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13. CHAPTER XIII.

“Is there in human form that bears a heart—
A wretch! a villain! lost to love and truth!
That can with studied, sly, ensnaring art,
Betray sweet Jenny's unsuspecting youth?”

Burns.


Gerald Roscoe to Mrs. Layton.

On looking over your letter a second time, my
“dear Mrs. Layton, I find there is enough of it
“unanswered to give me a pretence for addressing
“you again; and as I know no more agreeable
“employment of one of my many leisure hours
“than communicating with you, I will contrast
“your picture of the miseries of rustic hospitality
“and rustic habits, with the trials of a poor devil,
“condemned to the vulgarity and necessity of drag
“ging through the summer months in town. We
all look at our present, petty vexations, through
“the magnifying end of the glass, and then turning
“our instrument, give to the condition of others, the
“softness and enchantment of distance.

“But to my picture. Behold me then, after
“having waited through the day in my clientless
“office, retired to my humble lodging, No. —
“Walker-street, in a garret apartment, (by courtesy
“styled the attic,) as hot, even after the sun is
“down, as a well-heated oven when the fire is with
“drawn, or as hot as you might imagine `accom
“modations for a single gentleman' in tophet. The


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“room is fifteen feet square, or rather the floor,
“as the ceiling descends at an angle of forty-five
“degrees, so that whenever I pass the centre of my
“apartment I am compelled to a perpetual salam,
“or to having my head organized in a manner that
“would confound the metaphysical materialism of
“a German.

“My dear mother, nobly as she has conformed
“herself to our fallen fortunes, has not yet been able
“to dispense with certain personal refinements for
“herself, or for her unworthy son. I believe in my
“soul, she has never wafted a sigh from our land
“lady's sordid little parlor to the almost forgotten
“splendors of our drawing-room; but there is
“something intolerably offensive to her habits and
“tastes in the arrangements of a plebeian bed-room.
“Accordingly she has fitted up my apartment with
“what she considers necessaries; but that first ne
“cessity—that chiefest of all luxuries—space, she
“cannot command; nor can all her ingenuity over
“come the principle of resistance in matter, so that
“my `indispensable' furniture limits my locomotive
“faculties to six feet by four. The knocks I get
“in any one day against my bureaus, writing
“table, book-case, &c., would convert a Berkleian
“philosopher.

“I have but one window, an offset from the roof,
“to which my dormant ceiling forms a covert way.
“My horizon is bounded by tiled roofs and square
“chimneys. No graceful outlines of foliage; no
“broad lake to sparkle and dimple on the verge of
“the starry canopy; no `heaven-kissing hill;' but


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“chimneys and roofs, and roofs and chimneys, for
“one who counts it high pleasure to behold

`The lofty woods—the forest wide and long,
Adorn'd with leaves and branches fresh and green,
In whose cool bowers the birds, with many a song,
Do welcome with their quire the summer's queen;
The meadows fair, where Flora's gifts among
Are intermix'd with verdant grass between;
The silver scaled fish that softly swim
Within the sweet brook's crystal, watry stream.'

“These are the sorrows of my exile from nature
“in this her glorious ascendant. I say nothing,
“my dear Mrs. L., of being chained to the city,
“when the sweet spirits that gave it life are fled.
“In short, I will say nothing more of my miseries
“and privations. I will even confess that my little
“cell has its pleasures; humble though they be, still
“they are pleasures. I do not mean the dreams
“and visions that sport about the brain of a young
“man who has his own fortunes to carve in the
“world, and who of course indemnifies himself for
“the absolute negation of his present condition by
“the brilliant apparition of the future. It is well
“for us that our modesty is not gauged by our an
“ticipations! My humble attic pleasure consists in
“looking down, like Don Cleofas, on my neigh
“bors—in guessing at their spirit and history from
“their outward world. You, my dear madam,
“who live in the courtly luxury of — street, if
“your eye ever glanced through your curtained
“window at the yards of your neighbors, would
“only see the servile labors of their domestics.
“You can therefore have no imagination of the


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“revelations of life to my eye. A curious contrast
“there is between the front and rear of these esta
“blishments of our humble citizens—the formal
“aspect of the ambitious front parlor, and the laisser
“aller
style of the back apartments. Suffer me,
“in this dearth of parties, operas, and whatever
“makes an accredited drawing-room topic, to in
“troduce you to one of my neighbors and his `petit
“paradis
,' for so Abeille calls and considers his
“yard, a territory of about thirty feet by fourteen.
“Poor Abeille!—poor—what can make a French
“man poor? They ride through life on the `virtu
“oso's saddle, which will be sure to amble when
“the world is at the hardest trot.' They have
“heaven's charter for happiness.

“Abeille was a seigneur of St. Domingo, and
“possessed one of the richest estates of that Hes
“perian island. Did you never observe that a
“Frenchman's temperament is the reverse of the
“ungracious state that `never is, but always to be
“blessed.' Let his present condition be abject as it
“will, he has been blest. Abeille revels now in the
“retrospective glories of his seigniory, from which
“the poor fellow was happy to escape, during the
“troubles, with his life, his family, and a few jew
“els, with the avails of which he has since purchased
“this little property, and a scene of perfect French
“happiness it is. Abeille has two lodgers, an old
“bachelor, bitten with the mania of learning French,
“and a clerk qualifying himself for a supercargo.
“He teaches young ladies to paint flowers. His
“pretty daughters, Felicité and Angélique, embroi
“der muslin and weave lace, and by these means,


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“and the infinite ingenuity of a French ménage
“they contrive to live in independence, and so far
“from any vain misery about their past magnifi
“cence, it seems merely to cast a vivid hue—a sort
“of sunset glory over their present mediocrity.

“Abeille's little parterre gives him far more
“pleasure, he confesses, than he ever received
“from his West-India plantation. This parterre is
“the triumph of taste over expense. He has
“covered with a trellis a vile one story back-build
“ing, that protrudes its hideous form the whole length
“of the yard, and conducted over it a grape-vine, that
“yields fruit as delicious and plentiful as if it grew
“in sunny France. The high board-fence, over
“which once flaunted a vulgar creeper, is now em
“bossed with a multi-flora. In the angle of the
“yard next the house, and concealing with exquisite
“art an ugly indentation of the wall, is a moss-rose,
“Abeille's chef d'œuvre. This he has fed, watered,
“pruned, and in every way cherished, till it has
“surmounted the fence; and to-day I saw him
“gazing at a cluster of buds on the very summit, as
“a victor would have looked on his laurel-crown. At
“the extremity of the yard is a series of shelves ar
“ranged like the benches of an ampitheatre, (mark
“the economy of space and sunshine!) filled with
“pots containing the finest flowers of all seasons.
“The back windows are festooned, not screened—
“a Frenchman never blinds his windows—with
“honeysuckles, coquetting their way to two bird
“cages, where, embowered and perfumed, are
“perched canaries and mocking-birds, who enjoy


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“here every sweet in nature but liberty, and the
“little servile rogues sing as if they had forgotten
“that; and to finish all, the few unoccupied feet of
“the `petit paradis,' just leaving space for Abeille
“to meander among the flowers, are set with me
“dallions of carnations, tulips, hyacinths, and mig
“nonette. I must not omit the tame crow, Abeille's
“esquire, who follows him like his shadow, and
“madame's pets and darlings, an enormous parrot,
“the most accomplished of his tribe—a Mathews
“among parrots—and the largest and ugliest shock
“that ever lay in a Frenchwoman's lap. There sits
“madame, at this moment, coquetting with the par
“rot, scolding Belle, and taking snuff, her only
“occupations in life. `Pauvre femme,' Abeille
“says, `elle ne sait pas travailler—toutes les femmes
“de St. Domingue sont ainsi paresseuses, mais,
“elle est si bonne, si œconome, et si fidelle!'
“ `Pauvre femme' indeed! Abeille looks at her
“through the vista of long past time, or he would
“not account the latter quality such a virtue. But
“if madame does not, her pretty daughters do
“know how to work. Felicite wrought herself into
“the heart of a youth, who in spite of her poverty,
“and in spite of the Yankee prejudice of all his kin
“dred against a French girl, married her, and toiled
“hard to support her, when last week, like the gifts
“of a fairy tale, came a rich legacy to Felicité from
“Port-au-Prince, the bequest of a ci-devant slave.
“Never were people happier. I see them now
“prettily grouped at their chamber-window, Felicité
“leaning on her husband's shoulder, and playing

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“bopeep with her child, the child in the arms of her
“old maiden aunt 'Eli, who has forgotten to put on
“her false curls, even forgotten her matin mass
“ever since this bantling came into the world. So
“easy is it, my dear Mrs. Layton, for the affections
“of your sex to revert to their natural and happiest
“channel.

“But the prettiest flower of my neighbor's gar
“den, the genius loci of his petit paradis, is An
“gélique. She is much younger than her sister.
“From my observations from winter to summer for
“the last three years, I take it she is about the
“poetic age of seventeen.

“With all the facilities of my observatory, and
“the advantage of occasional explanatory notes
“from Abeille, I am extremely puzzled by Angé
“lique. During the past winter, I used every eve
“ning to see her, the very soul of gaiety, at the
“little réunions at her father's. Her sylph-like
“figure was always flitting over the floor. She danced
“with her father's old French friends, and frolicked
“with the children, the veriest romp and trickster
“among them. She would sew the skirts of pére
“Baillé's coat to old 'Eli's gown; drop icicles un
“der the boys' collars, and play off on all, young
“and old, her feats of fearless frolic. As the spring
“opened, I heard her sweet voice outsinging the
“birds, her light heart seemed instinctively to echo
“their joyous notes; and many a time have I
“thrown down my book, and involuntarily respond
“ed to her merry peals of laughter. Soon after
“this there was a sudden transition from the gay
“temper of the girl to the elaborate arts of the


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“young lady. She dressed ambitiously, always
“with exquisite taste, as if she had studied her fa
“ther's flowers for the harmony of colors, but with
“a restless vanity and expense that seemed the out
“breaking of her West-India nature. A few weeks
“since she had the fever of sentiment upon her—
“would sit whole evenings by her window alone,
“and sang more plaintive ditties than I supposed
“there were in the French language. Now she
“sings nothing, gay or sad, but sits all day over
“her lace without raising her eyes. Her face is so
“pale and pensive that I fancy, even at this dis
“tance, I see the tears dropping on her work.

“Her father called me to the fence to-day to give
“me a carnation. I remarked to him, that made
“moiselle was too constantly at her work. `Yes,'
“he said, `but she will work and she is so
“triste, Monsieur Roscoe. Sacristie! we are all
“triste, when Angélique will not smile.' `Ah!
“monsieur, mon cœur pleure.' I felt a sort of
“shivering as if a storm were gathering over this
“sunny spot. Heaven grant that this little hum
“ble paradis may not be infested by evil spirits.
“Do not, my dear Mrs. Layton, give the reins to
“your feminine fancy. My interest in Angélique
“is all `en philosophe,' or if you please, `en phi
“lanthropiste
;' a little softer and deeper it may be,
“than 'Eli or even Felicite, or any less beautiful
“than Angélique could excite.”

“I left my letter last evening and strolled down
“to the Battery. It should have been a moon
“light night but the clouds had interposed, and the


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“few loiterers that remained there chose the broad
“walk at the water's-side. I saw an acquaint
“ance whom I was in no humor to join, and I
“retired to a more secluded walk, where I encoun
“tered a pair who had evidently gone there to avoid
“observers, for on seeing me approach they turned
“abruptly and departed. Soon after, in going
“up Broadway, I met the same couple. They
“were just separating; the lady came towards
“me; she was shawled and veiled, but as I was
“passing her, her veil caught in the railing of an
“area and her face was exposed. It was, as I had
“conjectured, Angélique. I walked on without
“seeming to notice her, and I perceived that her
“attendant had turned and was hastily retracing his
“steps after her. I cast a scrutinizing glance at
“him, and though his hat was drawn close over his
“eyes, and he held his handkerchief to his face, I
“believed then, and still believe, he was Pedrillo!
“He has a certain gait and air that cannot be mis
“taken, and though he had not on the famous
“Spanish identifying cloak that you used to say
“was managed more gracefully than any other in
“Broadway, yet I am sure I am right in my conjec
“ture. If I am, `curse on his perjured arts!' ”

“My dear Mrs. Layton:—My letter had swollen
“to such an unreasonable bulk that I threw it aside
“as not worth the postage. But some facts having
“come to my ear which have made me give unwill
“ing credence to the possibility that you may be in
“duced to favor Pedrillo's suit to Emilie, I have
“determined to communicate certain particulars to


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“you, that I think will influence your opinion of
“this gentleman.

“The evening after the encounter with Pedrillo
“I have already mentioned, I was returning late to
“my lodgings—there should have been a waning
“moon to light the city, but the heavens were over
“cast, one of the possible vicisitudes of weather,
“which, (if we may judge from the economy of lamp
“oil,) is not anticipated by our corporation. The
“night was dark and drizzling. It was past one
“o'clock. I was musing on the profound stillness—
“what stillness is so eloquent as that of a populous
“city?—and in part confused by the darkness, I
“turned down White instead of Walker street. I
“did not perceive my mistake till I had made some
“progress, and then my attention was attracted by
“a carriage drawn up close to the flagging; the
“steps were down, the door open, and the coach
“man on his box. There was no light from
“the adjoining houses; no sound, no indication
“of any kind that a creature was awake there.
“I thought the poor devil of a coachman over
“wearied had fallen asleep on his box, and I stop
“ped with the intention of waking him, when I
“heard three low notes whistled by some person
“a few doors in advance of me, and directly half
“the blind of a parlor window was opened, and by
“the faint light that penetrated the misty atmos
“phere, I perceived a man's figure before the win
“dow of Abéille's house. Imperfect and varying
“as the light was, I saw the person was addressing
“imploring and impatient gestures to some one
“within. My first impulse was that natural to a


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“mind of common manliness and delicacy, to avoid
“any interference with the secret purposes of an
“other, and I crossed the street, designing to pass
“immediately down on the other side. But as the
“purpose of this untimely visit flashed upon my
“mind, I felt that there was something cowardly in
“my retreat. It might be possible, even at this
“late moment to save the infirm Angélique (for
“I had truly divined the actors in the scene) from
“the power of the villain Pedrillo. I was forti
“fied in my hope when I saw Angélique, in the
“act of putting her hat on her head, throw it
“from her, and cautiously raise the window-sash.
“She spoke to Pedrillo, but in so low a voice that
“I only caught a few words. Something she said
“of her mother being sick. That she faltered in
“her purpose of quitting the paternal roof was plain
“from Pedrillo's vehement gestures, and from the
“agony of indecision with which she paced the
“room, wringing her hands, and balancing, no
“doubt, the pleadings of honor and filial duty,
“against the passionate persuasions of her lover.

“I too thought of poor Abéille—the fond old
“father—of his `petit paradis,' and his cheerful and
“grateful enjoyment of the wreck of his splendid
“fortune, and of this his loveliest flower trampled in
“the dust. Images of the ruin and desolation that
“awaited the amiable Frenchman nerved my reso
“lution, and the possibility that I might avert the
“instant danger, made my heart throb as if my own
“dearest treasure were in jeopardy. What, thought
“I, ought I to do? What can I do, to counteract
“one who has so far succeeded in his purposes?


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“I may alarm the neighbors by my outcries, and
“rouse Abéille, but the wretch will escape with his
“prey, before he can be intercepted: or, at best,
“Angélique will be disgraced by the exposure of
“her intentions. Thus puzzled, I ceased to measure
“obstacles, dismissed all calculations, and just fol
“lowed the impulse and guidance of my feelings.
“I advanced with cautious foot-steps towards
“Abeille's door-step. Pedrillo was already on it,
“and as yet unaware of my proximity.

“The light moved from the parlor, and flashed
“through the fan-light above the street-door. An
“gélique had then decided her fate. There was
“another pause in her movement. I was now
“so near to Pedrillo that I heard him breathe
“through his shut teeth, `Ye furies! why does
“not she open the door?' and as if answering
“to his words, Angélique gave audible tokens
“of her decision. The bolts were slowly with
“drawn, the door opened, and Pedrillo sprang
“forward to receive his prize, when with one arm
“I hurled him back. I know not how far he fell,
“nor where, I had no time to give him one glance;
“with my other arm I had grasped Angélique, and
“dragging her within the door, I instantly reclosed
“and rebolted it.

“I never shall forget, and I am sure I can never
“describe, Angélique's first look of terror, astonish
“ment, and inquiry, and the overwhelming shame
“with which she dropped her head on her bosom,
“when she recognised me. Fortunately she did
“not speak. I listened intently for some indica


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“tion of our baffled knight's intentions, at this un
“expected turn in his affairs. I heard nothing till
“the sound of the retiring carriage-wheels proved
“that he had retreated. I then graced myself with an
“apology to Angélique. I am not sure that she was
“not, when her first surprise was over, a little vexed
“with my interference, but I was so fortunate as to
“give a better direction to her feelings, and with
“out preaching about her duties, or dictating them,
“I set before her such a picture of her fond old fa
“ther, that her tender heart returned to its loyalty
“to him, to duty, and to happiness, and shuddering
“at the precipice from which she had escaped, she
“most solemnly vowed for ever to renounce, and
“shun Pedrillo.

“That it is better to save than to destroy, no one
“will dispute. I believe it is easier—far easier to per
“suade the infirm to virtue than to vice. There is an
“unbroken chord in every human heart, that vibrates
“to the voice of truth. There is there an undying
“spark from the altar of God, that may be kindled
“to a flame by the breath of virtue. If we felt this
“truth more deeply, we should not be so reckless of
“the happiness of our fellow-beings, and so negli
“gent of any means we may possess of cherishing
“and stimulating their virtue.

“I did not embarrass Angélique with my pre
“sence one moment after I was assured that her
“right resolution was fixed; but I hesitated whether
“to retire through Abéille's yard to my lodgings,
“or to go into the street, where Pedrillo might pos
“sibly still be lurking. I wished that, if possible,
“he should think Angélique had been rescued by


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“some one who had a natural right to interpose in
“her behalf. But as I thought there was little
“chance of encountering him, and as I had knocked
“off my hat in entering the house, I withdrew that
“way in the hope of finding it. I did not; and I
“have since suspected that Pedrillo ascertained my
“name from it, for I have met him once since, and
“I thought his face flushed and his brow lowered
“as he passed me.

“Now, my dear Mrs. Layton, have I not by
“giving you a true account of the sober part I
“played in this little drama, proved to you my dis
“belief in the slander that claims the paramount
“favor of your sex for men à bonnes fortunes?
“However, to confess the truth, my motive in the
“communication was quite foreign to myself; but
“I must indulge my egotism by relating my own
“part in the characteristic finishing of the tale.
“Old Abéille came to my room this morning with
“a note from Angélique. She informed me that
“her poor mother had just died; that she had be
“stowed `such praise' on her when she gave her
“her last blessing. `The praise,' she said, `she
“had not deserved by her virtue, she would by her
“penitence, and she had fallen on her knees and
“confessed all to her mother; and her mother had
“then blessed her more fervently than ever, and
“blessed Monsieur Roscoe, both in one breath. And
“if the prayer of the dying was heard,' adds Angé
“lique, `no trouble nor sin will ever come nigh to
“Monsieur Roscoe, nor to any thing Monsieur
“loves.' Her note concludes with the information


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“that she is going to the convent at Baltimore `to
“pray to God and make penitence for a little
while.' It was evident the old man had a burden
“on his heart that could only be relieved by words;
“but there are feelings of a nature and force to
“check the fluency even of a Frenchman; and
“Abéille was mute, save in the eloquence of tears.
“He took out his snuff-box, which serves him on all
“occasions as a link to mend the broken chain of
“his ideas; but now it would not do. I had not
“yet read Angélique's note, and I naturally referred
“his emotion to the death of his wife, to which I
“adverted in a tone of condolence. “Ah, 'tis not
“that, Monsieur Roscoe,' he said, `il faut mourir—
“and my wife—pauvre femme!—was good to die.
“Certainement c'est un grand malheur; but every
“body can speak of his wife's death—but, sacristié!
“when I think of that, my tongue will not move,
“though my heart is full of gratitude to you, Mon
“sieur Roscoe. Ah, you have saved us all, et de
“quelle horreur!' Here Abéille burst into a fresh
“flood of tears, and again had recourse to his snuff-box.
“I could no longer appear ignorant of his meaning.
“`My good friend,' said I, `I understand you per
“fectly; but this is not a subject to talk about. Let me
“only say to you, that Angélique was even more
“ready to spring from the toils than I was to extri
“cate her.' `Ah, Dieu soit béni—veritablement—
“elle est un ange. Ah, Monsieur Roscoe, you
“have said that good word of ma petite pour
“m'encourager. Vous savez,' he continued, for
“now he had recovered all his volubility, `vous

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“savez quelle est belle—la reine de toutes mes
“fleurs—ah! n'est ce pas, Monsieur—and she is
“always so douce et gaie—si gaie—toujours—
“toujours—and now, Monsieur Roscoe, we must
“speak English; that always have a very plain mean
“ing. My claim on my country is partly allowed,
“and I have received fifty thousand francs. Now I do
“not want this money; I am very happy, and my
“poor girl shall have it all—ten thousand dollars—
“and when she has made her penitence you shall
“have her hand, Monsieur Roscoe, and all the
“money in it. Ah, do not speak—vous le méritez.'

“I certainly was not prepared to reply to so un
“expected an expression of Abéille's gratitude.
“However, I had frankness enough to say that
“marriage must be an affair of the heart entirely.
“`You,' I said, `my friend Abéille, cannot answer
“for Angélique at the end of a twelvemonth, nor
“can I foresee in what disposition I shall then find
“myself.' `Ah but,' interrupted Abéille, `we will
“shorten Angélique's retirement to a few weeks—
“elle est si jeune,—il ne faut pas penser et prier
“Dieu too long.' I was driven to an evasion; for
“I have too much chivalry interwoven in the very
“web of my nature to reject a `fair ladye' in plain
“terms, and I said, scarcely controlling a smile at
“the resemblance of my reply to the formula of a docile
“miss, at her first offer; I said that my mother felt
“on these subjects quite `en Américaine,'—that she
“had her prejudices, and I feared it would break
“her heart if I married any other than one of my
“own countrywomen, and therefore I must not


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“admit the thought of aspiring to the hand of
“Mademoiselle Angélique.

“`Est-il possible,' cried Abéille, `q'une femme
“raisonnable, peut être capable de telles sottises,
“pauvre garçon!' This was spoken in a tone of
“deep commiseration. `I pray the bon Dieu will
“reward your filial piety; but where will madame
“find une Américaine comparable à mon Angélique?
“Toujours, toujours you shall be mon fils, if
“you cannot be the mari of my belle Angé
“lique. Eh bien!—chacun à son goüt—mais,
“une Américaine préférable à mon Angélique!'
“The old man took a double pinch of snuff.
“`Adieu, Monsieur Roscoe; you will come to
“the cathédrale to hear the miserére chanted for
“poor Madame Abeille.' I assured him I would
“do so, and thereupon we parted.

“My dear Mrs. Layton, allow me the happiness
“of soon hearing from your own lips, or your own
“pen, that Senor Pedrillo's suit has met its merited
“fate.

“And in the meantime, believe me, as ever,
“Your devoted friend and servant,

Gerald Roscoe.”

Roscoe was right in his conjecture that Pedrillo
had ascertained who had intercepted his success.
When he rose from the prostrate position in the middle
of the street where Roscoe had thrown him, he
stumbled over a hat. He perceived that the noise
at Abéille's door had attracted the observation of
one of the guardians of the night, and he thought
proper to retreat. He took the hat with him, and


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when he exposed it to the light, he found within it
the name that of all others was most likely to give a
keen edge to his resentment. He had met Roscoe
often at Mrs. Layton's, and had had some corroding
suspicions that Emilie's indifference to his addresses
proceeded from preference to Roscoe. He
tore off the name, and threw the hat into the street,
saying as he did so, “I have found out the object,
and I will make the opportunity of revenge.”

It must be confessed there is a charm to our republican
society, in a foreign name and aristocratic
pretensions, like the fascinations of a fairy tale to
children. Our tastes are yet governed by ancient
préstiges—cast in the old mould. We profess the
generous principle that each individual has a right
to his own eminence, whether his sires commanded
the heights, or drudged obscurely in the humblest
vale of life; but artificial distinctions still influence
our imaginations, and the spell has not been dissolved
by the repeated detection of the pretensions
of impostors with foreign manners, and high-sounding
titles who have obtained the entrée of our
fashionable circles.

Henriques Pedrillo had far more plausible claims
to favor than certain other vagrant foreigners who
have played among us too absurd and notorious a
part to be yet forgotten. He had in the first place
`nature's aristocracy,' a person and face of uncommon
symmetry and elegance, and these advantages
he cherished and set off with consummate art, steering
a middle course between coxcombry and negligence,
the Scylla and Charybdis of the gentleman's
toilette. His conversation did not indicate any more


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erudition than he might have imbibed at the playhouse,
and by a moderate intercourse with cultivated
society. He spoke English, French, and
Spanish equally well; and so well as to leave his
hearer in doubt which was his vernacular; and he
had the insinuating address—the devotion of look
and manner, in his intercourse with ladies, that
marks the exotic in America. In common with
most Spaniards who come among us, he cast his nativity
in old Castile, though he confessed he had
been driven to the new world to repair the abated
fortunes of his ancient family. He was not precise
in communicating the particulars of his career; but
the grand circumstance of success, if it did not extinguish
curiosity, at least repressed its expression.
He had been recently known to some of our first
merchants, as the principal in a rich house in the
Havana. This was enough to satisfy the slight
scrupulosity Jasper Layton might have felt in introducing
him to his wife and daughter. Mrs. Layton
at first courted Pedrillo merely as a brilliant
acquisition to her coterie. She confessed she had
no affinities for American character—tame, unexcitable,
and unadorned as she deemed it. She
spoke French and Spanish remarkably well, and
the desire to demonstrate these accomplishments did
not betray a very culpable vanity. She first sedulously
cultivated Pedrillo's acquaintance; `Eve did
first eat;' but Mrs. Layton, no more than our first
mother, foresaw the fatal consequences of what appeared
a trivial act. Their relations soon became
interesting and complicated. Pedrillo was captivated
by Emilie's pre-eminent beauty. Her innocence

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and sweetness touched all that remained of
unextinguished goodness in his nature. The evil
spirits look back with lingering affection to the
heaven they have forfeited.

Layton, a man of lavish expense, found Pedrillo
a most convenient friend. Pedrillo was profuse,
but not careless. He had the acute habits of a man
of business, and even in his pleasures he nicely balanced
the amount he gave against the consideration
he expected to receive. When, therefore, he
from time to time, lent Jasper Layton large sums of
money, he gloried in the secret consciousness of the
power he was accumulating. Their intimacy grew
till Layton gave him the last proof of his confidence
and good fellowship, by introducing him to a club
of gentlemen who met privately every night at a
gambling-house, and indulged there to great excess
this keen and destructive passion.

Pedrillo had acquired in scenes of stirring excitement
and imminent peril, such command over his
turbulent passions, that to the eye of an observer the
fire that was merely covered, seemed extinguished.
So at least it appeared to Layton, when after a night
of various fortune and feverish excitement, they
emerged from their club-room, just as the city
lamps were dimmed by the approaching day.
“Pedrillo, my dear fellow,” said Layton, “you
are a philosopher: you win and lose with equal
nonchalance—I—I confess it—I am giddy with my
enexpected luck.”

Unexpected?” replied Pedrillo.

“Yes, unhoped for; Pedrillo, I will tell you a


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secret. When I entered that room to-night I was
utterly ruined.”

“A secret!—ha! ha!”

“A secret—yes, you might have guessed it, for
God knows you were deeply concerned in it—but
all scores are wiped out now, hey, Pedrillo? That
last bragger cleared off the last five thousand—and
my loss to that devilish fellow Martin, that is balanced
too; thank Heaven I am my own man again;
a timely whirl of the wheel it was. Fortune, blind
goddess as thou art, I still will worship thee!”

“Do we visit her temple to-morrow night?”

“Certainly.”

“Au revoir, then.” They parted; Layton went
one way, intoxicated with success, humming glees
and catches, now twisting his cane around his fingers,
now striking it on the pavement, and even attracting
the eye of the drowsy watchmen by his irregular
movements. His spirits would have fled if he
had penetrated Pedrillo's bosom, and seen the keen,
vigilant suspicion he had awakened there.

The next night they met again at the gaming-table.
Fortune maintained her perch on Layton's
cards; Pedrillo lost large sums. Again they left the
house together. Pedrillo appeared even more unmoved
than he had on the preceding night. He
congratulated Layton with as much seeming unconcern
as if the subject in question were a mercantile
speculation in which he had no personal concern.
Layton was in ecstacies—“You may defy the world,
Pedrillo!” he said in a tone of the highest good
humor, “and all its turns, tricks, and shufflings.
Those poor devils we have left behind us are ready


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to cut their own throats, or mine. Zounds! my dear
fellow, you are high-souled and whole-souled—”

“Have you heard from Miss Emilie, to-day?”
asked Pedrillo, rather abruptly interrupting his
companion's strain of lavish compliment.

“Yes.”

“Does she permit me to follow her?”

Layton's elated tone was changed to one more
conciliatory, as he replied, “Why, to tell you the
truth, Pedrillo, she seems disinclined; and on the
whole we may as well consider the affair as ended.”

When did you come to that conclusion, sir?”

“When? what difference does that make, if it be
a wise conclusion?”

“Do we meet to-morrow night?”

“As you please; after my run of luck it does not
become me to propose it.”

“We meet then; and after we will speak of Miss
Emilie.”

“Eh bien; but of course Pedrillo, you understand
that I shall never consent to put any force on
her inclinations.”

“You shall do as you choose”—and he added
mentally, “you shall choose it, Jasper Layton, as
surely as a man chooses life rather than death.”

The next evening found them at their accustomed
haunt. After Pedrillo and Layton had played one
game, Pedrillo threw up the cards, alleging a pain
and dizziness in his head. Another took his place.
He continued to stride up and down the room, sometimes
pausing beside Layton, and always keeping
his eye fixed on him. Layton had a dim consciousness,
as some sensitive persons have in their sleep, of


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a steady gaze, and once or twice he looked up, startled
and inquiring, but instantly his attention reverted
to the portentous interests of the game.
From time to time angry and half-smothered exclamations
broke from his companions, at his obstinate
luck; still they continued with fatal desperation to
wager and lose, and when the play was finished,
they had lost, and Layton had won all. Accustomed
as they were to sudden and violent fluctuations
of fortune, their continued losses on the present occasion
had exhausted their patience, and deprived
them of the power of quelling the expression of
their excited passions. Despair, madness, and
worse than all, suspicion, burst forth in loud imprecations,
or in half audible murmurs. Layton's
cheek burnt, and his hand trembled, with triumph,
or resentment, or consciousness, but he uttered not
one word; and when, as they left the apartment, he,
as usual, thrust his arm into Pedrillo's, Pedrillo
withdrew from him, and fixed on him a cold penetrating
glance that thrilled through his soul. He
involuntarily shivered—they emerged from the long
dark passage, that led from their secret haunt to the
street, into a damp, hot, steaming atmosphere. “A
singular morning for agues!” said Pedrillo, looking
contemptuously at Layton, while he took off his
own hat and fanned himself, as if to stir some living
principle in the suffocating air. Layton turned
his eye timidly to Pedrillo; their glances met—a
keen intelligence, a malignant triumph, and pitiless
contempt, spoke in Pedrillo's; the shame, and
fear, and misery of detected villany, in Layton's.
They walked on in silence to the head of the street,

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where, instead of parting as usual, Pedrillo drew
nearer to Layton, took his arm, and went on with
him. “A word to the wise,” he said, in a low thrilling
voice, “a word to the wise, for wise I think
you will be after this folly—the ass should not attempt
a cheat in the presence of the fox, Layton.
I suspected your trick the first night—the second my
suspicions were confirmed—to-night I have detected
you. Let this pass. You have been rash—
imprudent in your practice, my good friend; you
should have calculated more nicely the chances of
detection. Other suspicions than mine are awakened,
but there is an immeasurable distance between
suspicion and certainty, and we may continue to widen
that distance; that is, if,” and as he finished his
sentence, every word seemed measured and weighed,
and sunk like lead into Layton's heart,—“if in
future we are friends?”

The tone was interrogative, and Layton replied
gaspingly, “certainly, certainly.”

“Well, very well; we understand each other, do
we not?”

“Yes, yes, perfectly.”

“Then let that pass—`Il ne faut pas être plus
sage qu'il ne faut'—details are disagreeable and you
are sure, quite sure there is a clear mutual comprehension?”

Layton felt at every word as if a new manacle were
rivetted on him. Still, safety on any terms, were
better than destruction, and while he writhed under
the power, he dared not resist; “Proceed,” he
cried, “for God's sake—you know I understand
you.”


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“Then, Layton,” he resumed in a familiar, every-day
tone of voice, “my lips are sealed—as to the
few thousands you have won from me, retain them,
as a consideration in part for the treasure you ensure
me—ensure me, mark my words; and, Layton,
if in future you get becalmed, do not attempt
to raise the wind by such desperate expedients.
There are a few situations in life where honesty is
the best policy, and the gaming table is one of them.
But before we part, let us settle our plan of action.
Suspicion is awake, go again to-morrow night, and
lose your winnings liberally! this will baffle their
sagacity, and what is more, appease their resentment.
Do you like my counsel?”

“I will take it.”

“Good night then, or rather good morning, for
I think the sun is glimmering through the scalding
fog.” They parted, and Layton sprang on his own
door-step, as a newly captured slave would dart
from the presence of his master. “One word,”
said Pedrillo, turning back, “you write to Miss
Emilie to-morrow?”

“Yes, yes, I will communicate my determination
to her.”

“Oh! `of course,”' replied Pedrillo, with a
`laughing devil in his eye,' and quoting Layton's
last words of the preceding evening, “`of course
you will put no force on her inclinations.”' An
oath rose to Layton's lips, but he suppressed all expression
till secure from observation in his own
room, he gave vent to a burst of passion; but resentment,
remorse, and parental tenderness, were
now alike unavailing. He was inextricably involved


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with Pedrillo, and his own safety could only
be secured by the sacrifice of his beautiful child.

Jasper Layton was the only son of a man of talent,
virtue, and fortune, and he never quite lost the
sense of the responsibility such an inheritance involved;
and to the last, the fear of publicly disgracing
his honorable name, was a source of the keenest
suffering to him. Unfortunately he came into possession,
by his father's death, of a large fortune,
before he had sufficient strength of principle, or
habit, to encounter its temptations. He was not
destitute of kind, or even tender affections; but
what good thing thrives without culture? and frivolous
pursuits and selfish indulgences had rendered
his callous. Still, they had not perished, and it was
after many heart-writhings, and after a long interview
with Pedrillo on the subsequent morning,
that he wrote the following letter to his wife—to a
wife who, if she had rightly employed her superior
powers, might have saved him from the wreck of
virtue and happiness.

“Madam—I enclose you a remittance, according
“to the conjugal request you did me the honor to
“transmit through Gerald Roscoe, Esq.; and at the
“same time, I take the liberty to forewarn you, that
“unless you second—energetically second, my
“views and wishes in the — affair, I shall lose
“the ability, as I have long ago lost the inclination,
“to answer the demands arising from your habits of
“reckless expense. I expect you to be at Trenton
“by the first of next month. Pedrillo will follow
“you there; and there, or at Utica (he leaves all


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“minor points to her decision) he expects to re
“ceive Emilie's hand. He loves Emilie—upon
“my soul I believe de does—devotedly.

“God knows I have taken every care of her hap
“piness in my arrangements with P—. He has
“made a magnificent settlement on her, and pro
“mises never, but with her consent, to take her to
“Cuba. Do not moralize (it is not your forte)
“about P.'s foibles. I know the world; we must
“take our choice between unmasked frailty, and
“hypocrisy. I, for one, prefer the former. P.'s
“liberality covers a multitude of sins. Women
must be married. Emilie, poor girl, will not it is
“true, marry for love; but we married for love!
“and what has come of it? ha! ha! It is well
“enough for boys and girls to dream about, and
“novelists to string their stories on; but you and I
“know it is all cursed dupery. All that can be
secured in matrimonial life is pecuniary indepen
“dence. To this I have attended with parental
“fidelity.

“You must do your part; your influence over
“E. is unbounded; and if you choose to exercise it,
“you can incline her (force is of course out of the
“question) to do that, on which, let me tell you,
“madam, your as well as my happiness—happiness!
“existence depends. We are ruined, dishonored,
“if this affair is not brought to a fortunate conclu
“sion. I tell you this because it is necessary you
“should know the worst, to second me as you
“should; but make no unessential communications
“to poor E. God preserve that cheek from shame


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“that has never been dyed but with the pure blush
“of innocence.

“Do your part, I beseech you, and do it well,
“and effectually; you can act like a woman of
“sense. But I am urging where I should com
“mand. Remember you have other children, and
“will have future wants. Can you look poverty
“and disgrace in the face? If not, you know the
“alternative.

Yours, &c.

Jasper Layton.”

While the episode in Pedrillo's life related in
Roscoe's letter, and the transactions of the gaming-house
were passing in New York, Gertrude Clarence
was enjoying an almost daily interchange of
visits with her new friends, and an acquaintance
that promised nothing but happiness was ripening
into intimacy. Mrs. Layton found herself compelled
by the receipt of her husband's letter, suddenly
to suspend this intercourse, and she despatched
the following note to Gertrude, in which, as will
be seen, she did not hint at the place of her destination
after she left Upton's-purchase. She had her
reasons for this reserve. She feared that Mrs. Upton
would propose to accompany her, as a ride to
Trenton from her residence was a convenient and
tempting jaunt of pleasure; and she meant that her
going there should appear to have been the consequence
of a subsequent arrangement.

“It is with inexpressible sorrow, my sweetest
“friend, that I am compelled to bid you adieu with
“out again seeing you. We take our departure


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“early in the morning. Poor Em' is quite heart“broken
about it. We are both under the tyranny
“of destiny. I resign all to the despot, save my
“affections; and of those, you, dearest, have taken
“complete possession. It is not because you are
“a heroine of the nineteenth century; that is, prac
“tical, rational, dutiful, and all the tedious et ceteras
“that I admire you. No, these are qualities that, like
“bread and water, are the gross elements of every
“day life, but they have nothing to do with that
“fine accord of finely touched spirits that common
“minds can no more attain than common senses can
“take in the music of the spheres. There is no
“describing it, but we understand it; do we not?
“Dear Gertrude, you must be my friend, you must
“love me; you will have much to forgive in me. I
“am a wayward creature. Oh, heavens! how infe
“rior to you! but there have been crosses in my
“destiny. Had I known you sooner, your bland
“influence would have given a different color to
“my life. You understand me. I disdain the
“Procrustes standard of pattern ladies who admit
“none to the heaven of their favor, but those
“who can walk on a mathematical line, like that
“along which a Mahometan passes to his paradise.

“My best regards to your father. I wish he
“could have looked into my heart and seen how I
“was charmed with his manners to you; the chival
“ric tenderness of the lover mingling with the calm
“sentiment of the father. Would that poor Em'
“had — but on certain subjects unhappy wo
“man is forbidden to speak. To you, my loveliest
“friend, a husband would be a superfluity—at pre


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“sent. But to poor Em' how necessary. You
must come to us this winter. I shall make a
“formal attack on your father to that effect. I
“shall bring out all the arts of diplomacy; but I
“shall need no arts. I have good sense on my
“side, and `good sense' is the oracle of every man
“past forty. Clarenceville is, I allow, in the sum
“mer, a most delicious residence, the favored haunt,
“the home of the genius of mountain and lake;
“but in winter, when the grass withers, the leaves
“fall, the running stream runs no longer, and the
“winds are howling through these sublime forests,
“(a nervous sound of a dark day or cloudy night,)
“then come to the luxuries of civilization in town.
“Man was not made to contend alone with nature;
“and, with honest Touchstone, I confess that the
“country in respect `it is in the green fields, is
“pleasant; but (at all seasons) in respect it's far from
“court, it is tedious.' But pardon me, I had for
“gotten this was a note. One is so beguiled
“into forgetfulness of every thing else when com
“muning with you, dearest! Emilie begs me to
“say farewell for her.” Here followed half a
dozen lines so carefully effaced, that the keenest
curiosity could not discover a word. The note
proceeded: “These crossed lines prove how invo
“luntarily my heart flows out to you—how unwil
“lingly it bears the cold restraint of prudence; but,
“after a few days, such restrictions will be unne
“cessary. Till then, believe me, dear Gertrude,

“Yours, most truly,

Grace Layton.”
“N. B. My mind was so engaged with matters

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“of deeper interest that I forgot to mention the
“total wreck of poor Upton's expectations of
“making a family piece in an English book. She
“has exhausted her hospitalities on this son of an
“English baronet, in the hope of seeing herself, and
“the Judge, and all the little Uptons in print, when
“lo! she has found this morning, in the course of one
“of her housewife explorations, a leaf from the travel
“ler's note-book. I can stop to give you but a
“few specimens from the memorandum. I am vexed
“at the fellow's impertinence towards you; but you
“are a femme raisonnable, and know that fortune
“must be thus taxed. `Mem. Upton's-purchase,
“residence of a country justice—convenient vicinity
“to some celebrated lake-scenery—staid here on
“that account. American scenery quite savage—
“Justsce U. an abyss of ignorance—wife, a mighty
“vulgar little person—children, pests—no servants
“—two helps. Dined at Clarenceville. The C.s
“great people in America—giants in Lilliput!—
“Amer'n table barbarisms—porter and salad with
“meats! peas with currie!—no poultry—no butch
“er's meat. Query, do the inferior animals as well
“as man uniformly degenerate, and become scarce
“in America? Miss C. an only daughter—a pro
“digious fortune—pretty good air too—do very
“well caught young—but can't go again. Devilish
“pretty girl here—mother a knowing one.' You see,
“dear Gertrude, we have all a part in these precious
“notes. Poor little Upton half cried as she read
“them. We are philosophers and may laugh.
“Again, and at each moment more tenderly,
“Yours, G. L.”

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“One more nota bene and I have done. I have
“just received a folio from Gerald Roscoe—Oh!
“what a lover he will be! how I could have loved
“such a man! Who is it that says (too truly!) that
“`la puissance d'aimer est trop grande, elle l'esttrop
“dans les ames ardentes!'
Farewell, dearest,
G. L.”

Gertrude wondered that Mrs. Layton should be
so reserved about Emilie's affairs, when she manifested
such singular confidence, and unbounded tenderness;
for measuring her new friend by her own
purity and truth, she gave full credit to all her expressions.
Contrasted with the simple regard and
unexaggerated language of Gertrude's common acquaintance,
they were like the luscious fruits of the
tropics, compared with our cold northern productions.

But she had now no time to analyze her fascinating
friend. The jaunt to Trenton, to which her
father had at once consented, on Seton's account
had been delayed from day to day, for two weeks,
from the daily occurrence of the rural affairs of
midsummer, that seem to country gentlemen, of the
first importance. In the mean while, Seton was
becoming worse. The family physician, announced
the approach of a nervous fever, that could only be
averted by change of air; and Mr. Clarence put
aside every other concern; and, on the very day of
Mrs. Layton's departure, he set off with Gertrude
and Seton, and servants competent to the care of
the invalid, in case he failed to derive the benefit


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they hoped, from the journey. Mr. Clarence was
usually particularly annoyed by the discomforts of
travelling; his philosophy completely subdued by
bad roads, bad coffee, bad bread, and worst and
chiefest of all plagues, by the piratical `red rovers'
that `murder sleep;' but his benevolence now got
the better of the habits generated by ill health
and indulgence—he thought, and cared only for
Seton.

If the unhappy patient's malady had been within
the reach of art, it must have been subdued by Gertrude's
ministrations; for with that exquisite sensisibility,
which vibrates to every motion of another's
spirit, she watched all the variations of his mind,
and imparted or withheld the sunshine of her own,
as best suited his humor; but, in spite of skill
and patience, and sisterly vigilance, the nervous
fever predicted by the physician made hourly encroachments;
and the necessity of a few hours'
delay at one of the noisiest inns of that noisiest
of all growing towns, thronged busy Utica,
exasperated the disease to an alarming degree.

As may be supposed, Mr. Clarence had not come
to the most public hotel of a town, abounding in
every species and grade of receptacle for travellers,
till he had unsuccessfully applied for admittance
to the other more private, but now overflowing
houses.

The travellers, on alighting, were shown into the
common receiving parlor, a large apartment opening
into the public hall, and near the general entrance
door. Mr. Clarence, after vainly attempting
to obtain audience of the official departments of


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the house, and after a fruitless quest for some private
and unoccupied apartment, was compelled to
content himself with securing the exclusive possession
of a settee, which had the advantage of a position
removed as far as the dimensions of the apartment
admitted, from either of the general passage
doors, through which the full tide of human existtence
ebbed and flowed. Here, he, Gertrude, and
Seton, seated themselves; and here they might for a
little time, but for poor Seton, have been well
enough amused with the contrast to the seclusion,
quiet, and elegance of their home.

The front windows of the apartment looked into
the most public, and par excellence the busiest street
of the town, the avenue to the great northern turnpike.
Stage-coaches were waiting, arriving, departing,
driving to and fro, as if all the world were
a stage-coach, and all the men and women merely
travellers.

The `window privilege' (as our New-England
friends would say) at the side of the room, was no
way inferior to that in front. This afforded a view
of the canal, and of the general debouching place
of its packet-boats—all elements are here tributary
to the forwarding system.

There were servants and porters hustling baggage
off and on the boats—stage-coach proprietors persecuting
the jaded passengers with rival claims to patronage—agents
clothed in official importance—
idlers, for even here are idlers, and all `as their
tempers were,' muttering, sneering, scolding, joking,
laughing, or silently submitting to their fate.
The way-worn, weary travellers, as they poured


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into the hotel, seemed the victims, instead of the
authors, of this hurly-burly.

A female, with a highly decorated pongee riding-dress,
gaudy ear-rings, a watch at her side, with half
a dozen seals, and a gold safety chain, as big as a
cable around her neck—in short, with the aspect of
a half gentlewoman, seated herself beside Miss Clarence,
and very unceremoniously began a conversation
with her. “Are you going on in the pioneer
line, Ma'am?” “No.” “Oh, in the telegraph—so
are we, it is much more select; but I tell my husband,
that all the stages are too levelling to suit
me”—a pause ensued, and soon after the lady
beckoned to her husband. “My dear, who is that
foreign looking gentleman, that says he is going
on in the pioneer-line?” “The Duke of MonteBello!”
The lady looked all aghast at the untimely
discovery, that levels might be raised as well
as lowered in a stage-coach.

The only apparently perfectly cool member of
this bustling community, was a ruddy-faced, tight-built,
active, little man, not far declined from his meridian,
who was walking in and out, and up and
down the room, addressing the individuals of this
motley crowd, with the easy air of a citizen of the
world. He approached Mr. Clarence, and by way
of an introductory salutation observed, that it was a
`warmish day.' The mercury stood at ninety, and
Mr. Clarence' blood at fever heat.

“Intensely hot,” he replied, without turning his
head or moving his eye from the ark-like boats,
which were gliding under the bridge that crossed
the canal.


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“A pretty sight that!” continued the good-natured
man, “especially, to one, who, like myself, has
travelled through this town many and many a day,
in fair weather and foul, with the mail on my back.”

“You, my friend, you do not look older than myself!”

I think I have some dozen years the advantage of
you, sir; but I have led a stirring kind of a life, and
kept my blood warm, and courage up. Yes, sir,
just where the grand canaul goes, I used to whistle
along a foot-path; and here, where the folks are
now as thick as blades of grass in June, stood my
log-house; and my wife, and four flax-headed little
boys, were all the inhabitants. I love to look back
upon those times, though I have now seventy drivers
in my employ; but we grow with the country,
and get to be gentlemen before we know it; excuse
me, sir, my coaches are getting under way.”

A fresh bustle now broke out; Babel was nothing
to it; for no post-coaches stood at its devoted
doors. “Hurra for the western passengers!” Gentlemen
and ladies for Sacket's harbor—all ready!”
“Hurra for Trenton!” “Pioneer line—ready!”
“Gentlemen and ladies for the Telegraph!” “The
bell is ringing for the Adams boat—going out!”
“Horn blowing for the Jackson—coming in.”

Where was poor Seton, and his nerves, in this
mélée. “It will certainly kill him,” thought Gertrude,
and calling to a black fellow, who was hurrying
hither and thither, as if he were the ruling
spirit of the scene; “my good friend,” she said,
imploringly, “cannot you get a private room, for
that sick gentleman?”


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Blackey grinned from ear to ear; “Missess can't
suspect a private room in a public-house.”

Happily, his reply, half impudent, and half simple,
caught the ear of our friend, the some-time
mail-bearer; who ordered the servant, instantly, to find
private apartments, and accompanied his command
with such demonstrations of his having `come to be
a gentleman,' as none may give, in our country, but
those who have worked their passage to that elevation;
and none will receive, but those, whose color
stamps their subordination. When blackey had recovered
from the impetus, that had hurled him from
one extremity of the room to the other, his chastiser
ordered him to show the lady to the square-room;
and said, he would himself conduct the gentlemen
to the best apartments the house afforded. Most
gratefully did they all follow, blessing the timely
interposition of the bustling little man in authority.

Miss Clarence took possession of her apartment,
opened the sashes, closed the blinds, and was just
throwing herself upon the bed, when, a horribly
scrawled half-sheet of paper, caught her eye. She
picked it up, and taking it for granted, that it was
some discarded scrawl, and without once doubting,
whether it were proper to read it, and having
nothing else to do, she began it; and once begun,
it was read, and re-read. There was no address,
no signature; it was not folded, or finished. It
ran thus:

“You will be surprised at this addenda to the
“folio I have just despatched; if, indeed, you can
“decipher it, written, as it must be, with a bar-room
“pen, and diluted ink. Since I put that in the P.


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“Office, I have had positive information—there is
“no longer any doubt remaining. The poor girl is
“passive, and P. is to follow them to Trenton.
“What horrible infatuation! You may think me as
“infatuated to hope to prevent it; but I cannot look
“on, and see a creature so young, so innocent, and
“so lovely, on the brink of a precipice, and not
“stretch out my arm to rescue her from destruction.
“I will communicate the terrible suspicions that are
“abroad; if my efforts are abortive, why, I shall have
“made them, and that will be some consolation. I
“think if I see —, I can dissipate her delusion; if,
“indeed, it be delusion; but if, as I rather think, it is
“a timid submission to tyranny, I shall try to rouse
“her courage to rebellion. This crusade, of course,
“prevents my paying my respects at Clarenceville;
“I understand there are troops of pilgrims to that
“shrine. Let them bow before the golden idol—I
“reserve my worship, for the image to be set up in
“my heart. Report says that Miss C—”

Here the letter had been interrupted, and as Gertrude
hoped, unintentionally left, for she could not
believe that a person who could indite a decent
epistle would expose such allusions to public inspection.
`Who could have written it?' She ran
over the whole catalogue of her own, and her father's
acquaintance. Not one appeared as the probable
writer. She thought of Gerald Roscoe, but
she was familiar with his autograph, and, `thank
heaven, it was not he,' she ejaculated audibly,
and smiled involuntarily at the sensation of escape
she derived from this assurance. `Why was it
she had rather it had been any other man living


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than Gerald Roscoe?' Before she had given this
self-interogation fair hearing, and while she was
folding the manuscript with the intention of showing
it to her father, she heard a tap at the door,
and the voice of the negro-servant, saying, `Won't
missess please to hand me a written letter, lying on
the table under a handkerchief, and won't missess
please to keep the handkerchief tight over it, case
the gentleman's very pa'tic'lar not to have me, nor
nobody read it.”

She looked around the room, saw a cambric
handkerchief, not far from the place where she had
found the letter, and scrupulously covered it; but
she did not transfer it to the servant till (as every
woman will believe) she had vainly investigated every
corner for a mark. She was gratified with this indirect
assurance that the exposure of the letter had
been accidental and limited to herself, and probably
owing to the draft of wind occasioned by her throwing
open the window when she entered the apartment.

But what could console the high-minded Gertrude
Clarence for the conviction that continually pressed
on her from every quarter, and in every form, that
the accident of fortune, a distinction that she had
never sought, and never valued, exposed her to
slights and ridicule; to be dreaded and avoided by
one class, courted and flattered by another. She
thought of Seton, and it cannot be questioned that
she felt a glow of satisfaction that she had excited
one pure, disinterested sentiment; and a secret regret
that affection was in its nature so independent
and inflexible, that, though she would, she could not


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love him who so well deserved her love. Then
came the bitterest reflection of all; her fortune had
envenomed the shaft that wounded Seton's peace.

What would become of envy and covetousness,
and all their train of discontent, evil, and sin, if the
external veil were lifted, and the eye could penetrate
the secrets of the heart?

Miss Clarence was roused from a long reverie to
which we have merely given the clue, by a notice
that Mr. Seton was so much refreshed as to be able
to proceed on his journey.

Nothing can be more beautiful, more soothing
and refreshing, than the coming on of evening after
the fierce heat of one of our midsummer days. It
is a compensation for the languor and exhaustion
of mid-day—or rather it is the best preparation
for the full and exquisite enjoyment of the
delicious coolness, the deepening shadows, and the
fragrance that exhales from woods, flowers, and
and fields. A summer's evening in the country is
a paradise regained; but, alas! evil spirits could
leap the bounds of paradise; and melancholy interposed
her black pall between poor Seton and the
outward world. In vain did Gertrude point out
the rich hills and valleys of Oneida—the almost
boundless view of a country so recently redeemed
from savages and savage wildness, and now rich,
populous, and cultivated. He scarcely raised his
heavy eye-lids; and his faint and irrelevant replies
indicated that his brain was already touched by his
disease.

All other interest was now lost in anxiety to reach
Trenton; and after as rapid a drive, as roads, at their


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best indifferent, would permit, they arrived at the
`rural resort,' the neat inn in the vicinity of the falls.
Fortunately there were no visiters there at the moment
of our travellers' arrival, and they had an opportunity
of selecting their apartments, and for
Seton, the most retired and commodious one the
house afforded, to which he was borne in the arms
of his attendants.

The consciousness of sacrificing one's private inclinations
and comforts for the good of another is
always pleasant to a benevolent mind; and Mr.
Clarence, whom nothing but an errand of kindness
would have tempted from his home to a gathering-place,
was in unexpected good spirits. He already
`felt quite renewed by his journey.' `Gertrude
looked better than he had seen her for six months.'
`He was sure Louis wanted nothing but a little rest.'
He was delighted with the deep retirement and ruralities
of the situation, and `charmed with the
neatness, civility, and quiet of the house.' The
last quality was not of long duration. One or two
stage-coaches arrived, and the consequent and inevitable
bustle ensued. The guests were judiciously
disposed in a part of the house as remote as possible
from that occupied by Mr. Clarence; and
Gertrude passed the evening in her father's apartment,
reading aloud to him, according to her
usual custom. The lecture was of course interrupted
by Mr. Clarence' frequent visits to Seton's
room. His mind was still wandering, and his fever
increasing; but after a while, a powerful opiate took
effect, and he sunk into an unquiet, artificial sleep.
His attendant, however, reported that he was doing


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well, and Gertrude, after giving her last minute
directions, bade her father `good night.'

As she shut the door of his apartment, her book
in one hand, and lamp in the other, her foot was
entangled in the cloak of a gentleman who was
standing muffled in the little gallery. In extricating
herself from the awkward embarrassment, her
lamp fell. The gentleman recovered it, and gracefully
apologizing for the accident, he relighted the
lamp by the lantern suspended in the gallery. This
was an operose business. The cloak encumbered
him, he threw it aside, and Gertrude could not but
notice, with a curiosity stimulated by the concealment
for which the cloak had obviously been
worn—for nothing could be more agreeably tempered
than the atmosphere—the fine figure and
classic head thus accidentally and unintentionally
disclosed. Every one knows how slow and almost
impossible the process of ignition appears when
waited for. The gentleman made some common-place,
but, as Gertrude thought, pleasant remark
about it, which was suddenly cut off by a servant,
who came up the stairs and whispered to him. He
returned the lamp to Miss Clarence, bowed, and
hurried away. She turned to inquire the stranger's
name of the servant, but half ashamed of her curiosity,
she hesitated, and while she hesitated, he disappeared.

Gertrude then went to her own apartment.
After remaining there a while, she missed her
keys, and recollecting she had left the bag that
contained them in the parlor, she went down stairs
in quest of them. As she approached the parlor-door


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which stood a-jar, she heard voices in low and
earnest conversation. She listened; one was Mrs.
Layton, her heart beat, and she sprang forward,
and again stopped, for she perceived that her
friend was deeply absorbed in a tête à tête, evidently
private, with the stranger whom she had
met in the gallery. They had been quite too much
interested in their own affairs to hear Miss Clarence'
light tread, and there being no light in the passage,
she stood for a moment without the fear of observation.
Mrs. Layton leant against the window, her
handkerchief at her eyes, and her back to the light,
which fell strongly on the stranger's face. His fine
features were kindled with a glow of earnest feeling,
he spoke in a tone of mingled supplication and remonstrance.
`Such a man could scarcely speak
in vain,' thought Gertrude, as she turned away, and
stole back to her own apartment. There she revolved
in her own mind the probable meaning of
Mrs. Layton's unexpected appearance at Trenton—
the obscure intimations in relation to Emilie in her
farewell note—this private interview with the elegant
stranger—the Utica scrawl; and she would probably
have arrived at the right exposition, if that
had not involved Mrs. Layton in deep reproach.
Of course, that was rejected; and after going round,
in the same circle, she gave up the subject as
inexplicable, and resigned her mind to the sweet
fancies awakened by a dewy moonlight evening.

Gertrude Clarence, in daylight, and amidst the
real affairs of life, was truly what Mrs. Layton had
called her, a fit heroine for the nineteenth century;
practical, efficient, direct, and decided—a rational


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woman—that beau-ideal of all devotees to the ruling
spirit of the age—utility. But it must be confessed
she had certain infirmities of olden and romantic
times clinging to her; that she loved in moonlight
and retirement, to abandon herself to the visions of
her imagination; that she sought and loved the
beauty and mystery of nature; that she gave her
faith to the poetry of life—the sublime virtue that is
sometimes manifested in actual human existence,—
and that always visits the dreams of the enthusiast,
as the fair forms of their divinities were presented to
the inspired vision of the Grecian sculptors.