International Weekly Miscellany - Volume 1, No. 6, August 5, 1850 by Various
International Weekly Miscellany - Volume 1, No. 6, August 5, 1850 by Various
International Weekly Miscellany - Volume 1, No. 6, August 5, 1850 by Various
[pg 161]
"Among the most remarkable writers of romances in England, three women are entitled to be reckoned in the
first rank, namely, Miss Jewsbury, Miss Bronte, and Mrs. Gaskell. Miss Jewsbury issued her first work about
four years since, a novel, in three volumes, under the title of 'Zoe,' and since then she has published the 'Half
Sisters.' Both these works are excellent in manner as well as ideas, and show that their author is a woman of
profound thought and deep feeling. Both are drawn from country life and the middle class, a sphere in which
Miss Jewsbury is at home. The tendency of the first is speculative, and is based on religion; that of the second
is social, relating to the position of woman.
"Miss Jewsbury is still young, for an authoress. She counts only some thirty years, and many productions may
be confidently expected from her hand, though perhaps none will excel those already published, for, after
gaining a certain climax, no one excels himself. Her usual residence is Manchester; it is but seldom that she
visits the metropolis; she is now here. She has lively and pleasing manners, a slight person, fine features, a
beautiful, dreamy, light brown eye. She is attractive without being beautiful, retiring, altogether without
pretensions, and in conversation is neither brilliant nor very intellectual,—a still, thoughtful, modest character.
"Miss Bronte was long involved in a mysterious obscurity, from which she first emerged into the light as an
actually existing being, at her present visit to London. Two years ago there appeared a romance, 'Jane Eyre,'
by 'Currer Bell,' which threw all England into astonishment. Everybody was tormenting himself to discover
the real author, for there was no such person as Currer Bell, and no one could tell whether the book was
written by a man or woman, because the hues of the romance now indicated a male and now female hand,
without any possibility of supposing that the whole originated with a single pencil. The public attributed it
now to one, now to another, and the book passed to a second edition without the solution of the riddle. At last
there came out a second romance, 'Shirley,' by the same author, which was devoured with equal avidity,
although it could not be compared to the former in value; and still the incognito was preserved. Finally, late in
the autumn of last year the report was spread about that the image of Jane Eyre had been discovered in
London in the person of a pale young lady, with gray eyes, who had been recognized as the long-sought
authoress. Still she remained invisible. And again, in June 1850, it is said that Currer Bell, Jane Eyre, Miss
Bronte,—for all three names mean the same person,—is in London, though to all inquiries concerning the
where and how a satisfactory answer is still wanting. She is now indeed here, but not for the curious public;
she will not serve society as a lioness, will not be gazed and gaped at. She is a simple child of the country,
brought up in the little parsonage of her father, in the North of England, and must first accustom her eye to the
gleaming diadem with which fame seeks to deck her brow, before she can feel herself at home in her own
sunshine.
"Our third lady, Mrs. Gaskell, belongs also to the country, and is the wife of a Unitarian clergyman. In this
capacity she has probably had occasion to know a great deal of the poorer classes, to her honor be it said. Her
book, 'Mary Barton,' conducts us into the factory workman's narrow dwelling, and depicts his joys and
[pg 162]
At a very early age she exhibited unusual abilities, and was particularly distinguished for an extraordinary
facility in acquiring languages. Her father, proud of the displays of her intelligence, prematurely stimulated it
to a degree that was ultimately injurious to her physical constitution. At eight years of age he was accustomed
to require of her the composition of a number of Latin verses every day, while her studies in philosophy,
history, general science and current literature were pressed to the limit of her capacities. When he first went to
Washington he was accustomed to speak of her as one "better skilled in Greek and Latin than half of the
professors;" and alluding in one of her essays, to her attachment to foreign literature, she herself observes that
in childhood she had well-nigh forgotten her English while constantly reading in other tongues.
Soon after the death of her father, she applied herself to teaching as a vocation, first in Boston, then in
Providence, and afterward in Boston again, while her "Conversations" were for several seasons attended by
classes of women, some of them married, and many of them of the most eminent positions in society. These
conversations are described by Dr. Orestes A. Brownson, as "in the highest degree brilliant, instructive, and
inspiring," and our own recollections of them confirm to us the justice of the applause with which they are
now referred to. She made her first appearance as an author, in a translation of Eckermann's Conversations
with Goethe, published in Boston in 1839. When Mr. Emerson, in the following year, established The Dial,
she became one of the principal contributors to that remarkable periodical, in which she wrote many of the
most striking papers on literature, art, and society. In the summer of 1843 she made a journey to the Sault St.
Marie, and in the next spring published in Boston reminiscences of her tour, under the title of Summer on the
Lakes. The Dial having been discontinued, she came to reside in New York, where she had charge of the
literary department of the New York Tribune, which acquired a great accession of reputation from her critical
essays. Here in 1845 she published Woman in the Nineteenth Century; and in 1846, Papers on Literature and
Art, in two volumes, consisting of essays and reviews, reprinted, with one exception, from periodicals.
In the summer of 1845, she accompanied the family of a friend to Europe, visiting England, Scotland, and
France, and passing through Italy to Rome, where they spent the ensuing winter. The next spring she
proceeded with her friends to the north of Italy, and there stopped, spending most of the summer at Florence,
and returning at the approach of winter to Rome, where she was soon after married to Giovanni, Marquis
d'Ossoli, who made her acquaintance during her first winter in that city. They resided in the Roman States
until the last summer, after the surrender of Rome to the French army, when they deemed it expedient to go to
Florence, both having taken an active part in the Republican movement. They left Florence in June, and at
Leghorn embarked in the ship Elizabeth for New York. The passage commenced auspiciously, but at Gibraltar
the master of the ship died of smallpox, and they were detained at the quarantine there some time in
consequence of this misfortune, but finally set sail again on the 8th of June, and arrived on our coast during
"Miss Fuller was at one time editor, or one of the editors of the 'The Dial,' to which she contributed many of
the most forcible and certainly some of the most peculiar papers. She is known, too, by 'Summer on the
Lakes,' a remarkable assemblage of sketches, issued in 1844, by Little & Brown, of Boston. More lately she
published 'Woman in the Nineteenth Century,' a work which has occasioned much discussion, having had the
good fortune to be warmly abused and chivalrously defended. For 'The New York Tribune,' she has furnished a
great variety of matter, chiefly notices of new books, etc., etc., her articles being designated by an asterisk.
Two of the best of them were a review of Professor Longfellow's late magnificent edition of his own works,
(with a portrait,) and an appeal to the public in behalf of her friend Harro Harring. The review did her infinite
credit; it was frank, candid, independent—in even ludicrous contrast to the usual mere glorifications of the
day, giving honor only where honor was due, yet evincing the most thorough capacity to appreciate and the
most sincere intention to place in the fairest light the real and idiosyncratic merits of the poet. In my opinion it
is one of the very few reviews of Longfellow's poems, ever published in America, of which the critics have
not had abundant reason to be ashamed. Mr. Longfellow is entitled to a certain and very distinguished rank
among the poets of his country, but that country is disgraced by the evident toadyism [pg 163] which would
award to his social position and influence, to his fine paper and large type, to his morocco binding and gilt
edges, to his flattering portrait of himself, and to the illustrations of his poems by Huntingdon, that amount of
indiscriminate approbation which neither could nor would have been given to the poems themselves. The
defense of Harro Harring, or rather the philippic against those who were doing him wrong, was one of the
most eloquent and well-put articles I have ever yet seen in a newspaper.
"'Woman in the Nineteenth Century' is a book which few women in the country could have written, and no
woman in the country would have published, with the exception of Miss Fuller. In the way of independence,
of unmitigated radicalism, it is one of the 'Curiosities of American Literature,' and Doctor Griswold should
include it in his book. I need scarcely say that the essay is nervous, forcible, suggestive, brilliant, and to a
certain extent scholar-like—for all that Miss Fuller produces is entitled to these epithets—but I must say that
the conclusions reached are only in part my own. Not that they are bold, by any means—too novel, too
startling or too dangerous in their consequences, but that in their attainment too many premises have been
distorted, and too many analogical inferences left altogether out of sight. I mean to say that the intention of the
Deity as regards sexual differences—an intention which can be distinctly comprehended only by throwing the
exterior (more sensitive) portions of the mental retina casually over the wide field of universal analogy—I
mean to say that this intention has not been sufficiently considered. Miss Fuller has erred, too, through her
own excessive objectiveness. She judges woman by the heart and intellect of Miss Fuller, but there are not
more than one or two dozen Miss Fullers on the whole face of the earth. Holding these opinions in regard to
'Woman in the Nineteenth Century,' I still feel myself called upon to disavow the silly, condemnatory
criticism of the work which appeared in one of the earlier numbers of "The Broadway Journal." That article
was not written by myself, and was written by my associate, Mr. Briggs.
"The most favorable estimate of Miss Fuller's genius (for high genius she unquestionably possesses) is to be
obtained, perhaps, from her contributions to 'The Dial,' and from her 'Summer on the Lakes.' Many of the
descriptions in this volume are unrivaled for graphicality, (why is there not such a word?) for the force with
which they convey the true by the novel or unexpected, by the introduction of touches which other artists
would be sure to omit as irrelevant to the subject. This faculty, too, springs from her subjectiveness, which
leads her to paint a scene less by its features than by its effects.
"The truthfulness of the passages italicized will be felt by all; the feelings described are, perhaps, experienced
by every (imaginative) person who visits the fall; but most persons, through predominant subjectiveness,
would scarcely be conscious of the feelings, or, at best, would never think of employing them in an attempt to
convey to others an impression of the scene. Hence so many desperate failures to convey it on the part of
ordinary tourists. Mr. William W. Lord, to be sure, in his poem 'Niagara,' is sufficiently objective; he
describes not the fall, but very properly, the effect of the fall upon him. He says that it made him think of his
own greatness, of his own superiority, and so forth, and so forth; and it is only when we come to think that the
thought of Mr. Lord's greatness is quite idiosyncratic confined exclusively to Mr. Lord, that we are in
condition to understand how, in spite of his objectiveness he has failed to convey an idea of anything beyond
one Mr. William W. Lord.
"From the essay entitled 'Philip Van Artevelde, I copy a paragraph which will serve at once to exemplify Miss
Fuller's more earnest (declamatory) style, and to show the tenor of her prospective speculations:—
"'At Chicago I read again 'Philip Van Artevelde,' and certain passages in it will always be in
my mind associated with the deep sound of the lake, as heard in the night. I used to read a
short time at night, and then open the blind to look out. The moon would be full upon the
lake, and the calm breath, pure light, and the deep voice, harmonized well with the thought of
the Flemish hero. When will this country have such a man? It is what she needs—no thin
Idealist, no coarse Realist, but a man whose eye reads the heavens while his feet step firmly
on the ground, and his hands are strong and dexterous in the use of human instruments. A
man, religious, virtuous, and—sagacious; a man of universal sympathies, but self-possessed;
a man who knows the region of emotion, though he is not its slave; a man to whom this world
is no mere spectacle or fleeting shadow, but a great, solemn game, to be played with good
heed, for its stakes are of eternal value, yet who, if his own play be true, heeds not what he
loses by the falsehood of others. A man who lives from the past, yet knows that its honey can
but moderately avail him; whose comprehensive eye scans the present, neither infatuated by
its golden lures nor chilled by its many ventures; who possesses prescience, as the wise man
must, but not so far as to be driven mad to-day by the gift which discerns to-morrow. When
there is such a man for America, the thought which urges her on will be expressed."
"From what I have quoted, a general conception of the prose style of the authoress may be gathered. Her
manner, however, is infinitely varied. It is always forcible—but I am not sure that it is always anything else,
unless I say picturesque. It rather indicates than evinces scholarship. Perhaps only the scholastic, or, more
properly, those accustomed to look narrowly at the structure of phrases, would be willing to acquit her of
ignorance of grammar—would be willing to attribute her slovenliness to disregard of the shell in anxiety for
the kernel; or to waywardness, or to affectation, or to blind reverence to Carlyle—would be able to detect, in
"'I cannot sympathize with such an apprehension; the spectacle is capable to swallow up all
such objects."
"It is fearful, too, to know, as you look, that whatever has been swallowed by the cataract, is
like to rise suddenly to light."
[pg 164]
"It was always obvious that they had nothing in common between them."
"McKenny's Tour to the Lakes gives some facts not to be met with elsewhere."
"There is that mixture of culture and rudeness in the aspect of things as gives a feeling of
freedom," etc., etc.
"These are merely a few, a very few instances, taken at random from among a multitude of willful murders
committed by Miss Fuller on the American of President Polk. She uses, too, the word 'ignore,' a vulgarity
adopted only of late days (and to no good purpose, since there is no necessity for it) from the barbarisms of
the law, and makes no scruple of giving the Yankee interpretation to the verbs 'witness' and 'realize,' to say
nothing of 'use,' as in the sentence, 'I used to read a short time at night.' It will not do to say in defense of such
words, that in such senses they may be found in certain dictionaries—in that of Bolles', for instance;—some
kind of 'authority' may be found for any kind of vulgarity under the sun.
"In spite of these things, however and of her frequent unjustifiable Carlyleisms, (such as that of writing
sentences which are no sentences, since, to be parsed, reference must be had to sentences preceding,) the style
of Miss Fuller is one of the very best with which I am acquainted. In general effect, I know no style which
surpasses it. It is singularly piquant, vivid, terse, bold, luminous—leaving details out of sight, it is everything
that a style need be.
"I believe that Miss Fuller has written much poetry, although she has published little. That little is tainted with
the affectation of the transcendentalists, (I used this term, of course, in the sense which the public of late days
seem resolved to give it,) but is brimful of the poetic sentiment. Here, for example, is something in Coleridge's
manner, of which the author of 'Genevieve' might have had no reason to be ashamed:—
"To show the evident carelessness with which this poem was constructed, I have italicized an identical rhyme
(of about the same force in versification as an identical proposition in logic) and two grammatical
improprieties. To lean is a neuter verb, and 'seizing on' is not properly to be called a pleonasm, merely
because it is—nothing at all. The concluding line is difficult of pronunciation through excess of consonants. I
should have preferred, indeed, the ante-penultimate tristich as the finale of the poem.
"The supposition that the book of an author is a thing apart from the author's self, is, I think, ill-founded. The
soul is a cipher, in the sense of a cryptograph; and the shorter a cryptograph is, the more difficulty there is in
its comprehension—at a certain point of brevity it would bid defiance to an army of Champollions. And thus
he who has written very little, may in that little either conceal his spirit or convey quite an erroneous idea of
it—of his acquirements, talents, temper, manner, tenor and depth (or shallowness) of thought—in a
word of his character, of himself. But this is impossible with him who has written much. Of such a person we
get, from his books, not merely a just, but the most just representation. Bulwer, the individual, personal man,
in a green velvet waistcoat and amber gloves, is not by any means the veritable Sir Edward Lytton, who is
discoverable only in 'Ernest Maltravers,' where his soul is deliberately and nakedly set forth. And who would
ever know Dickens by looking at him or talking with him, or doing anything with him except reading his
'Curiosity Shop?' What poet, in especial, but must feel at least the better portion of himself more fairly
represented in even his commonest sonnet, (earnestly written,) than in his most elaborate or most intimate
personalities?
"I put all this as a general proposition, to which Miss Fuller affords a marked exception—to this extent,
that her personal character and her printed book are merely one and the same thing. We get access to her soul
as directly from the one as from the other—no more readily from this than from that—easily
from either. Her acts are bookish, and her books are less thoughts than acts. Her literary and her
conversational manner are identical. Here is a passage from her 'Summer on the Lakes:'—
"'The rapids enchanted me far beyond what I expected; they are so swift that they cease to
seem so—you can think only of their beauty. The fountain beyond the Moss Islands I
discovered for myself, and thought it for some time an accidental beauty which it would not
do to leave, lest I might never see it again. After I found it permanent, I returned many times
to watch the play of its crest. In the little waterfall, beyond, Nature seems, as she often does,
to have made a study for some larger design. She delights in this—a sketch within a
sketch—a dream within a dream. Wherever we see it, the lines of the great buttress in
the fragment of stone, the hues of the waterfall, copied in the flowers that star its bordering
mosses, we are delighted; for all the lineaments become fluent, and we mould the scene in
congenial thought with its genius.'
"Now all this is precisely as Miss Fuller would speak it. She is perpetually saying just such things in just such
words. To get the conversational woman in the mind's eye, all that is needed is to imagine her reciting the
paragraph just quoted: but first let us have the personal woman. She is of the medium height; nothing
remarkable about the figure; a profusion of lustrous light hair; eyes a bluish gray, full of fire; capacious
forehead; the mouth when in repose indicates profound sensibility, capacity for affection, for
love—when moved by a slight smile, it becomes even beautiful in the intensity of this expression; but
BY G.F.R. JAMES
An Illustration of the high prices paid to fortunate artists in these times may be found in the fact that Alboni,
the famous contralto singer, has been engaged to sing at Madrid, at the enormous rate of $400 dollars per day,
while Roger, the tenor, who used to sing at the Comic Opera at Paris, and who was transplanted to the Grand
Opera to assist in the production of Meyerbeer's "Prophet," has been engaged to sing with her at the more
moderate salary of $8000 a month. This is almost equal to the extravagant sum guaranteed to Jenny Lind for
performing in this country. It would be a curious inquiry why singers and dancers are always paid so much
more exorbitantly than painters, sculptors or musical composers, especially as the pleasure they confer is of a
merely evanescent character, while the works of the latter remain a perpetual source of delight and refinement
to all generations.
BY G.F.R. JAMES 9
International Weekly Miscellany, August 5, 1850.
he rather understated than exaggerated the fact. Mr. Griswold, besides the ninety regular poets in his
collection, gives an appendix of about seventy fugitive pieces by as many authors; and bitter complaints have
been made against him in various quarters for not including some seventy, or a hundred and seventy more,
'who,' it is said, and probably with truth, 'have as good a right to be there as many of those admitted.' Still it is
possible to pick out a few of general reputation, whom literati from all parts of the Union would agree in
sustaining as specimens of distinguished American poets, though they would differ in assigning their relative
position. Thus, if the Republic had to choose a laureate, Boston would probably deposit a nearly unanimous
vote for Longfellow; the suffrages of New York might he divided between Bryant and Halleck; and the
southern cities would doubtless give a large majority for Poe. But these gentlemen, and some three or four
more, would be acknowledged by all as occupying the first rank. Perhaps, on the whole, the preponderance of
native authority justifies us in heading the list with Bryant, who, at any rate, has the additional title of
seniority in authorship, if not in actual years.
"William Cullen Bryant is, as we learn from Mr. Griswold, about fifty-five years old, and was born in
Massachusetts, though his literary career is chiefly associated with New York, of which he is a resident. With
a precocity extraordinary, even in a country where precocity is the rule instead of the exception, he began to
write and publish at the age of thirteen, and has, therefore, been full forty years before the American public,
and that not in the capacity of poet alone—having for more than half that period edited the Evening
Post, one of the ablest and most respectable papers in the United States, and the oldest organ, we believe, of
the Democratic party in New York. He has been called, and with justice, a poet of nature. The prairie solitude,
the summer evening landscape, the night wind of autumn, the water-bird flitting homeward through the
twilight—such are the favorite subjects of inspiration. [pg 166] Thanatopsis, one of his most admired
pieces, was written at the age of eighteen, and exhibits a finish of style, no less than a maturity of thought,
very remarkable for so youthful a production. Mr. Bryant's poems have been for some years pretty well
known on this side the water,—better known, at any rate, than any other transatlantic verses; on which
account, being somewhat limited for space, we forbear to make any extracts from them.
"FITZ-GREENE HALLECK is also a New-Englander by birth and a New Yorker by adoption. He is Bryant's
contemporary and friend, but the spirit and style of his versification are very different; and so, it is said, are
his political affinities. While Bryant is a bulwark of the Democracy, Halleck is reported to be not only an
admirer of the obsolete Federalists, but an avowed Monarchist. To be sure, this is only his private reputation:
no trace of such a feeling is observable in his writings, which show throughout a sturdy vein of republicanism,
social and political. In truth, the party classification of American literary men is apt to puzzle the uninitiated.
Thus Washington Irving is said to belong to the Democrats; but it would be hard to find in his writings
anything countenancing their claim upon him. His sketches of English society are a panegyric of old
"LONGFELLOW, the pet poet of Boston, is a much younger man than either Bryant or Halleck, and has made
his reputation only within the last twelve years, during which time he has been one of the most noted lions of
American Athens. The city of Boston, as every one knows who has been there, or who has met with any book
or man emanating from it, claims to be the literary metropolis of the United States, and assumes the
slightly-pretending [pg 167] soubriquet just quoted. The American Athenians have their thinking and writing
done for them by a coterie whose distinctive characteristics are Socinianism in theology, a præter-Puritan
prudery in ethics, a German tendency in metaphysics, and throughout all a firm persuasion that Boston is the
fountain-head of art, scholarship, and literature for the western world, and particularly that New York is a
Nazareth in such things, out of which can come nothing good. For the Bostonians, who certainly cultivate
literature with more general devotion, if not always with more individual success than the New Yorkers, can
never forgive their commercial neighbors for possessing by birth the two most eminent prose-writers of the
"The immediate influences of this camaraderie are highly flattering and apparently beneficial to the subject of
them, but its ultimate effects are most injurious to the proper development of his powers. When the merest
trifles that a man throws off are inordinately praised, he soon becomes content with producing the merest
trifles. Longfellow has grown unaccustomed to do himself justice. Half his volumes are filled up with
translations; graceful and accurate, indeed; but translations, and often from originals of very moderate merit.
His last original poem, Evangeline, is a sort of pastoral in hexameters. The resuscitation of this classical metre
had a queer effect upon the American quidnuncs. Some of the critics evidently believed it to be a bran-new
metre invented for the nonce by the author, a delusion which they of the 'Mutual Admiration' rather winked at;
and the parodists who endeavored to ridicule the new measure were evidently not quite sure whether seven
feet or nine made a hexameter. It is really to be regretted that Longfellow has been cajoled into playing these
tricks with himself, for his earlier pieces were works of much promise, and, had they been worthily followed
out, might have entitled him to a high place among the poets of the language.... Longfellow's poetry,
whenever he really lays himself out to write poetry, has a definite idea and purpose in it—no small
merit now-a-days. His versification is generally harmonious, and he displays a fair command of metre.
Sometimes he takes a fancy to an obsolete or out-of-the-way stanza; one of his longest and best poems, The
Skeleton in Armor, is exactly in the measure of Drayton's fine ballad on Agincourt. His chief fault is an
over-fondness for simile and metaphor. He seems to think indispensable the introduction into everything he
writes of a certain (or sometimes a very uncertain) number of these figures. Accordingly his poems are
crowded with comparisons, sometimes very pretty and pleasing, at others so far-fetched that the string of
tortured images which lead off Alfred de Musset's bizarre Ode to the Moon can hardly equal them. This
making figures (whether from any connection with the calculating habits of the people or not) is a terrible
propensity of American writers, whether of prose or verse. Their orators are especial sinners in this respect.
We have seen speeches stuck as full of metaphors (more or less mixed) as Burton's Anatomy is of quotations.
"Such persons as know from experience that literary people are not always in private life what their writings
would betoken, that Miss Bunions do not precisely resemble March violets, and mourners upon paper may be
laughers over mahogany—such persons will not be surprised to hear that the Longfellow is a very jolly
fellow, a lover of fun and good dinners, and of an amiability and personal popularity that have aided not a
little the popularity of his writings in verse and prose—for he writes prose too, prettier, quainter, more
figurative, and more poetic if anything, than his poetry. He is also a professor at Harvard College, near
Boston.
"EDGAR A. POE, like Longfellow and most of the other American poets, wrote prose as well as poetry,
having produced a number of wild, grotesque, and powerfully-imagined tales; unlike most of them he was a
literary man pur sang. He depended for support entirely on his writings, and his career was more like the
precarious existence of an author in the time of Johnson and Savage than the decent life of an author in our
own day. He was a Southerner by birth, acquired a liberal education, and what the French call 'expansive'
tastes, was adopted by a rich relative, quarreled with him, married 'for love,' and lived by editing magazines in
Richmond, Philadelphia, and New York; by delivering lectures (the never-failing last resort of the American
literary adventurer); by the occasional subscriptions of compassionate acquaintances or admiring
friends—any way he could—for eighteen or nineteen years: lost his wife, involved himself in
endless difficulties, and finally died in what should have been the prime of his life, about six months ago. His
enemies attributed his untimely death to intemperance; his writings would rather lead to the belief that he was
[pg 168]
Poe was certainly a poet. Virulently and ceaselessly abused by his enemies (who included a large portion of
the press), he was worshiped to infatuation by his friends. The severity of his editorial criticisms, and the
erratic course of his life, fully account for the former circumstance; the latter is probably to be attributed, in
part at least, to pity for his mishaps.
"If Longfellow's poetry is best designated as quaint, Poe's may most properly be characterized as fantastic.
The best of it reminds one of Tennyson, not by any direct imitation of particular passages, but by its general
air and tone. But he was very far from possessing Tennyson's fine ear for melody. His skill in versification,
sometimes striking enough, was evidently artificial; he overstudied metrical expression and overrated its value
so as sometimes to write, what were little better than nonsense-verses, for the rhythm. He had an incurable
propensity for refrains, and when he had once caught a harmonious cadence, appeared to think it could not be
too often repeated. Poe's name is usually mentioned in connection with The Raven, a poem which he
published about five years ago. It had an immense run, and gave rise to innumerable parodies—those
tests of notoriety if not of merit. And certainly it is not without a peculiar and fantastic excellence in the
execution, while the conception is highly striking and poetic. This much notice seems due to a poem which
created such a sensation in the author's country. To us it seems by no means the best of Poe's productions; we
much prefer, for instance, this touching allegory, which was originally embodied in one of his wildest tales,
The Haunted Palace. In the very same volume with this are some verses that Poe wrote when a boy, and some
that a boy might be ashamed of writing. Indeed the secret of rejection seems to be little known to Transatlantic
bards. The rigidness of self-criticism which led Tennyson to ignore and annihilate, so far as in him lay, full
one half of his earlier productions, would hardly be understood by them. This is particularly unlucky in the
case of Poe, whose rhymes sometimes run fairly away with him, till no purpose or meaning is traceable amid
a jingle of uncommon and fine-sounding words....
"Though Poe was a Southerner, his poetry has nothing in it suggestive of his peculiar locality. It is somewhat
remarkable that the slave-holding, which has tried almost all other means of excusing or justifying itself
before the world, did not think of 'keeping a poet,' and engaging the destitute author from its own territory to
sing the praises of 'the patriarchal institution.' And it would have been a fair provocation that the Abolitionists
had their poet already. Indeed several of the northern poets have touched upon this subject; Longfellow, in
particular, has published a series of spirited and touching anti-slavery poems; but the man who has made it his
specialité is JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER, a Quaker, literary editor of the National Era, an Abolition and
ultra-Radical paper, which, in manful despite of Judge Lynch, is published at Washington, between the
slave-pens and the capitol. His verses are certainly obnoxious to the jurisdiction of that notorious popular
potentate, being unquestionably 'inflammatory, incendiary, and insurrectionary,' as the Southern formula goes,
in a very high degree. He makes passionate appeals to the Puritan spirit of New England, and calls on her sons
to utter their voice,
"and protest against the shocking anomaly of slavery in a free country. At times, when deploring the death of
some fellow laborer in the cause, he falls into a somewhat subdued strain, though even then there is more of
spirit and fire in his verses than one naturally expects from a follower of George Fox; but on such occasions
he displays a more careful and harmonious versification than is his wont. There is no scarcity of these elegies
in his little volume, the Abolitionists, even when they escape the attentions of the high legal functionary
already alluded to, not being apparently a long-lived class.
"Toujours perdrix palls in poetry as in cookery; we grow tired after awhile of invectives against governors of
slave-states and mercenary persons, and dirges for untimely perished Abolitionists. The wish suggests itself
that Whittier would not always
but sometimes turn his powers in another direction. Accordingly, it is a great relief to find him occasionally
trying his hand on the early legends of New England and Canada, which do not suffer such ballads as St.
John....
"Whittier is less known than several other Western bards to the English reader, and we think him entitled to
stand higher on the American Parnassus than most of his countrymen would place him. His
faults—harshness and want of polish—are evident; but there is more life, and spirit, and soul in
his verses, than in those of eight-ninths of Mr. Griswold's immortal ninety.
"From political verse (for the anti-slavery agitation must be considered quite as much a political as a moral
warfare) the transition is natural to satire and humorous poetry. Here we find no lack of matter, but a grievous
short-coming in quality. The Americans are no contemptible humorists in prose, but their [pg 169] fun cannot
be set to verse. They are very fond of writing parodies, yet we have scarcely ever seen a good parody of
American origin. And their satire is generally more distinguished for personality and buffoonery than wit.
Halleck's Fanny looks as if it might be good, did we only know something of the people satirized in it. The
reputed comic poet of the country at present is OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES, a physician. Whether it was
"But within the last three years there has arisen in the United States a satirist of genuine excellence, who,
however, besides being but moderately appreciated by his countrymen, seems himself in a great measure to
have mistaken his real forte. JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL, one of the Boston coterie, has for some time been
publishing verses, which are by the coterie duly glorified, but which are in no respect distinguishable from the
ordinary level of American poetry, except that they combine an extraordinary pretension to originality, with a
more than usually palpable imitation of English models. Indeed, the failure was so manifest, that the
American literati seem, in this one case, to have rebelled against Boston dictation, and there is sufficient
internal evidence that such of them as do duty for critics handled Mr. Lowell pretty severely. Violently piqued
at this, and simultaneously conceiving a disgust for the Mexican war, he was impelled by both feelings to take
the field as a satirist: to the former we owe the Fable for Critics; to the latter, the Biglow Papers. It was a
happy move, for he has the rare faculty of writing clever doggerel. Take out the best of Ingoldsby, Campbell's
rare piece of fun The Friars of Dijon, and perhaps a little of Walsh's Aristophanes, and there is no
contemporary verse of the class with which Lowell's may not fearlessly stand a comparison; for, observe, we
are not speaking of mock heroics like Bon Gaultier's, which are only a species of parody, but of real doggerel,
the Rabelaisque of poetry. The Fable is somewhat on the Ingoldsby model,—that is to say, a good part
of its fun consists in queer rhymes, double, treble, or poly-syllabic; and it has even Barham's fault—an
occasional over-consciousness of effort, and calling on the reader to admire, as if the tour de force could not
speak for itself. But Ingoldsby's rhymes will not give us a just idea of the Fable until we superadd Hook's
puns; for the fabulist has a pleasant knack of making puns—outrageous and unhesitating
ones—exactly of the kind to set off the general style of his verse. The sternest critic could hardly help
relaxing over such a bundle of them as are contained in Apollo's lament over the 'treeification' of his
Daphne.... The Fable is a sort of review in verse of American poets. Much of the Boston leaven runs through
it; the wise men of the East are all glorified intensely, while Bryant and Halleck are studiously depreciated.
But though thus freely exercising his own critical powers in verse, the author is most bitter against all critics
in prose, and gives us a ludicrous picture of one—
And this gentleman is finely shown up for his condemnatory predilections and inability to discern or
appreciate beauties. The cream of the joke against him is, that being sent by Apollo to choose a lily in a
flower-garden, he brings back a thistle as all he could find. The picture is a humorous one, but we are at a loss
to conjecture who can have sat for it in America, where the tendency is all the other way, reviewers being apt
to apply the butter of adulation with the knife of profusion to every man, woman, or child who rushes into
print. Some of his complaints, too, against the critic sound very odd; as, for instance, that
Surely the very meaning of learning is that it is something which a man learns—acquires from other
sources—does not originate in himself. But it is a favorite practice with Mr. Lowell's set to rail against
dry learning and pedants, while at the same time there are no men more fond of showing off cheap learning
than themselves: Lowell himself never loses an opportunity of bringing in a bit of Greek or Latin. Our readers
must have known such persons—for, unfortunately, the United States has no monopoly of
them—men who delight in quoting Latin before ladies, talking Penny-Magazine science in the hearing
of clodhoppers, and preaching of high art to youths who have never had the chance of seeing any art at all.
"The Biglow Papers are imaginary epistles from a New England farmer, and contain some of the best
specimens extant of the 'Yankee,' or New England dialect,—better than Haliburton's, for Sam Slick
sometimes mixes Southern, Western, and even English vulgarities with his Yankee. Mr. Biglow's remarks
treat chiefly of the Mexican war, and subjects immediately connected with it, such as slavery, truckling of
Northerners to the south, &c. The theme is treated in various ways with uniform bitterness. Now [pg 170] he
sketches a 'Pious Editors Creed,' almost too daring in its Scriptural allusions, but terribly severe upon the
venal fraternity. At another time he sets one of Calhoun's pro-slavery speeches to music. The remarks of the
great Nullifier form the air of the song, and the incidental remarks of honorable senators on the same side
make up a rich chorus, their names supplying happy tags to the rhymes. But best of all are the letters of his
friend the returned volunteer, Mr. Birdofredom Sawin, who draws a sad picture of the private soldier's life in
Mexico. He had gone out with hopes of making his fortune. But he was sadly disappointed and equally so in
his expectations of glory, which 'never got so low down as the privates.'
"But it is time to bring this notice to a close not, however, that we have by any means exhausted the subject.
For have we not already stated that there are, at the lowest calculation, ninety American poets, spreading all
over the alphabet, from Allston, who is unfortunately dead, to Willis, who is fortunately living, and writing
Court Journals for the 'Upper Ten Thousand,' as he has named the quasi-aristocracy of New York? And the
lady-poets—the poetesses, what shall we say of them? Truly it would be ungallant to say anything ill of
them, and invidious to single out a few among so many; therefore, it will be best for us to say—nothing
at all about any of them."
Original Poetry.
A RETROSPECT.
BY HERMANN.
Original Poetry. 16
International Weekly Miscellany, August 5, 1850.
BY HERMANN. 17
International Weekly Miscellany, August 5, 1850.
"If I felt that the circumstances of this hour, and the eloquent kindness which has enriched it, appealed for a
response only to personal qualities, I should be too conscious of the poverty of such materials for an answer to
attempt one; but the associations they suggest expand into wider circles than self impels, and while they teach
me that this occasion is not for the indulgence of vanity, but for the cultivation of humble thankfulness, they
impart a nobler significance to your splendid gift and to your delightful praise. They remind me that my
intellectual being has, from its first development, been nurtured by the partiality of those whom, living and
dead, you virtually represent to-day; they concentrate the wide-spread instances of that peculiar felicity in my
lot whereby I have been privileged to find aid, comfort, inspiration, and allowance in that local community
amidst which my life began; and they invite me, from that position which once bounded my furthest horizon
of personal hope, to live along the line of past existence; to recognize the same influence everywhere
pervading it: and to perceive how its struggles have been assisted; its errors softened down or vailed, and its
successes enhanced, by the constant presence of home-born regards. Embracing in a rapid glance the events of
many years, I call to mind how at an early age—earlier than is generally safe or happy for
youths—the incidents of life, supplying an unusual stimulus to ordinary powers, gave vividness to
those dreams of human excellence and progress which, at some time, visit all; how by the weakness which
precluded them from assuming those independent shapes which require the plastic force of higher powers,
they became associated with the scenes among which they were cherished, and clove to them with earnest
grasp; and how the fervid expressions which that combination prompted, were accepted by generous friends
as indicating faculties 'beyond the reaches of my soul,' and [pg 171] induced them to encourage me by genial
prophecies which, with unwearied purpose, they endeavored to fulfill. I renew that golden season when such
vague aspirations were at once cherished and directed by the Christian wisdom of the venerated master of
Reading School—who, during his fifty years of authority, made the name of our town a household
word to successive generations of scholars, who honored him in all parts of the world, and all departments of
society—whose long life was one embodied charity—and who gave steadiness and object to
those impulses in me which else might have ended, as they began, in dreams. I remember, when pausing on
the slippery threshold of active life, and looking abroad on the desolate future, how the earnestness of my
friends gave me courage, and emboldened me, with no patrons but themselves, to enter the profession of my
choice by its most dim and laborious avenue, and to brace myself for four years of arduous pupilage; how they
crowded with pleasures the intervals of holiday I annually enjoyed among them during that period, and
another of equal length passed in a special pleader's anxieties and toils; how they greeted with praise, sweeter
than the applause of multitudes to him who wins it, the slender literary effusions by which I supplied the
deficiency of professional income; and how, when I dared the hazard of the bar, they provided for me
opportunities such as riper scholars and other advocates wait long for, by confiding important matters to my
untried hands; how they encircled my first tremulous efforts by an atmosphere of affectionate interest, roused
my faint heart to exertion, absorbed the fever that hung upon its beatings, and strengthened my first
perceptions of capacity to make my thoughts and impressions intelligible, on the instant, to the minds of
Cultivate and exercise a serene faith, and you shall acquire wonderful power and insight; its results are sure
and illimitable, moulding and moving to its purposes equally spirit, mind, and matter. It is the
power-endowing essential of all action.
[pg 172]
Recent Deaths.
Under this head we have rarely to present so many articles as are demanded by the foreign journals received
during the week, and by the melancholy disaster which caused the death of the MARCHESA D'OSSOLI, with
her husband, and Mr. SUMNER. Of MARGARET FULLER D'OSSOLI a sketch is given in the preceding
pages, and we reserve for our next number an article upon the history of Sir ROBERT PEEL. The death of
this illustrious person has caused a profound sensation not only in Great Britain, but throughout Europe. In the
Recent Deaths. 19
International Weekly Miscellany, August 5, 1850.
House of Lords, most eloquent and impressive speeches upon the exalted character of the deceased, and the
irreparable loss of the country, were delivered by the Marquis of Lansdowne, Lord Stanley, Lord Brougham,
the Duke of Wellington, and the Duke of Cleveland, and in the House of Commons, by Lord John Russell,
and Messrs. Hume, Gladstone, Goulburn, Herries, Napier, Inglis and Somervile. The House, in testimony of
its grief, adjourned without business, an act without precedent, except in case of death in the royal family. A
noble tribute of respect was also paid by the French Assembly to the memory of Sir Robert Peel. The
President, M. Dupin, pronounced an affecting eulogy upon the deceased, which was received with the liveliest
sympathy by the Chamber, and was ordered to be recorded in its journal. A compliment like this is totally
unprecedented in France, and the death of no other foreigner in the world could have elicited it.
It is not questionable that the productions and general prosperity of the island decreased under Boyer's
administration. The blacks needed the stringent policy of some such tyrant as Christophe. And the popularity
of Boyer was greatly lessened by his approval or direct negotiation of a treaty with France, by which he
agreed to pay to that country an indemnity of 150,000,000 of francs, in five annual instalments. The French
Government recognized the independence of Hayti, but it was impossible for Boyer to meet his engagements.
He however conducted the administration with industry, discretion, and repose, for fifteen years, when a
long-slumbering opposition, for his presumed preference of the mulatto to the black population in the
dispensations of government favor, began to exhibit itself openly. When this feeling was manifested in the
second chamber of the Legislature, in 1843, the promptness and decision with which he attempted to suppress
it, induced an insurrection among the troops, and he was compelled to fly, with about thirty followers, to
Jamaica. He afterward proceeded to London, and finally to Paris, where he lived quietly in the Rue de
Madeline, enjoying the respect of many eminent men, and surrounded by attached followers who shared his
exile, until the 10th of July. On the 12th he was buried with appropriate funeral honors.
GEORGE W. ERVING.
This distinguished public man died in New York, on the 22d ult. A correspondent of the Evening Post gives
the following account of his history:
"The journals furnish us with a brief notice of the death of the venerable George W. Erving, who was for so
many years, dating from the foundation of our government, connected with the diplomatic history of the
country, as an able, successful and distinguished negotiator. The career of this gentleman has been so marked,
and is so instructive, that it becomes not less a labor of love than an act of public duty, with the press, to make
it the occasion of comment. At the breaking out of our revolution, the father of the subject of this imperfect
sketch was an eminent loyalist of Massachusetts, residing in Boston, connected by affinity with the Shirleys,
the Winslows, the Bowdons, and Winthrops of that State. Like many other men of wealth, at that day, he
joined the royal cause, forsook his country and went to England. There his son, George William, who had
always been a sickly delicate child, reared with difficulty, was educated, and finally graduated at Oxford,
where he was a classmate of Copley, now Lord Lyndhurst. Following this, on the attainment of his majority,
and during the lifetime of his father, notwithstanding the most powerful and seductive efforts to attach him to
the side of Great Britain, the more persevering from the great wealth, and the intellectual attainments of the
young American—notwithstanding the importunities of misjudging friends and relatives, the
incitements found in ties of consanguinity with some, and his intimate personal associations with many of the
young nobility at that aristocratic seat of learning, and notwithstanding the blandishments of fashionable
society—the love of country and the holy inspirations of patriotism, triumphed over all the arts that
power could control, and those allurements usually so potent where youth is endowed with great wealth. The
young patriot promptly, cheerfully, sacrificed all, for his country—turned his back upon the unnatural
stepmother, and came back, to share the good or evil fortunes of his native land.
"Such facts as these should not be lost sight of at the present day—such an example it is well to refer to
now, in the day of our prosperity. And we would ask—in no ill-natured or censorious spirit, but rather
that the lessons of history should not be forgotten—how many young men of these days under like
circumstances, would make a similar sacrifice upon the altar of their country? The solemn and impressive
event which has produced this notice seems to render this question not entirely inappropriate; for years should
not dim in the minds of the rising generation the memory of those pure and strong men, who, in the early trials
of their country, rose equal to the occasion. When, at a later period, political parties began to develop
themselves, Mr. Erving, then a resident of Boston, identified himself with the great republican party, and
became actively instrumental in securing the election of Thomas Jefferson to the Presidency. From that time
forward until the day of his death, he never faltered in his political faith.
"While at Copenhagen, he secured, in an eminent degree, the esteem and confidence of the Danish authorities,
and brought to a successful solution the questions then arising out of the interests committed to him. In
consequence, the government was enabled to avail itself of his experience at the Court of Berlin, where events
seemed to require the exercise of great diplomatic ability. He was afterward appointed to Madrid, where, by
his highly honorable personal character, and captivating manners, he obtained great influence, even at that
most proud and distrustful court, and conducted, with consummate skill and marked success, the important
and delicate negotiations then pending between the United States and Spain. He remained at Madrid for many
years, where he attained the reputation of being one of the most able and accomplished diplomatists that the
United States had ever sent abroad. Upon his final retirement from this post, and, in fact, from all public
employment, the administration of General Jackson sought to secure his services in the mission to
Constantinople, but the proffered appointment was declined.
"There are many interesting incidents in his public and diplomatic career, which a more extended notice
would enable us to detail. Indeed, we hope that so instructive a life as that of Mr. Erving may hereafter find a
fit historian. That historian may not have to chronicle victories won upon the battle [pg 174] field, but the
civic achievement he will have to record, if not so dazzling as the former, will, at least, be as replete with
evidences of public usefulness.
"The latter years of his life were passed in Europe, chiefly in Paris. The public agitations consequent upon the
last French revolution, need of quiet at his advanced age, and the presentiment of approaching dissolution,
induced him to return home. Indeed it was meet that he should close his mortal career in that country which he
had so long and faithfully served, and whose welfare and happiness had been the constant object of his every
earthly aspiration."
GEORGE W. ERVING. 22
International Weekly Miscellany, August 5, 1850.
the arrangement, and sometimes in the language. In 1815, the crown instituted a Professorship of Surgery in
the Glasgow University, and the Duke of Montrose, its chancellor, appointed to it Mr. Burns, a choice which
the voice of the profession generally approved. The value of the professorship might average 500l. yearly.
As a professor, Dr. Burns was highly popular. He had a cheerful and attractive manner, and was fond of
bringing in anecdotes more or less applicable, but always enlivening. His language was plain and clear, but
not always correct or elegant. In personal appearance, he was of the middle size, of an anxious and careworn,
but gentlemanly and intelligent, expression of countenance. In 1830, he published Principles of Surgery, first
volume, which was followed by another. This work is confused, both in style and arrangement, and has been
very little read, but it did credit to his zeal and industry, for he had now acquired fame and fortune, and had
long had at his command the most extensive practice in the west of Scotland. John Burns, the younger, had
written and published a work on the evidences and principles of Christianity, which was extensively read, and
went through many editions. His name was not at first on the title-page, but that it was the production of a
medical man was obvious. He gave a copy to his father, who shortly after said, "Ah, John, I wish you could
have written such a book!" Dr. Burns has many friends in the United States, who were once his pupils. One of
the most eminent of them is Professor Pattison of the Medical Department of the New York University, in this
city.
HORACE SUMNER.
This gentleman, one of the victims of the lamentable wreck of the Elizabeth, was the youngest son of the late
Charles P. Sumner, of Boston, for many years Sheriff of Suffolk county, and the brother of George Sumner,
Esq., of Boston, who is well known for his legal and literary eminence throughout the country. He was about
twenty-four years of ago, and has been abroad for nearly a year, traveling in the south of Europe for the
benefit of his health. The past winter was spent by him chiefly in Florence, where he was on terms of familiar
intimacy with the Marquis and Marchioness d'Ossoli, and was induced to take passage in the same vessel with
them for his return to his native land. He was a young man of singular modesty of deportment, of an original
turn of mind, and greatly endeared to his friends by the sweetness of his disposition and the purity of his
character.—Tribune.
HORACE VERNET, the great painter, has returned to Paris from St. Petersburgh. Offensive reports were
current respecting his journey: he had been paid, it was alleged, in most princely style by the Emperor, for his
masterly efforts in translating to canvas the principal incidents of the Hungarian and Polish wars. He came
back, it was declared, loaded and content, with a hundred thousand dollars and a kiss—an actual
kiss—from his Imperial Majesty. M. Vernet has deemed it necessary to publish a letter, correcting what
was erroneous in these reports. He says:—"In repairing to Russia I was actuated by only one desire, and
had but a single object, and that was, to thank His Majesty, the Emperor, for the honors with which he had
already loaded me, and for the proofs of his munificence which I had previously received. I intended to bring
back, and in fact have brought back from the journey, nothing but the satisfaction of having performed an
entirely disinterested duty of respectful gratitude." It is true, however, that he lent his powers to illustrate the
triumph of despotism, and if he brought back no gold the matter is not all helped by that fact.
Mrs. ESLING, better known as Miss Catherine H. Waterman, under which name she wrote the popular and
beautiful lyric, "Brother, Come Home!" has in press a collection of her writings, under the title of The Broken
Bracelet and other Poems, to be published by Lindsay & Blackiston of Philadelphia.
M. ROSSEEUW ST. HILAIRE, of Paris, is proceeding with his great work on the History of Spain with all
the rapidity consistent with the nature of the subject and the elaborate studies it requires. The work was
commenced ten years ago, and has since been the main occupation of its author. The fifth volume has just
been published, and receives the applause of the most competent critics. It includes the time from 1336 to
1492, which comes down to the very eve of the great discovery of Columbus, and includes that most brilliant
period, in respect of which the history of Prescott has hitherto stood alone, namely, the reign of Ferdinand and
Isabella. M. St. Hilaire has had access to many sources of information not accessible to any former writer, and
is said to have availed himself of them with all the success that could be anticipated from his rare faculty of
historical analysis and the beautiful transparency of his style.
THE REV. ROBERT ARMITAGE, a rector in Shropshire, is the author of "Dr. Hookwell," and "Dr. Johnson,
his Religious Life and his Death." In this last work, the Quarterly Review observes, "Johnson's name is made
the peg on which to hang up—or rather the line on which to hang out—much hackneyed
sentimentality, and some borrowed learning, with an awful and overpowering quantity of twaddle and
rigmarole." The writer concludes his reviewal: "We are sorry to have had to make such an exposure of a man,
who, apart from the morbid excess of vanity which has evidently led him into this scrape, may be, for aught
we know, worthy and amiable. His exposure, however, is on his own head: he has ostentatiously and
pertinaciously forced his ignorance, conceit, and effrontery on public notice." We quite agree with the
Quarterly.
JOHN MILLS—"John St. Hugh Mills," it was written then—was familiarly known in the
printing offices of Ann street in this city a dozen years ago; he assisted General Morris in editing the Mirror,
and wrote paragraphs of foreign gossip for other journals. A good-natured aunt died in England, leaving him a
few thousand a year, and he returned to spend his income upon a stud and pack and printing office, sending
from the latter two or three volumes of pleasant-enough mediocrity every season. His last work, with the
imprint of Colburn, is called "Our Country."
Mr. PRESCOTT, the historian, who is now in England, has received the degree of Doctor of Civil Law from
the University of Oxford. Two or three years ago he was elected into the Institute of France.
DR. MAGINN's "Homeric Ballads," which gave so much attraction during several years to Fraser's
Magazine, have been collected and republished in a small octavo.
[pg 176]
Mr. KENDALL, of the Picayune, has sailed once more for Paris, to superintend there the completion of his
great work on the late war in Mexico upon which he has been engaged for the last two years. The highest
talent has been employed in the embellishment of this book, and the care and expense incurred may be
estimated from the fact that sixty men, coloring and preparing the plates, can finish only one hundred and
twenty copies in a month. The original sketches were taken by a German, Carl Nebel, who accompanied Mr.
Kendall in Mexico, and drew his battle scenes at the very time of their occurrence. He has engaged in the
prosecution of the whole enterprise with as much zeal and interest as Mr. Kendall himself, and has spared no
pains to procure the assistance of the most skillful operatives. The book is folio in size, and will be published
early in the fall. The letter press has long been finished, and only waiting for the completion of the plates.
These are twelve, and their subjects are Palo Alto, the Capture of Monterey, Buena Vista: the Landing at Vera
Cruz, Cerro Gordo, Contreras, Cherubusco, Molino del Rey, two views of the Storming of Chapultepec, and
Gen. Scott's entrance into the city of Mexico. The lithographs are said to be unsurpassed in felicity of design,
perfection of coloring, and in the animation and expression of all the figures and groups. No such finished
specimens of colored lithography were ever exhibited in this country. The plates will have unusual value, not
only on account of their intrinsic superiority, but because of their rare historical merit, since they are exact
delineations of the topography of the scenes they represent and faithful representations in every particular of
the military positions and movements at the moment chosen for illustration.
MRS. TROLLOPPE is as busy as she has ever been since the failure of her shop at Cincinnati—trading
in fiction, with the capital won by her first adventure in this way, "The Domestic Manners of the Americans."
Her last novel, which is just out, has in its title the odor of her customary vulgarity; it is called "Petticoat
Government." Her son, Mr. A. Trolloppe, his just given the world a new book also, "La Vendee" a historical
romance which is well spoken of.
THE REV. DR. WILLIAM R. WILLIAMS, it will gratify the friends of literature and religion to learn, has
consented to give to the press several works upon which he has for some time been engaged. They will be
published by Gould, Kendall & Lincoln, of Boston. In the next number of The International we shall write
more largely of this subject.
Dr. BUCKLAND, the Dean of Westminster—the eloquent and the learned writer of the remarkable
"Bridgewater Treatise" is bereft of reason, and is now an inmate of an asylum near Oxford.
Dr. WAYLAND's "Tractate on Education," in which he proposes a thorough reform in the modes of college
instruction, has, we are glad to see, had its desired effect. The Providence Journal states that the entire
subscription to the fund of Brown University has reached $110,000, which is within $15,000 of the sum
originally proposed. The subscription having advanced so far, and with good assurances of further aid, the
committee have reported to the President, that the success of the plan, so far as the money is concerned, may
be regarded as assured, and that consequently it will be safe to go on with the new organization as rapidly as
may he deemed advisable. Of the sum raised, about $96,000 have come from Providence. A meeting of the
Corporation of the University will soon be called, when the entire plan will be decided upon, and carried into
effect as rapidly as so important a change can be made with prudence.
SIR JAMES EMERSON TENNANT has in the press of Mr. Murray a work which will probably be read with
much interest in this country, upon Christianity in Ceylon, its introduction and progress under the Portuguese,
the Dutch, the British, and the American missions, with a Historical View of the Brahminical and Buddhist
superstitions.
CHARLES EAMES, formerly one of the editors of the Washington Union, and more recently United States
Commissioner to the Sandwich Islands, is to be the orator of the societies of Columbia College, at the
commencement, on the evening of the 6th of October. Bayard Taylor will be the poet for the same occasion.
CHATEAUBRIAND'S MEMOIRS.—The eleventh and last volume has just been published at Paris in
the book form, and will soon be completed in the feuilletons. An additional volume is however to be brought
out, under the title of "Supplement to the Memoirs."
THE THIRD AND FOURTH SERIES of Southey's Common-Place Book are in preparation, and they will be
reprinted by the Harpers. The third contains Analytical Readings, and the fourth, Original Memoranda.
WASHINGTON IRVING's Life of General Washington, in one octavo volume, is announced by Murray. It
will appear simultaneously from the press of Putnam.
MRS. JAMESON has in press Legends of the Monastic Orders, as illustrated in art.
Dr. ACHILLI is the subject of an article in the July number of the Dublin Review—the leading Roman
Catholic journal in the English language. Of course the history of the missionary is not presented in very
flattering colors.
[pg 177]
The small town of Pobereze stands at the foot of a stony mountain, watered by numerous springs in the
district of Podolia, in Poland. It consists of a mass of miserable Cabins, with a Catholic chapel and two Greek
churches in the midst, the latter distinguished by their gilded towers. On one side of the market-place stands
the only inn, and on the opposite side are several shops, from whose doors and windows look out several
dirtily dressed Jews. At a little distance, on a hill covered with vines and fruit-trees, stands the Palace, which
does not, perhaps, exactly merit such an appellation, but who would dare to call otherwise the dwelling of the
lord of the domain?
On the morning when our tale opens, there had issued from this palace the common enough command to the
superintendent of the estate, to furnish the master with a couple of strong boys, for service in the stables, and a
young girl to be employed in the wardrobe. Accordingly, a number of the best-looking young peasants of
Olgogrod assembled in the avenue leading to the palace. Some were accompanied by their sorrowful and
Being brought into the court-yard of the palace, the Count Roszynski, with the several members of his family,
had come out to pass in review his growing subjects. He was a small and insignificant-looking man, about
fifty years of age, with deep-set eyes and overhanging brows. His wife, who was nearly of the same age, was
immensely stout, with a vulgar face and a loud, disagreeable voice. She made herself ridiculous in
endeavoring to imitate the manners and bearing of the aristocracy, into whose sphere she and her husband
were determined to force themselves, in spite of the humbleness of their origin. The father of the
"Right-Honorable" Count Roszynski was a valet, who, having been a great favorite with his master, amassed
sufficient money to enable his son, who inherited it, to purchase the extensive estate of Olgogrod, and with it
the sole proprietorship of 1600 human beings. Over them he had complete control; and, when maddened by
oppression, if they dared resent, woe unto them! They could be thrust into a noisome dungeon, and chained by
one hand from the light of day for years, until their very existence was forgotten by all except the jailor who
brought daily their pitcher of water and morsel of dry bread.
Some of the old peasants say that Sava, father of the young peasant girl, who stands by the side of an old
woman, at the head of her companions in the court-yard, is immured in one of these subterranean jails. Sava
was always about the Count, who, it was said, had brought him from some distant land, with his little
motherless child. Sava placed her under the care of an old man and woman, who had the charge of the bees in
a forest near the palace, where he came occasionally to visit her. But once, six long months passed, and he did
not come! In vain Anielka wept, in vain she cried, "Where is my father?" No father appeared. At last it was
said that Sava had been sent to a long distance with a large sum of money, and had been killed by robbers. In
the ninth year of one's life the most poignant grief is quickly effaced, and after six months Anielka ceased to
grieve. The old people were very kind to her, and loved her as if sue were their own child. That Anielka might
be chosen to serve in the palace never entered their head, for who would be so barbarous as to take the child
away from an old woman of seventy and her aged husband?
To-day was the first time in her life that she had been so far from home. She looked curiously on all she
saw,—particularly on a young lady about her own age, beautifully dressed, and a youth of eighteen,
who had apparently just returned from a ride on horse-back, as he held a whip in his hand, whilst walking up
and down examining the boys who were placed in a row before him. He chose two amongst them, and the
boys were led away to the stables.
"And I choose this young girl," said Constantia Roszynski, indicating Anielka; "she is the prettiest of them all.
I do not like ugly faces about me."
When Constantia returned to the drawing-room, she gave orders for Anielka to be taken to her apartments,
and placed under the tutelage of Mademoiselle Dufour, a French maid, recently arrived from the first
milliner's shop in Odessa. Poor girl! when they separated her from her adopted mother, and began leading her
toward the palace, she rushed, with a shriek of agony, from them, and grasped her old protectress tightly in
her arms! They were torn violently asunder, and the Count Roszynski quietly asked, "Is it her daughter, or her
grand-daughter?"
"But who will lead the old woman home, as she is blind?"
"I will, my lord," replied one of his servants, bowing to the ground; "I will let her, walk by the side of my
horse, and when she [pg 178] is in her cabin she will have her old husband,—they must take care of
each other."
So saying, he moved away with the rest of the peasants and domestics. But the poor old woman had to be
dragged along by two men; for in the midst of her shrieks and tears she had fallen to the ground, almost
without life.
And Anielka? They did not allow her to weep long. She had now to sit all day in the corner of a room to sew.
She was expected to do everything well from the first; and if she did not, she was kept without food or cruelly
punished. Morning and evening she had to help Mdlle. Dufour to dress and undress her mistress. But
Constantia, although she looked with hauteur on everybody beneath her, and expected to be slavishly obeyed,
was tolerably kind to the poor orphan. Her true torment began, when, on laving her young lady's room, she
had to assist Mdlle. Dufour. Notwithstanding that she tried sincerely to do her best, she was never able to
satisfy her, or to draw from her naught but harsh reproaches.
One day Mdlle. Dufour went very early to confession, and Anielka was seized with an eager longing to gaze
once more in peace and freedom on the beautiful blue sky and green trees, as she used to do when the first
rays of the rising sun streamed in at the window of the little forest cabin. She ran into the garden. Enchanted
by the sight of so many beautiful flowers, she went farther and farther along the smooth and winding walks.
till she entered the forest. She who had been, so long away from her beloved trees, roamed where they were
thickest. Here she gazes boldly around. She sees no one! She is alone! A little farther on she meets with a
rivulet which flows through the forest. Here she remembers that she has not yet prayed. She kneels down, and
with hands clasped and eyes upturned she begins to sing in a sweet voice the Hymn to the virgin.
As she went on she sang louder and with increased fervor. Her breast heaved with emotion, her eyes shone
with unusual brilliancy; but when the hymn was finished she lowered her head, tears began to fall over her
cheeks, until at last she sobbed aloud. She might have remained long in this condition, had not some one come
behind her, saying, "Do not cry, my poor girl; it is better to sing than to weep." The intruder raised her head,
wiped her eyes with his handkerchief, and kissed her on the forehead.
"You must not cry," he continued; "be calm, and when the filipony (peddlers) come, buy yourself a pretty
handkerchief." He then gave her a ruble and walked away. Anielka, after concealing the coin in her corset, ran
quickly back to the palace.
Fortunately, Mdlle. Dufour had not yet returned, and Anielka seated herself in her accustomed corner. She
often took out the ruble to, gaze fondly upon it, and set to work to make a little purse, which, having fastened
to a ribbon, she hung round her neck. She did not dream of spending it, for it would have deeply grieved her
to part with the gift of the only person in the whole house who had looked kindly on her.
From this time Anielka remained always in her young mistress's room; she was better dressed, and Mdlle.
Dufour ceased to persecute her. To what did she owe this sudden change? Perhaps to a remonstrance from
Leon. Constantia ordered Anielka to sit beside her whilst taking her lessons from her music masters, and on
her going to the drawing-room, she was left in her apartments alone. Being thus more kindly treated. Anielka
lost by degrees her timidity; and when her young mistress, whilst occupied over some embroidery, would tell
her to sing, she did so boldly and with a steady voice. A greater favor awaited her. Constantia, when
unoccupied, began teaching Anielka to read in Polish; and Mdlle. Dufour thought it politic to follow the
example of her mistress, and began to teach her French.
Meanwhile, a new kind of torment commenced. Having easily learnt the two languages, Anielka acquired an
irresistible passion for reading. Books had for her the charm of the forbidden fruit, for she could only read by
So passed the two years of Leon's absence. When he returned, Anielka was seventeen, and had become tall
and handsome. No one who had not seen her during this time, would have recognized her. Of this number was
Leon. In the midst of perpetual gayety and change, it was not possible he could have remembered a poor
peasant girl; but in Anielka's memory he had remained as a superior being, as her benefactor, as the only one
who had spoken kindly to her, when poor, neglected, forlorn! When in some French romance she met with a
young man of twenty, of a noble character and handsome appearance, she bestowed on him the name of Leon.
The recollection of the kiss be had given her ever brought a burning blush to her cheek, and made her sigh
deeply.
One day Leon came to his sister's room. Anielka was there, seated in a corner at work. Leon himself had
considerably changed; from a boy he had grown into a man. "I suppose, Constantia," he said, "you have been
told what a, good boy I am, and with what docility I shall submit myself to the matrimonial yoke, which the
Count and Countess have provided for me?" and he began whistling, and danced some steps of the Mazurka.
[pg 179]
"Refused! Oh, no. The old Prince has already given his consent, and as for his daughter, she is desperately in
love with me. Look at these moustachios; could anything be more irresistible?" and he glanced in the glass
and twirled them round his fingers; then continuing in a graver tone, he said, "To tell the sober truth, I cannot
say that I reciprocate. My intended is not at all to my taste. She is nearly thirty, and so thin, that whenever I
look at her, I am reminded of my old tutor's anatomical sketches. But, thanks to her Parisian dress-maker, she
makes up a tolerably good figure, and looks well in a Cachemere. Of all things, you know, I wished for a wife
with an imposing appearance, and I don't care about love. I find it's not fashionable, and only exists in the
exalted imagination of poets."
"Surely people are in love with one another sometimes," said the sister.
"Sometimes," repeated Anielka, inaudibly. The dialogue had painfully affected her, and she knew not why.
Her heart beat quickly, and her face was flushed, and made her look more lovely than ever.
"Perhaps. Of course we profess to adore every pretty woman," Leon added abruptly. "But, my dear sister,
what a charming ladies' maid you have!" He approached the corner, where Anielka sat, and bent on her a
coarse familiar smile. Anielka, although a serf, was displeased, and returned it with a glance full of dignity.
But when her eyes rested on the youth's handsome face, a feeling, which had been gradually and silently
growing in her young and inexperienced heart, predominated over her pride and displeasure. She wished
ardently to recall herself to Leon's memory, and half unconsciously raised her hand to the little purse which
always hung round her neck. She took from it the rouble he had given her.
"See!" shouted Leon, "what a droll girl; how proud she is of her riches! Why, girl, you are a woman of
fortune, mistress of a whole rouble!"
"I hope she came by it honestly," said the old Countess, who at this moment entered.
At this insinuation, shame and indignation kept Anielka, for a time, silent. She replaced the money quickly in
its purse, with the bitter thought that the few happy moments which had been so indelibly stamped upon her
memory, had been utterly forgotten by Leon. To clear herself, she at last stammered out, seeing they all
looked at her inquiringly, "Do you not remember, M. Leon, that you gave me this coin two years ago in the
garden"?"
"How odd!" exclaimed Leon, laughing, "do you expect me to remember all the pretty girls to whom I have
given money? But I suppose you are right, or you would not have treasured up this unfortunate rouble as if it
were a holy relic. You should not be a miser, child; money is made to be spent."
"Pray put an end to these jokes," said Constantia impatiently; "I like this girl, and I will not have her teased.
She understands my ways better than any one, and often puts me in a good humor with her beautiful voice."
"Sing something for me pretty damsel," said Leon, "and I will give you another rouble, a new and shining
one."
At this command Anielka could no longer stifle her grief; she covered her face with her hands, and wept
violently.
"Why do you cry?" asked her mistress impatiently; "I cannot bear it; I desire you to do as you are bid."
It might have been from the constant habit of slavish obedience, or a strong feeling of pride, but Anielka
instantly ceased weeping. There was a moment's pause, during which the old Countess went grumbling out of
the room. Anielka chose the Hymn to the Virgin she had warbled in the garden, and as she sung, she prayed
fervently;—she prayed for peace, for deliverance from the acute emotions which had been aroused
within her. Her earnestness gave an intensity of expression to the melody, which affected her listeners. They
were silent for some moments after its conclusion. Leon walked up and down with his arms folded on his
breast. Was it agitated with pity for the accomplished young slave? or by any other tender emotion? What
followed will show.
"My dear Constantia," he said, suddenly stopping before his sister and kissing her hand, "will you do me a
favor?"
"Impossible!"
"I am quite in earnest," continued Leon, "I wish to offer her to my future wife. In the Prince her father's
private chapel they are much in want of a solo soprano."
"Not as a free gift, but in exchange. I will give you instead a charming young negro—so black. The
women in St. Petersburgh and in Paris raved about him: but I was inexorable: I half refused him to my
princess."
"No, no," replied Constantia; "I shall be lonely without this girl, I am so used to her."
"Nonsense! you can get peasant girls by the dozen; but a black page, with teeth whiter than ivory, and purer
than pearls; a perfect original in his way; you surely cannot withstand. You will kill half the province with
envy. A negro servant is the most fashionable thing going, and yours will be the first imported into the
province."
This argument was irresistible. "Well," replied Constantia, "when do you think of taking her?"
"Immediately; to-day at five o'clock," said [pg 180] Leon; and he went merrily out of the room.
This then was the result of his cogitation—of Anielka's Hymn to the Virgin. Constantia ordered
Anielka to prepare herself for the journey, with as little emotion as if she had exchanged away a lap-dog, or
parted with parrot.
She obeyed in silence. Her heart was full. She went into the garden that she might relieve herself by weeping
unseen. With one hand supporting her burning head, and the other pressed tightly against her heart, to stifle
her sobs, she wandered on mechanically till she found herself by the side of the river. She felt quickly for her
purse, intending to throw the rouble into the water, but as quickly thrust it back again, for she could not bear
to part with the treasure. She felt as if without it she would be still more an orphan. Weeping bitterly, she
leaned against the tree which had once before witnessed her tears.
By degrees the stormy passion within her gave place to calm reflection. This day she was to go away; she was
to dwell beneath another roof, to serve another mistress. Humiliation! always humiliation! But at least it
would be some change in her life. As she thought of this, she returned hastily to the palace that she might not,
on the last day of her servitude, incur the anger of her young mistress.
Scarcely was Anielka attired in her prettiest dress, when Constantia came to her with a little box, from which
she took several gay-colored ribbons, and decked her in them herself, that the serf might do her credit in the
new family. And when Anielka, bending down to her feet, thanked her, Constantia, with marvelous
condescension, kissed her on her forehead. Even Leon cast an admiring glance upon her. His servant soon
after came to conduct her to the carriage, and showing her where to seat herself, they rolled off quickly toward
Radapol.
For the first time in her life Anielka rode in a carriage. Her head turned quite giddy, she could not look at the
trees and fields as they flew past her; but by degrees she became more accustomed to it, and the fresh air
enlivening her spirits, she performed the rest of the journey in a tolerably happy state of mind. At last they
arrived in the spacious court-yard before the Palace of Radapol, the dwelling of a once rich and powerful
Polish family, now partly in ruin. It was evident, even to Anielka, that the marriage was one for money on the
one side, and for rank on the other.
Among other renovations at the castle, occasioned by the approaching marriage, the owner of it, Prince
Pelazia, had obtained singers for the chapel, and had engaged Signer Justiniani, an Italian, as chapel-master.
Immediately on Leon's arrival, Anielka was presented to him. He made her sing a scale, and pronounced her
voice to be excellent.
Anielka found that, in Radapol, she was treated with a little more consideration than at Olgogrod, although
she had often to submit to the caprices of her new mistress, and she found less time to read. But to console
herself, she gave all her attention to singing, which she practiced several hours a day. Her naturally great
capacity, under the guidance of the Italian, began to develop itself steadily. Besides sacred, he taught her
operatic music. On one occasion Anielka sung an aria in so impassioned and masterly style, that the
enraptured Justiniani clapped his hands for joy, skipped about the room, and not finding words enough to
praise her, exclaimed several times, "Prima Donna! Prima Donna!"
Anielka was most anxious to know something of her adopted parents. Once, after the old prince had heard her
singing, he asked her with great kindness about her home. She replied, that she was an orphan, and had been
taken by force from those who had so kindly supplied the place of parents, Her apparent attachment to the old
bee-keeper and his wife so pleased the prince, that he said, "You are a good child. Anielka, and to-morrow I
will send you to visit them. You shall take them some presents."
Anielka, overpowered with gratitude, threw herself at the feet of the prince. She dreamed all night of the
happiness that was in store for her, and the joy of the poor, forsaken, old people; and when the next morning
she set off, she could scarcely restrain her impatience. At last they approached the cabin; she saw the forest,
with its tall trees, and the meadows covered with flowers. She leaped from the carriage, that she might be
nearer these trees and flowers, every one of which she seemed to recognize. The weather was beautiful. She
breathed with avidity the pure air which, in imagination, brought to her the kisses and caresses of her poor
father! Her foster-father was, doubtless, occupied with his bees; but his wife?
Anielka opened the door of the cabin; all was silent and deserted. The arm-chair on which the poor old woman
used to sit, was overturned in a corner. Anielka was chilled by a fearful presentiment. She went with a slow
step toward the bee-hives; there she saw a little boy tending the bees, whilst the old man was stretched on the
ground beside him. The rays of the sun, falling on his pale and sickly face, showed that he was very ill.
Anielka stooped down over him, and said, "It is I, it is Anielka, your own Anielka, who always loves you."
[pg 181]
The old man raised his head, gazed upon her with a ghastly smile, and took off his cap.
"She is dead!" answered the old man, and falling back he began laughing idiotically. Anielka wept. She gazed
earnestly on the worn frame, the pale and wrinkled cheeks, it which scarcely a sign of life could be perceived;
it seemed to her that he had suddenly fallen asleep, and not wishing to disturb him, she went to the carriage
for the presents. When she returned, she took his hand. It was cold. The poor old bee-keeper had breathed his
last!
Anielka was carried almost senseless back to the carriage, which quickly returned with her to the castle. There
she revived a little; but the recollection that she was now quite alone in the world, almost drove her to despair.
Her master's wedding and the journey to Florence were a dream to her. Though the strange sights of a strange
city slowly restored her perceptions, they did not her cheerfulness. She felt as if she could no longer endure
the misery of her life; she prayed to die.
"Why are you so unhappy?" said the Count Leon kindly to her, one day.
To have explained the cause of her wretchedness would have been death indeed.
"I am going to give you a treat," continued Leon. "A celebrated singer is to appear to-night in the theater. I
will send you to hear her, and afterward you shall sing to me what you remember of her performances."
Strange thoughts continued to haunt her on her return home. She was unable to sleep. She formed desperate
plans. At last she resolved to throw off the yoke of servitude, and the still more painful slavery of feelings
which her pride disdained. Having learnt the address of the prima donna, she went early one morning to her
house.
On entering she said, in French, almost incoherently, so great was her agitation—"Madam, I am a poor
serf belonging to a Polish family who have lately arrived in Florence. I have escaped from them; protect,
shelter me. They say I can sing."
The Signora Teresina, a warm-hearted, passionate Italian, was interested by her artless earnestness. She said,
"Poor child! you must have suffered much,"—she took Anielka's hand in hers. "You say you can sing;
let me hear you." Anielka seated herself on an ottoman. She clasped her hands over her knees, and tears fell
into her lap. With plaintive pathos, and perfect truth of intonation, she prayed in song. The Hymn to the
Virgin seemed to Teresina to be offered up by inspiration.
The Signora was astonished. "Where," she asked, in wonder, "were you taught?"
Anielka narrated her history, and when she had finished, the prima donna spoke so kindly to her that she felt
as if she had known her for years. Anielka was Teresina's guest that day and the next. After the Opera, on the
third day, the prima donna made her sit beside her, and said:—
"I think you are a very good girl, and you shall stay with me always."
"Well, then, be Giovanna. The dearest friend I ever had but whom I have lost—was named Giovanna,"
said the prima donna.
Teresina then said, "I hesitated to receive you at first, for your sake as well as mine; it you are safe now. I
learn that your master and mistress, after searching vainly for you, have returned to Poland."
From this time Anielka commenced an entirely new life. She took lessons in singing every day from the
Signora. and got an engagement to appear in inferior characters at the theater. She had now her own income,
and her own servant—she, who till then had been obliged to serve herself. She acquired the Italian
language rapidly, and soon passed for a native of the country.
So passed three years. New and varied impressions failed, however, to blot out the old ones. Anielka arrived
at great perfection in her singing, and even began to surpass the prima donna, who was losing her voice from
weakness of the chest. This sad discovery changed the cheerful temper of Teresina. She ceased to sing in
public; for she could not endure to excite pity, where she had formerly commanded admiration.
She determined to retire. "You," she said to Anielka, "shall now assert your claim to the first rank in the vocal
art. You will maintain it. You surpass me. Often, on hearing you sing, I have scarcely been able to stifle a
feeling of jealousy."
"Yes," continued Teresina, regardless of everything but the bright future she was [pg 182] shaping for her
friend. "We will go to Vienna—there you will be understood and appreciated. You shall sing at the
Italian Opera, and I will be by your side—unknown, no longer sought, worshiped—but will
glory in your triumphs. They will be a repetition of my own; for have I not taught you? Will they not be the
result of my work!"
Though Anielka's ambition was fired, her heart was softened, and she wept violently.
Five months had scarcely elapsed, when a furore was created in Vienna by the first appearance, at the Italian
Opera, of the Signora Giovanna. Her enormous salary at once afforded her the means of even extravagant
expenditure. Her haughty treatment of male admirers only attracted new ones; but in the midst of her triumphs
she thought often of the time when the poor orphan of Pobereze was cared for by nobody. This remembrance
made her receive the flatteries of the crowd with an ironical smile; their fine speeches fell coldly on her ear,
their eloquent looks made no impression on her heart: that, no change could alter, no temptation win.
In the flood of unexpected success a new misfortune overwhelmed her. Since their arrival at Vienna,
Teresina's health rapidly declined, and in the sixth month of Anielka's operatic reign she expired, leaving all
her wealth, which was considerable, to her friend.
Once more Anielka was alone in the world. Despite all the honors and blandishments of her position, the old
feeling of desolateness came upon her. The new shock destroyed her health. She was unable to appear on the
stage. To sing was a painful effort; she grew indifferent to what passed around her. Her greatest consolation
was in succoring the poor and friendless, and her generosity was most conspicuous to all young orphan girls
without fortune. She had never ceased to love her native land, and seldom appeared in society, unless it was to
meet her countrymen. If ever she sang, it was in Polish.
A year had elapsed since the death of the Signora Teresina, when the Count Selka, a rich noble of Volkynia, at
that time in Vienna, solicited her presence at a party. It was impossible to refuse the Count and his lady, from
whom she had received great kindness. She went. When in their saloons, filled with all the fashion and
aristocracy in Vienna, the name of Giovanna was announced, a general murmur was heard. She entered, pale
and languid, and proceeded between the two rows made for her by the admiring assembly, to the seat of honor
beside the mistress of the house.
Shortly after, the Count Selka led her to the piano. She sat down before it, and thinking what she should sing,
glanced round upon the assembly. She could not help feeling that the admiration which beamed from the faces
around her was the work of her own merit, for had she neglected the great gift of nature—her voice, she
could not have excited it. With a blushing cheek, and eyes sparkling with honest pride, she struck the piano
with a firm hand, and from her seemingly weak and delicate chest poured forth a touching Polish melody,
with a voice pure, sonorous, and plaintive. Tears were in many eyes, and the beating of every heart was
quickened.
The lady trembled; she silently bowed, fixed her eyes on the ground, and dared not raise them. Pleading
indisposition, which was fully justified by her pallid features, she soon after withdrew.
When on the following day Giovanna'a servant announced the Counts Selka and Roszynski, a peculiar smile
played on her lips, and when they entered, she received the latter with the cold and formal politeness of a
stranger. Controlling the feelings of her heart, she schooled her features to an expression of indifference. It
was manifest from Leon's manner, that without the remotest recognition, an indefinable presentiment
regarding her possessed him. The Counts had called to know if Giovanna had recovered from her
indisposition. Leon begged to be permitted to call again.
Where was his wife? why did he never mention her? Giovanna continually asked herself these questions when
they had departed.
A few nights after, the Count Leon arrived sad and thoughtful. He prevailed on Giovanna to sing one of her
Polish melodies; which she told him had been taught, when a child, by her muse. Roszynski, unable to restrain
the expression of an intense admiration he had long felt, frantically seized her hand, and exclaimed, "I love
you!"
She withdrew it from his grasp, remained silent for a few minutes, and then said slowly, distinctly, and
ironically, "But I do not love you, Count Roszynski."
Leon rose from his seat. He pressed his hands to his brow, and was silent. Giovanna remained calm and
tranquil. "It is a penalty from Heaven," continued Leon, as if speaking to himself, "for not having fulfilled my
duty as a husband toward one whom I chose voluntarily, but without reflection. I wronged her, and am
punished."
Giovanna turned her eyes upon him. Leon continued, "Young, and with a heart untouched, I married a
princess about ten years older than myself, of eccentric habits and bad temper. She treated me as an inferior.
She dissipated the fortune hoarded up with so much care by my parents, and yet was [pg 183] ashamed on
account of my origin to be called by my name. Happily for me, she was fond of visiting and amusements.
Otherwise, to escape from her, I might have become a gambler, or worse; but, to avoid meeting her, I
remained at home—for there she seldom was. At first from ennui, but afterward from real delight in the
occupation, I gave myself up to study. Reading formed my mind and heart. I became a changed being. Some
months ago my father died, my sister went to Lithuania, whilst my mother, in her old age, and with her ideas,
was quite incapable of understanding my sorrow. So when my wife went to the baths for the benefit of her
ruined health, I came here in the hope of meeting with some of my former friends—I saw
you—"
Giovanna blushed like one detected; but speedily recovering herself, asked with calm pleasantry, "Surely you
do not number me among your former friends?"
"I know not. I have been bewildered. It is strange; but from the moment that I saw you at Count Selka's, a
powerful instinct of love overcame me; not a new feeling; but as if some latent, long-hid, undeveloped
sentiment had suddenly burst forth into an uncontrollable passion. I love, I adore you. I—"
The Prima Donna interrupted him—not with speech, but with a look which awed, which chilled him.
Pride, scorn, irony sat in her smile. Satire darted from her eyes. After a pause, she repeated slowly and
pointedly, "Love me, Count Roszynski?"
"Such is my destiny," he replied. "Nor, despite your scorn, will I struggle against it. I feel it is my fate ever to
love you; I fear it is my fate never to be loved by you. It is dreadful."
Giovanna witnessed the Count's emotion with sadness. "To have," she said mournfully, "one's first, pure,
ardent, passionate affection unrequited, scorned, made a jest of, is indeed a bitterness, almost equal to that of
death."
She made a strong effort to conceal her emotion. Indeed she controlled it so well as to speak the rest with a
sort of gayety.
"You have at least been candid, Count Roszynski; I will imitate you by telling a little history that occurred in
your country. There was a poor girl born and bred a serf to her wealthy lord and master. When scarcely fifteen
years old, she was torn from a state of happy rustic freedom—the freedom of humility and
content—to be one of the courtly slaves of the Palace. Those who did not laugh at her, scolded her. One
kind word was vouchsafed to her, and that came from the lord's son. She nursed it and treasured it; till, from
long concealing and restraining her feelings, she at last found that gratitude had changed into a sincere
affection. But what does a man of the world care for the love of a serf? It does not even flatter his vanity. The
young nobleman did not understand the source of her tears and her grief, and he made a present of her, as he
would have done of some animal, to his betrothed."
Leon, agitated and somewhat enlightened, would have interrupted her; but Giovanna said, "Allow me to finish
my tale. Providence did not abandon this poor orphan, but permitted her to rise to distinction by the talent
with which she was endowed by nature. The wretched serf of Pobereze became a celebrated Italian cantatrice.
Then her former lord meeting her in society, and seeing her admired and courted by all the world, without
knowing who she really was, was afflicted, as if by the dictates of Heaven, with a love for this same
girl,—with a guilty love"—
And Giovanna rose, as she said this, to remove herself further from her admirer.
Roszynski vehemently tore a letter from his vest, and handed it to Giovanna. It was sealed with black, for it
announced the death of his wife at the baths. It had only arrived that morning.
"You have lost no time," said the cantatrice, endeavoring to conceal her feelings under an iron mask of
reproach.
There was a pause. Each dared not speak. The Count knew—but without actually and practically
believing what seemed incredible—that Anielka and Giovanna were the same person—his slave.
That terrible relationship checked him. Anielka, too, had played her part to the end of endurance. The long
cherished tenderness, the faithful love of her life could not longer be wholly mastered. Hitherto they had
spoken in Italian. She now said, in Polish,
"You have a right, my Lord Roszynski, to that poor Anielka who escaped from the service of your wife in
Florence; you can force her back to your palace, to its meanest work; but"—
"But," continued the serf of Pobereze, firmly, "you cannot force me to love you."
"Do not mock—do not torture me more; you are sufficiently revenged. I will not offend you by
importunity. You must indeed hate me! But remember that we Poles wished to give freedom to our serfs; and
for that very reason our country was invaded and dismembered by despotic powers. We must therefore
continue to suffer slavery as it exists in Russia; but, soul and body, we are averse to it; and when our country
once more becomes free, be assured no shadow of slavery will remain in the land. Curse then our enemies,
and pity us that we stand in such a desperate position between Russian bayonets and Siberia, and the hatred of
our serfs."
So saying, and without waiting for a reply, Leon rushed from the room. The door was closed. Giovanna
listened to the sounds of [pg 184] his rapid footsteps till they died in the street. She would have followed, but
dared not. She ran to the window. Roszynski's carriage was rolling rapidly away, and she exclaimed vainly, "I
love you, Leon; I loved you always!"
Her tortures were unendurable. To relieve them she hastened to her desk, and wrote these words:
"Dearest Leon, forgive me; let the past be forever forgotten. Return to your Anielka. She always has been,
ever will be, yours!"
She dispatched the missive. Was it too late, or would it bring him back? In the latter hope she retired to her
chamber, to execute a little project.
Leon was in despair. He saw he had been premature in so soon declaring his passion after the news of his
wife's death, and vowed he would not see Anielka again for several months. To calm his agitation, he had
ridden some miles into the country. When he returned to his hotel after some hours, he found her note. With
the wild delight it had darted into his soul, he flew back to her.
On regaining her saloon a new and terrible vicissitude seemed to sport with his passion—she was
nowhere to be seen. Had the Italian cantatrice fled? Again he was in despair-stupefied with disappointment.
As he stood uncertain how to act, in the midst of the floor, he heard, as from a distance, an Ave Maria poured
forth in tones he half recognized. The sounds brought back to him a host of recollections: a weeping
serf—the garden of his own palace. In a state of new rapture he followed the voice. He traced it to an
inner chamber, and he there beheld the lovely singer kneeling in the costume of a Polish serf. She rose,
greeted Leon with a touching smile, and stepped forward with serious bashfulness. Leon extended his arms;
she sank into them; and in that fond embrace all past wrongs and sorrows were forgotten! Anielka drew from
her bosom a little purse, and took from it a piece of silver, It was the rouble. Now, Leon did not smile at it. He
comprehended the sacredness of this little gift, and some tears of repentance fell on Anielka's hand.
A few months after, Leon wrote to the steward of Olgogrod to prepare everything splendidly for the reception
of his second wife. He concluded his letter with these words:
"I understand that in the dungeon beneath my palace there are some unfortunate men, who were imprisoned
during my father's lifetime. Let them be instantly liberated. This is my first act of gratitude to God, who has so
infinitely blessed me!"
Anielka longed ardently to behold her native land. They left Vienna immediately after the wedding, although
it was in the middle of January.
Fatigue and excitement made the night most welcome. All was dark and silent around the palace, and some
hours of the night had passed, when suddenly flames burst forth from several parts of the building at once.
The palace was enveloped in fire; it raged furiously. The flames mounted higher and higher; the windows
cracked with a fearful sound, and the smoke penetrated into the most remote apartments.
A single figure of a man was seen stealing over the snow, which lay like a winding-sheet on the solitary
waste; his cautious steps were heard on the frozen snow as it crisped beneath his tread. It was the beggar who
had accosted Anielka. On a rising ground he turned to gaze on the terrible scene.
"No more unfortunate creatures will now be doomed to pass their lives in your dungeons," he exclaimed.
"What was my crime? Reminding my master of the lowness of his birth. For this they tore me from my only
child—my darling little Anielka; they had no pity even for her orphan state; let them perish all!"
Suddenly a young and beautiful creature rushes wildly to one of the principal windows: she makes a violent
effort to escape. For a moment her lovely form, clothed in white, shines in terrible relief against the
background of blazing curtains and walls of fire, and as instantly sinks back into the blazing element. Behind
her is another figure, vainly endeavoring to aid her—he perishes also: neither of them are ever seen
again!
This appalling tragedy horrified even the perpetrator of the crime. He rushed from the place, and as he heard
the crash of the falling walls, he closed his ears with his hands, and darted on faster and faster.
The next day some peasants discovered the body of a man frozen to death, lying on a heap of snow—it
was that of the wretched incendiary. Providence, mindful of his long, of his cruel imprisonment and
sufferings, spared him the anguish of knowing that the mistress of the palace he had destroyed, and who
perished in the flames, was his own beloved daughter—the Serf of Pobereze!
[pg 185]
IN TWO PARTS.—PART I.
In the latter years of the last century, two youths, Ferdinand Von Hallberg and Edward Von Wensleben were
receiving their education in the military academy of Mariensheim. Among their schoolfellows they were
called Orestes and Pylades, or Damon and Pythias, on account of their tender friendship, which constantly
Their companionship had now lasted with satisfaction and happiness to both, for several years, and the youths
had formed for themselves the most delightful plans—how they were never to separate, how they were
to enter the service in the same regiment, and if a war broke out, how they were to fight side by side, and
conquer or die together. But destiny, or rather Providence—whose plans are usually opposed to the
designs of mortals—had ordained otherwise.
Earlier than was expected, Hallberg's father found an opportunity to have his son appointed to an infantry
regiment, and he was ordered immediately to join the staff in a small provincial town, in an out-of-the-way
mountainous district. This announcement fell like a thunderbolt on the two friends; but Ferdinand considered
himself by far the more unhappy, since it was ordained that he should be the one to sever the happy bond that
bound them, and to inflict a deep wound on his loved companion. His schoolfellows vainly endeavored to
console him by calling his attention to his new commission, and the preference which had been shown him
above so many others. He only thought of the approaching separation; he only saw his friend's grief, and
passed the few remaining days that were allowed him at the academy by Edward's side, who husbanded every
moment of his Ferdinand's society with jealous care, and could not bear to lose sight of him for an instant. In
one of their most melancholy hours, excited by sorrow and youthful enthusiasm, they bound themselves by a
mysterious vow, namely, that the one whom God should think fit to call first from this world, should bind
himself (if conformable to the Divine will) to give some sign of his remembrance and affection to the
survivor.
The place where this vow was made was a solitary spot in the garden, by a monument of gray marble,
overshadowed by dark firs, which the former director of the institution had caused to be erected to the
memory of his son, whose premature death was recorded on the stone.
Here the friends met at night, and by the fitful light of the moon they pledged themselves to the rash and
fanciful contract, and confirmed and consecrated it the next morning by a religious ceremony. After this they
were able to look the approaching separation in the face more manfully, and Edward strove hard to quell the
melancholy feeling which had lately arisen in his mind on account of the constant foreboding that Ferdinand
expressed of his own early death. "No," thought Edward, "his pensive turn of mind and his wild imagination
cause him to reproach himself without a cause for my sorrow and his own departure. Oh, no, Ferdinand will
not die early—he will not die before me. Providence will not leave me alone in the world."
The lonely Edward strove hard to console himself, for after Ferdinand's departure, the house, the world itself,
seemed a desert; and absorbed by his own memories, he now recalled to mind many a dark speech which had
fallen from his absent friend, particularly in the latter days of their intercourse, and which betokened but too
plainly a presentiment of early death. But time and youth exercised, even over these sorrows, their irresistible
influence. Edward's spirits gradually recovered their tone, and as the traveler always has the advantage over
the one who remains behind, in respect of new objects to occupy his mind, so was Ferdinand even sooner
calmed and cheered, and by degrees he became engrossed by his new duties and new acquaintances, not to the
exclusion, indeed, of his friend's memory, but greatly to the alienation of his own sorrow. It was natural, in
IN TWO PARTS.—PART I. 39
International Weekly Miscellany, August 5, 1850.
such circumstances, that the young officer should console himself sooner than poor Edward. The country in
which Hallberg found himself was wild and mountainous, but possessed all the charms and peculiarities of
"far off" districts—simple, hospitable manners, old-fashioned customs, many tales and legends which
arise from the credulity of the mountaineers, who invariably lean toward the marvelous, and love to people the
wild solitudes with invisible beings.
Ferdinand had soon, without seeking for [pg 186] it, made acquaintance with several respectable families in
the town; and as it generally happens in such cases, he had become quite domesticated in the best
country-houses in the neighborhood; and the well-mannered, handsome, and agreeable youth was welcomed
everywhere. The simple, patriarchal life in these old mansions and castles—the cordiality of the people,
the wild, picturesque scenery, nay, the very legends themselves, were entirely to Hallberg's taste. He adapted
himself easily to his new mode of life, but his heart remained tranquil. This could not last. Before half a year
had passed, the battalion to which he belonged was ordered to another station, and he had to part with many
friends. The first letter which he wrote after this change bore the impression of impatience at the breaking up
of a happy time. Edward found this natural enough; but he was surprised in the following letters to detect
signs of a disturbed and desultory state of mind, wholly foreign to his friend's nature. The riddle was soon
solved. Ferdinand's heart was touched for the first time, and perhaps because the impression had been made
late, it was all the deeper. Unfavorable circumstances opposed themselves to his hopes: the young lady was of
an ancient family, rich, and betrothed since her childhood to a relation, who was expected shortly to arrive in
order to claim her promised hand. Notwithstanding this engagement, Ferdinand and the young girl had
become sincerely attached to each other, and had both resolved to dare everything with the hope of being
united. They pledged their troth in secret; the darkest mystery enveloped not only their plans, but their
affections; and as secrecy was necessary to the advancement of their projects, Ferdinand entreated his friend
to forgive him if he did not intrust his whole secret to a sheet of paper that had at least sixty miles to travel,
and which must pass through so many hands. It was impossible from his letter to guess the name of the person
or the place in question. "You know that I love," he wrote, "therefore you know that the object of my secret
passion is worthy of any sacrifice; for you know your friend too well to believe him capable of any blind
infatuation, and this must suffice for the present. No one must suspect what we are to each other; no one here
or round the neighborhood must have the slightest clew to our plans. An awful personage will soon make his
appearance among us. His violent temper, his inveterate obstinacy, (according to all that one hears of him,)
are well calculated to confirm in her a well-founded aversion. But family arrangements and legal contracts
exist, the fulfillment of which the opposing party are bent on enforcing. The struggle will be
hard—perhaps unsuccessful; notwithstanding, I will strain every nerve. Should I fail, you must console
yourself, my dear Edward, with the thought, that it will be no misfortune to your friend to be deprived of an
existence rendered miserable by the failure of his dearest hopes, and separation from his dearest friend. Then
may all the happiness which Heaven has denied me be vouchsafed to you and her, so that my spirit may look
down contentedly from the realms of light, and bless and protect you both."
Such was the usual tenor of the letters which Edward received during that period, His heart was full of
anxiety—he read danger and distress in the mysterious communications of Ferdinand; and every
argument that affection and good sense could suggest did he make use of, in his replies, to turn his friend from
this path of peril which threatened to end in a deep abyss. He tried persuasion, and urged him to desist for the
sake of their long-tried affection—but when did passion ever listen to the expostulations of friendship?
Ferdinand only saw one aim in life—the possession of the beloved one. All else faded from before his
eyes, and even his correspondence slackened, for his time was much taken up in secret excursions,
arrangements of all kinds, and communications with all manner of persons; in fact every action of his present
life tended to the furtherance of his plan.
All of a sudden his letters ceased. Many posts passed without a sign of life. Edward was a prey to the greatest
anxiety; he thought his friend had staked and lost. He imagined an elopement, a clandestine marriage, a duel
IN TWO PARTS.—PART I. 40
International Weekly Miscellany, August 5, 1850.
with a rival, and all these casualties were the more painful to conjecture, since his entire ignorance of the real
state of things gave his fancy full range to conjure up all sorts of misfortunes. At length, after many more
posts had come in without a line to pacify Edward's fears, without a word in reply to his earnest entreaties for
some news, he determined on taking a step which he had meditated before, and only relinquished out of
consideration for his friend's wishes. He wrote to the officer commanding the regiment, and made inquiries
respecting the health and abode of Lieutenant Von Hallberg, whose friends in the capital had remained for
nearly two months without news of him, he who had hitherto proved a regular and frequent correspondent.
Another fortnight dragged heavily on, and at length the announcement came in an official form. Lieutenant
Von Hallberg had been invited to the castle of a nobleman whom he was in the custom of visiting, in order to
be present at the wedding of a lady; that he was indisposed at the time, that he grew worse, and on the third
morning had been found dead in his bed, having expired during the night from an attack of apoplexy.
Edward could not finish the letter—it fell from his trembling hand. To see his worst fears realized so
suddenly, overwhelmed him at first. His youth withstood the bodily illness [pg 187] which would have
assailed a weaker constitution, and perhaps mitigated the anguish of his grief. He was not dangerously ill, but
they feared many days for his reason; and it required all the kind solicitude of the director of the college,
combined with the most skillful medical aid, to stem the torrent of his sorrow, and to turn it gradually into a
calmer channel, until by degrees the mourner recovered both health and reason. His youthful spirits, however,
had received a blow from which they never rebounded, and one thought lay heavy on his mind, which he was
unwilling to share with any other person, and which, on that account, grew more and more painful. It was the
memory of that holy promise which had been mutually contracted, that the survivor was to receive some token
of his friend's remembrance of him after death. Now two months had already passed since Ferdinand's earthly
career had been arrested, his spirit was free, why no sign? In the moment of death Edward had had no
intimation, no message from the passing spirit, and this apparent neglect, so to speak, was another deep
wound in Edward's breast. Do the affections cease with life? Was it contrary to the will of the Almighty that
the mourner should taste this consolation? Did individuality lose itself in death, and with it memory? Or did
one stroke destroy spirit and body? These anxious doubts, which have before now agitated many who reflect
on such subjects, exercised their power over Edward's mind with an intensity that none can imagine save one
whose position is in any degree similar.
Time gradually deadened the intensity of his affliction. The violent paroxysms of grief subsided into a deep
but calm regret. It was as if a mist had spread itself over every object which presented itself before him,
robbing them indeed of half their charms, yet leaving them visible, and in their real relation to himself. During
this mental change the autumn arrived, and with it the long-expected commission. It did not indeed occasion
the joy which it might have done in former days, when it would have led to a meeting with Ferdinand, or at all
events to a better chance of meeting, but it released him from the thraldom of college, and it opened to him a
welcome sphere of activity. Now it so happened that his appointment led him accidentally into the very
neighborhood where Ferdinand had formerly resided, only with this difference, that Edward's squadron was
quartered in the lowlands, about a short day's journey from the town and woodland environs in question.
He proceeded to his quarters, and found an agreeable occupation in the exercise of his new duties.
He had no wish to make acquaintances, yet he did not refuse the invitations that were pressed upon him, lest
he should he accused of eccentricity and rudeness; and so be found himself soon entangled in all sorts of
engagements with the neighboring gentry and nobility. If these so-called gayeties gave him no particular
pleasure, at least for the time they diverted his thoughts; and with this view he accepted an invitation (for the
new-year and carnival were near at hand) to a great shooting-match which was to be held in the
mountains—a spot which it was possible to reach in one day, with favorable weather and the roads in
good state. The day was appointed, the air tolerably clear; a mild frost had made the roads safe and even, and
Edward had every expectation of being able to reach Blumenberg in his sledge before night, as on the
IN TWO PARTS.—PART I. 41
International Weekly Miscellany, August 5, 1850.
following morning the match was to take place. But as soon as he got near the mountains, where the sun
retires so early to rest, snow-clouds drove from all quarters, a cutting wind came roaring through the ravines,
and a heavy fall of snow began. Twice the driver lost his way, and daylight was gone before he had well
recovered it; darkness came on sooner than in other places, walled in as they were by dark mountains, with
dark clouds above their heads. It was out of the question to dream of reaching Blumenberg that night; but in
this hospitable land, where every householder welcomes the passing traveler, Edward was under no anxiety as
to shelter. He only wished, before the night quite set in, to reach some country-house or castle; and now that
the storm had abated in some degree, that the heavens were a little clearer, and that a few stars peeped out, a
large valley opened before them, whose bold outline Edward could distinguish, even in the uncertain light.
The well-defined roofs of a neat village were perceptible, and behind these, half-way up the mountain that
crowned the plain, Edward thought he could discern a large building which glimmered with more than one
light. The road led straight into the village. Edward stopped and inquired.
That building was indeed a castle: the village belonged to it, and both were the property of the Baron
Friedenberg. "Friedenberg!" repeated Edward: the name sounded familiar to him, yet he could not call to mind
when and where he had heard it. He inquired if the family were at home, hired a guide, and arrived at length
by a rugged path which wound itself round steep rocks, to the summit of them, and finally to the castle, which
was perched there like an eagle's nest. The tinkling of the bells on Edward's sledge attracted the attention of
the inmates; the door was opened with prompt hospitality; servants appeared with torches; Edward was
assisted to emerge from under the frozen apron of his carriage, out of his heavy pelisse, stiff with hoar-frost,
and up a comfortable staircase into a long saloon of simple construction, where a genial warmth appeared to
welcome him from a huge stove in the corner. The servants here placed two large burning candles in massive
silver sconces, and went out to announce the stranger.
[pg 188]
The fitting-up of the room, or rather saloon, was perfectly simple. Family portraits, in heavy frames, hung
round the walls, diversified by some maps. Magnificent stags' horns were arranged between; and the taste of
the master of the house was easily detected in the hunting-knives, powder-flasks, carbines, smoking-bags, and
sportsmen's pouches, which were arranged, not without taste, as trophies of the chase. The ceiling was
supported by large beams, dingy with smoke and age; and on the sides of the room were long benches,
covered and padded with dark cloth, and studded with large brass nails; while round the dinner-table were
placed several arm-chairs, also of ancient date. All bore the aspect of the good old times, of a simple,
patriarchal life with affluence. Edward felt as if there were a kind welcome in the inanimate objects which
surrounded him, when the inner-door opened, and the master of the house entered, preceded by a servant, and
welcomed his guest with courteous cordiality.
Some apologies which Edward offered on account of his intrusion, were silenced in a moment.
"Come, now, Lieutenant," said the Baron, "I must introduce you to my family. You are not such a stranger to
us, as you fancy."
With these words he took Edward by the arm, and, lighted by the servant, they passed through several lofty
rooms, which were very handsomely furnished, although in an old-fashioned style, with faded Flemish
carpets, large chandeliers, and high-backed chairs: everything in keeping with what the youth had already
seen in the castle. Here were the ladies of the house. At the other end of the room, by the side of an immense
stove, ornamented with a large shield of the family arms, richly emblazoned, and crowned by a gigantic Turk,
in a most comfortable attitude of repose sat the lady of the house, an elderly matron of tolerable
circumference, in a gown of dark red satin, with a black mantle and a snow-white cap. She appeared to be
playing cards with the chaplain, who sat opposite to her at the table, and the Baron Friedenberg to have made
the third hand at ombre, till he was called away to welcome his guest. On the other side of the room were two
IN TWO PARTS.—PART I. 42
International Weekly Miscellany, August 5, 1850.
young ladies, an elder person, who might be a governess, and a couple of children, very much engrossed by a
game at lotto.
As Edward entered, the ladies rose to greet him, a chair was placed for him near the mistress of the house, and
very soon a cup of chocolate and a bottle of tokay were served on a rich silver salver, to restore the traveler
after the cold and discomfort of his drive: in fact it was easy for him to feel that these "far away" people were
by no means displeased at his arrival. An agreeable conversation soon began among all parties. His travels,
the shooting-match, the neighborhood, agriculture, all afforded subjects, and in a quarter of an hour Edward
felt as if he had long been domesticated with these simple but truly well-informed people.
Two hours flew swiftly by, and then a bell sounded for supper; the servants returned with lights, announced
that the supper was on the table, and lighted the company into the dining-room—the same into which
Edward had first been ushered. Here, in the background, some other characters appeared on the
scene—the agent, a couple of his subalterns, and the physician. The guests ranged themselves round the
table. Edward's place was between the Baron and his wife. The chaplain said a short grace, when the
Baroness, with an uneasy look, glanced at her husband over Edward's shoulder, and said, in a low
whisper—
The Baron smiled, beckoned to the youngest of the clerks, and whispered to him. The youth bowed, and
withdrew. The servant took the cover away, and served his supper in the next room.
"My wife," said Friedenberg, "is superstitious, as all mountaineers are. She thinks it unlucky to dine thirteen.
It certainly has happened twice (whether from chance or not who can tell?) that we have had to mourn the
death of an acquaintance who had, a short time before, made the thirteenth at our table."
"This idea is not confined to the mountains. I know many people in the capital who think with the Baroness,"
said Edward. "Although in a town such ideas, which belong more especially to the olden time, are more likely
to be lost in the whirl and bustle which usually silences everything that is not essentially matter of fact."
"Ah, yes, Lieutenant," replied the Baron, smiling good-humoredly, "we keep up old customs better in the
mountains. You see that by our furniture. People in the capital would call this sadly old-fashioned."
"That which is really good and beautiful can never appear out of date," rejoined Edward courteously; "and
here, if I mistake not, presides a spirit that is ever striving after both. I must confess, Baron, that when I first
entered your house, it was this very aspect of the olden time that enchanted me beyond measure."
"That is always the effect which simplicity has on every unspoiled mind," answered Friedenberg: "but
townspeople have seldom a taste for such things."
"I was partly educated on my father's estate," said Edward, "which was situated in the Highlands; and it
appears to me as if, when I entered your house, I were visiting a neighbor of my father's, for the general aspect
is quite the same here as with us."
"Yes," said the chaplain, "mountainous districts have all a family likeness: the same necessities, the same
struggles with nature, the same seclusion, all produce the same way of life among mountaineers."
[pg 189]
IN TWO PARTS.—PART I. 43
International Weekly Miscellany, August 5, 1850.
"On that account the prejudice against the number thirteen was especially familiar to me," replied Edward.
"We also dislike it; and we retain a consideration for many supernatural, or at least inexplicable things, which
I have met with again in this neighborhood."
"Yes, here, almost more than anywhere else," continued the chaplain, "I think we excel all other mountaineers
in the number and variety of our legends and ghost stories. I assure you that there is not a cave or a church, or,
above all, a castle, for miles round about, of which we could not relate something supernatural."
The Baroness, who perceived the turn which the conversation was likely to take, thought it better to send the
children to bed; and when they were gone, the priest continued, "Even here, in this castle—"
"Yes, yes! Lieutenant," interposed the Baron, "this house has the reputation of being haunted; and the most
extraordinary thing is, that the matter cannot be denied by the skeptical, or accounted for by the reasonable."
"Yes, this part which we live in," answered the Baron; "but it consists of only a few apartments sufficient for
my family and these gentlemen; the other portion of the building is half in ruins, and dates from the period
when men established themselves on the mountains for greater safety."
"There are some who maintain," said the physician, "that a part of the walls of the stern tower itself are of
Roman origin; but that would surely be difficult to prove."
"But, gentlemen," observed the Baroness, "you are losing yourselves in learned descriptions as to the erection
of the castle, and our guest is kept in ignorance of what he is anxious to hear."
"Indeed, madam," replied the chaplain, "this is not entirely foreign to the subject, since in the most ancient
part of the building lies the chamber in question."
"Come, let us tell him at once," interrupted the Baron. "The fact is, that every guest who sleeps for the first
time in this room (and it has fallen to the lot of many, in turn, to do so,) is visited by some important,
significant dream or vision, or whatever I ought to call it, in which some future event is prefigured to him, or
some past mystery cleared up, which he had vainly striven to comprehend before."
"Then," interposed Edward, "it must be something like what is known in the Highlands, under the name of
second sight, a privilege, as some consider it, which several persons and several families enjoy."
"Just so," said the physician, "the cases are very similar; yet the most mysterious part of this affair is, that it
does not appear to originate with the individual, or his organization, or his sympathy with beings of the
invisible world; no, the individual has nothing to say to it—the locality does it all. Every one who
sleeps there has his mysterious dream, and the result proves its truth."
"At least, in most instances," continued the Baron, "when we have had an opportunity of hearing the cases
confirmed. I remember once, in particular. You may recollect, Lieutenant, that when you first came in, I had
the honor of telling you you were not quite a stranger to me."
IN TWO PARTS.—PART I. 44
International Weekly Miscellany, August 5, 1850.
"Certainly, Baron; and I have been wishing for a long time to ask an explanation of these words."
"We have often heard your name mentioned by a particular friend of yours—one who could never
pronounce it without emotion."
"Ah!" cried Edward, who now saw clearly why the Baron's name had sounded familiar to him
also—"ah! you speak of my friend Hallberg; truly do you say, we were indeed dear to each other."
"Were!" echoed the Baron, in a faltering tone, as he observed the sudden change in Edward's voice and
countenance; "can the blooming, vigorous youth be—"
"Dead!" exclaimed Edward; and the Baron deeply regretted that he had touched so tender a chord, as he saw
the young officer's eyes fill with tears, and a dark cloud pass over his animated features.
"Forgive me," he continued, while he leaned forward and pressed his companion's hand; "I grieve that a
thoughtless word should have awakened such deep sorrow. I had no idea of his death; we all loved the
handsome young man, and by his description of you were already much interested in you before we had ever
seen you."
The conversation now turned entirely on Hallberg. Edward related the particulars of his death. Every one
present had something to say in his praise; and although this sudden allusion to his dearest friend had agitated
Edward in no slight degree, yet it was a consolation to him to listen to the tribute these worthy people paid to
the memory of Ferdinand, and to see how genuine was their regret at the tidings of his early death. The time
passed swiftly away in conversation of much interest, and the whole company were surprised to hear ten
o'clock strike, an unusually late hour for this quiet, regular family. The chaplain read prayers, in which
Edward devoutly joined, and then he kissed the matron's hand, and felt almost as if he were in his father's
house. The Baron offered to show his guest to his room, and the servant preceded them with lights. The way
led past the staircase, and then on one side into a long gallery, which communicated with another wing of the
castle.
[pg 190]
The high-vaulted ceilings, the curious carving on the ponderous doorways, the pointed gothic windows,
through many broken panes of which a sharp nightwind whistled, proved to Edward that he was in the old part
of the castle, and that the famous chamber could not be far off.
"Would it be possible for me to be quartered there," he began, rather timidly; "I should like it of all things."
"Really!" inquired the Baron, rather surprised; "have not our ghost stories alarmed you?"
"On the contrary," was the reply, "they have excited the most earnest wish—"
"Then, if that be the case," said the Baron, "we will return. The room was already prepared for you, being the
most comfortable and the best in the whole wing; only I fancied, after our conversation—"
"Oh, certainly not," exclaimed Edward; "I could only long for such dreams."
During this discourse they had arrived at the door of the famous room. They went in. They found themselves
in a lofty and spacious apartment, so large that the two candles which the servant carried only shed a
glimmering twilight over it, which did not penetrate to the furthest corner. A high-canopied bed, hung with
costly but old-fashioned damask, of dark green, in which were swelling pillows of snowy whiteness, tied with
IN TWO PARTS.—PART I. 45
International Weekly Miscellany, August 5, 1850.
green bows, and a silk coverlet of the same color, looked very inviting to the tired traveler. Sofa and chairs of
faded needlework, a carved oak commode and table, a looking-glass in heavy framework, a prie-dieu and
crucifix above it, constituted the furniture of the room, where, above all things, cleanliness and comfort
preponderated, while a good deal of silver plate was spread out on the toilet-table.
Edward looked round. "A beautiful room!" he said. "Answer me one question, Baron, if you please. Did he
ever sleep here?"
"Certainly," replied Friedenberg; "it was his usual room when he was here, and he had a most curious dream
in that bed, which, as he assured us, made a great impression on him."
"He never told us, for, as you well know, he was reserved by nature; but we gathered from some words that he
let slip, that an early and sudden death was foretold. Alas! your narrative has confirmed the truth of the
prediction."
"Wonderful! He always had a similar foreboding, and many a time has he grieved me by alluding to it," said
Edward; "yet it never made him gloomy or discontented. He went on his way firmly and calmly, and looked
forward with joy, I might almost say, to another life."
"He was a superior man," answered the Baron. "whose memory will ever be dear to us. But now I will detain
you no longer. Good night. Here is the bell"—he showed him the cord in between the
curtains—"and your servant sleeps in the next room."
"Oh, you are too careful of me," said Edward, smiling; "I am used to sleep by myself."
"Still," replied the Baron, "every precaution should be taken. Now once more good night."
He shook him by the hand, and, followed by the servant, left the room.
Thus Edward found himself alone, in the large, mysterious-looking, haunted room, where his deceased friend
had so often reposed; where he also was expected to see a vision. The awe which the place itself inspired,
combined with the sad and yet tender recollection of the departed Ferdinand, produced a state of mental
excitement which was not favorable to his night's rest. He had already undressed with the aid of his servant
(whom he had then dismissed,) and had been in bed some time, having extinguished the candles. No sleep
visited his eyelids; and the thought recurred which had so often troubled him, why he had never received the
promised token from Ferdinand, whether his friend's spirit were among the blest—whether his silence
(so to speak) proceeded from unwillingness or incapacity to communicate with the living. A mingled train of
reflections agitated his mind; his brain grew heated; his pulse beat faster and faster. The castle clock tolled
eleven—half-past eleven. He counted the strokes: and at that moment the moon rose above the dark
margin of the rocks which surrounded the castle, and shed her full light into Edward's room. Every object
stood out in relief from the darkness. Edward gazed, and thought, and speculated. It seemed to him as if
something moved in the furthest corner of the room. The movement was evident—it assumed a
form—the form of a man, which appeared to advance, or rather to float forward. Here Edward lost all
sense of surrounding objects, and found himself once more sitting at the foot of the monument in the garden
of the academy, where he had contracted the bond with his friend. As formerly, the moon streamed through
the dark branches of the fir-trees, and shed its pale cold light on the cold white marble of the monument. Then
the floating form which had appeared in the room of the castle became clearer, more substantial, more
earthly-looking; it issued from behind the tombstone, and stood in the full moonlight. It was Ferdinand, in the
uniform of his regiment, earnest and pale, but with a kind smile on his features.
IN TWO PARTS.—PART I. 46
International Weekly Miscellany, August 5, 1850.
"Ferdinand, Ferdinand!" cried Edward, overcome by joy and surprise, and he strove to embrace the well-loved
form, but it waved him aside with a melancholy look.
"Ah! you are dead," continued the speaker; "and why then do I see you just as you looked when living?"
[pg 191]
"Edward," answered the apparition, in a voice that sounded as if it came from afar, "I am dead, but my spirit
has no peace."
"You are not with the blest?" cried Edward, in a voice of terror.
"God is merciful," it replied; "but we are frail and sinful creatures; inquire no more, but pray for me."
"With all my heart," cried Edward, in a tone of anguish, while he gazed with affection on the familiar features;
"but speak, what can I do for thee?"
"An unholy tie still binds me to earth. I have sinned. I was cut off in the midst of my sinful projects. This ring
burns." He slipped a small gold ring from his left hand. "Only when every token of this unholy compact is
destroyed, and when I recover the ring which I exchanged for this, only then can my spirit be at rest. Oh,
Edward, dear Edward, bring me back my ring!"
"Emily Varnier will give it thee herself; our engagement was contrary to holy duties, to prior engagements, to
earlier vows. God denied his blessing to the guilty project, and my course was arrested in a fearful manner.
Pray for me, Edward, and bring me back the ring, my ring," continued the voice, in a mournful tone of appeal.
Then the features of the deceased smiled sadly but tenderly; then all appeared to float once more before
Edward's eyes—the form was lost in mist, the monument, the fir-grove, the moonlight, disappeared; a
long, gloomy, breathless pause followed. Edward lay, half sleeping, half benumbed, in a confused manner;
portions of the dream returned to him—some images, some sounds—above all, the petition for
the restitution of the ring. But an indescribable power bound his limbs, closed his eyelids, and silenced his
voice; mental consciousness alone was left him, yet his mind was a prey to terror.
At length these painful sensations subsided—his nerves became more braced, his breath came more
freely, a pleasing languor crept over his limbs, and he fell into a peaceful sleep. When he awoke it was already
broad daylight; his sleep toward the end of the night had been quiet and refreshing. He felt strong and well,
but as soon as the recollection of his dream returned, a deep melancholy took possession of him, and he felt
the traces of tears which grief had wrung from him on his eyelashes. But what had the vision been? A mere
dream engendered by the conversation of the evening, and his affection for Hallberg's memory, or was it at
length the fulfillment of the compact?
There, out of that dark corner, had the form risen up, and moved toward him. But might it not have been the
effect of light and shade produced by the moonbeams, and the dark branches of a large tree close to the
window, when agitated by the high wind? Perhaps he had seen this, and then fallen asleep, and all combined,
had woven itself into a dream. But the name of Emily Varnier! Edward did not remember ever to have heard
it; certainly it had never been mentioned in Ferdinand's letters. Could it be the name of his love, of the object
of that ardent and unfortunate passion? Could the vision be one of truth? He was meditating, lost in thought,
when there was a knock at his door, and the servant entered. Edward rose hastily, and sprang out of bed. As he
did so, he heard something fall with a ringing sound; the servant stooped and picked up a gold ring, plain
IN TWO PARTS.—PART I. 47
International Weekly Miscellany, August 5, 1850.
gold, like a wedding-ring. Edward shuddered: he snatched it from the servant's hand, and the color forsook his
cheeks as he read the two words "Emily Varnier" engraved inside the hoop. He stood there like one
thunderstruck, as pale as a corpse, with the proof in his hand that he had not merely dreamed, but had actually
spoken with the spirit of his friend. A servant of the household came in to ask whether the Lieutenant wished
to breakfast in his room, or down stairs with the family. Edward would willingly have remained alone with
the thoughts that pressed heavily on him, but a secret dread lest his absence should be remarked, and
considered as a proof of fear, after all that had passed on the subject of the haunted room, determined him to
accept the proposal. He dressed hastily, and arranged his hair carefully, but the paleness of his face, and the
traces of tears in his eyes, were not to be concealed, and he entered the saloon, where the family were already
assembled at the breakfast-table, with the chaplain and the doctor.
The Baron rose to greet him: one glance at the young officer's face was sufficient; he pressed his hand in
silence, and led him to a place by the side of the Baroness. An animated discussion now began concerning the
weather, which was completely changed; a strong south wind had risen in the night, so there was now a thaw.
The snow was all melted—the torrents were flowing once more, and the roads impassable.
"How can you possibly reach Blumenberg, to-day?" the Baron inquired of his guest.
"That will be well nigh impossible," said the doctor. "I am just come from a patient at the next village, and I
was nearly an hour performing the same distance in a carriage that is usually traversed on foot in a quarter of
an hour."
Edward had not given a thought this morning to the shooting-match. Now that it had occurred to him to
remember it, he felt little regret at being detained from a scene of noisy festivity which, far from being
desirable, appeared to him actually distasteful in his present frame of mind. Yet he was troubled by the
thought of intruding too long on the hospitality of his new friends; and he said, in a hesitating
manner—
"That you shall not do," interrupted the [pg 192] Baron. "The road is always bad: and in a thaw it is always
dangerous. It would go against my conscience to allow you to risk it. Remain with us: we have no
shooting-match or ball to offer you, but—"
"Well, then, remain with us, Lieutenant," said the matron, laying her hand on his arm, with a kind, maternal
gesture. "You are heartily welcome; and the longer you stay with us, the better shall we be pleased."
The youth bowed, and raised the lady's hand to his lips, and said—
"If you will allow me—if you feel certain that I am not intruding—I will accept your kind offer
with joy. I never care much for a ball, at any time, and to-day in particular"—. He stopped short, and
then added, "In such bad weather as this, the small amusement—"
"Would be dearly bought." interposed the Baron. "Come, I am delighted; you will remain with us."
IN TWO PARTS.—PART I. 48
International Weekly Miscellany, August 5, 1850.
"And, beside," said the doctor, with disinterested solicitude, "it would be imprudent, for M. de Wensleben
does not look very well. Had you a good night, sir?"
"Hem!" said the doctor, shaking his head, portentiously. "No one yet—"
"Were I to relate my dream," replied Edward, "you would understand it no more than I did. Confused
images—"
The Baroness, who saw the youth's unwillingness to enlarge upon the subject, here observed—
"That some of the visions had been of no great importance—those which she had heard related, at
least."
The chaplain led the conversation from dreams, themselves, to their origin, on which subject he and the doctor
could not agree; and Edward and his visions were left in peace at last. But when every one had departed, each
to his daily occupation, Edward followed the Baron into his library.
"I answered in that manner," he said, "to get rid of the doctor and his questioning. To you I will confess the
truth. Your room has exercised its mysterious influence over me."
"I have seen and spoken with my Ferdinand, for the first time since his death. I will trust to your
kindness—your sympathy—not to require of me a description of this exciting vision. But I have
a question to put to you."
"Varnier!—certainly not."
"In the bed in which I slept I found this ring," said Edward, while he produced it; "and the apparition of my
friend pronounced that name."
"Wonderful! As I tell you, I know no one so called—this is the first time I ever heard the name. But it
is entirely unaccountable to me, how the ring should have come into that bed. You see, M. von Wensleben,
what I told you is true. There is something very peculiar about that room: the moment you entered, I saw that
the spell had been working on you also, but I did not wish to forestall or force your confidence."
IN TWO PARTS.—PART I. 49
International Weekly Miscellany, August 5, 1850.
"I felt the delicacy, as I do now the kindness, of your intentions. Those who are as sad as I am can alone tell
the value of tenderness and sympathy."
Edward remained this day and the following at the castle, and felt quite at home with its worthy inmates. He
slept twice in the haunted room. He went away, and came back often; was always welcomed cordially, and
always quartered in the same apartment. But, in spite of all this, he had no clew, he had no means of lifting the
vail of mystery which hung round the fate of Ferdinand Hallberg and of Emily Varnier.
From Punch.
From Punch. 50
International Weekly Miscellany, August 5, 1850.
R.H. STODDARD
THE ACTUAL.
Away! no more shall shadows entertain;
R.B.X.
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