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1. CHAPTER I.

“God made the country and man made the town.”


So wrote the charming Cowper, giving us to understand, by
the drift of the context, that he intended the remark as having
a moral as well as a physical application; since, as he there
intimates, in “gain-devoted cities,” whither naturally flow “the
dregs and feculence of every land,” and where “foul example
in most minds begets its likeness,” the vices will ever find their
favorite haunts; while the virtues, on the contrary, will always
most abound in the country. So far as regards the virtues, if
we are to take them untested, this is doubtless true. And so
far, also, as regards the mere vices, or actual transgressions of
morality, we need, perhaps, to have no hesitation in yielding
our assent to the position of the poet. But, if he intends to
include in the category those flagrant crimes which stand first
in the gradation of human offences, we must be permitted to
dissent from that part of the view; and not only dissent, but
claim that truth will generally require the very reversal of the
picture, for of such crimes we believe it will be found, on
examination, that the country ever furnishes the greatest proportion.
In cities, the frequent intercourse of men with their


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fellow-men, the constant interchange of the ordinary civilities
of life, and the thousand amusements and calls on their attention
that are daily occurring, have almost necessarily a tendency
to soften or turn away the edge of malice and hatred, to divert
the mind from the dark workings of revenge, and prevent it
from settling into any of those fatal purposes which result in
the wilful destruction of life, or some other gross outrage on
humanity. But in the country, where, it will be remembered,
the first blood ever spilled by the hand of a murderer cried up
to Heaven from the ground, and where the meliorating circumstances
we have named as incident to congregated life are almost
wholly wanting, man is left to brood in solitude over his
real or fancied wrongs, till all the fierce and stormy passions
of his nature become aroused, and hurry him unchecked along
to the fatal outbreak. In the city, the strong and bad passions
of hate, envy, jealousy, and revenge, softened in action, as we
have said, on finding a readier vent in some of the conditions
of urban society, generally prove comparatively harmless. In
the country, finding no such softening influences, and no such
vent, and left to their own workings, they often become dangerously
concentrated, and, growing more and more intensified as
their self-fed fires are permitted to burn on, at length burst
through every barrier of restraint, and set all law and reason
alike at defiance.

And if this view, as we believe, is correct in regard to the
operation of this class of passions, why not in regard to the
operation of those of an opposite character? Why should not
the same principle apply to the operation of love as well as
hate? It should, and does, though not in an equal degree, perhaps,
apply to them both. It has been shown to be so in the
experience of the past. It is illustrated in many a sad drama
of real life, but never more strikingly than in the true and
darkly romantic incidents which form the groundwork of the
tale upon which we are about to enter.

It was on a raw and gusty evening in the month of November,


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a few years subsequent to our last war with Great Britain,
and the cold and vapor-laden winds, which form such a drawback
to the coast-clime of New England, were fitfully wailing
over the drear and frost-blackened landscape, and the wayfarers,
as if keenly alive to the discomforts of all without, were
seen everywhere hurrying forward to reach those comforts
within which were heralded in the cheerful gleams that shot
from many a window, when a showy and conspicuous mansion,
in the environs of Boston, was observed to be lighted up to an
extent, and with a brilliancy, that betokened the advent of some
ambitious display on the part of the bustling inmates. Carriages
from different parts of the city were successively arriving,
discharging their loads of gaily-dressed ladies and gentlemen
at the door, and rattling off again at the crack of the whips
of the pert and jauntily equipped drivers. Others on foot,
and from the more immediate neighborhood, were, in couples and
singly, for some time constantly dropping in to swell the crowd,
witness, and perhaps add to, the attractions of the occasion, which
was obviously one of those social gatherings that have been
sometimes, in conventional phrase, not inaptly denominated a
jam; where people go to be in the fashion, to see, be seen,
and try as hard as they can to be happy; but where the aggregate
of happiness enjoyed is probably far less, as a general
rule, than would be enjoyed by the same company at home in
the pursuit of their ordinary avocations.

Meanwhile, as the guests were assembling and being conducted
to the withdrawing rooms, through the cash-bought and
obsequious politeness of some of the troop of waiters hired for
the occasion, the master of the mansion had taken his station
in the nook of a window commanding the common entrance,
and was there stealthily noting, as the company, severally or
one group after another, mounted the doorsteps, who had honored
his cards of invitation whom he wished to see there, and
who had come whom he wished to have stayed away. He was
a well-favored man, somewhat past the middle age of life, with


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regular features, and a good general appearance, but with one
of those unsettled, fluctuating countenances which are usually
found in men who, while affecting, perhaps, a show of independence,
lack self-reliance, fixed principles, or some other of the
essential elements of character. And such indeed was Mark
Elwood, the reputedly wealthy merchant whom we have thus
introduced as one of the leading personages of our story.
Though often moved with kind and generous impulses, he yet
was governed by no settled principles of benevolence; though
often shrewd and sagacious, he yet possessed no true wisdom;
and, though often bold and resolute in action, he yet lacked the
faith and firmness of true courage. In short, he might be regarded
as a fair representative of the numerous class we are
daily meeting with in life, — men who do many good things,
but more questionable ones; who undertake much, accomplish
little; bustle, agitate, and thus contrive to occupy the largest
space in public attention; but who, when sifted, are found, as
Pope maliciously says of women, to

“have no character at all.”

After pursuing his observations a while, with an air of disappointment
or indifference, Elwood was about to turn away,
when his eye caught a glimpse of an approaching group of
guests, whose appearance at once lighted up his countenance
with a smile of satisfaction, and he half-ejaculated: “There
they come! — the solid men of Boston. The presence of these,
with the others who will all serve as trumpeters of the affair,
will quell every suspicion of my credit till some new strike
shall place me beyond danger. Yes, just as I calculated, the
money spent will be the cunningest investment I have made
these six months. But who is that tagging along alone after
the rest?” he added, his countenance suddenly changing to a
troubled look, and slowly, and with a strange emphasis, pronouncing
the name, “Gaut Gurley!” he hurried away from
his post of observation.


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The person whose obviously unexpected appearance among
the arriving guests had so much disturbed our host, having
leisurely brought up the rear, now paused a few paces from
the door, and took a deliberate survey of all that was visible
through the windows of the scene passing within. He was a
man of a personal appearance not likely to be forgotten. His
strong, upright, well-proportioned frame, full, rounded head,
and unexceptionable features, were unusually well calculated to
arrest the attention, and, at a little distance especially, to secure
the favorable impressions of others; but those impressions
faded away, or gave place to opposite emotions, on a nearer
approach, for then the beholder read something in the countenance
that met his, which made him pause, — something which
he could not fathom, but which at once disinclined him to any
acquaintance with the man to whom that countenance belonged.

Perhaps it should be viewed as one of the kindest provisions
of Providence, made in aid of our rights and instincts of
self-preservation, that man should not be able wholly to hide
the secrets of his heart from his fellow-men, — that the human
countenance should be so formed that no schooling, however severe,
can prevent it from betraying the evil thoughts and purposes
which may be lurking within. It is said that God alone can read
the secrets of the heart; but we have often thought that He has
imparted to us more of this attribute of His omniscience than
that which is vouchsafed us in any one of our other faculties;
or, in other words, that, to the skill we may acquire by practice
in reading the countenance, He has added something of the light
of intuition, to enable us to pierce into the otherwise impenetrable
recesses of the bosom, and thus guard ourselves against
the designs which may there be disclosed, and which, but for
that, the deceptions of the tongue might forever conceal. All
this, we are aware, may pass as a mere supposition; yet we
think its correctness will be very generally attested by officers


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of justice, policemen, jailers, and all those who have had much
experience in the detection of crime.

But, whether the doctrine is applicable or not in the generality
of cases, it was certainly so in that of the unbidden guest
whose appearance we have attempted to describe. Unlike
Elwood, he had character, but all those who closely noted him
were made to feel that his character was a dark and dangerous
one.

After Gaut, for such he was called among his acquaintance,
had leisurely run his eye from window to window of the many
lighted apartments of the house, and scanned, as he did, with
many a sneering smile, the appearances within, as long as
suited his pleasure, he boldly walked in, and, with all the assurance
of the most favored, proceeded to mingle with the
company.

On quitting his lookout, Elwood repaired to the receptionroom,
where Mrs. Elwood, the mistress of the mansion, was
already in waiting, nerving herself to perform, as acceptably
as she could, her part of the stereotyped ceremony of receiving
the guests, and exchanging with them the salutations and commonplaces
of the evening. Mrs. Elwood, though not beautiful,
nor even handsome, was yet every way a comely woman; and
the quiet dignity and the unpretending simplicity of her manner,
together with a certain intelligent and appreciating cast
of countenance, which always rested on her placid features,
seldom failed to impress those who approached her with feelings
of kindness and respect. She looked pale and fatigued,
from the labors and anxieties she had gone through in the
preparations for the present occasion; and, in addition to this,
which is ever the penalty to the mistress of the house in getting
up a large party, there was an air of sadness in her looks that
told of secret sorrows which were not much mitigated by all
the show of wealth that surrounded her.

By this time the company, having mostly arrived and divested
themselves of hats, gloves, bonnets, shawls, together


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with all other of the loose etceteras of dress then in vogue, and
carefully consulted the confidential mirrors to secure that adjustment
of collars, curls, smirks, and smiles which are deemed
most favorable for effect in public, were now shown into the
suit of apartments where the host and hostess were waiting to
receive them.

But it is far from our purpose to attempt a detailed description
of the thousand little nothings which go to make up the
character of one of these great fashionable parties. Who ever
came from one the wiser? Not one guest in ten, probably, is
found engaged in a conversation in which the ordinary powers
of the speaker are exercised. A forced glee and smartness
seem everywhere to prevail among the company, who are
continually sacrificing their common sense in their eager attempts
to appear gay and witty. Who was ever made really
happier by being in such an assemblage? Although the participants
may exhibit to casual observation the semblance of
enjoyment, yet a close inspection will show that they are only
acting, and that, as we have already intimated, their apparent
enjoyment is no more deserving the name of social happiness
than that which is often represented as enjoyed by a company
of stage actors, in the harassing performance of the fictitious
scenes of some genteel comedy. Who was ever made any
better? Any rational discussion tending to exalt or purify the
mind would be deemed out of place; and any moral teachings
would be ridiculed or find no listeners. And, finally, who was
ever made healthier? In the bad air generated among so
many breaths in confined apartments, the high nervous excitement
that usually prevails among the company, and the exposure
to cold or dampness to which their unprepared systems
are often subjected in returning home, Death has marked many
a victim for his own; while, at the best, lassitude and depression
are sure to follow, from which it will require days to recover.

In these strictures on overgrown parties, we would not, of


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course, be understood as intending to include the smaller social
gatherings, where men and women do not, as they are prone to
do in crowds, lose their sense of personal responsibility, in deporting
themselves like rational beings; for such doubtless
often lead to pleasing and instructive interchange of thought,
and the cultivation of those little amenities of life which are
scarcely less essential than the virtues themselves in the structure
of good society.

But it is time we had returned from this digression to the
characters and incidents immediately connected with the action
of our tale.

A short time after the frosts of formality, which usually
attend the introductory scenes of such assemblages, had melted
away and given place to the noisy frivolities of the evening,
and while the bustling host, and pale, anxious-looking hostess,
were together taking their rounds among their three hundred
guests, bestowing their attentions on the more neglected, calling
out the more modest, and exchanging civilities with all,
— while this was passing, suddenly there arose from without a
confused noise, as of quick movements and mingling voices,
which, from its character and the direction whence it came,
obviously indicated some altercation, or other disturbance, at the
outer door. This attracting the quickened attention of Mr. and
Mrs. Elwood, the former left his companion, and was threading
his way through the throng, when he was met by a servant,
who in a flurried under-tone said:

“There is out here at the door, Mr. Elwood, a sort of a
countryfied, odd-looking old fellow, in rusty brown clothes, that
has been insisting on coming in, without being invited here to-night,
and without telling his business or even giving his name.
And he pressed so hard that we had to drive him back off the
steps; but he refused to go away, even then, and kept asking
where Mark was.”

“Mark! why, that is my given name: didn't you know it?”
said Elwood, rebukingly.


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“No, sir, I didn't,” replied the fashionable pro tempore
lackey. “And if I had, my orders has always been on sech
occasions not to admit any but the invited, who won't send in
their names, or tell their business. And I generally calculate
to go by Gunter, and do the thing up genteel.”

“Well, well,” said Elwood, impatiently cutting short the other
in the defence of his professional character, and leading the way
to the door, “well, well, we had better see who he is, perhaps.”

When they reached the front entrance, they caught, by means
of the reflected light of the entry and chambers, an imperfect
view of the object of their proposed scrutiny, walking up and
down the bricked pathway leading to the house. But, not being
able to identify the new-comer with any one of his acquaintances,
at that distance, Elwood walked down and confronted
him; when, after a momentary pause, he siezed the supposed
intruder by the hand, and, in a surprised and agitated tone,
exclaimed:

“My brother Arthur! How came you here?”

“By steam and stage.”

“Not what I meant: but no matter. We were not expecting
you; and I fear the waiters have made a sad mistake.”

“As bad an one as I did, perhaps, in declining to be catechized
at my brother's door.”

“No, you were right enough; but the waiters, being only
here for the extra occasion, — the bit of flare-up you see we
have here to-night, — and not knowing you, thought they must
do as others do at such times. So overlook the blunder, if you
will, and walk in.”

Mark Elwood, much chagrined and discomposed at the discovery
of such an untoward first reception of his brother, now
ushered him into the brilliantly-lighted hall, where the two
stood in such singular contrast that no stranger would have
ever taken them for brothers, — Mark being, as we have before
described him, a good-sized, and, in the main, a good-looking
man; while the other, whom we have introduced as Arthur


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Elwood, was of a diminutive size, with commonplace features,
and a severe, forbidding countenance, made so, perhaps, by
intense application to business, together with the unfavorable
effect caused by a blemished and sightless eye.

“Well, brother,” said Mark, after a hesitating and awkward
pause, “shall I look you up a private room, or will you go in
among the company, — that is, if you consider yourself in trim
to join them?”

“Your rooms must all be in use, and I should make less
trouble to go in and be lost in the crowd. My trim will not
kill anybody, probably,” was the dry reply to the indirect hint
of the other.

In all this Mark's better judgment coincided; but he had
no moral courage, and, fearing the cut and color of his somewhat
outre-looking brother's garments might excite the remarks
of his fashionable guests, he would have gladly disposed of
him in some private manner till the company had departed.
Finding him, however, totally insensible to all such considerations,
he concluded to make the best of it, and accordingly at
once led the way into the guest-crowded apartments.

Here, contrary to his doubting brother's expectation, Arthur
Elwood, whose character appeared to be known to several of
the wealthier guests, was soon treated with much respect, for,
in addition to what a previous knowledge of him secured, Mrs.
Elwood had promptly come forward to greet him, and be cordially
greeted in return, and, unlike her husband, had not hesitated
to bestow on him publicly the most marked attentions.
As soon, however, as she had thus testified her sense of the
superiority of worth over outward appearance, and thus, by
her delicate tact, given him the consideration with the company
which she thought belonged to the brother of her husband, she
gracefully relinquished him to the latter; when the two, by
tacit mutual consent, sought a secluded corner, and seated themselves
for a private conversation.

“As I said, I did not expect you, Arthur,” commenced Mark


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Elwood, in the unsteady and hesitating tone of one about to
broach a matter in which he felt a deep interest. “I was not
looking for you here at all, these days; but presumed, when I
wrote you, that, if you concluded to grant the favor I asked,
you would transact the business through the mail.”

“Loans of money are not always favors, Mark,” responded
the other, thoughtfully; “and when I make them, I like to
know whether they promise any real benefit. I could, as you
say, have transacted the business through the mail, but I confess,
Mark, I have lately had some misgivings and doubts
whether your commercial fabric here in Boston was not too
big and broad for the foundation; and I thought I would come,
see, and judge for myself.”

“But I only asked for the loan of a few thousands,” said
Mark, meekly. “The fact is, Arthur, that, owing to some bad
luck and disappointments in money matters, I am, just now, a
little embarrassed about meeting some of my engagements; and
I trust you will not refuse to give me a lift. What say you,
Arthur?”

“I don't say, but will see and decide,” replied the other.
“But, Mark,” he added, after a pause, “Mark, what will this
useless parade here to-night cost you?”

“O, a mere trifle, — a few hundreds, perhaps.”

“And you think hundreds well spent, when you are wanting
thousands to pay your debts, do you?”

“O, you know, Arthur, a man, to keep up his credit, must
display a little once in a while.”

“No, I did not know that, Mark. I did not know that the
throwing away of hundreds would help a man's credit in thousands,
especially with those whose opinion would be of any use
to him. But go,” added the speaker, rising, “go and see to
your company: I can take care of myself.”

The brothers, rising from an interview in which they had
felt, perhaps, nearly an equal degree of secret embarrassment,
— the one believing that his last hope hung on the


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result, and the other feeling conscious of entering on a most
ungracious duty, — now separated, and mingled with the gay
throng, who, swaying hither and thither, and, seemingly without
end or aim, moving round and round their limited range of
apartments, like the froth in the circling eddies of a whirlpool,
continued to laugh, flirt, and chatter on, till the advent of the
last act of the social farce, — the throwing open of a suit of
hitherto sealed apartments, and the welcome disclosure of the
varied and costly delicacies of the loaded refreshment tables,
which the company, by their strong and simultaneous rush
thitherward, the rattling of knives and forks, spoons and
glasses, the rapid popping of champagne corks, and the low,
eager hum of gratified voices that followed, evidently deemed
the best, as well as the closing, act of the evening's entertainment.

While this scene was in progress, Gaut Gurley, who had
been for some time in vain watching the opportunity, caught
Mark Elwood unoccupied in one of the vacated apartments,
and abruptly approached and confronted him.

“Well, what now, Gaut?” exclaimed Elwood, with an assumed
air of pettishness, after finding there was no further
chance of escaping an interview which he had evidently been
trying to avoid; “what would you have now?”

“I would just know whether you intend to keep your engagement,”
replied Gurley, fixing his black, quivering eyes
keenly on the other.

“What engagement?”

“To give me a chance to win back that money.”

“Which you demand when you have taken from me an hundred
to one!”

“And who had a better right? Through whose means did
you make your fortune? Besides this, haven't I always given
you a fair chance to win back all you could?”

“I want no more of such chances.”


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“But you promised; and I want to know whether you mean
to keep that promise or not.”

“Supposing I do, you would not have me leave home to-night,
would you?”

“Yes, to-night.”

“But my brother, as you have already discovered, I presume,
has just arrived on a visit; and you know I can't decently
leave him.”

“And what do I care for that? Say whether you will meet
me at the old room, or not, as soon as your company have
cleared out?”

“You are unreasonable, cruel, Gaut.”

“Then say you will not go, and see what will come of it,
Mark Elwood!”

“I must go — I will go, Gaut,” replied Elwood, turning pale
at the last intimation. “As soon as I get rid of the company,
I will start directly for the place.”

“Well, just as you can afford,” said Gaut, doggedly, as he
turned on his heel, and made his way out of the house.

Mark Elwood drew a long breath as he was thus relieved
of the other's presence, and was leaving the room, when Mrs.
Elwood, who had felt much disturbed at discovering among her
guests one of whose questionable character and connection with
her husband she was already apprised, and who, from an adjoining
apartment, had caught a slight glimpse of the meeting
just described, and enough of the conversation to enable her to
guess at its import, hurriedly came forward, and, in a voice
tremulous from suppressed emotion, said:

“You surely are not going out to-night, Mr. Elwood?”

“No — that is — only for a short time,” he said, hesitating,
and a little confused at the discovery of his design, which a
second thought told him she had made; “only for a short time.
But don't stop me to talk now; you see the company are retiring.
I must see the gentlemen off.”

“Mr. Elwood, I must be heard,” persisted the troubled and


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anxious wife. “I cannot bear to have you go off, and leave
your only brother, whom you have not seen for years, and for
such company! O Mr. Elwood, how can you let that bad
man —”

“Hush! don't get into such a stew. I shall soon be back,”
interrupted the other. “You can excuse my absence. There,
I hear them inquiring for me. I must go,” he added, abruptly
breaking away, and leaving his grieved companion to hide her
emotions as she best could from the guests who were now seen
approaching for their parting salutations.

In a few minutes the company had dispersed for their respective
homes, and with them, also, had unnoticed slipped away
their infatuated host.