■:'''0-'r/rK-- %■■■ m ^a _ V /¥^ At last they worked through the coppice. — See page 69. u no U THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH; OB, MAID, WIFE, AND WIDOW. A MATTER-OF-FACT ROMANCE. By CHARLES READE. HOUSEHOLD EDITION'. NEW YORK: HARPER & BROTHERS, PUBLISHERS, FRANKLIN SQUARE. Though the opening of " The Cloister and the Hearth " resem- bles a former story by the same author, it must not be confounded with it. As a complete work, four times the size, it incorporates the fragment re- ferred to, which, with an altogether different denouement, was contributed to " Once a Week." The present volume, therefore, while beginning with the previous book, soon changes in its (*onstruction, and justifies the second title, "Maid, Wife, and Widow." THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. CHAPTER I. "T^TOT a day passes over the earth _i^^ but men and women of no note do great deeds, speak great words, and suft'er noble sorrows. Of these obscure heroes, philosophers, and mar- tyrs, the greater part will never be known till that hour when many that were great shall be small, and the small great ; but of others the world's knowledge may be said to sleep, their lives and characters lie hidden from nations in the annals that record them. The general reader cannot feel them, they are presented so curtly and cold- ly ; they aie not like breathing stories appealing to his heart, but little his- toric hailstones striking him but to glance otT his bosom ; nor can he un- derstand them, for epitomes are not narratives, as skeletons are not hu- man figures. 'I'hus records of prime truths re- main a dead letter to plain folk ; the writers have left so much to the ima- gination, and imagination is so rare a gift. Here, then, the writer of fiction may be of use to the pub'ic — as an interpreter. There is a musty chronicle, written in tolerable Latin, and in it a chapter where every sentence holds a fact. Here is told, with harsh brevity, the strange history of a pair, who lived un- triimpeted, and died unsung, four hun- dred years ago ; and lie now as unpit- ied, in that stern page, as fossils in a rock. Thus, living or de:ul, fate is still unjust to them. Tor if I can but show you what lies below that dry chroni- cler's words, methinks you will cor- rect the inditference of centuries, and give those two sore tried souls a place in your heart — for a day. It was past the middle of the fif- teenth century. Louis XL was sover- eign of France ; Edward IV. was wrongful King of England ; and Phil- ip " the Good," having by force and cunning dispossessed his cousin Jac- queline, and broken her lieart, reigned undisturbed this many years in Hol- land, where our tale begins. Elias, and Catherine his wife, lived in the little town of Tergou. He traded, wholesale and retail, in cloth, silk, brown holland, and, above all, in curried leather, a material highly val- ued by the middling people, because it would stand twenty years' wear, and turn an ordinary knife, — no small virtue in a jerkin of that century, in which folk were so liberal of their steel. Even at dinner a man would leave his meat awhile, and carve you his neighbor, on a very moderate dif- ference of opinion. The couple were well to do, and would have been free from all earthly care but for nine children. When these were coming into the world, one per annum, each was hailed with re- joicings, and the saints were thanked, not expostulated with ; and when parents and children were all young together, the latter were looked upon as lovely little playthings invented by Heaven for tiie amusement, joy, and evening solace of people in business. THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. But as the olive-branches shot up, and the parents grew ohler, and saw with their own eyes the fate of large families, misgivings and care mingled with their love. They belonged to a singularly wise and provident people ; in Holland reckless parents were as rare as disobedient children. So now, when the huge loaf came in on a gi- gantic trencher, looking like a fortress in its moat, and, the tour of the table once made, seemed to have melted away, Elias and Catherine would look at one another and say, " Who is to find bread for them all when we are gone? " At this observation the younger ones needed all their filial respect to keep their Dutch countenances ; for in their opinion dinner and supper came by nature like sunrise and sun- set ; and, so long as that luminary should travel round the earth, so long must the brown loaf go round their family circle, and set in their stomachs, only to rise again in the family oven. But the remark awakened the natural thoughtfulncss of the elder boys, and, being often repeated, set several of the family thinking, some of them good thoughts, some ill thoughts, accord- ing to the nature of the thinkers. " Kate, the children grow so, this table will soon be too small." " We cannot afford it, Eli," replied Catherine, answering not his words, but his thought, after the manner of women. Their anxiety for the future took at times a less dismal but more mortify- ing turn. The free burghers had their pride as well as the nobles ; and these two could not bear that any of their blood should go down in the burgh alter their decease. So, by prudence and self-denial, they managed to clothe all the little bodies, and feed all the great mouths, and yet put by a small hoard to meet the future ; and, as it grew and grew, tliey felt a pleasure the miser hoarding for himself knows not. One day, the eldest boy but one, aged nineteen, came to hjs mother, and, with that outward composura which has so misled some persons as to the real nature of this people, beg- ged her to intercede with his father to send him to Amsterdam, and place him with a merchant. " It is the way of life that likes me; merchants are wealthy ; I am good at numbers ; prithee, good mother, take my part in this, and I shall ever be, as 1 am now, your debtor." Catherine threw up her hands with dismay and incredulity. " What, leave Tergou ! " " What is one street to me more than another? If I can leave the folk of Tergou, I can surely leave the stones." " What ! quit your poor fother now he is no longer young ? " " Mother, if I can leave you, I can leave him." " What, leave your poor brothers and sisters, that love you so dear ? " " There are enough in the house without me." " What inciin you, Richart ? Who is more thought of than you ? Stay, have I spoken sharp to you ? Have I been unkind to you ? " "Never that I know of; and if you had, you should never hear of it from me. Mother," said Richart, gravely, but the tear was in his eye, " it all lies in a word, and nothing can change my mind. There will be one mouth less for you to feed." " There now, see what my tongue has done," said Catherine, and the next moment she began to cry. For she saw her first young bird on the edge of the nest trying his wings, to fly into the world. Richart had a calm, strong will, and she knew he never wasted a word. It ended as nature has willed all such discourse shall end ; young Rich- art went to Amsterdam with a face so long and sad as it had never been seen before, and a heart like granite. That afternoon at supper there was one mouth less. Catherine looked at Richart's chair and wept bitterly. On this Elias shouted roughly and angri- THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. ly to the children, " Sit wider ! can't yel sit wider! " and turned his head away over the back of his seat awhile and was silent. Richart was launched, and never cost them another penny : but to fit him out and place him in the house of Vander Stegen, the merchant, took all the little hoard but one gold crown. They began again. Two years passed. Richart found a niche in commerce for his brother Jacob, and Jacob left Tergou directly after din- ner, which was at eleven in the fore- noon. At supper that day Elias re- membered what had happened the last time : so it was in a low whisper he said, " Sit wider, dears ! " Now until that moment, Catherine would not see the gap at table ; for her daughter Catherine had besought her not to grieve to-night, and she had said, " No, sweetheart, I promise I will not, since it vexes my children." But when Elias whispered " Sit wid- er ! " — says she, " Ay, the table will soon be too big for the children ; and you thought it would be too small " : and having delivered this with forced calmness, she put up her apron the next moment, and wept sore. " 'T is the best that leave us," sobbed she ; " that is the cruel part." " Nay, nay ! " said Elias ; " our chil- dren are good children, and all are dear to us alike. Heed her not ! What God takes from us still seems better than what he spares to us ; that is to say, men are by nature unthank- ful — and women silly." " And I say Richart and Jacob were the flower of the flock," sobbed Catherine. The little coffer was empty again, and to fill it they gathered like ants. In those days speculation was pretty much confined to the card-and-dice business. Elias knew no way to wealth but the slow and sure one. " A penny saved is a penny gained," was his humble creed. All that was not required for the business and the necessaries of life went into the little ooffer with steel bands and florid key. 1* They denied themselves in turn the humblest luxuries, and then, catching one another's looks, stnilcd ; perhaps with a greater joy than self-indulgence has to bestow. And so in three years more they had gleaned enough to set up their fourth son as a master tailor, and their eldest daughter as a robe- maker, in Tergou. Here were two more provided for ; tiieir own trade would enable them to throw work into the hands of this pair. But the coffer was drained to the dregs, and this time the shop too bled a little in goods, if not in coin. Alas ! there remained on hand two that were unable to get their bread, and two that were unwilling. The unable ones were, 1, Giles, a dwarf, of the wrong sort, half stupidity, halt malice, all head and claws and voice, run from by dogs and unprejudiced females, and sided with through thick and tiiin by his mother ; 2, Little Catherine, a poor little girl that could only move on crutches. She lived in pain, but smiled through it, with her marble face and violet eyes and long silky lashes ; and fretful or repining word never came from her lips. The unwilling ones were Sybrandt, the youngest, a ne'er-do-weel, too much in love with play to work, and Cornelis, the eldest, who had made calculations, and stuck to the hearth. Availing for dead men's shoes. Almost worn out by their repeated efforts, and above all dispirited by the moral and physical infirmities of those that now remained on hand, the anxious couple would often say, " What will become of all these when we shall be no longer here to take care of them ? " But when they had said this a good many times, suddenly the domestic horizon cleared, and then they used still to say it, be- cause a habit is a habit ; but they ut- tered it half mechanically now, and added brightly and cheerfully, " But, thanks to St. Bavon and all the saints, there's Gerard." Young Gerard was for many years of his life a son apart and distinct, 8 THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. object of no fears and no great hopes. No fears ; for he was going into the Church ; and tlic Church could always maintain her cliildren by hook or by crook in tliose days ; no great hopes, be^'ausc his family had no interest with the great to get him a benefice, and the young man's own hal)itswcre frivolous, and, indeed, sucli as our cloth merchant would not have put lip with in any one but a clerk that was to be. His trivialities were read- ing and penmanship, and he was so wrapt up in them that often he could hardly be got away to his meals. The day was never long enough for him : and he carried ever a tinder-box and brimstone matches, and begged ends of candles of the neighbors, which he liglitcd at unreasonable hours, — ay, even at eight of the clock at night in winter, when the very burgomaster was abed. Endured at home, his practices were encouraged by the monks of a neighboring convent. They had taught him penmanship, and continued to teach him, until one day they discovered, in the middle of a lesson, that he was teaching tlicm. They pointed this out to him in a merry way ; he hung his head and blushed : he had suspected as much himself but mistrusted his judgment in so delicate a matter. " But, my son," said an elderly monk, " how is it that you, to whom God has given an eye so true, a hand so subtle yet firm, and a heart to love these beauti- ful crafts, how is it you do not color as well as write 1 a scroll looks but barren unless a border of fruit, and leaves, and rich arabesques surround the good words, and charm the sense as those do the soul and understand- ing ; to say nothing of the pictures of holy men and women departed, with which the several chapters should be adorned, and not alone the eye soothed with the brave and sweetly blended colors, but the heart lifted by effigies of the saints in glory. An- swer me, my son." At this Gerard was confused, and muttered that he had made several trials at illuminating, but had not succeeded well ; and thus the matter rested . Soon after this a fellow-enthusiast came on the scene in the unwonted form of an old lady. Margaret, sister and survivor of the brothers Van Eyck, left Flanders, and came to end her days in her native country. She bought a small house near Tergou. In course of time she heard of Gerard, and saw some of his handiwork ; it pleased her so well that she sent her female servant, Richt Heynes, to ask him to come to her. This led to an ac- quaintance ; it could hardly be other- wise, for little Tergou had never held so many as two zealots of this sort before. At first the old lady damped Gerard's courage terribly. At eacli visit she fished out of holes and cor- ners drawings and paintings, some of them by her own band, that seemed to him unapproachable ; but if the artist overpowered him, the woman kept his heart up. She and Richt soon turned him inside out, like a glove ; among other things, tliey drew from him what the good monks had failed to hit upon, the reason why he did not illuminate, viz. that he could not afford the gold, tlic blue, and the red, but only the cheap earths; and that he was afraid to ask his mother to buy the choice colors, and was sure he should ask her in vain. Then Margaret Van Eyck gave him a little brush-gold, and some vermilion, and ultramarine, and a piece of good vel- lum to lay them on. He almost ador- ed her. As he left the house Richt ran after him with a candle and two quarters ; he quite kissed her. But better even than the gold and lapis- lazuli to the illuminator was the sym- pathy to the isolated enthusiast. That sympathy was always ready, and, as he returned it, an affection sprung up between the old painter and the young caligrapher that was doubly charac- teristic of the time. For this was u century in which the fine arts and the higher mechanical arts were not sepa- rated by any distinct boundary, nol THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. were those who practised them ; and it was an age in which artists sought out and loved one another. Should this last statement stagger a painter or writer of our day, let me remind him that even Christians loved one another at first starting. Backed by an acquaintance so ven- erable, and strengthened by female sympathy, Gerard advanced in learn- ing and skill. His spirits, too, rose risibly. He still looked behind him when dragged to dinner in the middle of an initial G, but once seated showed great social qualities : likewise a gay humor that had hitherto but peeped in him, shone out, and ofieii he set the table in a roar, and kept it there, sometimes with his own wit, some- times with jests which were glossy new to his family, being drawn from an- tiquity. As a return for all he owed his friends the monks, he made them ex- quisite copies from two of their choicest MSS. viz. the life of their founder, and their Comedies of Terence, the monastery finding the vellum. The high and puissant Prince, Philip " tlie Good," Duke of Burgundy, Luxemburg, and Brabant, Earl of Holland and Zealand, Lord of Fries- land, Count of Flanders, Artois, and Hainault, Lord of Salins and Macklyn, — was versatile. He could fight as well as any king going ; and he could lie as well as any, except the King of France. "He was a mighty hunter, and could read and write. His tastes were wide and ardent. He loved jewels like a woman, and gorgeous apparel. He dearly loved maids of honor, and indeed paintings generally ; in proof of which he ennobled Jan Van Eyck. He had also a rage for giants, dwarfs, and Turks. These last stood ever planted about him, turbaned, and blazing with jewels. His agents inveigled them from Istamboul with fair promises ; but, the moment he had got them, he baptized them by brute force in a large tub ; and, this done, let them squat with their faces towards Mecca, and invoke Mahound as much as they pleased, laughing in his sleeve at their simplicity in fancying they were still infidels. He had lions in cages, and fleet leopards trained by Orientals to run down hares and deer. In short, he relished all rarities, except the humdrum virtues. For anything sin- gularly pretty or diabolically ugly, this was your customer. The best of him was, he was open-handed to the poor ; and the next best was, he fos- tered the arts in earnest : whereof he now gave a signal proof. He offered prizes for the best specimens of " or- f evrerie " in two kinds, religious and secular ; item, for the best paintings in white of egg, oils, and tempera ; these to be on panel, silk, or metal, as the artists chose : item, for the best trans- parent painting on glass : item, for the best illuminating and border-painting on vellum ; item, for the fairest writing on vellum. The burgomasters of the several towns were commanded to aid all the poorer competitors by receiv- ing their specimens and sending them with due care to Rotterdam at the ex- pense of their several burghs. When this was cried by the bellman through the streets of Tergou, a thousand mouths opened, and one heart beat, — Gerard's. He told his family timidly he should try for two of those prizes. They stared in silence, for their breath was gone at his audacity ; but one horrid laugh exploded on the floor like a petard. Gerard looked down, and there was the dwarf, slit and fanged from ear to ear at his expense, and laughing like a lion. Nature, re- lenting at having made Giles so small, had given him as a set-off" the biggest voice on record. His very whisper was a bassoon. He was like those stunted, wide-mouthed pieces of ord- nance we see on fortifications, more like a flower-pot than a cannon ; but, ods tympana, how they bellow ! Gerard turned red with anger, the more so as the others began to titter. Wiiite Catherine saw, and a pink tinge came on her cheek. She said softly, " Why do you laugh "*. Is it because 10 THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. he is onr brother you think ho cannot be capable? Yes, Gerard, try -with the rest. Many say you are skilful ; and mother and I will pray the Virgin to guide your hand." " Thank you, little Kate. You shall pray to Our Lady, and our moth- er shall buy me vellum and the colors to illuminate with." " What will they cost, my lad ? " " Two gold crowns " (about three shillings and fourpence English money ) . " What 1 " screamed the house- wife ; " when the bushel of rye costs but a groat ! What ! me spend a month's meal and meat and fire on such vanity as that ; the lightning from Heaven would fall on me, and my children would all be beggars." " Mother ! " sighed little Catherine, imploringly. " O, it is in vain, Kate," said Gerard, with a sigh. " I shall have to give it up, or ask the dame Van Eyck. She would give it me, but I think shame to be forever taking from her." " It is not her affair," said Cathe- rine, very sharply ; " what has she to do coming between me and my son ? " And she left the room with a red face. Little Catherine smiled. Presently the housewife returned with a gra- cious, affectionate air, and two little gold pieces in her hand. " There, sweetheart," said she, " you won't have to trouble dame or demoiselle for two paltry crowns." But on this Gerard fell a thinking how he could spare her purse. " One will do, mother. I will ask the good monks to let me send my copy of their ' Terence ' ; it is on snowy vellum, and I can write no better : so then I shall only need six sheets of vellum for my borders and miniatures, and gold for my ground, and prime colors, — one crown will do." " Never tyne the ship for want of a bit of tar, Gerard," said this change- able mother. But she added, " Well, there, I will put the crown in my pocket. That won't be like putting it back in the box. Going to the box to take out instead of putting in, it is like going to my heart with a knife for so many drops of blood. You will be sure to want it, Gerard. The house is never built for less than the builder counted on." Sure enough, when the time came, Gerard longed to go to Kotterdam and sec the duke, and above all to see the work of his competitors, and so get a lesson from defeat. And the crown came out of thehousewife's pocket with a very good grace. Gerard would soon be a priest. It seemed hard if he might not enjoy the world a little before separating himself from it for life. The night before he went, Margaret Van Eyck asked him to take a letter for her ; and when he came to look at it, to his surprise he found it was ad- dressed to the Princess Marie, at the Stadthouse, in Rotterdam. The day before the prizes were to be distributed, Gerard started for Rotterdam in his holiday suit, to wit, a doublet of silver-gray cloth with sleeves, and a jerkin of the same over it, but without sleeves. From his waist to his heels he was clad in a pair of tight-fitting buckskin hose, fastened by laces (called points) to his doublet. His shoes were pointed, in moderation, and secured by a strap that passed under the hollow of the foot. On his h^d and the back of his neck he wore his flowing hair, and pinned to his back between his shoulders was his hat, it was further secured by a pur- ple silk ribbon little Kate had passed round him from the sides of the hat, and knotted neatly on his breast ; be- low his hat, attached to the upper rim of his broad waist-belt, was his leath- ern wallet. When he got within a league of Rotterdam he was pretty tired, but he soon fell in with a pair that were more so. He found an old man sitting by the roadside quite worn out, and a comely young woman hold- ing his hand, with a face brimful of concern. The country people trudged THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. 11 by and noticed nothings amiss ; but Gerard, as he passed, drew conclu- sions. Even dress tells a tale to those who study it so closely as he did, being an illuminator. The old man wore a gown, and a fur tippet, and a velvet cap, sure signs of dignity ; but the triangular purse at his girdle was lean, the gown iiisty, the fur worn, sure signs of poverty. The young woman was dressed in plain russet cloth ; yet snow-white lawn covered that part of her neck the gown left visible, and ended half-way up her white throat in a little band of gold embroidery. And her head-dress was new to Gerard ; instead of hiding her hair in a pile of linen or lawn, she wore an open network of silver cord with silver spangles at the interstices ; in this her glossy auburn hair was rolled in front into solid waves, and supported behind a luxurious and shapely mass. His quick eye took in all this, and the old man's pallor, and the tear in the young woman's eyes. So when he passed them a few yards, he reflected, and turned back, and came towards them bashfully. " Father, I fear you are tired." " Indeed, my son, I am," replied the old man ; " and faint for lack of food." Gerard's address did not appear so agreeable to the girl as to the old man. She seemed ashamed, and with much resen^e in her manner said that it was her fault ; she had underrated the distance, and imprudently allowed her father to start too late in the day. " No, no ! " said the old man ; " it is not the distance, it is the want of nourishment." The girl put her arms round his neck with tender concern, but took that opportunity of whispering, " Fa- ther, a stranger, — a young man ! " But it was too late. Gerard, with simplicity, and quite as a matter of course, fell to gathering sticks with great expedition. This done, he took down his wallet, out with the manchet of bread and the iron flask his care- ful mother had put up, and his ei^er- lasting tinder-box ; lighted a match, then a candle-end, then the sticks; and put his iron flask on it. Then down he went on his stomach and took a good blow ; then, looking up, he saw the girl's face had thawed, and she was looking down at him and his energy with a demure smile. He laughed back to her : " Mind the pot," said he, " and don't let it spill, for Heaven's sake : there 's a cleft stick to hold it safe with " ; and with this he set off running towards a cornfield at some distance. Whilst he was gone, there came by, on a mule with rich purple housings, an old man redolent of wealth. The fiurse at his girdle was plethoric, the ur on his tippet was ermine, broad and new. It was Ghysbrecht Van Swieten, the burgomaster of Tergou. He was old, and his face furrowed. He was a notorious miser, and looked one gen- erally. IJut the idea of supping with the duke raised him just now into manifest complacency. Yet at the sight of the Aided old man and his bright daughter sitting by a fire of sticks the smile died out of his face, and he wore a strange look of pain and un- easiness. He reined in his mule. " Why, Peter, — Margaret — " said he almost fiercely, " what mummery is this ? " Peter was going to answer, but Margaret interposed hastily, and said : " My father was exhausted, so I am warming something to give him strength before we go on." " What, reduced to feed by the roadside like the Bohemians," said Ghysbrecht, and his hand went into his purse ; but it did not seem at home there ; it fum- bled uncertainly, afraid too large a coin might stick to a finger and come out. At this moment who should come bounding up but Gerard. He had two straws in his hand, and he threw himself down by the fire, and relieved Margaret of the cooking part ; then, suddenly recognizing the burgomas- ter, he colored all over. Ghysbrecht Van S\vieten started and glared at him, and took his hand out of hia 12 THE CLOISTKR AND THE HEARTH. purse. "O," said he, bitterly, "I am not wanted " ; and went slowly on, casting a long; look of suspicion on Margaret, and hostility on Gerard, that was not very intelligible. How- ever, there was something about it that Margaret could read enough to blush at, and almost toss her head. Gerard only stared with surprise. " By St. Bavon ! I think the old miser grudges us three our (juart of soup," said he. When the young man put that interpretation upon Ghysbrecht's strange and meaning look, Margaret was greatly relieved, and smiled gayly on the speaker. Meantime Ghysbrecht j)lodded on, more wretched in his wealth than these in their poverty. And the curious thing is that the mule, the purple housings, and one half the coin in that plethoric purse, belonged not to Ghysbrecht Van Swieten, but to that faded old man and that come- ly girl, who sat by a roadside fire to be fed by a stranger. They did not know this, but Ghysbrecht knew it, and carried in his heart a scorpion of his own begetting. That scorpion is remorse ; the remorse that, not being penitence, is incurable, and ready for fresh misdeeds upon a fresh temptation. Twenty years ago, when Ghysbrecht Van Swieten was a hard and honest man, the touchstone opportunity came to him, and he did an act of heartless rogueiy. It seemed a safe one. It had hitherto proved a safe one, though he had never felt safe. To-day he had seen youth, enterprise, and, above all, knowledge, seated by fair Margaret and her father, on term's that looked familiar and loving. And the fiends are at his ear again. CHAPTER II. " The soup is hot," said Gerard. "But how are we to get it to our mouths '( " inquired the senior, de- spondingly. " Father, the j'oung man has brought us straws." And Margaret smiled slyly. " Ay, ay ! " said the old man : "but my poor bones are stiff, and indeed the fire is too hot for a body to kneel over with these short straws. St. John the Baptist, but the young man is adroit ! ^' For while he stated his difhculty, Gerard removed it. He untied in a moment the knot on his breast, took his hat off, put a stone into each corner of it, then, wrapping his hand in the tail of his jerkin, whipped the flask off" the fire, wedged it between the stones, and put the hat under the old man's nose with a merry smile. The other tremulously inserted the })ipe of rye-straw and sucked. Lo and behold, his wan, drawn face was seen to light up more and more till it quite glowed ; and, as soon as he had drawn a long breath : — " Hippocrates and Galen ! " ho cried, " 't is a soupe au vin, — the re- storative of restoratives. Blessed be the nation that invented it, and the woman that made it, and the yoimg man who brings it to fainting folk. Have a suck, my girl, while I relate to our young host the history and virtues of this his sovereign com- pound- This corroborative, young sir, v.as unknown to the ancients ; we find it neither in their treatises of medicine, nor in those popular nar- ratives which reveal many of their remedies, both in chinirgery and medicine proper. Hector, in the Ilias, if my memory does not play me false, — " Margaret: "Alas! he's off." " — was invited by one of the ladies of the poem to drink a draught of wine ; but he declined, on the plea that he was going into battle, and must not take aught to weaken his powers. Now, if the ' soupe au vin ' had been known in Troy, it is clear that, in declining ' vinnm merum ' up- on that score, he would have added in the next hexameter, 'But a "soupe au vin," madam, I will degust, and THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. 13 gratefully.' Not only would this have been but common civility, — a virtue no perfect commander is want- inf^ in, — hut not to have done it would have proved him a shallow and improvident person, unfit to be trusted with the conduct of a war ; for men going into a battle need sustenance, and all possible support, as is proved by this, that foolish generals, bring- ing hungry soldiers to blows with full ones, have been defeated, in all ages, by inferior numbers. The Ro- mans lost a great battle in the north of Italy to Hannibal, the Carthagin- ian, by this neglect alone. Now, this divine elixir gives in one moment force to the limbs and ardor to the spirits ; and, taken into Hector's body at the nick of time, would, by the aid of Pha-bus, Venus, and the blessed saints, have most likely pro- cured the Greeks a defeat. For, note how faint and weary and heart-sick I was a minute ago ; well, I suck tliis celestial cordial, and now behold me brave as Achilles and strong as an eagle." " O father, now ? an eagle ; alack ! " "Girl, I defy thee, and all the world. Ready, I say, like a foaming charger, to devour the space between this and Rotterdam, and strong to combat the ills of life, even poverty and old age, which last philosophers have called ' summum malum.' Ne- satur ; unless the man's life has been ill spent, — which, by the by, it generally has. Now for the modems." " Father ! dear father ! " " Fear mc not, girl, I will be brief, unreasonably and unseasonably brief The ' soupe au vin ' occurs not in modern science ; but this is only one proof more, if proof were needed, that for the last few hundred years physicians hiive been idiots with their chicken broth and their decoction of gold, whereby they attribute the highest qtuilit'ies to that meat which has the least juice of any moat, and to that metal which has less chemical qualities than all the metals; mounte- l)anks ! dunces ! homicides ! Since, then, from these no light is to b* gathered, go we to the chroniclers •, and first we find that Duguesclin, a French kni<;ht, being about to join battle with the English, — masters, at that time of half France, and sturdy .strikers by sea and land, — drank, not one, but three, ' soupes au vin ' in honor of the Blessed Trinity. This done, he charged the islanders ; and as might have been foretold, killed a multitude, and drove the rest into the sea. But he was only the first of a long list of holy and hard-hitting ones who have, by this divine restor- ative, been sustentated, fortified, cor- roborated, and consoled." " Dear father, prithee add thyself to that venerable company ere the soup cools." And Margaret held the hat imploringly in both hands till he inserted the straw once more. This spared them the " modem in- stances," and gave Gerard an ojiportu- nity of telling Margaret how proud his mother would be her soup had profited a man of leaming. " Ay ! but," said Margaret, " it would like her ill to see her son give all and take none himself. Why brought you but two straws 1 " " Fair mistress, I hoped you would let me put my lips to your straw, there being but two." Margaret smiled and blushed. " Never beg that you may command," said she. " The straw is not mine, 't is vours : you cut it in yonder field." " 1 cut it, and that made it mine ; but after that your lip touched it, and that made it yours." " Did it ? " Then I ^vill lend it you. There, — now it is yours again : your lip has touched it." " No, it belongs to us both now. Let us di\ide it." " By all means ; you have a knife." " No, I will not cut it, — that would be unlucky. I'll bite it. There J shall keep my half; you will burn yours, once you get home, I doubt." " You know me not. I waste noth' ing. It is odds but I make a hair-pin of it, or something.*' 14 THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. This answer dashed the novice Ger- ard, instead of provok.in<; him to fresii efforts, and he was silent. And now, the bread and soup being disposed of, the old scholar prepared to continue his journey. Then came a little ditH- eulty : Gerard, the adroit, could not tie his ribbon again as Catherine had tixl it. Margaret, after slyly eying liis efforts for some time, offered to help him ; for at her age girls love to be coy and tender, saucy and gentle, liy turns, and she saw she had put him out of countenance but now. Then a fair head, with its stately crown of auburn hair, glossy and glowing through silver, bowed sweetly towards him ; and, while it ravished his eye, two white supple hands played delicately upon the stubborn ribbon, and moulded it with soft and airy touches. Then a heavenly thrill ran through the innocent young man, and vague glimpses of a new world of feeling and sentiment opened on him. And these new and exquisite sen- sations Margaret unwittingly pro- longed ; it is not natural to her sex to hurry aught that pertains to the sacred toilet. Nay, when the taper fingers had at last subjugated the ends of the knot, her mind was not quite easy, till, by a manauvre peculiar to the fe- male hand, she had made her palm convex, and so applied it with a gen- tle pressure to the centre of the knot, — a sweet little coaxing hand-kiss, as much as to say, " Now be a good knot and stay so." The palm-kiss was bestowed on the ribbon, but the wearer's heart leaped to meet it. " There, that is how it was," said Margaret, and drew back to take one last keen survey of her work ; then, looking up for simple approval of her skill, received full in her eyes a long- ing gaze of such ardent adoration as made her lower them quickly and color all over. An indescribable tremor seized her, and she retreated with downcast lashes and telltale cheeks, and took her fatlier's arm on the op- posite side. Gerard, blushing at hav- ing scared her away with his eyes. took the other arm ; and so tho two young things went downcast and con- scious, and propped the eagle along in silence. They entered Rotterdam by the Schiedamze Poort ; and, as Gerard was unacquainted with the town, Pe- ter directed him the way to the Hooch Straet, in which the Stadthouse was. He himself was going with Margaret to his cousin, in the Ooster Waagcn Straet, so, almost on entering the gate, their roads lay apart. They bade each other a friendly adieu, and Gerard dived into the great town. A profound sense of solitude fell npon him, yet the streets were crowded. Then he lamented too late, that, out of delicacy, he had not asked his late companions who they were and where they lived. " Heshrew my shamefacedness ! " said be. " But their words and their breeding were above their means, and something did whisper me they would not be known. I shall never see her more. O weary world, I hate you and your ways. To think 1 must meet beauty and goodness and learn- ing, — three pearls of price, — and never see them more ! " Falling into this sad rcvery, and letting his body go where it would, he lost his way ; but presently meeting a crowd of persons all moving in ono direction, he mingled with them, for he argued they must be making for the Stadthouse. Soon the noisy troop that contained the moody Gerard emerged, not npon the Stadthouse, but upon a large meadow by the side of the Maas ; and then the attraction was revealed. Games of all sorts were going on ; wrestling, the game of palm, the quintain, legerdemain, archery, tumbling, — in which art, I blush to say, women as well as men performed, to the great delectation of the company. There was also a trained bear, who stood on his head, and marched upright, and bowed with prodigious gravity to his master ; and a hare that beat a drum, and a cock that strutted on little stilts disdain THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. 15 full/. These things made Gerard laugh now and then ; but the gay scene could not really enliven it, for his heart was not in tune with it. So, hearing a young man say to his fellow that the duke had been in the meadow, but was gone to the Stadt- house to entertain the burgomasters and aldermen and the competitors for the prizes, and their friends, he sud- denly remembered he was hungry, and should like to sup with a prince. He left the river-side, and this time he found the Hooch Straet, and it speedily led him to the Stadthouse. But when he got there he was refused, first at one door, then at another, till he came to the great gate of the court- yard. It was kept by soldiers, and superintended by a pompous major- domo, glittering in an embroidered collar and a gold chain of office, and holding a white staff with a gold knob. There was a crowd of persons at the gate endeavoring to soften this official rock. They came up in turn like ripples, and retired as such in turn. It cost Gerard a struggle to get near him, and when he wiis with- in four heads of the gate, he saw something that made his heart beat : there was Peter, with Margaret on his arm, soliciting humbly for en- trance. " My cousin the alderman is not at home. They say he is here." " What is that to me, old man ? " " If you will not let us pass in to him, at least take this leaf from my tablet to my cousin. See I have writ- ten his name; he will come out to us." " For what do you take me ? I carry no messages. I keep the gate." He then bawled, in a stentorian voice, inexorably : — "No strangers enter here but the competitors and their companies." " Come, old man," cried a voice in the crowd, " you have gotten your answer ; make way." Margaret turned half round im- ploringly : — " Good people, we are come from far, and my father is old ; and my cousin has a new servant that knows us not, and would not let us sit in our cousin's house." At this the crowd laughed hoarse- ly. Margaret shrank as if they had struck her. At that moment a hand grasped hers, — a magic grasp ; it felt like heart meeting heart, or magnet steel. She turned quickly round at it, and it was Gerard. Such a little cry of joy and appeal came from her bosom, and she began to whimper prettily. They had hustled her and fright- ened her for one thing ; and her cous- in's thoughtlessness in not even tell- ing his servant they were coming was cruel ; and the servant's caution, however wise and faithful to her mas- ter, was bitterly mortifying to her father and her. And to her so mor- tified, and anxious, and jostled, came suddenly this kind hand and face. — " Hine illse lacrimal." "All is well now," remarked a coarse humorist ; " she hath gotten her sweetheart." " Haw ! haw ! haw ! " went the crowd. She dropped Gerard's hand directly, and turned round, with eyes flashing through her tears : " I have no sweetheart, you rude men. But I am friendless in your boorish town, and this is a friend ; and one who knows, what you know not, how to treat the aged and the weak." The crowd was dead silent. They had only been thoughtless, and now felt the rebuke, though severe, was just. The silence enabled Gerard to treat with the porter. " I am a competitor, sir." " What is your name ? " and the man eyed him suspiciously. " Gerard, tlie son of Elias." The janitor inspected a slip of parchment he held in his hand : — " Gerard Eliassoen can enter." " With my company ; these two ? " " Nay ; those are not your com- pany ; they came before you." 16 THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. " What matter ? they are my friends, and without them I go not in." " Stay without, then." " That will I not." " That wc will see." " Wc will, and speedily." And with this Gerard raised a voice of as- tounding volume and power, and shouted, so that the whole street rang : " Ho ! PiiiLir, Earl of Hol- land ! " " Are you mad ? " cried the porter. " Hkrk is one of youR varlets DEFIES VOU." " Hush, hush ! " " And will not let your glests pass in." " Hush ! murder ! The duke 's there. 1 'm dead," cried the janitor, quaking. Then suddenly trying to overpower Gerard's thunder, he shouted, with all his lungs : — "Open the gate, ye knaves! Way there for Gerard Elias- soEN and ms COMPANY ! (the fiends go with him ! ") The gate swung open as by magic. Eight soldiers lowered their pikes half- way, and made an arch, under which the victorious three marched in tri- umphant. The moment they had passed, the pikes clashed together horizontally to bar the gateway, and all but pinned an abdominal citizen that sought to wedge in along with them. Once passed the guarded portal, a few steps brought the trio upon a scene of Oriental luxury. The court- yard was laid out in tables loaded with rich meats and piled with gor- geous plate. Guests in rich and vari- ous costumes sat beneath a leafy canopy of fresh-cut branches fastened tastefully to golden, silver, and blue silken cords that traversed the area ; and fruits of many hues, including some artificial ones of gold, silver, and wax, hung pendent, or peeped like fair eyes among the green leaves of plane-trees and lime-trees. The duke's minstrels swept their lutes at intervals, and a fountain played red Burgund)' in si.x jets that met and battled in the air. The evening sun darted its fires through those bright and purple wine-spouts, making them jets and cascades of molten rubies, then, passing on, tin<,'ed with the blood of the grape, shed crimson glories here and there on fair faces, snowy beards, velvet, satin, jewelled hilts, glowing gold, gleaming silver, and sparkling glass. Gerard and his friends stood dazzled, spellbound. — Presently a whisper buzzed round them, " Salute the duke ! Salute the duke ! " They looked up, and there on high, under the dais, was their sovereign, bidding them welcome with a kindly wave of the hand. The men bowed low, and Margaret courtesied with a deep and graceful obeisance. The duke's hand being up, he gave it another turn, and pointed the new comers out to a knot of valets. In- stantly seven of his people, with an obedient start, went headlong at our friends, seated them at a t:ii)le, and put fifteen many-colored soups hiefore them, in little silver bowls, and as many wines in crystal vases. " Nay, father, let us not eat until wo have thanked our good friend," said Margaret, now first recovering from all this bustle. " Girl, he is our guardian angel." Gerard put his face into his hands, " Tell me when you have done," said he, " and I will reappear and have my supper, for I am hungry. I know which of us three is the hap- piest at meeting again." " Me ? " inquired Margaret. "Xo: guess again." " Father ? " "No." " Then I have no guess ■which it can be"; and she gave a little crow of happiness and gayety. The sou|> was tasted, and vanished in a twirl of fourteen liands, and fish came on the table in a dozen forms, Avith patties of lobster and almonds mixed, and of almonds and cream, and an immense THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. 17 variety of " brouets," knowTi to us as " rissoles." The next trifle was a vv-ild boar, which smelt divine. Why, then, did Margaret start away from it with two shrieks of dismay, and pinch so good a friend as Gerard? Because the duke's "cuisinier" had been too clever, had made this excel- lent dish too captivating to the sight as well as taste. He had restored to the animal, by elaborate mimicry with burnt sugar and other edible colors, the hair and bristles he had robbed him of by fire and water. To make him still more enticing, the huge tusks were carefully preserved in the brute's jaw, and gave his mouth the winning smile that comes of tusk in man or beast : and two eyes of colored sugar glowed in his Jiead. St. Argut ! what eyes ! so bright, so bloodshot, so threatening, — they followed a man and every movement of his knife and spoon. But, indeed, I need the pencil of Granville or Tenniel to make you see the two gilt valets on the oppo- site side of the table putting the mon- ster down before our friends, with a smiling, self-satisfied, benevolent obsequiousness, — for this ghastly monster was the flower of all comes- tibles, — old Peter clasping both hands in pious admiration of it ; Margaret wheeling round with hor- ror-stricken eyes and her hand on Gerard's shoulder, squeaking and pinching ; his face of unwise delight at being pinched, the grizzly brute glaring sulkily on all, and the guests grinning from ear to ear. " What 's to do ? " shouted the duke, hearing the signals of female distress. Seven of his people with a zealous start went headlong and told him. He laughed and said, " Give her of the bcef-stutfing, then, and bring me Sir Boar." Benevolent monarch! The beef-stutfing was his own private dish. On these grand occasions an ox was roasted whole, and reserved for the poor. But this wise as well as charitable prince had discovered, that whatever venison, hares, lamb. poultry, &c. you skewered into that beef cavern, got cooked to perfection, retaining their own juices and receiv- ing those of the reeking ox. These he called his beef-stuffing, and took delight therein, as did now our trio ; for, at his word, seven of his people went headlong, and drove silver tri- dents into the steaming cave at ran- dom, and speared a kid, a cygnet, and a flock of wild fowl. These presently smoked before Gerard and company ; and Peter's face, sad and slightly morose at the loss of the savage hog, expanded and shone. After this twenty different tarts of fruits and herbs, and, last of all, confectionery on a Titanic scale ; cathedrals of sugar, all gilt and painted in the in- terstices of the bas-i'eliefs ; castles with their moats and ditches, imitat- ed to the life ; elephants, camels, toads ; knights on horseback joust- ing ; kings and princesses looking on ; trumpeters blowing ; and all these personages delicious eating, and their veins filled with sweet-scented juices: works of art made to be destroyed. The guests breached a bastion, crunch- ed a crusader and his horse and lance, or cracked a bishop, cope, chasuble, crosier and all, as remorselessly as we do a caraway comfit ; sipping, mean- while, hippocnis and other spiced drinks, and Greek and Corsican wines, while every now and then little Turk- ish boys, turbaned, spangled, jewelled, and gilt, came offering on bended knee golden troughs of rose-water and orange-water to keep the guests' hands cool and perfumed. But long before our party arrived at this final stage, appetite had suc- cumbed, and Gerard had suddenly remembered he was the bearer of a letter to the Princess Marie, and, in an undertone, had asked one of the servants if he would undertake to de- liver it. The man took it with a deep obeisance : " He could not de- liver it himself, but would instantly give it one of the princess's suite, several of whom were about." It mav be remembered that Pctet 18 THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. and Marj»arct came here not to dine, but to find their cousin. Well, the old ^'eiitleniau ate heartily, and, beinj^ much fatii,Mied, dropped asleep, and forgot all al)out his cousin. Margaret did not remind him, we shall hear why. Meantime, that cousin was seated within a few feet of them, at their hacks, and discovered them when Margaret turned round and screamed at the hoar. But he forlx»re to sneak to them for nmnicipal reasons. Alar- garet was very plainly dressed, and Peter inclined to threadbare. So the alderman said to himself: — " T will be time to make up to them when the sun sets and the com- pany disperses ; then I wi'.l take my poor relations to my house, and none will be the wiser." Half the courses were lost on Ge- rard and Margaret. They were no great caters, and just now were feed- ing on sweet thoughts that have ever been unfavorable to aj)])etite. But there is a delicate kind of sensuality, to whose influence these two were perhaps more sensitive than any other pair in that assembly, — the delights of color, music, and perfume, all of which blended so fascinatingly here. Margaret leaned back and half clos- ed her eyes, and murmured to Gerard : " What a lovely scene ! the warm sun, the green shade, the rich dresses, the bright music of the lutos and the cool music of the fountain, and all faces so happy and gay ! and then, it is to you we owe it." Gerard was silent all but his eyes ; observing which, — " Now, speak not to me," said Margaret, languidly ; " let me listen to the fountain : what arc you a com- petitor for ? " He told her. " Verj' well ! You will gain one prize, at least." " Which ? which ? Have you seen any of my work ? " " I? no. But you will gain a prize." " I hope so ; but what makes you think so ? " " Because you were so good to my father." Gerard smiled at the feminine logic, and hung his liead at the sweet praise, and was silent. " Speak not," murmured Margaret " They say this is a world of sin and misery. Can that be ? What is your opinion ? " " No ! that is all a silly old song," explained Gerard. " 'T is a byword our elders keep repeating, out of cus- tom : it is not true." " How can you know ? you are but a child," said Margaret, with pensive dignity. " Why, only look round ! And then I thought I had lost you forever ; and you are by my side ; and now the minstrels are going to j)lay again. Sin and misery ? Stuff and non* sense ! " The lutes burst out. The court- yard rang again with their delicate harmony. " What do you admire most of all these beautiful things, Gerard ? " " You know my name ? How is that 1 " " White magic. I am a witch." " Angels are never witches. But I can't think how you — " " Foolish boy ! was it not cried at the gate loud enough to deave one ? " " So it was. Where is my head ? What do I admire most ? If you will sit a little more that way, 1 '11 tell you." " This way ? " " Yes ; so that the light may fall on you. There. I see many fair things here, fairer than I could have con- ceived ; but the bravest of all to my eye is your lovely hair in its silver frame, and the setting sun kissing it. It minds me of what the Vnlgate praises for beauty, " an apple of gold tn a network of silver," and, O, what a pity I did not know you before I sent in my poor endeavors at illumi- nating ! i could illuminate so much better now. I could do everything better. There, now the sun is fulJ THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. 19 on it, it is like an aureole. So Our Lady looked, and none since her until to-da>'." " 0, fie ! it is wicked to talk so. Compare a poor, coarse-favored girl Cke me with the Queen of Heaven ? O Gerard! I thought you were a good young man." And Margaret was shocked apparently. Gerard tried to explain. " I am no worse than the rest ; but how can I help having eyes, and a heart, — Mar- garet ! " " Gerard ? " " Be not angry now ! " " Now is it likely 1 " " I love you." " 0, for shame ! you must not say that to me," and Margaret colored furiously at this sudden assault. ** "I can't help it. I love you. I love you." " Hush, hush ! for pity's sake ! I must not listen to such words from a stranger. I am ungrateful to call you a stranger. 0, how one may be mis- taken ! If I had known you were so bold — " And Margaret's bosom be- gan to heave, and her cheeks were covered vnth blushes, and she looked towards her sleeping father, very much like a timid thing that meditates ac- tual flight. Then Gerard was frightened at the alarm he caused. " Forgive me," said he, imploringly. " How could any one help loving you ? " " Well, sir, 1 will try and forgive you, — you are so good in other re- spects; but then you must promise me never to say you — to say that again. " " Give me your hand, then, or you don't forgive me." She hesitated; but eventually put out her hand a very little way very slowly, and with seeming reluctance. He took it, and held it prisoner. When she thought it had been there long enough, she tried gently to draw it away. He held it tight ; it submit- ted quite patiently to force. What is the use of resisting force 1 She turned her head away, and her long eyelashes drooped sweetly. Gerald lost nothing by his promise. Words were not heeded here ; and silence was more eloquent. Nature was in that day what she is in ours, but manners were somewhat freer. Then, as now, maid'- ens drew back alarmed at the first words of love ; but of prudery and artificial coquetry there was little, and the young soon read one another's hearts. Everything was on Gerard's side : his good looks, her belief in his goodness, her gratitude, and oppor- tunity ; for at the duke's banquet, this mellow summer eve, all things dis- posed the female nature to tenderness ; the avenues to the heart lay open ; the senses Avere so soothed and subdued with lovely colors, gentle sounds, and delicate odors ; the sun gently sink- ing, the warm air, the green canopy, the cool music of the now violet foun- tain. Gerard and Margaret sat hand in hand in silence ; and Gerard's eyes sought hers lovingly ; and hers now and then turned on him timidly and imploringly ; and presently two sweet unreasonable tears rolled down hei cheeks, and she smiled deliciously while they were drying ; yet they did not take long. And the sun declined ; and the air cooled ; and the fountain plashed more gently ; and the pair throbbed in uni- son and silence, and this weary world looked heaven to them. 0, the merry days, the merry days when we were young, 0, the merry days, the merry days when W9 were young. CHAPTER III. A GRAVE white-haired seneschal came to their table, and inquired cour- teously whether Gerard Eliassoen was of their company. Upon Gerard's answer, he said : — " The Princess Marie would confer 20 THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. with you, young sir ; I am to conduct you to her prt'scnce." Instantly all faces witliin licarinp^ turned sharp round, and were hent with curiosity and envy on the man that was to go to a princess. Grcrard rose to obey. " I wager avc shall not see you again," said Margaret, calmly, but coloring a little. " That will you," was the reply ; then he whispered in her ear : " This is my good princess, but you arc my queen." He added aloud : "Wait for me, I pray you ; I will presently re- turn." " Ay, ay ! " said Peter, awaking and speaking at one and the same moment. Gerard gone, the pair whose dress was so homely, yet they were with the man whom the princess sent for, became " the cynosure of neighboring eyes " ; observing which William Johnson came forward, acted surprise, and claimed his relations : " And to think that there was I at your backs, and you saw me not." " Nay, cousin Johnson, I saw you long syne," said Margaret, coldly. " You saw me, and spoke not to me?" " Cousin, it was for you to welcome us to Rotterdam, as it is for us to wel- come you at Sevenbergen. Your ser- vant denied us a seat in your house." " The idiot ! " " And I had a mind to see whether it was ' like maid like master ' ; for there is sooth in bywords." William Johnson blushed purple. He saw Margaret was keen, and sus- pected him. He did the wisest thing under the circumstances, trusted to deeds, not words. He insisted on their coming home with him at once, and he would show them whether they were welcome to Rotterdam or not. " Who doubts it, cousin ? Who doubts it ? " said the scholar. Margaret thanked him graciously, but demurred to go just now ; said she wanted to hear the minstrels again. In about a quarter of an hour John- son renewed his proposal, and bade her observe that many of the guests had left. Then her real reason came out. " It were ill manners to our friend, and he will lose us. He knows not where we lodge in Rotterdam, and the city is large, and wc have parted com- pany once already." " Oh ! " said Johnson, " we will provide for that. My young man, ahem ! I mean my secretary, shall sit here and wait, and bring him on to my house ; he shall lodge with me and with no other." " Cousin, we shall be too burden- some." " Nay, nay ; you shall sec whether you are welcome or not, you and your fricTuls, and your friends' friends if needs be: and I shall hear what the' princess would with him." Margaret felt a thrill of joy that Gerard should be lodged under the same roof with her ; then she had a slight misgiving. " But if your young man should be thoughtless, and go play, and Gerard miss him ? " " He go play ? He leave that spot where I put him, and bid him stay ? Ho ! Stand forth, Hans Cloterman." A figure clad in black serge and dark violet hose arose, and took two steps, and stood before them without moving a muscle : a solemn, precise young man, the very statue of gravity and starched propriety. At his aspect Margaret, being very happy, could hardly keep her countenance. But she whispered Johnson, " I would put my hand in the tire for him. We are at your command, cousin, as soon as you have given him liis orders." Hans was then instructed to sit at the table and wait for Gerard, and conduct him to Ooster Waagen Straet. He replied, not in words, but by calm, ly taking the seat indicated ; and Mar- garet, Peter, and William Johnson went away together. "And, indeed, it is time you were abed, father, after all your travel," said Margaret. This had been in her mind all along. THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. 21 Hans Cloterraan sat waiting for Gerard, solemn and business-like. The minutes flew by, but excited no impatience in tliat perfect young man. Johnson did him no more than jus- tice when he laughed to scorn the idea of his secretary leaving his post, or neglecting his duty, in pursuit of sport or out of youthful hilarity and frivolity. As Gerard was long in coming, the patient Hans — his employer's eye being no longer on him — im- proved the time by quaffing solemnly, silently, and at short but accurately measured intervals, goblets of Corsi- can wine. The wine was strong, so was Cloterman's head ; and Gerard had been gone a good hour ere the model secretary imbibed the notion that Creation expected Cloterman to drink the health of all good fellows, and " nommement " of the Duke of Burgundy here present. With this view he filled bumper nine, and rose gingerly but solemnly and slowly. Having reached his full height, he in- stantly rolled upon the grass, goblet in hand, spilling the cold liquor on more than one ankle, — whose owners frisked, — but not disturbing a mus- cle in his own long face, which, in the total eclipse of reason, retained its gravity, primness, and infallibil- ity. The seneschal led Gerard through several passages to the door of the pavilion, where some young noble- men, embroidered and feathered, sat sentinel, guarding the heir-apparent, and playing cards by the red light of torches their servants held. A whis- per from the seneschal, and one of them rose reluctantly, stared at Ge- rard with haughty surprise, and en- tered the pavilion. He presently re- turned, and, beckoning the pair, led them through a passage or two, and landed them in an antechamber, where sat three more young gentlemen, feathered, furred, and embroidered like pieces of fancy-work, and deep in that instructive and edifying branch of learning, dice. " You can't see the priflccss, — it is too late," said one. Another followed suit : — " She passed this way but now with her nurse. She is gone to bed, doll and all. Deuce-ace again ! "' Gerard prepared to retire. The seneschal, with an incredulous smile, replied : — " The young man is here by the countess's orders ; be so good as to conduct him to her ladies." On this a superb Adonis rose, with an injured look, and led Gerard into a room where sat or lolloped eleven ladies, chattering like magpies. Two, more industrious than the rest, were playing cat's-cradle with fingers as nimble as their tongues. At the sight of a stranger all their tongues stopped like one prece of complicated machin- ery, and all the eyes turned on Gerard, as if the same string that checked the tongues had turned the eyes on. Ge- rard was ill at ease before, but this bat- tery of eyes discountenanced him, and down went his eyes on the ground. Then the cowards, finding, like the hare who ran by the pond and the frogs scuttled into the water, that there was a creature they could frighten, giggled, and enjoyed their prowess. Then a duenna said, se- verely, " Mesdames ! " and they were all abashed at once as though a mod- esty string had been pulled. This same duenna took Gerard, and marched before him in solemn si- lence. The young man's heart sank, and he had half a mind to turn and run out of the place. " What must princes be," he thought, " when their courtiers are so freezing ? Doubtless they take their breeding from him they serve." These reflections were interrupted bv the duenna suddenly introducing him into a room where three ladies sat working, and a pretty little girl tuning a lute. The ladies were richly, but not showily dressed, and the duenna went up to the one who was hemming a kerchief, and said a few words in a low tone. This lady then turned towards Gerard with a 22 THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. Bmile, and beckoned him to come near her. She did not rise, hut she hiid aside her work, and lier manner of turning; towards him, slight as the movement was, was full of grace and case and courtesy. She began a con- versation at once. " Margaret Van Eyck is an old friend of mine, sir, and I am right glad to have a letter from her hand, and thankful to you, sir, for bringing it to me safely. Maria, my love, this is the young gentleman who brought you that pretty miniature." " Sir, I thank you a thousand times," said the young lady. " I am glad you feel her debtor, sweetheart, for our friend could have us to do liim a little service in re- turn." " I will do anything on earth for him," replied the young lady, with ardor. " Anything on earth is nothing in the world," said the Countess of Charlois, quietly. " Well, then, I will — What would you have me to do, sir ? " Gerard had just found out what high society he was in. " My sover- eign demoiselle," said he, gently, and a little tremulously, " where there liave been no pains there needs no reward." " But we must obey mamma. All the world must obey mamma." " That is true. Then, our demoi- selle, reward me, if you Avill, by let- ting me hear the stave you were going to sing and I did interrupt it." " What, you love music, sir ? " " I adore it." The little princess looked inquir- ingly at her mother, and received a smile of assent. She then took her lute and sang a romaunt of the day. Although but twelve years old, she was a well-taught and painstaking musician. Her little claw swept the chords with courage and precision, and struck out the notes of the arpeg- gio clear and distinct and bright, like twinkling stars : but the main charm was her voice. It was not mighty, but it was round, clear, full, and ringing like a bell. She sang with a certain modest eloquence, though she knew none of the tricks of teeling. She was too young to be theatrical, or even sentimental, sb nothing was forced — all gushed. Her little mouth seemed the mouth of Nature. The ditty, too, was as pure as its utterance. As there were none of those false divisions — those whin- ing slurs, which are now sold so dear by Italian songsters, though every jackal in India delivers them gratis to his customei"s all night, and sometimes gets shot for them, and always deser\-e8 it — so there were no cadences or fiorituri, the trite, turgid, and feeble expletives of song, the skim-milk with which mindless musicians and mindless writers quench fire, wash out color, and drown melody and meaning dead. While the pure and tender strain was flowing from the pure young throat, Gerard's eyes tilled. The countess watched him with interest, for it was usual to applaud the prin- cess loudly, but not with cheek and eye. So when the voice ceased, and the glasses left off ringing, she asked demurely, " Was he content 1 " Gerard gave a little start ; the spo- ken voice broke a charm, and brought him back to earth. " madam ! " he cried, " surely it is thus that cherubs and seraphs sing, and charm the saints in heaven." " I am somewhat of your opinion, my young friend," said the countess, with emotion ; and she bent a look of love and gentle pride upon her girl ; a heavenly look, such as, they say, is given to the eye of the short-lived resting on the short-lived. The countess resumed : — " My old friend requests me to be serviceable to you. It is the first fa- vor she has done us the honor of ask- ing us, and the request is sacred. You are in holy orders, sir ? " Gerard bowed. " I fear you are not a priest, yoa look too young." THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. 23 " O no, madam : I am not even a snb-dcacon. I am only a lector ; bnt next month I shall be an exorcist ; and before long an acolyth." " Well, Monsieur Gerard, with your accomplishments you can soon pass through the inferior orders. And let me beg of you to dc so. For the day after you have said your first mass I shall "have the pleasure of appointing you to a beneiice." " 0, madam ! " " And, Marie, remember I make this promise in your name as well as in my own." " Fear not, mamma : I will not for- get. But if he will take my advice, what he will be is Bishop of Liege. The Bishop of Lie'ge is a beautifid bishop. AVliat ! do you not remember him, mamma, that day we were at Liege ? he was braver than grandpapa himself. He had on a crown, a high one, and it was cut in the middle, and it was full of, O, such beautiful jewels : and his gown stiff with gold ; and his mantle too ; and it had a broad l)ordcr, all pictures ; but, above all, his gloves ; you have no such gloves, mamma. They were embroid- ered, and covered with jewels, and scented with such lovely scent ; I smelt them all the time he was giving me his blessing on my head with them. Dear old man ! I dare say he will die soon, — most old people do, — and then, sir, you can be bishop, you know, and wear — " " Gently, Marie, gently ; bishoprics are for old gentlemen ; and this is a young gentleman." " Mamma ! he is not so very young." " Not compared witli you, Marie, eh ? " " He is a good Vjlgth, dear mamma ; and I am sure he is yood enough for a bishop." " Alas, mademoiselle ! you are mis- taken." " I know not that, Monsieur Ge- rard ; but I am a little jiuzzled to know on what grounds mademoiselle there uronouuces your character so boldl}-." 2 " Alas, mamma ! " said the prin- cess, " you have not looked at his ftice, then " ; and she raised her eyebrows at her mother's simplicity. " I beg your pardon," said the countess, " I have. Well, sir, if I cannot go quite so fast as my daugh- ter, attribute it to my age, not to a want of interest in your welfare. A benefice will do to begin your career with ; and I must take care it is not too far from — what call you the place 1 " " Tergou, madam." "A priest gives up much," con- tinued the countess ; " often, I fear, he leanis too late how much " ; and her woman's eye rested a moment on Gerard with mild pity and half sur- prise at his resigning her sex and all the heaven they can bestow, and the great parental joys. " At least you shall be near }'our friends. Have you a niotlicr ^ " " Yes, madam ; thanks be to God ! " " Good ! You shall have a church near Tergou. She will thank me. And now, sir, wc must not detain you too long from those who have a better claim to your society than we have. Duchess, oblige me by bidding one of the pages conduct liim to the hall of banquet ; the way is hard to find." Gerard bowed low to the countess and the princess, and backed towards the door. " I hope it will be a nice benefice," said the princess to him, with a pretty smile, as he was going out ; then, shak- ing her head with an air of solemn misgiving, " but you had better have been Bishop of Liege." Gerard followed his new conductor, his heart warm with gratitude ; but ere he reached the banquet-hall a chill came over him. The mi-nd of one who has led a quiet, uneventful life is not apt to take in contradictory feelings at the same moment and balance them, but rather to be overpowered by each in turn. While Gerard was with the countess, the excitement of so new a situation, the unlooked-for promise, the joy and pride it would cause at 24 THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH home, possessed him wholly : but now it was passion's turn to be heard again. What, give up Margaret, whose soft hand he still felt in his, and her deep eyes in his heart 1 resign her and all the world of love and joy slie had opened on him to-day 1 The revul- sion, when it did come, was so strong, that he hastily resolved to say noth- ing at home about the offered benefice. " The countess is so good," thought he, " she has a hundred ways of aid- ing a young man's fortune ; she will not compel me to be a priest when she shall learn I love one of her sex ; one would almost think she does know it, for she cast a strange look on me, and said, ' A priest gives up much, too much.' I dare say she will give me a place about the palace." And with this hopeful reflection his mind was eased, and, being now at the entrance of the banqueting-hall, he thanked his conductor, and ran hastily Avith joyful eyes to Margaret. He came in sight of the table, — she was goi;c. Peter was gone too. Nobody was at the ta- ble at all, only a citizen in sober gar- ments had just tumbled under it dead drunk, and several persons were raising him to carry him away. Ge- rard never guessed how important this solemn drunkard was to him ; he was looking for "Beauty," and let the " Beast " lie. He ran wildly round the hall, which Avas now comparatively empty. She Avas not there. He left the palace ; outside he found a crowd gaping at tAvo great fan-lights just lighted over the gate. He asked them earnestly if they had seen an old man in a gOAvn, and a lovely girl pass out. They laughed at the question. " They Avere staring at these ncAv lights that turn night into day. They did n't trouble their heads about old men and young Avenches, every-day sights." From another group he learned there Avas a Mystery being played under can- vas hard by, and all the Avorld gone to see it. This revived his hopes, and he went and saw the Mystery. In this representation, divine personages, too sacred for me to name here, came clumsily doAvn from heaven to talk sophistry Avith the cardinal Virtues, the nine Muses, and the seven deadly Sins, all present in human shape, and not unlike one another. To enliven Avhich weary stuff, in rattled the Prince of the poAver of the air, and an imp that kept molesting him, and buffeting him Avith a bladder, at each thAvack of Avhich the crowd were in ecstasies. When the Vices had uttered good store of obscenity, and the Virtues tAvaddle, the celestials, including the nine Muses, Avent gingerly back to heaven one by one ; for there Avas but one cloud ; and tAvo artisans Avorked it up Avith its supernatural freight, and Avorked it doAvn Avith a Avinch, in full sight of the audience. These disposed of, the bottomless pit opened and flamed in the centre of the stage ; the carpenters and Virtues shoved the Vices in, and the Virtues and Beelzebub and his tormentor danced merrily round the place of eternal torture to the fife and tabor. This entertainment Avas Avrit by the Bishop of Ghent for the diffusion of religious sentiment by the aid of the senses, and Avas an average specimen of theatrical exhibitions so long as they Avere in the hands of the clergy. But, in course of time, the laity con- ducted plays, and so the theatre, I learn from the pulpit, has become pro- fane. Margaret was nowhere in the croAvd, and Gerard could not enjoy the per- formance : he actually Avent aAA-ay in Act 2, in the midst of a much-admired piece of dialogue, in Avhich Justice outquibbled Satan. He Avalked through many streets, but could not find her he sought. At last, fairly Avom out, he Avent to a hostelry and slept till daA'break. All that day, heaA-y and heartsick, he sought her, but could never fall in with her or her father, nor ever obtain the slightest cleAv. Then he felt she Avas false or had changed her mind. He Avas irri- tated now, as well as sad. More good fortune fell on him : he almost hated it. At last, on th(5 third day. THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. 25 after he had once more been through every street, he said, " She is not in the town, pnd I shall never see her again. I will go home." He started for Tergou with royal favor promised, with fifteen golden angels in his purse, a golden medal on his bosom, and a heart like a lump of lead. CHAPTER IV. It was near four o'clock in the af- ternoon. l<]li was in the shop. His eldest and youngest sons were abroad. Catherine and her little crippled daughter had long been anxious about Gerard, and now they were gone a little way down the road, to see if by good luck he might be visible in the distance ; and Giles was alone in the sitting-room, which I will sketch, furniture and dwarf included. The Hollanders Mere always an original and leading people. They claim to have invented printing (wooden type), oil-painting, liberty, banking, gardening, i&c. Above all, years before my tale, they invented cleanliness. So, while the English gentr}', in velvet jerldns, and cliicken- toed shoes, trod floors of stale rushes, foul receptacle of bones, decomposing morsels, spittle, dogs' eggs, and all abominations, this hosier's sitting- room at Tergou was floored with Dutch tiles, so highly glazed and constantly washed, that you could eat oflT them. There was one large win- dow ; the cross stone-work in the cen- tre of it was very massive, and stood in relief, lonking like an actual cross to the inmates, and was eyed as such in their devutions. The panes were very small and lozenge-sha])ed,and sol- dered to one another with stri])s of lead ; the like ymi may see to this day in our rural cottages. Hie chairs were rude and primitive, all but the arm- chair, whose back, at right angles with its seat, was so high that the sitter's head stopped two feet short of the top. This chair was of oak, and car\'ed at the smnmit. There was a copper pail, that went in at the waist, holding holy water ; and a little hantl-besom to sprinkle it far and wide ; and a long, narrow, but massive oak table, and s dwarf sticking to its rim by his teeth, his ej'cs glaring, and his claws in the air like a pouncing vampire. Nature, it would seem, did not make Giles a dwarf out of malice prepense ; she constructed a head and torso with her usual care : but just then her atten- tion was distracted, and she left the rest to chance ; the result w^as a hu- man wedge, an in^'erted cone. He might justly have taken her to task in the terms of Horace : — " Amphora ccepit Institui ; currente rota cur urceus exit? " His centre was anything but his centre of gravity. Bisected, upper Giles would have outweighed three lower Giles. But this very dispropor- tion enabled him to do feats that would have bafiled Milo. His brawny arms had no weight to draw after them ; so he could go up a vertical pole like a squirrel, and hang for hours from a bough by one band, like a cherry by its stalk. If he could have made a vacuum with his hands, as the lizard is said to do with its feet, he would have gone along a ceiling. Now, this pocket athlete was insane ly fond of griping the dinner-cloth with both hands, and so swinging ; and then — climax of delight ! — he would seize it with his teeth, and, tak- ing otF his hands, hold on like grim death by his huge ivories. But all our joys, however elevat- ing, suffer interruption. Little Kate caught Samsonet in this posture, and stood aghast. She was her mother's daughter, and her heart was with the furniture, not with the 12mo gym. nast. " O Giles, how can you ? Mothej is at hand. It dents the table." " Go and tell her, little talebearer," snarled Giles. " You are clio one foi ranking mischief." 26 THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. " Am I ? " inquired Kate, calmly ; " that is news to inc." " The biggest in Tcrgou," growled Giles, fastening on again. " O, indeed ? " said Kate, dryly. This piece of unwonted satire launched, and Giles not visibly blast- ed, she sat down quietly and cried. Her mother came in almost at that moment, and Giles hurled himself un- der the table, and there glared. " What is to do now ? " said the dame, sharply. Then turning her experienced eyes from Kate to Giles, and observing the position he had taken up, and a sheepish expression, she hinted at cuffing of ears. "Nay, mother," said the girl ; "it was but a foolish word Giles spoke. I had not noticed it at another time ; but I was tired and in care for Gerard, you know." " Let no one be in care for me," said a faint voice at the door, and in tottered Gerard, pale, dusty, and worn out ; and, amidst uplifted hands and cries of delight, curiosity, and anxiety mingled, dropped exhausted into the nearest chair. Beating Rotterdam, like a covert, for Margaret, and the long joiirney afterwards, had fairly knocked Gerard up. But elastic youth soon revived, and behold him the centre of an eager circle. First of all they must hear about the prizes. Then Gerard told them he had been admitted to see the competitors' works all laid out in an enormous hall before the judges pro- nounced. " mother ! O Kate ; when I saw the goldsmiths' work, I had like to have fallen on the floor. I thought not all the goldsmiths on earth had so much gold, silver, jewels, and craft of design and facture. But, vn sooth, all the arts are divine." Then, to please the females, he de- scribed to them the reliquaries, fereto- ries, calices, crosiers, crosses, pyxes, monstrances, and other wonders ec- clesiastical, and the goblets, hanaps, watches, clocks, chains, brooches, &c., so tiiat their mouths watered. " But, Kate, when I came to the illuminated work from Ghent and Bruges, my heart sank. Mine was dirt by the side of it. For the lirst min- ute I could almost have cried ; but I prayed for a better spirit, and present- ly I was able to enjoy them, and thank God for these lovely works, and for those skilful, patient craftsmen, whom I own my masters. Well, the colored work was so beautiful I forgot all about the black and white. But, next day, when all the other prizes had been given, they came to the writing, and whose name think you was called first?" " Yours," said Kate. The others laughed her to scorn. " You may well laugh," said Ge- rard, " but for all that Gerard Elias- socn of Tergou was the name the herald shouted. I stood stupid ; they thrust me forward. Evei'y thing swam before my eyes. I found myself kneel- ing on a cushion at the feet of the duke. He said something to me, but I was so fluttered I could not answer him. So then he put his hand to his side and did not draw a glaive and cut off" my dull head, but gave me a gold medal, and there it is." There was a yell and almost a scramble. " And then he gave me fifteen great bright golden angels. 1 had seen one before, but I never handled one. Hero they are." " O Gerard ! O Gerard ! " " There is one for you, our eldest ; and one for you, Sybrandt, and for you. Little Mischief; and two for thee. Little Lily, because God hath aiflicted thee ; and one for myself to buy colors and vellum ; .and nine for her that nursed us all, and risked the two crowns upon poor Gerard's h.and." The gold drew out their charac- ters. Cornelis and Sybrandt clutched each his coin with one glare of greed- iness and another glare of envy at Kate, who had got two pieces. Giles seized his and rolled it along the floor and gambolled after it. Kate put down her crutches and sat down, and held out her little arms to Gerard with THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. 27 a heavenly gesture of love and tender- ness, and the mother, fairly benumbed at first by the sht)wer uf gold that fell on her apron, now eried out, " Leave kissing him, Kate, he is my son, not yours. Ah, (ierard, my boy ! I have not loved you as you deserved." Then Gerard threw himself on his knees beside her, and she flung her arms round him and wept for joy and pride upon his neck. " Good lad ! good lad ! " cried the hosier, with some emotion. " I must go and tell the neighbors. Lend me the medal, Gerard, I '11 show it my good friend, Peter Buyskens ; he is ever regaling me with how his son Jorian won the tin mug a shooting at the butts." " Ay, do, my man ; and show Peter Buyskens one of the angels. Tell him there are fourteen more where that came from. Mind you bring it me back ! " " Stay a minute, father, there is better news behind," said Gerard, flushing with joy at the joy he caused. " Better ! Better than this I " Then Gerard told his interview with the countess, and the house rang with joy. " Now, God bless the good lady, and bless the Dame Van Eyck ! A benefice ? our son ! My cares are at an end. Eli, my good friend and master, now we two can die happy whenever our time comes. This dear boy will take our place, and none of these loved ones will want a home or a friend." From that liour Gerard was looked upon as the stay of the family. He was a son apart, Ijut in another sense. lie was always in the right, and noth- ing too good for him. Cornells and Sybrantlt became more and more jeal- ous of him, and longed for the daj' he should go to his benefice : they would get rid of the favorite, and his rever- ence's purse would be open to them. With these views he co-o])erated. The wound love had given him throbbed duller and duller. His success and tho aitectioa and admiration of his parents made him think more highly of himself, and resent with moresjjirit Margaret's ingratitude and discour- tesy. For all that, she had power to cool him towards the rest of her sex, and now for every reason he wished to be ordained ])riest as soon as he could pass the intermediate orders. He knew the Vulgate already better than most of the clergy, and stud- ied the rubric and the dogmas of the church with his friends the monks; and, the first time the bishop came that way, he applied to be admitted " exorcist," the third step in holy or- ders. The bishop questioned him, and ordained him at once. He had to kneel, and, after a short prayer, the bishop delivered to him a little MS. full of exorcisms, and said : " Take this, Gerard, and have power to lay hands on the possessed, whether bap- tized or catechumens ! " and he took it reverently, and went home invested by the church with power to cast out demons. Returning home from the church, he was met by little Kate on her crutches. " O Gerard ! who think you hath sent to our house seeking you i — the burgomaster himself" " Ghj-sbrecht Van Swieten "? What would he with me ? " "Nay, Gerard, I know not. But he seems urgent to see you. You are to go to his house on the instant." " Well, he is the burgomaster : I will go : but it likes me not. Kate, I have seen him cast such a look on me as no friend casts. No matter ; such looks forewarn the wise. To be sure he knows — " " Knows what, Gerard 1 " " Nothing." " Nothing ? " " Kate, 1 '11 go." CHAPTER V. Ghysbrecht van Swieten was an artful man. He opened on tho novice with something quite wide of 28 THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. the mark he was really aiming at. " The town records," said he, " arc crabbedly written, and the ink rusty with age." He oftercd Gerard the honor of transcribing them i'air. Gerard inquired what he was to be paid. Ghysbrecht offered a sum that would have just purchased the pens, ink, and parchment. " But, burgomaster, my labor ? Here is a year's work." " Your labor ? Call you marking parchment labor ? Little sweat goes to that, I trow." " 'T is labor, and skilled labor to boot ; and that is better paid in all crafts than rude labor, sweat or no sweat. Besides, there 's my time." " Your time f Why, what is time to you, at two-and-twenty ? " Then fixing his eyes keenly on Gerard, to mark the effect of his words, he said : " Say, rather, you are idle grown. You are in love. Your body is with these chanting monks, but your heart is with Peter Brandt and his red- haired girl." " I know no Peter Brandt." This denial confirmed Ghysbrecht's suspicion that the caster-out of demons was playing a deep game. " Ye lie ! " he shouted. " Did I not find you at her elbow, on the road to Rotterdam ? " " Ah ! " " Ah ! And you were seen at Sev- enbergen but t'other day." " Was I -i " " Ay ; and at Peter's house." " At Sevenbergen ? " " Ay, at Sevenbergen." Now this was what in modem days is called a draw. It was a guess, put boldly forth as fact, to elicit by the young man's answer whether he had been there lately or not. The result of the artifice surprised the crafty one. Gerard started up in a strange state of nervous excite- ment. " Burgomaster," said he, with trem- bling voice, " I have not been at Scv- enbCTgen this three years and I knew not the name of those you saw mo ■with, nor where they dwelt ; but, as my time is precious, though you value it not, give you good day." And he darted out, Asith his eyes sparkling. Ghysbrecht started up in huge ire; but he sank into his chair again. " He fears me not. He knowa something, if not all." Then he called hastily to his trusty servant, and almost dragged him to a window. " See you yon man ? " he cried. " Haste. Follow him ! But let him not see you. He is young, but old in craft. Keep him in sight all day. Let me know whither he goes, and what he docs." It was night when the servant re- turned. " Well ? well ? " cried Van Swieten, eagerly. " Master, the young man went from you to Sevenbergen." Ghysbrecht groaned. " To the house of Peter the Magi- cian." CHAPTER VI. " Look into your own heart and write ! " said Herr Cant ; and earth's cuckoos echoed the cry. Look into the Rhine where it is deepest, and the Thames where it is thickest, and paint the bottom. Lower a bucket into a well of self-deception, and what comes up must be immortal truth, must n't it f Now, in the first place no son of Adam ever reads his own heart at all, except by the habit acquired, and the light gained, from some years' perusal of other hearts ; and even then, with his acquired sagacity and reflected light, he can but spell and decipher his own heart, not read it fluently Half-way to Sevenbergen Gerard looked into his own heart, and asked it why he was going to Sevenbergen. His heart replied without a moment's hesitation, " We are going out of curi- osity, to know why she jilted us, and ta THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. 29 8ho\r her it lias not broken our licarts, anil that we arc quite eontent witli our lionors and our benefice in pro- s/iirfit, and don't want her nor any of lier tickle sex." He soon found out Peter Brandt's cottage-, and there sat a fjirl in tlie doonvay, plying her needle, and a stalwart tigure leaned on a long bow and talked to her. Gerard felt an unaccountable pang at the sight of him. However, the man turned out to be past fifty years of age, an old soldier, whom Gerard remembered to have seen shoot at the butts with ad- mirable force and skill. Another minute and the youth stood before them. Margaret looked up and dropped her work, and uttered a faint cry, and was white and red by turns. But these signs of emotion were swiftly dismissed, and she turned far more chill and indiftcrent than she would if she had not betrayed this agitation. " What ! is it you, Master Gerard? What on earth brings you here, I wonder ? " " I was passing by and saw you ; so I thought I would give you good day, and ask after your father." " My father is well. He will be here anon." " Then I may as well stay till he comes." " As you will. Good Martin, step into the village and tell my father here is a friend of his." " And not of yours." " My father's friends are mine." " That is doubtful. It was not like a friend to promise to wait for me, and then make off the moment my back was turned. Cruel Marga- ret ! you little know how I searched the town for you ; how for want of you nothing was pleasant to me." " These are idle woi'ds ; if you had desired my father's company, or mine, you would have come back. There t had a bed laid for you, sir, at my cousin's, and he would have m:ule much of you, and, who knows ? I niiglit have made much of you too. I was in the humor that day. You will not catch me in the same mind again, neither you nor any young man, I wan-ant me." " Margaret, I came back the mo- ment the countess let me go ; but you were not there." " Nay, you did not, or you had seen Ilans Cloterman at our table; we left him to bring you on." " I saw no one there, but only a drunken man that had just tumbled down." "At our table ? How was he clad ? " " Nay, I took little heed : in sad- colored garb." At this Margaret's face gradually warmed ; but presently, assuming incredulity and severity, she put many shrewd questions, all of which Gerard answered most loyally. Fi- nally, the clouds cleared, and they guessed how the misunderstanding had come about. Then came a re- vulsion of tenderness, all the more powerful that they had done each other wrong ; and then, more danger- ous still, came mutual confessions. Neither had been happy since ; neither ever would have been happy but for this fortunate meeting. And Gerard found a MS. Vulgate lying open on the table, and pounced upon it like a hawk. MSS. were his dehght ; but before he coidd get to it two white hands c[uickly came flat upon the page, and a red face over them. " Nay, take away your hands, Margaret, that I may see where you are reading, and I will read there too at home ; so shall my soul meet yours in the sacred page. You will not ? Nay, then, I must kiss them away." And he kissed them so often, that for very shame they were fain to withdraw, and, lo ! the sacred book lay open at "An apple of goUl in a network of silver." " There, now," said she, " I had been hunting for it ever so long, and found it but even now, — and to bo caucht! " and with a touch of incon. 30 THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. Bistency she pointed it out to Gerard with her white linjier. " Ay," said he, " but to-day it is all hidden in that great cap." " It is a comely cap, I 'm told by some." "Maybe: but what it hides is beautiful." " It is not : it is hideous." " Well, it was beautiful at Rotter- dam." " Ay, everything was beautiful that day " (with a little sigh). And now Peter came in, and wel- comed Gerard cordially, and would have him to stay supper. And Mar- garet disappeared ; and Gerard had a nice learned chat with Peter; and Margaret reappeared with her hair in her silver net, and shot a glance half arch, half coy, and glided about them and spread supper, and beamed bright with gayety and happiness. And in the cool evening Gerard coaxed her out, and she objected, and came ; and coaxed her on to the road to Tergou, and she declined, and came, and there they strolled up and do^vn, hand in hand ; and when he must go they pledged each other never to quaiTel or misunder- stand one another again ; and they sealed the promise with a long, lov- ing kiss, and Gerard went home on wings. From that day Gerard spent most of his evenings with Margaret, and the attachment deepened and deepened on both sides till the hours they spent together were the hours they lived ; the rest they counted and underwent. And at the outset of this deep attach- ment all went smoothly; obstacles there were, but they seemed distant and small to the eyes of hope, youth, and love. The feelings and passions of so many persons, that this attach- ment woiTld thwart, gave no warning smoke to show their volcanic nature and power. The course of true love ran smoothly, placidly, until it had drawn these two young hearts into its current forever. And then — CHAPTER Vn. One bright morning unwonted vel vet shone, unwonted feathers waved, and horses' hoofs glinted and rang through the streets of Tergou, and the windows and balconies were studded with wondering faces. The French ambassador was riding through to sport in the neighboring forest. Besides his own suite he was attend- ed by several servants of the Uuke of Burgundy, lent to do him honor and minister to his pleasure. The duke's tumbler rode before him with a grave, sedate majesty, that made his more noble companions seem light, frivolous persons. But ever and anon, when respect and awe neared the oppressive, he rolled off his horse so ignobly and funnily that even the ambassador was fain to burst out laughing. He also climbed up again by the tail in a way provoi'ative of mirth, and so he played his part. Towards the rear of the pageant lude one that excited more attention still, — the duke's leopard. A huntsman, mounted on a Flemish horse of pro- digious size and power, carried a long box fastened to the rider's loins by straps curiousl}- contrived, and on this box sat a bright leopard crouch- ing. She was chained to the hunts- man. The people admired her glossy hide and spots, and pressed near, and one or two were for feeling her, and pulling her tail ; then the huntsman shouted in a terrible voice, " Beware ! At Antwerp one did but throw a handful of dust at her, and the duke made dust of him." " Gramercy ! " " I speak sooth. The good duke shut him up in pri.son, in a cell under ground, and the rats cleaned the flesh off his bones in a night. Sensed him right for molesting the poor thing." There was a murmur of fear, and the Tergovians shrank from tickling the leopard of their sovereign. But an incident followed that raised their spirits again. The duke's giant, a Hungarian seven feet four inches THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. 31 high, brought up the rear. This enor- mous creature had, like some other giants, a treble, tiuty voice of little power. He was a vain fellow, and not conscious of this nor any defect. Now it happened he caught sight of Giles sitting on the top of the balcony ; so he stopped and began to make fun of him. " Hallo ! brother ! " squeaked he, " I had nearly passed without seeing thee." " You are plain enough to see," ■bellowed Giles, in his bass tones. " Come on my shoulder, brother," squeaked Titan, and held out a shoul- der-of-mutton fist to help him down. " If I do I '11 cufF your ears," roared the dwarf. The giant saw the homuncule was Irascible, and played upon him, being encouraged thereto by the shouts of laughter. For he did not see that the people were laughing, not at his wit, but at the ridiculous incongruity of the two voices, — the gigantic feeble fife, and the petty, deep, loud drum, — the mountain delivered of a squeak, and the molehill belching thunder. The singular duet came to as sin- gular an end. Giles lost all patience and self-command, and being a crea- ture devoid of fear, and in a rage to boot, he actually dropjjed upon the giant's neck, seized his hair with one hand, and punched his head with the other. The giant's first impulse was to laugh, but the weight and rapidity of the blows soon corrected that in- clination. " He ! he ! Ah ! ha ! hallo ! oh ! oh ! Holy saints ! here ! help ! or I must throttle the imp. I can't! I '11 split your skull against the — " and he made a wild run backwards at the balcony. Giles saw his danger, seized the balcony in time with both hands, and whipped over it just as the giant's head came against it with a stunning crack. The })eo])le roareil with laugh- ter and exultation at the address of their little champion. The indignant giant seized two of the laughers, knocked them together like dumb- ?.* bells, shook them and strewed them flat, (Catherine shrieked and threw her apron over Giles,) then strode wratht'ully away after the party. This incident had consequences no one at present foresaw. Its immediate re- sults were agreeable. The Tergovians turned proud of Giles, and listened with more afl'ability to his prayers for parchment. For he drove a regular trade with his brother Gerard in this article. Went about and begged it gratis, and Gerard gave him coppers for it. On the afternoon of the same day, Catherine and her daughter were chat- ting together about their favorite theme, Gerard, his goodness, his I one- fice, and the brightened prospects of the whole family. Their good luck had come to them in the very shajje they would have chosen ; besides the advantages of a benefice such as the Countess Cha- rolois would not disdain to give, there was the feminine delight at having a priest, a holy man, in their own family. " He will marry Cornells, and Sy- brandt : for they can wed (good house- wives) now, if they will. Gerard will take care of you and Giles when wo are gone." " Yes, mother, and we can confess to him instead of to a stranger," said Kate. " Ay, girl ! and he can give the sacred oil to your father and me, and close our eyes when our time comes." " mother ! not for many, many years, I do pray Heaven. Pray speak not of that, it always makes me sad. I hope to go before you, mother, dear. No ; let us be gay to-day. I am out of pain, mother, quite out of all pain ; it does seem so strange ; and I feel so bright and happy, that — mother, can you keep a secret ? " " Nobody better, child. Why, you know I can." " Then I will show you something so beautiful. You never saw the like, I trow. Only Gerard must never know ; for sure he means to surprise 82 THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. D9 with it; he covers it up so, and sometimes he carries it away al- together." Kate took her crutches, and moved slowly away, leaving her mother in an exalted state of curiosity. She soon returned with something in a cloth, uncovered it, and there was a lovely picture of the Virgin, with all her insignia, and wearing her tiara over a wealth of beautiful hair, which flowed loose over her shoulders. Cath- erine, at first, was struck with awe. " It is herself," she cried ; " it is the Queen of Heaven. I never saw one like her to my mind before." "And her eyes, mother; lifted to the sky, as if they belonged there, and not to a mortal creature. And her beautiful hair of burning gold." " And to think I have a son that can make the saints live again upon a piece of wood ! " " The reason is, he is a young saint himself, mother. He is too good for this world ; he is here to portray the blessed, and then to go away and be with them forever." Ere they had half done admiring it, a strange voice was heard at the door. By one of the furtive instincts of their sex they hastily hid the pic- ture in the cloth, though there was no need. And the next moment in came, casting his eyes furtively around, a man that had not entered the house this ten years, — Ghysbrecht Van Swieten. The two women were so taken by surprise, that they merely stared at him and at one another, and said, " The burgomaster ! " in a tone so expressive, that Ghysbrecht felt com- pelled to answer it. " Yes ! I own, the last time I came here was not on a friendly errand. Men love their o^vn interest, — Eli's and mine were contraiy. Well, let this visit atone the last. To-day I come on your business, and none of mine." Catherine and her daughter exchanged a swift glance of contempt- uous incredulity. They knew the man better than he thought. " It is about your son Gerard." "Ay! ay! you want him to wor^ for the town all for nothing. He told us." " I come on no such errand. It is to let you know he has fallen into bad hands." " Now Heaven and the saints for- bid ! Man, torture not a mother ! Speak out, and quickly : speak ere you have time to coin falsehood : we know thee." Ghysbrecht turned pale at this af- front, and spite mingled with the other motives that brought him here. " Thus it is then," said he, grinding his teeth, and speaking very fast. " Your son Gerard is more like to be father of a family than a priest ; he is forever with Margaret, Peter Brandt's red-haired girl, and loves her like a cow her calf." Mother and daughter both Imrst out laughing. Ghysbrecht stared at them. " What, you knew it 1 " " Carry this tale to those who know not my son Gerard. Women are naught to him." " Other women, mayhap. But this one is the apple of his eye to him, or will be, if you part them not, and soon. Come, dame, make me not waste time and friendly counsel : my sen'ant has seen them together a score of times, handed, and reading babies in one another's eyes like — you know, dame — you have been young too." " Girl, I am ill at ease. Yes, I have been young, and know how blind the young and foolish are. My heart ! He has turned me sick in a moment. Kate, if it should be true." " Nay, nay ! " cried Kate, eagerly. " Gerard might love a young woman : all young men do : I can't find what they see in them to love so : but if he did he would let us know ; he would not deceive us. You wicked man ! No, dear mother, look not so ! Ge- rard is too good to love a creature of earth. His love is for Our Lady and the saints. Ah ! I will show you the THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. 33 picture, — there- if his heart Was ettrthly, could he paint the Queen of Heaven like that — look ! look ! " and she held the picture out trium- phantly, and, more radiant and beauti- ful in this moment of enthusiasm than ever dead picture was or will be, over- powered the burgomaster with her eloquence and her feminine proof of Grerard's purity. His eyes and mouth opened, and remained open : in which state they kept turning, face and all, as if on a pivot, from tlie picture to the women, and from the women to the picture. " Why, it is herself," he gasped. " Is n't it 1 " cried Kate, and her hostility was softened. " You ad- mire it ? I forgive you for frighten- ing us." " Am I in a madhouse ? " said Ghysbrecht Van Swieten, thoroughly puzzled. " You show me a picture of the girl ; and you say he painted it ; and that is a proof he cannot love her. Why, they all paint their sweet- hearts, painters do." " A picture of the girl ? " exclaimed Kate, shocked. " Fie ! this is no girl ; this is our blessed Lady." " No ; no, it is Margaret Brandt." "O blind! It is the Queen of Heaven." " No ; only of Sevenbergen tillage." " Profane man ! behold her crown !" " Silly child ! look at her red hair ! W^ould the Virgin be seen in red hair ? — she who had the pick of all the colors ten thousand years before the world began." At this moment an anxious face was insinuated round the edge of the open door : it was their neighbor Peter Buyskens. " What is to do ? " said he, in a cautious wliisper. " We can hear you all across the street. What on earth is to do ? " " neighbor ! WHiat is to do ? Why, here is the burgomaster black- ening our Gerard." " Stop ! " cried Van Swieten. " Pe- ter Buyskens is come in the nick of time. He knows father and daughter both. They cast their glamour on him." " What, is she a witch, too ? " " Else the egg takes not after the bird. Why is her father called the magician ? I tell you they bewitched this very Peter here ; they cast un- holy spells on him, and cured him of the colic : now, Peter, look and tell me who is that ? and you be silent, women, for a moment, if you can ; who is it, Peter 1 " " Well, to be sure ! " said Peter, in reply : and his eye seemed fascinated by the picture. " Who is it ? " repeated Ghysbrecht, impetuously. Peter Buyskens smiled. "Why, you know as well as I do ; hut what have they put a crown on her for ? I never saw her in a crown, for my part." " Man alive ! Can't you open your great jaws, and just speak a wench's name plain out to oblige three peo- ple ? " " I 'd do a great deal more to oblige one of you than that, burgomaster. If it isn't as natural as life ! " " Curse the man ! he won't, he won't, — curse him ! " - " Why, what have I done now ? " " sir ! " said little Kate, " for pity's sake tell us ; are these the fea- tures of a living woman, of — of — Margaret Brandt ? " " A mirror is not truer, mj- little maid." " But is it she, sir, for very cer- tain ■} " " Why, who else should it be ? " " Now why could n't you say so at once ? " snarled Ghysbrecht. " I did say so, as plain as I could speak," snapped Peter ; and they growled over this small bone of con- tention so zealously, that they did not see Catherine and her daughter had thrown their aprons over their heads, and were rocking to and fro in deep distress. The next moment Elias came in fi'om the shop, and stood aghast. Catherine, though her face was covered, knew his footstep^ 34 THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. " That is my poor man," sobbed she. " Tell him, f^ood Peter Buy- skcns, for I have not the cour- age." Elias turned pale. The presence of tiie hurj^omaster in liis liousc, after so many years of coohiess, coupled with his wife's and daufjjhter's dis- tress, made him fear some heavy mis- fortune. " Richart ! Jacob ! " he gasped. " No ! no ! " said the burgomaster ; "it is nearer home, and nobody is dead or dying, old friend." " God bless you, burgomaster ! All ! something is gone off my breast that was like to choke me. Now, what is the matter 1 " Ghysbreeht then told him all that he told the women, and showed the picture in evidence. " Is that all ? " said Eli, profoundly relieved. " What are ye roaring and bellowing for ? It is vexing, it is an- gering, but it is not like death nor even sickness. Boys will be boys. He will outgrow that disease : 't is but skin-deep." But when Ghysbreeht told him that Margaret was a girl of good charac- ter, ■^— that it was not to be supposed she would be so intimate if marriage had not been spoken of between them, — his brow darkened. " Marriage ? that shall never be," said he, sternly. " I '11 stay that, ay, by force if need be, as I would his hand lifted to cut his throat. I 'd do what old Johu Koestein did t'other day." "And what is that, in Heaven's name 1 " asked the mother, suddenly removing her apron. It was the burgomaster who re- phed : — " He made me shut young Albert Koestein up in the prison of the Stadt- house till he knocked under : it was not long. Forty-eight hours, all alone, on bread and water, cooled his hot stom- ach. " Tell my father I am his hum- ble servant," says he, " and let me into the sun once more, — the sun is worth all the wenches in the world.' " " O the cruelty of men ! " sighoi Catherine. " As to that, the burgomaster has no choice : it is the law. And if a father says, ' Burgomaster, lock up my son,' he must do it. A tine thing it would be if a father might not lock up his own son." " Well, well ! it won't come to that with me and my son. He never dis- obeyed me in his life : he never shall. Where is he ? It is past supper-time. Where is he, Kate ? " " Alas, I know not, father." " I know," said Ghysbreeht ; " he is at Sevenbergen. My senant met hira on the road." Supper passed in gloomy silence. Evening descended, — no Gerard : eight o'clock came, — no Gerard. Then the father sent all to bed except Catherine. " You and I will walk abroad, wife, and talk over this new care." " Abroad, my man, at this time ? Whither i " " Why, on the road to Sevenber- gen." " O no, no hasty words, father. Poor Gerard ! he never vexed you be- fore." " Fear me not. But it must end ; and I am not one that trusts to-mor- row with to-day's work." The old pair walked hand in hand ; for, strange as it may. appear to some of my readers, the use of the elbow to couples walking was not discovered in Europe till centuries after this. They sauntered on a long time in si- lence. The night was clear and balmy. Such nights, calm and silent, recall the past from the dead. " It is many years since we walked so late, my man," said Catherine, softly. " Ay, sweetheart, more than we shall see again. (Is he never coming, I wonder ?) " " Not since our courting days, Eli." " No. Ay, you were a buxom lass then." "And you were a comely lad, as THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. 35 ever a girl's eye stole a look at. I do suppose Gerai'd is with her now, as you used to be with me. Nature is strong, and the same in all our gen- erations." " Nay, I hope he has left her by now, confound her, or we shall be here all night." " Eli ! " " Well, Kate 1 " " I have been happy with you, sweetheart, for all our rubs, — much happier, I trow, than if I had — been — a — a — nun. You Avon't speak harshly to the poor child ? One can be firm without being harsh." " Surely." " Have you been happy with me, my poor Eli 1 " " Why, you know I have. Friends I have known, but none like thee. Buss me, wife ! " " A heart to share joy and grief with is a great comfort to man or woman. Is n't it, Eli ? " " It is so, my lass. ^ It doth joy double. And halveth trouble,^ runs the byword. And so I have found it, sweetheart. Ah ! here comes the young fool." Catherine trembled and held her husband's hand tight. The moon was bright, but they were in the shadow of some trees, and their son did not see them. He came singing in the moonlight, and his face shining. CHAPTER VIII. While the burgomaster was ex- posing Gerard at Tergou, Margaret had a trouble of her own at Seven- bergen. It was a housewife's distress, but deeper than we can well conceive. She came to Martin Wittenliaagen, the old soldier, with tears in her eyes. " Martin, there 's nothing in the house, and Gerard is coming, and he is so thoughtless. He forgets to sup at home. When he gives over work then he runs to me straiglit, poor soul ; and often he comes quite faint. And to think I have nothing to set before my servant that loves me so dear." Martin scratched his head. " What can I do ? " " It is Thursday ; it is your day to shoot, — sooth to say, I counted on you to-day." " Nay," said the soldier, " I may not shoot when the duke or his friends are at the chase ; read else. I am no scholar." And he took out of his pouch a parchment with a grand seal. It purported to be a stipend and a license given by Philip Duke of Bur- gundy to Martin Wittenliaagen, one of his archers, in return for services in the wars, and for a wound received at the duke's side. The stipend was four merks yearly, to be paid by the duke's almoner, and the license was to shoot three arrows once a week, viz. on Thursday, and no other day, in any of the duke's forest>i in Hol- land, at any game but a seven-year old buck or a doe carrying fawn, pro- viso, that the duke should not be hunting on that day, or any of his friends. In this case Martin was not to go and disturb the woods on peril of his salar}^, and his head, and a fine of a penny. Margaret sighed and was silent. " Come, cheer up, mistress," said he, " for your sake I '11 peril my car- cass ; I have done that for many a one that was not worth your forefin- ger. It is no such mighty risk either I '11 but step into the skirts of the forest, here. It is odds but tliey drive a hare or a fawn within reach of my arrow." " Well, if I let you go you must promise me not to go far, and not to be seen ; far better Gerard went sup- perless than ill should come to you, faithful Martin." The required promise given, Mar- tin took his bow and three arrows, and stole cautiously into the wood : it was scarce a furlong distant. The horns were hoard faintly in the dis- tance, and all the game was afoot 86 THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. Come, thought Martin, I shall soon fill the pot, and no one be the wiser. He took his stand behind a tliick oak that commanded a view of an open glade, and strung his bow, a truly formidable weapon. It was of Eng- lish yew, six feet two inches high, and thick in proportion ; and Martin, broad-chested, with arms all iron and cord, and used to the bow from in- fancy, could draw a three-foot arrow to the head, and, when it hew, the eye could scarce follow it, and the bow- string twanged as musical as a harp. This l)ow had laid many a stont soldier low in the wars of the Iloecks and Cabbel-jaws. In those days a battle- field was not a cloud of smoke : the combatants were few but the deaths many ; for they saw what they were about, and fewer bloodless arrows flew than bloodless bullets now. A hare came cantering, then sat spright- ly, and her ears made a capital V. Martin levelled his tremendous wea- pon at her : the arrow Hew, the string twanged : but Martin had been in a hurry to pot her, and lost her by an inch : the arrow seemed to hit her, but it struck the ground close to her and passed under her belly like a flash, and hissed along the short grass and disappeared. She jumjied three feet perpendicular, and away at the top of her speed. " Bungler ! " said Martin. A sure proof he was not an habitual bungler, or he would liave blamed the hare. He had scarce- ly fitted another arrow to his string when a wood-pigeon settled on the very tree he stood under. " Aha ! " thought he, " you are small, but dainty." This time he took more pains ; drew Ids arrow carefully, loosed it smoothly, and saw it, to all appear- ance, go clean through the bird, car- rying feathers skyward like dust. Instead of falling at his feet, the bird, whose breast was torn, not fiiirly pierced, fluttered feebly away, and by a great elFort rose above tlie trees, flew some fifty yards, and fell dead at last ; but where, he could not see for the thick foliage. "Luck is against me," said he, despondingly. But he fitted another arnnv, anil eyed the glade keenly. Presently he heard a bustle behind him, and turned ruund Justin time to see a noble buck cross the open, but too late to shoot at liim. lie dashed his bow down with an imj)recation. At that moment a long, spotted animal, glided swiftly across after the deer ; its belly seemed to toiicli the ground as it went. Martin took up his bow hastily : he recognized the duke's leopard. " The hunters will not be far from her," said he, " and I must not be seen. Gerard must go supper- less this night." He plunged into the wood, follow- ing the buck and leopard, for that was his way home. He had not gone far when he heard an unusual sound ahead of him, — leaves rustling vio- lently and the ground trampled. He hurried in the direction. He found the leopard on the bi;ek's back, tear- ing him with teeth and claw, and the buck running in a circle and bounding convulsively, with the blood pouring down his hide. Then Mar- tin formed a desperate resolution to have the venison for Margaret. He drew his arrow to the head, and buried it in the deer, who, spite of the creature on his back, bounded high into the air, and fell dead. The leop- ard went on tearing him as if nothing had happened. Martin hoped that the creature would gorge itself with blood, and then let him take the meat. He wait- ed some minutes, then walked reso- lutely up, and laid his hand on the buck's leg. The leopard gave a frightful growl, and left off" sucking blood. She saw Martin's game, and was sidky and on her guard. What was to be done'? Martin had heard that wild creatures cannot stand the human eye. Accordingly he stood erect and fixed his on the leopard ; the leopard returned a savage glance, and never took her eye otF Martin. Then Martin continuing to look the beast down, the leopard, brutally THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. 37 Ignorant of natural history, flew at his head with a frightful yell, flaming eyes, and jaws and claws distended. He had but just time to catch her by the throat, before her teeth could crush his face ; one of her claws seized his shoulder and rent it; the other, aimed at his cheek, would have been more deadly still, but Martin was old- fashioned, and wore no hat, but a scapulary of the same stuff as his jer- kin, and this scapulary he had brought over his head like a hood ; the brute's claw caught in the loose leather. Martin kept her teeth off his face with great difficulty, and griped her throat fiercely, and she kept rending his shoulder. It was like blunt reaping - hooks grinding and tearing. The pain was fearful ; but, instead of cowing the old soldier, it put his blood up, and he gnashed his teeth with rage almost as fierce as hers, and squeezed her neck with iron force. The t^vo pair of eyes flared at one another, — and now the man's were almost as furious as the brute's. She found he was throttling her, and made a wild attempt to free herself, in wliich she dragged his cowl all over his face and blinded him, and tore her claw out of his shoulder, flesh and all : but still he throttled her, with hand and arm of iron. Present- ly her long tail, that was high in the air, went down. " Alia ! " cried Mar- tin, joyfully, and griped her like death ; next, her body lost its elas- ticity, and he held a choked and pow- erless thing : he griped it still till all motion ceased, then dashed it to the earth; then, panting, removed his cowl : the leopard lay mute at his feet with tongue protruding and bloody paw ; and for the first time terror fell on Martin. " I am a dead man : I have slain the duke's leopard." He hastily seized a few handful s of leaves and threw them over her ; then shouldered the buck and stag- gered away, lea^nng a trail of blood all the way, — his own and the buck's. He burst into Peter's house ft horrible figure, bleeding and blood- stained, and flung the deer's carcass down. " There, no questions," said he, " but broil me a steak on 't ; for I 'm faint." Margaret did not see he was wound- ed : she thought the blood was all from the deer. She busied herself at the fire, and the stout soldier stanched and bound his own wound apart, and soon he and Gerard and Margaret were supping royally on broiled ven- ison. They were very merry ; and Ge- rard, with wonderful thoughtfulness, had brought a flask of Schiedam, and under its influence Martin revived, and told them how the venison was got ; and they all made merry over the exploit. Their mirth was strangely inter- rupted. Margaret's eyes became fixed and fascinated, and her cheek pale with fear. She gasped, and could not speak, but pointed to the window with trembling finger. Their eyes fol- lowed hers, and there in the twilight crouched a dark form with eyes like glow-worms. It was the leopard. While they stood petrified, fascinat- ed by the eyes of green fire, there sounded in the wood a single deep bay. Martin trembled at it. " They have lost her, and laid muz- zled bloodhounds on her scent. They will find her here, and the venison. Good by, friends, Martin Witten- haagen ends here." Gerard seized his bow, and put it into the soldier's hands. " Be a man," he cried, " shoot her, and fling her into the wood ere they come up. Who will know ? " More voices of hounds broke out, and nearer. " Curse her ! " cried Martin. " I spared her once ; now she must die, or I, or lx)tli more likely " ; and he reared his bow, and drew his arrow to the head. " Nay ! nay ! " cried Margaret, and seized the arrow : it broke iu half: 38 Tin: CLOISTKR AND TIIK flKAHTIf. thf piivo« fell on onrh siiU" tht> Imw. Tilt- iiir itt till- siiiiH- tiiiii- tilled with till! tKii^iir-. of lUv liniin(i_v tliroiit." "No!" crinl Mmx'iin't. "I Imvp siived you : .Htiind luuk fnim tin- win- il«>« , iMjth ! Viiiir kmtV. ti;:-|Miiiitrf Um (,'irtllr, nntl liarti'd from the room. Thv tiou.ic wuH How surroumliHi with Imyiii^ ilo;;>* »ntl Khoutint; nirn. Thf (jlow-wonn ryw moved not. CIIAl'Tini IX. M vnu;,'h the house ; luiil the thn«e tit the window >hniiik tomther. Tlien the leopard feared for her supjuT. and ^'lidiil swiltly and stealthily away with it towards the wimmIs, and the very next moment horses and men and ilot;s eunie helter-skelter pa.st the window, and followed her full ery. Martin and his eompanions hn-athtil a;;ain : the U-ojmrd was swift, and would not tie eaiii;ht within a leajjiie of their house. 'Ihey ;;ras]»iil hands. Man^'aret seized this oniiortunity, and cried a little; Gerard kiH^ed the tears away. To tahle onee more, and Gerard drank to woman's wit : " "V is stron- jrer than man's fone." said he. " Ay," said Margaret, " when those she loves arc in danger ; not eNe." Ttvni;:ht (ierard stayiil with her loiiL'er than usual, and went home prouder than ever of her, and happy as a prince. Some little distance from home, under the shadow of some trees, he eneountercd two fipiiva : ihry ■! iiioit Imrri-d his way. It was hio father and niotlH-r. Out DO lute: what could U' ih« cause ' A cliill fell on him. He stop|H>d and hMjked a( them : they stiHMi prim and nilcnt. He main- mered out some words of in(|uirv. " Why n.sk ' " naiil hi* father ; "yon know why we ore here." " <) l that hA.4 Urn caught bv a rvd rheek and a |Miir of blue eyevt.'' " Nay, nay!" nut in Catherine; " it wo.". witihiToM, IVrer the Ma^p- cinn is well known for that." " Come, Sir I'ncsi," n-numed hb father, " you know vnu mu«t not meddle with wiimen (ttlk. Hut girc un your pn>mis4< to po no more to Seven U-rijen, and here oil end* : wc won't Ik- ImnI on vou for one fault." •■ I cannot promise that, father." " Not promise it, you younp hy[io> crite • " " Nay, father, niiM-all mc not : I locknl conrapv to tell yon what I knew would vex vou ; and rijfht prutefiil am I to tliat i;imj«| friend, whoi'vcr he 1m', that has let yr)u wot "r is a load off niy mind. Yi-s, fa- ther, I love Marpiin-t ; mul call me not a priest, for o priest I will never be. I will die Mioner." " That we shall sec, younp man. (^ome, painsay me no more ; you will leani what 't is to di^rcs|Hrt a father." (ierard held his jH-ace ; and the three walked home in ;:lhe ex- amination left him as incredulous as before. Then Peter told them his story, how the faithful scpiire got the knight out of a high tower at Brescia. The mana'uvre, like most things that are really scientific, was so sini])le, that now their wonder was they had taken for impossible what was not even dif- ficult. The letter never went to Rotterdam. They trusted to Peter's learning and their own dexterity. It was nine o'clock on a clear moonlight night ; Gerard, .senior, was still awa}' ; the rest of his little family had been for some time abed. A figure stood by the dwarfs bed. It was white, and the moonlight shone on it. With an unearthly noise, between a yell and a snarl, the gymnast rolled off his bed and under it by a single unbroken movement. A soft voice followed him in his retreat. " Why, Giles, are you afeard of me? " At this, Giles's head peeped cau- tiously up, and he saw it was only his sister Kate. She put her finger to her lips. " Hush ! lest the wicked Cornells or the wicked Syhrandt hear us." Giles's claws seized the side of the bed, and THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. 47 he rcturnc. to his place by one uudi- iidud gymnastic. Kate then revealed to Giles, that she had heard Cornelis and Sybrandt mention Gerard's name, and, being herself in great anxiety at his not coming home all day, had listened at tlieir door, and made a fearful dis- covery. Gerard was in prison, in the hiutntcd tower of the Stadthouse. He was there, it seemed, by their father's authority. But here must be some treachery ; for how could their father have ordered this cruel act ? he was at Rotterdam. She ended by entreat- ing Giles to bear her company to the foot of the haunted tower, to say a word of comfort to poor Gerard, and let him know their ftither was absent, and would be sure to release him on his return. " Dear Giles, I would go alone, but I am afeard of the spirits that men say do haunt the tower : l)ut with you I shall not be afeard." " Nor I with you," said Giles. " I don't believe there are any spirits in Tergon. I never saw one. This last was the likest one ever I saw ; and it was but you, Kate, after all." In less than half aifc hour Giles and Kate ojjened the house door cautioiis- ly and issued forth. She made him carry a lantern, though the night was bright. " The lantern gives me more courage against the evil spirits," said she. The first day of imprisonment is very trying, especially if to the horror of captivity is added the horror of ut- ter solitude. I observe that in our own day a great many persons com- mit suicide during the first twenty- four hours of the solitary cell. This is doubtless why our Jairi abstain so carefully from the impertinence of watching their little experiment upon the human soul at that particular stage of it. As the sun declined, Gerard's heart too sank and sank : with the waning light even the embers of liope went out. He was faint, too, with hunger ; for he was afraid to eat the fuod Ghys- brecht had brought him ; and liunger alone cows men. He sat upon the chest, his arms and his head drooping before him, a picture of despondency. Suddenly something struck the wall beyond him very sharply, and then rattled on the floor at his "feet. It was an arrow ; he saw the white feather. A chill ran through • him, — they meant then to assassinate him from the outside. He crouched. No more missiles came. He crawled on all fours, and took np the arrow : there was no head to it. He uttered a cry of hope : had a friendly hand shot it ? He took it up, and felt it all over : he felt a soft substance attached to it. Then one of his eccentricities was of grand use to him. His tinder-box en- abled him to strike a light : it showed him two things that made his heart bonnd with tlclight, none the less thrillin;;- for being somewhat vague. Attacli ^d to the arrow was a skein of silk, and on the arrow itself were words written. How his eyes devoured them, liis heart panting the while ! Wcll-hdoccd, make fust the silk to thji knife and lower to us : but hold thine end fast : then count an hundred and draw up. Gerard seized the oak chest, and with almost superhuman energy dragged it to the window : a moment ago he could not have moved it. Standing on the chest and looking down, he saw figures at the tower foot. They were so indistinct they looked like one huge form. He waved his Ijon- net to them with trembling hand : then he undid the silk rapidly but carefully, and made one end fast to his knife and lowered it till it ceased to draw. Then he counted a hun- dred. Then pulled the silk carefully up : it came up a little heavier. At last he came to a large knot, and by that knot a stout whipcord was at- tached to the silk. What could this mean ? While he was puzzling liiut- 48 THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. self, Margaret's voice came up to him, low but clear. " Draw up, Gerard, till you see liberty." At the word Gerard drew the whipcord line uj), and drew and drew till lie came to another knot, and found a cord of some thickness take the place of the whipcord. He had no sooner begun to draw this up than he found that he had now a heavyweight to deal with. Then the truth suddeidv flashed on him, and he went to work and jjulled and pulled till the perspiration rolled down him : the weight got heavier and heavier, and at last he was well- nigli exhausted ; looking down he saw in the moonlight a sight that revived him : it was as it were a great snake coming up to him out of the deep shadow cast by the tower. He gave a shout of jo}', aTul a score more wild pulls, aiul lo ! a stout new rojie touched ins hand : he liaided and hauled, and dragged the end into his ])rison, and instantly passed it through both handled of the chest in succession, and knotted it firmly ; then sat for a moment to recover his breath and col- lect his courage. The first thing was to make sure that the chest was sound, and capalilc of resisting his weight poised in mid-air. He jumped with all his force upon it. At the third jump the whole side burst open, and out scuttled the contents, a host of parchments. After the first start and misgiving this gave him, Gerard comprehended that the chest had not burst but opened : he had doubtless jumped upon some secret spring. Still it shook in some degree his confidence in the chest's powers of resistance ; so he gave it an ally : he took tlie iron bar and fastened it ■with the small rope across the large rope, and across the window. He now mounted the chest, and from the chest put his foot through the window, and sat half in and half out, with one hand on that part of the rope wliich was in- side. In the silent night he heard his OAvn heart beat. The free air breathed on liis face, I and gave him tlie courage to risk what we must all lose one day — for liberty. Many dangers awaited him, but the greatest was the first getting on to the ro])e outside. Gerard re- flected. Finally he put liimself in the attitude of a swimmer, his body to the waist being in the prison, his legs outside. Then holding the inside rope with both hands, he felt anx- iously with his feet for the outside rope, and, when he had got it, he worked it in between the palms of his feet, and kept it there tight : then he uttered a short prayer, and, all the calmer for it, ])ut his left liand on the sill and gradually wriggled out. Then he seized the iron bar, and for one fearful moment hung outside from it by his right hand, while his left hand felt for the rope down at his knees ; it was too tight against the wall for his fingers to get round it higher up. The moment he had fairly grasped it, he left the bar, and swiftly seized the rope with the right hand too ; but in this manoeuvre his bodv necessarily fell about a yard. A stifled cry came up from below. Gerard hung in mid-air. He clenched his teeth, and nipped the rope tight with his feet and gripped it with his hands, and went down slo^\■ly, liand below hand. He passed by one huge rough stone after another. He saw there was green moss on one. He looked up and he looked down. The moon shone into his prison window : it seemed very near. The fluttering figures below seemed an awful dis- tance. It made him dizzy to look down : so he fixed his eyes steadily on the wall close to him, and went slowly down, down, down. He passed a rusty, slimy streak on the wall : it was some ten feet long. The rope made his hands very hot. He stole another look up. The prison window was a good way oflT now. Down — down — dovm — down. The rope made his hands sore. He looked up. The window was so distant, he ventured now to turn THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. 49 his eyes downward again : and tliere, not more than thirty fijct below him, were Margaret and Martin, their i'aith- ful hands upstretclied to catcli him shoukl he fall. lie could see their eyes and their teeth shine in the moon- light. For their mouths were open, and they were breathing hard. " Take care, Gerard ! 0, take care ! Look not down." " Fear me not," cried Gerard, joy- fully, and eyed the wall, but came doivn faster. In another minute his feet were at their hands. They seized him ere he touched the ground, and all three clung together in one embrace. " Hush ! away in silence, dear one." They stole along the shadow of the wall. Now, ere they had gone man}' yards, suddenly a stream of light shot from an angle of the building, and lay across their path like a barrier of fire, and they heard whispers and foot- steps close at hand. " Back ! " hissed Martin. " Keep in the shade." They hurried back, passed the dangling rope, and made for a little square projecting tower. They had barely rounded it, when the light shot trembling past them, and flickered uncertainly into the distance. " A lantern ! " groaned Martin, iu a whisper. " They are after iis." " Give me my knife," whispered Gerard. " I '11 never be taken alive." "No, no!" murmured INIargarot : " is there no way out where we are 1 " "None, none. But I carry six lives at my shoulder" ; and, with the word, Martin strung his bow, and fitted an arrow to the string; "in war never wait to be struck ; I will kill one or two ere they shall know where their death comes from " ; then, motioning his companions to be quiet, ho began to draw his bow, and, ere the arrow was quite drawn to the head, he glided round the corner ready to loose the string the moment the enemy should offer a mark. Gerard and Margaret held their breath in horrible expectation ; they had never seen a human being killed. And now a wild hope, but half repressed, thrilled through Gerard, that this watchful enemy might be the burgomaster in person. The sol- dier, he knew, would send an arrow through a burgher or burgomaster, as he would through a boar in a wood. But who may foretell the future, however near ? The bow, instead of remaining firm, and loosing the dead- ly shaft, was seen to waver first, then sliake violently, and the stout soldier staggered back to them, his knees knocking and his cheeks blanched with fear. He let his arrow fall, and clutched Gerard's shoulder. "Let me feel flesh and blood," he gasped ; " the haunted tower ! the haunted tower ! " His terror communicated itself to Margaret and Gerard. They gasped, rather than uttered, an inquiry. " Hush ! " he cried, " it will hear you. Up the wall ! it is going tip the wall ! Its head is on fire. Up the wall, as mortal crcatixres walk upon greensward. If you know a prayer say it ! for hell is loose to-night." " I have power to exorcise spirits," said Gerard, trembling. "I wiU venture forth." " Go alone, then," said Martin ; "I have looked on 't once, and live." CHAPTER XL The strange glance of hatred the burgomaster had cast on Gerard, coupled with his imprisonment, had filled the young man with a persua- sion that Ghysbrecht was his enemy to the death ; and he glided round the angle of the tower, fully expect- ing to sec no supernatural appearance, but some cruel and treacherous con- trivance of a bad man to do him a mischief in that prison, his escape from which could hardly be kno\vn. 50 THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. As he stole forth, a soft but brave hand crept into liis, and Margaret was by his side to share this new peril. No sooner was the haunted tower visible, tlian a sight struik their eyes that benumbed them as they stood. More than half-way up the tower, a creature with a fiery head, like an enormous glow-worm, was steadily mounting the wall ; the body was dark, but its outline visible through the glare from the head, and the whole creature not much less than four feet long. At tiie foot of the tower stood a thing in white, that looked exactly like tiie figure of a female. Gerard and Margaret jialpitated with awe. " The rope, the rope ! It is going up the rope," gasped Gerard. As they ga/.ed, the glow-worm dis- appeared in (Jerard's late jjrison, but its light illuminated tlie cell in- side, and reddened the window. The white figure stood motionless be- low. Such as can retain their senses after the first prostrating effect of the supernatural are apt to experience terror in one of its strangest forms, — a wild desire to fling themselves upon the terrible object. It fascinates them as the snake the bird. The great tragedian Maeready used to render this finely in Macbeth, at Ban- quo's second appearance. He flung himself with averted head at the hor- rible shadow. This strange impulse now seized Margaret. She put down Gerard's hand quietly, and stood be- wildered ; tlien all in a moment, with a wild cry, darted towards the spectre. Gerard, not aware of the natural impulse I have spoken of, never doubted the Evil One was drawing her to her perdition. He fell on his knees. " Exorciso vos. In nomine beatas Maria?, exorciso vos." While the exorcist was shrieking his incantations in extremity of ter- ror, to his infinite relief he heard the spcf'trc utter a feeble cry of fear. To find that hell had also its little weak- nesses was encouraging. He re- doubled his exorcisms, and presently he saw the ghastly shaj)e kneeling at Margaret's knees, and heard it pray- ing piteously for mercy. Kate and Giles soon reached the haunted tower. Judge their surjiri.'^e wiien they found a new rope dangling from the prisoner's window to the ground. " I .see how it is," said the inferior intelligence, taking facts as they came. " Our Gerard has come down this rope. He has got clear. Up I go, and see." " No, Giles, no ! " said the superior intelligence, blinded by prejudice. " See you not this is glamour ? This rope is a line the Evil One casts out to wile thee to destruction. He knows the weaknesses of all our liearts ; he has seen how fond you are of going up things. Where should our Ge- rard procure a rope ? how fasten it in the sky like this ? It is not in nature, lloly saints protect us this night, for hell is abroad." "Stuff!" said the dwarf: "the way to hell is down, and this rope leads up. I never had the luck to go up such a long rope. It may be years ere I fall in with such a long rope all ready hung for me. As well be knocked on the head at once as never know happiness." And he sprung on to the rope with a cry of delight, as a cat jumps with a mew on to a table where fish is. All the gymnast was on fire ; and the only concession Kate could gain from him was permission to fasten the lantern on his neck first. " A light scares the ill-spirits," said she. And so with his huge arms, and his legs like feathers, Giles went u]) the rope faster than his brother came down it. The light at the najie of his neck made a glow-worm of him His sister watched his progress witJi trembling anxiety. Suddenly a fe- male figure started out of the solid THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. 51 masonry, and came flying at her with more than mortal velocity. Kate uttered a feeble cry. It was all she could, for her tongue clove to her palate with terror. Then she dropped her crutches, and sank upon liL'r knees, hiding her face and moan- ing : — " Take my body, but spare my soul ! " Margaret (panting) "Why, it is a woman." Kate (quivering). " Why, it is a woman." Margaret. " How you scared me ! " Kate. " I am scared enough my- self. Oh! oh! oh!" " This is strange. But the fiery- headed thing ? Yet it was with you, and you are harmless. But why are you here at this time of night ? " " Nay, why are you 1 " " Perhaps we arc on the same errand t Ah, you are his good sister, Kate." " And j'ou are Margaret Brandt." " Yea." " All the better. You love him : you are here. Then Giles was right. He has won free." Gerard came forward, and put the question at rest. But all further ex- planation was cut short by a horrible, unearthly noise, like a sepulchre ven- triloquizing. " Parchment ! — parcument ! — parchment ! " At each repetition it rose in inten- sity. They looked up, and there was the dwarf with his hands full of parchments, and his face lighted with fiendish joy, and lurid with diabolical fire. The light being at his neck, a more infernal " transparency " never startled mortal eye. With the word the awful imp hurled parchment at the astonished heads below. Down came records like wounded wild ducks, some collapsed, others flutter- ing, and others spread out and wheeling slowly down in airy circles. They had hardly settled, when again the sepulchral roar was heard, " Parchment .' — Parchment ! " and down pattered and sailed another flock of documents : another fol- lowed : they whitened* the grass. Finally, the firc-hcaded imp, with his light body and horny hands, slid down the rope like a falling star, and (business before sentiment) proposed to his rescued brother an immediato settlement for the merchandise he had just delivered. " Hu.sh ! " said Gerard ; "you speak too loud. Gather them vip and follow us to a safer place than this." " Will you not come home with me, Gerard ? " said little Kate. " I have no home." " You shall not say so. Who is more welcome than you will be, after this cruel wrong, to your father's house ■? " " Father ? I have no father," said Gerard, sternly. " He that was my father is turned my jailer. I have escaped from his hands ; I will never come Avithin their reach again." " An enemy did this, and not our father." And she told him what she had overheard Cornclis and Sybrandt say. But the injury was too recent to be soothed. Gei'ard showed a bitterness of indignation he had hitherto seemed incapable of. " Cornelis and Sybrandt arc two ill curs that have shown me their teeth and their heart a long while ; but they could do no more. My father it is that gave the burgomaster authority, or he durst not have laid a finger on me, that am a free burgher of this town. So be it, then. I was his son ; I am his prisoner. He has played his part : I shall play mine. Farewell the burgh where I was born and lived honestly, and was put in prison. While there is another town left in creation, I '11 never trouble you again, Tergou." " Gerard ! Gerard ! " Margaret whispered her, "Do. not gainsay him now. Give his choler time to cool ! " Kate turned quickly towards her. " Let me look at your face ! " The 52 THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. inspection was favorable, it seemed, for she whispered, " It is a comely face, and no mischief-maker's." " Fear me not," said Margaret, in the same tone. " I could not be hap- P3' without your love as well as Ge- rard's." " These are comfortable words," Eobbcd Kate. Then, looking up, she said, " I little thought to like you so well. My heart is willing, but my infirmity ' will not let me embrace you." At this hint, Margaret wound gen- tly round Gerard's sister, and kissed her lovingly. " Often he has spoken of you to me, Kate, and often I longed for this." " You, too, Gerard," said Kate, " kiss me ere you go, for my heart lies heavy at parting with you this night." Gerard kissed her, and she went on her crutches home. The last thing they heard of her was a little patient sigh. Then the tears came and stood thick in Margaret's eyes ; but Gerard was a man, and noticed not liis sister's sigh. As they turned to go to Scvenber- gen the dwarf nudged Gerard with his bundle of parchments, and held out a concave claw. Margaret dissuaded Gerard. "Why take what is not ours ? " " 0, spoil an enemy how you can." " But may they not make this a handle for fresh violence ? " " How can they ? Think you I shall stay in Tergou after this '( The burgomaster robbed me of my liberty ; I doubt I should take his life for it if I could." " O fie, Gerard ! " " What ■? Is life worth more than liberty "? Well, I can't take his life, so I take the first thing that comes to hand." He gave Giles a few small coins, with which the urchin was gladdened, and shuffled after, his sister. Marga- ret and Gerard were speedily joined by Martin, and away to Sevenber- gen. CHAPTER XII GHTsnREciiT Van Swieten kept the key of Gerard's jjrison in his pouch. He waited till ten of the clock ere he visited him ; for he said to himself, " A little hunger sometimes does well ; it breaks 'em." At ten he crept up the stairs with a loaf and pitcher, fol- lowed by his trusty sen'ant, well armed. Ghysbrecht listened at the door. There was no sound inside. A grim smile stole over his features. " By this time he will be as down- hearted as Albert Koestein was," thought he. He opened the door. No Gerard. Ghysbrecht stood stupefied. Although his face was not visible, his body seemed to lose all motion in so peculiar a way, and then, after a little, he fell a trembling so, that the servant behind him saw there was something amiss, and crept close to him and peeped over his shoulder. At sight of the empty cell and the rope and iron bar, he uttered a loud exclamation of wonder : but his sur- prise doubled when his master, disre- garding all else, suddenly fiung him- self on his knees before the empty chest, and felt wildly all over it with quivering hands, as if unwilling to trust his eyes in a matter so impor- tant. The scrs-ant gazed at him in utter bewilderment. " Why, master, what is the mat- ter ? " Ghysbrecht's pale lips worked as if he was going to answer ; but they uttered no sound : liis hands fell by his side, and he stared into the chest. " Wliy, master, what avails glaring into that empty box ? The lad is not there. See here ! Note the cunning of the young rogue ; he hath taken out the bar, and — " "GONE! GONT:! GONE!" " Gone ? What is gone ? Holy saints ! he is planet-struck." " STOP THIEF ! " shrieked Ghys- brecht, and suddenly turned on his THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. 53 servant and collared hiin, and shook him with rage. " D' ye stand there, k:j:ive, and see your master robbed '? Kiai ! fly ! A hundred crowns to him that finds it me again. No, no ! 't is in vain. O fool, fool ! to leave that in the same room with him. But none ever found tlic secret spring be- for^i. None ever would but he. It was to be. It is to be. Lost ! Lost ! " and his years and infirmity now gained the better of his short-lived frenzy, and he sank on the chest, mut- tering, " Lost ! lost ! " " What is lost, master ? " asked the servant, kindly. " House and lauds and good name," a;roaned Ghysbrecht, and wrung his hands feebly. " WHAT ? '"' cried the servant. The emphatic word, and the tone of eager curiosity, struck on Ghys- brecht's ear, and revived his natural cunning. " I have lost the town records," stammered he, and he looked askant at the man, like a fox caught near a hen-roost. " O, is that all ? " " Is 't not enough 1 What will the burghers say to me "? What will tlie burgh do ? " Then he suddenly burst out again, " A hundred crowns to him who shall recover them ; all, mind, all that were in this box. If one be missing, I give nothing." " 'T is a bargain, master : the hundred crOwns are in my pouch. See you not that where Gerard Elias- soen is, there are the pieces of sheep- skin you rate so high ? " " That is true ; that is true ; good Dierich ; good, feithful Dierich. All, mind, all that were in the chest." " Master, I will take the constables to Gerard's house, and seize liim for the theft." "The theft? ay! good; very good. It is theft. I forgot that. So, as he is a thief now, we will put him in the dungeons below ; where the toads are and the rats. Dierich, that man must never see daylight again. 'T is his own fault; he must be prying. Quick, quick ! ere he has time to talk, you know, time to talk." In less than half an hour Dierich Brower and four constables entered the liosier's house, and demanded young Gerard of the panic-stricken Catherine. " Alas ! what has he done now? " cried she : " that boy will break my heart." " Nay, dame, but a trick of youth," said Dierich. " He hath but made oif with certain skins of parchment, in a frolic, doubtless ; but the burgo- master is answerable to the burgh for their safe-keeping, so he is in care about them : as for the youth, he will doubtless be quit for a reprimand." This smooth speech completely im- posed on Catherine ; but her daugli- ter was more suspicious, and that suspicion was strengthened by the disproportionate anger and disappoint- ment Dierich showed the moment he learned Gerard was not at home, had not been at home that night. " Come away, then," said he, roughly. " We are wasting time." He added, vehemently, " I '11 find him if he is above ground." Afi'ection sharpens the wits, and often it has made an innocent person more than a match for the wily. As Dierich was going out, Kate made liim a signal she would speak with him privately. He bade his men go on, and waited outside the door. She joined him. " Hush ! " said she, " my mother knows not. Gerard has left Tergou." " How ? " " I saw him last night." " Ay ? Wlicre ? " cried Dierich, eagerly. "At the foot of the harjitcd tower." " How did he get the rope ? " "I know not; but this I know; my brother Gerard bade me there farewell, and he is many leagues from Tergou ere this. The town, you know, was always unworthy of him, and, when it imprisoned him, he vowed never to set foot in it again 54 THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. Let the burgomaster be content, then. He has imprisoned him, and he has driven him from his hirthphice and from liis native land. What need now to rob him and us of our good name ? " This might at another moment have struck Dierieli as good sense ; but he was too mortified at this escape of Gerard and the loss of a hundred crowns. " What need had he to steal ? " retorted he, bitterly. " Gerard stole not the trash ; he but took it to sj)ite the burgomaster, who stole his liberty : but he shall answer . to the duke for it, he shall. As for these skins of parchment you keep such a coil about, look in the nearest brook, or sty, and 't is odds but you find them." " Think ye so, mistress ? — think ye so ? " And Dierich's eyes flashed. " Mayhap you know 't is so." " This I know, that Gerard is too good to steal, and too wise to load himself with rubbish, going a jour- ney." " Give you good day, then," said Dierich, sharply. " The sheepskin you scorn, I value it more than the skin of any he in Tergou." And he went oft' hastily on a false scent. Kate returned into the house and drew Giles aside. " Giles, my heart misgives me ; breathe not to a soul what I say to you. I have told Dirk Brower that Gerard is out of Holland : but much I doubt he is not a league from Tergou." " Why, where is he, then 1 " " Where should he be, but with her he loves ? But, if so, he must not loiter. These be deep and dark and ^vicked men that seek him. Giles, I see that in Dirk Brower's eye makes me tremble. 0, why can- not I fly to Sevenbergen, and bid him away 1 Why am I not lusty and active like other girls ? God forgive me for fretting at his will : but I never felt till now what it is to be lame and weak and useless. But you are strong, dear Giles," added she, coaxingly, " you are very strong." " Yes, I am strong," thundered Pcrpusillus ; then, catching sight of her meaning, " but I hate to go on foot," he added, sulkily. " Alas ! alas .' who will help me if you will not ? Dear Giles, do you not love Gerard ? " " Yes, I like him best of the lot. I '11 go to Sevenbergen on Peter Buy, skens his mule. Ask you him, for he won't lend her me." Kate remonstrated. The whole town would follow him. It woidd be known whither he was gone, and Gerard be in worse danger than be- fore. Giles parried this by promising to ride out of the town the opposite way, and not turn the mule's head towards Sevenbergen till he had got rid of the curious. Kate then assented, and borrowed the mule. She charged Giles with a short bixt meaning message, and made him repeat it after her, over and over, till he could say it word for word. Giles started on the mule, and little Kate retired, and did the last thing now in her power for her beloved brother, — prayed on her knees long and earnestly for his safety. CHAPTER XIII. Gerard and Margaret went gayly to Sevenbergen, in the first flush of recovered liberty and successful ad- venture. But these soon yielded to sadder thoughts. Gerard was an escaped prisoner, and liable to be re- taken, and perhaps punished ; and, therefore, he and Margaret would have to part for a time. Moreover, he had conceived a hatred to his na- tive place. Margaret wished him to leave the country for a while, but at the thought of bis going to Italy her THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. 55 heart fainted, (lerard, on the con- trary, was reconciled to leaving Mar- garet only by his desire to visit Ital}', and his strong conviction that there he should earn money and reputation, and remove every obstacle to their marriage. He had already told her all that the demoiselle Van Eyck had said to him. He repeated it, and re- minded Margaret that the gold pieces were only given him to go to Italy with. The journey was clearly for Gerard's interest. He was a crafts- man and an artist, lost in this boorish place. In Italy they would know how to value him. On tliis ground, above all, the unselfish girl gave her consent : but many tender tears came with it, and at that Gerard, young and loWng as herself, cried bitterly with her, and often they asked one another what they had done that so many different persons should be their ene- mies, and combine, as it seemed, to part them. They sat hand in hand till mid- night, now deploring their hard fate, now drawing bright and hopeful pic- tures of the future, in the midst of which Margaret's tears would sud- denly flow, and then poor Gerard's eloquence would die away in a sigh. The morning found them resigned to part, but neither had the courage to say when ; and much I doubt whether the hour of parting ever would have struck. But about three in the afternoon, Giles, who had made a circuit of many miles to avoid suspicion, rode up to the door. They both ran out to him, eager with curiosity. " Brother Gerard," cried he, in his tremendous tones, " Kate bids you run for your life. They charge you with theft ; you have given them a handle. Think not to explain. Hope not for justice in Tergou. The parch- ments you took they are but a blind. iSlie hath seen your death in the men's eyes : a price is on your head. Fly 1 For Margaret's sake and all who love you, loiter not lile away, but flv!" 3* It was a thunder-clap, and left two white faces looking at one another, and at the terrible messenger. Then Giles, who had hitherto but uttered by rote what Catherine bade him, put in a word of his own. " All the constables were at our house after you, and so was Dirk Brower. Kate is wise, Gerard. Best give ear to her rede, and fly." " O yes ! Gerard," cried Mar- garet, wildly. " Fly on the instant. Ah ! those parchments ; my mind misgave me : why did I let you take them ? " "Margaret, they are but a blind! Giles says so : no matter, the old caitifl^ shall never see them again : I ■will not go till I have hidden his treasure where he shall never find it." Gerard then, after thanking Giles warmly, bade him farewell, and told him to go back and tell Kate he was gone. "For I shall be gone, ere you reach home," said he. He then shouted for Martin ; and told him what had happened, and begged him to go a little way towards Tergou, and watch the road. " Ay ! " said Martin, " and if I see Dirk Brower, or any of his men, I will shoot an arrow into the oak-tree that is in our garden ; and on that you must run into the forest hard by, and meet me at the weird hunter's spring. Then I will guide you through the wood." Surprise thus provided against, Gerard breathed again. He went with Margaret, and, while she watched the oak - tree tremblingly, fearing every moment to see an arrow strike among the branches, Gerard dug a deep hole to bury the parchments in. He threw them in, one by one. They were nearly all charters and records of the burgh : but one ap- peared to be a private deed between Floris Brandt, father of Peter, and Ghysbrecht. " Why this is as much yours as his," said Gerard. " I will read this." " O, not now, Gerard, not now," 56 THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. cried Margaret ; "every moment you lose fills nic with fear ; and see, large drops of rain are beginning to fall, and the clouds lower." Gerard listened to this remon- strance ; but lie put the deed into his bosom, and threw the earth in over the others, and stamped it down. While thus employed, there came a flash of lightning followed by a peal of distant thunder, and the rain came down heavily. Margaret and Gerard ran into the house, whither they were speedily followed by Martin. " The road is clear," said he, "and a heavy storm coming on." His words proved true. The thun- der came nearer and nearer till it crashed overhead : the flashes fol- lowed one another close, like the strokes of a whip, and the rain fell in torrents. Margaret hid her face not to see the lightning. On this, Gerard put up the rough shutter, and lighted a candle. The lovers consulted to- gether, and Gerard blessed the storm that gave him a few hours more with Margaret. The sun set unperceivcd, and still the thunder pealed .and the lightning flashed, and the rain poured. Supper was set ; but Gerard and Margaret could not eat : tlie thought that this was the last time they should sup together choked them. The storm lulled a little. Peter retired to rest. But Gerard was to go at peep of day, and neither he nor Margaret could afford to lose an hour in sleep. Martin sat awhile, too : for he was fitting a new string to his bow, a matter in which he was very nice. The lovers murmured their sorrows and their love beside him. Suddenly the old man held up his hand to them to be silent. They were quiet, and listened, and heard nothing. But the next mo- ment a footstep crackled faintly upon the autumn leaves that lay strewn in the garden at the back door of the liousc. To those who had nothing to fear such a step would have said noth- ing : but to those who had enemies it was terrible. For it was a foot try. ing to be noiseless. Martin fitted an an-ow to his string, and hastily blew out the candle. At this moment, to their horror, they heard more than one footstep ap- proach the other door of the cottage, not quite so noiseless as the other, but very stealthily, — and then a dead pause. Their blood froze in their veins. " U Kate ! O Kate ! You said fly on the instant." And Margaret moaned and wrung her hands in an- giiish and terror, and wild remorse for having kept Gerard. " Hush, girl ! " said Martin, in a stern whisper. A heavy knock fell on the door. And on the hearts within. CHAPTER XIV. As if this had been a concerted sig- nal, the back door was struck as rudely the next instant. They were hemmed in. But at these alarming sounds Margaret seemed to recover some share of self-possession. She whis- pered : " Say he teas here, but is gone." And with this she seized Gerard, and almost dragged him up the rude steps that led to her father's sleeping-room. Her own lay next beyond it. The blows on the door Averc repeat- ed. ■" Who knocks at this hour t " " Open, and you will see ! " " I open not to thieves, — honest men are all abed now." " Open to the law, Martin Witten- haagen, or you shall rue it." " Why, that is Dirk Brower's voice, I trow. What makes vou so far from Tergou ? " " Open and you will know." Martin drew the bolt very slowly, and in rushed Dierich and four more. They let in their companion who was at the back door. IHE CLOISTER AND THE HEAKTH. 57 "Kow, Martin, where is Gerard Eliassoen 1 " " Gerard Eliassoen 1 Wliy, he was here bat now." " Was here ? " Dierich's counte- nance fell. "And where is he now 1 " " They say he has pone to Italy. Why ? Wliat is to do ? " "No matter. When did he go? Tell me not that he went in such a storm as this ! " " Here is a coil about Gerard Elias- soen," said Martin, contemptuously. Then he lighted the candle, and, seat- ing himself coolly by the fire, proceed- ed to whip some fine silk round his bowstring at the place where the nick of the arrow frets it. " I '11 tell you," said he, carelessly. " Know you his brother Giles, — a little misbegotten imp, all head and arms ? Well, he came tearing over here on a mule, and bawled out something. I was too for off to hear the creature's words, but only its noise. Any way, he started Gerard ; for, as soon as he was gone, there was such crying and kissing, and then Gerard went away. They do tell me he has gone to Italy, — mayhap you know where that is ; for I don't." Dierich's countenance fell lower and lower at this account. There was no flaw in it. A cunninger man than Martin would, perhaps, have told a lie too many, and raised suspi- cion. But Martin did his task well. He only told the one falsehood he was bade to tell, and of his own head in- vented nothing. " Mates," said Dierich, " I doubt he speaks sooth. I told the burgo- master how 't would be. He met the dwarf galloping Peter Buyskens's mule from Sevenbergen. ' They have sent that imp to Gerard,' says he ; ' so then Gerard is at Sevenbergen.' ' All, master ! ' says I, ' 't is too late now. We should have thought of Sev- enbergen l)efore, instead of wasting our time hunting all the odd corners of Tergou for those cursed parchments that we shall never find till we find the man that took 'em. If he was at Sevenbergen,' quoth I, 'and they sent the dwarf to him, it must have been to warn liiin we were after him. He is leagues away by now,' quoth I. Confound that chalk-faced girl ! she has outwitted us bearded men ; and so I told the burgomaster, but he would not hear reason. A wet jerkin apiece, that is all we shall get, mates, by this job." Martin grinned coolly iu Dierich's face. "However," added the latter, "to content the burgomaster, we will search the house." Martin turned grave directly. This change of countenance did not escape Dierich. He reflected a mo- ment. "Watch outside, two of yon, one on each side of the house, that no one jump from the upper windows. The rest come with me." And he took the candle and mounted the stairs, followed by three of his comrades. Martin was left alone. The stout soldier hung his head. All had gone so well at first : and now this fatal turn ! Suddenly it occurred to him that all was not yet lost. Ge- rard must be either in Peter's room or Margaret's ; they were not so very high from the ground. Gerard would leap out. Dierich had left a man be- low; but what then? For half a minute Gerard and he would be two to one, and in that brief space what might not be done ? Martin then held the back door ajar and watched. The light shone in Peter's room. "Curse the fool!" said he, "is he going to let them take him like a girl ?" The light now passed into Marga- ret's bedroom. Still no window was opened. Had Gerard intended to es- cape that way he would not have waited till the "men were in the room. Martin saw that at once, and left the door, and came to the foot-stair and listened. He began to think Gerard must have escaped by the window while all the men were in the house. 58 THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. The longer the silence continued, the stronger grew this conviction. But it was suddenly and nidely dissipated. I'aint cries issued from the inner bedroom, — Margaret's. " They have taken him," groaned Martin ; " they have got him." It now flashed across Martin's mind that if they took Gerard away his life was not worth a button, and that if evil befell him Margaret's heart would break. He cast his eyes wildly round, like some savage beast seeking an es- cape, and in a twinkling formed a resolution terribly characteristic of those iron times and of a soldier driv- en to bay. He stepped to each door in turn, and, imitating Dirk Browcr's voice, said sharply, " AVatch the win- dow ! " He then quietly closed and bolted both doors. He then took up his bow and six arrows ; one he fitted to his string, the others he put into his quiver. His knife he placed upon a chair behind him, the hilt towards him ; and there he waited at the foot of the stair with the calm determina- tion to slay those four men, or be slain by them. Two, he knew, he could dispose of by his arrows ere they could get near him, and Gerard and he must take their chance, hand to hand, with the remaining pair. Besides, he had seen men panic-strick- en by a sudden attack of this sort. Should Brower and his men hesitate but an instant before closing with him, he should shoot three instead of two, and then the odds would be on the right side. He had not long to wait. The heavy steps sounded in Margaret's room, and came nearer and nearer. The light also approached, and voices. Martin's heart, stout as it was, beat hard to hear men coming thus to their death, and perhaps to his ; more likely so than not : for four is long odds in a battle-field of ten feet square, and Gerard might be bound, perhaps, and powerless to help. But this man, whom we have seen shake in his shoes at a Giles-o'-lantem, never wavered in this awful moment of real danger, l)ut stood there, his body all braced for combat, and his eye glowing, e(iually ready to take life and lose it. Desperate game ! to win which was exile instant and for life, and to lose it was to die that moment upon that fioor he stood on. Dicrich Brower and his men found Peter in his first sleep. They opened his cu})boards ; they ran their knives into an alligator he had nailed to his wall ; they looked under his bed : it was a large room, and apparently full of hiding-places, but they found no Gerard. Then they went on to Margaret's room, and the very sight of it was discouraging, — it was small and bare, and not a cupboard in it ; there was, however, a large fireplace and chim- ney. Dierich's eye fell on these direct- ly.' Here they found the beauty of Scvenbergen sleeping on an old chest, not a foot high, and no attempt made to cover it ; laut the sheets were snowy white, and so was Margaret's own lin- en. And there she lay, looking like a lily fallen in a rut. Presently she awoke, and sat up in the bed like one amazed ; then, see- ing the men, began to scream faintly, and pray for mercy. She made Dierich Brower ashamed of his errand. " Here is a to-do," said he, a little confused. " We are not going to hurt you, my pretty maid. Lie you still, and shut your eyes, and think of your wedding night, while I look up this chimney to see if Master Gerard is there." " Gerard ! in my room 1 " "Why not? They say that you and he — " " Cruel ; you know they have driven him away from me, — driven him from his native place. This is a blind. You are thieves ; you arc wicked men ; you are not men of Seven- bergen, or you would know Margaret Brandt better than to look for her THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. ^9 lover in this room of all others in the world. O, hnive ! Four great hulk- ing men to come, anncd to the teeth, to insult one poor honest girl ! The women that live in yonr own houses must be naught, or }'ou would respect them too much to insult a girl of good character." " There, come away, before we hear worse," said Dierich, hastily. " He is not in the chimney. Plaster will mend what a cudgel breaks ; but a woman's tongue is a double-edged dagger, and a girl is a woman, with her mother's milk still in her." And he beat a hasty retreat. " I told the burgomaster how t' would be." CHAPTER XV. Where is the woman that cannot act a part ? Where is she who will not do it, and do it well, to save the man she loves 1 Nature on these great occasions comes to the aid of the simplest of the sex, and teaches her to throw dust in Solomon's eyes. The men had no sooner retired, than Margaret stepped out of bed, and opened the long chest on which she had been lying down in her skirt and petticoat and stockings, and night- dress over all ; and put the lid, bed- clothes and all, against the wall : then glided to the door and listened. The footsteps died away through her fa- ther's room, and down the stairs. Now in that chest there was a pccii- liarity that it was almost impossible for a stranger to detect. A part of the boarding of the room had been broken, and Gerard, being applied to to make it look neater, and being short of materials, had ingeniously sawed away a space sufficient just to admit Margaret's soi-disant bed, and with the materials thus acquired he had repaired the whole room. As for the bed or chest, it really rested on the rafters a foot below the boards. Con- sequently it was full two feet deep, though it looked scarce one. All was quiet. Margaret kneeled and gave thanks to Heaven. Then she glided from the door, and leaned over the cliest, and whispered tender- ly, "Gerard!" Gerard did not reply. She then whispered, a litth; louder, " Gerard, all is safe, thank Heaven ! You may rise ; but, O, be cau- tious! " Gerard made no reply. She laid her hand upon his shoulder, — " Gerard ! " No reply. " Oh ! what is this ? " she cried, and her hands ran wildly over his face and his bosom. She took him by the shoulders ; she shook him ; she lifted him ; but lie escaped from her trembling hands, and fell back, not like a man, but like a body. A great dread fell on her. The lid had been down. She had lain upon it. The men had been some time in the room. With all the strength of frenzy she tore him out of the chest. She bore him in her arms to the window. She dashed the window open. The sweet air came in. She laid him in it and in the moonlight. His face was the color of ashes, his body was all limp and motionless. She felt his heart. Horror ! it was as still as the rest ! Horror of horrors ! she had stifled him with her own body. The mind cannot all at once believe so great and sudden and strange a calamity. Gerard, who had got alive into that chest scarce five minutes ago, how could he be dead 1 She called him by all the endearing names that heart could think or tongue could frame. She kissed him, and fondled him, and coaxed him, and implored him to speak to her. No answer to words of love, such as she had never uttered to him be- fore, nor thought she could utter. Then the poor creature, trembling all over, began to say over that ashy face little foolish things that were at once terrible and pitiable. " Gerard ! I am very sorry you 60 THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. are dead. I am very sorry I have killed you. Forgive me for not let- ting the men take you ; it would have been better than this. Gerard ! I am very, very sorry for what I have done." Then she began suddenly to rave. " No ! no ! such things can't be, or there is no God. Jt is mon- strous. How can my Gerard be dead 1 How can I have killed my Gerard ? I love him. O God ! you know how I love him. He does not. I never told liim. If he knew my heart, he would speak to me, he would not be so deaf to his ])oor Margaret. It is all a trick to make me cry out and betray him : but no, I love him too well for that. I '11 choke first." And she seized her own throat, to check her wild desire to scream in her terror and anguish. " If he would but say one word. O Gerard ! don't die without a word. Have mercy on me and scold me ! but sj)eak to me : if you are angry with mc, scold me ! curse me ! 1 deserve it : the idiot that killed the man she loved better than herself Ah ! I am a murderess. The worst in all the world. Help, help ! I have murdered liim. Ah ! ah ! ah ! ah ! ah ! " She tore her hair, and uttered shriek after sliriek so Avild, so piercing, they fell like a knell upon the ears of Die- rich Brower and his men. All started to their feet, and looked at one another. CHAPTER XVI. Martin Wittexhaagen, standing at the foot of the stairs with his arrow drawn nearly to the head, and his knife behind him, was struck with amazement to see the men come back without Gerard : he lowered his bow, and looked open-mouthed at them. They, for their part, were equally puzzled at the attitude they had caught him in. " Why, mates, was the old fellow making ready to shoot at lis ? " " Stuff!" said Martin, recovering his stolid composure, " I was but try- ing my new string. There, I '11 un- string my bow, if you think that." " Humph! " said Dierich, suspicious- ly, " there is something more in you than I understand : put a log on, and let us dry our hides a bit, ere we go." A blazing fire was soon made, and the men gathered round it, and their clothes anil long hair were soon smok- ing from the cheerful blaze. Then it was that the shrieks were heard in Margaret's room. They all started up, and one of them seized the candle, and ran up the steps that led to the bedrooms. Martin rose hastily too, and, being confused by these sudden screams, and apprehending danger from the man's curiosity, tried to prevent him from going there. At this Dierich threw his arms round him from behind, and called on the others to keej) him. The man that hud the candle got clear away, and all the rest fell ujion Mar- tin, and after a long and fierce strug- gle, in the course of whicli they were more than once all rolling on the floor, with Martin in the middle, they suc- ceeded in mastering the ohl Samson, and binding him hand and foot with a rope they had brought for (ierard. Martin groaned aloud. He saw the man had made his way to Margaret's room during the struggle, and lierc was he powerless. "Ay, grind your teeth, you old rogue," said Dierich, panting with the struggle. " You sha' n't use them." " It is my belief, mates, that our lives were scarce safe while this old fellow's bones were free." " He makes me think this Gerard is not far off," put in another. " No such luck," replied Dierich. " Hallo, mates. Jorian Ketel is a long time in that girl's bedroom. Best go and see after him, some of us." The rude laugh caused by this r;- mark had hardly subsided, when has- ty footsteps were heard running along overhead. " 0, here he comes at last. Well, Jorian, what is to do now up there 1 " THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. 61 CHAPTER XVII. JoEiAX Ketel went straight to Margaret's room, and there, to his in- finite surprise, he found tlie man he had been in search of, pale and mo- tionless, his head in jMargaret's lap, and she kneeling over him, mute now, and stricken to stone. Her eyes were dilated yet glazed, and she neither saw the light nor heard the man, nor cared for anything on earth but the white face in her lap. Jorian stood awe-struck, the candle shaking in his hand. " Why, where was he, then, all the time?"' Margaret heeded him not. Jorian went to the empty chest and inspected it. He began to comprehend. The girl's dumb and frozen despair moved him. "This is a sorry sight," said he; "it is a black night's work: all for a few skins ! Better have gone with us than so. She is past answering me, poor wench. Stop — let us try whether — " He took down a little round mirror, no bigger than his hand, and put it to Gerard's mouth and nostrils, and held it there. When he withdrew it, it was dull. "There is life in him!" said Jorian Ketel to himself. Margaret caught the words instant- ly, though only muttered, and it was as if a statue should start into life and passion. She rose and flung her arms round Jorian's neck. " O bless the tongue that tells me so !" and she clasped the great rough fellow again and again, eagerly, al- most fiercely. "There, there! let us lay him wann," said Jorian ; and in a moment he raised Gerard and laid him on the bedclothes. Then he took out a flask he carried, and filled his hand twice with Schiedamze, and flung it sharply each time in Gerard's face. The pun- gent liquor co-operated witli his re- covery, — he gave a faint sigh. O, never was sound so joyful to human ear ! She flew towards him, but then stopped, quivering for fear she should hurt him. She had lost all confidence in herself. " That is right, — let him alone," said Jorian, " don't go cuddling him as you did me, or you '11 drive his breath back again. Let him alone; he is sure to come to. 'T is n't like as if he was an old man." Gerard sighed deeply, and a faint streak of color stole to his lips. Jorian made for the door. He had hardly reached it, when he found his legs seized from behind. It was Margaret ! She curled round his knees like a serpent, and kissed his hand, and fawned on him. " You won't tell ? You have saved his life ; you have not the heart to thrust him back into his grave, — to undo your own good work ?" "No, no! It is not the first time I 've done you two a good turn ; 't was I told you in the church whither we had to take him. Besides, what is Dirk Brower to me ? I '11 see him hanged ere I '11 tell him. But I wish you'd tell 7ne where the parchments are? There are a hundred crowns offered for them. That would be a good windfall for my Joan and the children, you know." "Ah! they shall have those hun- dred crowns." " What ! are the things in the house ?" asked Jorian, eagerly. "No ; but I know where they are : and, by God and St. Bnvon, I swear you shall have them to - morrow. Come to me for them when you will, but come alone." "I were mad, else. What! share the hundred crowns with Dirk Brow- er ? And now may my bones rot in my skin if I let a soul know the poor boy is here." He then ran off, lest by staying longer he should excite suspicion, and have them all after him. And Mar- garet knelt, quivering from head to foot, and prayed beside Gerard, and for Gerard. "What is to do?" replied Jorian G2 THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. to Dierich Brower's query ; " why, we have scared the ;^irl out of her wits. She was in a kind of fit." " We had better all go and doctor her, then." " O yes ! and frijjhten her into the churchyard. Her father is a doctor, and I have roused liim, and set him to bring her round. Let us sec the fire, will ye 1 " His off-hand way disarmed all sus- picion ; and soon after the party agreed that the kitchen of the Tliree Kings was much warmer than Peter's house, and they departed, having first untied Martin. " Take note, mate, that I was right, and the burgomaster wrong," said Diericli Browcr, at the door : " I said we should be too late to catch liim, and we were too late." Thus Gerard, in one terrible niglit, grazed the prison and the grave. And how did he get clear at last 1 Not by his cunningly contrived hid- ing-place, nor by Margaret's ready wit ; but by a good impulse in one of his captors, — by the bit of humanity left in a somewhat reckless fellow s lieart, aided !)y his desire of gain. So mixed and seemingly incongruous are human motives, so short-sighted our shrewdest counsels. They whose moderate natures, or gentle fates, keep them, in life's ])as- sage, from the fierce extremes of joy and anguish our nature is capable of, are perhaps the best, and certainly the happiest, of mankind. But to such readers I should try in vain to con- vey what bliss unspeakable settled now upon these persecuted lovers. Even to those who have joyed great- ly, and greatly suffered, my feeble art can present but a pale reflec- tion of Margaret's and Gerard's ecs- tasy. To sit and see a beloved face come back from the grave to the world, to health and beauty, by swift grada- tions ; to see the roses return to the loved cheek, love's glance to the loved eye, and his words to the loved month; tiiis was Margaret's, — a joy to bal- ance years of sorrow. It was Ge- rard's to awake from a trance, and find his head ])illowcd on Margaret's arm ; to hear the woman he adored murmur new words of elo(juent love, and shower tears and tender kisses and caresses on him. He never knew, till this sweet moment, how ardently, how tenderly, she loved him. lie thanked his enemies. They wreathed their arms sweetly round each other, and trouble and danger seemed a world, an age behind them. They called each other husband and wife. Were they not solemnly l)etrothed? And had they not stood before the al- tar together '? Was not the blessing of Holy Church upon their union 1 — her curse on all who would part them 1 But, as no woman's nerves can bear with impunity so terrible a strain, presently Margaret turned faint, and sank on Gerard's shoulder, smiling feebly, but (piite, (|uite unstrung. Then Gerard was anxious, and would seek assistance. But she held him with a gentle grasp, and implored him not to leave her for a moment. " While I can lay my hand on you, I feel you are safe, not else. Foolish Gerard ! nothing ails me. I am weak, dcan-st, but hapj)y ; O, so haj)j)y ! " Then it was Gerard's turn to sup- port that dear head, with its great waves of hair flowing loose over him, and nurse her, and soothe her quiver- ing on his bosom, with soft encourag- ing words and murmurs of love, and gentle caresses. Sweetest of all her charms is a woman's weakness to a manly heart. Poor things ! they were happy. To-moiTow they must part. But that was nothing to them now. They had seen Death, and all other troubles seemed light as air. While there is life there is hope : while there is hope there is joy. Separation for a year or two, what was it to them who were so young, and had caught a glimpse of the grave ? The future THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. 63 was bright, the present was heaven : 80 passed the blissfal hours. Alas ! their innocence ran other risks besides the prison and the grave ; they were in most danger from their own hearts and their inexperience, now that visible danger there was none. CHAPTER XVm. Ghysbrecht van Swieten could not sleep all night for anxiety. He was afraid of thunder and lightning ; or he would have made one of the party that searched Peter's house. As soon as the storm ceased altogether, he crept down stairs, saddled his mule, and rode to the Three Kings at Sevenbergen. There he found his men sleeping, some on the chairs, some on the tables, some on the floor. He roused them furiously, and heard the story of their unsuccessful search, interlarded with praises of their zeal. " Fool ! to let you go without me," cried the burgomaster. " My life on 't he was there all the time. Looked ye under the girl's bed ? " " No : there was no room for a man there." " How know ye that, if ye looked not f " snarled Ghysbrecht. " Ye should have looked under her bed and in it, too ; and sounded all the panels with your knives. Come, now, get up, and I shall show ye how to search." Dierich Brower got up, and shook himself: " If you find him, call me a horse and no man." In a few minutes Peter's house was again surrounded. The fiery old man left his mule in the hands of Jorian Ketel, and, with Dierich Brower and the others, en- tered the house. The house was empty. Not a creature to be seen, not even Peter. They went up stairs, and then suddenly one of the men gave a shout and pointed through Peter's window, which was open. The others looked, and there, at some little dis- tance, walking quietly across the fields with Margaret and Martin, was the man they sought. Ghysbrecht, with an exulting yell, descended the stairs, and flung himself on his mule ; and he and his men set off in hot pursuit. CHAPTER XIX. Gerard, warned by recent peril, rose before daybreak, and waked Martin. The old soldier was aston- ished. He thought Gerard had escaped by the window last night. Being consulted as to the best way for him to leave the country and elude pursuit, he said there was but one road safe. " I must guide you through the great forest to a bridle- road I know of This will take you speedily to a hostelry, where they will lend you a swift horse ; and then a day's gallop will take you out of Holland. But let us start ere the folk here quit their beds." Peter's house was but a furlong and a half from the forest. They started, Martin with his bow and three arrows, for it was Thursday : Gerard with nothing but a stout oak staff Peter gave him for the journey. Margaret pinned up her kirtle and farthingale, for the road was wet. Peter went as far as his garden hedge with them, and then, with more emotion than he often bestowed upon passing events, gave the young man his blessing. The sun was peeping above the horizon as they crossed the stony field and made for the wood. They had crossed about half, when Mar- garet, who kept nervously looking back every now and then, uttered a cri% and, following her instinct, began to run towards the woods, screaming with terror all the way. Ghj-sbrecht and his men were in hot pursuit. Resistance would have been mad- ness. Martin and Gerard followed 64 THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. Margaret's example. The pursuers gained slightly on them ; but Martin kept shouting, " Only win the wood ! only win the wood ! " They had too good a start for the men on foot, and their hearts hound- ed with hope at Martin's words, for the great trees seemed now to streteh their branches like friendly arms towards them, and their leaves like a screen. Hut an unforeseen danger attacked them. The fiery old burgomaster flung himself on his mule, and, spur- ring him to a gallop, he headed not his own men only, but the fugitives. His object was to cut them off. The old man came galloping in a semi- oirele, and got on the edge of the wood, right in front of Gerard : the otliers might escape for aught lie cared. Margaret shrieked and tried to protect Gerard by clasping liim ; but he shook her off without ceremony. Gliysbrccht in his ardor forgot that hunted animals turn on the hunter ; and that two men can hate, and two can long to kill the thing they hate. Instead of attempting to dodge him, as the burgomaster made sure he would, Gerard Acav right at him with a savage, exulting cry, and struck at him with all his heart and soul and strength. The oak staff came ing, smeared her hose and shoes ; and still as the blood trickled she smeared them ; but so adroitly that neither Gerard nor Martin saw. Then she seized the soldier's arm. " Come, be a man ! " she said, " and let this end. Take us to some thick place, where numbers will not avail our foes." " I am going," said Martin, sulkily. " Hurry avails not ; we cannot shun the hound, and the place is hard by " ; then, turning to the left, he led the way, as men go to execution. He soon brought them to a thick hazel coppice, like the one that had fiivored their escape in the morning. " There," said he, " this is but a furlong broad, but it will serve our turn." " What are we to do ? " " Get through this, and wait on the other side ; then, as they come strag- gling through, shoot three, knock two on the head, and the rest will kill us." "Is that all you can think of?" said Gerard. " That is all." " Then, Martin Wittenhaagen, I take the lead ; for you have lost your head. Come, can you obey so young a man as I am ? " " O yes, Martin," cried Margaret, " do not gainsay Gerard. He is wiser than his years." Martin yielded a sullen assent. " Do then as you see me do," .said Gerard, and, drawing his huge knile, he cut at every step a hazel shoot ot 68 THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. two close by the ground, and, turning round, twisted them breast-high bc- hiiui him among the standing shoots. Martin did the same, Init with a dog- ged, hopeless air. When they had thus painfully travelled through the greater part of the coppice, the blood- hound's deep bay came nearer and iienrcr, less and less musical, louder and sterner. Margaret trembled. Martin went down on his stomach and listened. " I iiear a horse's feet." " No," said Gerard. " I doubt it is a mule's. That cursed Ghysbrecht is still alive ; none other would follow me u]) so bitterly." " Never strike your enemy but to slay him," said Martin, gloomily. " I '11 hit harder this time, if Heav- en gives me the chance," said Ge- rard. At last they worked through the coppice, and there was an open wood. The trees were large, but far apart, and no escape possible that way. And now with the hound's bay min- gled a score of voices, whooping and hallooing. " The whole village is out after us," said Martin. " I care not," said Gerard. " Lis- ten, Martin. I have made the track smooth to the dog, but rough to the men, that we may deal with them apart. Thus the hound will gain on the men, and as soon as he comes out of the coppice we must kill him." " The hound ? There are more than one." " I hear but one." "Ay! but one speaks, the others nm mute ; but let the leading hound lose the scent, then another shall give tongue. There will be tvvo dogs at least, or devils in dogs' hides." " Then we must kill two instead of one. The moment they are dead, into the coppice again, and go right back." " That is a good thought, Gerard ! " said ^lartin, plucking up heart. " Hush ! the men are in the wood." Gerard now gave his orders in a whisper. " IStand you with your bow by the side of the coppice, — there, in the ditch. I will go but a few yards to yon oak-tree, and hide behind it ; the dogs will follow me, and, as they come out, shoot as many as you can, the rest will I brain as they come round the tree." Martin's eye flashed. They took up their places. The whooping and hallooing came closer and closer, and soon even the rustling of the young wood was heard, and every now and then the unerring bloodhound gave a single bay. It was terrible ! the branches rus- tling nearer and nearer, and the in- evitable struggle for life and death coming on minute by minute, and that death-knell leading it. A trem- bling hand was laid on Gerard's shoulder. It made him start violent- ly, strung up as he was. " Martin says, if we are forced to part company, make for that high ash-tree we came in by." " Yes ! yes ! yes ! but go back for Heaven's sake ! don't come here, all out in the open ! " She ran back towards Martin ; but, ere she could get to him, suddenly a huge dog burst out of the coppice, and stood erect a moment. Margaret cowered with fear, but he never no- ticed her. Scent was to him what sight is to us. He lowered his nose an instant, and the next moment, with an awful yell, s])rang straight at Gerai'd's tree, and rolled head over heels dead as a stone, literally spitted by an arrow from the bow that twanged beside the coppice in Mar- tin's' hand. That same moment out came another hound, and smelt his dead comrade. Gerard rushed out at him ; but, ere he could use his cudgel, a sti'cak of white lightning seemed to strike the hound, and he grovelled in the dust, wounded desperately, but not killed, and howling piteously. Gerard had not time to despatch THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. 69 him ; the coppice rustled too near : it seemed alive. Pointing wildly to Martin to go back, Gerard ran a few yards to the right, then cx'ept cau- tiously into the thick coppice just as three men hurst out. These had headed their comrades considerably ; the rest were following at various distances. Gci'ard crawled back al- most on all-fours. Instinct taught Martin and Margaret to do tlie same upon their line of retreat. Thus, within the distance of a few yards, the pursuers and pursued were pass- ing one another upon opposite tracks. A loud cry announced the discov- ery of the dead and the wounded hound. Then followed a babble of voices, still swelling as fresh pursuers reached the spot. The hunters, as usual on a surprise, were wasting time, and the hunted ones were mak- ing the most of it. " I hear no more hounds," whis- pered Martin to Margaret, and he was hnnself again. It was Margaret's turn to tremble and despair. " O, why did wc part with Gerard ? They will kill my Gerard, and I not near him." " Nay, nay ! the head to catch him is not on their shoulders. You bade him meet us at the ash-trcc 1 " " And so I did. Bless you, Mar- tin, for thinking of that. To the ash-tree ! " " Ay ! but with less noise." They were now nearly at the edge of the co])pice, when suddenly they heard whooping and hallooing behind them. The men had satisfied them- selves the fugitives were in the cop- pice ; and were beating back. " No matter," whispered Martin to his trembling companion. " We shall Iiave time to vnn clear and slip out of sight by hard running. Ah ! " He stopped suddenly ; for just as he was going to burst out of the brush- wood his eye caught a figure keeping sentinel. It was Ghysbrecht Van Swieten seated on his mule ; a bloody bandage was across his nose, the bridge of which was broken ; bat over this his eyes peered keenly, and it was plain by their expression he had heard the fugitives rustle, and was looking out for them. Martin muttered a tenible oath, and cautious- ly strung his bow, then with equal caution fitted liis last arrow to the string. Margaret put her hands to her face, but said nothing. She saw this man must die or Gerard. After the first impulse she peered through her fingers, her heart panting to her throat. The bow was raised, and the dead- ly arrow steadily drawn to its head, when at that moment an active figure leaped on Ghysbrecht from behind, so swiftly, it was like a hawk swooping on a pigeon. A kerchief went over the burgomaster; in a turn of the hand his head was muffled in it and he was whirled from his seat and fell heavily upon the ground, where he lay groaning with terror ; and Gerard jumped down after him. " Hist, Martin ! Martin ! " Martin and Margaret came out, the former open-mouthed, crying, "Now fly ! fly ! while they are all in the thicket ; wc are saved." At this crisis, when safety seemed at hand, as fate would have it, Mar- garet, who had borne up so bravely till now, began to succumb, partly from loss of blood. " my beloved ! fly," she gasped. " Leave me, for I am faint." " No ! no ! " cried Gerard. " Death together, or safety. Ah ! the mule ! mount her, you, and I '11 run by your side." In a moment Martin was on Gh3-s- brecht's mule, and Gerard raised the fixinting girl in his arms and placed her on the saddle, and relieved Mar- tin of his bow. " Help ! treason ! murder ! mur- der ! " shrieked Ghysbrecht, suddenly rising on his hams. " Silence, cur," roared Gerard, and trod him down again by the throat as men crush an adder. " Now, have you got her firm ? 70 THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. Then fly ! for our lives ! for our lives ! " But even as the mule, urged sud- denly by Martin's heel, scattered the flints with his hind hoot's ere he got into a canter, and even as Gerard withdrew his foot from Ghyshrecht's tiiroat to run, Dicrich Hrowcr and his five men, who iiad come hack for ? tlic thicket on our fugitives, and the sharji cry of terror with wliich these latter darted away. The pursu- ers' hands clutched the empty air scarce two feet behind them, as they fled for life. Confused for a moment, like lions that miss their spring. Die- rich and his men let Gerard and the mule j)Ut ten yards l)etween them. Then they flew after with uplifted weapons. They were sure of catch- ing them ; for this was not the first time the parties had measured speed. In the open ground they had gained visibly on the three this morning, and now, at last, it was a fair race again, to be settled by speed alone. A hun- dred yards were covered in no time ; yet still there remained these ten j^ards between the pursuers and the pursued. This increase of speed since the morning puzzled Dierich Brower. The reason was this. "When three run in company, the pace is that of the slowest of the three. From P© ter's house to the edge of the forest Gerard ran Margaret's j)ace ; but now he ran his own ; for the mule was fleet, and could have left them all far behind. Moreover, youth and chaste living began to tell. Daylight grew imperceptibly between the hunted ones and the hunters. Then Dierin the do^'s wouhl follow me in- stead, and let my (iernrd wend free. So I seratcheil my arm with Martin's knife, — for;,'ive me! WIiom- ilse could I take f Yours, (Jerard '. Ah, no. You for;;ive me ? " said she, 1k'- 8efchin;;ly, and lovingly, and fawii- in;:ly, nil in one. " Let me see this Bcrntch first," said (ierard, ehokin}; with emotion. " 'i'here, I thou;;ht so. A scratch ? I call it a cut, — a that love so dear, — one must be in Holland, one in It- aly. Ah mo ! ah me ! ah me ! " At this Mar;:aret wept afresh, but jiatiently and silently. Instinct is never ofr its j^uard, and with her un- seltishness was an instinct. To utter her present thoui^hts would he to add to Cierard's miser)' at parting, so she wept in silence. Suddeidy they <'mir;.'i-d uj on ■ lx.'aten |iath, and Martin >loiiped. " This is the bridle roati I spoke of," said he, han;;iiig his head, " and there away lies the hostelry." Mar;:arei ami Gerard ca>t a warvd liMik at one another. "Come a step with me, Martin," whisjK^red Gerard. When he had drawn him aside, he saiil to him, in a broken voice : " (Jood Martin, wat*\ Icajriie, he raine to ii plaie where four ways nu-t. IJeiii;: cDuntrv roiwl.s and serjH'iitine, they haor jia.ssin;; from vina;;e to vilhii,'f. (ierartl took out a little dial IVter had f^vcn liim, and set it in the autumn .-un, and hy this compass stt-^red unhesitatinL'ly for Home ; iu- exiK-rierued as a yuun;; swallow fly- ing south, hut, unlike the swallow, waniieriu'' south alone. CIIAPTKK XXIV. Not fjiron this road he eamc upon a little >,'roup. Two men in solier suits stfHKl leanin^; lazily on each side i.f a horse, talking; to one another. The rider, in a silk douhlet and hrii;ht ^,'re«-n jerkin and hose, Ixith f>f En;;- li>h c loth, ;;lo.ssy as a mole, lay (lat on Ins stomach in the afternoon sun, anil looked like an enonnous lizard. His velvet eloak (flaming; yellow) was e.irefidly spri'ad over the horse's loins. " Is au;.'ht amiss '. " impiired Gerard. " Not that I wot of," rej)lied one of the servants. " Hut your master, he lies like a corjise. Arc ye not ashamed to let him grovel on the t:round ? " " tio to, the hare j,'round is the best rure tor his di.sorder. If you pet so- Iter in hed it >;ives you a headache ; hut you leap up from the hanl t:ronnd like a lark in sprinp ; eh, L'Irie '. " " He sj)caks sooth, young man," Bail! riric, warmly. " What, is the (gentleman drunk ? " The servants burst into a hoarse laujjh at the simplicity of Gerard's question. But suddenly Ulric stopped, and, eyineinp tliere to stir tluiii round. Odor of fiiniily pnilominatfil in two conii-rs, stcwL-d rustic rii;;ncd siijin inc in thf CfUtrc, and ;,':irlio in tlic noisy p-onp l>v the \viniiow. He found too, hy lia^ty analysis, that of these the pirlie discriht'd the snnillest lUTJal orhit, ami till' scent of rcekin;: rustic darted farthest, — a flavor as if aiuient ^'oats, or llio fathers of all foxes, hud l»ivn drawn through a river, and were here dried hy Nrtuichadnezzar. So (ierard crept into a eonier close to the door. Hut, thou^rh the soliflity of the main fetors is(datcd them some- what, the heat anil n-ekin^' vaj)ors circulated and made the walls drip ; uinl the home-nurtureil novice found sonuthin;; like ii cold snake wind alnxit his Ic'^'s, and his head turn to a ^'reat lumji of leail ; and next he felt like chokinj,', sweetly slntnlnTJnjj, and dviii;,', all in one. He was within nn ace of swooning, hut recovered to a deep sense of " Gerard was too tired and faint for the labor of arjrument ; so he turned the conversation, and asked where he could tind the landlord. At this fresh disjday of ipnorancc the native's contempt rose too hiph for words ; he pointed to a middle- ajLjed woman seated on the other side of the oven, and, tumin^r to his mates, let them know what an outlandish animal was in the room. Thereat the loud voices stopped one by one, as the infonnation penetrated the mass, and each eye turned n.s on a pi\(>t, following: (ierard and his every movement silently and 7.oolo;_ncally. The lainllady sat on a chair an inch or two hi;:her than the rest, l»e- tween two bundles. From the tirst, a hn;;e henj) ,'er, and l>eltttwl sore against my will." " What have I to do with tliat ? All the whni(-iit wa.t a InMjn to (iernrd, tor tlitii he lay on the .<i-s another,' ami so here '.t your tii^ht- cap." and he thrust a ^reat oaken nm^ uiidi r (ierard's nose. " I thank her and bless her; here . 'W9 — u>;h ! " and his jjrntitmle eml- • l in a wry face, for the l»eer was muddy, nnd had a strange medicinal twar»;; new to the Hollander. ■■ Trinke aus ! " shouteil the hind, nproaehfully. " Know is as ctHnl as a feast," said the youth, Je.-iuitically. The hind cast a h)ok of pity on this stran^jer who left liiiuor in his mujj. " leh trinks eueh, ' said he, ami drained it to the lM>ttom. Ami now lieranl turned his face to the wall, nnd pulled up two handfuls of the nice clean straw, and bore.h half-jHimy, ami he of the pitchfork de- matideil trink;;e!d, antl. ^ettin;; a trille more than u>ual, and .Hii-in^ (ierard eye a founiin;; niilk|uul ho luid juAt brought fnJHi the cow, hoi<ouch. At the door Gcrurd found his t*encfiu-trcss of lust ni;;hU and a hu;^e-i-hested artisan, her JiuS' bnn.iitl she, ndorin^ faintly ; " wo are travel' lers and strangent the same us you, nnd iMtund to feel for those in lika Then fiernrd blushed in his turn, nnd stammered excuses. The hulkin;; husliand prinned supe- rior to them l>oth. " (live the vi.xen a kiss for her pud- din;.', and cry <|uits," stkid he, with nq air impartial, judyedike, and Jovc- likc. Gcmnl olicvcd the lofty behest, and kis.sed the wile's chei-k. "A blessine >;o with you l>oth,good people !'' said lie. "Anly tyrant riscntiaul ho ; " if ^vou can't wait for the rfst, look out for another lody- in^'." (fcrard siKhitl. At this the fH'aylK'ard frowned. After a while eonijcinv triekled steadily in, 'ill full ei;;hty jK-r.sons of various conditions were con;;re;;ated, and to our novice the place Ufanie a cli:unlH-r of horrors ; for here the inutluTs not to;,'ether and com|iared rin^'wornis, anrou;,'ht in ewers. (Jeranl j>ounced on one f>f thex-, hut at si;;ht of the iii|uid contents lost his temper and said to the waiter, " Wash you tirst your water, and then a nmn may wiish his liands withal." " An it likes you not, seek another inn ! " ( icrard said nothinp, hut went quiet- ly, and courtcou " int|uired n trav- eller, (icrard (xtinted ruefully to the dirty sackcloth. The other looked at it with lark-lustre eye, and compnv bended nautrht. A lJ\irpundian soldier, with his ar- balest at his back, came jHV|iinp over (ierard's shoulder, anillage, interlard- ing his discoui-M- with curious oalhs, at which ( terard drew away from him more or less. Presently in came the grisly ser- vant, and countcil them all on his fin- gers su|H-n-iliously, like Abraham tell- ing sheej), then went out again and returned with a deal trencher and deal sjxHin to each. Then there was an interval. Then he brought them a long mug apiece, made of glass, and frowned. By and by he stalked gloomily in with a hunch of bre^id apiece, and exit with an injured air. Exj)ectatiiin thus raised, the guests sat for nearly an hour balancing the wooden spoons, and with their own knives whittling the bread. Eventually, when ho{)C was extinct, patience worn out, and hunger exhausted, a huge vessel was brought in with pomp, the lid was re- moved, a cloud of steam rolled forth, and behold some thin broth with THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. 81 square pieces of bread floating. Tliis, though not agreeable to the mind, served to distend the body. Slices of Strasbourg ham followed, and pieces of salt fish, both so liighly salted that Gerard could hardly swallow a mouth- ful. Then came a kind of gruel, and, when the repast had lasted an hour and more, some hashed meat highly peppered ; and the French and Dutch being now full to the brim with the above dainties, and the draughts of beer the salt and spiced meats had provoked, in came roasted kids, most excellent, and carp and trout fresh from the stream. Gerard made an effort, and looked angrily at them, but " could no more," as the poets say. The Burgundian swore, by the liver and pikestaif of the good centurion, the natives had outwitted him. Then turning to Grerard, he said, " Courage, I'ami, le diable est mort," as loudly as before, but not witti the same tone of conviction. The canny natives had kept an internal corner for contingen- cies, and polished the kids' very bones. The feast ended with a dish of raw animalcula in a wicker cage. A cheese had been surrounded with little twigs and strings ; then a hole made in it and a little sour wine poured in. This speedily bred a small but numer- ous vermin. When the cheese Avas so rotten with them that only the twigs and string kept it from tumbling to pieces and walking off quadrivious, it came to table. By a malicious caprice of fate, cage and menagerie were put down right under the Dutchman's or- gan of self-torture. He recoiled with a loud ejaculation, and hung to the bench by the calves of his legs. " What is the matter 1 " said a trav- eller, disdainfully. " Docs the good cheese scare ye? Then put it hither, in the name of all the saints ! " " Cheese !" cried Gerard. "I see none. These naitseous reptiles have made awav with every bit of it." " Well,'' replied another, " it is not gone far. By eating of the mites we eat the cheese to boot." "Nay, not so," said Gerard. " These reptiles are made like us, and digest their food and turn it to foul flesh even as we do ours to sweet ; as well might you think to chew grass by eating of grass-fed beeves, as to eat cheese by swallowing these uncleanly insects." Gerard raised his voice in uttering this, and the company received the paradox in dead silence, and with a distrustful air, like any other stranger; during which the Burgundian, who understood German but imperfectly, made Gerard Gallicize the discussion. He patted his interpreter on the back. " C'est bien, mon gars ; plus fin que toi n'est pas bete," and administered his formula of encouragement ; and Gerard edged away from him, for next to ugly sights and ill odors the poor wretch disliked profaneness. Meantime, though shaken in argu- ment, the raw reptiles were duly eaten and relished by the company, and served to provoke thirst, a principal aim of all the solids in that part of Germany. So now the company drank " garausses " all round, and their tongues were unloosed, and O the Babel ! But above the fierce clamor rose at inten-als, like some hero's war-cry in l)attle, the trumpet- like voice of the Burgundian soldier shouting lustily, " Courage, cama- rades, Ic diable est mort ! " Entered grisly Ganymede, holding in his hand a wooden dish with circles and semicircles marked on it in chalk. He put it down on the table and stood silent, sad, and sombre, as Charon of Styx waiting for his boat-load of souls. Then pouches and purses were rum- maged, and each threw a coin into the dish. Gerard timidh' observed that he had drunk next to no beer, and in- quired how much less he was to pay than the others. "What mean you?" said Gany- mede, roughly. " Whose fault is it you have not drunken ? Are all to suffer because one chooses to be a milksop 1 You will pay no more than the rest and no less." Gerard was abashed. 82 THK CLOISTEK ANI> THE IlKAKTH. Conrafje, j>ot;t, le (liable est mort," (i;inviiK'ot;t, tiio s suldicr, and Hung " You are as liatl as he is," said the old man, pccvislily, " yuu arc payinj; too niiuh " ; and the tyramiiial old Aristidis returned him some coin out of tlie trenclier with a most reproadi- ful conntcnance. And now the man wliom (iiranl liad confuted an inuir anil a lialf a;,'o awoke from a i)rown study, in whieh he had been ever sinec. ami camo to him and said, " Yes; but the honey is none the worse for pnss- in;,' tlirou;;h the Ixes' bellies." Gerard staretl. The answer had been so lon^' on tlie road he hadn't an iilea what it was an answer to. Scein;,' him ilumfoundered, tlie other coneluded him eonfuted, and with- drew ealmed. The i>edrooms were up-stjiirs dun- geons with not ft serap of furniture except the bed, and a male servant settled inexorably who should sleep with whom. Neither money nor jirayers would get a man a bed to himself here ; custom forbade it stern- ly. You mi;;ht as wi'll have asked to iiioMopoli/e a see-saw. They assifjned to (icrard a man with a great black beard. Ho was an honest fellow enough, but not perfect ; he >vould ttot go to l)ed, an[y name is Gerard, and I am go- ing to Home," said the more reserved Hollander, and in a way that invited no further confidences. " All the better ; we will go to- gether as far as Burgimdy." " That is not my road." " All roads take to Home." " Ay, but the shortest road thither is my way." " Well, then, it is I who must go out of my way a step for the sake of good company, for thy face likes rae, and thou speakest French, or nearly." " There go two words to that bar- gain," said Gerard, coldly. " I steer by proverbs too. They do put old heads on young men's shoulders. 'Bon loup mauvais compagnon, dit lo THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. 83 brebis * ; and a soldier, they say, is near akin to a wolf." " They lie," said Denys ; " besides, if he is, ' les loups ne se mangent pas entre eux.' " Let us drop wolves and sheep, be- ing men ; my meaning is, that a good soldier never pillages — a comrade. Come, young man, too much suspi- cion becomes not your years. They who travel should learu to read faces ; methinks you might see Icalty in mine sith I have seen it in yourn. Is it yon fat purse at your girdle you fear for?" (Gerard turned pale.) "Look hither ! " and he imdid his belt, and poured out of it a double handful of gold pieces, then returned them to their hiding-place. " There is a host- age for you," said he; "carry you that, and let us be comrades," and handed him his belt, gold and all. Gerard stared. " If I am over-pru- dent, you have not enow." But he flushed and looked pleased at the oth- er's trust in him. " Bah ! I can read faces ; and so must you, or you '11 never take your four bones safe to Eome." " Soldier, you would find me a dull companion, for my heart is very heavy," said Gerard, yielding. " I '11 cheer you, mon gars." " I think yon would," said Gerard, sweetly ; " and sore need have I of a kindly voice in mine ear this day." " 0, no soul is sad alongside me. I lifj; up their poor little hearts with my consigne : ' Courage, tout le monde, le diable est mort.' Ha, ha!" " So be it, then," said Gerard. " But take back your belt, for I could never trust by halves. We will go to- gether as far as Rhine, and God go with us both ! " " Amen ! " said Denys, and lifted his cap. " En avant ! " The pair trudged manfully on, and Denys enlivened the weary way. He chattered about battles and sieges, and things which were new to Gerard; and he was one of those who make lit- tle incidents wherever they go. Ho passed nobody without addressing him. " They don't understand it, but it wakes them up," said he. But, whenever they fell in with a monk or priest, he pulled a long face and sought the reverend father's blessing, and fearlessly poured out on him floods of German words, in such order as not to produce a single German sentence. He dofled his cap to every woman, high or low, he caught sight of, and with eagle eye discerned her best feature and complimented her on it in his native tongue, well adapted to such nuttters : and, at each carrion crow or magpie, down came his cross- bow, and he would go a furlong off the road to circumvent it ; and indeed he did shoot one old crow with lauda- ble neatness and despatch, and carried it to the nearest hen-roost, and there slipped in and set it upon a nest. " The goodwife will say, ' Alack, here is Beelzebub a hatching of my eggs.' " "No, you forget, he is dead," ob- jected Gerard. " So he is, so he is. But she does n't know that, not having the luck to be acquainted with me, who carry the good news from city to city, uplifting men's hearts." Such was Denys in time of peace. Our travellers towards nightfall reached a village ; it was a very small one, but contained a place of enter- tainment. They searched for it, and found a small house Avith barn and stables. In the former was the ever- lasting stove, and the clothes drying round it on lines, and a traveller or two sitting morose. Gerard asked for supper. "Supper? We have no time to cook for travellers ; we only provide lodging, good lodging for man and beast. You can have some beer." "Madman who, born in Holland, sought other lands ! " snorted Gerard, in Dutch. The landlady started. "What gibberish is that?" asked she, and crossed herself with looks of siiperstitioxis alarm. " You can buy what you like in the village, and cook 84 THE CLOISTER AND TlIK llKAUTir. it in our oven ; Imt, prithee, mutter no I eliarms nor .Kori-t-rifs here, (;oriiui;lit them into a cow-lionse. 'I'liere, on eaeh side of'^Pery cow, was laid a little clean fMnnw, ami a tied hiiudle ot' ditto for a pillow. The old man looked down on this !iis work with paternal pri«lc. Not so Gerard. What, do yon Ret Chris- tian men to lie amon;^ cattle ? " *■ Well, it ii hard upon the poor Ixa-st-s. They have scarce room to turn." "Oh! what, it is not hard on us then 1 " " Where is the hardship ? I have lain ainon;; them all my life. Ix>ok at me ! I am fotirseore, and nc\er had a headache in all my liorn days, — all alon;,' of lyiii;: anion;; the kye. Bless your silly head, kiiic's breath is ten times sweeter to drink nor Chris- tians'. Yon try it ! " and he slammed the l)edro me warm but the carciuss of a fellow I had Im-cii and lielj>ed kill ? " "Horrible! horrible! Tell me all about it ! O, but this is sweet." " Well, we had a little battle in Brabant, and won a little victory, but it cost us dear ; several iirbalestriers turned their toes up, and 1 among them." " Killed, Dcnys ? come, now ! " " Dead as mutton. Stuck full of pike-holes till the blood ran out of me, like the good wine of Mi'icon from the trodden grapes. It is right bountious in me to jiour the tale in minstrel phrase, for — augh — I am sleepy. Augh — now where was I '. " " fvcft dead on the field of battle, bleeding like a pig ; that is to say, like grai)es, or something ; go on, pri- thee go on, 'tis a sin to sleej) in iho midst of a good story." " Granted. Well, some of those vagabonds that strip the dead soldier on the field of glory came and took ever)' rag off mc ; they wrought me no further ill, because there was no need." " No : yon were dead." " C'est convcnu. This mnst have been at sundown ; and with the night came a shrewd frost that barkened the blood on my wounds, and stopped all the rivulets that were running from my heart, and about midnight I awoke as from a trance." "And thought you were in heaven?" THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. 85 asked Gerard, eagerly, being a youth inoculated with monkish tales. " Too frost-bitten for that, mon gars; besides, I heard the wounded groaning on all sides ; so I knew I was in the old place. I saw I could not live the night through without cover. I groped about shivering and shivering ; at last, one did suddenly leave groaning. ' You are sped,' said I, so made up to him, and true enough he was dead, but warm, you know. I took my lord in my arms ; but was too weak to carry him, so rolled with him into a ditch hard by ; and there my comrades found me in the morning properly stung with nettles and hugging a dead Fleming for the bare life." Gerard shuddered. " And this is war ; this is the chosen theme of poets and troubadours, and Reden Ryckers. Truly was it said by the men of old, ' Dulcc bcUum inex- pertis.' " " Tu dis ? " " I say, — O what stout hearts some men have ! " " N 'est-ce pas, p'tit 1 So after that sort — thing, — this sort thing is heaven. Soft — warm — good com- pany comradancow — cou'age — dia- ble — m — ornk ! " And the glib tongue was still for some hours. In the morning Gerard was awak- ened by a liquid hitting his eye, and it was Denys employing the cow's udder as a squirt. "O fie!" cried Gerard, "to waste the good milk": and he took a horn out of his wallet. "Fill this! but indeed I see not what right we have to meddle with her milk at all." "Make your mind easy! Last night la camarade was not nice ; but what then ? true friendship dispenses with ceremony. To-day we make as free with her." "Wliy, what did she do, poor thing?" "Ate my pillow." "Ha, ha!" " On waking I had to hunt for mv head, and found it do^vn in the stable gutter. She ate our pillow from us, wc drink our pillow from her. A votre sante', madame; et sans ran- cune " ; and the dog drank her to her own health. " The ancient was right, though," said Gei'ard. " Never have I risen so refreshed since I left my native land. Henceforth let us shun great towns and still lie in a convent or a cow-house ; for I 'd liever sleep on fresh straw than on linen well washed six months agone ; and the breath of kine it is sweeter than that of Chris- tians, let alone the garlic which men and women folk affect, but cowen ab- hor from, and so do I, St. Bavon be my witness ! " The soldier eyed him from head to foot : " Now, but for that little tuft on your chin, I should take you for a girl ; and, by the finger-nails of St. Luke, no ill-favored one neither." These three towns proved types, and repeated themselves with slight varia- tions for many a weary league ; but, even when he could get neither a con- vent nor a cow-house, Gerard learned in time to steel himself to the inevi- table, and to emulate I. is comrade, whom he looked on as almost super- human for hardihood of body and spirit. There was, however, a balance to all this veneration. Denys, like his predecessor Achil- les, had his weak part ; his very weak part, thought Gerard. His foible was "woman." Whatever he was saying or doing, he stopped short at sight of a farthin- gale, and his whole soul became oc- cupied with that garment and its in- mate till they had disappeared; and sometimes for a good while after. He often put Gerard to the blush by talking his amazing German to such fe- males as he caught standing or sitting in doors or out, at which they stared ; and, when he met a peasant girl on the road, he took off his cap to her, and saluted her as if.she was a queen. T)ie invariable effect of which was, 86 Tin: CLOISTER AND THK UKARTH. that she Riulilonly drew herself up (piite stiff, like a soldii-r on parade, B.ii'1 wore a fi>rl»ii|iliii;; CDUTiti'iiiiiiee. '• They drive iiic to desjiair," says Denys. " Ls that u just return to a civil hnnnetjide i They are larjje, thi-y are fair, hut slii|iid as swans." " What hrei'dini' ean you exiK-et from women that wear no liose, " inquired (ierard, " and some of them no shoon ? They sit-m to mo re- jk-rved on- nuii ' " " Half a dozen that would crj' thiir eves e met half-way with no«ls and In'cks and wreathed smiles, and waved into a keat, wliilc almost at the same in.^tant an ea;:er sluipman llings himself half acro-s the counter in a seniicirfle t ! " " The diMir is too low." " March through hin> ! " " The man is too thick." " What is the coil '. " in(|uired a mumbling voice from the interior, — apprentice with his mouth full. " We want to get into your shop." " What for, in Heaven's nunu- !!]]]" " ShtM)n ; lazy-bones ! " The ire of the apprentice l)egan to rise at such an explanation. " And could ye fmd no hour out of all tho twelve to come pestering us for shoon, but the one little, little hour my mas- ter takes his nap, and I sit down to my dinner, when all the rest of tho world is fidl long ago t " Denys heard, but could not follow the sen.se. " Waste no more time in talking their (ierman giblMjrish," sai«l he : " take out thy tnife and tickle his fat ribs." " That will I not," said Gerard. " Then here goes ; I '11 prong him with this." Gerard seized the mad fellow's arm in dismay, for he had been long enough in tlie country to guess that the whole town would take part in any brawl with the native against a stninger. But Denys twisted away from him, and the cross-lrow IkjU in bis hand was actually on the road to THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. 87 the sleeper's ribs, but at that very moment two females crossed the road towards liim ; he saw the blissful vis- ion, and instantly forgot what he was about, and awaited the approach with unreasonable joy. Though companions they were not equals, except in attractiveness to a Burgundian cross-bow-man ; for one W:is very tall, the other short, and, by one of those anomalies which socie- ty, however primitive, speedily estab- lishes, the long one held up the little one's tail. The tall one wore a plain linen coif on her head, a little grogi'am cloak over her shoulders, agraykirtle, and a short fartliingale, or petticoat, of bright red cloth, and feet and legs quite bare, though her arms were veiled in tight linen sleeves. The other a kirtle broadly trimmed with fur, her arms in double sleeves, whereof the inner, of yellow satin, clung to the skin ; the outer, all be- furred, were open at the inside of the «lbo\v, and so the arm passed through and left them dangling. Velvet head- dress, huge purse at girtlle, gorgeous train, bare legs. And thus they came on, the citizen's wife strutting, and the maid gliding after, holding her mistress's train devoutly in both hands, and bending and winding her lithe body prettily enough to do it. Imagine (if not pressed for time) a bantam, with a guinea-hen stepping obsequious at its stately heel. This pageant made straight for the shoemaker's shop. Denys louted low ; the worshipful lady nodded gracious- ly, but rapidly, having business on hand, or rather on foot ; for in a mo- ment she poked"the point of her little shoe into the sleeper, and worked it round in him like a gimlet, till with a long snarl he woke. The incarnate shutter rising and grumbling vaguely, the lady swept in and deigned him no further notice. He retreated to his neighbor's shop, the tailor's, and, sit- ting on the step, protected it from the impertinence of morning calls. Neighbors should be neighborly. Denys and Gerard followed the dignity into the shop, where sat the apprentice at dinner; the maid stood outside ^vith her insteps crossed, lean- ing against the wall, and tapping it with her nails. " Those, yonder," said the dignity, briefly, pointing with an imperious little white hand to some yellow shoes gilded at the toe. While the appren- tice stood stock-still, neutralized by his dinner and his duty, Denys sprang at the shoes, and brought them to her ; she smiled, and, calmly seating her- self, proti'uded her foot, shod, but hoseless, and scented. Down went Denys on his knees and drew off her shoe, and tried the new ones on the white skin, devoutly. Finding she had a willing victim, she abused the opportunity, tried first one pair, then another, then the first again, and so on, balancing and hesitating for about half an hour, to Gerard's disgust and Denys's weak delight. At last she was fitted, and handed two pair of yellow and one pair of red shoes out to her servant. Then was heard a sigh. It burst from the owner of the shop ; he had risen from slumber, and was now hovering about, like a partridge near her brood in danger. " There go all my colored shoes ! " said he, as they disappeared in the girl's apron. The lady departed. Gerard fitted himself with a stout paii", asked the price, paid it without a word, and gave his old ones to a beggar in the street, who blessed him in the mai'ket- place, and threw them furiously down a well in the suburbs. The comrades left the shop, and in it two melan- choly men, that looked, and even talked, as if they had been robbed wholesale. " My shoon are sore worn," snid Denys, grinding his teeth ; " but I '11 go barefoot till I reach France ere I '11 leave my money with such churls as these." The Dutchman replied, calmly, " They seem indifferently well sewn." As they drew near the Rhine, they passed through forest after forest, and 88 TIIK CI.OISTFH ANI> THK IIKAIMII. novr for the first time uply woitls* ; bounilifl in truvcIliTs' mouiiu, Fcateil aniuiid stovfs. " Thicvca ! " " bluck ^.'iui^'s ! " " cutthront-t ! " etr. 'I'lii- MTV rustics wvTv said tt> Iiuvr a custom hi-rt-aliuut/i of munliTiiij,' tlic ;niwi»ry iruvi-llcr in tliosc ^looniv >viM>ils, wli(»Sf (larlc and devious wind- inir* enuhled those who were f.tniiliar with them to do di-eds of rapine and IdiMMl undetirted, or, if detected, easily to haille pUTMuit. ( "erUiin it wa.s. thatevery clown they met carried, whether for oHenec or difiiue, a most fonnidahle weajKin : a ii;,'ht axe with a short pike at tlie head, and a lonj;, slemler handle of ash or yew, well Rcasonctl. These the natives could all throw with sin- gular ]irecision, so as to make (h<< i>oint strike an ohjivt at several yards dis- tance, or could slay a liulltM-k at hanil with a stroke of the Made. (Wrard lK)ti;jIit one and practised with it. Dcnys quietly filed and j:round his liolts sharp, whi-.tlinK the whilst ; and, when they entered a i;loomy wwmI, he woulil unslin;; his cross-lKJW and carrv it reaily for action ; hut not so much like a tniveller tearing; an at- tack as a s|H)rtsnian watchful not to miss a snap-shot. One day, hein;; in a fon*ow with ;;littcrinjj eye. " Hush ! " said he, in a low whisjxT, that surtled (ierard more th:in thunder, (icranl ;:r.»sped his axe tii;l»t, and sho-ik a little; he heanl a rustlin;: in the wood hard hy, and at the same moment Denys sprani: into the wood, and his cross- Itow went to his shoulder even as he jumped. Twanir ! went the metal string' ; and after an instant'.s susj)ense he n):>rod, " Hun forward, truard the road ; he is hit ! he is hit ! " Cierard darted fonvard, and, as he ran, a young bear burst out of the wood right upon him ; finding itself intercepted, it went up on its hind legs ^vith a itnarl, ami, thougli not half grown, ojK:neer, so 1 could not hold my hand." "" Ay, these chattering travellers I have siutVed your head full of thieves I and a.ssassins ; they have not got n real live robl>er in ihcir whole nation. Nay, I '11 carrv tin- Uast ; In-ar thou ' my cross-Uiw. '" We will carry it by tnnjs, then," .saiil (JeranI, " for 't is a heavy load. I'lxir thing, how its WwmI «lrips! Why did we slay it ? " " For supjier, and the n*ward the baillieof the next town shall give us." " And for that it mu-t die, when it had but just Ingun to live ; and jht- I chance it hath a mother that will miss I it sore this night, and loves it as ours I loves us ; nion' than mine doi-s me." I " What, know ycm not that his mother was caught in a pitfall last I month, and her skin is now at the tanner's ? and his father was stuck I full of cloth-yard shafts t'other day, I and died like Julius Ca-sar, with his I hands folded on his lH>som and a i dcaed it; (ierard the same on his side ; and, as they tied, lioth men uttered inhuman howls, like .sav- a;;e ereatures j^ra/ed l»y death. Wich all their sj»«.-ed one or other would have l)een torn to frag- ments at the foot of his tree, but the U-ar stopjad a moment at the cub Without taking her blmidshot eyes oft" those she was hunting', she smelt it all round, ai\d found, how her Creator only knows, that it wius dead, quite dead. She gave a yell such as neither of the hunted ones had ever heard, nor dreameii to \)C in nature, anil flew after Denys. She reared and stnuk at him as he elimbed. lie was just out of reaeh. Instantly she seized the tree, and with her huge teeth tore a great pieee out of it with a crash. Then she roaretl again, dug her claws deep into the bark, and liegan to mount it slowly, but as surely as a monkey. Denys's evil star liatl led him to a dead tree, a mere shaft, and of no very great height- He elimbed faster than his pursuer, and was soon at the top. He looked this way and that for some bough of another tree to ipring to. There was none ; and, if he jumjicd down, he knew the Ytetf woulil Ik' uiMm hint ere he eonld re- er»\er the tall, and make short work of him. Miire<»ver, Denys was little used to turning his back on danger, and his blood wits rising at bein^ hunted. He turned to bay. " My hour is come," thought he. " Ixt me me-et death like a man." He kneele*'(| a small shcM)t to steady himself, drew his long knite, and, elenehing his teeth, prepared to job ihe huge brute ns soon as it should mount within reach. Of this combat the result was not doubtful. The monster's head anar, and the iKitr to cnurk the man like a nut. (lerard's hciirt wius In-tter than his nerves. -He saw his friend's mortal danger, and passi-d at onee from fear to blinody with a loud shout. The la-ar gave a snarl of rage and pain, and turned its head irn.'solutely. "Keep aloof!" cried Denys, "or you are a dead man." " I care not," and in a moment he had another Itolt nady and shot it fiercely into the l>ear, screaming, " Take that ! take that ! " Denys jHJured n volley of oaths down at him. " Get away, idiot ! " He was right : the bear, finding .«o formidable and noisy a foe behind him, slipped growling down the tree, rending deep furrows in it as she slipped, (ierard ran back to his tree ami climbed it swiftly. But, while Iiis legs were dangling some eight feet from the ground, the bear came rear- ing and struck with her fore paw, and out Hew a piece of bloody cloth from Gerard's hose. He climl)cd and climbed ; and presently lie liwinl, Jis it were in the air, a voice say, " Go oul THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. 9] on the bough ! " He looked, and there was a long, massive branch be- fore him, shooting upwards at a shght angle ; he threw his body across it, and by a series of con-vnilsive efforts worked up it to the end. Then he looked round, panting. The bear was mounting the tree on the other side. He heard her claws scrape, and saw her bulge on both sides of the massive tree. Her eye not being very quick, she reached the fork and passed it, mounting the main stem. Gerard drew breath more freely. The bear either heard him, or found by scent she was wrong : she paused ; presently she caught sight of him. She eyed him steadily, then quietly descended to the fork. Slowly and cautiously she stretched out a paw and tried the bough. It was a stiff oak branch, sound as iron. Instinct taught the creature this ; it crawled carefully out on the bough, growling savagely as it came. Gerard looked wildly down. He was forty feet from the ground. Death below. Death moving slow but sure on him in a still more hor- rible form. His hair bristled. The sweat poured from him. He sat helpless, fascinated, tongue-tied. As the fearful monster crawled growling towards him, incongruous thoughts coursed through his mind. Margaret, — the Vulgate, where it speaks of the rage of a she-bear robbed of her whelps, — Rome, — Eternity. The bear crawled on. And now the stupor of death fell on the doomed man ; he saw the opened jaws and bloodshot eyes coming, but in a mist. As in a mist he heard a twang ; he glanced down ; Denys, white and silent as death, was shooting up at the bear. The bear snarled at the twang, but crawled on. Again the cross-bow twanged ; and the bear snarled, and came nearer. Again llie cross-bow twanged, and the next moment the bear was close upon Ge- rard, where he sat, with hair standing stiff on end and eyes starting from their sockets, palsied. The bear opened her jaws like a grave ; and hot blood spouted from them upon Ge- rard as from a pump. The bough rocked. The wounded monster was reeling ; it clung, it stuck its sick- les of claws deep into the wood; it toppled ; its claws held tirm, but its body rolled off, and the sudden shock to the branch shook Gerard forward on his stomach with his face upon one of the bear's straining paws. At this, by a convulsive ef- fort she raised her head up, up, till he felt her hot, fetid breath. Then huge teeth snapped together loudly close below him in the air, with a last effort of baffled hate. The ponder- ous carcass rent the claws out of the bough, then pounded the earth with a tremendous thump. There was a shout of triumph below, and the very next instant a cry of dismay ; for Gerard had swooned, and, without an attempt to save himself, rolled head- long from the perilous height. CHAPTER XXV. Dents caught at Gerard, and somewhat checked his fall ; but it may be doubted whether this alone would have saved him from breaking his neck or a limb. His best friend now was the d\ing bear, on whose hairy carcass his head and shoulders de- scended. Denys tore him off her. It was needless. She panted still, and her limbs quivered, but a hare was not so harmless ; and soon she breathed her last; and the judicious Denys propped Gerard up against her, being soft, and fanned him. He came to by degrees, but confused, and, feeling the bear all around him, rolled away, yelling. " "Courage," cried Denys, " le diable est mort." " Is it dead ? quite dead ? " inquired Gerard from behind a tree; for his courage was feverish, and the cold fit 92 TIIK CLOIMKi; AM) 1111. HI.AKIH. was upon liim just now, nnil had li.rn fur M>riu' tiinc. " Ikliolil," .siiid Dirnys, and pulled the lirute's car pliiyfullv, und opt-ni-d liiT jiiws and put in his head, with otliir insultin;; unties, in the midst ol wliith our lives a;,'ainst such fearful odds '. " And Gerard kneeleil and prayeil aloud. And presently he ♦ound Denys kiieelinjr quiet lx;side him, with his hands across his bosom, after the custom of his nation, and a face as long as his arm. When they rose, Gerard's countenance was beam- " (irMxl Denys," said he, " IleuTcQ will rewaril thy piety." " Ah, bah ! 1 did it out of |>oliie- ness," said the Frenchman. " It was to please tliee, little one. Cost e^al ; 't was well and orderly praveil, and ediliej mo to the core while it lastetl. A bi>hop liad scarce handlcil the mutter better ; .so now our even ^on^' 1)0 sun^, and the suint.s enlisted with us — inarchuns." Kre they had taken two »tcn«, ho «lup|>ed. " By tlie bv, the cub I " " O no, no ! " ciictl (Jeranl. " You are right. It is late ; wc have lost time climbing tiees and tumbling otl' 'em, and swiMining, and vomiting, and praying, and the bruto is heaivy to carry ; ami, now I think on 't, we shall have |mpa after it next ; these licars make such a coil aliout the old cub ; what is this ? You are wuuiided I vou are wound- ed ! " " Not I." " He is wouniled, miserable that I am." " Be calm, Denys. I am not tt)uchcd, I ftrl no pain anyuhcre." " You '. yt>u only feci when another is hurt," cried Denys, with great em«)- tion ; and, throwin;; himself on his kmrs, he c.vamincd Gerard's leg with glistening eyes. " Quick !'<|uick ! Wforc it stiffens," he cried, and hurried him on. " Who makes the coil alxtut noth- ing now ; " intjuired Gerard, comj»os- edlv. r)enys'3 n-ply was a very indirect one. " Be plea-scd to note," said he, " that I have a bad heart. You were man enough to save my life, yet I must sneer at you, a novice in war; was not I a novice once myself? Then you fainted from a wound, and I thought you swooned for fear, and called you a milksop. Briclly, I have a bad tongue and a bud heart." " Denvs ! " '• Plait-il ? " " You lie." " You arc very good to say so, lit' THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. 93 tie one, and I am eternally obliged to you," mumbled the remorseful Denys. Ere they had walked many fur- longs, the muscles of the wounded leg contracted and stiftened, till pres- ently Gerard could only just put his too to the ground, and tliat with great pain. At last he could bear it no longer. " Let me lie down and die," he groaned, " for this is intolerable." Denys represented that it was af- ternoon, and the nights were now frosty, and cold and hunger ill com- panions, and that it would be unrea- sonable to lose heart, a certain great personage being notoriously defunct. So Gerard leaned upon his axe and hobbled on, but presently he gave in all of a sudden, and sank helpless in the road. Denys drew him aside into the wood, and, to his surprise, gave him his cross-bow and belts, enjoining him strictly to lie quiet, and, if any ill- looking fellows should find him out and come to him, to bid them keep aloof; and, should they refuse, to shoot them dead at twenty paces. " Honest men keep the path, and knaves in a wood, none but fools do parley with them." With this he snatched up Gerard's axe and set off running, not, as Gerard expected, towards Dus- seldorf, but on the road they had come. Gerard lay aching and smarting, and, to him, Kome, that seemed so near at starting, looked far, far off, now that he was two hundred miles nearer it. But soon all his thoughts turned Scvenbergen-wards How sweet it would be one day to hold Margaret's hand and tell her all he had gone through for her ! The very thought of it and her soothed him, and in l;he midst of pain and irritation of the nerv-es he lay resigned and sweetly though faintly smiling. He had lain thus more than two hours, when suddenly there were shouts, and the next moment some- thing struck a tree hard by, and quiv- srod in it. He looked, it was an arrow. He started to his feet. Several mis.' siles rattled among the boughs, and the wood echoed with battle-cries. Whence they came he could not tell, for noises in these huge woods are so reverberated that a stranger is always at fault as to their whereabout ; but they seemed to fill the whole air. Presently there was a lull ; then he heard the fierce galloping of hoofs ; and still loudei* shouts and cries arose, mingled with shrieks and groans, and above all strange and terrible soundi like fierce claps of thunder, bellowing loud, and then dying oft" in cracking echoes ; and red tongues of flame shot out ever and anon among the trees, and clouds of sul])hurous smoke came drifting over his head, and aR was still. Gerard was struck with awe. " What will become of Denys ? " he cried. " 0, why did you leave mel O Denys, my friend, my friend ! " Just before sunset Denys returned, almost sinking under a hairy bundle. It was the bear's skin. Gerard welcomed him with a burst of joy that astonished him. " I thought never to see you again, dear Denys. Were you in the battle 1 " " No. ' ^Vhat battle 1 " " The bloody battle of men, or fiends, that raged in the wood a while agone " ; and with this he de- scribed it to the life, and more fully than I have done. Denys patted him indulgently on the back. " It is well," said he, " thou art a good limner, and fever is a great spur to the imagination. One day I lay in a cart-shed with a cracked skull, and saw two hosts manoeuvre and fight a good hour on eight feet square, the which I did fairly describe to my comrade in due order, only not so gorgeously as thou, for want of book leaj'ning." " What, then, you believe me not ? when I tell you the arrows whizzed over my head, and the combateVTild shouted, and — " 'J 4 THK CLOISTER AND THt IIKAUTH. " May tho f«iil I'u'nds fly nway with lu" if I Ulifvi- II wnrtl of it." (ivninl tw, uh I live " ; und he went (Insc and louki-d up ut it. •' It cnnu- out of the battle. I hranl it. iiini .saw it." '• All Kii;;li.Hh iirrow." '• llow know you tlmt ? " '• Mjirry, hy itit h-nt^th. Tho Knp- lisli Imiwiiu'Ii draw th<' Ixtw to I he ear, othrfH only to the ri^ht hnast. Ileniv th»- Kn;,'li>h Iooho a thnv Coot jthufl, und (hit is one of iheni, fierdiliou s«i/.e them ! Well, if thi.s it not f:lH- mour, then: hius lnvn a triHe of a hattle ; and if there hiut Imiii a hattle in so ridieulou.t a nluee for a buttle a.t thit, why, then, 't it no hutine.st of niinr, for my diik<' hath no i|iianrel lunalM>ut.t ; .S4) li't 't to Im'iI," siuil the profcssinnal ; ami with thit he seniix-d to;;ither n hrjiit of ieavi-s, ami made (ieranl lie on It, hit axe hy hi.t siile ; he then lay down U'tide him, with one hand on hit arbalett, and drew the lNn lut wann tut liNi.tt, und fa.t| a.s|er|i. Hut lonir Ufiire the dawn (ieranl NNokc hi.s eomradc. • What t^hall I do, Deny.t ? I .lie I famine." " I)o ' why Ko to sleon a|;nin, in- rontinent ; i|iii dort dine. •' Hut I tell you I am too hunpry to sl«H"j>," .snapiM'd (ieranl. " L»t ut mandi. then," rrpliwl Denys, with patrmal indulp-ncc. lie had a brief paroxysm of yawns ; then made a .small bundle of In-ars' cars, roilint: them up in a strip of the .skin, eiit for the i)urj>o.sc ; nnd they tonk the road. (ierard leaned on hi.s axe, and, nro|)]H'l ]iapa. smoothly. It WU5 a clear, starlight night ; and (toon the moon, risin^r, revealc*! the end of the wood at no j^reat di.staiiee ; Iilea.sant sijcht, »ine« I>u.sMld«jrf they :new was but a short leu;jue further At the ed;;e of the wood they rame uj)on somethin;; so mysterious that they stop|M-4l to ^u/.e at it lufon- po- in^; up to it. Two white pillars roue in the air, distant a few paces from each i>thfr , and U-tween them stad, or live robU-rs waiting to shoot down honest travellem ? nay, living men they eannot lie, for they stand on nothing that I .*ee. O Denys, let us turn baek till duybn-nk; thit is no mortal si^ht." Denys halted and jKH-n'il Ion;; and kef Illy. " They are nun," said he, at last, (ieranl was for turning hack all the more. " Hut men that will never hurt nn, nor we them. I^Mik not to their feet for that they stand on ! " " When- then, i' the name of all the saints ' " " I<lesal<" vengiance, o light air swept by ; and several of the corp-ses swung, or gently gyrateil, and every ropecreake*!. CJerard shudih-red at this ghastly salute. So thoroiighlv had the giU hot witli 'Ha sickening loud .seized and held their eyes, that it was but now they jK-rccived a tire right under- neath, and a living figure sitting huddled over it. lli« axe lav bcsido THE CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. 95 him, the briftht blade shining red in the glow, lie was asleep. Gerard started, but Dcnys only whispered, " Courage, comrade, here is a fire." "Ay! but there is a man at it." " There will soon be three " ; and he began to heap some wood on it that the watcher had prepared ; dur- ing which the prudent Gerard seized the man's axe, and sat down tight on it, grasping his own, and exam- ining the sleeper. There was noth- ing outwardly distinctive in the man. He wore the dress of the country folk, and the hat of the district, a three- cornered hat called a Brunswicker, stiff enough to turn a sword-cut, and with a thick brass hat-band. The weight of the whole thing had turned his ears entirely down, like a fancy rabbit's in our century ; but even this, though it spoiled him as a man, was nothing remarkable. They had of late met scores of these dog's-eared rustics. The peculiarity was — this clown watching under a laden gal- lows. What for? Deuys, if he felt curious, would not show it ; he took out two bears' ears from his bundle, »nd, running sticks through them, began to toast them. " 'T will be eating coined money," said he ; " for the burgomaster of Dusseldorf had given us a rix-dollar for these ears, as proving the death of their owners ; but better a lean purse thau a lean stomach." " Unhappy man ! " cried Gerard, "could you eat food here?" " Where the fire is lighted there must the meat roast, and where it roasts there must it be eaten ; for naught travels worse than your roasted meat." " Well, eat thou, Denys, an thou canst ! but I am cold and sick ; there is no room for hunger in my heart after what mine eyes have seen," and he shuddered over the fire. " O, how they creak ! and who is this man, I winder ? what an ill-favored churl ' " Denys examined him like a con- noisseur looking at a picture ; and in due course delivered judgment. " I take him to be of the refuse of that company whereof these (pointing carelessly upward) were the cream, and so ran their heads into dan- ger." " At that rate, why not stun him before he wakes ? " and Gerard fid- geted where he sat. Denys opened his eyes with humor- ous sm-prise. " For one who sets up for a milksop you have the readiest hand. Why should two stun one ? tush ! he wakes ; note now what he says at waking, and tell me." These last words were hardly whis- pered when the watcher opened his eyes. At sight of the fire made up, and two strangers eying him keenly, he stared, and there was a s ^vere and pretty succcj^ful effort to be calm ; stiil a perceptible tremor ran all over hun. Soon he manned himself, and said gniffly, " Good morrow." But, at the very moment of saying it, he missed his axe, and saw how Gerard was sitting upon it, with his own laid ready to his hand. He lost counte- nance again directly. Denys smiled grimly at this bit of by-play. " Good morrow ! " said Gerard qui- etly, keeping his eye on him. The watcher was now too ill at ease to be silent. " You make free with my fire," said he ; but he added, in a somewhat faltering voice, " you are welcome." Denys whispered Gerard. The watcher eyed them askant. " My comrade says, sith we share your fire, you shall share his meat." " So be it," said the man, warmly. " I have half a kid hanging on a bush hard by ; I '11 go fetch it " ; and he arose with a cheerful and obliging countenance, and was retiring. Denys caught up his cross-bow, and levelled it at his head. The man fell on his knees. Denys lowered his weapon, and pointed him back to his place. lie rose and went back slowly and m^- 96 THK CLOISTER AND THE HEARTH. BtCfldily, like one disjointed, and sick at heart as the mouse that the eat lets go a little wny, and then durtd and replaces. " Sit down, friend," said Dcnys, primly, in French. The man obevcd finger and tone, though he knew not a word of French. " Tell him the (ire is not hig enough for more than three. He will take my meaning." This being eommnnieated by Ge- nird, tlie man grinned ; ever since Denys s|)oke he had seemed great- ly relieved. " I wist not ye were strangers," said he to (jerard. Denys cut a piece of bear's ear, ami offered it with grace to him lie had just levelled cross-bow at. lie took it calndy, and drew a piece of bread from his wallet, and divided it with the pair. Nay, more, he winked and thrust his hand into the heap of leaves he sat on ((Jerard gras])ed his a.\c ready to brain him), and pnxluceil a leathern Untie hold- ing tull two gallons. He put it to his mouth, and dnink their healths, then hnmli'd it to Gerard ; he passed it untotiilud to Denys. " Mort de ma vicl " cried the sol- dier, " it is Uhcnish wine, and fit for tlie gullet of an archbishop. Here 's to thee, thou prince of good fel- lows, wishing thee a short life and a merry one! Come, Gerard, sujd sup ! Pshaw, never heed them, man ! they heed not thee. Natheless, did I hang over such a skin of Uhcnish as this, and three churls sat l)cneath a draining it and offered rac not a drop, I 'd soon be down among them.' " Dcnys ! Dcnys ! " " My spirit would cut the cord, and womp would come my lx)dy amongst ye, with a hand on the bottle, and one eye winking, t'other — " Gerard started up with a cry of horror and his fingers to his cars, and was running from the place, when his eyes fell on the watcher's axe. The tangible danger brought him hack. He sat down again r>n thv ax-- wiik his fingers in his ears. "Courage, I'ami, lediablcest mort! " shouted Denys, gayly, and offered him a piece of la-ar's ear, jiut it right un- der his no.se »is he stoj>{)e(l his ears. Gerard tumeil his head away with loathing. " Wine ! " he gas[>ed. " Heaven knows I have much need of it, with such companions as thee and — " He took a long draught of the Rhenish wine : it ran glowing through his veins, and wanned and strength- eiK-tl his heart ; but eouM not check his tremors whenever a gust of wind came. As for Denys and the olher, they feastcfl recklessly, and plied the iKjttle unceasingly, and drank healths ami caroused beneath that creaking scjuilchre and its ghastly tenants. " Ask him how tiny came here," said Denys, with his mouth full, and ])ointing up without looking. Un this question iK'ing inteq»retcd to the watcher, he replied that trea.son had Iteeii their end, dialK>licai trea- son and priestcraft. He then, l>eing rendere thuti^'ht him nhdiiufully ovi-rpuid iilreadv. " Dost swk the hide off i)ur iMjnes ? " " Nay, pood sirs ; bat yon hare M-en ti>-nipht how parlous a life ii mine. Yc l>c trtio men, and your pniver!* avail ; pivc me then a stniall in lie oCa prayer, an "t please you ; for I know not one." tJeranl'.H eholer ))cpan to rise at the 1 i,'«)ti'.tieal roj^tie ; nion'ovt-r. erer itinec hi4 wound, he hud felt pu^t.H of irritalMlity. Ilowevi-r, he hit hi.i lip, iind !• liil, ■■ Then* po two wonl.H to tliiit hiir^'ain ; tell me tip*t, is it tnic what men dnyof you Khenioh thieves, ihiit ve do munler innocent and un- n.'.'«i' ; but the law in this land slays an lioni>st man an' if he ilo but steal. What follows ' he would l>e pitiful, but is di."»eourB^iMl tlien-from ; pity j;ains him no pity, and doubles his |MTil ; an he but rut a piir^e. his life is forfeit ; therefore eutteth he the thmat to Uxit, to save his own neck ; «lead men tell no ta\v». I'ray. then, for the jMjor soul who by bhx)dy laws is driven to kill or else Ik> slau;;i)tered ; were there less of this uurejusonable (jibbotin;: on the high- road, there should Iw less enforced cuttinfj of throaLs in dark^woods, my masters." " Fewer words had served," replied Gerard, coldly ; " I asked a quesition, I am answereil " ; and, suddenly doff- ing his bonnet : — " ' Obsecro Deum omnipotenlnn, ut, qua cruce jam pendent isti quindecim liitronea furra et knmlcidir, in iti homtd Jit fur ft lairo lu pr/inuirni r/uum eili^ $imf, ftm puUica talutr, i/i hoiu>rrm jutU iMi CM tit gloria, in tttemum, Amen.' " And to pood day." TIh- pn'Cfly outlaw was satisfied at last. " Tlwt is Latin," he miittentl, •' and jnore than I bargained for." So indecii it was. And he returned to his busincM with a mind at ea.so. The friends |M>ndere«l in »ilenee the many creotM of the last few hours. At last (iernrd saiil, thoughtfully, " That she-boar saved both our lire* — bv (ioil's will." "t.ike enough," replicr eight as black as ink around our fire." " When ' when ' " " Ere we had left it five minutes." *' (}o»xl Heavens! And you said not a wonl." •' It woulil but have worried you, and had set our friend a lking hack, and mayhiip temt>tcd him to get his skull st>lit. All other danger was over; tney could not sec us, we were out of the moonshine, anil, indeed, just turning a corner; ah! there is the sun ; and lu-n' are the gates of Dus- .seldorf Courage, I'anii, Ic diabic cat mort." " My head ! my head ! " was all poor ( icrard could reply. " So many shocks, emotions, pains, horrors, aildcd to the wound, his first, had tried his youthful IhxIv and sensi- tive nature too severely. It wa.9 noon of the same