. Blimber, Proprietor of a boys' boarding-school to which Paul Dom- bey is sent. Mrs. Cornelia Blimber, Daughter of Dr. Blimber, whose special charge Paul becomes. Mr. Toots a young Gentleman of means, and Student at Dr. Blimber's school. Sir Barnet and Lady Skettles, Friends of Florence and Paul. Joseph Bagstock, Major in the army, retired from service. Mrs. Edith Granger, second wife of Paul Dombey, Sr. Mrs. Skewton, Mother of Mrs. Edith Granger. Mr. Carker, Head Clerk and Manager for Dombey and Son. Florence and Paul, children of Walter and Florence Gay. 180 DOMBEY AND SON. By Charles Dickens. Paul Dombey, of the late well-known firm of Dombey and Son, for many years the firm of Dombey himself, a man doing an extensive business and reputed to be of great wealth, with great pride in himself and in the name of Dombey, was in the excess of joy and happiness when one morning it was announced to him that unto his house — the house of Dombey, whose sole male representative was himself — a son and heir was born. Mr. Dombey was known in London and elsewhere in the United Kingdom as a prince among the merchants both at home and abroad. He had been and was now a successful man, with an un- bending will and indomitable energy, with a selfishness that admitted of no opposition from anyone in his own household or in his employ. He had had but one disap- pointment in the eight and forty years of his life, and that disappointment had ended in the fruition of hope when his son was born. He immediately took the boy — whom he named Paul before he was an hour old — into a future part- nership, and resolved that the glory of the house of Dom- bey and Son, as it was to be, should eclipse the past and present of the firm, if such a thing could be possible. He had been married ten years when Paul was born. It was hinted among those who ought to know, that there was no love in the firm of Dombey and Wife, but Mrs: Dombey was a good, true woman, who presided at her 181 182 DOMBEY AND SON. husband's table and did the honors of his house with becoming grace and dignity, and he gave her full credit for all qualities that reflected credit on the matrimonial firm. Six years before the birth of Paul, a daughter, Florence, was born, who was regarded as a blessing by her mother, but looked upon with disfavor by her father, to whom the thought that he, Paul Dombey, should be thwarted in the sex of his child was insupportable. He never noticed her ; she might as well have been unborn, o;r, having been born, died, for all he cared for her. But the' boy baby atoned for all in the past. "This young gentleman has to accomplish a destiny," he said to Mrs. Blockitt, the nurse. " A destiny, little fellow ! " he repeated; and he actually took one tiny hand of the in- fant and raised to his lips and kissed it. In his magna- nimity he even gave Florence permission to go and look at her brother. She, poor child, went to her mother instead, and clung to her in a loving embrace. The infantile Paul (scarcely more than an hour old) was to lose his mother soon after he had entered into life. Notwithstanding no less a person than Doctor Parker Peps, a court physician, and Mr. Pilkins, medical adviser in the Dombey family, were in constant attendance, her friends soon saw that Mrs. Dombey must die. Clinging fast to her little girl, who sobbed over her, she drifted away on the sea upon which some day we must all take a sail. Mrs. Chick, Mr. Dombey 's sister, and her intimate, Miss Tox, had come to the house to offer congratulations, and services if need be ; but their services were for the dead more than for the living. Next in importance to Mrs. Dombey 's death — it would be uncharitable to say that it took the precedence in im- DOMBEY AND SON. 183 portance — was the providing of a suitable nurse for baby Paul. Mrs. Chick was almost beside herself; at last Miss Tox came to her assistance when she was on the verge of despair, by introducing Mrs. Toodle, whom Miss Tox had induced to come to the Dombey mansion, accompanied by Mr. Toodle and the five children, — "four hims and a her," as their loving father answered Mr. Dombey's question as to how many children he had, — to show to the bereaved hus- band that there was no disease in the family, and that his son and heir would be in no danger from receiving nour- ishment from Mrs. Toodle, who was willing to assume the care of him. Proof positive having been given that Mrs. Toodle was a proper person for nurse to Paul Dombey, of the firm of Dombey and Son (to be), Tommy Toodle, her six-weeks-old infant, was intrusted to Mrs. Toodle's sister Jemima, along with the other three "hims and a her," with Mr. Toodle to oversee the family as heretofore. Mr. Dombey took no more notice of Florence during this sad time than if she had not been living. After her mother's funeral she was taken to her Aunt Chick's, where she remained for six weeks. She had her own nurse, Su- san Nipper, a girl of fourteen ; but Mrs. Toodle, who in the Dombey household was to be known as Richards, being a mother with all a mother's instincts, seeing the forlorn ness of the beautiful child when she returned home, managed it so that Florence might be with her and Paul each day, explaining to Mr. Dombey that children thrive better when other children were with them, and that Master Paul needed Florence to help him to be a lively child. Paul, under the excellent care of Richards, grew stouter and stronger each day. Cherished by his nurse and loved by Florence, the idol of his father for certain selfish and 184 DOMBEY AND SON. ' Managed it so that Florence might be with her and Paul each day" D6MBEY AND SON. 185 ambitious reasons, he also became to Miss Tox an object of the greatest and tenderest interest. In this critical world of ours there may have been those — indeed, right in Mr. Dombey's own house there may have been some — who uncharitably, or possibly truly, judged that in seek- ing the well-being of Paul, Miss Tox was looking to her own interests as a future Mrs. Dombey; but if such there were, they prudently kept their thoughts locked in the depths of their own minds. Certain it is that Mr. Dom- bey was so pleased with the good lady's attentions that he thought it would be but a fair return for all her favors to confer upon her the dignity and honor of being god- mother to his baby. He talked the matter over with Mrs. Chick. She happened to hint that "god-fathers, of course, are important in point of connection and in- fluence." "I don't know why they should be to my son," said Mr. Dombey, coldly. ..." Paul and myself will be able, when the time comes, to hold our own — the house, in other words, will be able to hold its own, and maintain its own, and hand down its own of itself, and without any such commonplace aids. The kind of foreign help which people usually seek for their children, I can afford to despise; being above it, I hope. So that Paul's infancy and childhood pass away well, and I see him becoming qualified without waste of time for the career on which he is destined to enter, I am satisfied. He will make what powerful friends he pleases in after-life, when he is actively maintaining — and extending, if that is possible — the dignity and credit of the Firm. Until then, I am enough for him, perhaps, and all in all. I have no wish that people should step in between us." 186 DOMBEY AND SON. In these remarks, delivered with his usual grandeur and haughtiness, Mr. Dombey revealed to his sister just what he felt in his heart. He wanted no rival in Paul's affections. He himself had never made a friend; he neither sought one, nor found one. There was one rival to Paul's love that he had though, that he could not have disposed of even if he would. Paul, from the time that he noticed anything, loved Florence over and above all things else. Florence, set aside and neglected by her father from her birth, loved Paul devotedly, and tenderly, and unself- ishly. Paul, from his extreme youth and inexperience, was not expected to take any interest whatever in the prepa- rations for his christening which were going on around him. Neither did he, on the appointed morning, show any sense of its importance, being but a few months old. His father stood in his cold library, as cold as the weather of the bleak autumnal day, waiting to receive the com- pany who were to be present on the occasion of Paul's being carried to church for the first time. As soon as the guests had assembled, the christening party started to the church. In Mr. Dombey's carriage were Dombey and Son, Miss Tox, Mrs. Chick, Richards, and Florence. In Mr. Chick's little carriage following were Mr. Chick and Susan Nipper. The chief difference between the christening party and a party in a mourning coach, consisted in the colors of the carriage and horses, so solemn were they. Miss Tox's hand trembled as she slipped it through Mr. Dombey's arm. It seemed for a moment like that other solemn institution, " Wilt thou have this man, Lucretia ? " — "Yes, I will"; but she went through her part bravely. For some mysterious reason little Paul did not like the DOMBEY AND SON. 187 proceedings, — perhaps he was cold, as were his attendants, . — for he rent the air of the church with his cries during the first part of the ceremony and had to be carried to the vestibule. The christening over, the party repaired to Mr. Dombey's for dinner. The dinner, like its master, was cold and forbidding, and all were glad when it was over. If Paul was deprived of his mother by death, he was deprived of Richards in a manner unlooked for by her- self and all interested. It had been stipulated when she was engaged by Mr. Dombey, that while she was nurse to Paul she was not to visit or hold communication with her family, sacrificing for the time being her maternal feelings in the interests of her little charge ; but on the day of Paul's christening, Mr. Dombey, having a scholarship in a charitable school to dispose of, conferred the honor upon Biler Toodle, the eldest of Mr. Toodle's "hims," and ma- jestically informed Richards of what he had done. Though she thanked him, she was uncertain about its being for her boy's good that he should be a pupil at the " Charita- ble Grinders " ; and, in talking the matter over with Susan Nipper, that young lady advised that when she next took Paul out for an airing she should go to her home and in- quire into the whole arrangement and see if it were what she herself would approve. She hesitated about taking Susan's advice, but love finally prevailed. Susan took Florence for her daily walk at the same time, and the interview at the house passed off well, even though Richards did transfer Paul to Jemima's arms and hold and caress her own baby all the time she was at home, and even though she did caress the other children to show them that she still loved and had not forgotten them. But Biler did not return from the school as 188 DOMBEY^ AND SON. Richards hoped, so that she might see hini in his uni- form (the management of the charitable school had decreed that all children in attendance should wear a peculiar garb, so that the world might not be mistaken and take them for other than children who were being educated by charity), and when she and Susan started for home they took a circuitous route with the hope that they might meet him. Alas! their plans came to grief. An animal that was being driven through the neighborhood, becoming en- raged, made such demonstrations that everyone in its path fled where he could for safety. Florence became frightened, and in Susan's efforts to escape, wherein she forgot all about her charge, was borne in an opposite direction from her nurse and Richards. She was picked up and carried off by an old woman to a wretched room, where she was stripped of all her own clothing, and then, wrapped in rags which were. taken from a heap which stood in the room, was turned out to find her way home in any way that might present itself. She wan- dered for hours, and was then found by Walter Gay, an employee of Dombey and Son, and taken home. Richards did not prevaricate, but told a straight story. She, from being nurse to the junior member of the firm, was discharged. Susan, the nurse to Florence, was re- tained, with no restriction of privileges. Mrs. Wickam, a woman of sad countenance and given much to weeping and sorrowful retrospects, took the place of Richards. From the day of Paul's christening he seemed to be ailing. Miss Tox, with her keen perceptions, and Mrs. Chick, who was ever watchful to win the favor of her brother and knew that there was no surer way of DOMBEY AND SON. 189 so doing than to take an interest in Paul, saw that Panl was not thriving as he should ; and yet neither one would have dared to mention the fact to his doting father. Some philosophers tell us that selfishness is at the root of our best loves and affections. Mr. Dombey's young child was, from the beginning, so distinctly important to him as a part of his own greatness, or (which is the same thing) of the greatness of Dombey and Son, that there is no doubt that his parental affection might have been easily traced, like many a goodly superstructure of fair fame, to a very low foundation. But he loved his son with all the love he had. If there was a warm place in his frosty heart, his son occupied it; if its very hard surface could receive the impression of any image, the image of that son was there; though not so much as an infant, or as a boy, but as a grown man — the "Son" of the Firm. Paul grew to be nearly five years old. He was frail and delicate, one of those wise children given to talk far beyond their years; and his older friends, who saw that his mind was outstripping his body, looked grave and shook their heads, but kept their thoughts about him to them- selves so far as his father was concerned. Mr. Dombey and his son were a strange pair as they sat together and talked — the former entertaining nothing but worldly schemes ; the latter with thoughts of his own, which Heaven alone could interpret. " Papa ! what 's money ? " asked Paul of his father one day. "What is money, Paul?" he answered. "Money? . . . Gold, and silver, and copper. Guineas, shillings, half- pence. You know what they are ? " "Oh yes, I know what they are," said Paul. "I don't 190 DOMBEY AND SON. mean that, papa. I mean, What 's money after all ? . . . I mean, papa, What can it do ? " His father patted him on the head. " You '11 know better by and by, my man," he said. " Money, Paul, can do anything." " Anything, papa ? " "Yes. Anything — almost," said Mr. Dombey. "Anything means everything, don't it papa? . . . Why didn't money save me my mamma?" returned the child. "It isn't cruel, is it?" " Cruel ! " said Mr. Dombey, settling his neckcloth, and seeming to resent the idea. " No. A good thing can't be cruel." "If it's a good thing, and can do anything," said the little fellow thoughtfully, as he looked back at the fire, " I wonder why it didn't save me my mamma." ..." It can't make me strong and quite well, either, papa ; can it ? " he asked further, and then went on telling his father of how he suffered, something of which the elder Dombey knew nought. Mr. Dombey was so astonished and so uncomfortable, and so perfectly at a loss how to pursue the conversation, that he could only sit looking at his son by the light of the fire, with his hand resting on his back, as if it were detained there by some magnetic attraction. Paul continued growing weaker and wiser. Sea air was recommended, and he and Florence, with the nurse and maid, were sent to Brighton, where he soon seemed to improve very much in health ; so much so, indeed, that his father decided to put him in school. Accordingly he was entered in the school owned and managed by Dr. Blimber, whose reputation as an educator ranked very high in high circles and among parents who looked for DOMBEY AND SON. 191 astonishing results in astonishingly limited time. In short, Mr. Blimber's school was one in which the system of forcing was carried out to perfection. Paul Dombey became a pupil, and was entrusted as a special charge to Miss Cornelia Blimber, Dr. Blimber's only daughter, who was as fine a product of the school as had ever been produced. Being from her birth subject to the system prevailing in the school, she knew no other way of teaching, and tried on Paul the same methods, with very different results, however. Paul, conscientious and obedient Paul, did the best he could, but grew weaker daily under the rigorous regime. He spent each Saturday and Sunday with Florence, who remained at Brighton. She, seeing that he was given lessons and tasks far beyond his years, bought a set of books like Paul's, and, in addition to her own lessons, kept ahead of him in his. Each week when he came to her she would go over the lessons of the coming week with him, and thus made his hard way easier. But the fiat had gone forth from a higher power than Dombey of Dombey and Son, and Paul's school days were to be few, even though those few were very difficult. The school year closed, and Paul and Florence went home. Paul was to die, and die soon, even though his father would not admit the fact, nor would he have allowed anyone to mention the possibility of such a thing to him. Each day, each hour, Paul grew weaker, and, it seemed to those in loving attendance, wiser and more mature. Florence scarcely left him. One day he asked, " Did I never see any kind face, like mamma's, looking at me when I was a baby, Floy ? " "Oh yes, dear!" 192 DOMBEY AND SON. " Whose, Floy ? " " Your old nurse's. Often." i ■ • i "Show me that old nurse, Floy, if you please!" On the next day Richards was sent for. " Floy ! this is a kind, good face ! " he said, when he saw her. "I am glad to see it again. Don't go away, old nurse ! Stay here ! " His last hour had come. Sister and brother wound their arms around each other, and the golden light came streaming in, and fell upon them, locked together. He spoke to her of the beautiful river that he saw with his quickened vision, and of the flowery banks on either side, and of the boat in which he fancied himself to be, and of one whom he saw standing on the bank ahead. "Mamma is like you, Floy. I know her by the face. But tell them that the print upon the stairs at school is not divine enough. The light about the head is shining on me as I go ! " The old, old fashion — Death ! Oh thank God, all who see it, for that older fashion yet, of Immortality ! And look upon us, angels of young children, with regards not quite estranged, when the swift river bears us to the ocean ! After Paul's death, Florence saw less of her father than before. He did not know how much she loved him, and she, poor child, hoping against hope that the day would come when he would love her as he had loved Paul, did everything she could to please him, and studied hard that she might one day be worthy of his love. Soon after Paul's death, Mr. Dombey and a friend, Major Bagstock, left London for a change of scene for the DOMBEY AND SON. 193 former, and went to Warwickshire. Unexpectedly, one day, as they were taking a stroll, they came upon a former friend of Major Bagstock, Mrs. Skewton, who, with her young widowed daughter, was boarding for the time in the neighborhood. The old friendship was renewed, and need we tell it, that Mr. Dombey became interested in the younger of the ladies, and that she in a short time was his promised wife ? Mrs. Edith Granger and Mr. Dombey were well matched in many respects. We know what Mr. Dombey was. Mrs. Granger was beautiful and graceful and accomplished, but her mother always overshadowed her. When Edith was but a girl her mother was making plans for her; she married her to Mr. Granger, for whom she had no love, and since her daughter had been a widow she had been constantly at work to marry her again. Mr. Dombey was her opportunity and she improved it well, and was de- lighted with results. The gloomy old Dombey mansion in London, whose parlors had never been in use since Mrs. Dombey's death, was to undergo a complete transformation. Florence, who came and went as she pleased, had taken Susan and gone by invitation to visit Sir Barnet and Lady Skettles, friends of hers and of Paul's, and on her return to the city was amazed to see that the outside of her house had been so transformed that she scarcely knew it. Inside was more of a surprise to her. She went to her own room, which was not yet touched ; she went to Paul's, where work was just going to be begun. Susan soon fol- lowed her with word that her father wished to see her. In what a flutter was her heart! Maybe he was now going to love her! 13 194 DOMBEY AND SON. "Florence," he said when she entered the room, "how do you do?" She saw that he was not alone, but that two ladies were with him. She advanced to him and took his hand and raised it to her lips. "Mrs. Skewton," he said to the elder of the ladies, " this is my daughter Florence." "Edith," he said to the younger lady, "this is my daughter Florence. Florence, this lady will soon be your mamma." Florence was startled, but, true to her own unselfish, beautiful self, she said, "Oh, papa, may you be happy! may you be very, very happy all your life ! " There was a short silence. The beautiful lady, who at first had seemed to hesitate whether or not she should advance to Florence, held her to her breast, and pressed the hand with which she clasped her, close about *her waist, as if to reassure her and comfort her. Not one word passed the lady's lips. Mr. Dombey then offered Mrs. Skewton his arm and moved forward, thinking that the others were following. "Florence," said Mrs. Granger hurriedly, "you will not begin by hating me ? " "By hating you, mamma!" replied Florence in aston- ishment, winding her arms around her neck. "Hush! Begin by thinking well of me. . . . Begin by believing that I will try to make you happy, and that I am prepared to love you, Florence. Good-by. We shall meet again, soon. Good-by ! Don't stay here, now." And in this new marriage Florence began to hope that with her new mother's aid she might gain the love of her father, which had been the leading thought of her life. DOMBEY AND SON. 195 In her sleep that night, in her lost old home, her own mamma smiled radiantly upon this hope, and blessed it. Dreaming Florence ! Fresh hope in her father's marriage to the beautiful woman who had taken so kindly to her sprang up in Florence's heart. The new mother was a spirit of promise to her. Soft shadows of the bright life dawning, when her father's affection should be gradually won, and all or much should be restored of what she had lost on the dark day when a mother's love had faded with a mother's last breath on her cheek, moved about her in the twilight and were welcome company. The wedding-day came, and the wedding party went to the church. The bride was beautiful and stately and cold — cold towards her mother, cold to him to whom she was soon to plight her troth. Not from any feeling or sentiment of love was she marrying him, but marrying him because she needed some one to support her; marry- ing him to get rid of future torture from the maneuvers and machinations of her worldly-minded and unprinci- pled mother. Mr. Dombey was marrying Mrs. Granger from equally selfish reasons; her beauty, her accomplish- ments, might add to the glory of the Dombey name, — that was all, and each was suited. No joy-bells rang their peals for either one, but they were married. So, from that day forward, for better, for worse, for richer, for poorer, in sickness and in health, to love and to cherish till death do them part, they plight their troth to one another, and are married. The wedding journey was over and Mr. Dombey and bride came back to their elegantly furnished home, to par- ties and receptions, to Florence and Mrs. Skewton, to — mis- 196 DOMBEY AND SON. ery . Not a ray of happiness lighted the home for Mrs. Dom- bey but Florence, between whom and herself the strongest bonds of love grew — alas! no good omen for Florence. Mr. Dombey, soon feeling that the new wife scorned his authority and despised him, saw the daily affection be- tween his wife and daughter, and became intensely jealous. Word had reached England during the absence of, the newly-wedded pair that the ship in which Walter Gay had gone abroad on business for the firm of Dombey and Son was lost at sea and all on board had perished, and Florence was very sad, as both she and her brother Paul had become very much attached to Walter. When alone with her new mother she told her of this sorrow, because after Paul's death she had adopted Walter for a brother and would feel his loss keenly. She also told her that her father never was fond of her and she begged her to teach her how to win his love. " Florence, you do not know me ! Heaven forbid that you should learn from me ! .... If you could teach me, that were better; but it is too late. You are dear to me, Florence. I did not think that anything could ever be so dear to me as you are in this little time I will be your true friend always. I will cherish you as much, if not as well, as any one in this world could. You may trust in me — I know it and I say it, dear — with the whole confidence even of your pure heart." Mrs. Skewton entered into the festivities that followed Mr. and Mrs. Dombey's home-coming with all the eager- ness of her frivolous nature. Whether the excitement was too much for her, whether there might have been other influences mental or physical preying upon her, she DOMBEY AND SON. 197 did not say; but one day, in the midst of her preparation for gayety, a messenger came unannounced — paralysis — and Mrs. Skewton was laid aside, with mind and body both shattered. When Brighton was recommended for her health, Mr.Dombey,who indeed did appear to like the old lady, made immediate preparation for her removal to Brighton, hoping that she might gain strength, if not full recovery. She rallied, she seemed to be improving, but all favorable symptoms proved to be but temporary. Mrs. Skewton was to put aside all her attempts at deceit which she had practiced during her long life; she was to go where she would be known in her full character, and be rewarded for the deeds she had done in the body. She passed away suddenly, and was buried at Brighton, where the ceaseless noise of the waves is heard year in, year out, and where life in its gayety and in its misery meet and part, unnoted and unmentioned, upon the margin of the great sea. After the funeral Edith stood upon the seashore looking backward with sorrow through life as the old waves re- ceded, and forward with dread forebodings as the new ones came in to shore. Mrs. Dombey's dislike for Mr. Dombey ended in aversion and contempt. The barriers between her and her husband grew stronger each day. Of equal pride, both possessing indomitable wills, it was impossible that they could live together and be happy. Even the love that Mrs. Dombey had for Florence in time had to be repressed, not for the good of herself, for she cared nothing for her husband's pleasure, but for Florence's sake, as it was intimated to her that unless the intercourse between the two became less affectionate the young girl would be dealt with more harshly than ever. Mrs. Dom- 198 DOMBEY AND SON. bey did not tell her of having received this warning, but all the hopes that Florence ever entertained of winning her father's love through her mother were crushed. She felt soon the change in her new mother's manner, and the void in her heart over the loss of her companionship made the solitude of her home and of her life greater than before. Mr. Dombey had been married but two years, — two years of gilded misery for his wife, two years of domestic discord and unhappiness such as had never before been in the Dombey mansion, — when Mrs. Dombey, after a stormy scene with her husband in which Florence was present, decided to end her misery by a secret flight from home, her determination being never to return. Great was Mr. Dombey's consternation one morning to find that no traces of her could be found in his home nor among his friends. All the jewels that he had given her, all the ornaments and costly clothing that he had bestowed upon her, were found heaped together in her dressing-room. In Mr. Dombey's frenzy at the disgrace which would attach to his name and that of his wife, he lifted up his cruel arm and struck Florence when she went to him to offer sympathy and consolation. As she tottered and fell, he stung her more than ever by bidding her follow her mother, as they had been in league together ever since he had brought his wife home. Scarcely knowing what she did, she ran out of the house, and without a purpose to go anywhere in particular, wild with sorrow, shame, and terror, her feet guided her to the house of a humble friend, with whom she found shelter. Troubles did not come singly to Mr. Dombey. Wife and daughter both were gone, but what was of greater DOMBEY AND SON. 199 pride and importance to him, the great firm of Dombey and Son was tottering, and finally ended in bankruptcy. He would listen to no adviser, he stubbornly persisted in having his own way, and one morning the doors of his office and warehouses were closed, and the world received the news of his failure with astonishment. His furniture was in the hands of the auctioneer, and his servants, who had yielded to his tyrannical sway, bid off many a costly article that hitherto they had stood off and looked upon with admiring eyes. Mr. Dombey shut himself up in his room, refusing to see any one that he could avoid. Walter Gay, from whom no word had come since he had left England, and whom his friends gave up for lost, returned one day very unexpectedly. The boat in which he had set sail had been shipwrecked, and only he and two sailers were rescued. The only home he knew was in the house where Florence had sought refuge, and whither he went immediately. He and Florence had not been together long ere they felt that the feeling of friendship which they had had toward each other in the days gone by was growing into the deeper one of love ; and ere many days they were plighted lovers. As Walter had a position now that would require him in a few weeks to put out to sea again, it was decided that they should be married and that Florence should make the voyage with him. They were married without a father's or mother's benediction; but youth and hope and love were theirs, and they went to the great ship which, with its white wings spread out to catch a favoring breeze, was waiting to receive them. Upon the deck, image to the roughest man on board of something that is graceful, beautiful, and harmless, — something that it is good and pleasant to have there, and 200 DOMBEY AND SON. that should make the voyage prosperous, — is Florence. It is night, and she and Walter sit alone, watching the solemn path of light upon the sea between them and the moon. "As I hear the sea," says Florence, "and sit watching it it brings so many days into my mind. It makes me think so much" ■ "Of Paul, my love. I know it does." Of Paul and Walter. And the voices in the waves are always whispering to Florence, in their ceaseless mur- muring, of love — of love, eternal and illimitable, not bounded by the confines of this world, or by the end of time, but ranging still, beyond the sea, beyond the sky, to the invisible country far away! Mr. Dombey was alone in the great mansion which had been one of the prides of his proud life. Heretofore he had been the slave of his own greatness; now he was the slave of bitter, remorseful thoughts. He thought of his wife; he thought of one of his friends, who had proved to be a flattering villain; he thought of Paul, his dead son and heir, around whom all his proudest hopes had centered; he could not but think of Florence, — and now, too late, too late, he felt the injustice he had done her. As, one by one, they fell away before his mind — his baby hope, his wife, his friend, his fortune — oh how the mist through which he had seen her cleared, and showed him her true self ! Oh, how much better than this that he had loved her as he had his boy, and lost her as he had his boy, and laid them in their early grave together ! The proud man was crushed, was almost maddened. Each day he thought that to-morrow he would leave DOMBEY AND SON. 201 Oh say, God bless me and my little child!" 202 DOMBEY AND SON. the bare house, bereft of all its adornments and furniture, but when to-morrow came he could not tear himself away. Finally he decided that he could endure his misery no longer. 'T was the last day in the old house. Alone with his desperate thoughts, all at once he was startled by a cry — a wild, loud, piercing, loving, rapturous cry. It was Florence. She knelt at his side and was not repulsed. "Papa! Dearest papa! Pardon me, forgive me! I have come back to ask forgiveness on my knees. I never can be happy more without it I " Not a word of all his unkindness was spoken as a reproach to him, but as Florence plead for his love she spoke as if she were the offender. " Papa, love, I am a mother. I have a child who will soon call Walter by the name by which I call you. When it was born, and when I knew how much I loved it, I knew what I had done in leaving you. Forgive me, dear papa ! Oh say, God bless me and my little child ! . . . My little child was born at sea, papa. I prayed to God (and so did Walter for me) to spare me, that I might come home. The moment I could land, I came back to you. Never let us be parted any more, papa. Never let us be parted any more ! " Autumn days are in their glory, and on a certain sea- beach are often seen a young lady and a white-haired gentleman, always accompanied by a little girl and boy. The gentleman is devoted to the children. Sometimes he takes the tiny hand of the boy in his, and looks very dreamy and thoughtful, and the boy asks, — " What, grandpapa, am I so like my poor little uncle again?" DOMBEY AND SON. 203 "Yes, Paul. But he was weak, and you are very strong." " Oh yes, I am very strong." " And he lay on a little bed beside the sea, and you can run about." No one except Florence, the mother of the children, knows how much her father loves the little girl. He watches her every change and motion, and anticipates and ministers to her wants. He cannot bear to have her away from him. He even steals to her room and bends over her when she is asleep. He loves her always, but shows her most affection when no one is near. The child says then, sometimes, — " Dear grandpapa, why do you cry when you kiss me ? " He only answers, " Little Florence ! Little Florence ! " and smooths away the curls that shade her earnest eyes. And so Dombey and Son is indeed Dombey and daugh- ter after all. THE PICKWICK PAPERS. Principal Characters. Samuel Pickwick, General Manager and Member Pickwick Club (G. M. & M. P. C.) Tracy Tupman, Member Pickwick Club. Augustus Snodgrass, Member Pickwick Club. Nathaniel Winkle, Member Pickwick Club. Mr. Wardle, whose acquaintance the Members of the Pickwick Club make. Miss Eachael Wardle, Sister of Mr. Wardle. The Misses Isabella and Emily Wardle, Daughters of Mr. Wardle. Old Mrs. Wardle, the Deaf Lady, Mother of Mr. Wardle. Joe, the Fat Boy, Servant of Mr. Wardle. Mr. Alfred Jingle, an Ad/venturer whom the Corresponding Society of the Pickwick Club meet. Samuel Weller, Servant at the White Hart Inn, afterwards valet to Mr. Pickwick. Tony Weller, the elder Weller, Father of Samuel. Mrs. Bardell, at ivhose house Mr. Pickwick lodges. Mrs. Leo Hunter, the Lady of literary pretensions. Mr. Leo Hunter, Husband of Mrs. Leo Hunter. Dodson & Fogg, Lawyers in the suit of Bardell vs. Pickwick. Ben Allen, .} . Friends. Bob Sawyer, Miss Arabella Allen, Sister of Ben; weds Mr. Winkle. Mrs. Weller, Mother-in-law of Sam and one of the Shepherds. Mr. and Mrs. Trundle, Friends of Mr. Pickwick. 204 THE PICKWICK PAPERS. By Charles Dickens. Of the earlier history of the immortal Samuel Pick- wick but little is known. He was in the maturity of his powers before he appeared to the public in the transac- tions of the celebrated Pickwick Club, named in honor of him, which club it may be said, while conferring upon him this distinction, derived its character and fame mainly from having a man so eminently fitted for the position at its head. On one occasion, Mr. Pickwick distinguished himself above all other efforts in a paper which he read before the association, entitled, "Specula- tions on the Source of the Hampstead Ponds, with Some Observations on the Theory of Tittlebats," which was so warmly received that resolutions were passed expressing indorsement of it, and to Mr. Pickwick and three associates was given the authority to form a new branch of the United Pickwickians, under the title of "The Corresponding Society of the Pickwick Club." Among other things mentioned in these resolutions was one original to this particular club: "That this association cordially recognizes the principle of every member of the Corresponding Society defraying his own traveling ex- penses; and that it sees no objection whatever to the members of the said society pursuing their inquiries for any length of time they please, upon the same terms." Mr. Pickwick, General Chairman and Member Pick- 205 206 THE PICKWICK PAPERS. wick Club, and Tracy Tupman,- Augustus Snodgrass, and Nathaniel Winkle, named by the association to further its interests, started on their journey. It may be well to remark concerning Mr. Pickwick, that he was a man of a benevolent and philosophical turn of mind; that occa- sionally, if not frequently, he would utter truths which might almost be maxims, one of the most profound of which was that fame is dear to the heart of every man; that he had so many noble characteristics that he would be deserving of kindest remembrances by everyone who had the pleasure of knowing him; and that the reading public of to-day, notwithstanding a genera- tion has intervened between his time and ours, enjoy his society quite as much, perhaps, as did those who met regularly in his club to discuss questions wise and other- wise. We will also say of him that he was very simple- hearted and very credulous. Almost at the outset of their journey, Mr. Pickwick and his companions made the acquaintance of Mr. Alfred Jingle, a young gentle- man of peculiar appearance and garb, whose conversation could perhaps be best described by saying that it con- sisted largely of dashes allowed by grammarians, inter- spersed here and there with facts, or words which represented facts. The traveling party met with no remarkable adven- tures on their journey for a while, though there was enough each day to interest them and to keep their lives from becoming humdrum and monotonous. They met a lean man, and a fat man, and a very fat boy; a bony woman, and one who was her opposite; a dismal man, and a cheerful one; they met people who were very poor, and many who were very comfortable; they saw and did THE PICKWICK PAPERS. 207 things which were vastly amusing, Mr. Winkle perhaps, being so constituted, doing the most, unconsciously, to furnish amusement for others. He undertook to ride, and, instead, continued walking; he shot at a nest of rooks, but instead of killing the birds, almost succeeded in killing Mr. Tupman, one of his best friends. They stopped at Dingley Dell and became acquainted with the interesting family of Mr. Wardle; and here Mr. Tupman, being more susceptible, perhaps, to the charms of the gentler sex than the others, became deeply and truly in love with Miss Rachael, the spinster sister of Mr. Wardle. She had characteristics that distinguished her from any woman whom Mr. Tupman had ever before seen. Love has its own way of making itself known, and Mr. Tupman and Miss Rachael met one day in the garden, and the circumstances being favorable, he declared his love and admiration for her, which she coyly professed not to believe, saying softly, as she turned aside from his flatteries, — "Men are such deceivers." Mr. Tupman agreed with her, but was not disheartened at the remark. "Oh, Rachael! say you love me." "Mr. Tupman," she answered, with averted head, "I can hardly speak the words; but — but — you are not wholly indifferent to me." Mr. Jingle was also in the neighborhood of Dingley Dell and became acquainted with the Wardles. If Mr. Tupman valued Miss Rachael for her personal charms, Mr. Jingle learned to have regard for her from a mone- tary standpoint, as it was told him that she had certain values in that direction of which he was certainly 208 THE PICKWICK PAPERS. destitute. Under the guise of friendship for Tupman, and w^ith professions that he was furthering his interests with Miss Rachael, he played false, and gaining her too credulous ear, he accused her lover of entertaining mercenary motives, and inspired her with jealousy, and then offered her his own devotion. He became her accepted lover; and, fearing opposition from Mr. Wardle, her brother, and Miss Rachael's aged mother, Mr. Jingle planned an elopement, and, less than a week afterwards, one evening when supper was called, it was found that Mr. Jingle and Miss Rachael were missing. Mr. Wardle and Mr. Pickwick started in pursuit without delay, and were soon following in the track of the lovers. If their flight was fast, Mr. Wardle's pursuit was fleet, and he might have overtaken them had it not been that when he was not more than a hundred yards behind them, the wheel of his chaise came off, and he and Mr. Pickwick were thrown unceremoniously to the ground. Mr. Jingle pulled up his chaise as soon as he saw that he and Miss Rachael were in no further danger. "Hello!" shouted the shameless Jingle; "anybody damaged! — elderly gentlemen — no light weights — dan- gerous work — very. . . '. . — drive on, boys." His pursuers readjusted themselves, and after sending off one of their boys for a fresh chaise and horses, set manfully on the walk. The chaise which contained Mr. Jingle and Miss Rachael stopped in front of the White Hart Inn, London, and the expectant bridegroom lost no time in securing his marriage license. "License, dearest of angels — give notice at the church — call you mine to-morrow," — said Mr. Jingle. THE PICKWICK PAPERS. 209 ***** "Can't — can't we be married before to-morrow morn- ing?" inquired Rachael. "Impossible — can't be — notice at the church — leave the license to-day — ceremony come off to-morrow." " I am so terrified, lest my brother should discover us ! " said Rachael. " Discover — nonsense — too much shaken by the break- down — besides — extreme caution — gave up the post- chaise — walked on — took a hackney-coach — came to the Borough — last place in the world that he 'd look in — ha ! ha ! — capital notion that — very." Mr. Jingle had his license, and was arranging the preliminaries of the wedding, when another party came to the White Hart on a matter of business connected with him and Miss Rachael. Mr. Samuel Weller, boot- black and servant-in-waiting to the inn, a wag and a man of pronounced characteristics and peculiar form of expressing himself that was apropos to the subject in hand, was polishing a pair of boots, when the party, con- sisting of two plump gentlemen and a thin one, entered the yard and made some inquiries of him. "Pretty busy, eh?" said the little man. "Oh, werry well, sir," replied Sam, "we sha'n't be bankrupts, and we sha'n't make our fort'n's. We eats our biled mutton without capers, and don't care for horse-radish wen ve can get beef." "Ah, said the little man, "you're a wag, ain't you?" "My eldest brother was troubled with that complaint," said Sam; "it may be catching — I used to sleep with him." The little man was a lawyer whom Mr. Wardle (for 14 210 THE PICKWICK PAPERS. one of the fat men answered to his name) had engaged to settle matters, but with all his acumen Samuel Weller baffled him. Mr. Pickwick (for he was the third of the party) suggested that half a guinea might bring Mr. Weller to answer all the questions directly that were put to him. The little man objected. "Ah, Pickwick — really, Mr. Pickwick, my dear sir, excuse me — I shall be happy to receive any private sug- gestions of yours, as amicus curiae, but you must see the impropriety of your interfering with my conduct in this case, with such an ad captandum argument as the offer of half a guinea. Really, my dear sir, really," and the little man took an argumentative pinch of snuff, and looked very profound. By much questioning, Mr. Wardle found that Miss Rachael and Mr. Jingle were in the inn, and the irate brother and his friends walked unannounced into the room where they were, just as Mr. Jingle was showing the lady their license. Seeing the men, the possessor of it crum- pled up that precious paper and thrust it into his coat- pocket. Mr. Wardle was indignant. No one can say to what his feelings might have led him, had it not been for the presence of his legal friend. The lady in the case, after a fainting spell, refused positively to go back with her brother. As she was of age, — her brother declaring that she was fifty if she was an hour, — no force could be employed. The lawyer suggested a compromise, and the gentlemen withdrew to arrange it. On learning that Rachael had but a few hundred pounds till the death of her mother, who bade fair to last many years, the compro- mise for all that Mr. Jingle would lose by losing her was ended by the little man's handing the young man a THE PICKWICK PAPERS. ■ 211 check for one hundred and twenty pounds. Mr. Jingle, being that much ahead, made himself off in no unhappy mood. Slowly and sadly did the two friends and the deserted lady return next day in the Muggleton heavy coach. Dimly and darkly had the somber shadows of a sum- mer's night fallen upon all around, when they again reached Dingley Dell, and stood within the entrance to Manor Farm. Mr. Tupman could not bear his disap- pointment, and had left for another place while Mr. Pickwick was absent; learning which on his return, he advised with his two companions, and they decided to leave the hospitable home immediately. They journeyed to Rochester; after dining there and procuring the necessary information relative to the road, the three friends started on their way to Cobham. Having arrived there, they were directed to the Leather Bottle, a village ale-house, and were shown into a room where sat Mr. Tupman, evidently enjoying the dinner which he had ordered. It was while here in this neighborhood that our distinguished friend made a discovery, of which his friends have never ceased to boast. He came upon a stone which, to him, bore a strange inscription, and he purchased it of a cottager near whose door he found it. The stone was uneven and broken, and the letters were straggling and irregular, but the following fragment of an inscription was clearly to be deciphered: — + BILST UM PSHI S.M. ARK 212 THE PICKWICK PAPERS. Mr. Pickwick was delighted, and he exulted over his treasure. He had attained one of the greatest objects of his ambition. Here was something which would bring joy to the heart of any antiquarian, and he, the chair- man of the Pickwick Club, had discovered and secured the treasure. He and his admiring followers returned immediately to London, Mr. Pickwick, usually so quiet and serene, having become very nervous and excited. It appears from the Transactions of the Club, then, that Mr. Pickwick lectured upon the discovery at a general club meeting, convened on the night succeeding their return, and entered into a variety of ingenious and erudite speculations on the meaning of the inscrip- tion; that heart-burnings and jealousies without number were created by rival controversies, which were penned upon the subject; and that Mr. Pickwick was elected an honorary member of seventeen native and foreign soci- eties for making the discovery. There was one man, who, with a mean desire to tarnish the luster of the immortal name of Pickwick, actually undertook a journey to Cobham in person, and on his return, sarcastically observed in an oration at the club, that he had seen the man from whom the stone was purchased; that the man presumed the stone to be an- cient, but solemnly denied the antiquity of the inscrip- tion — inasmuch as he represented it to have been rudely carved by himself in an idle mood, and to display letters intended to bear neither more nor less than the simple construction of "Bill Stumps, his mark." In- stead of its tarnishing the name of Pickwick, however, the club signified their confidence in Mr. Pickwick, and their approbation of his opinion, by voting him a pair THE PICKWICK PAPERS. 213 of gold spectacles, while the offending member was ejected from the club. Mr. Pickwick took apartments at Mrs. Bard ell's, in Gos- well Street, the lady being a widow with but one child, a small boy, who spent most of his time in the neighboring pavements and gutters. It was in Mrs. Bard ell's house that Mr. Pickwick brought on a scene most unexpected, and not consistent at all with his character. He and Mrs. Bar- She had fainted in Mr. Pickwick's arms.' dell were alone, when he astonished her by asking, " Do you think it 's a much greater expense to keep two people, than to keep one?" Mrs. Bardell misunderstood the question, or rather, understood it in a way which she would have favored; and, imagining that she saw a matrimonial twinkle in Mr. Pickwick's eyes, she replied, "La, Mr. Pickwick, what a question ! " 214 THE PICKWICK PAPERS. Mr. Pickwick was not one who was lucid in making statements, and what he further said mystified Mrs. Bardell so much that she understood him as making her an offer of marriage. She became very demonstrative in her affection for him^-so much so indeed that, when Master Bardell returned, ushering in Mr. Tupman, Mr. Winkle, and Mr. Snodgrass, she had fainted in Mr. Pick- wick's arms. When Mrs. Bardell had recovered, and had been led downstairs, Mr. Pickwick explained that he had merely intended to announce to her his inten- tion of keeping a man servant, whereupon she had fallen into the extraordinary paroxysm in which they had found her. Perhaps Mr. Pickwick had seen some latent good qualities in Mr. Samuel Weller during his brief sojourn at the White Hart, for he had decided to secure the services of this gentleman, if possible, and attach him to himself and his companions in travel. He had, previous to his question of Mrs. Bardell, sent for Samuel to come and see him, and the latter was now waiting below stairs for him. The terms being satisfactory to all concerned, Samuel was engaged and became identified with the great club by having his gray coat ornamented with the "P. C." button, and taking orders from the chairman of the P. C. Mr. Pickwick took a great interest in politics; and when he again pursued his journey he watched the contest that was taking place between the candidates for Parliament in the opposing parties, the Buffs and the Blues, in Eatanswill. It would be superfluous to say that his man Samuel could tell him of many ways in which votes were made or lost by those acquainted with the THE PICKWICK PAPERS. 215 trickery of politics, of all of which Mr. Pickwick, being an honorable and upright gentleman, was supremely ignorant. Very extraordinary statements did Samuel make, all of which Mr. Pickwick, being the soul of truthfulness himself, believed without a doubt. So great a man as Mr. Pickwick could not remain in obscurity in Eatanswill. Sam one morning handed him a card upon which was engraved, "Mrs. Leo Hunter," stating that a gentleman was waiting for him in the drawing-room. When Mr. Pickwick descended, the gentleman greeted him with profound respect. " We have heard of your fame, sir. The noise of your antiquarian discussion has reached the ears of Mrs. Leo Hunter — my wife, sir; Jam Mr. Leo Hunter" — the stranger paused, as if he expected that Mr. Pickwick would be overcome by the disclosure; but seeing that he remained perfectly calm, he proceeded to tell him of what a remarkable woman Mrs. Hunter was, stating that all of her acquaintances were people distinguished, that she doted on and wrote poetry, and that she desired the honor of Mr. Pickwick's company the fol- lowing morning to a fancy-dress breakfast, given to some who had made themselves celebrated by their works and talents. Mr. Pickwick went to the breakfast in the clothes he looked upon as suitable for a man of his age and stand- ing, but his companions were attired in clothes supposed to resemble those worn by the characters whom they represented. Our distinguished friend was interested and entertained by the hostess and her guests, and noth- ing seemed wanting to make the party complete, when Mr. Hunter called out, "My dear, here's Mr. Charles 216 THE PICKWICK PAPERS. Fitz-Marshall." Mrs. Hunter was delighted, and asked that room might be made to allow Mr. Fitz-Marshall to pass. "Coming, my dear ma'am," cried a voice, "as quick as I can — crowds of people — full room — hard work — very." Mr. Pickwick was astonished, and stared at Mr. Tup- man, who was as much astonished as Mr. Pickwick. "Ah!" cried the voice, as its owner pushed his way among the last five-and-twenty Turks, officers, cavaliers, and Charles the Seconds that remained between him and the table, "regular mangle — Baker's patent — not a crease in my coat, after all this squeezing — might have 'got up my linen,' as I came along — ha! ha! not a bad idea, that — queer thing to have it mangled when it 's upon one, though — trying process — very." With these broken words, a young man dressed as a naval officer made his way up to the table, and presented to the astonished Pickwickians the identical form and features of Mr. Alfred Jingle. The offender had barely time to take Mrs. Leo Hunter's proffered hand, when his eyes encountered the indignant orbs of Mr. Pickwick. " Hallo ! " said Jingle. " Quite forgot — no directions to postilion — give 'em at once — back in a minute," and he disappeared. "Will you allow me to ask you, ma'am," said the excited Mr. Pickwick, rising from his seat, "who that young man is, and where he resides ? " "At Bury St. Edmonds, not many miles from here. But dear me, Mr. Pickwick, you are not going to leave THE PICKWICK PAPEKS. 217 us; surely, Mr. Pickwick, you cannot think of going so soon." But Mr. Pickwick could not be detained, and he and Sam, perched on the outside of a stage-coach, were soon in pursuit of Alfred Jingle. The long ride afforded a good opportunity for conversation. "I worn't always a boots, sir," said Mr. Weller, with a shake of the head. "I wos a waginer's boy once . . . when I was first pitched neck and crop into the world to play at leap-frog with its troubles. ... I was a carrier's boy at startin': then a waginer's, then a helper, then a boots. Now I'm a genTm'n's servant. I shall be a gen'l'm'n myself one of these days, perhaps, with a pipe in my mouth, and a summer-house in the back garden. Who knows? I shouldn't be surprised, for one. . . . Afore I took up with the waginer, I had unfurnished lodgin's for a fort- night. . . . Yes — the dry arches of Waterloo Bridge. Fine sleeping-place — within ten minutes' walk of all the public offices — only if there is any objection to it, it is that the sitivation 's rayther too airy. I see some queer sights there. . . . Young beggars, male and female, as hasn't made a rise in their profession, takes up their quarters there sometimes; but it's generally the worn- out, starving, houseless creeturs as rolls themselves in the dark corners o' them lonesome places — poor creeturs as ain't up to the twopenny rope. . . . Wen the lady and gen'l'm'n as keeps the Hot-el first begun business, they used to make the beds on the floor; but this wouldn't do at no price, 'cos instead o' taking a moderate twopenn'orth o' sleep, the lodgers used to lie there half the day. So now they has two ropes, 'bout six foot apart, and three from the floor, which goes right down the 218 THE PICKWICK PAPERS. room; and the beds are made of slips of coarse sacking, stretched across 'em. . . At six o'clock every mornin', they lets go the ropes at one end, and down falls all the lodgers. 'Consequence is, that being thoroughly waked, they get up wery quietly, and walk away! Beg you, pardon, sir," said Sam, suddenly breaking off in his loquacious discourse. " Is this Bury St. Edmonds ? " Mr. Pickwick failed to meet Mr, Jingle, who wisely eluded him. On his return to his friends, he found a letter informing him that Mrs. Bardell had commenced action against him for breach of promise, laying her damages at fifteen hundred pounds. He was astonished ; his friends were dumbfounded. There was no escaping the law, and Mr. Pickwick ordered Sam to secure two places on the coach going to London. Arriving in the city, Mr. Pickwick went immediately to the office of Messrs. Dodson and Fogg, Mrs. Bardell's attorneys, and inquired for those gentlemen. Dodson was not in his office and Fogg was engaged. He waited in the office till Mr. Fogg was disengaged and he could see him. Accord- ingly, when that gentleman sent for him, Mr. Pickwick went up stairs, leaving Sam below. Mr. Dodson soon returned to the office, and Mr. Pickwick had to face both of them. Mr. Pickwick was indignant and excited and used plain language, none of which was lost by Dodson and Fogg and their obliging clerks. Mr. Pickwick's wrath might have led him into more difficulty, but at a critical moment Sam mounted the stairs, and seized his master by the arm. " You just come avay," said Mr. Weller. " Battledoor and shuttlecock's a wery good game, vhen you ain't the shuttlecock and two lawyers the battled oors, in wich case THE PICKWICK PAPERS. 219 it gets too excitin' to be pleasant. Come avay, sir. If you want to ease your mind by blowing up somebody, come out into the court and blow up me; but it's rayther too expensive work to be carried on here." Mr. Pickwick and his valet stopped at a public place on their way to see Mr. Perker, the little lawyer with whom Mr. Pickwick had made acquaintance in the affair of Jingle and Miss Wardle, to secure his services, and unexpectedly met Mr. Weller, Senior. Mr. Pickwick could not but be impressed with one remark among many which the old gentleman made to his son in answer to questions about home and Sam's second mother. " I 've done it once too often, Sammy ; I 've done it once too often. Take example by your father, my boy, and be wery careful o' widders all your life, specially if they 've kept a public-house, Sammy." Mr. Pickwick, before the suit of Bardell vs. Pickwick came off, met with experiences peculiar to himself — experiences which one acquainted with the ways of the world would have avoided. Sam was very wise when he said to his master, — "You rayther want somebody to look arter you, sir, wen your judgment goes out a-wisitin'." Mr. Pickwick was joined by his three Pickwickian friends, ere he reached London to make arrangements to meet the proceedings of the suit against him. Sam's services were invaluable. He saw through the sharp practices of Dodson and Fogg, and prepared his master for them. An interview with Mr. Perker, next day, more than confirmed Mr. Weller's statement; and Mr. Pick- wick was fain to prepare for his Christmas visit to 220 THE PICKWICK PAPERS. Dingley Dell, with the pleasant anticipation that some two or three months afterwards, an action brought against him for damages sustained by reason of a breach of promise of marriage would be publicly tried in the Court of Common Pleas. The Pickwickians went to Dingley Dell; Mr. Weller, on leave of absence, visited his father on Christmas, anxious to atone for all past remissness. There was no dread of the law immediately before them, — that was several weeks in the future, — and each party gave itself up to Christmas cheer and merriment. But time moves on, and so do lawsuits, dreary though they be. The day had arrived for Mr. Pickwick's. He and Mr. Perker sat talking over the case. "Ten minutes past nine!" said the little man, looking at his watch. " Time we were off, my dear sir. . . . You had better ring for a coach, my dear sir, or we shall be rather late." Mr. Pickwick called for a coach, and he and Mr. Perker and the three Pickwickians and Sam were soon on the way to Guildhall. At the hour appointed, "Bardell and Pickwick" was called. The usual forms in law cases were observed. There were witnesses for and against both plaintiff and defend- ant; there were more against than for Mr. Pickwick, as the circumstances in which even his friends had found him with Mrs. Bardell that memorable day were surely against him; and Mr. Pickwick was found guilty. The jury, being merciful in amount of damages, put it down at just half the sum for which she had sued. Speechless with indignation, Mr. Pickwick allowed himself to be led by his solicitor and friends to the door, and there assisted into a hackney-coach which had been fetched for the purpose by the ever- watchful Sam "Weller, Sam had THE PICKWICK PAPERS. 221 put up the steps, and was preparing to jump upon the box, when he felt a gentle touch upon his shoulder. There stood his father, who said, in warning accents, " I know'd what 'ud come o' this here mode o' doin' bisness. Oh, Sammy, Sammy, vy worn't there a alleybi ! " Mr. Pickwick declared that he would not pay the costs, and when told by Mr. Perker that the next term of court would not be for two months, he determined to enjoy himself until the opposing party in the suit would begin the legal process of execution against him. He and his friends decided that they would go to Bath for recreation and improvement, and went accordingly. On the way thither the Pickwickian party met with nothing remark- able, though, according to their chairman's custom, they entered into conversation with whomsoever they had opportunity, and in this way had fine chances of advanc- ing in character study. As the chairman contemplated remaining for at least two months at Bath, he made arrangements to that effect, and began taking the waters systematically, drinking a quarter of a pint before break- fast and a like measure afterwards; and after every fresh quarter of a pint, Mr. Pickwick declared, in the most solemn and emphatic terms, that he felt a great deal better: whereat his friends were very much delighted, though they had not been previously aware that there was anything the matter with him. After they had been there several days, one John Smauker asked of Sam, "Have you drank the waters, Mr. Weller?" Sam replied that he had, once. "What did you think of 'em, sir?" "I thought they wos particklery unpleasant," replied Sam. 222 THE PICKWICK PAPERS. "Ah," said Mr. John Smauker, "you disliked the killi- beate taste, perhaps ? " "I don't know much about that 'ere," said Sam. "I thought they 'd a wery strong flavor o' warm flat-irons." "That is the killibeate, Mr. Weller," observed Mr. John Smauker, contemptuously. At Bath Mr. Winkle fell in love, the lady being Miss Arabella Allen, and the course of his love did not flow smoothly for either party concerned. There were numerous hindrances, and Mr. Winkle was almost desperate. Mr. Pickwick, who saw what was going on, took Sam into his confidence relative to the affair, and the latter had a stolen interview with the young lady and presented to her the desperate condi- tion of Mr. Winkle in such language that she was con- vinced something must be done to help him, and she gave him to understand that possibly she might be in the garden next evening. When Sam reported to Mr. Pick- wick, this gentleman declared that he would be a party to the interview on the following day. He made all needful preparations, and in addition provided himself with a dark lantern, which he expected to be of great service to them. Miss Allen's servant, Mary, drew near; soon after, the footsteps of the lady herself were heard. It was just then that the dark lantern very nearly exposed the whole party, but its owner finally succeeded in closing it. Mr. Pickwick decided that his age and experience entitled him to address the young lady first. Sam bent his body and Mr. Pickwick mounted it, and with Mr. Winkle's assistance, Mr. Pickwick, holding on to the top of the wall, contrived to bring his spectacles just above the level of the coping. He addressed Miss Arabella pater- THE PICKWICK PAPERS. 223 nally and tenderly, which affected her to tears. The inter- view might have been indefinitely long had not Mr. Pick- wick made a false step on Sam's shoulder, which brought him suddenly to the ground. He left the rest of the inter- view to Mr. Winkle and Sam, and he went out into the lane to keep watch. Had he left the lantern at home, had he never bought it, all might have gone well; but in adjusting it a powerful light was thrown through the air, and a scientific gentleman, who was pursuing his investigations, happened to see it. He saw the light several times, and, thinking it was some wonderful elec- trical display, started out to investigate. The consequence was the precipitate flight of Mr. Pickwick and those who were talking over the garden wall. The two months were up, and the Pickwick party left Bath for London. They obtained comfortable quarters, and were calmly waiting for what was before them. One morning Mr. Pickwick was fast asleep in bed, when he was roused by Sam and a visitor entering his room. The latter told him that he had got an execution against him, at the suit of Bardell, and he must go with him. He threw his card on the table, and it bore the name of the sheriff's deputy. Mr. Pickwick, by reason of his own act — his obstinacy in refusing to settle with Fogg and Dod- son, was in the debtor's prison — Mr. Pickwick the re- nowned, the philanthropic, — and he philosophically sub- mitted to the unavoidable, and quietly made an inven- tory of his surroundings and fellow prisoners. Among the latter he recognized Alfred Jingle and his servant in more prosperous days, Job Trotter. Samuel Weller was true to his master; he was sympathetic; he was strategic. He could not bear the thought that Mr. Pick- 224 THE PICKWICK PAPERS. wick should be left in the prison without him. He sought his father, and stated the case. Mr. Weller, Senior, grasped the situation. "He goes in rayther raw, Sammy," said Mr. Weller metaphorically, "and he'll come out done so ex-ceedin' brown that his most formiliar friends won't know him. Roast pigeon's nothin' to it, Sammy." Father and son studied how to aid the prisoner, and soon devised a plan. Sam was to borrow twenty-five pounds of his father, and was to refuse payment when asked for it. He was to be arrested and thrown into prison till the payment of said debt, which it was agreed would not be till Mr. Pickwick had paid the one for which he was imprisoned. Sam hoped that his father would not be long out of possession of his money. Mr. Pickwick was surprised to see Sam return to the prison; he was surprised to hear that he was a prisoner for debt; and he was very much surprised to hear him say, "Yes, for debt, sir; and the man as put me in 'ull never let me out till you go yourself." He was touched also very deeply by this evidence of Sam's attachment to him, in voluntarily placing himself in a debtor's prison for an indefinite period. He pondered the subject long and well, but he had said that he would stay in the prison and he adhered to his determination, and for three long months he remained shut up all day, only going out at night to breathe the air and look upon the sky above him. His health was suffering from his close confinement, but he would take no advice from either his lawyer or his friends. But the case of Bardell and Pickwick was to assume a new phase. After the trial, Dodson and Fogg, sharp THE PICKWICK PAPERS. 225 practitioners that they were, had obtained from Mrs. Bardell a cognovit for the amount of the costs, only as a matter of form, to be sure, and Mr. Pickwick choosing rather to suffer imprisonment than come to a settlement, they had secured an execution on cognovit against Mrs. Bardell, and she, very unexpectedly, was a prisoner as well as Mr. Pickwick. Sam Weller, acute and long-sighted Sam, saw release ahead for Mr. Pickwick, and sent immediately for Mr. Perker. On entering the prison, the latter received a look of intelligence from Sam, to intimate to him that he was not to tell his master that he had been sent for, which Mr. Perker wisely acted on. Sam withdrew from the room, and Mr. Perker proceeded. He told his client that no one could rescue Mrs. Bardell from prison but himself, and that this could only be done by paying the costs of both plaintiff and defendant; and further, that Mrs. Bardell had voluntarily signified to him that she would never have brought about the suit had not Dodson and Fogg fomented and encouraged it. The lawyer appealed to Mr. Pickwick with all the eloquence he could master, trying to show him that for a very small amount, only one hundred and fifty pounds, he himself, his faithful servant, and Mrs. Bardell could all be free and restored to their former healthy pursuits and amusements. He finished by saying, " I wait here most patiently for your answer." What Mr. Pickwick would have done, will never be known, as just at this moment Sam returned, bringing in Mr. Winkle and Miss Arabella, or, as Mr. Winkle, drop- ping on his knees, said, "Mrs. Winkle. Pardon, my dear friend, pardon!" Before the young bride had left the room she had done what all others had failed to do — 15 226 THE PICKWICK PAPERS. Mr. Pickwick was argued out of all previous determina- tions to remain where he was, and he actually told his friends that they might do with him as they pleased. At three o'clock that afternoon, Mr. Pickwick took a last look at his little room, and made his way, as well as he could, through the throng of debtors who pressed eagerly forward to shake him by the hand, until he reached the lodge steps. Alas! how many sad and unhappy beings had he left behind ! We might tell of the journey that Mr. Pickwick and Samuel Weller made the next day to the house of Mr. Ben Allen, Arabella's only brother, to reconcile him to her marriage to Mr. Winkle, and of his success; of how he and Mr. Allen, attended by Robert Sawyer, who had, from his earliest years, had aspirations for Arabella's hand, undertook to go to Birmingham to confer with Mr. Winkle, Senior, in regard to his son's marriage and settle- ment, and whose conference with that gentleman was not at all satisfactory; we might tell of the long, dreary ride back to London, and of how on the way Mr. Pickwick met friends whose company he had enjoyed but a few months before, as well as others who were strangers to him, and that almost as soon as, or very soon after, Mr. Pickwick and Sam settled down in rooms, and were making them- selves comfortable, old Mr. Wardle visited them and told of the little love affair between Mr. Snodgrass and his own daughter, Emily; and we might tell how Arabella Winkle was one day surprised by a call from a little, old, business-like man who very much mystified and embarrassed her, and who proved to be her father- in-law, and who received her and her husband back into favor. If we would tell all this, it would be the truth, THE PICKWICK PAPERS. 227 and yet not half that might be told of the Pickwickians; but we can tell best all that remains to be told of Mr. Pickwick and his friends in the language of the immortal chronicler of the Pickwick Club: — "For a whole week after the happy arrival of Mr. Winkle from Birmingham, Mr. Pickwick and Sam Wel- ler were from home all day long, only returning just in time for dinner, and then wearing an air of mystery and importance quite foreign to their natures. It was evident that very grave and eventful proceedings were on foot; but various surmises were afloat, respecting their precise character. ... At length, when the brains of the whole party had been racked, for six long days, by unavailing speculation, it was unanimously resolved that Mr. Pick- wick should be called upon to explain his conduct. . . . With this view, Mr. Wardle invited the full circle to dinner; . . . and the decanters having been twice sent round, opened the business. "'We are all anxious to know/ said the old gentleman, ' what we have done to offend you, and to induce you to desert us and devote yourself to these solitary walks.' "'Are you?' said Mr. Pickwick. 'It is singular enough that I had intended to volunteer a full explanation this very day. . . All the changes that have taken place among us . . . rendered it necessary for me to think, soberly and at once, upon my future plans. I determined on retiring to some quiet, pretty neighborhood, in the vicinity of London ; I saw a house which exactly suited my fancy. ... It is fully prepared for my reception, and I intend entering upon it at once, trusting that I may yet live to spend many quiet years in peaceful retirement, cheered through life by the society of my friends, and followed in 228 THE PICKWICK PAPERS. death by their affectionate remembrance. . . . Sam accompanies me there. . . . I have communicated, both personally and by letter, with the club, acquainting them with my intention. During our long absence, it has suffered much from internal dissensions; and the with- drawal of my name, coupled with this and other circumstances, has occasioned its dissolution. The Pick- wick Club exists no longer. ... I shall never regret having devoted the greater part of two years to mixing with different varieties and shades of human character, frivolous as my pursuit of novelty may have appeared to many. Nearly the whole of my previous life having been devoted to business and the pursuit of wealth, numerous scenes of which I had no previous conception have dawned upon me — I hope to the enlargement of my mind, and the improvement of my understanding. If I have done but little good, I trust I have done less harm, and that none of my adventures will be other than a source of amusing and pleasant recollection to me in the decline of life. God bless you all.' "Let us leave our old friend in one of those moments of unmixed happiness, of which, if we seek them, there are ever some, to cheer our transitory existence here. There are dark shadows on the earth, but its lights are stronger in the contrast." BLEAK HOUSE. Principal Characters. Esther, The Heroine. Miss Barbary, Godmother to Esther. Mrs. Rachael, their Servant. Mr. Jarndyce, Esther's Guardian. Kenge and Carboy, Solicitors for Mr. Jarndyce. Miss Ada Clare, bosom Friend of Esther, afterward Mrs. Richard Carstone. Sir Leicester Dedlock. Lady Dedlock. Mr. Tulkinghorn, their Solicitor. Richard Carstone, interested in the case of Jarndyce vs. Jarndyce. 230 BLEAK HOUSE By Charles Dickens. ESTHER SUMMERSON S STORY. There was a mystery connected with my birth which gave me many an hour of anxious thought, when, as a little girl in my godmother's house, I wondered often who my father was, who my mother could have been (that was, supposing I had ever had a father and mother, which I thought probable), where I had come from, and who I really was. I pondered these questions, but they were unanswered for many a year. I was brought up in the country by my godmother, — at least I only knew her as such while she lived. She was a good woman; I knew that, because she was such a strict church-goer. She never missed any of the services when she was able to leave the house. This impressed itself indelibly on my mind. I longed to be as good as godmother, but, try as hard as I would, I never felt satisfied. She was so very good that I thought the badness of other people made her frown all her life. I was in such a habit of contrasting her goodness with my own imperfections, that I think that must have been why we were never drawn more closely to each other than we were. I repeat, I think that must have been the reason, as my childish mind could think of no other. Our only servant, Mrs. Rachael, was almost as reserved as godmother, if not more so, and I could not go to her 231 232 BLEAK HOUSE. with questions about myself any more easily than to god- mother. I seemed to be a child set apart from all other children — indeed, from everything but my darling doll — by the very goodness of my grave guardian, who, I really thought, would have been as beautiful as an angel if she only sometimes would have smiled. My birthdays were the most melancholy days in the whole year. I can never forget one that I spent in my early home. Dinner was over, and godmother and I were sitting alone before the fire. She looked at me so sadly and with such earnestness that I could refrain no longer, and cried: "0, dear godmother, tell me, pray do tell me, did mamma die on my birthday ? . . . 0, do pray tell me something of her. . . . Why am I so different from other children, and why is it my fault?" I was so excited, I was so intensely in earnest, that I knelt before her and begged for an answer. She raised me, stood me before her and said, coldly, and in a low voice which sounded in my ears for many a year: — "Your mother, Esther, is your disgrace, and you were hers. The time will come — and soon enough — when you will understand this better, and will feel it too, as no one save a woman can. I have forgiven her," she added, "the wrong she did to me, and I say no more of it, though it was greater than you will ever know — than anyone will ever know, but I, the sufferer. . . . Forget your mother, and leave all other people to forget her who will do her unhappy child that greatest kindness." I felt almost frozen by what she said, and started to leave the room, when she added : " Submission, self-denial, diligent work, are the preparations for a life begun with such a shadow on it. You are different from other chil- BLEAK HOUSE. 233 dren, Esther, because you were not born, like them, in common sinfulness and wrath. You are set apart." I went to bed with my doll hugged tightly to my breast, and cried myself to sleep. It was so terrible to me to think that at no time had I ever brought joy to anyone's heart. After that night I felt the distance between my godmother and myself more than ever. One afternoon when I came home from school, I found a stranger — a J %'Wf/ •r- g# jpi "For when I was introduced to him, he put on his glasses, to see me the better." large, important-looking gentleman — in our parlor, and evidently I was in some way concerned in his visit; for when I was introduced to him, he put on his glasses, to see me the better, I thought, and said, "Come here, my dear! " and said, "Ah! " and "Yes! " when I obeyed him; and when he was through with his scrutiny, he looked at godmother with a peculiar nod, upon which she told 234 BLEAK HOUSE. me that I might now go upstairs. Two years afterwards, godmother died very suddenly, and on the day after her funeral this same gentleman appeared. "My name is Kenge," he said; "you may remember it, my child; Kenge and Carboy, Lincoln's Inn." From what he said to Mrs. Rachael I learned that my godmother, whom he spoke of as Miss Barbary, was also my aunt, and I exclaimed, — "My aunt, sir!" "It really is of no use carrying on a deception, when no object is to be gained by it," said Mr. Kenge, smoothly. "Aunt in fact, though not in law. Don't distress your- self ! Don't weep ! Don't tremble ! Mrs. Rachael, our young friend has no doubt heard of — the — a — Jarndyce and Jarndyce." He was amazed to find me utterly ignorant that there was such a wonder in existence as the great Chancery Court, in which the suit of Jarndyce and Jarndyce had lain for years. It took a great many words, and to me unmeaning ones, to tell me what Mr. Kenge wanted of me. He finally told me that a Mr. Jarndyce, whom he represented as a very humane, though at the same time a very singular, man, had for some reason offered to put me in a first-rate school, where, while I would be receiv- ing a good education, I would also have every comfort and attention that I needed; and all the restrictions that were imposed were, that I would not leave the school at any time without first notifying him, and that I would study diligently, as I should ultimately be dependent on my own exertions. All the arrangements being completed, one week from that day I left the only home I had ever known for BLEAK HOUSE. 235 Greenleaf, the boarding-school kept by the two Misses Donny, twin sisters. One of the sisters met me when the coach which carried me to them stopped at its destination, and I was put into her carriage and borne away. "Everything is ready for you, Esther," said Miss Donny; " and the scheme of your pursuits has been arranged in exact accordance with the wishes of your guardian, Mr. Jamdyce." I was quite bewildered, and asked Miss Donny if she was acquainted with Mr. Jarndyce, and was told that there was no personal acquaintance, and that she knew of him only through his solicitors, Messrs. Kenge and Carboy, of London. What a sweet, lovely life I lived for the next six years ! Every birthday, even, was a gladsome day, and brought to me many tokens of affectionate remembrance, and on none of them was I ever told that it would have been better for me never to have been born. I remained in school till I was twenty years old. One dreary November morning (and yet no morning had real dreariness in it for me), I was surprised to learn through Kenge and Carboy that my guardian, whom I did not know, was about to receive into his house, under an order from the Court of Chancery, a ward of the Court in the case of Jarndyce and Jarndyce, and desired my services as her companion, and asked that I meet a messenger whom they would appoint, on the following Monday morning. As it was my guardian's wish, and there were but five days left me with the Misses Donny and my darling school compan- ions, every one of whom I loved on account of her endear- ing qualities, there was so much to be seen to and done that the morning when I was to leave it all came before 236 BLEAK HOUSE. any of us were ready for it. I went out from Greenleaf with blessings on my head and future life from all who had known me. On reaching London, I was told that I was to go before the Lord Chancellor — for what, I could not im- agine. On meeting Mr. Kenge, he took me into a room near the court room, where standing before a great roaring fire I saw the beautiful girl, Miss Ada Clare, whose life and mine were henceforth to be linked together. By her side, and in conversation with her, was a young gentle- man who I learned was her distant cousin, Mr. Richard Carstone, who was also interested like herself in the case of Jarndyce and Jarndyce, and who was to go with us to Bleak House, the home of Mr. John Jarndyce, my guardian. " Miss Ada," said Mr. Kenge, " this is Miss Summerson." She came to me with a sweet smile of welcome, and her hand extended, and from that moment we seemed to understand and love each other. The business connected with the case of transferring Ada to the care of Mr. Jarndyce was soon attended to, and we were ready to take our departure from the building, when we were surprised by the appearance of one of the most curious- looking little old women whom it has ever been my fortune to meet. Her talk and actions were so strange that Richard whispered to us that she was mad. She caught the word " mad." "Right! Mad, young gentleman," she returned so quickly that he was quite abashed. "I was a ward myself. I was not mad at that time," courtesying low, and smiling between every little sentence. "I had youth, and hope; I believe, beauty. It matters very little now. BLEAK HOUSE. 237 Neither of the three served, or saved me. ... I expect a judgment, shortly." She said much more in the same strain, till she was interrupted by the appearance of Mr. Kenge, whom she seemed to know quite familiarly. We remembered her quite well afterwards. Mr. Jarndyce had arranged for us to spend that night at Mrs. Jellyby 's, who, Mr. Kenge informed us, was quite well- known, as she possessed remarkable strength of character and devoted herself entirely to the public. Mr. Guppy, clerk to Kenge and Carboy, conducted us thither. We were not favorably impressed with Mrs. Jellyby or her household arrangements ; we pitied her children, we pitied her husband, and we could not but think that if, instead of spending all her time in schemes for the coloni- zation of Africa, in which she was so interested just then, she would direct a part at least of it and some of her energy to the improvement of her family, it would be much better for her, for that family, and for all parties concerned. We felt much sympathy for Caddy, the oldest daughter, who was out of sorts with the family government and her mother's ideas, and was a miserable, unhappy girl in con- sequence of the disorderly life which they all led as a result of her mother's neglect of them. Next morning we were up early and went out before breakfast for a walk, Caddy accompanying us. We encountered the little old woman of the day before, who introduced us to her land- lord, Mr. Krook, quite as singular a character as herself, we judged. If the old woman had talked of Chancery, Mr. Krook was a good match for her, and he seemed very familiar with the Jarndyce suit and most of the parties concerned. " Quite an adventure for a morning in London ! " said 238 BLEAK HOUSE. Richard, with a sigh. "Ah, cousin, cousin, it's a weary word, this Chancery! . . . At all events, Ada, Chancery will work none of its bad influence on us. We have happily been brought together, thanks to our good kins- man, and it can't divide us now! " "Never, I hope, cousin Richard!" said Ada, gently. We left the city and were delighted with the green country beyond. We traveled all day, reaching St. Albans, near to which town Bleak House was to be found. Mr. Jarndyce stood in the door to welcome us. "Ada, my love, Esther, my dear, you are welcome. I rejoice to see you! Rick, if I had a hand to spare at present, I would give it you ! " Such a delightful home as we found Bleak House — bleak only in name — to be ! Such a delightful friend as we had in Mr. Jarndyce ! Such delightful times as we had each day ! We found a strange character who came and went in the house as he saw fit — Mr. Skimpole, who pro- fessed to be somewhat of an artist and something of a musician, and though he was very peculiar, we enjoyed him because he was different from anyone else whom we had ever met. While Esther is becoming acquainted with her new friends and her new duties, let us leave Hertfordshire, the part of England where she is to make her home, and go to Lincolnshire, and look upon the stately home of Sir Leicester and Lady Dedlock. No mightier baronet was there in the country than Sir Leicester, and no more beautiful or haughty woman could be found in town or country than Lady Dedlock, whose husband idolized her. He had married her for love, BLEAK HOUSE. 239 which had never abated one jot since his marriage- day. It was whispered that she had come from a common family, but Sir Leicester had so long and proud a lineage that there was enough for both of them, and they could not have made use of any more. Lady Dedlock divided her time between London, where she had a house befitting her rank and beauty, and the country home, with frequent trips to Paris, to rid and rest her from the strain of company and the cease- less round of pleasure with which she was surrounded. Mr. Tulkinghorn, attorney-at-law, was the legal adviser in the Dedlock family, and he was the only person whom Lady Dedlock seemed to dread; and yet, when he was near, she made strong efforts to hide her uneasiness, and her hauteur generally carried her through. Lady Ded- lock had a secret, and Mr. Tulkinghorn was a shrewd old gentleman, whom long practice in the mysteries which the law unravels had made sharp and penetrating. Aside from being adviser to Sir Leicester and Lady Ded- lock, he was private legal adviser to Lady Dedlock in Jarndyce and Jarndyce, and his business relations made him a frequent visitor at Chesney Wold, the Dedlock country home, and he was also admitted to their town house at any hour he called. He was interested in Lady Dedlock aside from her claims in the great Chancery suit — he had learned something about her lately; he sus- pected her secret, and had agents at work who were helping him ferret it out. Mr. Tulkinghorn was gener- ally successful in his undertakings; he hoped to be suc- cessful in this affair concerning Lady Dedlock' s early life, though he had to proceed slowly and cautiously in obtaining facts. 240 BLEAK HOUSE. Over Mr. Krook's little shop, in a low, dingy room, might "Have been seen, day after day for many weeks in succession, a gaunt, sad-eyed man, leaning over an old broken desk and copying in a most peculiar hand legal documents that had been brought to him through Mr. Snagsby, a law-stationer, who served Mr. Tulkinghorn and others in various ways for a reasonable consideration. Mr. Krook's lodger would give no one his name; he told Snagsby and others to call him Nemo — Latin for "no one." He was a prodigious worker — could do more work in a given time, as Snagsby affirmed, than any other copyist he had ever employed. Mr. Tulkinghorn desired to see this man, and went in person to Mr. Krook's and asked to be shown to Nemo's room. He knocked, and, receiving no answer, opened the door and went in. The room was so dark that he had to grope his way into it. On a dirty, low bed he saw the object of his search. The room was vilely dirty, as was its sleeping occupant; but the odor which greeted Mr. Tulkinghorn was so vile, so sickeningly vile with the fumes of opium, that he hesitated about remaining. But business de- manded it, and he touched the sleeper. There was no response. Nemo, who also had a secret, and perhaps had a history, was dead — dead from the drug of which he was the unhappy victim. As no one could prove that he meant suicide in taking it, the jury rendered the ver- dict of "Accidental death," and he was borne to his resting-place in an obscure graveyard not far off. His ragged clothes and an old portmanteau were his only effects, and from the contents of the latter nothing could be gleaned to tell who Nemo was. But Nemo's death gave Mr. Tulkinghorn a clue to Lady Dudley's secret, — BLEAK HOUSE. 241 or rather, Nemo's handwriting was the clue, as he had noticed whenever he took her a paper that had been copied by the dead man, she had appeared ill at ease, and one time asked him, "Who copied that?" in such a startled way that he thought she must have seen it before. That was why he had sought the copyist in his own room. ESTHER S STORY, CONTINUED. Richard and Ada were lovers. There was no need to attempt to conceal the fact — indeed, they did not wish to conceal it — that, young as they were, they were hopelessly in love; and they asked Uncle John, as they called Mr. Jarn- dyce, to sanction their engagement. Guardian, for such I called him whom they addressed as Uncle John, seemed lately to be worried, so far as he with his cheerful, hopeful nature could be worried, with Richard's indecision of character. Rick was so young — not having yet reached his majority — that my guardian made many excuses for him. At considerable expense, at one time he secured him a student's place with a surgeon, of which the dear fellow soon became tired, not having the least inclination for surgery ; then he put him in a law office, for which we soon found he cared still less than for surgery. But in this office he was led to know more of the Chancery Court than he ever knew before, and became intensely interested in " Jarndyce and Jarndyce," of which our guardian had so often warned him that no good could come, and in which he, John Jarndyce, a near heir-at-law, never took a part, knowing to what end all engaged in such suits generally come. This was the only cloud in our happy home, and we hoped that it would soon pass away. 16 242 BLEAK HOUSE. I asked Guardian about the meaning of Jarndyce and Jarndyce, and this is what he told me: A certain Jarn- dyce had succeeded in making a great fortune, and before dying made a great will disposing of it. In the question, how certain trusts under the will were to be administered, the lawyers and others concerned in the cause had delayed a settlement till nearly one or two generations of Jarndyces had passed away, none of the original legatees having received a penny for the many thousands of pounds which some of them had spent in the case. Through years and years the fascinating suit had gone on, men losing their minds and fortunes in seeking to have it settled, and still it was in Chancery, no one bearing the name of Jarndyce making anything out of it, though some of the family then living thought that the settlement of the great estate was near at hand. Guardian told me that, knowing from history and experience what such a case meant, and having seen the unhappy fate of several of his kindred as they pursued the phantom, he had made up his mind never to have anything whatever to do with it, and had been happier in consequence. Meantime Guardian had accepted an invitation to take Ada and me and go to Lincolnshire to visit an old friend of his, a Mr. Lawrence Boy thorn, who visited Bleak House a few months before, and for whom, notwithstand- ing his brusqueness, Ada and I conceived a sincere liking. We learned during the short visit that he made us that his place adjoined Chesney Wold, and that he and Sir Leicester were not friendly to each other, as there was a certain piece of ground in dispute between them, and they had brought suit against each other for trespass. BLEAK HOUSE. 243 We arrived at Mr. Boythorn's on Saturday, and on Sunday attended the little church in the park. The congregation gathered very slowly, and the services were delayed for the entrance of Sir Leicester and Lady Ded- lock. "'Enter not into judgment with thy servant, O Lord, for in thy sight'" — read the rector, when the baronet and his lady were in their pew, and the response began. What ailed me? I heard nothing, saw nothing, but Lady Dedlock for a while, and in some mysterious way I associated her with myself and with my life at god- mother's, and yet I knew that I had never before seen her. What is it? I asked myself, while I heard my heart beating loudly. The proud lady looked at me also, and her eyes seemed to hold mine with a strange spell. I tried to break this by giving heed to the words of the beautiful service, and partially succeeded, though in it I seemed to hear godmother's voice, and in Lady Dedlock's face I thought I saw a resemblance to godmother's, though the expression of the two was so opposite. At last, by degrees I overcame my strange emotion, and when the service was over said nothing to anyone about it. Every day of the following week was so bright and beautiful that Ada and I would wander in the woods, listening to the birds overhead and to the insects under- foot; looking through the densely interlaced boughs to the glimpses of sky that -we could see; gathering flowers and mosses, and taking in the beautiful prospect around us, so charmed with the loveliness of it all that often we thought we had a foretaste of the better land beyond. On Saturday Mr. Jarndyce went with us, and we spent hours in the park. Suddenly we were warned that the 244 BLEAK HOUSE. day, which had been a very sultry one, would end in a heavy storm. It would be unsafe to remain in the park, and we knew we could not reach Mr. Boythorn's before the rain would be upon us, so we hastened to the keeper's lodge for shelter. The lodge was very dark, though all the lattice win- dows were thrown open, and Ada and I seated ourselves just inside the doorway. We did not know that anyone had preceded us till Lady Dedlock stepped forward and spoke to us. She stood behind my chair, with her hand upon it. Again, at sight of her, and when I heard her voice, I was affected just as I had been the Sunday before, and there arose innumerable pictures of the past before me. She recognized and spoke to Mr. Jarndyce, and asked after Richard and Ada, with whose interests she seemed to be perfectly familiar; and, looking intently at me, she requested to be presented to me, and on being told who I was, asked if I had lost both parents. She talked to Mr. Jarndyce as an old acquaintance, but in a few moments her little pony phaeton arrived, and she left us. We remained at Mr. Boythorn's for six weeks, but we saw no more of Lady Dedlock except on Sundays. Chesney Wold was brilliant with company, and Lady Dedlock was entertaining them. I think I admired the beautiful woman with a kind of fear, and I thought often when I looked at her that perhaps I was influencing her in the same way that she was influencing me; but we went home, and I had many, many other things to think of than Chesney Wold and its beautiful mistress. Richard was constant in his visits, coming out from London every Saturday or Sunday and remaining till BLEAK HOUSE. 245 Monday, and frequently riding out in the evening and going back early next morning. He was kind and pleasant as ever, but I could not be easy in my mind about him. He had got at the very root of the difficulty in the great Chancery suit, he told us, and he felt that it must now soon be settled and he and Ada would be in possession of thousands of pounds, if there was any sense or justice in the great Court. Ada loved him too well to think otherwise than he did, and became very sanguine. My guardian preserved a strict silence on the subject, so I decided that as I was going to London to see Caddy Jellyby, I would ask Richard to meet me at the coach office and have a little talk with me. I frankly asked the dear fellow all about his prospects, and he as frankly answered me, excusing himself for not attending to the study of the law as he should have done, because it was impossible to do so while Jarndyce and Jarndyce remained in such an unsettled state. "I have looked well into the papers, Esther, — I have been deep in them for months, and you may rely upon it that we shall come out triumphant. As to years of delay, there has been no want of them, Heaven knows! and there is the greater probability of our bringing the matter to a speedy close; in fact, it's on the paper now. It will be all right at last, and then you shall see ! " He told me that he had worked like a slave on the case of Jarndyce and Jarndyce, and that it had slaked his thirst for the law; that his thoughts were now turned to the army, and if he could get a commission, he was all right. I knew how all this would end. The fatal blight that fell upon everyone who had ever entered upon this great suit in Chancery was ruining Eichard and was 246 BLEAK HOUSE. plainly visible upon his countenance. Soon after this conversation, he appealed to my guardian about the commission, and I really do not think that the latter was taken by surprise. He knew in the beginning that Richard could never resist its fascination. Of course, as Richard was a ward of the Court, nothing could be done till a formal application was made to Chancery. He received a reproof from the Lord Chancellor for trifling with time, but his application was granted, and he was entered for an ensign's commission. We hoped for the best, but had cause to fear that in the army he would be a failure. Richard became offended at my guardian, and I observed with great regret that, from the hour when the little difference arose between them, he never was as free and open with Mr. Jarndyce as he had been before. Time passed, and my little maid Charlotte Coavinses, called " Charley," for a pet name, was taken dangerously ill with a malignant fever. Knowing that the whole household would be infected if they were free to visit and wait upon* her, I took her to a room upstairs and forbade Ada and the servants to come near, and constituted my- self the little girl's nurse, knowing that I had already been exposed to the disease and that the others had not. Of course, Guardian and Ada and everyone else objected, but I' was firm and they had to yield. The poor child had a dreadful time of it, but recovered, and no sooner was she well than I was taken down. She became my nurse, and a very good one was she, indeed. For a while I was blind; but, oh, how patient and unwearying in her attentions was Charley ! Ada would come within speak- ing distance and beg through the window to be admitted; BLEAK HOUSE. 247 but Charley had promised me not to allow her to enter, and neither she nor my guardian saw me again till I was pronounced convalescent and was assured that there would be no danger of anyone contracting the disease from me. While I was ill I looked back over my life and could see myself a child, a girl at school, Ada's com- panion, and my guardian's housekeeper. Well for me that I did not know what was just ahead of me! And yet, I had learned to look upon the cheerful side of life at Greenleaf, and had learned no lessons but those of cheerfulness and hope since I had lived with my guardian. The thought of being blind had been a terrible one while blindness lasted, but my joy was boundless when my sight was restored; and when I was again well I was as cheerful, aye, more trustful than ever before. Everybody seemed to be conspiring to make me happy — how could I disappoint them ? Mr. Boythorn sent for me to come and take possession of his house, as he was going away for a short time. Change was declared necessary tz make me completely well, and Guardian and Charley and I went to Mr. Boythorn's, Guardian intending only to see us safely there. Ada intended coming some days later. The air was so pure and bra ing that strength came to my body and color to my face, and it was a blessing to see Charley's delight at my restoration. I became strong enough to walk, and when Guardian went away my maid and I would take walks to the village and through the park, often stopping at a favorite spot of mine where a seat had been erected commanding a lovely view. Wo could see part of Chesney Wold distinctly, espe- cially that known as the Ghost's Walk. The tradition in 248 BLEAK HOUSE. the family for the origin of this name was, that Lady Morbury Dedlock, whose husband favored the cause of Charles the First, while her ladyship espoused the opposite side, would steal dow T n in the night and go to the stables and lame the horses when she knew that on the following day Sir Morbury and his retainers were to ride forth in the king's cause; and that her husband, suspecting her, watched, and one night seized her as she stood in the stall of his favorite horse; and that in the struggle that ensued she was lamed in the hip, and from that time began to pine away, though she could, with the aid of a stick, walk upon the terrace, which she would do, up and down repeatedly, each day with greater difficulty. She never spoke to her husband afterward, but when one day he went to her, seeing her fall, she uttered these words: — " I will die here where I have walked. And I will walk here, though I am in my grave. I will walk here until the pride of this house is humbled. And when calamity or when disgrace is coming to it, let the Dedlocks listen for my step ! " When I came to Mr. Boythorn's I heard that Sir Lei- cester and Lady Dedlock were not at Chesney Wold, and I would sit in my favorite spot wondering all about the great Hall and its inmates, and whether indeed a footstep ever did resound on the Ghost's Walk. One day I was resting here, and Charley was gathering violets at a little distance from me, when I saw a figure coming towards me through the wood. It drew nearer, and I knew that it was Lady Dedlock. I would have gone away, but was rendered motionless by something in her face that, when a child, I had pined for and dreamed of, but which I had never BLEAK HOUSE. 249 seen in any lace; never till now had I seen it in hers. A faintness overpowered me, and I called to Charley. Lady Dedlock expressed anxiety lest she should have startled "Falling down on her knees and crying, '0 my child, my child, I am your nicked and unhappy mother!'" 250 BLEAK HOUSE. me, and told me that she had heard of my illness and that she was much concerned about it, and that she was glad that I was recovering again, and then, what was very strange I thought, she asked me to send my attend- ant ahead, as she wished to talk to me. At my request Charley moved towards Mr. Boythorn's, and Lady Dedlock and I looked at each other, and the beating of my heart became so violent that I felt that my life was leaving me. She caught me to her breast, kissed me over and over again, wept over me, and called me back to myself, falling down on her knees and crying: " my child, my child, I am your wicked and unhappy mother ! try to forgive me ! " I recovered somewhat and raised her up, begging her not to humble herself so before me. I told her that it was not for me, then resting for the first time on my mother's bosom, to take her to account for having given me life. We held each other in a tender embrace, as she said : — "To bless and receive me, it is far too late. I must travel my dark road alone, and it will lead me where it will. From day to day, sometimes from hour to hour, I do not see the way before my guilty feet. This is the earthly punishment I have brought upon myself. I bear it, and I hide it. ... I must keep this secret, if by any means it can be kept, not wholly for myself. I have a husband, wretched and dishonoring creature that I am! " She told me that in my illness she was almost frantic, as she had but just learned that her child was living, and that she had followed me down here to speak to me but once in all her life, and that when this interview was over we would part, probably never to meet again. I asked her if her secret was safe, and she told me that she dreaded BLEAK HOUSE; 251 Mr. Tulkinghorn, who prided himself on knowing the secrets of many great houses, and who, now having a sus- picion of her, she felt was hunting her down and would certainly expose her if it were ever in his power. I asked if I might confide in Mr. Jarndyce, and she gave me full permission. We held each other in a loving embrace while we could, mother exclaiming in agony that it would be for the last time — that we would meet no more. She took my hands in hers, gave me a last kiss, and went from me into the wood. I knew my mother's secret now, or a part of it. Who was my father ? I knew now how my mother was my disgrace and I hers. I knew now why I was set apart. She gave me a letter that she had written for me, and asked that when I had read it I would de- stroy it. Safe in my own room, I read it, and learned that she had not abandoned me, but that her elder and only sister, my godmother, discovering signs of life in me, had at my birth taken me away from all who knew me, and reared me in rigid secrecy, and had never again beheld my mother's face, so deeply did she feel her disgrace. Richard Carstone was hopelessly in debt. The case of Jarndyce and Jarndyce had become life and soul to him. He sacrificed time, strength, salary, — all, all to the hopes which the delusion spread before him. He had employed Mr. Vholes, a lawyer keen and unprincipled, to watch the case constantly in Chancery, and for the hope of gain the lawyer dogged his steps with false reports and illusive promises of a speedy settlement of the great estate. My guardian advised that I should go to see him at Deal, where he was then stationed. Poor Rick! lie 252 BLEAK HOUSE. was so haggard and wild-looking, he was so disorderly in appearance and in his room, he was so unlike anything that I had ever seen in him, that I was frightened. He told me that he was almost in disgrace, and that he meant to leave the army and give all his time to the Chancery suit till it was settled. I can never forget his look of despair when he exclaimed, " I wish I was dead ! " Soon after this he and Ada were secretly married, and when she told us of it she declared that she was going to London to be with him all the time. Mr. Jarndyce saw that they were settled in apartments, and then he and I went to the city also till we knew how the great case would be settled. It was not long till we knew all about it, and it was just what we expected — the lawyers and the great Chancery Court acted in the Jarndyce case as they had acted in many another one, and divided the estate among themselves in costs and charges. The shock was too much for Richard and he survived it but a few hours. After it was all over, and after Ada's baby was born, we all went to Bleak House, where Ada regained her cheerfulness in caring for her boy, little Richard, and Mr. Jarndyce. In a home of my own, many miles away from Bleak House, I now reign as mistress. I had known Allan Woodcourt for many years and the love between us was deep and abiding. I proved him during the illness of both Richard and Ada, to whom he was medical adviser — aye, I knew all about his noble character and deeds long before that. Ada is housekeeper at Bleak House now, and she and little Richard call Mr. Jarndyce "Guardian" just as I used to, and a careful and loving guardian is he of all that con- cerns them. "Jarndyce and Jarndyce" is settled for- BLEAK HOUSE. 253 ever, and its shadows will never cloud the life of the bright boy who bears the name of Richard Carstone. My two little daughters often share with him the pleasures of my old home, and know Mr. Jarndyce by no other name than Guardian. Who was my father? Long since I learned that the unhappy man whose life was ended in the miserable lodging above old Krook's shop, was once a gay military officer, who won the love of my mother — then a bright, beautiful young girl — and cast it from him after he had betrayed her. I learned, too, that Lady Dedlock had heard the particulars of his wretched death, and that, disguised in a servant's dress, she had sought the humble graveyard where his body rests. The strange steps upon the Ghost's Walk had been heard distinctly many times of late, and boded no good. Mr. Tulkinghorn had reached out far and wide, and had at last learned all the particulars of Lady Dedlock's story, and had gone to Chesney Wold and disclosed them. She fled — fled through the bleak, cold winter's day down to the country, back to the city, her disgrace more than she could bear. The story of her flight was brought to me and 1 was entreated to go in search of her. I sought her, going everywhere where I thought she might possibly go, — everywhere, everywhere, — till at last my guide and Mr. Woodcourt and I stopped before the iron gate of the burying ground where Nemo was buried. On the step at the gate we saw a woman lying, and I ran forward; but they stopped me. Dressed in strange clothes I did not recognize her. She lay there, with one arm twined around a bar of the iron gate, seeming to embrace it. I saw, but did not comprehend, the solemn and com- 254 BLEAK HOUSE. passionate look in Mr. Woodeourt's face as he stood before the woman with head uncovered and with a reverence for something; I saw, but did not comprehend, his touching the other to keep him back. I heard him and the guide talking, and one of them said, " Shall she go ? " " She had better go. Her hands should be the first to touch her. They have a higher right than ours." I passed on to the gate, and stooped down. I lifted the heavy head, put the long dark hair aside, and turned the face. And it was my mother, cold and dead. James Fenimore Cooper at His Desk. JAMES FENIMORE COOPER. 1789-1851. James Fenimoke Cooper was the first of American novelists to gain a national reputation, as well as the first American writer of fiction to gain recognition in Europe. His tales of pioneer life in the New World gave to these earlier years an interest equal to that which Scott had thrown around those of the Old. His sea tales were received with great favor on both sides of the Atlantic. Cooper was born in Burlington, New Jersey, but his father having bought extensive tracts of land in the interior of New York, where he founded Cooperstown on Otsego Lake, his name is chiefly associated with that place. He entered Yale College, but after remaining there three years, left and entered the navy. After remaining there six years he left it and devoted the remainder of his life to literature. His first effort, "Precaution," had but a very moderate sale. His sec- ond work, "The Spy," was immediately successful, and from the time of its publication he continued to issue, with amazing rapidity, work after work which met with great favor. As an author, Cooper excels in his powers of description. So lifelike are his scenes that they seem to stand distinctly before him who reads of them, and so strong and marked was his love of his nationality that he, in a greater degree than any other American 17 257 258 JAMES FENIM0HE COOPER. writer, describes accurately American scenery, manners, customs, and ideas. He wrote in all thirty novels; but besides his works of fiction he wrote "A History of the Navy of the United States," in two volumes, and " Lives of American Naval Officers"; as well as a series of sketches of travel in England, France, Switzerland, and Italy. His writings are of very unequal merit, some being of a very high order, and others utterly worthless. Notwithstanding this, he was one of the greatest and most original writers of his day, and shares with Washington Irving the honors that were given to them in Europe as well as in America. "Soon a humble dwelling appeared in sight, and ivithout quitting his saddle ?te knocked at the cfoor." THE SPY. Principal Characters. Harvey Birch, the Peddler, and the Spy of the Neutral Ground. Mr. Wharton, the Son of an Englishman, whose country estate was situated in the Neutral Ground. Captain Wharton, his Son, supporter of the Crown. Major Dunwoodie, Captain Lawton, j> Officers of the Federal Army. Colonel Singleton, Mr. Harper. Frances Wharton, } , Daughters of Mr. Wharton. Sarah Wharton, Miss Peyton, Sister-in-Law to Mr. Wharton. Katy Haynes, Housekeeper for Harvey Birch. Elizabeth Flanagan, Sutler of the camp. Csesar, Negro Servant to Mr. Wharton. 260 THE SPY. By James Fenimore Cooper. It was near the close of 1780 that a traveler was seen pursuing his way through one of the many little valleys that lie in the vicinity of what is now the metropolis of our country. A storm was approaching, and it was evident that he was looking around him for some place of shelter. Nothing satisfactory seemed to offer in the neighborhood where he was, and onward he rode, the observed of those whose houses he passed in a not very thickly settled farming community. Hostilities between the colonists and the mother country were then at their height. The passing by of a stranger unknown to those whose way he, crossed, would cause many conjectures as to who he was, and what his errand might be. Our traveler was fatigued with the unusual ride of the day, and finally determined to seek admission in the next house that offered. Soon a humble dwelling appeared in sight, and without quitting his saddle he knocked at the door. His request for shelter did not receive a very reassuring answer. "I can't say I like to give lodgings to a stranger in these ticklish times," said an unpleasant female voice. "I'm nothing but a forlorn lone body; or, what's the same thing, there 's nobody but the old gentleman at home; but a half mile farther up the road is a house where you can get entertainment, and that for nothing. 261 262 THE SPY. . . . Harvey is away; I wish he 'd take advice, and leave off wandering," she continued. "But Harvey Birch will have his own way, and die vagabond after all ! " The horseman moved on his way as indicated, and tying his horse in a spot where he would be protected from the storm, he approached the door and knocked loudly for admission. An aged black servant opened it and showed him into the parlor, where a cheery fire dispelled the dullness of a stormy October evening. The appearance of the traveler betokened a gentleman, and he was received with courtesy by the elderly gentle- man and the three ladies who were seated in the room. Mr. Wharton, for so was the owner of the estate called, after offering a glass of wine to the stanger, paused as he held his own glass and inquired politely, — "To whose health am I to have the honor of drink- ing ?" "Mr. Harper," was the courteous reply. Mr. Wharton drank to his health, and v the party soon entered into conversation. The elderly lady left the room to make some household arrangements for the night, and the two younger ones joined in the conversation on the subject of the war, which was then engrossing all the minds in the colonies. In a short time Mr. Wharton led the way to the supper table, but barely were they seated when a loud knock again summoned the faithful black to the door. Scarcely had the master of the house time to bid Caesar show the second comer in, when the door was hastily thrown open and he himself appeared and repeated the request made before of the servant. Throwing aside his great-coat, he seated himself at the table, when bidden, and uncere- THE SPY. 263 moniously proceeded to allay the cravings of his appetite, which proved to be by no means a delicate one. The evening passed till Mr. Harper, rising, desired to be shown to his place of rest. Scarcely had he left the room, when the newcomer arose from his seat, went to the door, opened it, and then closed it again. The wig which he wore fell from his head, and in an instant he was a different man altogether in his appearance, and amid the rejoicings of them all, he made himself known to them as Mr. Wharton's own and only son, Henry. He anxiously inquired who Mr. Harper was, and whether he was likely to betray him. "Xo, no, no, Massa Harry," said old Caesar, "I been to see — Massa Harper on he knee — pray to God — no gem- man who pray to God tell of good son, come to see old fader — Skinner do that — no Christian ! " Mr. Wharton was the younger son of an Englishman whose father had provided for him in the colony of New York. In the great conflict now going on he had decided to remain neutral, and for prudential reasons he had also decided to withdraw with his two motherless daughters, his sister-in-law, Miss Peyton, and his servants, to his country estate in Westchester County, a few miles from the city. His only son, Henry, had espoused the cause of Britain, and was an ardent supporter of the claims of the Crown. The storm of the night lasted for two days, and it was impossible for Mr. Harper or Henry to get away. At breakfast of the second day Csesar entered with a small package which he handed to Mr. Wharton, remarking, — " Harvey Birch, he got home, and he bring you a little good 'baccy from York." 264 THE SPY. To Sarah, the elder of Mr. "Wharton's daughters, the news that Harvey Birch was near gave unexpected pleas- ure. She bade Csesar show him into the parlor. Recol- lecting herself she turned to Mr. Harper apologetically and said, "If Mr. Harper will excuse the presence of a peddler." Harvey Birch had been a peddler from his youth. Ten years before, he and his father had arrived in the valley and purchased the humble dwelling at which Mr. Harper had unsuccessfully applied. The history of both was unknown, and the movements of the son sometimes seemed suspicious. Katy Haynes, their housekeeper, with a prying curiosity, found out much of their history, but the greater part of it remained unknown even to her. Sarah Wharton made heavy purchases from the con- tents of Harvey's pack, as did also her aunt. But it was not fabrics alone that engaged their attention. Questions about the armies were exchanged, and Harvey gave them the information they desired. Harper sat, evidently interested in the book before him, but it was plain that nothing of the conversation was lost upon him. The ladies finished their business with Harvey and he withdrew, when Mr. Harper, turning to Harvey, exclaimed, — "If any apprehensions of me induce Captain Wharton to maintain his disguise, I wish him to be undeceived; had I motives for betraying him, they could not operate under present circumstances." The effect of these words upon the family was one of speechless surprise. More followed from the stranger, and he then rose to leave the room. THE SPY. 265 Frances, the beautiful younger daughter, stopped him ; " You cannot — you will not betray my brother." » " I cannot, and I will not," he answered, as he released her hands. The storm began to break the afternoon of the second day. The family and their guest were on the piazza. They were suddenly interrupted by the reappearance of the peddler. Harper remarked that his business would not now admit of delay, and he would -avail himself of the fine evening to ride a few miles on his journey. Regret was expressed at his departure, but when he gave his hand to Henry he remarked, — " The step you have undertaken is one of much danger, and disagreeable consequences to yourself may result from it; in such a case, I may have it in my power to prove the gratitude I owe your family for its kindness." He bowed to the party and was gone. The eyes of Harvey Birch followed him, and he drew a long and heavy sigh. He then asked Henry if he was also going to leave that night, but was answered that nothing could induce him to do so. Harvey tried to persuade him, without giving reasons, but it availed nought. During the evening Henry remarked, — "This Harvey Birch . . . gives me more uneasiness than I am willing to own." "How is it that he is able to travel to and fro in these difficult times, without molestation?" said Miss Peyton. ■Sir Henry would not permit a hair of his head to be injured," he answered. "Indeed!" said Frances; "is he then known to Sir Henry Clinton?" 266 THE SPY. "At least he ought to be." Forebodings of evil rilled the minds of each member of the family^ as they retired to their rooms. In the morning Henry was late at table, and had scarcely taken his seat when Caesar entered, exclaiming in alarm, — "Run — Massa Harry — run — if he love old Caesar, run — here come a rebel horse." Captain Wharton refused to do this, and soon he saw fifty dragoons winding down the valley and surrounding the house of Mr. Birch. They did not remain there long, but turned in the direction of the Locusts, as Mr. Whar- ton's home was called. Captain Lawton, of the dragoons, put Captain Wharton under arrest for being within the lines of the Federal army, but notified him that it belonged to Major Dunwoodie, his superior, who would soon arrive, to make disposition of him. Frances, young as she was, had met Major Dunwoodie in her city home, and the result of the attachment that had sprung up between them was an engagement of marriage. On his appearance in the house, soon after Henry's arrest, she led him to a room where they might be uninterrupted, and told him of her brother's danger. " Your brother ! " he cried ; " your brother ! explain your- self — what dreadful meaning is concealed in your words ? " "Has not Captain Lawton told you of the arrest of Henry by himself this very morning ? " continued Frances. "He told me of arresting a captain of the 60th in disguise, without mentioning where or whom," replied the Major. Her agitation was so great that Dunwoodie was unnerved. "Frances, what can I do?" THE SPY. '2i)7 " Do ! would Major Dunwoodie yield his friend to his enemies — the brother of his betrothed wife?" It was not long till the soldiers of the opposing armies were in mortal combat near the house of Harvey Birch. Captain Wharton was under guard at the Locusts. The guard went to a window and became interested in the scene without. The Captain was quick in his motions, and dexterously throwing himself out of the window, sprang upon a horse that was standing near, and with the swiftness of the wind, was soon beyond the reach of pursuit. He was startled at a certain point by a voice: — "Bravely clone, Captain! Don't spare the whip, and turn to your left before you cross the brook." Turning, he saw Harvey Birch sitting in a position to command a view of the valley below. He took his advice, and soon joined the British ranks. During the battle, however, he was recaptured, and returned to the Locusts. Two Federal officers were riding leisurely along, in advance of their troop, talking of the bloody affray when it was all over, the Americans having been victorious, when one of them, Captain Lawton, exclaimed, — " What animal is moving through the field on our right?" - T is a man," answered Mason, his companion. "By his hump 'tis a dromedary! Harvey Birch! — Take him, dead or alive." The chase commenced. For a moment the peddler was helpless, and 11 ion took to flight, keeping in the shadow of the wood. At this time a heavy reward was offered lor his arrest, and well lie knew that many were seeking 268 THE SPY. it and him. Captain Lawton and his men pursued him, and the Captain, riding in advance, was about to capture him, when his horse stumbled and fell, throwing him and rendering him helpless. This was the peddler's opportunity. He seized the Captain's sword. For a moment the demon within him prevailed, and Birch brandished the powerful weapon in the air; in the next, it fell harmless on the reviving but helpless trooper. The Harvey Birch, the Peddler, Spares the Life of the American Officer. peddler vanished up the side of the friendly rock. But his father lay dying, and he determined at all hazards to see him again. Caesar had gone to watch with Katy, and they were surprised at Harvey's entrance during the night. During their watch they heard a noise in an adjoining room, and going thither, met a wicked- looking man whom Harvey recognized as the leader of THE SPY. 269 a gang of thieves, known throughout the country as the Skinners. By threats and tortures Harvey was compelled to yield the gold which for many years he had so care- fully hoarded. During the night the elder Birch died, and Harvey, much as he loved him, knew that haste would have to be observed in the obsequies. Captain Lawton, who had been injured in his fall from his horse while pursuing Harvey, and had been under treatment at the home of Mr. Wharton, was about to depart to join his troopers when the funeral procession approached. The Captain sat in his saddle in rigid silence until the procession came opposite him, and then for the first time Harvey raised his eyes from the ground to the enemy, whom he so much dreaded. His first impulse was flight, but recovering his recollection he kept his place behind the coffin and passed the Captain with a firm step but a throbbing heart. When the first clod fell upon the coffin, Harvey's frame became convulsed for an instant; but mastering his emotion, till the grave w T as filled, and the turf covered the little hillock, he stood quietly; and then, uncovering his head, he spoke : — "My friends and neighbors, I thank you for assisting me to bury my dead out of my sight." About four miles from the Locusts two roads inter- sected, and throughout the neighborhood the intersection was known as the Four Corners. A rude hostelry was kept here at the present time by Elizabeth Flanagan, who was regarded as the sutler of the camp, in that she always followed them with supplies, and pitched her tent — which was often a mythical one — near their own. A gay troop of officers were gathered here on the 270 THE SPY. evening of the day of Mr. Birch's interment, and a demijohn of fine old wine added much to their hilarity, which at its height was interrupted by the door being unceremoniously opened and the band of Skinners entering and dragging the body of Harvey Birch along, the peddler bending beneath his pack. "Are you Harvey Birch?" asked Major Dunwoodie. "I am," answered Birch, proudly. " Do you know that I should be justified in ordering your execution this night ? . . . You die to-morrow." "'Tis as God wills," answered Birch. A rude shed extended the whole length of the hostelry, and from one of its ends a small apartment had been partitioned, and in this Harvey was imprisoned, closely watched by his guard. The room was really the private room of Mrs. Flanagan, but it had other and varied uses. Orders were given that no one have access to it during the night but the sentinel and the lady to whom it belonged. She, imbibing deeply of the contents of the demijohn, lay down before the fire in the sitting-room after her guests withdrew, and slept a sleep whose sonor- ous breathing proved would be one both deep and long. The sentinel walked his beat, and Harvey, throwing himself upon the pallet usually occupied by Betty, was soon to all appearances sleeping as soundly as she, his breathing answering to hers in the adjoining room. Major Dunwoodie could not sleep, and rising early he went to an orchard adjoining the place where he was stationed. Imagine his surprise when ordered by a voice near by to "Stand or die!" Turning in its direction, whom should he see seated on a shelving rock, with musket pointed directly at him, but Harvey Birch, THE SPY. 271 whom he supposed to be under strict guard at that very- moment. "If I am to be murdered, fire! I will never become your prisoner." "No, Major Dunwoodie," said Birch, "it is neither my intention to capture nor to slay." "What then would you have, mysterious being?" said Dunwoodie. "Your good opinion. I would wish all good men to judge me with lenity." The peddler discharged his musket in the air and threw it at the feet of Dunwoodie. When the latter looked again on the rock the spot was vacant. By the time he reached the camp it was all astir, ready for a forward march. The officers suggested that their prisoner, Birch, who was held in detestation, should be executed before they marched. Dunwoodie, keeping what he had seen of Birch to himself, went with them to the place which was supposed to contain the peddler. " I trust you have your prisoner in safety," said he to the sentinel. "He is yet asleep, and he makes such a noise, I could hardly hear the bugles sound the alarm." " Open the door and bring him forth." The order was obeyed, but imagine the surprise of all when no prisoner was found. In the place where he was supposed to have been sleeping, lay Betty Flanagan, wearing off the effects of her last evening's potations. The noise of the soldiers awoke her, and her indignation knew no bounds when she was accused of connivance at the escape of the prisoner. Captain Lawton stood with folded arms, looking on 272 THE SPY. the scene before him. His manner struck Major Dun- woodie as singular. Their eyes met, and they walked together for a few moments in close conversation, when the Major returned and dismissed the guard to the place of rendezvous. Written on a blank leaf in Sergeant Hollister's Bible, which he had left with Birch to prepare him for his awful fate, were the words: — " These certify, that if suffered to get free, it is by God's help alone, to whose divine aid I humbly riccommind myself. I'm forced to take the woman's clothes, but in her pocket is a ricompinse. Witness my hand — "Harvey Birch." Betsy's wrath was mollified by the golden guinea that she found concealed in the pocket of her dress, and which amply repaid her for the loss of her apparel in which Harvey had eluded the vigilance of the guard and made his escape. Sergeant Hollister was discussing the merits of Major Dunwoodie with Mrs. Flanagan as they sat together in the evening of the day upon which the Major and his troops had withdrawn from the vicinity of the Locusts, when a voice exclaimed, — " Why, then, are you here idle, when all that he holds most dear are in danger?" A mysterious billet had recently been found that gave intimation of danger to the Whartons, and the voice now heard brought consternation to the heart of the Sergeant. He turned, on hearing it, and perceived Harvey Birch standing near him. THE SPY. 273 "Arm and mount, and fly to the rescue of your officer, if you are worthy of the cause in which you serve, and would not disgrace the coat you wear." He vanished from their sight, and with a speed that left them uncertain which way he had fled. The Skinners had determined to enter the Locusts that night, and in the efforts they made to carry off all that was valuable, fire was set to the dwelling. The fright of the family was so great that the young sisters seemed to have lost all thought of the means of escape or control of their judgment. Frances was rescued, and a trooper, in his efforts to reach Sarah, was met by a man carrying her to a place of safety. Instead of one of his own men, Captain Lawton was surprised to see that it was the peddler who had saved her. "Ha, the spy!" he exclaimed; "by heavens, you cross me like a specter." " Captain Lawton," said Birch, " I am again in your power, for I can neither flee, nor resist." " The cause of America is dear to me as life," said Lawton ; " but she cannot require her children, to forget gratitude and honor. Fly, unhappy man, while yet you are unseen, or it will exceed my power to save you." "May God prosper you, and make you victorious over your enemies.," said Birch, grasping the hand of the Captain. "Hold," said Lawton to him, "are you what you seem? — can you — are you " "A royal spy," interrupted Birch, and his gaunt form glided out into the darkness. The Locusts, the home so lately of refinement and wealth, was gone, and its inmates were compelled to seek 18 274 THE SPY. a temporary home in a rude dwelling at the Four Corners. After a brief stay here, they began to disperse, the family of Mr. Wharton going northward into the Highlands of the Hudson to be present at the trial of Captain Wharton. While climbing a mountain, Katy Haynes, who since Mr. Birch's death had found a home in Mr. Wharton's family, and Frances preferred to walk to the summit, and as they walked along the way, Katy unburdened herself to her companion of the strange man who to the latter was best known as " the peddler." "Lord, Miss Fanny, Harvey is a man no calculation can be made on. Though I lived in his house for a long concourse of years, I have never known whether he be- longed above or below." * The day had been cloudy and cool, but as the two walked along and talked, the rays lighted up the High- lands and everything was clear before their vision. Far up the rocks Frances beheld something like a rude structure, and presently, perhaps from what Katy had just told her, she saw the figure of a man gliding into the hut, and which to her bore a strong resemblance to Harvey Birch. She said nothing to her companion about it, but the image of the hut and the appearance of the man remained in her memory and served her a purpose when she had great need of them. The trial of Captain Wharton had begun, and before the three arbiters of his fate the prisoner sat and listened to the charges brought against him. The chief, or president, of the three was Colonel Singleton, colonel of 1 The American party was called the party belonging: " above," and the British that of "below," having reference to the course of the Hudson. THE SPY. 275 Major Dunwoodie's regiment. Henry was charged with passing the pickets of the American army, and was accused of being a spy. The trial proceeded in a dignified and formal, though kind manner, and every evidence was adduced to prove that not as a spy had he gone home, but for the great love he bore his father and his sisters had he incurred the danger. Mr. Wharton gave evidence, and then Frances was brought before the judges. Her testimony was clear and in her brother's favor, till Colonel Singleton put the question, — "Did he leave the house until taken, or had he inter- course with any out of your own dwelling?" "With none — no one, excepting our neighbor, the peddler Birch." "With whom?" exclaimed the Colonel, turning pale, and shrinking as from the sting of an adder. "But Harvey Birch," repeated Frances, gazing wildly around her. "Harvey Birch!" echoed all the judges. "To you, gentlemen, it can be no new intelligence to hear that Harvey Birch is suspected of favoring the royal cause," said Henry, again advancing before the judges; "for he has already been condemned by your tribunals to the Me that I now see awaits myself. I will there- fore explain, that it was by his assistance I procured the disguise, and passed your pickets; but to my dying moment, with my dying breath, I will avow that my intentions were as pure as the innocent being before you." The verdict went against him, and he was condemned to die by nine o'clock on the morning of the next day. Frances's pleading induced Colonel Singleton to offer to go in person to Washington, and plead in Henry's favor. 276 THE SPY. True to his promise, the Colonel went, but it availed nothing. "What news?" asked Major Dunwoodie of the courier, as he saw him returning with the message from the commander-in-chief. He received the paper and broke the seal. The hopes that all entertained were blasted with misery as he read the words written underneath the sentence of the court: "Approved — George Washington." Henry was making preparations for his impending doom. The last solemn charges had been given regard- ing the loved ones in his home, for whom he had risked so much, and then he asked to be left alone with Dunwoodie. His aunt and Frances rose to leave the room, when the former declared her intention of going to Washington himself. Suddenly a thought flashed through the mind of Frances, and she exclaimed, — "Why not apply to Mr. Harper?" for the first time recollecting the words of their guest. " What said he ? " said Dunwoodie "He bade Henry apply to him when in danger, and promised to requite the son for the hospitality of the father." "Rest easy, rest easy, for Henry is safe," cried Dun- woodie. The landlady of the house where the Whartons were staying felt it her duty to send for a minister to attend to the spiritual wants of Henry, but the one to whom she sent could not respond, and in his stead he sent one whose forbidding aspect and harsh, fanatical words brought anything but comfort and consolation. Miss Peyton and the landlady left the room under his scorch- ing rebukes, and Henry was giving vent to his hard-to- THE SPY. 277 be-repressed feelings, when a third voice was heard, which said, — "Such a denunciation would have driven many women into fits; but it has answered the purpose well enough, as it is." " Who 's that?" cried Henry. " It is I, Captain Wharton," answered Harvey Birch, revealing himself to him. " Good heavens — Harvey ! " " Silence! " said the peddler, solemnly; " 't is a name not to be mentioned, and least of all here, within the heart of the American army." He disclosed to Henry his plans for helping him make his escape. Henry informed him that Dunwoodie was searching for Harper, and that if he found him, his liberation was certain. In reply Birch asked him why he depended on Harper. Hearing his reasons, he replied that neither Harper nor Dunwoodie could save his life, and that Henry's only hope lay in his flight with him. To his plans Henry acceded, and with the help of Csesar, Captain Wharton was soon disguised, and followed his leader right through the militia who were lounging around the yard through which they made their exit. Not without great danger did they reach the mountain, and it was not till they had reached a point inaccessible after dark to any but one familiar with their every turning that Henry felt any measure of security. When Frances knew of her brother's escape, she could not rid herself of the thought that in some way Harvey Birch would convey him to the mountain, and in confer- ence with her aunt, she determined at all hazards to go to the hut and see if they were not there. She set out 278 THE SPY. on her lonely walk, climbing over rocks and making her way through a tangled* undergrowth, fear of danger and love of her brother raging within her for the mastery. When she reached the place where she supposed the hut to be, no vestige of it appeared. The thought of her solitude struck on the terrified girl, and approaching a shelving rock, she bent forward to gaze on the signs of life in the valley below, when a ray of keen light dazzled her eyes and a warm air diffused itself over her whole frame. She looked on the ledge beneath her and per- ceived that she stood directly over the object of her search. Around a winding path she advanced to the den, and we may know something of her feelings when, on entering it, she saw no other than Mr. Harper within, sitting with some papers spread out before him. She fell at his feet as she cried: — "Save him — save him — save my brother; remember your promise, and save him. . . . There is none here but my God and you; and by his sacred name I conjure you to remember your promise, and save my brother ! " While they were talking, the voices of Henry and Harvey were heard outside, and Harper immediately vanished into a secret chamber in the rock. When the two men entered, we may imagine their surprise at seeing Frances. Not a word did she utter of Harper, but seeing Harvey looking around uneasily, she glanced significantly towards the place where Harper disap- peared, and he seemed satisfied. " But why and wherefore are you here ? " exclaimed her astonished brother. She told them briefly of what had occurred at the house since they left it, and of the motives which induced THE SPY. 279 her to seek them. Henry and the peddler remained only long enough to partake of some simple refreshment, and then disappeared down the mountain-side at a rapid rate. Soon after Frances reached her friends, a messenger, who wore the dress of Washington's aid-de-camp, approached Dunwoodie with orders from the commander-in-chief to concentrate his squadron on the heights of Croton, where a body of foot would be ready to support him. " Thank God ! " cried Dunwoodie, " my hands are washed of Henry's recapture. I can now move to my duty with honor." The war for independence was over, and peace had settled down upon the land. Where battlefields had been covered with the slain were waving fields of golden grain; where camps had been, were hamlets and prosper- ous towns. The ploughshare had taken the place of the musket and sword — the hum of machinery was heard in place of the battle drum and the tramp of moving armies. But across the waters was the dark war-cloud again lowering, and the American colonies were soon involved — the American armies were soon arrayed once more against the troops of England. But instead of the banks of the Hudson, those of Niagara were to be the scene of the conflict. Washington was resting, with an untarnished name and growing honor, amid the peaceful shades of Mount Vernon. 'Twas the evening of July 25, 1814, that a young officer stood on the table rock of Niagara, and looked upon the flood of waters beneath his feet. Another officer stood near him. A deep silence was observed by each, till one of them exclaimed, — 280 THE SPY. "See! Wharton, there is a man crossing in the very eddies of the cataract, and in a skiff no bigger than an eggshell." As he drew near them, instead of a soldier, he proved to be an old man of seventy, who anxiously inquired the news from the contending armies. This given, he lin- gered near respectfully, and heard the conversation going on between the young officers. The names of Wharton and Dunwoodie and of others with which we are familiar, caught his ear and held him to the spot, and he listened with the most intense and undisguised interest to what they said. Whilst they were talking, they were interrupted by sudden and heavy explosions of artillery, which were followed by long-continued volleys of firearms, and soon the air was filled with the tumult of a warm and well- contested battle. Above the sound of the cataract was the sound of cannon and musketry, and soon the troops were in motion and a movement was made to support the division of the army which was already engaged. The battle of Lundy's Lane raged — was fought — was decisively in favor of the Americans. Among the dead was found an old man in civilian's dress, lying on his back, with a look upon his face more like a smile of peace than that of a convulsion of pain, holding in his hands a small tin box through which the fatal bullet had gone. Captain Wharton Dunwoodie opened it, and to his astonishment found a paper containing the following words: — " Circumstances of political importance, which involve the lives and fortunes of many, have hitherto kept secret what this paper now reveals. Harvey Birch has for THE SPY. 281 years been a faithful and unrequited servant of his country. Though man does not, may God reward him for his conduct! "Geo. Washington." It was the Spy of the Neutral Ground, who died as he had lived, devoted to his country, and a martyr to her liberties, though suspected of being an enemy to her interests, and more than once tried and condemned as a traitor of the deepest, dye. THE LAST OF THE MOHICANS. Principal Characters. Uncas, Hero, Son of Chingachgook, the Last of the Mohicans. Chingachgook, Father of Uncas, a Mohican. Magua, Le Eenard Subtil, the Indian Runner and Guide. Montcalm, a General of the French Army. General Webb, a General of the British Army. General Munro, Commander of Fort William Henry and Father of Alice and Cora. Cora, Heroine, Daughter of General Munro, Sister to Alice. Alice, Daughter of General Munro, Sister to Cora. Major Hey ward, a Young British Officer, Suitor for Alice's hand. Hawkeye, the Scout. David Gamut, the Singing-Master. 282 THE LAST OF THE MOHICANS. By James Fenimore Cooper. It was a feature peculiar to the colonial wars of North America, that the toils and dangers of the wilderness were to be encountered before the adverse hosts could meet. A wide and apparently an impervious boundary of forests severed the possessions of the hostile provinces, of France and England. The hardy colonist, and the trained Euro- pean who fought at his side, frequently expended months in struggling against the rapids of the streams, or in effecting the rugged passes of the mountains, in quest of an opportunity to exhibit their courage in a more martial conflict. Perhaps no district throughout the wide extent of the intermediate frontiers can furnish a livelier picture of the cruelty and fierceness of the savage warfare of those periods than the country which lies between the head waters of the Hudson and the adjacent lakes. Lake George had been so named by the English in honor of their sovereign. To the French it was known as Lac du Saint Sacrement, whose waters, on account of being peculiarly pure and limpid, were used by the early Jesuit missionaries in the rite of baptism; but to the Indian the beautiful sheet of water was known as Horican, and by this name we shall speak of it. The region of the lake was the scene of bitter war and cruel bloodshed. The incidents which follow occurred in the 283 2£4 THE LAST OF THE MOHICANS. third year of the war which England and France last waged for the possession of the surrounding territory. Montcalm was moving up the Champlain with a large army, and one midsummer's evening an Indian runner brought the request from Munro, the commander of a fort on Lake Horican, to General Webb to send reinforce- ments to him. Two forts had been erected by the British at the ends of the portage uniting the Hudson with the lake, the northern one commanded by Munro, the one at the southern extremity in command of General Webb, under whom was a body of more than five thousand men. In the early morning, Webb's army was in motion, attended with the pomp and display of the proud British army. The sounds of the soldiery had died away on the breeze, but there still remained the signs of another departure, before a log cabin of unusual size and accom- modations, in front of which those sentinels paced their rounds who were known to guard the person of the English general. The horses which stood in readiness before the cabin showed that two of them at least were to be ridden by females. Among the crowd of spectators who stood by to witness the gayly-caparisoned party move off, was one who in countenance and actions was a marked exception to the others. He expressed his senti- ments on the horses before him either favorably or unfa- vorably. His voice was remarkably soft and sweet. He acted as one who had in his keeping some high and extra- ordinary trust. He was delivering encomiums on one of the horses, when his eye turned and fell upon the Indian runner at his side. . The Indian was apparently stoical, but there was a sullen fierceness mingled with his quiet, THE LAST OF THE MOHICANS. 285 and there were other features about him that would make him a mark to an acute observer. His eyes for a moment met those of the man who now scanned him, and then turned away, and he seemed to be looking into vacancy. The curiosity of the spectators was at that moment directed to two ladies, who came forth with a young man in the dress of an officer, and made ready to mount their horses. When seated in their saddles, the young officer who was to be their attendant mounted his horse, and with graceful farewell bows to General Webb, followed by their train they proceeded quietly towards the northern entrance of the encampment. The Indian runner glided by the party and guided them along the military road in front of them. One of the ladies, the elder of the two, was veiled; the other one took no thought to conceal her face from the breezes of the morning or the gaze of her companions. As the Indian passed them, the former lifted her veil and gazed upon him with a look of pity, admiration, and horror, as her dark eye followed the easy motions of the savage. She then covered her face and rode on, as one who thought nothing of the scene around her. The younger lady inquired of the officer, their escort, about the Indian, and he replied: — "He is said to be a Canadian; and yet he served with our friends the Mohawks, who, as you know, are one of the six allied nations. He was brought amongst us, as I have heard, by some strange accident in which your father was interested, and in which the savage was rigidly dealt by; but I forget the idle tale, — it is enough that he is now our friend." The young lady was not prepossessed in favor of the 286 THE LAST OF THE MOHICANS. runner, and on hearing that he had once been her father's enemy, she liked him still less. She asked Major Hey ward, the young officer, to speak to him, so that she might hear his voice, remarking that she had great faith in the tones of the human voice. She was told that it would be in vain to do so, as, even should he understand him, in all probability the Indian, like most of his people, would affect ignorance of the English language. She still expressed her distrust of their guide, and to her veiled companion, said: — "Cora, what think you? If we journey with the troops, though we may find their presence irksome, shall we not feel better assurance of our safety ? " "Should we distrust the man, because his manners are not our manners, and that his skin is dark ? " coldly asked Cora. Alice gave her steed a cut and followed the runner along the dark and tangled pathway. Major Hey ward rode along by Cora's side. They heard horses' hoofs in the near distance, and soon a colt appeared, and then the man who has already been noticed among those who witnessed the departure of the party from the cabin came into view, and as he drew near them Heyward inquired the reason of his presence. He answered that he also was riding to Fort William Henry, and "concluded good company would seem consistent to the wishes of both parties." " You appear to possess the privilege of a casting vote," returned Heyward. "We are three, whilst you have consulted no one but yourself." "Even so. The first point to be obtained is to know one's own mind. Once sure of that, — and where women THE LAST OF THE MOHICANS. 287 are concerned it is not easy, — the next is, to act up to the decision. I have endeavored to do both, and here I am." Nothing that Hey ward could say daunted the stranger. Alice was now at the side of Hey ward. "Throw aside that frown, Hey ward; . . . suffer him to journey in our train," remarked Alice. "Besides," she added, in a low and hurried voice, casting a glance at the distant Cora, who had ridden forward and now slowly followed the footsteps of their silent but sullen guide, "it may be a friend added to our strength, in time of need." She pointed to the couple in front, and Heyward soon joined them, while Alice rode along by the side of the stranger, and, learning that he cared for music, they began to talk upon that theme. Soon the man began singing, in a full, melodious voice, a psalm of David, the tones reaching those in advance. The Indian uttered a few words in broken English to Heyward, who requested the singer to cease his musical efforts, urging that, though he apprehended no danger near, prudence demanded that they journey as quietly as possible. Could Major Heyward only have seen the savage face that was watching them from the thicket, he would have felt the need of greater watchfulness than ever. On that (lay, two men were lingering on the banks of a small but rapid stream, within an hour's journey of the encampment of Webb. One of them was a grave, dusky Indian, the other ,a white man; but they were friends, judging from their conversation. The Indian addressed his companion as "Hawkeye"; the latter always called his companion "Chingachgook." Ching- achgook was telling Hawkeye of the history and tradi- 288 THE LAST OF THE MOHICANS. tions of his tribe, and finished pathetically by say- ing:— " So all of my family departed, each in his turn, to the land of spirits. I am on the hilltop, and must go down into the valley; and when Uncas follows in my footsteps, there will no longer be any of the blood of the Saga- mores, for my boy is the last of the Mohicans." "Uncas is here," said another voice, in the same soft, guttural tones, near his elbow; "who speaks to Uncas?" and at the next instant a youthful warrior passed between them and seated himself on the banks of the rapid stream. The youth brought to his father news of the Maquas, their enemies. He was interrupted by the appearance of Major Hey ward and his party, who inquired of the distance to the post called William Henry. The answers the officer received were not reassuring, and in a short conversation Heyward learned that his Indian guide was an enemy and had purposely led him wrong. Chingachgook and the scout, for such was Hawkeye, urged that the runner, Magua, be instantly shot, but Heyward would not consent. Then it was decided that he had better be captured and bound, and the scout directed them how to do this. Heyward was to engage him in conversation, while Uncas and his father should stealthily approach him from different directions and effect their plans. These plans proved futile, and Magua, suspecting something, darted into the woods and was lost to them. Realizing his own danger, but more that of the ladies in his care, Major Heyward begged Hawkeye and the two Indians to defend his charges and to escort them to the fort. After con- sulfation with the two Indians in their own language, THE LAST OF THE MOHICANS. 289 the scout turned away, saying in a sort of soliloquy, and in the English tongue: — "Uncas is right! It would not be the act of men to leave such harmless things to their fate, even though it breaks up the harboring place forever. If you would save these tender blossoms from the fangs of the worst of sarpents, gentleman, you have neither time to lose nor resolution to throw away ! " To Hey ward he said : — "These Mohicans and I will do what man's thoughts can invent, to keep such flowers, which, though so sweet, were never made for the wilderness, from harm, and that without hope of any other recompense but such as God always gives to upright dealings. First, you must promise two things, both in your own name and for your friends, or without serving you we shall only injure ourselves! . . . The one is, to be still as these sleeping woods, let what will happen; and the other is, to keep the place where we shall take you, forever a secret from all mortal men." Making for the river, Cora and Alice were put into a canoe, and Hawkeye and Hey ward bore it up the stream, the Indians and the white man having gone by another route to the point where they were to be reunited. They went to the foot of Glenn's Falls, and the scout and the Mohicans disappeared in a cavern of a huge rock that hung over the water's edge. Heyward and his compan- ions were uneasy at this, but a sudden light flashed upon those without, and laid bare the much-prized secret of the place. At a little distance in advance stood Uncas, his whole person thrown powerfully into view. The ingenu- ous Alice gazed at his free air and proud carriage, as she would have looked upon some precious relic of the 19 290 THE LAST OF THE MOHICANS. Grecian chisel, to which life had been imparted by the intervention of a miracle. They went inside the cave, and were soon safe from any enemy who might pursue them. A simple meal of venison was soon before them, and sassafras boughs thrown upon the soft black rock formed pleasant seats for the ladies. They were enjoying * some measure of security, when they were startled by a piercing cry, the like of which neither the scout nor the Indians had ever heard before. Uncas went out to reconnoitre, but returned unsatisfied. The party prepared for rest, Cora and Alice being shown into an inner chamber, Major Heyward accompanying them as guard. Again the horrid cry was heard, and it was then decided that some should keep watch -during the night, upon the rock. Hawkeye and the Mohicans assumed this duty. With the first streakings of the dawn the party were awake and making preparations for moving on towards Fort William Henry. Just then it seemed, for near a minute, as if the demons of hell had possessed them- selves of the air about them, and were venting their savage humors in barbarous sounds. From the opposite side of the stream the quick reports of a dozen rifles were heard, which were soon answered by those in front of the cave. Their only hope was that Munro, alarmed at their non-arrival at the fort, would send a detachment strong enough to escort them to a place of safety. Firing ceased, though a vigilant watch was kept up by the guards from their fissures in the rocks. Heyward hoped that the attack would not be renewed, but a motion from the scout showed him where the enemy were, at a point very near to them. His impetuosity to proceed was THE LAST OF THE MOHICANS. 291 checked by the scout, who warned him that danger was ahead of them and they must await the movements of the enemy. They did not wait long. Soon it was a hand- to-hand contest, in which the party from the cave were victorious, several of the attacking party having been disabled or killed and thrown from the top of the precipice. " To cover! to cover! " shouted Hawkeye, "to cover, for your lives ! the work is but half ended ! " There were more Indians at hand, and the fighting was continued till the powder of the party on the defensive gave out. They looked below and saw their canoe floating away with a hostile Huron in it. All hope of escape from that quarter was gone. Destruction was before them, or worse, a horrid captivity. It was Cora who then showed true heroism, urging the scout and the Mohicans to make speed to her father, General Munro, and urge him to the rescue. Haw T keye and his friend Chingachgook saw no hope of rescue in any other way; and commending her for her wisdom, they dropped into the stream to make for Munro's headquarters. Uncas lingered in immovable composure. Cora urged him also, saying: — " Go to my father, as I have said. . . . Tell him to trust you with the means to buy the freedom of his daughters. Go ! 't is my wish, 't is my prayer, that you will go!" With noiseless step he crossed the rock, and dropped into the troubled stream. Cora entreated Hey ward to go also, but he did not heed her entreaties. The two sisters retired into the inner cavern, and Heyward, seeing all things seemingly peaceful, decided that the surest means of safety for himself and David Gamut, the singing mas- 292 THE LAST OF THE MOHICANS. ter, who had been his companion in travel the day before, and who had received a blow that had disabled him, was also in the cave, and they entered it and were hidden from view. David took out his pitch-pipe and began a melody of exceeding sweetness. They were all soothed and comforted by the music, when a yell burst into the air without that sent a thrill of horror through them. The outer cave was entered and demolished, but the inner one was undiscovered. The Indians left the place, and Hey ward felt they were again safe. Alice, in the act of returning thanks, glanced upward, and beheld Magua, or Le Renard Subtil, the Indian runner, gazing through a small opening into their retreat. Soon his eyes discovered them, and upon his giving a prolonged yell, the Indians answered him, and returned to the cave. Now were they captives indeed, with no hope of mercy from their savage captors. The party were led to the canoe, which had been secured by the Indians. When the pilot chosen for the task of guiding the canoe had taken his station, the whole band plunged again into the river, the vessel glided down the current, and in a few moments the captives found themselves on the south bank of the stream nearly opposite to the point where they had struck it the preceding evening. The band now divided. The horses of the captives were led from the cover of the woods. The chief, mounting the charger of Heyward, led the way directly across the river, followed by most of his people, leaving the prisoners in charge of six savages, at whose head was Le Renard Subtil. Heyward and his friends were taken in a course directly opposite to that leading to Fort William Henry. Hey- THE LAST OF THE MOHICANS. 293 ward tried to work upon the feelings of Le Renard, telling him of the grief of the white father, Munro, over the loss of his daughters. A remarkable expression passed over the Indian's face. Heyward had spoken to him of the reward he would receive should he rescue and deliver them in safety, but the gleam on his face was not one of avarice, — it was more. "Go," he said, "go to the dark-haired daughter, and ^ay, Magua waits to speak. The father will remember what the child promises." Supposing that some additional pledge would be de- manded, Heyward led Cora to him. Le Renard motioned with his hand for him to withdraw, saying, "When the Huron talks to the women, his tribe shut their ears." Heyward withdrew, and the Indian recounted the events of his life to Cora, not forgetting to tell her of having been a soldier under her father's command, and of the flogging he had received by Munro's order on the occa- sion of his having become intoxicated. Revenge burned within him, and he had a proposal to make. "When Magua left his people, his wife was given to another chief; he has now made friends with the Hurons, and will go back to the graves of his tribe, on the shores of the great lake. Let the daughter of the English chief follow and live in his wigwam forever." Cora listened to his revolting proposal, but retained her self-command, knowing well how much depended on her prudence. Her reply did not satisfy Le Subtil, and he answered : — " When the blows scorched the back of the Huron, he would know 7 where to find a woman to feel the smart. The daughter of Munro w r ould draw his water, hoe his 294 THE LAST OP THE MOHICANS. corn, and cook his venison. The body of the gray-head would sleep among his cannon, but his heart would lie within reach of the knife of Le Subtil." Scorn and indignation governed her reply. The Indian answered this bold defiance by a ghastly smile, that showed an unaltered purpose, while he motioned her away, as if to close the conference forever. He went back to his comrades, and in an address he recounted their unavenged wrongs, urging them to requite them, and put the question, " What shall be said to the old men when they ask us for scalps, and we have not a hair from a white head to give them?" He pointed out their means of vengeance, and in a moment the savages seized Heyward and David, and bound them securely. Cora and Alice were also bound, and again Le Subtil made his hideous proposal to Cora: — "Say; shall I send the yellow hair to her father, and will you follow Magua to the great lakes, to carry his water, and feed him with corn?" She spurned his offer for her own sake; and when she told her friends of his base proposition, and that they might be free if she would consent to be his wife, Hey- ward indignantly refused any good that might come to himself through such a sacrifice. Alice, with the love of life full upon her, wavered for a moment, but, her better nature mastering, she answered firmly, — "No, no, no; better that we die as we have lived, to- gether ! " "Then die! " shouted Magua, and hurled his tomahawk at the innocent girl. Heyward could not stand this unmoved, as the ax cut off some of her hair and lodged firmly in the tree above THE LAST OF THE MOHICANS. 295 her head, and he burst his bonds .and rushed upon another Indian, who was preparing to repeat the blow. They grappled, and fell to the earth together. Hey ward was pressed to the earth, and saw the Indian's knife gleaming above his head, but just then a whistling sound rushed past him, he heard the sharp crack of a rifle, and his antagonist fell dead at his side. Hawkeye and Uncas and his father had not gone to the bend of the river, but lay concealed under its bank, and hearing through the stillness of the region the sounds of their friends' capture, had turned back to their relief. They arrived just in time to rescue them. The Indians were all killed in the contest that followed, all excepting Le Renard. In a hand-to-hand encounter with Ching- achgook, he simulated defeat; and when he was near the edge of the plain to which he had gradually drawn his antagonist, he fell backward without motion and seem- ingly without life, then, instantly leaping upon his feet, made his escape. The party soon after started towards Munro's camp. They met danger on the way, but during the day came within the boundaries of the French, and from a moun- tain they saw the clear waters of the Horican in the dis- tance. They moved still farther north, and the ramparts and low buildings of William Henry appeared in sight. Coming nearer, the quick eyes of Hawkeye saw prepara- tions for war, and he exclaimed, "Montcalm has already filled the woods with his accursed Iroquois." Danger was before them, danger was all around, as pickets were stationed between them and the fort in every direction. Montcalm had invested the place. A crashing sound was heard, and a cannon ball entered the thicket. Uncas, 296 THE LAST OF THE MOHICANS. the ever watchful, commenced speaking to the scout in the Delaware tongue. A crisis was at hand, and some- thing desperate must be done to secure their safety. The dense fog from the lake enveloped them, and they mis- took the direction of the fort and started backwards to the woods, but the mistake was soon rectified. By this time their presence was discovered and they were hotty pur- sued by the French. They knew that this was no time for hesitation, and hurried onwards. They heard an eager pursuer give an order in French, when suddenly a voice above them exclaimed: — "Stand firm, and be ready, my gallant 60ths! Wait to see the enemy, fire low, and sweep the glacis." "Father! father!" exclaimed a piercing cry from out the mist; "it is I! Alice, thy own Elsie! Spare, 0! save your daughters ! " " Hold ! " shouted the former speaker, in the awful tones of parental agony. "'Tis she! God has restored me my children! Throw open the sally-port; to the field, 60ths, to the field; pull not a trigger, lest ye kill my lambs! Drive off these dogs of France with your steel." He rushed out of the body of the mist, and folded them to his bosom, and exclaimed in the peculiar accent of Scotland: — " For this I thank thee, Lord ! Let danger come as it will, thy servant is now prepared ! " In the next few days events of importance crowded thick and fast upon those entrenched behind the walls of William Henry. There was one which concerned Major Heyward which must not be omitted— his declaration of love for Alice Munro, and his request for her father's sanction to their union. There was another which THE LAST OF THE MOHICANS. 297 touched the heart of every soldier in the gallant 60th — a letter from General Webb to Munro, which had been taken from Hawkeye, who was now a prisoner of the French, and which Montcalm handed to Munro and Hey ward in a conference they had with him, in which he advised a speedy surrender, urging in the plainest language, as a reason, the utter impossibility of his send- ing a single man to their rescue. Nothing remained to be done but to capitulate. Montcalm was too honorable to profit by the defeat of Munro, and the treaty stipulated that the garrison were to retain their arms, their colors, and their baggage, and consequently, according to mili- tary opinion, their honor. Next morning the English soldiers, three thousand in number, were soon in motion, and passed out of the fort. On their way they passed a group of stragglers who were engaged in contention, and among them Cora discovered the form of Le Renard. He gave the well-known whoop, and more than two thousand raving savages broke from the forest at the signal. The horrors that succeeded are too revolting to dwell upon. Magua captured Cora and Alice, and bore them back to the mountain-top whither once before they had been carried by the friendly scout. David Gamut followed them. The terrible engagement between the savages and the English is known in history as The Massacre of William Henry. The third day after the massacre, five men might have been seen making their way along the path leading to the Hudson. The party was made up of Munro and Heyward, the scout, Hawkeye, and Uncas and his father. They were in search of Cora and Alice. They passed heaps of the dead, and looked upon them with horror. 298 THE LAST OF THE MOHICANS. Uncas suddenly darted ahead, and returned bearing a fragment of the green veil that Cora wore. "My child!" said ivXunro, speaking quickly and wildly; " give me my child ! " "Uncas will try," was the short and touching answer. The young Mohican darted away again, and raised a cry of success as he saw another piece of the veil flutter- ing from a tree. They were now on the trail, and per- ceived a footprint, which, on examining it closely, Uncas pronounced to be that of Le Eenard Subtil. They found the pitch-pipe of David dangling from a tree; then an- other footprint, which they knew must be Cora's, and then a trinket which belonged to Alice. They went back to the ruins of William Henry to rest during the night, preparatory to starting in the morning on what might prove to be a long and weary search. In the evening Hawkeye and Heyward went to the side of the fort that looked toward the Hudson. After their success the French army had moved on, and there was no danger to be apprehended from them. Heyward detected noises on the plain and called the scout's attention to them. He called Uncas, knowing that his senses were more acute than his own, who vanished from their sight as soon as they told him of the sounds they had heard. He returned, bearing the scalp of an Oneida whom he had shot. In the morning they entered a canoe and rowed up the lake, and landed on the sterile and rugged district which separates the tributaries of Champlain from those of the Hudson, the Mohawk, and the St. Lawrence. After many hours of laborious travel, the scout called a halt for the night. In the morning they resumed their journey. They felt that Le Renard was bearing his captives north, THE LAST OF THE MOHICANS. 299 and the scout and Uncas were alive to every sign of a trail, which they had .so far failed to discover. At last they were rewarded — Uncas had discovered that some heavy animal had passed. "See!" he said, "the dark- hair has gone towards the frost." Better than that, they moved on and came upon David Gamut, painted and dressed like an Indian, who gave them all the informa- tion they needed. Munro's daughters were safe and were well treated, and were being conveyed, without any espe- cial haste, to Canada. Le Renard, or Magua, had reached an encampment of his people, and had separated his prisoners. Alice was with the Hurons, and Cora was thought to be with a tribe of the Dela wares not far away. Magua and his men had that day gone on a moose hunt, and David, whose power of song had conquered the sav- ages, could come and go at his own free will. Hawkeye tapped his forehead, to indicate that there were other reasons why he was not molested. After he had told them everything of moment, the scout advised that he go back and remain with the tribe, and intimate to Cora and Alice that their friends were in pursuit. Hey ward decided to accompany him in the disguise of an Indian, painted as a buffoon, in the hope of rescuing Alice; and as such he, with the singer, started to the camping ground of the open enemies of the English — the Hurons. Shortly after the arrival of Heyward and David, Uncas, having fallen into a snare, was brought into the same camp, a prisoner. No quarter could be expected from Le Renard, who was a powerful chief of the tribe, and who came back from the hunt and seated himself among the warriors. The captive Uncas stood near him, but he paid no attention to him while he indulged in the 300 THE LAST OF THE MOHICANS. pleasures of his pipe. When through with that, he arose and glanced for the first time at Uncas. Their eyes met, and in the bold look neither man quailed before the other. Le Renard decided that the captive should die; and after he had harangued his men, one of them arose and, with a yell like a demon, twirled his battle-ax above the head of Uncas, but the arm of Le Renard was raised, and turned it from its course. Uncas was to be held for greater indignities, and was not to die until the morrow. Heyward, in his fanciful disguise and assumed char- acter, had in some way attained the reputation of possess- ing healing powers, and was taken to a cavern where a young woman lay ill of some disease that baffled the skill of the medicine men. A bear went along with him and his guide and entered the cave, and made demon- strations of friendliness to him, of which he was in fear ; but seeing that his companion seemed at ease, he made no effort to get rid of the animal. His guide left him alone with the woman to practice any incantations he might see proper, and the seeming bear discovered itself to him as no other than Hawk eye, who by unmistakable proof assured him that Alice, surrounded by plunder from William Henry, was in an inner room of the cave, having been put there for security. Heyward immediately went to Alice, and they were talk- ing together, when all at once they were confronted by the malignant face of Le Renard Subtil, who had come in by a private entrance. They found that he meditated no immediate violence, and that his intentions were but to secure Heyward as an additional prisoner. Directly a growl caught his ear, and the bear appeared. When Le THE LAST OF THE MOHICANS. 301 Renard came within reach, the bear suddenly extended its forelegs and held him in a tight grasp. Hey ward, seizing a stout buckskin thong, bound him so that there was no escape. He was bound securely and gagged. Alice was overcome by fear and had to be carried out in Heyward's arms. The relatives of the sick woman had gathered outside the cave, and it was only by strategy that Hawkeye and Heyward escaped with their burden. When they had passed the bounds of the camp, Hawkeye pointed out to Heyward the way of escape. "This path will lead you to the brook," he said; "follow its northern bank until you come to a fall; mount the hill on your right, and you will see the fires of the other people. There you must go and demand protection; if they are true Delawares you will be safe. Go, and Providence be with you." Uncas, in the camp of the enemy, was bound hand and foot by strong and painful withes. The scout made his way back into the Indian encampment, and in passing an unfinished hut found David Gamut, who led him to the lodge where Uncas lay. Going in in his unique dis- guise, the captive did not recognize him. He took no notice of him as a bear, but when he heard him make a peculiar hissing sound, he uttered, in a deep, suppressed voice, "Hawkeye." The scout induced him to array him- self in the shaggy skin, after he had been unbound. Hawkeye having exchanged clothing with David and as- sumed the role of singer, he and Uncas left the lodge and were soon out of immediate danger. The rage of the Hurons, when they found that they had been outwitted, was dangerous, and they vowed re- taliation* At the cavern there was great excitement. 302 THE LAST OF THE MOHICANS. The relatives of the sick woman waited for some time after Heyward had left, and when they went into the room where she lay on her rude bed, they found her dead. A dark-looking object was seen rolling out of another apartment, which proved to be Magua, who told them of all that had happened in the cavern, and of Alice's escape. Pursuers were soon on the trail of the fugitives. Magua had early discovered that in retaining the person of Alice, he possessed the most effectual check on Cora. When they parted, therefore, he kept the former within reach of his hand, consigning the one he most valued to the keep- ing of their allies. Alice was gone and he must try to recover her. He went to the camp of the Delawares, where he had put Cora for safe keeping, expecting to find Alice also there. Tamenund, a patriarch of great age, presided at the councils of the tribe. With the cunning of all the eloquence of which he was master, Le Subtil endeavored to win their favor, and was successful. He presented to the patriarch his claims to Cora and the escaped captives, and as the Hurons and Delawares were at peace, his claims were sustained. The intercourse of the sisters in the short time they were together was loving and tender. Their separation was cruel and heartrending. Cora stood foremost among the prisoners, entwining her arms in those of Alice, in the tenderness of sisterly love. The scout and Heyward were bound, and awaited the fate before them. Cora plead for herself and her friends, but it was of no avail. "There is yet one of thine own people who has not been brought before thee; before thou lettest the Huron depart in triumph, hear him speak," she said to Tam- enund. THE LAST OF THE MOHICANS. 303 Then the waving multitude opened and shut again, and Uncas stood in the living circle. Tamenund uttered words that were very uncomplimentary to Uncas, and in his reply the young Indian stung his tribe to the quick. Twenty knives gleamed in the air, and as many warriors sprang to their feet at this biting, and perhaps merited, retort. His clothes were torn from him, and he was about to be led to the stake; but suddenly this cruel work was arrested, for on the bosom of the captive was seen a small tortoise, beautifully tattooed, the presence of which saved him. He understood his power, and like to a king he stepped in front of them, and said: — "Men of the Lenni Lenape! my race upholds the earth. Your feeble tribe stands on my shell ! . . . My race is the grandfather of nations ! " "AYho art thou?" demanded the patriarch. "Uncas, the son of Chingachgook, a son of the great Unamis. . . . The blood of the turtle has been in many chiefs, but all have gone back into the earth from whence they came, except Chingachgook and his son," said Uncas. " Our wise men have often said that two warriors of the unchanged race were in the hills of the Yengeese [Eng- lish]; why have their seats at the council fires of the Delawares been so long empty ? " returned the sage. The superior rank of Uncas saved him, and through him all the others, except Cora, were also saved. All that Uncas could do, and even Hawk eye's offer of himself as her substitute, could not save Cora. After commending Alice to Heyward's care, and embracing the almost insensible girl, with a tearless eye and a proud step the captive walked off with the man whom her whole being loathed, Le Renard Subtil. 304 THE LAST OF THE MOHICANS. The instant Magua and Cora were out of sight, the mul- titude left behind became tossed and agitated by fierce and powerful passion, and preparations were begun to accom- pany Uncas to the field. War was declared against the Hurons, and Uncas was placed at the head of the Dela- wares. Magua put Cora in a cave and appeared in front of his own tribe of savages. To obtain the release of the beautiful girl and wreak his vengeance on the Hurons, was what had incited Uncas to warlike action. When the opposing tribes met, the charge was one of terrible cruelty and carnage. Uncas singled out Le Subtil and followed him in chase to the mouth of the cave already mentioned, Hawkeye, Heyward, and David pressing in his footsteps. Magua fled through the subterranean pas- sages, Uncas and the white men following. A white robe was seen fluttering in the further extremity of a passage that seemed to lead up the mountain. " 'T is Cora ! " exclaimed Heyward, in a voice in which horror and delight were wildly mingled. "Cora! Cora!" echoed Uncas, bending forward like a deer. " 'T is the maiden!" shouted the scout. "Courage, lady; we come! — we come!" They could see that she was being borne along by two savages, whom Magua directed in their flight. But the Hurons were losing ground in the race, — the Delawares were almost upon them, — and Magua halted. He drew his knife. "Woman," he said to Cora, "choose; the wigwam or the knife of Le Subtil ! " Her reply was, " I am thine! do with me as thou seest best." Again he commanded her to choose. She answered not. But just then a piercing cry was heard above them, " Uncas appeared, leaping frantically, from a fearful height, upon the ledge. 20 306 THE LAST OF THE MOHICANS. and Uncas appeared, leaping frantically, from a fearful height, upon the ledge. Magua recoiled a step; and one of his assistants, profiting by the chance, sheathed his own knife in the bosom of Cora. Magua, maddened, sprang upon Uncas and buried his knife in his back. Uncas arose from the blow and struck the murderer of Cora to his feet, in which effort he spent all his remaining strength. Le Subtil seized the unre- sisting arm of his foe, and passed his knife into his bosom three several times, before his victim, still keeping his gaze riveted on his enemy with a look of inextinguish- able scorn, fell dead at his feet. Magua uttered a fierce, wild, joyous cry over the death of his enemy, and leaped forward to gain the height of the mountain. A rock fell, and looking up he saw the angry face of the singer, David Gamut. He avoided him, and springing over a fissure, reached a place where he need not fear him. The eyes of Hawkeye watched his every movement. He saw that one more bound would carry Magua to safety, and saw that he made the leap and fell short of it. Summoning all his powers, Magua renewed the attempt to scale the preci- pice, but the scout, watching the most favorable time, aimed his rifle at him and fired. The arms of the Huron relaxed, and his body fell back a little. Turning a relentless look on his enemy, he shook a hand in grim defiance. But his hold loosened, and his dark person was seen cutting the air with its head downwards, for a fleeting instant, until it glided past the fringe of shrub- bery which clung to the mountain, in its rapid flight to destruction. The sun found the Lenape, on the succeeding day, a THE LAST OF THE MOHICANS. 307 nation of mourners. Six Delaware girls strewed sweet- scented herbs and forest flowers on a litter of fragrant plants, that, under a pall of Indian robes, supported all that now remained of the ardent, high-souled, and gen- erous Cora. At her feet sat her aged father in the deso- lation of his grief. Gamut stood near, and Heyward, too, and watched the touching ceremony. Another group was opposite, in which the body of Uncas appeared, seated as in life, and arrayed in the most gorgeous ornaments that the wealth of the tribe could furnish. Chingachgook was placed directly in front of the body of his boy. The Mohican warrior had kept a steady, anxious look on the cold and senseless countenance of his son. So unchanged was his attitude that it was hard to distinguish the living from the dead but for the occasional gleamings of a troubled spirit, that shot athwart the dark visage of the bereaved father. The scout and the aged patriarch Tamenund were near by. The funeral rites, according to the custom of the Indians, were long and impressive. The women took up the chant in honor of the dead, and the sounds were singularly soft and wailing. Addresses were made to Cora and Uncas as though they were living, and they admonished Uncas to be kind to her. Clothing their language in their peculiar imagery, they betrayed that they had discovered the love of Uncas for Cora. They made tender allusions to the sad Alice, who wept in a lodge adjacent. Warriors pressed near Uncas in suc- cession, and sang or spoke their tributes to the departed. The lips of Chingachgook had so far parted as to announce that it was the monody of the father that followed the dirge of the warriors. At last the funeral 308 THE LAST OF THE MOHICANS. rites were over. An aide of Montcalm, with his guard, had arrived to convey Munro and his party to the British army, and they passed out of the sight of their friends, the Delawares. The scout was the only white person left behind. Chingachgook was now the object of com- mon attention. Hawkey e attached himself to the lonely old man, saying: — "If ever I forget the lad who has so often fou't at my side in war, and slept at my side in peace, may He who made us all, whatever may be our color or our gifts, for- get me! The boy has left us for a time; but, Sagamore, you are not alone." At the close of Uncas' funeral ceremonies, the patriarch addressed the assembly. "It is enough," he said. "Go, children of the Lenape, the anger of the Manitou is not done. Why should Tamenund stay ? The pale faces are masters of the earth, and the time of the red men has not yet come again. My day has been too long. In the morning I saw the son of Unamis happy and strong; and yet, before the night has come, have I lived fcc see the last warrior of the wise race of the 'Mohican* '* NATHANIEL HAWTHORNE 1804-1864. Nathaniel Hawthorne was born in 1804, in the town of Salem, Massachusetts. He was educated at Bowdoin College. Among his classmates was the poet Longfellow, who in after years said of the product of his gifted pen, "It is as clear as running waters are; indeed, his words are but as stepping-stones, upon which, with free and youthful bound, his spirit crosses and recrosses the bright and rushing stream of thought." Hawthorne's power to awaken an intense interest in his readers is unsurpassed by any author; his style is as transparent and beautifully fresh as is the autumnal sunrise. In 1850 he published "The Scarlet Letter," a fasci- nating story of early New England life. This at once raised its author to the first rank among American writers of fiction. The following year he published " The House of the Seven Gables," about which, in a letter to a friend, he wrote, "'The House of the Seven Gables/ in my opinion, is better than 'The Scarlet Letter.'" His earliest writings appeared, however, in 1832, nearly twenty years before. In 1837 he published the famous collection of "Twice-Told Tales," so called because they had previously appeared in periodicals or other publi- cations. Another delightful volume of tales he published in 309 310 NATHANIEL HAWTHORNE. 1846, entitled "Mosses from an Old Manse." This volume was written in Concord, Massachusetts, whither he moved in 1843, occupying an old parsonage, or manse, from the windows of which its early inmates looked, in April, 1775, upon the first battle of the Revolution. In 1853 Mr. Hawthorne was appointed by President Pierce United States Consul at Liverpool, which office he held four years. That his ambition from early boyhood was to become an author is evinced by a letter written to his mother, in which he asked her if she would not like him to become an author and have his books read in England. He died in 1864. Home of Nathaniel Hawthorne, Concord, Mass. THE SCARLET LETTER. Principal Characters. Hester Prynne, condemned to wear the Scarlet Letter. Pearl ; Daughter of Hester Prynne. Arthur Dimmesdale, Hester Prynne's Pastor. Roger Chilling worth, Physician, a Stranger in Boston. Rev. John Wilson, Boston's oldest Clergyman. Governor Bellingham. 312 THE SCARLET LETTER. By Nathaniel Hawthorne. The summer sun shone brightly one morning, two centuries ago, upon a crowd of men, intermixed with many women, who had gathered in front of the old prison in the chief historic town of the Puritans to wit- ness something which possessed for them unusual interest. The eyes of all were fixed upon the ponderous prison- door, and an onlooker, not possessing even a moderately critical eye, might have observed that the feminine por- tion of the motley multitude seemed to be awaiting developments with more anxiety than did any of the stronger sex. Listening intently to their conversation, one could gather that some sentence of the law was to be inflicted upon one of their sisterhood. Their tones and remarks bore the stamp of deep bitterness, no sweet char- ity being mixed with what they had to say. A man near by heard what they had said, and exclaimed, in rebuke: — "'Mercy on us, . . . is there no virtue in woman, save what springs from a wholesome fear of the gallows? . . . Hush, now, gossips! for the lock is turning in the prison-door, and here comes Mistress Prynne herself.' " The prison-door was flung open and the town beadle emerged, clad in his somber gown, his sword hanging at his side, and his staff of office in his hand. His august presence hushed the expectant assembly. " Stretching forth the official staff in his left hand, he laid his right upon 313 314 THE SCARLET LETTER. the shoulder of a young woman, whom he thus drew for- ward; until, on the threshold of the prison-door, she repelled him, by an action marked with natural dignity and force of character, and stepped into the open air, as if by her own free will. She bore in her arms a child, a baby of some three months old, who winked and turned aside its little face from the too vivid light of day; because its existence, heretofore, had brought it acquainted only with the gray twilight of a dungeon, or other dark- some apartment of the prison." When she stood where she could be plainly seen, she made a movement as if she would clasp her baby closely to her bosom, but on second thought she teld it on her arm, and with a calm look gazed upon those who were before her. "On the breast of her gown, in fine red cloth, surrounded with an elaborate embroidery and fan- tastic flourishes of gold-thread, appeared the letter A. It was so artistically done, and with so much fertility and gorgeous luxuriance of fancy, that it had all the effect of a last and fitting decoration to the apparel which she wore; and which was of a splendor in accordance with the taste of the age, but greatly beyond what was allowed by the sumptuary regulations of the colony." The woman upon whom all eyes rested was very handsome, and her manners refined and lady-like. Never had she looked more beautiful than on this fair day, which was to behold her humbled in disgrace before the public. The beadle advanced, and wdth the staff made passage- way through the crowd of spectators, calling to Hester Pry nne, his prisoner, to follow him to the market-place. On all sides of her were stern, unyielding men and women; in front was a rabble of schoolboys, who gazed Hester "stood on the scaffold of the pillory, an infant on her arm, and the letter A, in scarlet, . . . upon her bosom." 316 THE SCARLET LETTER. curiously upon everything connected with her. Her haughty appearance and proud step did not work in her favor. She moved on till she "came to a sort of scaffold, at the western extremity of the market-place. It stood nearly beneath the eaves of Boston's earliest church, and appeared to be a fixture there. ... It was, in short, the platform of the pillory"; and here was Hester Prynne to stand for a certain time, with her baby, the token of her sin and shame, as the gazing-stock of the people, who stood in a mass several feet below the platform. The Governor and his highest advisers were present, who, with the ministers of the town, were gathered upon the balcony of the meeting-house. The presence of these dignitaries of church and state lent a solemnity to the occasion, and poor Hester, who under her assumed indifference carried a very human heart with very human sensibilities, "felt, at moments, as if she must needs shriek out with the full power of her lungs, and cast herself from the scaffold down upon the ground, or else go mad at once." Over her memory flitted the events and scenes of her life — -her native village, her happy childhood, her father's kind face, her mother's loving care; and "a pale, thin, scholar-like visage, with eyes dim and bleared by the lamplight that had served them to pore over many ponderous books." And then she looked before her and saw "the rude market-place of the Puritan settlement, with all the townspeople assem- bled and leveling their stern regards at Hester Prynne, — yes, at herself, — who stood on the scaffold of the pillory, an infant on her arm, and the letter A, in scarlet, . . . upon her bosom. . . . The infant and the shame were real. . . . All else had vanished ! " THE SCARLET LETTER. 317 In the outskirts of the crowd Hester discerned the figure of a man standing near an Indian, and almost at the same time the man looked upon Hester. " When he found the eyes of Hester Prynne fastened on his own, and saw that she appeared to recognize him, he slowly and calmly raised his finger, made a gesture with it in the air, and laid it on his lips." He turned to the man standing nearest him and asked him the meaning of the scene before him, stating that he had been a wanderer, and one who had met with mishaps and imprisonment among the heathen folk where he had been cast, and had but just been brought hither by the Indian to be freed from captivity. He was answered: — " ' Yonder woman, Sir, you must know, was the wife of a certain learned man, English by birth, but who had long dwelt in Amsterdam, whence, some good time agone, he was minded to cross over and cast his lot with us of the Massachusetts. To this purpose, he sent his wife before him, remaining himself to look after some neces- sary affairs. Marry, good Sir, in some two years, or less, that the woman has been a dweller here in Boston, no tidings have come of this learned gentleman, Master Prynne; and his young wife, look you, being left to her own misguidance ' " — He was interrupted by the stranger, who asked who might be the father of her infant, and was told: — "'Of a truth, friend, that matter remaineth a riddle. . . . Madam Hester absolutely refuseth to speak, and the magistrates have laid their heads together in vain. Per- adventure the guilty one stands looking on at this sad spectacle, unknown of man, and forgetting that God sees him.' 318 THE SCARLET LETTER. "'The learned man,' observed the stranger, with an- other smile, 'should come himself, to look into the mystery.'" Hester's townsman added further, that the penalty for such sin as hers was death; but, that, considering the possibility of her husband being at the bottom of the sea, and that her temptation might have been exceptionally strong, her punishment was mitigated, and she was doomed to stand for but three hours on the pillory plat- form, and "'for the remainder of her natural life, to wear a mark of shame upon her bosom.' " The stranger made some further remark about the author of her shame bearing the punishment with the poor woman, and ended with the words, thrice repeated, which sounded like a prophecy, '"He will be known."' Hester Prynne stood with her gaze fixed upon the stranger till he disappeared in the crowd. Soon after, she heard a voice behind her calling her name in a loud and solemn tone. She turned and lifted her eyes to the balcony of the meeting-house and beheld the Reverend John Wilson, the oldest and most famous of Boston's clergymen at that time, who now addressed her in a voice which all present could hear: — " ' Hester Prynne, I have striven with my young brother here, under whose preaching of the word you have been privileged to sit,' — here Mr. Wilson laid his hand on the shoulder of a pale young man beside him, — 'I have sought, I say, to persuade this godly youth, that he should deal with you, here in the face of Heaven, and before these wise and upright rulers, and in hearing of all the people, as touching the vileness and blackness of your sin; . . . insomuch that you should no longer hide the THE SCARLET LETTER. 319 name of him who tempted you to this grievous fall. But he opposes to me . . . that it were wronging the very nature of woman to force her to lay open her heart's secrets in such broad daylight, and in presence of so great a multi- tude. . . . What say you to it, once again, Brother Dimmes- dale ? Must it be thou, or I, that shall deal with this poor sinner's soul ? ' " Governor Bellingham seconded Reverend Wilson's efforts, and the eyes of the whole crowd were fixed upon Reverend Arthur Dimmesdale, the young clergy- man, Hester's pastor, who with a tremulous air leaned over the balcony and looked down steadily into her upturned eyes and said, addressing her: — "' Hester Prynne, thou hearest what, this good man says, and seest the accountability under which I labor. If thou feelest it to be for thy soul's peace, and that thy earthly punishment will thereby be made more effectual to salvation, I charge thee to speak out the name of thy fellow-sinner and fellow-sufferer ! Be not silent from any mistaken pity and tenderness for him. . . . What can thy silence do for him, except it tempt him — yea, compel him, as it were — to add hypocrisy to sin? Heaven hath granted thee an open ignominy. . . . Take heed how thou deniest to him — who, perchance, hath not the courage to grasp it for himself — the bitter, but whole- some, cup that is now presented to thy lips ! ' " His sweet, rich voice caused the hearts of all who heard him to vibrate with sympathy. Even Hester's baby held out its little arms to him. His appeal was so direct that everyone expected to hear Hester speak out the name of her betrayer, or that the guilty one, were he present, would feel the measure of his sin and ascend the 320 THE SCARLET LETTER. scaffold by the side of his victim. Hester stood unmoved. Another voice spoke out of the crowd : — " ' Speak, woman ! Speak ; and give your child a father ! ' '"I will not speak!' answered Hester, turning pale as death, but responding to this voice, which she too surely recognized. ' And my child must seek a heavenly Father; she shall never know an earthly one!' " ' She will not speak ! ' murmured Mr. Dimmesdale. . . . ' Wondrous strength and generosity of a woman's heart! She will not speak ! ' " Hester stood out the time allotted her for her public disgrace, and was then borne back and hidden behind the prison portal. The reaction from the nervous tension was so great that a physician had to be called in before nightfall. The baby, too, was ill. A physician, a stranger, the same who had made inquiries regarding Hester in the market-place, was ushered into the apartment where she was confined. His name was given as Koger Chil- lingworth. Hester became quiet in a moment. The jailer withdrew. Chillingworth attended to the infant first, and soon it, too, was quiet, under the spell of his medicine. He mixed a potion for Hester and offered it to her. She put it to her lips and then hesitated. Roger Chillingworth and Hester Prynne well knew and under- stood each other. "'If death be in this cup, I bid thee think again, ere thou beholdest me quaff it,'" she said. . " ' Dost thou know me so little, Hester Prynne ? . . . Live, . . . and bear about thy doom with thee, in the eyes of men and women, — in the eyes of him whom thou didst call thy husband, — in the eyes of yonder child! And, that thou may est live, take off this draught.'" THE SCARLET LETTER. 321 Hester Prynne stood in the presence of him who had been her lawful husband, and confessed to him, Roger Chillingworth, that she had wronged him in marrying him when she cared nothing for him; wronged him in dishonoring his name, though none in her new home knew what it was; yet no persuasions of his could induce her to tell him the name of her baby's father. Roger confessed that he had done the first wrong when he per- suaded her to marry him, a man whose years and habits of life and thought were incompatible with hers, and then he said with stern, unmistakable resolve: — "'I shall seek this man, as I have sought truth in books. . . . Sooner or later, he must needs be mine. . . . There are none in this land that know me. Breathe not, to any human soul, that thou didst ever call me husband ! Here ... I shall pitch my tent. ... I find here a woman, a man, a child, amongst whom and myself there exist the closest ligaments. No matter whether of love or hate; no matter whether of right or wrong! Thou and thine, Hester Prynne, belong to me. My home is where thou art, and where he is. But betray me not!"' Hester Prynne was once more free, and breathed God's sunshine outside the prison walls. There was some strange tie or fascination that kept her, an outcast, near to the place where she had been dishonored, and where the finger of the public was always pointed at her in scorn. She could not, would not, break the links that bound her to her New World home. She would not go back to England, but on the outskirts of the town, in a little old cottage long since abandoned by him who had built it, she made for herself and her little girl a home. She had some means, and with the help of her beautiful 21 322 THE SCARLET LETTER. needlework she kept her household in simple comfort; and it may seem strange while we tell it, but in the Puritan age there were fashions — gay, costly fashions — peculiar to the times; and Hester Prynne, with the scarlet ever on her bosom, was the designer and maker of gar- ments for ceremonies of pomp and state and almost every noted occasion. But there is not an instance on record where " her skill was called in aid to embroider the white veil which was to cover the pure blushes of a bride." Her clothing was always plainly made, and was of the coarsest material; but that of her child, whom she named Pearl, was gay, and made fancifully, a style that accorded well with the child's peculiar type of beauty. All the money that Hester made, over and above what was required for the support of herself and Pearl, was spent in works of charity; her spare time was given to making garments for those poorer than herself; and, such is human nature, very often did she receive insults from the very ones whom she befriended. While Hester was in the world, she was made to feel by those around about her that she was not of it, — that she was banished from its hopes and its interests. Every day, Sabbath-day as well as week-day, was she made to feel her sin. There was no forgiveness for her in the breasts of the stern Puritans around her. Even "clergymen paused in the street to address words of exhortation, that brought a crowd, with its mingled grin and frown, around the poor, sinful woman. If she entered a church, trusting to share the Sabbath smile of the Universal Father, it was often her mishap to find herself the text of the discourse." Pearl, her beautiful, willful, independent Pearl, whom Hester herself could not understand, was a being for THE SCARLET LETTER. 323 whom there was no companionship, no counterpart, in the world of children around her. She, too, was set apart. Children did not seek her; she did not seek the prim little children of the settlement, — prim even in their plays; her mother was her only companion. From a tiny baby the scarlet letter had excited her curiosity. She asked many perplexing questions. One day she asked her mother of her origin. "'Thy Heavenly Father sent thee!"' said Hester. " ' He did not send me ! ' cried she, positively. ' I have no Heavenly Father!'" The community had sought in vain to discover the pa- ternity of the child. Hester's secret remained safe in her own breast; and at last there were those who circulated the story that the poor little unfortunate was the offspring of a demon. Aye, tnev went further than this; there were those among these good people who argued that for the good of Hester's soul her elfish child should be taken from her and transferred to other hands, better fitted to rear her. It was said that Governor Bellingham was among the busiest of these, and Hester, hearing the reports, took Pearl and waited on this official. It hap- pened that with him this morning were the venerable pastor, John Wilson, Reverend Arthur Dimmesdale, and Roger Chillingworth, who for three years past had been settled in the town, and who had achieved great reputa- tion in the community as being a skillful physician. He had been much with Mr. Dimmesdale lately, as it was rumored that he was suffering bodily from overwork, and needed a physician. Pearl, in her fantastic dress of scarlet, was the first to attract the attention of the dignified men when they 324 THE SCARLET LETTER. entered the hall where Hester and her child waited for the summons of the Governor. Governor Bellingham looked sternly upon her, and made remarks not at all complimentary to the child. Mr. Wilson, kind man that he was, spoke of Pearl's appearance as reviving memories of beautiful painted windows that he had seen across the sea. Arthur Dimmesdale said nothing. The older min- ister was the first to recognize Pearl. "'This is the selfsame child of whom we have held speech together; and behold here the unhappy woman, Hester Prynne, her mother!'" Governor Bellingham (as history testifies) was not given to tenderness. Turning to Hester with the stern- ness characteristic of him, he said: — "Hester Prynne, there hath been much question con- cerning thee, of late. The point hath been weightily discussed, whether we, that are of authority and influence, do well discharge our consciences by trusting an immortal soul, such as there is in yonder child, to the guidance of one who hath stumbled and fallen, amid the pitfalls of this world. Speak thou, the child's own mother! Were it not, thinkest thou, for thy little one's temporal and eternal welfare that she be taken out of thy charge, and clad soberly, and disciplined strictly, and instructed in the truths of heaven and earth? What canst thou do for the child, in this kind ? ' " ' I can teach my little Pearl what I have learned from this!' answered Hester Prynne, laying her finger on the red token. . . . 'This badge hath taught me — it daily teaches me — it is teaching me at this moment — lessons whereof my child may be the wiser and better, albeit thay can profit nothing to myself.'" THE SCARLET LETTER. 325 Mr. Wilson was deputed by the Governor to question Pearl and see if she had been duly instructed in Chris- tian principles, and the good old man made the effort to draw her to him. Unaccustomed to the touch of anyone but her mother, she sprang from him through the open window and stood outside, looking intensely at him and the others, the very spirit of independence and resistance in her every motion. Pearl was, to-day, more than usually perverse, and gave answers befitting a heathen to the very simple questions that were put to her. Governor Bellingham was shocked. Roger Chillingworth smiled, and whis- pered something to Arthur Dimmesdale. " ' This is awful ! ' cried the Governor. ... ' Here is a child of three years old, and she cannot tell who made her ! . . . Methinks, gentlemen, we need inquire no further.'" Hester's excitement w T as intense. She caught Pearl in her arms, declaring that she would die rather than be parted from her. She appealed to Mr. Dimmesdale, as her former pastor, to plead in her behalf. He stepped forward tremblingly and nervously and spoke for Hester feelingly and eloquently, and not at all in accordance with Puritan severity. His plea for Hester prevailed, and owing to the nervousness which followed it, he withdrew from the group and went nearer the window. Something in him had attracted Pearl. She "stole softly towards him, and taking hi-s hand in the grasp of both her own, laid her cheek against it. . . . The minister looked round, laid his hand on the child's head, hesitated an instant, and then kissed her brow." Roger Chillingworth had determined that in no way 326 THE SCARLET LETTER. should his name be associated with that of Hester Prynne. As her husband in the Old World — an un- loved husband, it is true — he would not claim her now; his name should never be linked with the disgrace that would follow her through life. He himself was wear- ing an assumed name; both of them had left all of their relatives behind them; none in the New World knew of their past history. For some reason of his own Roger attached himself to the church of Reverend Ar- thur Dimmesdale, and to the minister himself. The health of the latter was failing, and was the cause of anxiety throughout the little settlement. Just at that time it was that Roger gave up long journeys, which he was accustomed to take, and frequent absences, and set- tled permanently with them; and when it became known that he had learning and skill in medicine, the more devout of the Puritans looked upon it as a kind disposi- tion of Providence that he had been sent to Mr. Dimmes- dale at so opportune a time. When at last the minister consented to receive his aid, they spent much time to- gether. They took long walks in the forest and upon the seashore, Roger Chillingworth studying his patient diligently. We remember what he had told Hester in the prison— that he would find out the father of her child. He had been diligently searching and had failed. He now had another case to study — Arthur Dimmesdale. Perhaps he was studying the two cases together — perhaps the two cases may yet make one. For while Roger was baffled in Mr. Dimmesdale's malady, he could make nothing clear out of his data, — which, it must be con- fessed, were very meager, — and then, to further his pur- pose, he sought lodgment in the same house with his THE SCARLET LETTEK. 327 patient, so that he might, unsuspected, study him more carefully and at all hours, and in his different moods. Many days was he in the pursuit of the knowledge he wished. His patient efforts and skill were, however, to be rewarded. He at last found what he sought: Arthur Dimmesdale's malady was spiritual, not physical; he bore in his heart a terrible secret that was wearing him out. Roger Chillingworth, one day, while his patient was sleeping, uncovered his bosom and found the key of the secret. Arthur Dimmesdale's agony of soul was dreadful, known only to himself and his God. He had sinned; he was being tortured for it. In the secret of his chamber he scourged himself; in public he had many days of fasting; he kept lonely vigils. At last, one night a new form of humiliation seized him. He dressed himself in his clerical clothes, and walking to the spot where Hester Prynne had been humiliated publicly years ago, he mounted the same scaffold upon which she had stood, and did penance alone, with himself and his Maker, as he supposed. Horror seized him as he stood thus, and he shrieked aloud. He saw a glimmering light coming up the street. It then drew nearer; it proved to be Mr. Wilson returning from the deathbed o\' Governor Winthrop. The venerable man passed by the scaffold without looking up. Arthur was in terror, and yet he could not tear himself from the spot. M< lining was advancing and he surely would be dis- covered. He painted mental pictures of what would follow the incoming of the light, and actually laughed aloud at them. He was startled by hearing the laugh reechoed. Hester Prynne and Pearl stood before him. 328 THE SC ABLET LETTER. He inquired their errand, and was answered that Gov- ernor Winthrop was dead and Hester had been taking the measurements of his burial robe. Something impelled him to ask her and the child to ascend the scaffold with him. Pearl asked him to do strange things. " ' Wilt thou stand here with mother and me, to-morrow noontide ? . . . Wilt thou promise to take my hand and mother's hand, to-morrow noontide ? ' " ' Not then, Pearl, but another time. ... At the great judgment day. . . . Then, and there, before the judg- ment-seat, thy mother, and thou, and I must stand together. But the daylight of this world shall not see our meeting!'" Pearl pointed her finger across the street. There stood old Roger Chillingworth. He drew near. He, too, as the physician, had been at Governor Winthrop's bedside, and was going home. He took Mr. Dimmesdale's hand and led him along with him. No need of further investiga- tions, — Hester's secret was in his power. Time passed. Pearl Prynne was now seven years old. The public sentiment towards Hester had changed, though the red letter, which it was her doom to wear, proclaimed her sin. Her readiness to do good to others in minister- ing to the sick and poor; her uncomplaining submission to the decree of fate which had set her aside; the pure life she had now led for years, brought her a measure of respect that she and others had never looked for. " She was self-ordained a Sister of Mercy; or, we may rather say, the world's heavy hand had so ordained her, when neither the world nor she looked forward to this result. .... Many people refused to interpret the scarlet A by THE SCARLET LETTER. 329 its original signification. They said that it meant Able; so strong was Hester Prynne, with a woman's strength." Hester, after her interview on the scaffold with Arthur, saw that he w T as threatened w T ith lunacy, if indeed he were not already insane, and she determined to meet Roger Chillingworth, and through him do what she could for Mr. Dimmesdale. She met her former husband soon after, by the seashore, and saw that in seven years time had wrought sad changes with him also. "In a word, old Roger Chillingworth was a striking evidence of man's faculty of transforming himself into a devil, if he w T ill only, for a reasonable space of time, undertake a devil's office." She appealed to him, with all the elo- quence of one w T ho was in dead earnest, to loose the power which he held on Arthur Dimmesdale and set him free from the dread fate that was before him. She did not excuse herself for the ruin of the old man's hopes and happiness, in having turned away from him. He told her that he knew the author of her ruin, and that he held Arthur Dimmesdale's fate for weal or woe in his hands and could use his power as he wished. She re- plied that she would reveal to Arthur Dimmesdale the identity of Roger Chillingworth, without regard to the consequences. The interview was an unsatisfactory one. Roger left her with hate rankling in his bosom. She resolved to tell Arthur of Roger's true character, and warn him of the man who was hourly watching him. She learned that the young minister had gone to visit the Apostle Eliot, among his Indian friends, and she determined to watch for him on his return and meet him in the forest. She waited for him, and was not disappointed. Pearl " She waited for him, and was not disappointed." THE SCARLET LETTER. 331 strayed away, and Hester was alone with Arthur. She told hini of Roger, that he was his enemy, — aye, more, she told him why, — that Roger was her husband. She warned him to flee from Roger's presence, to quit the town where he dwelt, to go where he might yet lead a useful life, to give up his real name and make for himself another. " ' 0, Hester ! . . . I must die here ! There is not the strength or courage left me to venture into the wide, strange, difficult world, alone!'" " He repeated the word. "'Alone, Hester!' " ' Thou shalt not go alone ! ' answered she, in a deep whisper. " Then, all was spoken ! " "The clergyman resolved to flee, and not alone." Before they left the forest their plans for flight were matured. A vessel lay in the harbor. It w T as a ship of questionable character that had recently arrived from the Spanish Main, and was to sail in a few days. Hester was to engage passage for two persons and a child, she and Arthur meantime making quiet arrangements to quit the settlement. Arthur Dimmesdale went home and to his study. In three days he was to preach the annual Election Sermon, — in four days he was to sail away from misery, and seek happiness. He tore up the sermon which lay unfinished upon his table. He began another. A new inspiration guided him, and he wrote as he had never written before. Roger Chillingworth entered the room next day and was surprised at the change in Arthur, a change for the better, surely. Arthur beheld him in his 332 THE SCARLET LETTER. true character, but gave no sign of it. The physician offered his aid, but it was declined, Arthur urging that he had no further need of it, saying that he thanked Roger from his heart for his good deeds, but that he could only requite them with his prayers. "'A good man's prayers are golden recompense!' re- joined old Roger Chillingworth, as he took his leave. 'Yea, they are the current gold coin of the new Jerusa- lem, with the King's own mint-mark on them!'" The morning of the day upon which the new Governor was to be installed into his office had arrived. From every direction came the people, men and women and children. Hester Prynne and Pearl were among the crowd, the latter, like a gay bird, flitting everywhere, attracting attention from all who saw her. "A party of Indians stood apart, with countenances of inflexible gravity, beyond what even the Puritan aspect could at- tain. ... A part of the crew of the vessel from the Spanish Main . . . had come ashore to see the humors of Election Day. . . . Old Roger Chilling- worth, the physician, was seen to enter the market-place, in close and familiar talk with the commander of the questionable vessel. . . . After parting from the physician, the commander of the Bristol ship strolled idly through the marketplace; until happening to ap- proach the spot where Hester Prynne was standing, he appeared to recognize, and did not hesitate to address her." What was her sorrow to hear him say that Roger Chillingworth also had engaged a passage for himself on his vessel. Her Nemesis was bound to follow her. She looked ahead some distance and saw Roger standing in THE SCARLET LETTER. 333 the market-place and smiling upon her; a smile which "conveyed secret and fearful meaning." Heralded hy military music, the great procession moved onward to the meeting-house. Reverend Dimmesdale preached such a sermon upon the relations between Divine and human government as had never been heard by the people before. Men, stirred by his eloquence, held their breath, and it was not till the august and impressive services were over, and they had reached the open air, that they could shake off the awe and spell that were upon them. Applause for the young minister was heard on all sides. His sermon was magnificent. " But, throughout it all, and through the whole discourse, there had been a certain deep, sad undertone of pathos, which could not be interpreted otherwise than as the natural regret of one soon to pass away." The train of dignitaries were fairly in the market- place. Arthur Dimmesdale, having delivered his ser- mon, moved along with the crowd; but so feeble did he look that Mr. Wilson stepped forward and offered him his arm. Its aid was declined. Governor Bellingham advanced towards him, but a glance. showed that neither were his services needed. The people gazed in awe upon their idol, if a Puritan might have an idol. Arthur "turned towards the scaffold, and stretched forth his arm-. "' Hester,' said he, 'come hither! Come, my little Pearl!'" "The child . . . flew to him, and clasped her arms about his knees. Hester Prvnne — slowly, as if impelled by inevitable fate, and against her strongest will — like- wise drew near, but paused before she reached him. At 334 THE SCARLET LETTER. this instant, old Roger Chillingworth . . . rushed for- ward, and caught the minister by the arm. "'Madman, hold! what is your purpose?' whispered he. ' Wave back that woman ! Cast off this child ! All shall be well! Do not blacken your fame, and perish in dishonor! I can yet save you! Would you bring infamy on your sacred profession ? ' " Arthur was firm. He had fought the battle with all evil and temptation within him, and was resolved upon his course. "'Come, Hester, come!"' he cried. "'Support me up yonder scaffold!'" The excitement of the crowd was intense. They looked, but knew not what was coming. "They beheld the minister, leaning on Hester's shoulder, and supported by her arm around him, approach the scaffold, and ascend its steps; while still the little hand of the sin-born child was clasped in his." '"Is not this better,' murmured he, 'than what we dreamed of in the forest?' " ' I know not! I know not ! '" Hester hurriedly replied. " ' Better? Yea; so we may both die, and little Pearl die with us!'" " ' Hester, I am a dying man. So let me make haste to take my shame upon me.' " He stood before the people and addressed them, appeal- ing to their love for him, saying : — "'At last! — at last! — I stand upon the spot where, seven years since, I should have stood; here, with this woman, whose arm, more than the little strength where- with I have crept hitherward, sustains me, at this dread- ful moment, from groveling down upon my face! Lo, THE SCARLET LETTER. 335 the scarlet letter which Hester wears ! Ye have all shud- dered at it! Wherever her walk hath been, — wherever, so miserably burdened, she may have hoped to find repose, — it hath cast a lurid gleam of awe and horrible repugnance round about her. But there stood one in the midst of you, at whose brand of sin and infamy ye have not shuddered ! ... He hid it cunningly from men. . . . Now, at the death-hour, he stands up before you! He bids you look again at Hester's scarlet letter ! He tells you, that ... it is but the shadow of what he bears on his own breast, and that even this, his own red stigma, is no more than the type of what has seared his inmost heart!'" He tore away the clothing from his breast, — his secret was revealed. " For an instant, the gaze of the horror- stricken multitude was concentered on the ghastly mira- cle. . . . Then, down he sank upon the scaffold! Old Roger Chillingworth knelt down beside him, with a blank, dull countenance, out of which the life seemed to have departed. " ' Thou hast escaped me ! ' he repeated more than once. 1 Thou hast escaped me ! ' "'May God forgive thee!' said the minister. 'Thou, too, hast deeply sinned ! ' "He withdrew his dying eyes from the old man, and fixed them on the woman and the child." "'Dear little Pearl, wilt thou kiss me now? . . . Hester, farewell.'" She bent over him and asked if they should not meet again, — if beyond this life they might not have hope to spend the immortal life together. He answered: "'God knows; and He is merciful! 336 THE SCARLET LETTER. He hath proved his mercy, most of all, in my afflictions. By giving me this burning torture to bear upon my breast! By sending yonder dark and terrible old man, to keep the torture always at red-heat! By bringing me hither, to die this death of triumphant ignominy before the people ! Had either of these agonies been wanting, I had been lost forever ! Praised be his name ! His will be done! Farewell!'" The effort was too mucli for him, and with the last word his spirit passed away, to be beyond the power of Roger Chillingworth's persecutions, — to be beyond the tortures of a guilty, never quiet conscience. In death he atoned to Hester for all the wrongs he had inflicted on her in life, — in death he stood before the people what he was, not what for so many years he had seemed to be. It would be hard to describe the feelings of those who looked upon this scene upon the scaffold. There was one feeling that was common to all — that of awe and wonder. When the excitement had become allayed, there were those who were standing near the scaffold who averred that when Arthur had thrust aside the badge of his ministerial office they had seen upon his breast a scarlet letter, the very semblance of that worn by Hester Prynne, and that it was deeply imprinted in his flesh. There were other rumors in reference to his mys- terious words uttered upon the scaffold. But we turn from the dead to the living in this sad drama, and will look upon Eoger Chillingworth first of all the actors in it. He had made revenge his pursuit, — it was but human that he should seek to be avenged, — and had triumphed, but it brought him no happiness. Every faculty and energy of his mind and body seemed to THE SCARLET LETTER. 337 desert him; he hid himself from his fellow-beings; he gave himself up to the miserable companionship of his own mind, and thus died, — died within a twelvemonth of Arthur Dimmesdale, leaving to Pearl Prynne all his property both in the colony and in England, so that she really became the richest heiress in the New World. Not long after Roger's decease, Hester took Pearl and went back to Europe, and was lost to the interests of the little town, which grew in importance each year; though such was the spell that attached to the scaffold, and to Hester's thatched cottage, as well, that they remained for many a day. One afternoon, years after the events recorded had occurred, some children were playing near the cottage, when a tall woman appeared, at whose touch the door opened, and she went in. She turned, and the children saw upon her breast a scarlet letter. She came alone, — it was Hester, — and took up her abode where no one had dwelt since she had gone away. Where Pearl was, — whether living or dead, — no one knew. That Hester was provided for, that she w T as an object of tender solicitude by some one in a foreign land, was well attested by the letters which came frequently to her. These let- ters bore armorial seals upon them, though of bearings unknown to English heraldry. The cottage was not bare and cheerless, as it was when Hester had before occupied it, but showed evidences of wealth and luxury which she seemed to care nothing for. She was contin- ually remembered in little gifts by some absent one, and these gifts were so dainty that none but delicate fingers could have wrought them. Hester was seen embroider- ing a baby garment of exceeding richness, — not intended for any of her New World friends, — and it was currently 338 THE SCARLET LETTER. believed that Pearl was alive and married and happy, and that she would gladly have kept her sad mother with her, and made her happy, too, but that Hester pre- ferred the cottage where she had borne the punishment of her sin, had carried her sorrow, and where she could better live a life of penitence than in the far-away place where a home had been made for her innocent child. Self-imposed, she put upon her the scarlet letter and wore it ever afterward. It was no stigma upon the beautiful life that she led — a life of consecrated sorrow, of unselfishness, of devotion to the interests of others. "People brought all their sorrows and perplexities, and besought her counsel, as one who had herself gone through a mighty trouble. . . . Hester comforted and counseled them as best she might." So Hester Prynne lived for many a year, and then a new grave was made, "near an old and sunken one, in that burial-ground beside which King's Chapel has since been built. It was near that old and sunken grave, yet with a space between, as if the dust of the two sleepers had no right to mingle. Yet one tombstone served for both. . . . On this simple slab of slate . . . there appeared the semblance of an engraved escutcheon. It bore a device, a herald's wording of which might serve for a motto and brief description of our now concluded legend; so somber is it, and relieved only by one ever-glowing point of light gloomier than the shadow: — "'ON A FIELD, SABLE, THE LETTER A, GULES.'" THE HOUSE OF THE SEVEN GABLES. Principal Characters. Colonel Pyncheon, the Ancestor upon whom a curse was uttered. Matthew Maule, who uttered the curse against the Pyncheons. Judge Pyncheon, a Descendant of Colonel Pyncheon. Miss Hepzibah Pyncheon, a Descendant of Colonel Pyncheon and Cousin of Judge Pyncheon. Clifford Pyncheon, a Descendant of Colonel Pyncheon, and Brother of Miss Hepzibah. Miss Phoebe Pyncheon, a Descendant of Colonel Pyncheon j and Cousin of Miss Hepzibah, Clifford, and Judge Pyncheon. Mr. Holgrave, a Daguerreotypist, a Descendant of Matthew Maule. Uncle Venner, an Old Man. 340 THE HOUSE OF THE SEVEN GABLES. By Nathaniel Hawthorne. In one of the historic towns of New England stood a venerable house whose seven acutely peaked gables and other features of architecture spoke of a century gone by, — aye, they told the tale of days and people, and the vicissitudes of life which befell those people, which, had one the time to recount them, would include "a chain of events extending over the better part of two centuries," and out of which many a romance of thrilling interest might be woven. The house stood upon Pyncheon Street; it was known as the old Pyncheon House, but, for reasons already stated, it was more commonly spoken of as the House of the Seven Gables. It, or rather its original proprietor, was connected with a time long past by a weird chain of circumstances. The spot upon w T hich the quaint old pointed house stood, had at another time been occupied by another dwelling, and Pyncheon Street had previously been known to those who were familiar with its locality as Maule's Lane. But the little sea-girt town had grown in size and importance, and Colonel Pyncheon, a magnate of the place, looked upon the site of Matthew Maule's humble dwelling, and the beautiful spring of soft and pleasant water which bubbled and sparkled in nearness to the cottage, with longing, if not with envious, eyes. Colonel Pyncheon presented claims of proprietorship to the acre or two of ground which his 341 342 THE HOUSE OF THE SEVEN GABLES. obscure neighbor claimed and had cleared and cultivated, basing his claims on a grant from the legislature, and being a man of great means, and being possessed of indomitable will and purpose, having taken steps to secure the desired spot, prosecuted his claims uninter- mittently, though he never obtained possession till the death of his opponent, who was executed for the crime of witchcraft. In later days many remembered the zeal of Colonel Pyncheon in efforts to purge the land from the strange delusion as exhibited by Maule, and it was well known and commented upon that the hapless victim " had recognized the bitterness of personal enmity in his persecutor's conduct towards him, and that he declared himself hunted to death for his spoil. At the moment of execution — with the halter about his neck, and while Colonel Pyncheon sat on horseback, grimly gazing at the scene — Maule had addressed him from the scaffold, and uttered a prophecy, of which history, as well as flresidp tradition, has preserved the very words. 'God/ said the dying man, pointing his finger, with a ghastly look, at the undismayed countenance of his enemy, — ' God will give him blood to drink.' " When the title to the ground was in Colonel Pyncheon's hands, he began making preparations to build a family mansion, of materials that would endure through many generations of Pyncheons. There was much shaking of the head among the grave Puritans as they saw the ponderous pile spreading out and rising upward, and some hinted that the house covered an unquiet grave. Others said that the great house "would include the home of the dead and buried wizard, and would thus afford the ghost of the latter a kind of privilege to haunt THE HOUSE OF THE SEVEN GABLES. 343 its new apartments, and the chambers into which future bridegrooms were to lead their brides, and where children of the Pyncheon blood were to be born." There were other prophesies, but whether the sturdy Puritan heard them, we know not. Certain it is, he never heeded them, and his mansion grew in stateliness, "a specimen of the best and stateliest architecture of a long-past epoch." It was a fact of bad omen that the clear, sweet waters of the spring became hard and brackish when the mansion was built, and that they have ever since remained so. It seemed a little curious at the time, that the son of Maule should be chosen head carpenter in building the great house over the ruins of his birthplace; but the last nail had been driven into the house, the finishing touches had been given to it by both architect and artisan, and its proud owner decided that it should be consecrated by both religious and festive ceremonies, the latter commensurate with the dignity and grandeur of the occasion. The rich and the poor entered the great front door and passed into the wide hallway, but the etiquette and formalism of the day did not permit their associating, and servants ushered each class to the parts of the house appointed for them. The absence of the host excited unfavorable comment. Many said, and rightly too, that he "ought surely to have stood in his own hall, and to have offered the first welcome to so many eminent personages as here presented themselves in honor of his solemn festival." Plebeian and patrician — aye, even the high sheriff and the lieutenant-governor and the latter^ lady, had arrived, and received no other greeting than that given by Colonel Pyncheon's principal domestic, "a gray-headed man, of quiet and most respect- 344 THE HOUSE OF THE SEVEN GABLES. ful deportment/' who "found it necessary to explain that his master still remained in his study, or private apart- ment; on entering which, an hour before, he had expressed a wish on no account to be disturbed." Time passed, and the lieutenant-governor decided that he would bring his host to a sense of his duties. He knocked loudly upon the rich panels; he took his sword and beat the door, but no sound was heard from the master of the feast. A strange feeling possessed the guests, and the dignitary, presuming upon his position, "tried the door, which yielded to his hand, and was flung wide open by a sudden gust of wind that passed, as with a loud sigh, from the outermost portal through all the passages and apartments of the new house. ... A shadow of awe and half-fearful anticipation — nobody knew wherefore, nor of what — had all at once fallen over the company. " They thronged, however, to the now open door, press- ing the lieutenant-governor, in the eagerness of their curiosity, into the room in advance of them." They were horrified at the sight before them. "A little boy — the Colonel's grandchild, and the only human being that ever dared to be familiar with him — now made his way among the guests, and ran towards the seated figure; then pausing half-way, he began to shriek with terror. . . . The iron-hearted Puritan, the relentless persecutor, the grasping and strong-willed man, was dead! Dead, in his new house! There is a tradition . . . that a voice spoke loudly among the guests, the tones of which were like those of old Matthew Maule, the executed wizard, — 'God hath given him blood to drink! '" There was blood on his ruff, and his hoary beard was saturated with it. Thus early had Death stepped across the threshold of the House of the Seven Gables I" 346 THE HOUSE OF THE SEVEN GABLES. " Thus early had that one guest, — the only guest who is certain, at one time or another, to find his way into €very human dwelling, — thus early had Death stepped across the threshold of the House of the Seven Gables ! " There were many theories advanced to account for his death, one of which was, that as the lieutenant-governor looked into the room he saw a skeleton-hand grasping the Colonel's throat, and that it vanished away as he advanced farther into the room. " The coroner's jury sat Upon the corpse, and, like sensible men, returned an unassailable verdict of ' Sudden Death!'" His son and heir came "into immediate enjoyment of a rich estate, but there was a claim through an Indian deed, confirmed by a subsequent grant of the General Court, to a vast and as yet unexplored and unmeasured tract of Eastern lands. These . . . comprised the greater part of what is now known as Waldo County, in the State of Maine, and were more extensive than many a dukedom, or even a reigning prince's territory, on European soil. . . . The bare justice or legality of the claim was not so apparent, after the Colonel's decease, as it. had been pronounced in his lifetime. Some connecting link had slipped out of the evidence, and could not any- where be found." Colonel Pyncheon's son lacked the force of character that had marked his father, and during his lifetime the great landed estate remained as it had been during Colonel Pyncheon's — in the possession of actual settlers, who obtained their titles to it through regrants from the powers that were of more recent authority. The claims of the Pyncheons from generation to generation amounted to nothing tangible, though each one of the name cher- THE HOUSE OF THE SEVEN GABLES. 347 ished an absurd idea of the importance of the family, and hoped that he might come into the possession of wealth, so that the ancient dignity of the race might be restored. The fortunes of the family waned, — the House of the Seven Gables yielded to Time's rapacious ravages, but each succeeding generation clung to the old ancestral home with an undying affection. The law had given them a right to the ground on which the house with a history stood, but there have been those who had a lurking belief that most of the owners of the house had doubts about their moral rights to it. There was a story told of a large old mirror that hung in one of the rooms, and which "was fabled to contain within its depths all the shapes that had ever been reflected there"; and there was another tale told, "that the posterity of Matthew Maule had some connection with the mystery of the looking-glass, and that, by what appears to have been a sort of mesmeric process, they could make its inner region all alive with the departed Pyncheons; not as they had shown themselves to the world nor in their better and happier hours, but as doing over again some deed of sin, or in the crisis of life's bitterest sorrow. . . . It was considered, moreover, an ugly and ominous cir- cumstance, that Colonel Pyncheon's picture — in obedience, it was said, to a provision of his will — remained affixed to the wall of the room in which he died." As the years went by (over a century and a half), it was chronicled that so few Pyncheons were left that the race seemed to be dying out, until at last there were left but Judge Pyncheon, who indeed, to the world, was one of the best of the whole name ; his son, who was traveling in Europe; a P3mcheon who was serving a long imprison- 348 THE HOUSE OF THE SEVEN GABLES. ment for having killed a relative of the same name; a sister of the prisoner, who had a life-estate in the House of the Seven Gables by the will of a deceased relative; and "the last and youngest Pyncheon was a little country-girl of seventeen," whose father had died young, and whose mother saw fit to take another husband. The lady who lived in the old home was wretchedly poor, but she had often refused from the Judge offers of assistance, and seemed to choose poverty for some reasons of her own. At the time when this aristocratic family had dwindled down to so few in number, it was thought that the Maule family was extinct. They had always, in their successive generations, been a quiet, honest, reserved people, and to all appearances they never seemed to think that the great house of the Pyncheons rested upon soil that properly belonged to the descendants of Matthew Maule. It must be noted here that one of the Pyncheons had so far forgotten himself that he had in his poverty con- cluded to support himself, and had made a shop in part of the basement story of the House of the Seven Gables, and had cut a door in one of its sides; but as soon as he was dead "the shop-door had been locked, bolted, and barred, and, down to the period of our story, had prob- ably never once been opened." At last Miss Hepzibah Pyncheon dwelt alone in the house, except that a quiet, well-behaved young man who took daguerreotypes, had for some time been a lodger in part of the house quite removed from her. Her life was lonely and sad. How could it be aught else when her brother, the brother whom she loved, was spending the years of his life within prison bars ? But there came a THE HOUSE OF THE SEVEN GABLES. 349 change into her life, — very late in life, indeed, for Miss Hepzibah had lived over sixty years, — when she decided to go into business on her own account. It had come to the point when it must be that or starve; so the old shop in the basement had been cleared of its cobwebs and made tidy, and one morning the bar was -taken from the door, and Miss Hepzibah was waiting to welcome her first customer. The trial that would crush all her pride had come to her. She, the last daughter of the Pyncheons, standing behind a counter, and with her own dainty hands, — the fair hands of a gentlewoman, — dealing out goods and wares in small quantities to whosoever would demand them! The young daguerreotypist called to leave his good wishes, and she told him how dreadfully she felt. "'Ah ; Mr. Holgrave/ cried she, as soon as she could speak, ' I never can go through with it ! Never, never, never I I wish I were dead, and in the old family-tomb, with all my forefathers ! . . . The world is too chill and hard, — and I am too old, and too feeble, and too hope- less!'" He encouraged her all he could, and told her that the new phase of her life would be easier than it looked before she had grappled with it, and that he looked upon her first day in her shop as an augury for good. "'It ends an epoch and begins one. Hitherto, the life-blood has been gradually chilling in your veins as you sat aloof, within your circle of gentility, while the rest of the world was fighting out its battle with one kind of necessity or another. Henceforth, you will at least have the sense of healthy and natural effort for a purpose, and of lending your strength — be it great or small — to 350 THE HOUSE OF THE SEVEN GABLES. the united struggle of mankind. This is success, — all the success that anybody meets with.' " Mr. Holgrave wished to be her first customer; but from the only friend she had in all the world she felt that she could not take a penny for a bit of bread. Her first real sale was nothing but a piece of gingerbread, but after the excitement attending it was over and the little urchin who had bought it was leaving her shop, a calm- ness came over her, and her anxious thoughts vanished into the past. Business was to be her aim, and she applied herself to it. " The healthiest glow that Hepzi- bah had known for years had come now in the dreaded crisis, when, for the first time, she had put forth her hand to help herself." The first day as a keeper of a shop brought its trials to her. There were customers who were hard to please; there were those who were very much displeased. She saw her relative, Judge Pyncheon, go by on the other side of the street, stop, look at the house with expressive glances, and then pass her by. She troubled herself with many fancies. An old, patriarchal-looking man, known as Uncle Venner by the whole neighborhood, dropped into her little room. Something he said to her set her to thinking: "Some- thing still better will turn up for you. I'm sure of it!" Visions of what might be, vagaries of the hour, swept by her mental vision; illusive images of relatives distant and unknown coming to her aid and making her comfortable in circumstances, lent a halo to the place, and she built beautiful air-castles in her poor surround- ings. Uncle Venner gave her some sound advice about business, about greeting customers pleasantly, and then he asked her: — THE HOUSE OF THE SEVEN GABLES. 351 "'When do you expect him home? . . . Ah? you don't love to talk about it. Well, well ! we '11 say no more, though there 's word of it all over town. I remem- ber him, Miss Hepzibah, before he could run alone!'" At the close of her first day in business, just as she had bolted the door, an omnibus stopped at the house, and a bright young girl presented herself at the door. " It was 'a face to which almost any door would have opened of its own accord." The visitor, who received a kindly welcome (though, it must be confessed, the visit had not been requested, and Hepzibah decided that it should be of short duration), proved to be Phoebe, the young cousin already mentioned, who had come to make her ancient cousin a visit, and, with the characteristic New England spirit, to seek her own fortune. Her mother's second marriage made it imperative that she should do so. Next morning Phcebe was up and enjoying such beauties of the garden as might be seen from her chamber win- dow. After arranging her room, she purposed to descend to the garden. She was met by Hepzibah, who stated to her what was on her mind, but, strange to say, in a very short time the elder woman changed her mind about returning Phoebe to her mother, and actually said, — " ' You are welcome, my child, for the present, to such a home as your kinswoman can offer you.' " What a change came over the little shop, what a change came over the habitable part of the House of the Seven Gables, after Phcebe came to it! Trade in- creased, cheerfulness reigned. Hepzibah took Phoebe over the old house, and told her of its traditions and former inhabitants; and then she told her of Mr. Hoi- 352 THE HOUSE OP THE SEVEN GABLES. grave, or at least as much as she knew of him, or rather surmised: that he had strange associates, and that she believed "he practised animal magnetism, and, if such things were in fashion nowadays, should be apt to sus- pect him of studying the Black Art, up there in his lonesome chamber"; and yet, she affirmed, he was kind and pleasant, and she did not like to send him away. Phoebe met the artist soon after this, in the garden, where he had beds of flowers and rows and hills of useful vegetables, and his character perplexed her, as it had many a more experienced observer. Clifford Pyncheon, Hepzibah's brother, had outlived the thirty years of his imprisonment, and was now free, and soon after the arrival of Phoebe had come home to his sister and to the old House of the Seven Gables, broken in spirit, clouded in mind. "At the first glance, Phoebe saw an elderly personage, in an old-fashioned dressing-gown of faded damask, and wear- . ing his gray or almost white hair of an unusual length. It quite overshadowed his forehead, except when he thrust it back, and stared vaguely about the room. ... The expression of his countenance — while, notwithstand- ing, it had the light of reason in it — seemed to waver, and glimmer, and nearly to die away, and feebly to recover itself again. It was like a flame which we see twinkling among half-extinguished embers; we gaze at it more intently than if it were a positive blaze, gushing vividly upward, — more intently, but with a certain impatience, as if it ought either to kindle itself into satisfactory splendor, or be at once extinguished." And after all these years this was the poor creature who had come back to Hepzibah — come back to be taken THE HOUSE OF THE SEVEN GABLES. 353 care of, to be ministered unto. The saddest part of it all was that he had an aversion to his sister; her presence was positively repulsive to him; but for Phoebe he con- ceived a strong liking, and her influence over him was like rays of sunshine in a dark room, — it lit up the darkness of a mind darkened by isolation and the degra- dation of a felon's cell. Clifford Pyncheon was a half- torpid man; whether or not he could ever be roused from his stupor was the problem. His coming back home did not lighten the cares of Hepzibah and Phoebe — it added to them. Clifford could not overcome his aversion to his sister, and an arrangement was made whereby Hepzibah would sit near by and watch him during his slumbering hours in the daytime, — and these were many, — whilst Phoebe would attend to the shop; and when he wakened, the two women would exchange places, Phoebe reading or singing or talking cheerfully to the poor, wretched old gentleman, who still retained the elegant tastes of his early life. "By the involuntary effect of a genial tem- perament, Phoebe soon grew to be absolutely essential to the daily comfort, if not the daily life, of her two forlorn companions. . . . Her spirit resembled, in its potency, a minute quantity of ottar of rose in one of Hepzibah's huge, iron-bound trunks, diffusing its fragrance through the various articles of linen and wrought-lace, . . . and whatever else was treasured there. As every article in the great trunk was the sweeter for the rose-scent, so did all the thoughts and emotions of Hepzibah and Clifford, somber as they might seem, acquire a subtle attribute of happiness from Phoebe's intermixture with them." 354 THE HOUSE OF THE SEVEN GABLES. Uncle Venner now became a frequent visitor at the house; so, too, did Mr. Holgrave, on Sunday afternoons, and sometimes on these occasions Clifford had momentary spells of cheerfulness, and even gayety. On other days Holgrave and the young girl frequently met in the garden, where she went to have companionship with the flowers and to breathe the pure air, — he, perhaps, to tend his veg- etables, which was one of his pastimes; or, which was more than probable, to cultivate the acquaintance of the bright, sensible young girl who was now lighting up the gloom — may we not say, the history — that attached to the decaying House of the Seven Gables. One day they met, and as they talked, Phoebe learned that Mr. Holgrave was a magazine writer. Further than that, he produced a roll of manuscript and read her one of his stories, about beautiful Alice Pyncheon, great- granddaughter of old Colonel Pyncheon, who had come under the mesmeric influence of a grandson of the old wizard and was led by him at his will, whether they were near together or far apart, to do as he wished her, until one night, while she was at a wedding-party, she was beckoned and influenced by the unseen finger of the mesmerist to leave the house and go to the common dwelling of a laboring man, whose daughter young Matthew Maule was that night to marry. She waited upon his bride, she kissed her, her spell was broken, and she went on her way. She was clad in her party clothes, her satin slippers were wet through and through, and Alice Pyncheon, the beautiful, proud Alice, took a cold from which she never recovered. " The Pyncheons made a great funeral for Alice. The kith and kin were there, and the whole respectability of the town besides. But, THE HOUSE OF THE SEVEN GABLES. 355 last in the procession, came Matthew Maule, gnashing his teeth, as if he would have bitten his own heart in twain, — the darkest and wofullest man that ever walked behind a corpse! He meant to humble Alice, not to kill her; but he had taken a woman's delicate soul into his rude gripe, to play with — and she was dead ! " As Holgrave read his story, something strange hap- pened to Phoebe. She began to be drowsy, and, " with the lids drooping over her eyes, — now lifted for an instant, and drawn down again as with leaden weights, — she leaned slightly towards him, and seemed almost to regulate her breath by his. Holgrave . . . recognized an incipient stage of that curious psychological condition, which, as he had himself told Phoebe, he possessed more than an ordinary faculty of producing." He felt his power, he felt that he could influence Phoebe as Matthew Maule influenced Alice Pyncheon, but he had enough integrity in his heart and too much reverence for her to seek her harm. He made a slight gesture upward with his hand and she was free from the spell. Phoebe spent several weeks at the House of the Seven Gables, and then went home to her mother, intending to return in a short time; and it was heavy and dreary enough to Clifford and Hepzibah while she was absent. The latter was startled one day, when, in answering the door-bell, she was confronted by Judge Pyncheon, who had effected an entrance into the shop, and who beamed benevolently upon her. He inquired of the health of herself and Clifford, and made offers of promoting their comfort if they would accept them. His offers were spurned. He grew pathetic, almost tearful, in his ear- 356 THE HOUSE OF THE SEVEN GABLES. nestness and solicitude. Hepzibah had cause to know that he was a dissembler — that under his assumed appearance of goodness there was a heart dyed in the blackness of hypocrisy and sin, and her indignation knew no bounds. Far back in his life there was a scene which had ended in her brother's disgrace, and in which she had suspicions, if not proof, that the man before her was responsible for her brother's imprisonment; and she cried : — " ' In the name of Heaven, in God's name, whom you insult, . . . give over, I beseech you, this loathsome pretence of affection for your victim! You hate him! Say so, like a man ! You cherish, at this moment, some black purpose against him in your heart! . . . Never speak again of your love for my poor brother! I cannot bear it!'" " Thus far the Judge's countenance had expressed mild forbearance. . . . But when those words were irrevocably spoken his look assumed sternness, the sense of power, and immitigable resolve; and this with so natural and imperceptible a change, that it seemed as if the iron man had stood there from the first, and the meek man not at all. . . . Never did a man show stronger proof of the lineage attributed to him than Judge Pyncheon, at this crisis," and Hepzibah almost felt that she had been talk- ing to old Colonel Pyncheon, so much did her cousin resemble in his severity the old picture hanging in the parlor. He declared his determination to see Clifford, and then relapsed into his look of studied benignity. He had come on a cruel errand, and declared that he would see it to the end. He told her of his Uncle JafFrey Pyncheon's will, in which all that he died possessed of THE HOUSE OF THE SEVEN GABLES. 357 was to go to him, Judge Pyncheon how, except the old mansion and some land adjoining, that were to be Hep- zibah's during her lifetime; but that not one-third of the great estate was apparent after his uncle's death, and that lie believed Clifford could give the clew to it, as some months before the old gentleman died, Clifford had boasted to him that he held the secret of untold wealth, and that he now sought him to compel him to disclose the docu- ments or other evidences of the missing property; and if he refused to do this, the only alternative was his confinement in an asylum for the insane for the remainder of his life. Hepzibah's grief was pitiful, but it did not touch the hard heart before her. Knowing well the character of him who stood in her room, and who turned a deaf ear to all her pleas for mercy for her brother, she moved towards Clifford's room. The Judge passed into the parlor and flung himself down in the great chair which family tradition said was the one in which the founder of his family had sat and given a dead man's reception to his guests when the House of the Seven Gables was for the first time opened to them. The picture of the old Colonel — the picture that by his will was never to be removed from its place — was immediately in front of him. No one can tell the feelings of the Judge as he sat and gazed upon it. He had taken out his watch "and now held it in his hand, measuring the interval which was to ensue before the appearance of Clifford." Poor Hepzibah! Thoughts of a conflicting nature passed through her mind as she went to her brother's room. She "could not rid herself of the sense of some- thing unprecedented at that instant passing and soon to be accomplished." She thought of Mr. Holgrave — of 358 THE HOUSE OF THE SEVEN GABLES. Phoebe; she wondered for a moment if Clifford had any knowledge of hidden wealth belonging to her uncle, but it was necessary that she weigh Judge Pyncheon's wishes and demands against her lingering thoughts, and she approached her brother's door and knocked. There was no response; again, but no answer; yet again, and again, and still silence within. She opened the door, but Clifford was nowhere to be seen. Where was he? "Could it be that, aware of the pres- ence of his Evil Destiny, he had crept silently down the staircase, while the Judge and Hepzibah stood talking in the shop, and had softly undone the fastenings of the outer door, and made his escape into the street?" Poor Hepzibah's brain conjured up all the troubles that would attend him should this prove the case, and she was almost distracted. She started towards the parlor, shriek- ing as she went: — " ' Clifford is gone ! I cannot find my brother ! Help, Jaffrey Pyncheon ! Some harm will happen to him ! ' " She threw open the door, but in the dimness of the room she could not see her cousin. "'I tell you, Jaffrey,'" she continued, "'my brother is not in his chamber ! You must help me seek him ! ' " No answer came to aught she might say. Clifford himself appeared on the threshold of the parlor, coming from within. He was deadly pale, and there was a wild look in his eyes which betokened scorn and mockery. He pointed his finger within the parlor and shook it, and there was a look upon his face which indicated joy. Had her brother shown signs of insanity and thus reduced Judge Pyncheon to absolute quiet ? she wondered. She was frightened at Clifford's appearance and words. THE HOUSE OF THE SEVEN GABLES. 359 "'As for us, Hepzibah, we can dance now! — we can sing, laugh, play, do what we will ! The weight is gone, Hepzibah! it is gone off this weary old world, and we may be as light-hearted as little Phcebe herself!'" He kept pointing his finger within at whatever object he may have seen, and his sister hurried past him, return- ing in a moment, gazing in terror upon Clifford, whose passion or alarm still seemed mingled with a feeling of mirth. He urged her to fly, and to bring her purse with all her money along with her, assuring her that Jaffrey would take care of the old house. Hepzibah was dazed, and she awakened not, even when, just before they left the house, she saw Clifford steal to the parlor door and make a parting obeisance to him who sat within. They started up Pyncheon Street, and were soon adrift in the world. They wandered on till they reached the railway station. Hepzibah was wholly at the disposal of her brother. He put her into a coach, and the train soon moved on, she knowing not whither they were going. " ' Clifford ! Clifford ! Is not this a dream ? ' " she asked. " ' A dream, Hepzibah ! On the contrary, I have never been awake before ! '" The conductor came by and asked for their tickets. As purse-bearer, self-installed, Clifford put a bank-note in his hand, and said they would ride as far as that would carry them, remarking that they were riding for pleasure only. An old gentleman who heard him was rather amused with the thought of seeking pleasure in a car- ride on such a day, and he and Clifford entered into an animated talk upon the merits of the comforts of one's own fireside and that of travel, till Hepzibah, knowing not to what lengths Clifford might go, begged him to be 360 THE HOUSE OF THE SEVEN GABLES. quiet. Clifford touched upon mesmerism and spirit- rapping; upon electricity and the telegraph. " ' You are a strange man, sir ! I can't see through you ! ' " said the old gentleman, at last. " ' No, I '11 be bound you can't ! And yet, my dear sir, I am as transparent as the water of Maule's well ! ' " Just then the train stopped at a lonely way-station, and Clifford decided that they would alight here. The excite- ment had worn away, and the poor fellow was submissive in Hepzibah's hands. She knelt down upon the platform and cried: — " ' God ! God, — our Father, — are we not thy chil- dren ? Have mercy on us ! ' " We leave these two forlorn ones for a moment, and turn to Judge Pyncheon. He still sits in the old chair in the old parlor, in front of old Colonel Pyncheon's picture, his watch in his hand, just as it was a moment after he had taken his seat, waiting for the appearance of Hepzibah and Clifford. All business engagements, all engagements for pleasure that he may have made for the day, are forgotten. He sits in unbroken silence, ghastly white and with features drawn, but no sound disturbs him. What strange spell has seized him? Uncle Venner was abroad early next morning, but on going to Miss Hepzibah's door, he was surprised to see no signs of her, and he was about passing out the gate of the back-yard, when Mr. Holgrave, from his window above, asked him if he heard anyone stirring, and spoke of the storm the night before. The newspaper man came and went; so did a customer. A gossip across the way imparted the information to a passer-by that she had THE HOUSE OF THE SEVEN GABLES. 361 seen Clifford and his sister go away the day before, and as Judge Pyncheon had been seen going into the house, it was surmised that his relatives had gone away to his home. Later, a little schoolboy who had a penny to spend in sweetmeats stopped, and, not gaining admit- tance to the shop, became angry and picked up a stone with naughty intent of throwing it through the window. Two men were passing by, and began to surmise what had become of the Pyncheons, stating that Judge Pyn- cheons horse had been standing at the liveryman's since the morning before, and that one of his hired men had come in from the Judge's country estate to make inquiry about him. Tradesmen came to deliver their orders — they went away without seeing Miss Hepzibah. The butcher, more persistent than the others, tried every door, and at last peeped through a crevice of the window curtain, and thought he saw a pair of stalwart legs belonging to a man sitting in the large oaken chair. He drove away in the spirit of contempt for anyone who would act as the mistress of the old house seemed to be doing just then. Rumors were afloat — rumors strange and dreadful, but no search was made for any of the Pyncheons that day, and in the afternoon Phcebe returned. She tried the shop-door for admittance, but it was barred, and ,?he could not get in. She went to another door and it was opened wide to admit her. She had no sooner entered than the door closed behind her, and Holgrave stood before her. He drew her, not into the parlor, but into what had once been a large reception-room, remarking that they met at a strange moment and that he could not rejoice that she had come back at that time. He 362 THE HOUSE OF THE SEVEN GABLES. told her of the flight of her cousins, and that something terrible had happened to some one, but that he believed both Hepzibah and Clifford to be innocent of any- hand in it. He showed her a daguerreotype of Judge Pyncheon, — the same as that she had seen the first time she met him, — and a second picture, taken within a half-hour, and then he told her that the original of the picture was in the parlor, dead, and that he himself had made the discovery. " ' A feeling which I cannot describe . . . impelled me to make my way into this part of the house, where I discovered what you see. As a point of evidence that may be useful to Clifford, and also as a memorial val- uable to myself, — for, Phoebe, there are hereditary reasons that connect me strangely with that man's fate, — I used the means at my disposal to preserve this pictorial record of Judge Pyncheon's death.' " He told her of what he feared for Hepzibah and Clifford, and that, thirty years before, old Jaffrey Pyncheon had died under very similar circumstances, though Clif- ford was charged with the crime and had suffered for it. Phoebe asked for the story in full, and Holgrave told her that he believed that the man who was at that moment sitting dead in the parlor had arranged everything against Clifford so that he might not share the inherit- ance, and had fixed guilt upon him of which he was innocent, and that the stroke of God had come upon himself as a punishment for his wickedness and to clear Clifford of the imputation of murder. " ' We must not hide this thing a moment longer!' said Phoebe. . . . Let us throw open the doors, and call all the neighborhood to see the truth! ' " THE HOUSE OF THE SEVEN GABLES. 363 Strange it is, but true as it is strange, Holgrave, before the public were notified that Judge Pyncheon was dead within the old house, declared his joy at Phoebe's return and his love for her. "' Do you love me? ... Do you love me, Phoebe?' " ' You look into my heart,' said she, letting her eyes drop. 'You know I love you!' " " ' Now let us meet the world ! ' said Holgrave. . . . * Let us open the door at once.' " "They heard footsteps in the farther passage," and going hither to open the door, there stood Hepzibah and Clifford; the former seemed broken down, and Clifford was the stronger of the two. "'Thank God, my brother, we are at home!'" said Hepzibah. Judge Pyncheon was dead — there was no question of the truth of the fact. When the highest professional authority declared that his was no unusual form of death, the public took but little interest in his decease. The circumstances connected with the death of the elder Jaffrey Pyncheon were revived, but no one now believed Clifford guilty of murder, though, as he was living with his uncle at the time of his death and certain valuable documents and articles had been removed from his private room and desk, the death had been fixed upon him. Suspicion was also fixed upon young Jaffrey, afterwards Judge Pyncheon, as he had been disinherited by his uncle on account of his dissolute habits and love of low pleasures. The story was, — or was supposed to be, — that being one night engaged in searching his uncle's desk, old Jaffrey appeared in the doorway, and 364 THE HOUSE OF THE SEVEN GABLES. in the surprise at the discovery of his nephew's criminal deed, he was so agitated that he "seemed to choke with blood, and fell upon the floor, striking his temple a heavy blow against the corner of a table." He never revived, and young Jaffrey, proceeding with his search, found a will in favor of Clifford, which he destroyed, and an older one in favor of himself was offered for probate. When Clifford was suspected and brought to trial, Jaffrey had arranged everything so well that he did not have to swear to anything false to fix the guilt upon him, — he simply refrained from telling the circumstances of his uncle's death as he knew them. Judge Pyncheon was laid to rest, and though he did not know it, he died childless. A few days after his strange death a steamer from Europe brought word of the death of his son by cholera, just as he was embarking for his native land. By his decease Clifford and Hep- zibah became rich. So, too, did Phoebe, and through his marriage with her Holgrave shared the Pyncheon riches. Clifford became stronger physically and mentally. He had lived in constant terror of Jaffrey Pyncheon, and when freed from his presence, he was a different man. Before the family removed from the House of the Seven Gables to their deceased relative's elegant country seat, henceforth to be their home, Clifford was standing before old Colonel Pyncheon's picture. " ' Whenever I look at it, there is an old dreamy recol- lection haunting me, but keeping just beyond the grasp of my mind. ... I could fancy that, when I was a child, or a youth, that portrait had spoken, and told me a rich secret, or had held forth its hand, with the written record of hidden opulence.' " THE HOUSE OF THE SEVEN GABLES. 365 " ' Perhaps I can recall it/ answered Holgrave. ' See ! There are a hundred chances to one that no person, unacquainted with the secret, would ever touch this spring.'" Holgrave touched the spring, and at his pressure the protrait, frame, and all tumbled forward and lay upon the floor. A recess in the wall was brought to light, and therein lay an ancient deed, signed by several Indian sagamores, and conveying to Colonel Pyncheon and his heirs forever a vast territory of land lying in the far East. " ' But,' said Phoebe, apart to Holgrave, ' how came you to know the secret ? ' "'My dearest Phoebe,' said Holgrave, 'how will it please you to assume the name of Maule ? As for the secret, it is the only inheritance that has come down to me from my ancestors. You should have known sooner (only that I was afraid of frightening you away) that, in this long drama of wrong and retribution, I represent the old wizard, and am probably as much a wizard as ever he was. The son of the executed Matthew Maule, while building this house, took the opportunity to construct that recess, and hide away the Indian deed, on which depended the immense land-claim of the Pyncheons,. Thus they bar- tered their Eastern territory for Maule's garden-ground.'" "A plain, but handsome, dark -green barouche had now drawn up in front of the ruinous portal of the old man- sion-house. The party came forth, and . . . proceeded to take their places. They were chatting and laughing very pleasantly together; and — as proves to be often the case, at moments when we ought to palpitate with sensi- bility — Clifford and Hepzibah bade a final farewell to the abode of their forefathers, with hardly more emotion 366 THE HOUSE OF THE SEVEN GABLES. than if they had made it their arrangement to return thither at tea-time." " Maule's well, all this time, though left in solitude, was throwing up a succession of kaleidoscopic pictures, in which a gifted eye might have foreshadowed the coming fortunes of Hepzibah and Clifford, and the descendant of the legendary wizard, and the village maiden, over whom he had thrown Love's web of sorcery. The Pyncheon Elm, moreover, with what foliage the Septem- ber gale had spared to it, whispered unintelligible proph- ecies. And wise Uncle Venner, passing slowly from the ruinous porch, seemed to hear a strain of music, and fancied that sweet Alice Pyncheon — after witnessing these deeds, this bygone woe and this present happiness, of her kindred mortals — had given one farewell touch of a spirit's joy upon her harpsichord, as she floated heavenward from the House of the Seven Gables ! " WASHINGTON IRVING. 1783-1859. To oxe familiar with the best and purest in American literature, there is no name dearer than that of him who wrote the inimitable "Sketch Book," "Braceb ridge Hall," and "Tales of a Traveler." How lifelike are his sketches, how genial, how easily understood! We have seen a dog very like the one which Irving describes, — we have heard its bark many a time; we have seen fowls that could not be distinguished from those that he looked upon, strutting with a proud independence very similar to that of the ones which gave him so much amusement; we have known characters that are faith- fully delineated in those that peopled Irving's world; we are not in a strange land and among strangers, but are at home and among our friends, when we read his sketches of American people and American life. Washington Irving was born in New York City, April 3, 1783. He began the study of law, but, while a student, under the name of Jonathan Oldstyle he con- tributed several articles to the Morning Chronicle. He went into commercial pursuits with his brothers, Peter and William, and was sent to England on business. He remained there two years; he then returned to New York, and was admitted to the bar. He became a frequent contributor to Salmagundi, a semimonthly periodical, and in 1809 he and his brother Peter had r>7 368 WASHINGTON IRVING. published "Diedrich Knickerbocker's History of New York"; but these had only occupied hours that could be taken from other pursuits. In 1809 occurred the death of Matilda Hoffman, his betrothed. Her death gave a tinge of sadness to his whole after life, and, true to the Washington Irving's Home. memory of the love he bore her, he never afterwards gave any thought to marriage. From 1813 to 1814 he edited the Analectic Magazine, a periodical published in Philadelphia. In 1815 he went for the second time to WASHINGTON IRVING. 369 Europe, as the house of which he was a partner carried on business both in New York and Liverpool. In 1817 the house became bankrupt. Washington Irving now took up literature as a profession. In 1819-20 "The Sketch Book" was collected and published in two vol- umes by John Murray, the London publisher. " Brace- bridge Hall" followed in 1822. It is said that Thomas Moore, the poet, suggested the compilation of this book. "Tales of a Traveler" appeared in 1824, and Murray gave its author the sum of fifteen hundred guineas for the manuscript, without having seen it. In 1826 Irving went to Spain, where he remained till 1829. It was while here that he wrote and published the "Life of Columbus/' and the "Chronicle of the Conquest of Grenada." He was appointed Secretary of the United States Legation in London in 1829, and it was while in London that he published "The Alhambra," and "The Voyage of the Companions of Columbus." While in Spain, Irving lived in the old Moorish palace for two or three months, being, as he himself says, "in a kind of Oriental dream" all the time. After an absence of seventeen years, in 1832 Irving returned to the United States, and received such an ovation as had never before been given to a returning traveler. In 1834 he traveled in the West with commissioners appointed to treat with the Indians, and in 1835 appeared his "Tour of the Prairies." It was in this year that he purchased a tract of land on the east bank of the Hud- son, on which was a small Dutch cottage, the Van Tassel house as it is described in his "Legend of Sleepy Hollow." It was afterward known as Wolfert's Roost, but Irving christened it Sunnyside, which name it still 370 WASHINGTON IRVING. retains in honor of him. From 1842 to 1846 he was Minister to Spain. When his term of office had expired he returned to Sunnyside, where he spent the remainder of his life. Irving wrote upon many themes, and as volume suc- ceeded volume, each received a warm welcome. No Amer- ican author has ever been more popular than he. His histories possess the fascination of romances. His books and characters became household names in his own day, and are familiar friends of ours after half a century has passed. As a writer of sketches and stories, he occupies a prominent place which no one can dispute. As a historian he has been gravely criticized. His pages are too highly colored to make them accurate as history. Irving's geniality of disposition won him hosts of friends both in Europe and America, and all the promi- nent literary characters of his day, in both countries, were proud of his friendship and took delight in honor- ing him. No other American author has attained the popularity that has been accorded him. Thomas Camp- bell, the poet, gave him a letter of introduction to Walter Scott, and Scott said of Irving, "He is one of the best and pleasantest acquaintances I have made this many a day." He died November 28, 1859, at Sunnyside, regretted by thousands on both continents; ay, the two continents joined hands and hearts in a mutual grief and vied with each other in doing him honor and in laying upon his grave the tributes of their love. RIP VAN WINKLE. Principal Characters. Rip Van Winkle, the Vagabond of the Catskills. Dame Yan Winkle, Rip's Wife. Rip Van Winkle, Jr., Son and Counterpart of our hero. Lena, Rip's Daughter. Derrick Van Bummel, the Schoolmaster. Nicholas Vedder, Landlord of the inn. Children and loungers of the village. Dwarfs, the Spirits of the Mountains. 372 RIP VAN WINKLE. By Washington Irving. No lover of nature who has ever made the voyage up the Hudson will forget the moment when the distant Kaatskill Mountains come into view. From the time the traveler has left the busy scenes of life in the metropolis behind him, each point on either side of the majestic, beautiful river is a point of interest, picturesque or his- toric ; and while the onlooker may on one side of him gaze in wonder on the Palisades, whose bare, precipitous walls of rock rise abruptly and extend for several miles up the river; while he looks upon Stony Point, and recalls "Mad Anthony Wayne's" exploit, wherein with but a small force of men he surprised and captured the British fort on the Point, or with eager eyes strives to catch glimpses of the life that is going on at West Point, — he may, if he knows well how to use his eyes, look on the other side of the river and see towering castles or homes made interesting or historic by the lives that have been lived or the scenes that have transpired within them, and imagination joined with fact may round out many a tale of thrilling interest otherwise obscure. The traveler comes to a point where the river seems to end. On the west rises Dunderberg Mountain, on the east Anthony's Nose ; down below, between the two, lies in peaceful beauty Iona Island. The boat rounds the island, and the beautiful Highlands of the Hudson 373 374 RIP VAN WINKLE. stretch for miles along the course of the river. But while he looks with untiring interest upon Palisades and broken ranges of hills, while he is making his way up- stream on the clear; wide expanse of the Hudson, whose waters are moving downward with majestic motion to join the grand old ocean, suddenly some companion on the boat, whose field-glass is pointed to the west, exclaims, " The Kaatskills ! the Kaatskills ! " and there is a momentary forgetfulness of everything else, as each passenger crowds to the bow of the boat or secures an advantageous seat on the west side, where he may see all that is to be seen of the high-towering peaks, which seem to have broken membership with the great ranges of the Appalachians, and stand, solitary and alone in their majestic height, looking down for miles upon the peaceful landscape on all sides, which landscape may indeed be said to have its origin at "their base. From the river, the mountains appear to be clothed in somber shades of gray, or azure, or green. Drawing nearer, the hues are more intense, and in clear weather royal purples and azure tints form their outer dress, which is distinctly outlined against the paler sky. Some- times, when the sun is setting, a great cap of gray vapors gathers on the mountains' crest; and as the sun moves slowly towards its home beyond the western horizon its lingering rays of light turn into red and gold, and, min- gling with the gray mountain mist, form a crown of glory which the pen of mortal cannot describe, or the touch of the artist reproduce. In years gone by (so says the record), near the base of the mountain nestled a little village, not like those which now dot that region of country, wherein artistic cottages RIP VAN WINKLE. 375 and palatial residences predominate, but a primitive vil- lage, whose houses were mainly of inexpensive or rude construction, and whose inhabitants lived without ambi- tions or aspirations higher than those found in their little hamlet. The village had been founded by some of the early Dutch settlers in the seventeenth century, when Peter Stuyvesant, the best and ablest of their governors, was in power. The smoke from the cottage chimneys curled upwards, the bright colors from the painted roofs gleamed among the trees, the "small yellow bricks brought from Holland," of which the houses were built, shone in the sun upon a very contented and unambi- tious people. The houses could not always remain new, and time wrought many changes in them. The thrifty Hollander, by good care and constant repairing, kept his house in good shape ; that of his „ shiftless, careless neighbor gradually fell into decay or ruin. The Dutch colony yielded to the power of the Briton, and it was while the country surrounding the village "was yet a province of Great Britain," that Bip Van Winkle, with his family, occupied one of the village houses, a tenement sadly out of repair, whose exterior told the tale that for many years its latticed windows and gabled fronts and weather- stained walls had not come in touch with the renovating brush of the painter. Rip traced his ancestry to the "Van Winkles who figured so gallantly in the chivalrous days of Peter Stuy- vesant, and accompanied him to the siege of Fort Chris- tina." He was a simple, good-natured fellow, who in his character was utterly destitute of any of the warlike spirit shown by the earlier Van Winkles, and though 376 RIP VAN WINKLE. possessed of many amiable and endearing characteristics, he had submitted without resistance for so many years to the dominant will of Mrs. Van Winkle, that all that was ever self-assertive in him had become absorbed in a quiescent, pliant frame of character that was well known throughout the neighborhood where he dwelt. No deed of kindness that he could do for a neighbor was ever left undone. He won many friends through these deeds. Perhaps, had he neglected his neighbors' interests and at- tended more strictly to his own, he and Mrs. Van Winkle might have lived on better terms, — perhaps the most re- markable episode in his life would never have occurred, and he might have died unknown to the general public. While there are grave suspicions that Dame Van Winkle saw no good qualities in her husband, it is recorded "that he was a great favorite among all the good wives of the village, who, as usual with the amiable sex, took his part in all family squabbles; and never failed, whenever they talked those matters over in their evening gossipings, to lay all the blame on Dame Van Winkle." The children of the village always greeted his appearance with demonstrations of delight, because his heart was as young as theirs and he could be a youth in their sports and games ; and then his mind was a storehouse of legends and stories of ghosts and witches and Indians. "When- ever he went dodging about the village, he was surrounded by a troop of them, hanging on his skirts, clambering on his back, and playing a thousand tricks on him with impunity; and not a dog would bark at him throughout the neighborhood." Notwithstanding all the good qualities that Rip pos- sessed, there was one wanting that made of his life a KIP VAN WINKLE. 3/ i failure,— he was constitutionally opposed to any exercise or application to labor whereby he might have been profited. Perhaps Dame Van Winkle was not to be blamed for her belligerent attitude towards Rip; perhaps (and it is altogether probable), had he assisted her instead of assisting the women of the village in the little yet innumerable chores of their households, she might have had fewer of the same kind of chores to do in Kip's household, and she might never have Avon for herself the universal sobriquet of "termagant." He possessed the gift of perseverance, for "he would sit on a wet rock, with a rod as long and heavy as a Tartar's lance, and fish all day without a murmur, even though he should not be encouraged by a single nibble. He would carry a fowl- ing-piece on his shoulder for hours together, trudging through woods and swamps, and up hill and down dale, to shoot a few squirrels or wild pigeons." In a word, Rip was shiftless, he was aimless; and of all the qualities with which nature had endowed him, that which was most distinctive, which overbalanced all others, was laziness. His farm, which was just as fertile as any in the province, lay neglected, and became the home of weeds most pestilent and hard to be eradicated, and in a few years after Eip came into possession of it, it dwindled away "acre after acre, until there was little more left than a mere patch of Indian corn and potatoes, yet it was the worst-conditioned farm in the neighborhood." What could be expected of children with such a father and mother? Rip Van Winkle, Junior, resembled his father so much that one familiar with the latter would know the paternity of the former at first sight. There something singular about the boy, however. While 378 RIP VAN WINKLE. other mothers' sons were always seeking Rip Van Winkle's company, his own son seldom followed him, but generally stayed as near to his mother as possible. It made no difference to Rip ; nothing affected him ; he sipped what sweets came in his way ; he never wanted anything higher or better or purer. " If left to himself, he would have whistled life away in perfect contentment ; but his wife kept continually dinning in his ears about his idle- ness, his carelessness, and the ruin he was bringing on his family. Morning, noon, and night, her tongue was incessantly going, and every thing he said or did was sure to produce a torrent of household eloquence. Rip had but one way of replying to all lectures of the kind, and that, by frequent use, had grown into a habit. He shrugged his shoulders, shook his head, cast up his eyes, but said nothing. This, however, always provoked a fresh volley from his wife ; so that he was fain to draw off his forces, and take to the outside of the house — the only side which, in truth, belongs to a hen-pecked husband." Rip had one constant, ever-abiding friend, his dog Wolf, who shared his master's pleasures — such as they were — and his troubles, — so far as Rip would appropriate troubles, — and who, when in Dame Van Winkle's pres- ence, was as meek and noncombative as the head of the Van Winkle household himself. " Times grew worse and worse with Rip Van Winkle as years of matrimony rolled on. . . . For a long while he used to console himself, when driven from home, by frequenting a kind of per- petual club of the sages, philosophers, and other idle personages of the village, which held its sessions on a bench before a small inn, designated by a rubicund por- RIP VAN WINKLE. 379 trait of his Majesty George the Third. Here they used to sit in the shade through a long, lazy summer's day, talking listlessly over Tillage gossip, or telling endless, sleepy stories about nothing. But it would have been worth any statesman's money to have heard the profound discussions that sometimes took place, when by chance an old newspaper fell into their hands from some passing Rip "was fain to draw off his forces, and take to the outside of the house." traveler." Besides our noted friend Rip Van Winkle, the village schoolmaster, Derrick Van Bummel, and Nicholas Vedder, the landlord of the village inn, were wont to join this outside, sidewalk club, and lend their influence to it. Mrs. Van Winkle, knowing well each character in the club, and neither expecting nor seeing any good result from their frequent sittings, formed the 380 KIP VAN WINKLE. habit — for habit it was, from its constantly recurring fre- quency — of breaking in unexpectedly upon their sage deliberations, and putting the members to most undigni- fied flight, not even excepting Nicholas Vedder, the pro- prietor of the inn, himself. Rip was in despair, and yet the only way by which he could mend matters — by becoming a staid, industrious, provident man — was studiously and carefully avoided by him. He would stroll off to the woods, and, with the soothing voices of nature lulling him to sleep, would spend many a day, with no companion near him but Wolf, "his fellow-sufferer in persecution." One autumn day, these two started up the mountain- side, and ere they were aware of whither they were going, they found themselves upon one of the highest peaks of the Kaatskills. The solitude had been unbroken save by the twitter of some bird or insect, or the echoes and re- echoes of Rip Van Winkle's gun. The effort of ascent had greatly fatigued Rip, and he threw himself down where " from an opening between the trees he could over- look all the lower country for many a mile of rich wood- land. He saw at a distance the lordly Hudson, far, far below him, moving on its silent but majestic course, with the reflection of a purple cloud, or the sail of a lagging bark, here and there sleeping on its glassy bosom, and at last losing itself in the blue highlands." Everything above and around him was at peace. The hours sped by unheeded, and evening drew near. A strange dread accompanied the approach of the evening twilight, the dread of meeting his wife. The repose of the sylvan spot must be broken ; Rip felt that he must descend from the heights of the mountain and RIP VAN WINKLE. 381 of happiness to the turmoil and the troubles of the valley below. Suddenly, in the distance he heard some one call his name: "'Rip Van Winkle! Rip Van Winkle!'" lie looked ; no one was near. Again did he hear the voice, and so too did Wolf, who bristled up his back, uttered a loud growl, and peered down the glen whence the sound seemed to proceed. Rip looked in the same direction and saw a strange figure climbing up the rocks, and bending under the load he carried on his back. Surmising that it might be some one in need of assist- ance, Rip hastened towards the intruder to offer it. The stranger was "a short, square-built old fellow, with thick bushy hair and a grizzled beard. His dress was of the antique Dutch fashion : a cloth jerkin strapped round the waist — several pairs of breeches, the outer one of ample volume, decorated w T ith rows of buttons down the sides, and bunches at the knees. He bore on his shoulder a stout keg, that seemed full of liquor, and made signs for Rip to approach and assist him with the load." Ever willing to help others, Rip complied, and they began the ascent of the narrow- gully before them. Strange noises, like the rolling of distant thunder, were heard reverberating between the great walls of rock, and Rip stopped for a moment. Their path led them to "a hollow, like a small amphitheater, surrounded by perpen- dicular precipices, over the brinks of which impending trees shot their branches." Not a w T ord w T as spoken by either man, though it must be told that Rip's curiosity hd him to wonder why anyone would carry a keg of liquor up the wild mountain, where there were no signs of habitation. When they entered the amphitheater he stood amazed at what he saw. His companion up the 382 RIP VAN WINKLE. mountain was a strange-looking man; before them there was a company of equally strange-looking creatures play- ing at ninepins. Their dress was of no known fashion, and their faces were not such as Rip had ever seen before. There was one man who seemed to control the others. As Rip stood looking upon the group he was impressed with their gravity of appearance and demeanor and their unbroken silence, though their employment was merely amusement. Not a word was spoken. "Nothing Drinking to the Health of the Spirits of the Mountains. interrupted the stillness of the scene but the noise of the balls, which, whenever they were rolled, echoed along the mountains like rumbling peals of thunder." They stopped their game when Rip and his silent companion drew near, and gazed upon them with an expressionless stare that terrified the former. His unknown friend mo- tioned him to take the flagons, into which he had emptied RIP VAN WINKLE. 383 the liquor, and wait upon the players. This Rip did. They drank and then resumed the game. Rip's terror gradu- ally subsided, and when he thought no one saw him he, too, tasted of the liquor; it proving to be of the best quality, he was tempted to drink of it so frequently that he became unconscious and fell into a deep sleep. When he awoke he found it was morning, — a beautiful, sunny morning, in which all nature around him seemed to be taking delight. He listened to the music of the singing birds; he saw an eagle overhead; he felt the sweet breath of the morning breeze upon his face; he sat up and recalled the incidents of the day before, — as he supposed, — and the temptation to which he had yielded. Dame Van Winkle's angry countenance and stinging reproofs, to which he looked forward, were not a pleasant vision. He made ready to descend to the village. He reached for his gun, but instead of his well-kept fowling-piece he found an old, rusty gun by his side, whose stock was falling off in decay, and which would be useless to him. He looked around for Wolf, but, strange to say, he had deserted him. Thinking that he might not be far off, Rip whistled and called to him, but no bark answered him, no dog appeared. Oddly enough, too, Rip was not in the part of the mountain where he had seen the group of strange men, but in the spot where he had at first en- countered his companion. He decided to go to their play- ground before he went home; but, on attempting to walk, he found that he could scarcely move. He went down to the glen, but was amazed to see the gully filled with a clear mountain stream, whose bright waters formed many a cascade as they made their way over their rocky bed. By great effort he toiled through the undergrowth to the Rip Waking. " ' Surely,' thought Rip, ' I have not slept here all night. 1 " RIP VAN WINKLE. 385 amphitheater in the rocks, but no such spot was visible. Water filled the basin, and as Rip looked upon it he was deeply perplexed. What had wrought the change in one short night? What was to be done? There was mystery all around him, there was no prospect of pleasure below; only one thing remained for him to do. He could not spend his days in the cold mountain, and he resolved to face Dame Van Winkle and her torrent of invective, which he felt sure was ready for him. As he drew near the village he met several persons, and he was surprised to find them all strangers. They were dressed differently, too, from any whom he had ever known. He stared at them, but they returned a stare which showed surprise and amusement as great as his own, and each one as he gazed would stroke his chin. The frequency of this movement upon the part of the men w r hom he passed, made Rip unconsciously put his hand to his chin. Lo! he found that his beard was of such an unusual length that he did not wonder at their strange gestures. He came into the village, and, instead of the friendly recognition from the children to which he had always been accustomed, hoots and insults were thrust upon him. Not a friendly face greeted him, not a friendly hand was extended. The very dogs seemed turned against him. The village had grown into a town. Everything was strange — strange names, strange faces, strange new streets. Could this change be effected in one short day and night ? thought poor, bewildered Rip. What power of witchery had wrought the trans- formation ? Was the world changed, or was he at fault ? Everything confused him, except the surety that the mountain in the distance was the Kaatskill, and that the 386 RIP VAN WINKLE. river was the same Hudson that he had always known. Hill and dale were in the same places that they had ever been. What was the trouble ? What had wrought this confusion ? With a wisdom far beyond what might have been ex- pected, Rip solved the problem, and laid the blame upon the flagon of spirits of which he had imbibed so freely in the revels of the weird mountain people. He started in the direction of his home. It was sadly decayed and was uninhabited. In the anguish of his soul he cried aloud for the wife whom he feared, for the children who had so little reason to reverence or love him. Sad echoes responded to his call, and he left the desolate place and made his way to the inn where he and Derrick Van Bummel and Nicholas Vedder and other congenial spirits were wont to assemble. The inn was gone. An- other building stood upon its site — very dilapidated it was, we must confess — and "over the door was painted, 'The Union Hotel, by Jonathan Doolittle.'" The old tree, whose wide-spreading branches had comforted Rip innumerable times, was nowhere to be seen. In its stead was a liberty-pole, from which fluttered a flag of stars and stripes ; the image of King George which but yesterday decorated the sign of the inn "was singularly metamor- phosed. The red coat was changed for one of blue and buff, a sword was held in the hand instead of a scepter, the head was decorated with a cocked hat, and under- neath was painted in large characters, l General Wash- ington.' " The crowd about the door were strangers, and instead of the repose and serenity of those with whom Rip had associated, their conversation was disputatious and belligerent. In place of the old innkeeper and the RIP VAN WINKLE. 387 schoolmaster, "a lean, bilious-looking fellow, with his pockets full of handbills, was haranguing vehemently about rights of citizens — elections — members of Congress — liberty — Bunker's Hill — heroes of seventy-six — and other words, which were a perfect Babylonish jargon to the bewildered Van Winkle." A motley crowd had followed Rip, and the tavern poli- ticians stopped their talk long enough to draw near to him and inquire on which side he voted. He was worse and worse confused when the question was put direct, whether he was Federal or Democrat. The crowd was parted to the right and left by a man of self- assumed authority, who demanded of Rip why he had come "'to the election with a gun on his shoulder, and a mob at his heels.'" His answer was not conciliatory. '•'Alas! gentlemen,' cried Rip, somewhat dismayed, 'I am a poor quiet man, a native of the place, and a loyal subject of the king, God bless him ! ' "Here a general shout burst from the bystanders — 'A tory ! a tory ! a spy ! a refugee ! hustle him ! away with him!'" Rip assured them that he had come with peaceful intent; that he was in search of his friends; that he wished to see Nicholas Vedder. He was told that Nicho- las had been dead eighteen years, and that even the simple marker of his grave had gone to decay. He inquired for Brom Dutcher, another pleasant acquaint- ance, and for Von Bummel. The former had disappeared in some way unknown to his townsmen, and the humble pedagogue had first won a general's title and was at present representing his district in Congress 388 RIP VAN WINKLE. Confused and almost crazed by the answers he received to every question, Eip cried out in the anguish of his lonely soul, " ' Does nobody here know Rip Van Winkle ? ' " To this he received an answer not more satisfactory than the others had been. " ' Oh, Rip Van Winkle ! ' exclaimed two or three, 'oh, to be sure! that's Rip Van Winkle yonder, leaning against the tree.'" Sure enough ! There stood one, looking just as he did before that fatal day spent in the mountains. If that was Rip Van Winkle, who was he himself ? Others did not iden- tify him: evidently he was a stranger to himself. "'God knows ! ' exclaimed he, at his wit's end ; ' I 'm not myself — I'm somebody else — that's me yonder — no that's somebody else got into my shoes — I was myself last night, but I fell asleep on the mountain, and they've changed my gun, and every thing 's changed, and I can't tell what 's my name or who I am ! ' " This settled Rip's standing with the curious crowd. They exchanged significant looks, they pointed to their foreheads, they made motions that it would be prudent to relieve Rip of his gun. What might have been done with him one cannot tell; but just then a woman with a baby in her arms stepped forward to get a peep at him who was the object of interest to the great throng. The child, becoming frightened at the strange old man, began to cry. "'Hush, Rip/ cried she; 'hush, you little fool; the old man won't hurt you.' The name of the child, the air of the mother, the tone of her voice, all awakened a train of recollections in his confused mind." He turned to the woman with a gleam of hope, and inquired her name. She replied that it was Judith Gardenier. RIP VAN WINKLE. 389 "'And your father's name?' "'Ah, poor man, Rip Van Winkle was his name, but it 's twenty years since he went away from home with his gun, and never has been heard of since, — his dog came home without him ; but whether he shot himself, or was carried away by the Indians, nobody can tell. I was then but a little girl.'" A dark cloud had ever hung over Rip in the days gone by. He had ever dreaded the storm which its presence presaged. It must be confessed that there were no sunny recollections connected with it now, but he must ask another question ; he asked it tremblingly and fearfully, and with no loving curiosity: — "'Where 's your mother?'" There was no sound of regret, no sense of bereave- ment, in the plain, straightforward answer: — " ' Oh, she, too, had died but a short time since ; she broke a blood-vessel in a fit of passion at a New England pedler.' " There was no dread before Rip. When he had wak- ened from his sleep and thought of facing his wife and her bitter upbraidings, the "coming events cast their shadows before"; now, even though some lingering affec- tion might have stirred a latent pang in Rip's bosom, there was comfort in knowing that never again would he have to listen to the accusations of his irascible partner. But he was coming in touch with his family once more, and through them he might again come in touch with the world which he loved so well, and of which he longed to again form a part. " He caught his daughter and her child in his arms. 'I am your father!' cried he — 'Young Rip Van Winkle once — old Rip Van Winkle now! — Does nobody know poor Rip Van Winkle?'" 390 RIP VAN WINKLE. This wail touched the heart of an old woman, who stepped forward and recognized him. "'Sure enough! it is Rip Van Winkle — it is himself! Welcome home again, old neighbor. Why, where have you been these twenty long years?'" Rip had but little to tell. For twenty years he had been in a long, unbroken, dreamless sleep. Of course, most of his auditors doubted when they heard his story. They needed other assurance than his to corroborate the existence of such weird, silent creatures as those which Rip declared he had met in the mountain, and they con- sulted Peter Vanderdonk, the oldest inhabitant of the village, whose memory was a storehouse of " all the won- derful events and traditions of the neighborhood." Altered in appearance and manner though Rip was, Peter recognized him, "and corroborated his story in the most satisfactory manner. He assured the company that it was a fact, handed down from his ancestor, the histo- rian, that the Kaatskill Mountains had always been haunted by strange beings. That it was affirmed that the great Hendrick Hudson, the first discoverer of the river and country, kept a kind of vigil there every twenty years, with his crew of the Half -moon; being permitted in this way to revisit the scenes of his enterprise, and keep a guardian eye upon the river and the great city called by his name. That his father had once seen them in their old Dutch dresses playing at ninepins in a hollow of the mountain; and that he himself had heard, one summer afternoon, the sound of their balls, like distant peals of thunder." We know not how many, if any, of the crowd believed this strange legend, for it was election day and other and RIP VAN WINKLE. 391 more weighty matters claimed their attention. Rip Van Winkle's identity was established, which was much in his favor. Mrs. Gardenier took her father home to live with her. Her husband was a well-to-do farmer who, when a little boy, had known Rip well and cherished pleasant recollections of him. Young Rip Van Winkle, his father's counterpart and heir, was also "employed to work on the farm; but evinced an hereditary disposition to attend to any thing else but his business." Rip's habits were of too long standing to be uprooted or reconstructed. He hunted up his former associates, now, like himself, past the prime of life ; but they did not interest him as they had once done, and he betook him- self to the younger generation, the boys of the town, who soon learned to regard him with great favor. His son-in-law and daughter made life pleasant for him, and he frequently went to the village inn and sat upon the bench before it, and in due time he began to be looked upon as one of the patriarchs of the commu- nity. Though he could relate many incidents of interest of the times previous to his mysterious disappearance, "it was some time before he could get into the regular track of gossip, or could be made to comprehend the strange events that had taken place during his torpor : how that there had been a revolutionary war, — that the country had thrown off the yoke of old England, — and that, instead of being a subject of his Majesty George the Third, he was now a free citizen of the United States. Rip, in fact, was no politician; the change of states and empires made but little impression on him; but there was one species of despotism under which he had long groaned, and that was — petticoat government. Happily that was 392 RIP VAN WINKLE. at an end; he had gotten his neck out of the yoke of matrimony, and could go in and out whenever he pleased, without dreading the tyranny of Dame Van Winkle. Whenever her name was mentioned, however, he shook his head, shrugged his shoulders, and cast up his eyes; which might pass either for an expression of resignation to his fate, or joy at his deliverance." Rip never wearied of telling his story ; he did not always tell it the same way, but in due time the facts in the case arranged themselves, and were so often repeated that there was " not a man, woman, or child in the neigh- borhood but knew it by heart." There were those who were incredulous, to whom the story would never be a reality ; but the old Dutch inhabitants, who had the superstitions brought from beyond the seas, listened to it and believed every word that Rip told. "Even to this day they never hear a thunder-storm of a summer after- noon about the Kaatskill, but they say Hendrick Hudson and his crew are at their game of ninepins ; and it is a common wish of all hen-pecked husbands in the neigh- borhood, when life hangs heavy on their hands, that they might have a quieting draught out of Rip Van Winkle's flagon." THE LEGEND OF SLEEPY HOLLOW. Principal Characters. Ichabod Crane, the Schoolmaster. Katrina Van Tassel, Daughter of Baltus Van Tassel. Abraham. Van Brunt, or Brom Bones, Rival of Ichabod Crane. Baltus Van Tassel, a wealthy Dutch farmer. Hans Van Ripper. 394 THE LEGEND OF SLEEPY HOLLOW. By Washington Irving. "In the bosom of one of those spacious coves which indent the eastern shore of the Hudson, at that broad expansion of the river denominated by the ancient Dutch navigators the Tappan Zee, and where they always pru- dently shortened sail, and implored the protection of St. Nicholas when they crossed, there lies a small market- town or rural port, which by some is called Greensburgh, but which is more generally and properly known by the name of Tarry Town. This name was given, we are told, in the former days, by the good housewives of the adjacent country, from the inveterate propensity of their husbands to linger about the village tavern on market- days. . . . Not far from this village, perhaps about two miles, there is a little valley, or rather lap of land, among high hills, which is one of the quietest places in the whole world. A small brook glides through it, with just mur- mur enough to lull one to repose; and the occasional whistle of a quail, or tapping of a woodpecker, is almost the only sound that ever breaks in upon the uniform tranquillity." "If ever I should wish for a retreat, whither I might steal from the world and its distractions, and dream quietly away the remnant of a troubled life, I know of none more promising than this little valley. "From the listless repose of the place, and the peculiar 395 396 THE LEGEND OF SLEEPY HOLLOW. character of its inhabitants, who are descendants from the original Dutch settlers, this sequestered glen has long been known by the name of Sleepy Hollow, and its rustic lads are called the Sleepy Hollow Boys throughout all the neighboring country." The whole neighborhood abounds with superstitions. Everyone who resides in this valley for a time is sure "to inhale the witching in- fluence of the air, and begin to grow imaginative, to dream dreams, and see apparitions." "The dominant spirit, however, that haunts this en- chanted region, and seems to be commander-in-chief of all the powers of the air, is the apparition of a figure on horseback without a head. . . . The specter is known, at all the country firesides, by the name of The Headless Horseman of Sleepy Hollow." Here, in a remote period of American history, stood a primitive schoolhouse in a lonely spot near to the brook, on whose bank grew a large specimen of the birch-tree. This building was of the simplest construction and meager furnishing. On rough benches and at desks very limited in number the students sat, the only light which aided in their study being that which came through paper glazed and often patched with different materials. On a summer's day, when the door stood open and the paper was removed from the window-openings, might have been heard the subdued murmur of the children's voices, as, in the fashion of the time, they studied aloud in a low monotone; or, above the murmur of study, one could distinguish the voice of the master, Ichabod Crane, who gave instruction and administered discipline in about equal proportions. Sometimes, when it was necessary, he varied the exercises, and then might be heard "the ap- THE LEGEND OF SLEEPY HOLLOW. 397 palling sound of the birch, as he urged some tardy loiterer along the flowery path of knowledge. . . . Icha- bod Crane's scholars certainly were not spoiled," and yet "he administered justice with discrimination rather than severity, taking the burden off the backs of the weak, and laying it on those of the strong." Ichabod's income from teaching was small, and he eked it out, according to the custom of the times, in boarding round for a week at a time in the different families of the neighborhood. He was not always a welcome guest, but he made himself useful both indoors and out, and so could be tolerated with some measure of endurance. He assisted the farmers in the lighter field work, and did the heavy chores of the household. From constant associa- tion with older children he learned to take care of the younger ones in the household, and "he would sit with a child on one knee, and rock a cradle with his foot for whole hours together."" He had another resource which brought him in an addition to his slender salary and made him one of the most prominent characters in the valley. He was the singing-master and choir leader, and on Sun- days he divided the honors of the sanctuary with the min- ister, — indeed, there were times when Ichabod was vain enough to believe that he eclipsed that godly man by the way in which he rendered the musical part of the worship. Ichabod was not handsome, — he was very far from being even passably good looking; but somehow, in some way, he had ingratiated himself with all the young maidens in the country, and received marks of attention from them, while the more bashful young men of the neighborhood kept in the background, meanwhile "envy- ing his superior elegance and address." 398 THE LEGEND OP SLEEPY HOLLOW. He was an authority on almost every subject. "He had read several books quite through, and was a perfect master of Cotton Mather's 'History of New England Witchcraft/ in which, by the way, he most firmly and potently believed." Whilst Ichabod was shrewd, he was also very credulous; and often on his walks to his board- ing-place in the dusk of evening, wherever that boarding- place might chance to be, was he frightened almost out of his senses by the most trivial, commonplace circum- stance or occurrence. He believed in evil spirits, and when alone, either on the quiet road or in the woods or glens, he would, to keep them at a distance, roll out sonorously psalm after psalm, whose melody would be borne to "the good people of Sleepy Hollow, as they sat by their doors of an evening." Ichabod averred that "he had seen many specters in his time, and been more than once beset by Satan in divers shapes," — that is, he had had these unnatural visions when darkness enveloped the earth and he was traversing the country by himself; but in the light of day, or when he was indoors, he was free from persecution, and would have passed his time in pleasantness "if his path had not been crossed by a being that causes more perplexity to mortal man than ghosts, goblins, and the whole race of witches put together, and that was — a woman." Katrina Van Tassel, the only child of a wealthy Dutch farmer, was one of Ichabod's singing pupils. One even- ing of each week his class met, and it was then that for the first time he looked upon and felt the force of the fair girl's attractions. She was young and pretty, — aye, her beauty was of such a type that the surrounding country paid tribute to it by bringing to her many THE LEGEND OF SLEEPY HOLLOW. 399 ardent admirers. Her personal beauty was enhanced by the prospect of vast wealth which her father had inherited and added to in many years of successful farming. Katrina was coquettish, as might have been expected from one born and reared as she had been. She knew how to dress so as to best show off her beauty, and her charms were never sacrificed to any whim of fashion. In her wardrobe the old styles that were becoming were mixed with the new, and for her ornaments she wore the antique jewelry that had de- scended to her from grandmothers far removed. Her dress was picturesque; there was no one who did — there was no one in all Sleepy Hollow who could afford to — dress as did Katrina Van Tassel. Baltus Van Tassel, Katrina's father, measured the world by the boundary lines of his farm. He cared not what went on beyond his own domain. From across the waters he had brought a strong home-love with him; he had also brought habits of industry, integrity, and contentment with his lot. He had chosen his farm in a beautiful valley which lay between the hills which border the Hudson, and at a point which commanded a fine view of the river he had built his house. He cared nothing for the grand style then so much affected by the wealthy colonists, but he lived in great comfort and with a free use of the good things which surrounded him on all sides. No unhappy dreams of ambition disturbed his thoughts by day or his sleep by night. He would sit under the great elm-tree that spread its branches over his ample home, and smoke his pipe in blissful peace, on good terms with himself and all the rest of the world. He was liberal-hearted and hospitable, and his door 400 THE LEGEND OF SLEEPY HOLLOW. stood always open to any who with neighborly intent would enter it. His undertakings were prospered. "Whether he understood farming better than many others and sowed good seed in soil suitable for its reproduction, or whether the location of his fields in the valley, wherein they could receive the moisture from the river which descended in the early and the latter rain, was the cause of his abundant crops, we can only surmise; but certain it is that his barns were filled to their utmost with precious grain, that brought him precious coin whenever he wished to make the exchange from one to the other. His cattle and swine and horses were of the best, his turkeys strutted with a lordly air, while fowls of varied kinds grew fat and multiplied their species in great numbers in the cleanly kept poultry yard. Plenty reigned without Van Tassel's home, and most abundant plenty filled the closets and storehouses of the household within. No wonder that the future heiress of this wealth was an object upon which all the young men in the neighborhood looked with longing eyes. Ichabod Crane was very susceptible to the charms of the gentler sex. Katrina's beauty had impressed its counterpart upon his soft heart, and after he had visited her in her home there were other weighty considerations which made her an object of attainment greatly to be desired. He was without a home; if he could win the heiress, here was one ready prepared to receive him. He was tall, and lean, and lank, and had wondrous storage capacities for the pleasures of the table, and after he had eaten one meal at Baltus Van Tassel's table his soul within him would have been ever satisfied to sit at each meal during the remainder of his life with Katrina, and THE LEGEND OF SLEEPY HOLLOW. 401 as her husband share the good things which her father knew so well how to provide. Under the sleepy, en- chanting influence of the valley, or some other influence equally potent, Ichabod would sit under the great elm with Van Tassel and allow his fancy to paint beautiful pictures of a future time when, if he could but win the handsome maiden, all these fertile fields and meadow- lands might be converted into cash, and with Katrina and a large family of children mounted in wagons filled with household goods, he himself riding by their side to ward off danger, they would start off to some El Dorado in the West, where vast domains were waiting for him who would enter in and possess them. He set himself resolutely to win Katrina's heart. As might be imagined, his pathway was beset with many difficulties. We have intimated that Katrina was coquet- tish; she was more; — young as she was, she had had so many admirers that she was very capricious. Ichabod found that he had rivals persistent and strong, and that to win the race he must summon all his best forces and appear to the best advantage. The rival whom he most dreaded, whom for many reasons he had most cause to dread, was Abraham Van Brunt, shortened, as was the custom of the Dutch, to Brom Van Brunt, a great, broad-shouldered athlete, whose feats of strength were well known the country over. "From his Hercu- lean frame and great powers of limb, he had received the nickname of Brom Bones, by which he was universally known." He was an expert horseman, and engaged in any game or sport that required physical strength. " He was always ready for either a fight or a frolic; but had more mischief than ill-will in his composition; and, with 26 402 THE LEGEND OF SLEEPY HOLLOW. all his overbearing roughness, there was a strong dash of waggish good-humor at bottom. He had three or four boon companions, who regarded him as their model, and at the head of whom he scoured the country, attend- ing every scene of feud or merriment for miles round. . . . The neighbors looked upon him with a mixture of awe, admiration, and good- will; and when any mad- cap prank, or rustic brawl, occurred in the vicinity, always shook their heads, and warranted Brom Bones was at the bottom of it." Brom Bones looked upon and weighed well the many- sided attractions of Katrina Van Tassel, and indeed, it was told by those who ought to know, that his attentions were received with favor by the pretty maiden. Of one thing the swains in the neighborhood were well aware: whenever Brom sought Katrina's company the other contestants for her favor retired in order and left the field clear for him. Van Tassel attended strictly to his farm and its prod- ucts, animal and vegetable. "His notable little wife, too, had enough to do to attend to her housekeeping and manage her poultry; for, as she sagely observed, ducks and geese are foolish things, and must be looked after, but girls can take care of themselves." So, with the confidence of both her parents that she would act wisely, Katrina managed her love affairs according to her own sweet will; she received or discouraged her suitors as she saw fit; no one advised her, no one restrained her. Ichabod Crane made his advances in one way, Brom Bones in a manner altogether different. Ichabod's dreamy nature made him feel secure of success; he was THE LEGEND OF SLEEPY HOLLOW. 403 mild and gentle, his music lessons, if such they may be called, were an ever-at-hand excuse for his frequent visits to the Van Tassel homestead, and he would sit undisturbed by the hour with Katrina, under the elm- tree or in the comfortable Dutch parlor, or they w^ould take walks "in the twilight — that hour so favorable to the lover's eloquence." Ichabod's interests with Katrina seemed to be growing in the estimation of his friends, and those of Brom Bones were apparently on the decline. "His horse was no longer seen tied at the palings on Sunday nights, and a deadly feud gradually arose between him and the preceptor of Sleepy Hollow." Ichabod was pacific; if the whole truth were put in plain language, he stood in awe of the immense strength of Brom, and avoided everything that might arouse the belligerent in him. This was more exasperating to the great, rough wag than threats and open hostility; and in consequence, Ichabod was the object of many a joke, which did him no harm, but which seemed to afford Brom and his companions much merriment. As Ichabod peacefully pursued his suit, his persecutors tried ways that more and more annoyed him. "They harried his hitherto peaceful domains; smoked out his singing-school, by stopping up the chimney; broke into the schoolhouse at night, in spite of its formidable fastenings of withe and window-stakes, and turned every- thing topsyturvy, so that the poor schoolmaster began to think all the witches in the country held their meet- in-- there. But what was still more annoying, Brom took opportunities of turning him into ridicule in pres- ence of his mistress, and had a scoundrel dog whom he taught to whine in the most ludicrous manner, and 404 THE LEGEND OF SLEEPY HOLLOW. introduced as a rival of Ichabod's to instruct her in psalmody." Ichabod endured these persecutions with the spirit of non-resistance, but they were wearing upon him. One autumn day he sat in his school, amid the trials and annoyances that came in with the girls and boys, and was attending to the duties of his position, when he " was suddenly interrupted by the appearance of a negro ... with an invitation to Ichabod to attend a merry- making or 'quilting frolic,' to be held that evening at Mynheer Van Tassel's." Almost before Ichabod had time to accept, the boy dashed away from the schoolhouse door, "and was seen scampering away up the Hollow, full of the importance and hurry of his mission." The excitement of the occasion changed the careworn, pensive attitude of Ichabod, and his pupils caught the inspiration of the hour. The enforced quiet was broken up, and haste ruled the exercises. "The scholars were hurried through their lessons, without stopping at trifles; those who were nimble skipped over half with impunity, and those who were tardy had a smart application now and then in the rear, to quicken their speed, or help them over a tall word. Books were flung aside without being put away on the shelves, inkstands were overturned, benches thrown down, and the whole school was turned loose an hour before the usual time, bursting forth like a legion of young imps, yelping and racketing about the green, in joy at their early emancipation. "The gallant Ichabod now spent at least an extra half hour at his toilet, brushing and furbishing up his best and indeed only suit of rusty black, and arranging his looks by a bit of broken looking-glass, that hung up in THE LEGEND OF SLEEPY HOLLOW. 405 the schoolhouse." That week Ichabod was staying with Hans Van Ripper; and, that he might go in a style in line with other young men who would be at the party, he borrowed of Van Ripper a steed to carry him thither, and set out for Van Tassel's. The steed he rode demands a passing notice — it had much to do with Ichabod's future destiny. This horse bore the significant name of " Gun- powder," which told the nature of his character. He was "a broken-down plough-horse, that had outlived almost everything but his viciousness. He w r as gaunt and shagged, with a ewe neck and a head like a ham- mer; his rusty mane and tail were tangled and knotted with burrs; one eye had lost its pupil, and was glaring and spectral; but the other had the gleam of a genuine devil in it. . . . Old and broken-down as he looked, there was more of the lurking devil in him than in any young filly in the country. "Ichabod was a suitable figure for such a steed. He rode with short stirrups, which brought his knees nearly up to the pommel of the saddle; his sharp elbows stuck out like grasshoppers'; he carried his whip perpendicu- larly in his hand, like a scepter, and, as his horse jogged on, the motion of his arms was not unlike the flapping of a pair of wings. A small wool hat rested on the top of his nose, for so his scanty strip of forehead might be called; and the skirts of his black coat fluttered out almost to the horse's tail." Ichabod was happy in himself, happy in anticipation of the pleasure of Katrina's company, happy in his pros- pective enjoyment without stint of the viands which he knew would be spread for the guests at Baltns Van Tas- sel's hospitable board. The beauties of an autumnal day 406 THE LEGEND OF SLEEPY HOLLOW. were all around him. The sky was clear, and without a threatening cloud; the forests were clothed in the rich, warm colors of yellow and brown and scarlet and crim- son. Birds of beautiful and varied plumage enlivened the scene. The rich, juicy nuts with which the nut trees were laden, spoke a prophecy of winter evenings of pleas- ure and cheer around many a fireside in the quiet valley. If more were needed to enhance the pleasure of the coming winter time, Ichabod looked upon orchards whose boughs were loaded with rich, fragrant apples, or beheld vast stores of the luscious fruit standing ready for the market, and in imagination he almost tasted the ruby cider which he knew would soon be flowing from the presses of the neighborhood. Nature was prodigal with her treasures, and not only forests and orchards gave promise of what was to be, but the fields bore substantial tokens of their rich increase and abundant ingathering. "The wide bosom of the Tappan Zee lay motionless and glassy, excepting that here and there a gentle undulation waved and prolonged the blue shadow of the distant mountain. ... A sloop was loitering in the distance, dropping slowly down with the tide, her sail hanging uselessly against the mast; and as the reflection of the sky gleamed along the still water, it seemed as if the vessel was suspended in the air." When Ichabod reached Van Tassel's, he found farmers and farmers' wives, with their sons and daughters, each one dressed in the quaint Dutch costume, the chief orna- ment of the men being great numbers of brass buttons of an antique pattern arranged in rows upon their coats, and long plaited queues hanging down their backs, as was the fashion of their time. Brom Bones was there, in all his THE LEGEND OF SLEEPY HOLLOW. 407 independence and high spirits. He had ridden his horse, which he had named Daredevil, "a creature, like himself, full of mettle and mischief, and which no one but him- self could manage." The young Dutch beauties of the valley and surround- ing country were gathered in the pleasant rooms and stately parlor of the Van Tassel mansion. The charms of these young maidens were most attractive to some of the swains, but to Ichabod, the "genuine Dutch country tea-table," with its "heaped-up platters of cakes of various and almost indescribable kinds," with "apple-pies and peach-pies and pumpkin-pies; besides slices of ham and smoked beef; and moreover delectable dishes of preserved plums, and peaches, and pears, and quinces; not to men- tion broiled shad and roasted chickens; together with bowls of milk and cream, . . . with the motherly teapot sending up its clouds of vapor from the midst," — to Icha- bod this tempting array of substantial and delicacies was indescribably charming. " He was a kind and thank- ful creature, whose heart dilated in proportion as his skin was filled with good cheer; and whose spirits rose with eating as some men's do with drink. He could not help, too, rolling his large eyes round him as he ate, and chuckling with the possibility that he might one day be lord of all this scene of almost unimaginable luxury and splendor." The host, Baltus Van Tassel, moved about and welcomed the guests in his earnest, simple-hearted manner, which consisted of "a shake of the hand, a slap on the shoulder, a loud laugh, and a pressing invi- tation to 'fall to, and help themselves/" An old, gray- headed negro drew his bow upon the strings of an old, 408 THE LEGEND OF SLEEPY HOLLOW. worn violin, and Ichabod, for whom the dance had witchery at all times, moved over the floor, his whole person animated and joyous because "the lady of his heart was his partner in the dance, and smiling graciously in reply to all his amorous oglings; while Brom Bones, sorely smitten with love and jealousy, sat brooding by himself in one corner." When the dance was over, Ichabod drew near a group of elderly men who were rich in reminiscences of the war between the British and Americans, and he listened to the stories of bravery and daring exploit which they told of heroes dead and gone; and then came stories of ghosts and apparitions that had been seen in countless numbers in the neighborhood. The prevalence of supernatural stories in these parts " was doubtless owing to the vicinity of Sleepy Hollow. There was a contagion in the very air that blew from that haunted region; it breathed forth an atmosphere of dreams and fancies infecting all the land." Story after story was told, but the chief part of them "turned upon the favorite specter of Sleepy Hollow, the headless horseman, who had been heard several times of late, patrolling the country; and, it was said, tethered his horse nightly among the graves in the churchyard." Brom Bones joined the group, and told that one night the headless horseman had overtaken him, and "that he had offered to race with him for a bowl of punch, and should have won it too, for Daredevil beat the goblin horse all hollow, but, just as they came to the church-bridge, the Hessian bolted, and vanished in a flash of fire." Not one of the stories told was lost on Ichabod Crane. THE LEGEND OF SLEEPY HOLLOW. 409 In return he gave copious extracts from Cotton Mather, and told of wondrous apparitions that he had seen after nightfall in Sleepy Hollow. All social gatherings must end in separations, and Dame Van Tassel's guests, some of whom had to traverse several miles before they reached their homes, withdrew when the festivities were over, loath to quit the house where they had been so handsomely entertained. All were at last gone save Ichabod Crane. He lingered be- hind, hoping to have a tete-a-tete with Katrina. She granted it, but whatever passed between them must have been of a very unpleasant nature, for Ichabod, after but a few moments, left the house, with a very disconsolate air. " Oh, these women ! these women ! Could that girl have been playing off any of her coquettish tricks? Was her encouragement of the poor pedagogue all a mere sham to secure her conquest of his rival? Heaven only knows ! " What Ichabod said to Katrina no one knows; what she said to him is all conjecture; but his gay dreams of future enjoyment of the Van Tassel wealth must have been rudely shattered. He went to the stable, mounted Gunpowder, and started homewards, looking neither to the right hand nor to the left. Heavy-hearted, he rode "along the sides of the lofty hills which rise above Tarry Town, and which he had traversed so cheerily in the afternoon." The quiet and darkness of the midnight were all around him; within him were shattered hopes and a gloom of soul that well accorded with the night hour. He had to pass the spot where many of the scenes of the ghost stories told during the evening had been laid. "In the center of 410 THE LEGEND OF SLEEPY HOLLOW. the road stood an enormous tulip-tree, which towered like a giant above all the other trees of the neighborhood, and formed a kind of landmark. ... It was connected with the tragical story of the unfortunate Andr6, who had been taken prisoner hard by; and was universally known by the name of Major Andre's tree." To dispel his gloom and fear, perhaps to drive away any spirit who might have been in his way, Ichabod began to whistle bravely. Hist ! What was that ? Was it only the echo of his own voice? Surely some one whistled, he thought. No; it was only the autumn wind sighing through the leafless tree-tops. Horrors! what was that white object in the tree ? Ichabod could reach his home in no other way than by going straight by the tree. There was no time to pause. The sooner he braved its terrors, whether real or imaginary, the better for him. He drew near and looked at the tree. The white object proved to be noth- ing more than a spot where the lightning's track had. stripped the bark and left the white surface exposed. But quiet of soul was not to be his. He heard a groan. Were the stories to which he had listened at Herr Van Tassel's true ? Was a fellow-traveler in trouble ? Was the spirit of Andre haunting the spot near where he had been so cruelly captured? No; the night wind was only playing hide-and-seek among the boughs of the tree, and the noise was made as one bough touched another in their sport. Troubles come "trooping in each other's track," and Ichabod's increased the farther he went on his way. His fears would scarce be allayed; his nerves, which were strung to their greatest tension, would be but THE LEGEND OF SLEEPY HOLLOW, 411 half quieted, when sonic new terror would present itself just ahead of him. '•About two hundred yards from the tree a small brook crossed the road, and ran into a marshy and thickly wooded glen, known by the name of Wiley's swamp. A few rough logs, laid side by side, served for a bridge over this stream. On thai side of the road where the brook entered the wood, a group of oaks and chestnuts, matted thick with wild grape-vines, threw a cavernous gloom over it." It was at this bridge that Andre bad been captured; it was under these very trees that Pauld- ing, Van Wart, and Williams, his captors, lay concealed. Stout was the beart of him who could ride fearlessly through this memorable spot at midnight and not have his serenity of mind disturbed. Ichabod was not stout- hearted in the presence el* danger. His courage tailed him completely now. But there could be no retreat — - he must advance and take (be consequences. Summoning up all bis courage, be prepared to cross the bridge in baste and leave all dread recollections in the rear. Gunpowder, the perverse beast, was not bis ally; be failed him completely. Whether the sell-willed creature was insulted by the vigorous kicks which bis rider gave him, or for some propensity inherent in him, we know not, but certain ii is be did not take the straight line which would have been the shortest way to bis master's, but sought the roadside to bis right and left, much to Ichabod's discomfiture. What did lie see? Evidently something that bis rider's eyes, quickened to uncommon keenness though they were, could not discern. Just at the bridge be stopped. No force or persuasion from Ichabod could make him proceed. What was that? 412 THE LEGEND OF SLEEPY HOLLOW. No wonder that Gunpowder stopped; no wonder that the poor frightened pedagogue felt his blood freeze within hiim Just by the brook, in the shadows of the great trees, stood "something huge, misshapen, black, and towering. It stirred not, but seemed gathered up in the gloom, like some gigantic monster ready to spring upon the traveler." If it were Andre's spirit, if it were the spirit of some nameless dead, flight would not avail. In desperation Ichabod cried out, demanding who it was, lurking in the shadows. No answer came. There was but one thing left him to do: he shut his eyes, brought his great feet in dextrous play against poor Gunpowder's sides, and with his peculiar intonation, struck up a psalm. This mode of defense had served him hitherto when in danger, — why not now? Mercy defend him! The psalm had lost its efficacy; he with whom the singer had now to contend was a foe different in character from any whom Ichabod had ever before encountered. What- ever or whoever it was, it . sprang into the middle of the road just ahead of him. It looked like. "a horseman of large dimensions, and mounted on a black horse of powerful frame. He made no offer of molestation or sociability, but kept aloof on one side of the road, jogging along on the blind side of old Gunpowder, who had now got over his fright and waywardness." Ichabod was terrified beyond the power of speech; not a psalm, even, came to his relief. They left the shadows of the low ground, and, "on mounting a rising ground, which brought the figure of his fellow-traveler in relief against the sky, gigantic in height, and muffled in a cloak, Ichabod was horror-struck, on perceiving that he was headless! — but his horror was still more increased, THE LEGEND OF SLEEPY HOLLOW. 413 on observing that the head, which should have rested on his shoulders, was carried before him on the pommel of the saddle." By vigorous kicking, Gunpowder was put in rapid motion, the black horse kept at his side. "Away then they dashed, through thick and thin; stones flying, and sparks flashing at every bound." They reached the road leading to Sleepy Hollow; Gunpowder did not follow it-, but took the one leading "Just then he savj the goblin rising in his stirrups, and in the very act of liurling his head at him." towards the church. Ichabod rode with the fury of desperation, but just when he had gained an apparent advantage in the chase, his saddle-girths gave way and he felt the saddle slipping from under him. No effort of his could keep it in its place; it fell, and Ichabod was "jolted on the high ridge of his horse's backbone, with a violence that he verily feared would cleave him asunder." He 414 THE LEGEND OF SLEEPY HOLLOW. knew that the church-bridge was not far off; he reached it, he crossed it, and thought that he could now breathe the air of safety; he looked behind him, and "just then he saw the goblin rising in his stirrups, and in the very act of hurling his head at him." The aim was a sure one; it struck Ichabod's head, he was unhorsed, and " Gunpowder, the black steed, and the goblin rider, passed by like a whirlwind." Morning found Gunpowder standing riderless and without a saddle at Hans Van Eipper's gate. Ichabod did not appear in time for breakfast; his seat at dinner time was vacant. Something dreadful must have hap- pened him to have kept him from his meals. Search was instituted. The saddle was found, — Hans Van Kip- per's Sunday saddle, — buried in the dust and its glory departed. Gunpowder's tracks were traced to the bridge, and "on the bank of a broad part of the brook, where the water ran deep and black, was found the hat of the unfortunate Ichabod, and close beside it a shattered pumpkin." Though diligent search was made, though there were many surmises and a few regrets at Ichabod's disappear- ance from the neighborhood, nothing was seen of him, nothing definite was ever known of him. His worldly effects were few in number and of little value. "They consisted of two shirts and a half; two stocks for the neck; a pair or two of worsted stockings; an old pair of corduroy small-clothes; a rusty razor; a book of psalm-tunes, full of dogs' ears; and a broken pitch-pipe. As to the books and furniture of the schoolhouse, they belonged to the community, excepting Cotton Mather's 'History of Witchcraft,' a 'New England Almanac,' and THE LEGEND OF SLEEPY HOLLOW. 415 a book of dreams and fortune-telling; in which last was a sheet of foolscap much scribbled and blotted in several fruitless attempts to make a copy of verses in honor of the heiress of Van Tassel." As Ichabod "was a bachelor, and in nobody's debt, nobody troubled his head any more about him. The school was removed to a different quarter of the Hollow, and another pedagogue reigned in his stead." It was firmly believed by some that he had been carried off by the headless horseman; and if there were those who entertained other and more sensible views of the ease, their record has never reached us. It is true that several years after the occurrence a farmer "brought home the intelligence that Ichabod Crane was still alive; that he had left the neighborhood, partly through fear of the goblin and Hans Van Ripper, and partly in mortification at having been suddenly dismissed by the heiress; that he had changed his quarters to a distant part of the country; had kept school and studied law at the same time, had been ad- mitted to the bar, turned politician, electioneered, written tor the newspapers, and finally had been made a justice of the Ten Pound Court." This story may have been true. New ambitions may have come to him, — flay may have been stirred into action by the contact of his lnad with the head — or the pumpkin — with which the headless horseman had pursued him; they may have been developed when he escaped the dreamy, enchanting influences of Sleepy Hollow. There was one thing that looked suspicious. "Brom Bones, too. who shortly after his rival'.- disappearance conducted the blooming Kat- rina in triumph to the altar, was observed to look 416 THE LEGEND OF SLEEPY HOLLOW. exceedingly knowing whenever the story of Ichabod was related, and always burst into a hearty laugh at the mention of the pumpkin; which led some to suspect that he knew more about the matter than he chose to tell. "The old country wives, however, who are the best judges of these matters, maintain to this day that Ich- abod was spirited away by supernatural means; and it is a favorite story often told about the neighborhood round the winter-evening fire. The bridge became more than ever an object of superstitious awe, and that may be the reason why the road has been altered of late years, so as to approach the church by the border of the mill-pond. The schoolhouse, being deserted, soon fell to decay, and was reported to be haunted by the ghost of the unfortunate pedagogue; and the plough- boy, loitering homeward of a still summer evening, has often fancied his voice at a distance, chanting a melan- choly psalm-tune among the tranquil solitudes of Sleepy Hollow." This story was related by a pleasant old gentleman "at a Corporation meeting of the ancient city of Man- hattoes, at which were present many of its sagest and most illustrious burghers." Notwithstanding some fell asleep before he had proceeded far, it was well received by all excepting one, "who maintained a grave and rather severe face throughout; now and then folding his arms, inclining his head, and looking down upon the floor, as if turning a doubt over in his mind." He finally demanded " what was the moral of the story, and what it went to prove ? " The story-teller . . . paused for a moment, looked at THE LEGEND OF SLEEPY HOLLOW. 417 bis inquirer with an air of infinite deference, and . . . observed, that the story was intended most logically to prove: — "'That there is no situation in life but has its advan- tages and pleasures — provided we will but take a joke as we find it: " ' That, therefore, he that runs races with goblin troop- ers is likely to have rough riding of it. "'Ergo, for a country schoolmaster to be refused the hand of a Dutch heiress, is a certain step to high pre- ferment in the State/ "The cautious old gentleman knit his brows tenfold closer after this explanation. ... At length he observed, that all this was very well, but still he thought the story a little on the extravagant — there were one or two points on which he had his doubts. 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