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Title: St. Irvyne
Author: Percy Bysshe Shelley
Date: 1810
Language: en
Topics: fiction, science fiction
Source: http://gutenberg.net.au/ebooks06/0606391h.html

Percy Bysshe Shelley

St. Irvyne

CHAPTER. I.

Red thunder-clouds, borne on the wings of the midnight whirlwind,

floated, at fits, athwart the crimson-coloured orbit of the moon; the

rising fierceness of the blast sighed through the stunted shrubs, which,

bending before its violence, inclined towards the rocks whereon they

grew: over the blackened expanse of heaven, at intervals, was spread the

blue lightning's flash; it played upon the granite heights, and, with

momentary brilliancy, disclosed the terrific scenery of the Alps, whose

gigantic and mishapen summits, reddened by the transitory moon-beam,

were crossed by black fleeting fragments of the tempest-clouds. The

rain, in big drops, began to descend, and the thunder-peals, with louder

and more deafening crash, to shake the zenith, till the long-protracted

war, echoing from cavern to cavern, died, in indistinct murmurs, amidst

the far-extended chain of mountains. In this scene, then, at this

horrible and tempestuous hour, without one existent earthy being whom he

might claim as friend, without one resource to which he might fly as an

asylum from the horrors of neglect and poverty, stood Wolfstein;--he

gazed upon the conflicting elements; his youthful figure reclined

against a jutting granite rock; he cursed his wayward destiny, and

implored the Almighty of Heaven to permit the thunderbolt, with crash

terrific and exterminating, to descend upon his head, that a being

useless to himself and to society might no longer, by his existence,

mock Him whone'er made aught in vain. "And what so horrible crimes have

I committed," exclaimed Wolfstein, driven to impiety by desperation,

"what crimes which merit punishment like this? What, what is death?--Ah,

dissolution! thy pang is blunted by the hard hand of long-protracted

suffering--suffering unspeakable, indescribable!" As thus he spoke, a

more terrific paroxysm of excessive despair revelled through every vein;

his brain swam around in wild confusion, and, rendered delirious by

excess of misery, he started from his flinty seat, and swiftly hastened

towards the precipice, which yawned widely beneath his feet. "For what

then should I longer drag on the galling chain of existence?" cried

Wolfstein; and his impious expression was borne onwards by the hot and

sulphurous thunder-blast.

The midnight meteors danced above the gulf upon which Wolfstein

wistfully gazed. Palpable, impenetrable darkness seemed to hang upon it;

impenetrable even by the flaming thunderbolt. "Into this then shall I

plunge myself?" soliloquized the wretched outcast, "and by one rash act

endanger, perhaps, eternal happiness;--deliver myself up, perhaps, to

the anticipation and experience of never-ending torments? Art thou the

God then, the Creator of the universe, whom canting monks call the God

of mercy and forgiveness, and sufferest thou thy creatures to become the

victims of tortures such as fate has inflicted on me?--Oh! God, take my

soul; why should I longer live?" Thus having spoken, he sank on the

rocky bosom of the mountains. Yet, unheeding the exclamations of the

maddened Wolfstein, fiercer raged the tempest. The battling elements, in

wild confusion, seemed to threaten nature's dissolution; the ferocious

thunderbolt, with impetuous violence, danced upon the mountains, and,

collecting more terrific strength, severed gigantic rocks from their

else eternal basements; the masses, with sound more frightful than the

bursting thunder-peal, dashed towards the valley below. Horror and

desolation marked their track. The mountain-rills, swoln by the waters

of the sky, dashed with direr impetuosity from the Alpine summits; their

foaming waters were hidden in the darkness of midnight, or only became

visible when the momentary scintillations of the lightning rested on

their whitened waves. Fiercer still than nature's wildest uproar were

the feelings of Wolfstein's bosom; his frame, at last, conquered by the

conflicting passions of his soul, no longer was adequate to sustain the

unequal contest, but sank to the earth. His brain swam wildly, and he

lay entranced in total insensibility.

What torches are those that dispel the distant darkness of midnight, and

gleam, like meteors, athwart the blackness of the tempest? They throw a

wavering light over the thickness of the storm: they wind along the

mountains: they pass the hollow vallies. Hark! the howling of the blast

has ceased,--the thunderbolts have dispersed, but yet reigns darkness.

Distant sounds of song are borne on the breeze: the sounds approach. A

low bier holds the remains of one whose soul is floating in the regions

of eternity: a black pall covers him. Monks support the lifeless clay:

others precede, bearing torches, and chanting a requiem for the

salvation of the departed one. They hasten towards the convent of the

valley, there to deposit the lifeless limbs of one who has explored the

frightful path of eternity before them. And now they had arrived where

lay Wolfstein: "Alas!" said one of the monks, "there reclines a wretched

traveller. He is dead; murdered, doubtlessly, by the fell bandits who

infest these wild recesses."

They raised from the earth his form: yet his bosom throbbed with the

tide of life: returning animation once more illumed his eye: he started

on his feet, and wildly inquired why they had awakened him from that

slumber which he had hoped to have been eternal. Unconnected were his

expressions, strange and impetuous the fire darting from his restless

eyeballs. At length, the monks succeeded in calming the desperate

tumultuousness of his bosom, calming at least in some degree; for he

accepted their proffered tenders of a lodging, and essayed to lull to

sleep, for a while, the horrible idea of dereliction which pressed upon

his loaded brain.

While thus they stood, loud shouts rent the air, and, before Wolfstein

and the monks could well collect their scattered faculties, they found

that a troop of Alpine bandits had surrounded them. Trembling, from

apprehension, the monks fled every way. None, however, could escape.

"What! old greybeards," cried one of the robbers, "do you suppose that

we will permit you to evade us: you who feed upon the strength of the

country, in idleness and luxury, and have compelled many of our noble

fellows, who otherwise would have been ornaments to their country in

peace, thunderbolts to their enemies in war, to seek precarious

subsistence as Alpine bandits? If you wish for mercy, therefore, deliver

unhesitatingly your joint riches." The robbers then despoiled the monks

of whatever they might adventitiously have taken with them, and, turning

to Wolfstein, the apparent chieftain told him to yield his money

likewise. Unappalled, Wolfstein advanced towards him. The chief held a

torch; its red beams disclosed the expression of stern severity and

unyielding loftiness which sate upon the brow of Wolfstein. "Bandit!" he

answered fearlessly, "I have none,--no money--no hope--no friends; nor

do I care for existence! Now judge if such a man be a fit victim for

fear! No! I never trembled!"

A ray of pleasure gleamed in the countenance of the bandit as Wolfstein

spoke. Grief, in inerasible traces, sate deeply implanted on the front

of the outcast. At last, the chief, advancing to Wolfstein, who stood at

some little distance, said, "My companions think that so noble a fellow

as you appear to be, would be no unworthy member of our society; and, by

Heaven, I am of their opinion. Are you willing to become one of us?"

Wolfstein's dark gaze was fixed upon the grounds his contracted eyebrow

evinced deep thought: he started from his reverie, and, without

hesitation, consented to their proposal.

Long was it past the hour of midnight when the banditti troop, with

their newly-acquired associate, advanced along the pathless Alps. The

red glare of the torches which each held, tinged the rocks and

pine-trees, through woods of which they occasionally passed, and alone

dissipated the darkness of night. Now had they arrived at the summit of

a wild and rocky precipice, but the base indeed of another which mingled

its far-seen and gigantic outline with the clouds of heaven. A door,

which before had appeared part of the solid rock, flew open at the

chieftain's touch, and the whole party advanced into the spacious

cavern. Over the walls of the lengthened passages putrefaction had

spread a bluish clamminess; damps hung around, and, at intervals, almost

extinguished the torches, whose glare was scarcely sufficient to

dissipate the impenetrable obscurity. After many devious windings they

advanced into the body of the cavern: it was spacious and lofty. A

blazing wood fire threw its dubious rays upon the mishapen and

ill-carved walls. Lamps suspended from the roof, dispersed the

subterranean gloom, not so completely however, but that ill-defined

shades lurked in the arched distances, whose hollow recesses led to

different apartments.

The gang had sate down in the midst of the cavern to supper, which a

female, whose former loveliness had left scarce any traces on her cheek,

had prepared. The most exquisite and expensive wines apologized for the

rusticity of the rest of the entertainment, and induced freedom of

conversation, and wild boisterous merriment, which reigned until the

bandits, overcome by the fumes of the wine which they had drank, sank to

sleep. Wolfstein, left again to solitude and silence, reclining on his

mat in a corner of the cavern, retraced, in mental, sorrowing review,

the past events of his life: ah! that eventful existence whose fate had

dragged the heir of a wealthy potentate in Germany from the lap of

luxury and indulgence, to become a vile associate of viler bandits, in

the wild and trackless deserts of the Alps. Around their dwelling, lofty

inaccessible acclivities reared their barren summits; they echoed to no

sound save the wild hoot of the night-raven, or the impatient yelling of

the vulture, which hovered on the blast in quest of scanty sustenance.

These were the scenes without: noisy revelry and tumultuous riot reigned

within. The mirth of the bandits appeared to arise independently of

themselves: their hearts were void and dreary. Wolfstein's limbs

pillowed on the flinty bosom of the earth: those limbs which had been

wont to recline on the softest, the most luxurious sofas. Driven from

his native country by an event which imposed upon him an insuperable

barrier to ever again returning thither, possessing no friends, not

having one single resource from which he might obtain support, where

could the wretch, the exile, seek for an asylum but with those whose

fortunes, expectations, and characters were desperate, and marked as

darkly, by fate, as his own?

Time fled, and each succeeding day inured Wolfstein more and more to the

idea of depriving his fellow-creatures of their possessions. In a short

space of time the high-souled and noble Wolfstein, though still

high-souled and noble, became an experienced bandit. His magnanimity and

courage, even whilst surrounded by the most threatening dangers, and the

unappalled expression of countenance with which he defied the dart of

death, endeared him to the robbers: whilst with him they all asserted

that they felt, as it were, instinctively impelled to deeds of horror

and danger, which, otherwise, must have remained unattempted even by the

boldest. His was every daring expedition, his the scheme which demanded

depth of judgment and promptness of execution. Often, whilst at midnight

the band lurked perhaps beneath the overhanging rocks, which were

gloomily impended above them, in the midst, perhaps, of one of those

horrible tempests whereby the air, in those Alpine regions, is so

frequently convulsed, would the countenance of the bandits betray some

slight shade of alarm and awe; but that of Wolfstein was fixed,

unchanged, by any variation of scenery or action. One day it was when

the chief communicated to the banditti, notice which he had received by

means of spies, that an Italian Count of immense wealth was journeying

from Paris to his native country, and, at a late hour the following

evening, would pass the Alps near this place; "They have but few

attendants," added he, "and those few will not come this way; the

postillion is in our interest, and the horses are to be overcome with

fatigue when they approach the destined spot: you understand."

The evening came. "I," said Wolfstein, "will roam into the country, but

will return before the arrival of our wealthy victim." Thus saying, he

left the cavern, and wandered out amidst the mountains.

It was autumn. The mountain-tops, the scattered oaks which occasionally

waved their lightning-blasted heads on the summits of the far-seen piles

of rock, were gilded by the setting glory of the sun; the trees,

yellowed by the waning year, reflected a glowing teint from their thick

foliage; and the dark pine-groves which were stretched half way up the

mountain sides, added a more deepened gloom to the shades of evening,

which already began to gather rapidly above the scenery.

It was at this dark and silent hour, that Wolfstein, unheeding the

surrounding objects,--objects which might have touched with awe, or

heightened to devotion, any other breast,--wandered alone--pensively he

wandered--dark images for futurity possessed his soul: he shuddered when

he reflected upon what had passed; nor was his present situation

calculated to satisfy a mind eagerly panting for liberty and

independence. Conscience too, awakened conscience, upbraided him for the

life which he had selected, and, with silent whisperings, stung his soul

to madness. Oppressed by thoughts such as these, Wolfstein yet

proceeded, forgetful that he was to return before the arrival of their

destined victim--forgetful indeed was he of every external existence;

and absorbed in himself, with arms folded, and eyes fixed upon the

earth, he yet advanced. At last he sank on a mossy bank, and, guided by

the impulse of the moment, inscribed on a tablet the following lines;

for the inaccuracy of which, the perturbation of him who wrote them, may

account; he thought of past times while he marked the paper with--

Overcome by the wild retrospection of ideal horror, which these

swiftly-written lines excited in his soul, Wolfstein tore the paper, on

which he had written them, to pieces, and scattered them about him. He

arose from his recumbent posture, and again advanced through the forest.

Not far had he proceeded, ere a mingled murmur broke upon the silence of

night--it was the sound of human voices. An event so unusual in these

solitudes, excited Wolfstein's momentary surprise; he started, and

looking around him, essayed to discover whence those sounds

proceeded.--What was the astonishment of Wolfstein, when he found that a

detached party, who had been sent in pursuit of the Count, had actually

overtaken him, and, at this instant, were dragging from the carriage the

almost lifeless form of a female, whose light symmetrical figure, as it

leant on the muscular frame of the robber who supported it, afforded a

most striking contrast.--They had, before his arrival, plundered the

Count of all his riches, and, enraged at the spirited defence which he

had made, had inhumanly murdered him, and cast his lifeless body adown

the yawning precipice. Transfixed by a jutting point of granite rock, it

remained there to be devoured by the ravens. Wolfstein joined the

banditti: and, although he could not recall the deed, lamented the

wanton cruelty which had been practised upon the Count. As for the

female, whose grace and loveliness made so strong an impression upon

him, he demanded that every soothing attention should be paid to her,

and his desire was enforced by the commands of the chief, whose dark eye

wandered wildly over the beauties of the lovely Megalena de Metastasio,

as if he had secretly destined them for himself.

At last they arrived at the cavern; every resource which the cavern of a

gang of lawless and desperate villains might afford, was brought forward

to restore the fainted Megalena to life: she soon recovered--she slowly

opened her eyes, and started with surprise to behold herself surrounded

by a rough set of desperadoes, and the gloomy walls of the cavern, upon

which darkness hung, awfully visible. Near her sate a female, whose

darkened expression of countenance seemed perfectly to correspond with

the horror prevalent throughout the cavern; her face, though bearing the

marks of an undeniable expression of familiarity with wretchedness, had

some slight remains of beauty.

It was long past midnight when each of the robbers withdrew to repose.

But his mind was too much occupied by the events of the evening to allow

the unhappy Wolfstein to find quiet;--at an early hour he arose from his

sleepless couch, to inhale the morning breeze. The sun had but just

risen; the scene was beautiful; every thing was still, and seemed to

favour that reflection, which even propinquity to his abandoned

associates imposed no indefinably insuperable bar to. In spite of his

attempts to think upon other subjects, the image of the fair Megalena

floated in his mind. Her loveliness had made too deep an impression on

it to be easily removed; and the hapless Wolfstein, ever the victim of

impulsive feeling, found himself bound to her by ties, more lasting than

he had now conceived the transitory tyranny of woe could have imposed.

For never had Wolfstein beheld so singularly beautiful a form;--her

figure cast in the mould of most exact symmetry; her blue and

love-beaming eyes, from which occasionally emanated a wild expression,

seemingly almost superhuman; and the auburn hair which hung in

unconfined tresses down her damask cheek--formed a resistless tout

ensemble.

Heedless of every external object, Wolfstein long wandered.--The

protracted sound of the bandits' horn struck at last upon his ear, and

aroused him from his reverie. On his return to the cavern, the robbers

were assembled at their meal; the chief regarded him with marked and

jealous surprise as he entered, but made no remark. They then discussed

their uninteresting and monotonous topics, and the meal being ended,

each villain departed on his different business.

Megalena, finding herself alone with Agnes (the only woman, save

herself, who was in the cavern, and who served as an attendant on the

robbers), essayed, by the most humble entreaties and supplications, to

excite pity in her breast: she conjured her to explain the cause for

which she was thus imprisoned, and wildly inquired for her father. The

guilt-bronzed brow of Agnes was contracted by a sullen and malicious

frown: it was the only reply which the inhuman female deigned to return.

After a pause, however, she said, "Thou thinkest thyself my superior,

proud girl; but time may render us equals.--Submit to that, and you may

live on the same terms as I do."

There appeared to lurk a meaning in these words, which Megalena found

herself incompetent to develope; she answered not, therefore, and

suffered Agnes to depart unquestioned. The wretched Megalena, a prey to

despair and terror, endeavoured to revolve in her mind the events which

had brought her to this spot, but an unconnected stream of ideas pressed

upon her brain. The sole light in her cell was that of a dismal lamp,

which, by its uncertain flickering, only dissipated the almost palpable

obscurity, in a sufficient degree more assuredly to point out the

circumambient horrors. She gazed wistfully around, to see if there were

any outlet; none there was, save the door whereby Agnes had entered,

which was strongly barred on the outside. In despair she threw herself

on the wretched pallet.--"For what cause, then, am I thus entombed

alive?" soliloquized the hapless Megalena; "would it not be preferable

at once to annihilate the spark of life which burns but faintly within

my bosom?--O my father! where art thou? Thy tombless corse, perhaps, is

torn into a thousand pieces by the fury of the mountain

cataract.--Little didst thou presage misfortunes such as these!--little

didst thou suppose that our last journey would have caused thy immature

dissolution--my infamy and misery, not to end but with my hapless

existence!--Here there is none to comfort me, none to participate my

miseries!" Thus speaking, overcome by a paroxysm of emotion, she sank on

the bed, and bedewed her fair face with tears.

Whilst, oppressed by painful retrospection, the outcast orphan was yet

kneeling, Agnes entered, and, not evén noticing her distress, bade her

prepare to come to the banquet where the troop of bandits was assembled.

In silence, along the vaulted and gloomy passages, she followed her

conductress, from whose stern and forbidding gaze her nature shrunk back

enhorrored, till they reached that apartment of the cavern where the

revelry waited but for her arrival to commence. On her entering,

Cavigni, the chief, led her to a seat on his right hand, and paid her

every attention which his froward nature could stoop to exercise towards

a female: she received his civilities with apparent complacency; but her

eye was frequently fascinated, as it were, towards the youthful

Wolfstein, who had caught her attention the evening before. His

countenance, spite of the shade of woe with which the hard hand of

suffering had marked it, was engaging and beautiful; not that beauty

which may be freely acknowledged, but inwardly confessed by every

beholder with sensations penetrating and resistless; his figure majestic

and lofty, and the fire which flashed from his expressive eye,

indefinably to herself, penetrated the inmost soul of the isolated

Megalena. Wolfstein regarded Cavigni with indignation and envy; and,

though almost ignorant himself of the dreadful purpose of his soul,

resolved in his own mind an horrible deed. Cavigni was enraptured with

the beauty of Megalena, and secretly vowed that no paius should be

spared to gain to himself the possession of an object so lovely. The

anticipated delight of gratified voluptuousness revelled in every vein,

as he gazed upon her; his eye flashed with a triumphant expression of

lawless love, yet he determined to defer the hour of his happiness till

he might enjoy more free, unrestrained delight, with his adored fair

one. She gazed on the chief, however, with an ill-concealed aversion;

his dark expression of countenance, the haughty severity, and

contemptuous frown, which habitually sate on his brow, invited not, but

rather repelled a reciprocality of affection, which the haughty chief,

after his own attachment, entertained not the most distant doubt of. He

was, notwithstanding, conscious of her coldness, but attributing it to

virgin modesty, or to the novel situation into which she had suddenly

been thrown, paid her every attention; nor did he omit to promise her

every little comfort which might induce her to regard him with esteem.

Still, though veiled beneath the most artful dissimulation, did the fair

Megalena pant ardently for liberty--for, oh! liberty is sweet, sweeter

even than all the other pleasures of life, to full satiety, without it.

Cavigni essayed, by every art, to gain her over to his desires; but

Megalena, regarding him with aversion, answered with an haughtiness

which she was unable to conceal, and which his proud spirit might ill

brook. Cavigni could not disguise the vexation which he felt, when,

increased by resistance, Megalena's dislike towards him remained no

longer a secret: "Megalena," said he, at last, "fair girl, thou shalt be

mine--we will be wedded tomorrow, if you think the bands of love not

sufficiently forcible to unite us."

"No bands shall ever unite me to you!" exclaimed Megalena. "Even though

the grave were to yawn beneath my feet, I would willingly precipitate

myself into its gulf, if the alternative of that, or an union with you,

were proposed to me."

Rage swelled Cavigni's bosom almost to bursting--the conflicting

passions of his soul were too tumultuous for utterance;--in an hurried

tone, he commanded Agnes to show Megalena to her cell: she obeyed, and

they both quitted the apartment.

Wolfstein's soul, sublimed by the most infuriate paroxysms of contending

emotions, battled wildly. His countenance retained, however, but one

expression,--it was of dark and deliberate revenge. His stern eye was

fixed upon Cavigni;--he decided at this instant to perpetrate the deed

he had resolved on. Leaving his seat, he intimated his intention of

quitting the cavern for an instant.

Cavigni had just filled his goblet--Wolfstein, as he passed, dexterously

threw a little white powder into the wine of the chief.

When Wolfstein returned, Cavigni had not yet quaffed the deadly draught:

rising, therefore, he exclaimed aloud, "Fill your goblets, all." Every

one obeyed, and sat in expectation of the toast which he was about to

propose.

"Let us drink," he exclaimed, "to the health of the chieftain's

bride--let us drink to their mutual happiness." A smile of pleasure

irradiated the countenance of the chief:--that he whom he had supposed

to be a dangerous rival, should thus publicly forego any claim to the

affections of Megalena, was indeed pleasure.

"Health and mutual happiness to the chieftain and his bride!" re-echoed

from every part of the table.

Cavigni raised the goblet to his lips: he was about to quaff the tide of

death, when Ginotti, one of the robbers, who sat next to him, upreared

his arm, and dashed the cup of destruction to the earth. A silence, as

if in expectation of some terrible event, reigned throughout the cavern.

Wolfstein turned his eyes towards the chief;--the dark and mysterious

gaze of Ginotti arrested his wandering eyeball; its expression was too

marked to be misunderstood;--he trembled in his inmost soul, but his

countenance yet retained its unchangeable expression. Ginotti spoke not,

nor willed he to assign any reason for his extraordinary conduct; the

circumstance was shortly forgotten, and the revelry went on undisturbed

by any other event.

Ginotti was one of the boldest of the robbers; he was the distinguished

favourite of the chief, and, although mysterious and reserved, his

society was courted with more eagerness, than such qualities might,

abstractedly considered, appear to deserve. None knew his history--that

he concealed within the deepest recesses of his bosom; nor could the

most suppliant entreaties, or threats of the most horrible punishments,

have wrested from him one particular concerning it. Never had he once

thrown off the mysterious mask, beneath which his character was veiled,

since he had become an associate of the band. In vain the chief required

him to assign some reason for his late extravagant conduct; he said it

was mere accident, but with an air, which more than convinced every one,

that something lurked behind which yet remained unknown. Such, however,

was their respect for Ginotti, that the occurrence passed almost without

a comment.

Long now had the hour of midnight gone by, and the bandits had retired

to repose. Wolfstein retired too to his couch, but sleep closed not his

eyelids; his bosom was a scene of the wildest anarchy; the conflicting

passions revelled dreadfully in his burning brain:--love, maddening,

excessive, unaccountable idolatry, as it were, which possessed him for

Megalena, urged him on to the commission of deeds which conscience

represented as beyond measure wicked, and which Ginotti's glance

convinced him were by no means unsuspected. Still so unbounded was his

love for Megalena (madness rather than love), that it overbalanced every

other consideration, and his unappalled soul resolved to persevere in

its determination even to destruction!

Cavigni's commands respecting Megalena had been obeyed:--the door of her

cell was fastened, and the ferocious chief resolved to let her lie there

till the suffering and confinement might subdue her to his will.

Megalena endeavoured, by every means, to soften the obdurate heart of

her attendant; at length, her mildness of manner induced Agnes to regard

her with pity; and before she quitted the cell, they were so far

reconciled to each other, that they entered into a comparison of their

mutual situations; and Agnes was about to relate to Megalena the

circumstances which had brought her to the cavern, when the fierce

Cavigni entered, and, commanding Agnes to withdraw, said, "Well, proud

girl, are you now in a better humour to return the favour with which

your superior regards you?"

"No!" heroically answered Megalena.

"Then," rejoined the chief, "if within four-and-twenty hours you hold

yourself not in readiness to return my love, force shall wrest the jewel

from its casket." Thus having said, he abruptly quitted the cell.

So far had Wolfstein's proposed toast, at the banquet, gained on the

unsuspecting ferociousness of Cavigni, that he accepted the former's

artful tender of service, in the way of persuasion with Megalena,

supposing, by Wolfstein's manner, that they had been cursorily

acquainted before. Wolfstein, therefore, entered the apartment of

Megalena.

At the sight of him Megalena arose from her recumbent posture, and

hastened joyfully to meet him; for she remembered that Wolfstein had

rescued her from the insults of the banditti, on the eventful evening

which had subjected her to their control.

"Lovely, adored girl," he exclaimed, "short is my time: pardon,

therefore, the abruptness of my address. The chief has sent me to

persuade you to become united to him; but I love you, I adore you to

madness. I am not what I seem. Answer me!--time is short."

An indefinable sensation, unfelt before, swelled through the

passion-quivering frame of Megalena. "Yes, yes," she cried, "I will--I

love you--" At this instant the voice of Cavigni was heard in the

passage. Wolfstein started from his knees, and pressing the fair hand

presented to his lips with exulting ardour, departed hastily to give an

account of his mission to the anxious Cavigni; who restrained himself in

the passage without, and, slightly mistrusting Wolfstein, was about to

advance to the door of the cell to listen to their conversation, when

Wolfstein quitted Megalena.

Megalena, again in solitude, began to reflect upon the scenes which had

been lately acted. She thought upon the words of Wolfstein, unconscious

wherefore they were a balm to her mind: she reclined upon her wretched

pallet. It was now night: her thoughts took a different turn; the

melancholy wind sighing along the crevices of the cavern, and the dismal

sound of rain which pattered fast, inspired mournful reflection. She

thought of her father,--her beloved father;--a solitary wanderer on the

face of the earth; or, most probably, thought she, his soul rests in

death. Horrible idea If the latter, she envied his fate; if the former,

she even supposed it preferable to her present abode. She again thought

of Wolfstein; she pondered on his last words:--an escape from the

cavern: oh delightful idea! Again her thoughts recurred to her father:

tears bedewed her cheeks; she took a pencil, and, actuated by the

feelings of the moment, inscribed on the wall of her prison these lines:

Whilst a wreath of dark vapour encircles his head. Here she paused, and,

ashamed of the exuberance of her imagination, obliterated from the wall

the characters which she had traced: the wind still howled dreadfully:

in fearful anticipation of the morrow, she threw herself on the bed,

and, in sleep, forgot the misfortunes which impended over her.

Meantime, the soul of Wolfstein was disturbed by ten thousand

conflicting passions; revenge and disappointed love agonized his soul to

madness; and he resolved to quench the rude feelings of his bosom in the

blood of his rival. But, again he thought of Ginotti; he thought of the

mysterious intervention which his dark glances proved not to be

accidental. To him it was an inexplicable mystery; which the more he

reflected upon, the less able was he to unravel. He had mixed the

poison, unseen, as he thought, by any one; certainly unseen by Ginotti,

whose back was unconcernedly turned at the time. He planned, therefore,

a second attempt, unawed by what had happened before, for the

destruction of Cavigni, which he resolved to put into execution this

night.

Before he had become an associate with the band of robbers, the

conscience of Wolfstein was clear; clear, at least, from the commission

of any wilful and deliberate crime: for, alas! an event almost too

dreadful for narration, had compelled him to quit his native country, in

indigence and disgrace. His courage was equal to his wickedness; his

mind was unalienable from its purpose; and whatever his will might

determine, his boldness would fearlessly execute, even though hell and

destruction were to yawn beneath his feet, and essay to turn his

unappalled soul from the accomplishment of his design. Such was the

guilty Wolfstein; a disgraceful fugitive from his country, a vile

associate of a band of robbers, and a murderer, at least in intent, if

not in deed. He shrunk not at the commission of crimes; he was now the

hardened villain; eternal damnation, tortures inconceivable on earth,

awaited him. "Foolish, degrading idea!" he exclaimed, as it momentarily

glanced through his mind; "am I worthy of the celestial Megalena, if I

shrink at the price which it is necessary I should pay for her

possession?" This idea banished every other feeling from his heart; and,

smothering the stings of conscience, a decided resolve of murder took

possession of him--the determining, within himself, to destroy the very

man who had given him an asylum, when driven to madness by the horrors

of neglect and poverty. He stood in the night-storm on the mountains; he

cursed the intervention of Ginotti, and secretly swore that nor heaven

nor hell again should dash the goblet of destruction from the mouth of

the detested Cavigni. The soul of Wolfstein too, insatiable in its

desires, and panting for liberty, ill could brook the confinement of

idea, which the cavern of the bandits must necessarily induce. He longed

again to try his fortune; he longed to re-enter that world which he had

never tried but once, and that indeed for a short time; sufficiently

long, however, to blast his blooming hopes, and to graft on the stock,

which otherwise might have produeed virtue, the fatal seeds of vice.

CHAPTER. II.

It was midnight; and all the robbers were assembled in the banquet-hall,

amongst whom, bearing in his bosom a weight of premeditated crime, was

Wolfstein; he sat by the chief. They discoursed on indifferent subjects;

the sparkling goblet went round; loud laughter succeeded. The ruffians

were rejoicing over some plunder which they had taken from a traveller,

whom they had robbed of immense wealth; they had left his body a prey to

the vultures of the mountains. The table groaned with the pressure of

the feast. Hilarity reigned around: reiterated were the shouts of

merriment and joy; if such could exist in a cavern of robbers.

It was long past midnight: another hour, and Megalena must be Cavigni's.

This idea rendered Wolfstein callous to every sting of conscience; and

he eagerly awaited an opportunity when he might, unperceived, infuse

poison into the goblet of one who confided in him. Ginotti sat opposite

to Wolfstein: his arms were folded, and his gaze rested fixedly upon the

fearless countenance of the murderer. Wolfstein shuddered when he beheld

the brow of the mysterious Ginotti contracted, his marked features

wrapped in inexplicable mystery.

All were now heated by wine, save the wily villain who destined murder;

and the awe-inspiring Ginotti, whose reservedness and mystery, not even

the hilarity of the present hour could dispel.

Conversation appearing to flag, Cavigni exclaimed, "Steindolph, you know

some old German stories; cannot you tell one, to deceive the lagging

hours?"

Steindolph was famed for his knowledge of metrical spectre tales, and

the gang were frequently wont to hang delighted on the ghostly wonders

which he related.

"Excuse, then, the mode of my telling it," said Steindolph, "and I will

with pleasure. I learnt it whilst in Germany; my old grandmother taught

it me, and I can repeat it as a ballad."--"Do, do," re-echoed from every

part of the cavern.--Steindolph thus began:

As Steindolph concluded, an universal shout of applause echoed through

the cavern. Every one had been so attentive to the recitation of the

robber, that no opportunity of perpetrating his resolve had appeared to

Wolfstein. Now all again was revelry and riot, and the wily designer

eagerly watched for the instant when universal confusion might favour

his attempt to drop, unobserved, the powder into the goblet of the

chief. With a gaze of insidious and malignant revenge was the eye of

Wolfstein fixed upon the chieftain's countenance. Cavigni perceived it

not; for he was heated with wine, or the unusual expression of his

associate's face must have awakened suspicion, or excited remark. Yet

was Ginotti's gaze fixed upon Wolfstein, who, like a sanguinary and

remorseless ruffian, sat expectantly waiting the instant of death. The

goblet passed round:--at the moment when Wolfstein mingled the poison

with Cavigni's wine, the eyes of Ginotti, which before had regarded him

with the most dazzling scrutiny, were intentionally turned away: he then

arose from the table, and, complaining of sudden indisposition, retired.

Cavigni raised the goblet to his lips--

"Now, my brave fellows," he exclaimed, "the hour is late; but before we

retire, I here drink success and health to every one of you."

Wolfstein involuntarily shuddered.--Cavigni quaffed the liquor to the

dregs!--the cup fell from his trembling hand. The chill dew of death sat

upon his forehead: in terrific convulsion he fell headlong; and,

inarticulately uttering "I am poisoned," sank seemingly lifeless on the

earth. Sixty robbers at once rushed forward to raise him; and, reclining

in their arms, with an horrible and harrowing shriek, the spark of life

fled from his body for ever. A robber, skilled in surgery, opened a

vein; but no blood followed the touch of the lancet.--Wolfstein advanced

to the body, unappalled by the crime which he had committed, and tore

aside the vest from its bosom: that bosom was discoloured by large spots

of livid purple, which, by their premature appearance, declared the

poison which had been used to destroy him, to be excessively powerful.

Every one regretted the death of the brave Cavigni; every one was

surprised at the mode of his death: and, by his abruptly quitting the

apartment, the suspicion fell upon Ginotti, who was consequently sent

for by Ardolph, a robber whom they had chosen chieftain, Wolfstein

having declined the proffered distinction.

Ginotti arrived.--His stern countenance was changed not by the

execrations showered on him by every one. He yet remained unmoved, and

apparently careless what sentiments others might entertain of him: he

deigned not even to deny the charge. This coolness seemed to have

convinced every one, the new chief in particular, of his innocence.

"Let every one," said Ardolph, "be searched; and if his pockets contain

poison which could have effected this, let him die." This method was

universally applauded. As soon as the acclamations were stilled,

Wolfstein advanced forwards, and spoke thus:

"Any longer to conceal that it was I who perpetrated the deed, were

useless. Megalena's loveliness inflamed me:--I envied one who was about

to possess it.--I have murdered him!"

Here he was interrupted by the shouts of the bandits; and he was about

to be delivered to death, when Ginotti advanced. His superior and

towering figure inspired awe even in the hearts of the bandits. They

were silent.

"Suffer Wolfstein," he exclaimed, "to depart unhurt. I will answer for

his never publishing our retreat: I will promise that never more shall

you behold him."

Every one submitted to Ginotti: for who could resist the superior

Ginotti? From the gaze of Ginotti Wolfstein's soul shrank, enhorrored,

in confessed inferiority: he who had shrunk not at death, had shrunk not

to avow himself guilty of murder, and had prepared to meet its reward,

started from Ginotti's eye-beam as from the emanation of some superior

and preter-human being.

"Quit the cavern!" said Ginotti.--"May I not remain here until the

morrow?" inquired Wolfstein.--"If tomorrow's rising sun finds you in

this cavern," returned Ginotti, "I must deliver you up to the vengeance

of those whom you have injured."

Wolfstein retired to his solitary cell, to retrace, in his mind, the

occurrences of this eventful night. What was he now?--an isolated wicked

wanderer; not a being on earth whom he could call a friend, and carrying

with him that never-dying tormentor--conscience. In half-waking dreams

passed the night: the ghost of him whom he had so inhumanly destroyed,

seemed to cry for justice at the throne of God; bleeding, pale, and

ghastly, it pressed on his agonized brain; and confused, inexplicable

visions flitted in his imagination, until the freshness of the morning

breeze warned him to depart. He collected together all those valuables

which had fallen to his share as plunder, during his stay in the cavern:

they amounted to a large sum. He rushed from the cavern; he

hesitated,--he knew not whither to fly. He walked fast, and essayed, by

exercise, to smother the feelings of his soul; but the attempt was

fruitless. Not far had he proceeded, ere, stretched on the earth

apparently lifeless, he beheld a female form. He advanced towards it--it

was Megalena!

A tumult of exulting and inconceivable transport rushed through his

veins as he beheld her--her for whom he had plunged into the abyss of

crime. She slept, and, apparently overcome by the fatigues which she had

sustained, her slumber was profound. Her head reclined upon the jutting

root of a tree: the tint of health and loveliness sat upon her cheek.

When the fair Megalena awakened, and found herself in the arms of

Wolfstein, she started; yet, turning her eyes, she beheld it was no

enemy, and the expression of terror gave way to pleasure. In the general

confusion had Megalena escaped from the abode of the bandits. The

destinies of Wolfstein and Megalena were assimilated by similarity of

situations; and, before they quitted the spot, so far had this

reciprocal feeling prevailed, that they swore mutual affection. Megalena

then related her escape from the cavern, and showed Wolfstein jewels, to

an immense amount, which she had secreted.

"At all events, then," said Wolfstein, "we may defy poverty; for I have

about me jewels to the value of ten thousand zechins."

"We will go to Genoa," said Megalena. "We will, my fair one. There,

entirely devoted to each other, we will defy the darts of misery."

Megalena returned no answer, save a look of else inexpressible love.

It was now the middle of the day; neither Wolfstein nor Megalena had

tasted food since the preceding night; and faint, from fatigue, Megalena

scarce could move onwards. "Courage, my love," said Wolfstein; "yet a

little way, and we shall arrive at a cottage, a sort of inn, where we

may wait until the morrow, and hire mules to carry us to Placenza,

whence we can easily proceed to the goal of our destination."

Megalena collected her strength: in a short time they arrived at the

cottage, and passed the remainder of the day in plans respecting the

future. Wearied with unusual exertions, Megalena early retired to an

inconvenient bed, which, however, was the best the cottage could afford;

and Wolfstein, lying along the bench by the fireplace, resigned himself

to meditation; for his mind was too much disturbed to let him sleep.

Although Wolfstein had every reason to rejoice at the success which had

crowned his schemes; although the very event had occurred which his soul

had so much and so eagerly panted for; yet, even now, in possession of

all he held valuable on earth, was he ill at ease. Remorse for his

crimes, tortured him: yet, steeling his conscience, he essayed to

smother the fire which burned within his bosom; to change the tenour of

his thoughts--in vain! he could not. Restless passed the night, and the

middle of the day beheld Wolfstein and Megalena far from the habitation

of the bandits.

They intended, if possible, to reach Breno that night, and thence, on

the following day, to journey towards Genoa. They had descended the

southern acclivity of the Alps. It was now hastening towards spring, and

the whole country began to gleam with the renewed loveliness of nature.

Odoriferous orange-groves scented the air. Myrtles bloomed on the sides

of the gentle eminences which they occasionally ascended. The face of

nature was smiling and gay; so was Megalena's heart: with exulting and

speechless transport it bounded within her bosom. She gazed on him who

possessed her soul; although she felt no inclination in her bosom to

retrace the events, by means of which an obscure bandit, undefinable to

herself, had gained the eternal love of the former haughty Megalena di

Metastasio.

They soon arrived at Breno. Wolfstein dismissed the muleteer, and

conducted Megalena into the interior of the inn, ordering at the same

time a supper. Again were repeated protestations of eternal affection,

avowals of indissoluble love; but it is sufficient to conceive what

cannot be so well described.

It was near midnight; Wolfstein and Megalena sat at supper, and

conversed with that unrestrainedness and gaiety which mutual confidence

inspired, when the door was opened, and the innkeeper announced the

arrival of a man who wished to speak with Wolfstein.

"Tell him," exclaimed Wolfstein, rather surprised, and wishing to guard

against the possibility of danger, "that I will not see him."

The landlord left the room, and, in a short time, returned. A man

accompanied him: he was of gigantic stature, and masked. "He would take

no denial, Signor," said the landlord, in exculpation, as he left the

room.

The stranger advanced to the table at which Wolfstein and Megalena sat:

he threw aside his mask, and disclosed the features of--Ginotti!

Wolfstein's frame became convulsed with involuntary horror: he started.

Megalena was surprised.

Ginotti, at length, broke the terrible silence.

"Wolfstein," he said, "I saved you from, otherwise, inevitable death; by

my means alone have you gained Megalena:--what do I then deserve in

return?" Wolfstein looked on the countenance: it was stern and severe,

yet divested of the terrible expression which had before caused his

frame to shudder with excess of alarm.

"My eternal gratitude," returned Wolfstein, hesitatingly.

"Will you promise, that when, destitute and a wanderer, I demand your

protection, when I beseech you to listen to the tale which I shall

relate, you will listen to me; that, when I am dead, you will bury me,

and suffer my soul to rest in the endless slumber of annihilation? Then

will you repay me for the benefits which I have conferred upon you."

"I will," replied Wolfstein, "I will perform all that you require."

"Swear it!" exclaimed Ginotti.

"I swear."

Ginotti then abruptly quitted the apartment; the sound of his footsteps

was heard descending the stairs; and, when they were no longer audible,

a weight seemed to have been taken from the breast of Wolfstein.

"How did that man save your life?" inquired Megalena.

"He was one of our band," replied Wolfstein, evasively, "and, on a

plundering excursion, his pistol-ball entered the heart of the man,

whose sabre, lifted aloft, would else have severed my head from my

body."

"Dear Wolfstein, who are you?--whence came you?--for you were not always

an Alpine bandit?"

"That is true, my adored one; but fate presents an insuperable barrier

to my ever relating the events which occurred previously to my connexion

with the banditti. Dearest Megalena, if you love me, never question me

concerning my past life, but rest satisfied with the conviction, that my

future existence shall be devoted to you, and to you alone." Megalena

felt surprise; but although eagerly desiring to unravel the mystery in

which Wolfstein shrouded himself, desisted from inquiry.

Ginotti's mysterious visit had made too serious an impression on the

mind of Wolfstein to be lightly erased. In vain he essayed to appear

easy and unembarrassed while he conversed with Megalena. He attempted to

drown thought in wine--but in vain:--Ginotti's strange injunction

pressed, like a load of ice, upon his breast. At last, the hour being

late, they both retired to their respective rooms.

Early on the following morning, Wolfstein arose, to arrange the

necessary preparations for their journey to Genoa; whither he had sent a

servant whom he hired at Breno, to prepare accommodations for their

arrival.--Needless were it minutely to describe each trivial event which

occurred during their journey to Genoa.

On the morning of the fourth day, they found themselves within a short

distance of the city. They determined on the plan which they should

adopt, and, in a short space of time, arriving at Genoa, took up their

residence in a mansion on the outermost extremity of the city.

CHAPTER. III.

Whence, and what art thou, execrable shape.

That dar'st, though grim and terrible, advance

Thy miscreated front athwart my way?

Paradise Lost.

Time passed; and, settled in their new habitation, Megalena and

Wolfstein appeared to defy the arrows of vengeful destiny.

Wolfstein resolved to allow some time to elapse before he spoke of the

subject nearest to his heart, of herself, to Megalena. One evening,

however, overcome by the passion which, by mutual indulgence, had become

resistless, he cast himself at her feet, and, avowing most unbounded

love, demanded the promised return. A slight spark of virtue yet burned

in the bosom of the wretched girl; she essayed to fly from temptation;

but Wolfstein, seizing her hand, said, "And is my adored Megalena a

victim then to prejudice? Does she believe, that the Being who created

us gave us passions which never were to be satiated? Does she suppose

that Nature created us to become the tormentors of each other?"

"Ah! Wolfstein," Megalena said tenderly, "rise!--You know too well the

chain which unites me to you is indissoluble; you know that I must be

thine; where, therefore, is there an appeal?"

"To thine own heart, Megalena; for, if my image implanted there is not

sufficiently eloquent to confirm your hesitating soul, I would wish not

for a casket that contains a jewel unworthy of my possession."

Megalena involuntarily started at the strength of his expression; she

felt how completely she was his, and turned her eyes upon his

countenance, to read in it the meaning of his words.--His eyes gleamed

with excessive and confiding love.

"Yes." exclaimed Megalena, "yes, prejudice avaunt! once more reason

takes her seat, and convinces me, that to be Wolfstein's is not

criminal. O Wolfstein! if for a moment Megalena has yielded to the

imbecility of nature, believe that she yet knows how to recover herself,

to reappear in her proper character. Ere I knew you, a void in my heart,

and a tasteless carelessness of those objects which now interest me,

confessed your unseen empire; my heart longed for something which now it

has attained. I scruple not, Wolfstein, to aver that it is you:--Be

mine, then, and let our affection end not but with our existence!"

"Never, never shall it end!" enthusiastically exclaimed Wolfstein.

"Never!--What can break the bond joined by congeniality of sentiment,

cemented by an union of soul which must endure till the intellectual

particles which compose it become annihilated? Oh! never shall it end;

for when, convulsed by nature's latest ruin, sinks the fabric of this

perishable globe; when the earth is dissolved away, and the face of

heaven is rolled from before our eyes like a scroll; then will we seek

each other, and, in eternal, indivisible, although immaterial union,

shall we exist to all eternity."

Yet the love, with which Wolfstein regarded Megalena, notwithstanding

the strength of his expressions, though fervent and excessive, at first,

was not of that nature which was likely to remain throughout existence;

it was like the blaze of the meteor at midnight, which glares amid the

darkness for awhile, and then expires; yet did he love her now; at least

if heated admiration of her person and accomplishments, independently of

mind, be love.

Blessed in mutual affection, if so it may be called, the time passed

swift to Wolfstein and Megalena. No incident worthy of narration

occurred to disturb the uninterrupted tenour of their existence. Tired,

at last, even with delight, which had become monotonous from long

continuance, they began to frequent the public places. It was one

evening, nearly a month subsequent to their first residence at Genoa,

that they went to a party at the Duca di Thice. It was there that he

beheld the gaze of one of the crowd fixed upon him. Indefinable to

himself were the emotions which shook him; in vain he turned to every

part of the saloon to evade the scrutiny of the stranger's gaze; he was

not able to give formation, in his own mind, to the ideas which struck

him; they were acknowledged, however, in his heart, by sensations awful,

and not to be described. He knew that he had before seen the features of

the stranger; but he had forgotten Ginotti; for it was Ginotti--from

whose scrutinizing glance, Wolfstein turned appalled;--it was Ginotti,

of whose strangely and fearfully gleaming eyeball Wolfstein endeavoured

to evade the fascination in vain. His eyes, resistlessly attracted to

the sphere of chill horror that played around Ginotti's glance, in vain

were fixed on vacuity; in vain attempted to notice other objects.

Complaining to Megalena of sudden and violent indisposition, Wolfstein

with her retired, and they quickly reached the steps of their mansion.

Arrived there, Megalena tenderly inquired the cause of Wolfstein's

illness, but his vague answers, and unconnected exclamations, soon led

her to suppose it was not corporeal. She entreated him to acquaint her

with the reason of his indisposition; Wolfstein, however, wishing to

conceal from Megalena the true cause of his emotions, evasively told her

that he had felt excessively faint from the heat of the assembly; she

well knew, by his manner, that he had not told her truth, but affected

to be satisfied, resolving, at some future period, to develope the

mystery with which he evidently was environed. Retired to rest,

Wolfstein's mind, torn by contending paroxysms of passion, admitted not

of sleep; he ruminated on the mysterious reappearance of Ginotti; and

the more he reflected, the more did the result of his reflections lead

him astray. The strange gaze of Ginotti, and the consciousness that he

was completely in the power of so indefinable a being; the consciousness

that, wheresoever he might go, Ginotti would still follow him, pressed

upon Wolfstein's heart. Ignorant of what connexion they could have with

this mysterious observer of his actions, his crimes recurred in hideous

and disgustful array to the bewildered mind of Wolfstein; he reflected,

that, although now exulting in youthful health and vigour, the time

would come, the dreadful day of retribution, when endless damnation

would yawn beneath his feet, and he would shrink from eternal punishment

before the tribunal of that God whom he had insulted. To evade death,

unconscious why, became an idea on which he dwelt with earnestness; he

thought on it for a time, and being mournfully convinced of its

impossibility, strove to change the tenour of his reflections.

While these thoughts dwelt in his mind, sleep crept imperceptibly over

his senses; yet, in his visions, was Ginotti present. He dreamed that he

stood on the brink of a frightful precipice, at whose base, with

deafening and terrific roar, the waves of the ocean dashed; that, above

his head, the blue glare of the lightning dispelled the obscurity of

midnight, and the loud crashing of the thunder was rolled franticly from

rock to rock; that, along the cliff on which he stood, a figure, more

frightful than the imagination of man is capable of portraying, advanced

towards him, and was about to precipitate him headlong from the summit

of the rock whereon he stood, when Ginotti advanced, and rescued him

from the grasp of the monster; that no sooner had he done this, than the

figure dashed Ginotti from the precipice--his last groans were borne on

the blast which swept the bosom of the ocean. Confused visions then

obliterated the impressions of the former, and he rose in the morning

restless and unrefreshed.

A weight which his utmost efforts could not remove, pressed upon the

bosom of Wolfstein; his mind, superior and towering as it was, found all

its energies inefficient to conquer it. As a last resource, therefore,

this wretched victim of vice and folly sought the gaming-table; a scene

which alone could raise the spirits of one who required something

important, even in his pastimes, to interest him. He staked large sums;

and, although he concealed his haunts from Megalena, she soon discovered

them. For a time, fortune smiled; till one evening he entered his

mansion, desperate from ill luck, and, accusing his own hapless destiny,

could no longer conceal the truth from Megalena. She reproved him

mildly, and her tenderness had such an effect on Wolfstein that he burst

into tears, and promised her that never again would he yield to the

vicious influence of folly.

The rapid days rolled on, and each one brought the conviction to

Wolfstein more strongly, that Megalena was not the celestial model of

perfection which his warm imagination had portrayed; he began to find in

her, not the exhaustless mine of interesting converse which he had once

supposed. Possession, which, when unassisted by real, intellectual love,

clogs man, increases the ardent, uncontrollable passions of woman even

to madness. Megalena yet adored Wolfstein with most fervent

love:--although yet greatly attached to Megalena, although he would have

been uneasy were she another's, Wolfstein no longer regarded her with

that idolatrous affection which had filled his bosom towards her.

Feelings of this nature, naturally drove Wolfstein occasionally from

home to seek for employment--and what employment, save gaming, could

Genoa afford to Wolfstein?--In what other occupation was it possible

that he could engage? It was done: he broke his promise to Megalena, and

became even a more devoted votary to gambling than before.

How powerful are the attractions of delusive vice! Wolfstein soon staked

large sums--larger even than ever. With what anxiety did he watch the

dice!--How were his eyeballs strained with mingled anticipation of

wealth and poverty! Now fortune smiled; yet he concealed even his good

luck from Megalena. At length the tide changed again: he lost immense

sums; and, desperate from a series of ill success, cursed his hapless

destiny, and with wildest emotions rushed into the street. Again he

solemnly swore to Megalena, that never more would he risk their mutual

happiness by his folly.

Still, hurried away by the impulse of a burning desire of interesting

his deadened feelings, did Wolfstein, false to his promise, seek the

gaming-table; he had staked an enormous amount, and the fatal throw was

at this instant about to decide the fate of the unhappy Wolfstein.

A pause, as if some dreadful event were about to occur, ensued; each

gazed upon the countenance of Wolfstein, which, desperate from danger,

retained, however, an expressive firmness.

A stranger stood before Wolfstein on the opposite side of the table. He

appeared to have no interest in what was going forward, but, with

immoved gaze, fixed his eyes upon his countenance.

Wolfstein felt an instinctive shuddering thrill through his frame, when,

oh horrible confirmation of his wildest apprehensions! it

was--Ginotti!--the terrible, the mysterious Ginotti, whose dire

scrutiny, resting upon Wolfstein, chilled his soul with excessive

affright.

A sensation of extreme and conflicting emotions shook the inmost

recesses of Wolfstein's heart; for an instant his brain swam around in

wildest commotion, yet he steeled his resolution, even to the horrors of

hell and destruction; he gazed on the mysterious scrutineer who stood

before him, and, regardless of the sum he had staked, and which before

had engaged his whole attention, and excited his liveliest interest,

dashed the box convulsively upon the table, and followed Ginotti, who

was about to quit the apartment, resolving to clear up a fatality which

hung around him, and appeared to blast his prospects; for of the

misfortunes which had succeeded his association with the bandits, he had

not the slightest doubt, in his own mind, that Ginotti was the cause.

With reflections a scene of the wildest anarchy, Wolfstein resolved to

unravel the mystery in which he saw Ginotti was shrouded; and resolved,

therefore, to devote that night towards finding out his abode. With

feelings such as these, he rushed into the street, and followed the

gigantic form of Ginotti, who stalked onwards majestically, as if

conscious of safety, and wholly ignorant of the eager scrutiny with

which Wolfstein watched his every movement.

It was midnight--yet they continued to advance; a feeling of desperation

urged Wolfstein onwards; he resolved to follow Ginotti, even to the

extremity of the universe. They passed through many bye and narrow

streets; the darkness was complete; but the rays of the lamps, as they

fell upon the lofty form of Ginotti, guided the footsteps of Wolfstein.

They had reached the end of the Strada Nuova; the lengthened sound of

Ginotti's footsteps was all that struck upon Wolfstein's ear. On a

sudden, Ginotti's figure disappeared from Wolfstein's gaze; in vain he

looked around him, in vain he searched every recess, wherein he might

have secreted himself--Ginotti was gone!

To describe the surprise mingled with awe, which possessed Wolfstein's

bosom, is impossible. In vain he searched every part. He proceeded to

the bridge; a party of fishermen were waiting there; he inquired of

them, had they seen a man of superior stature pass? they appeared

surprised at his question, and unanimously answered in the negative.

While varying emotions tumultuously contended within his bosom,

Wolfstein, ever the victim of extraordinary events, paused awhile,

revolving the mystery both of Ginotti's appearance and disappearance.

That business of an important nature led him to Genoa, he doubted not;

his indifference at the gaming-table, his particular regard of

Wolfstein, left, in the mind of the latter, no doubt, but that he took a

terrible and mysterious interest in whatever related to him.

All now was silent. The inhabitants of Genoa lay wrapped in sleep, and,

save the occasional conversation of the fishermen who had just returned,

no sound broke on the uninterrupted stillness, and thick clouds obscured

the starbeams of heaven.

Again Wolfstein searched that part of the city which lay near Strada

Nuova; but no one had seen Ginotti; although all wondered at the wild

expressions and disordered mien of Wolfstein. The bell tolled the hour

of three ere Wolfstein relinquished his pursuit; finding, however,

further inquiry fruitless, he engaged a chair to take him to his

habitation, where he doubted not that Megalena anxiously awaited his

return.

Proceeding along the streets, the obscurity of the night was not so

great but that he observed the figure of one of the chairmen to be above

that of common men, and that he had drawn his hat forwards to conceal

his countenance. His appearance, however, excited no remark; for

Wolfstein was too much absorbed in the idea which related individually

to himself, to notice what, perhaps, at another time, might have excited

wonder. The wind sighed moaningly along the stilly colonnades, and the

grey light of morning began to appear above the eastern eminences.

They entered the street which soon led to the abode of Wolfstein, who

fixed his eyes upon the chairman. His gigantic proportions struck him

with involuntary awe: such is the unaccountable connexion of idea in the

mind of man. He shuddered. Such a man, thought he, is Ginotti: such a

man is he who watches my every action, whose power I feel within myself

is resistless, and not to be evaded. He sighed deeply when he reflected

on the terrible connexion, dreadful although mysterious, which subsisted

between himself and Ginotti. His soul sank within him at the idea of his

own littleness, when a fellowmortal might be able to gain so strong,

though sightless, an empire over him. He felt that he was no longer

independent. Whilst these thoughts agitated his mind, the chair had

stopped at his habitation. He turned round to discharge the chairman's

fare, when, casting his eyes on his countenance, which hitherto had

remained concealed, oh horrible and chilling conviction! he recognised

in his dark features those of the terrific Ginotti. As if hell had

yawned at the feet of the hapless Wolfstein, as if some spectre of the

night had blasted his straining eyeball, so did he stand transfixed. His

soul shrank with mingled awe and abhorrence from a being who, even to

himself, was confessedly superior to the proud and haughty Wolfstein.

Ere well he could calm his faculties, agitated by so unexpected an

interview, Ginotti said.

"Wolfstein! long have I known you; long have I marked you as the only

man who now exists, worthy, and appreciating the value of what I have in

store for you. Inscrutable are my intentions; seek not, therefore, to

develope them: time will do it in a far more complete manner. You shall

not now know the motive for my, to you, unaccountable actions: strive

not, therefore, to unravel them. You may frequently see me: never

attempt to speak or follow; for, if you do--" Here the eyes of Ginotti

flashed with coruscations of inexpressible fire, and his every feature

became animated by the tortures which he was about to describe; but he

suddenly checked himself, and only added, "Attend to these my

directions, but try, if possible, to forget me. I am not what I seem.

The time may come, will most probably arrive, when I shall appear in my

real character to you. You, Wolfstein, have I singled out from the whole

world to make the depositary--" He ceased, and abruptly quitted the

spot.

CHAPTER. IV.

On Wolfstein's return to his habitation, he found Megalena in anxious

expectation of his arrival. She feared that some misfortune had befallen

him. Wolfstein related to her the events of the preceding night; they

appeared to her mysterious and inexplicable; nor could she offer any

consolation to the wretched Wolfstein.

The occurrences of the preceding evening left a load upon his breast,

which all the gaieties of Genoa were insufficient to dispel: eagerly he

longed for the visit of Ginotti. Slow dragged the hours: each day did he

expect it, and each succeeding day brought but disappointment to his

expectations.

Megalena too, the beautiful, the adored Megalena, was no longer what

formerly she was, the innocent girl hanging on his support, and

depending wholly upon him for defence and protection; no longer, with

mild and love-beaming eyes, she regarded the haughty Wolfstein as a

superior being, whose look or slightest word was sufficient to decide

her on any disputed point. No; dissipated pleasures had changed the

former mild and innocent Megalena. Far, far different was she than when

she threw herself into his arms on their escape from the cavern, and,

with a blush, smiled upon the first declaration of Wolfstein's

affection.

Now immersed in a succession of gay pleasures, Megalena was no longer

the gentle interesting she, whose soul of sensibility would tremble if a

worm beneath her feet expired; whose heart would sink within her at the

tale of others' woe. She had become a fashionable belle, and forgot, in

her new character, the fascinations of her old one. Still, however, was

she ardently, solely, and resistlessly attached to Wolfstein: his image

was implanted in her soul, never to be effaced by casualty, never erased

by time. No coolness apparently took place between them; but, although

unperceived and unacknowledged by each, an indifference evidently did

exist between them. Among the various families whom their residence in

Genoa had rendered familiar to Wolfstein and Megalena, none were more so

than that of il Conte della Anzasca; it consisted of himself, la

Contessa, and a daughter of exquisite loveliness, named Olympia.

This girl, mistress of every fascinating accomplishment, uniting in

herself to great brilliancy and playfulness of wit, a person alluring

beyond description, was in her eighteenth year. From habitual

indulgence, her passions, naturally violent and excessive, had become

irresistible; and when once she had fixed a determination in her mind,

that determination must either be effected, or she must cease to exist.

Such, then, was the beautiful Olympia, and as such she conceived a

violent and unconquerable passion for Wolfstein. His towering and

majestic form, his expressive and regular features, beaming with

somewhat of softness; yet pregnant with a look as if woe had beat to the

earth a mind whose native and unconfined energies aspired to

heaven--all, all told her, that, without him, she must either cease to

be, or drag on a life of endless and irremediable woe. Nourished by

restless imagination, her passion soon attained a most unbridled height:

instead of conquering a feeling which honour, generosity, virtue, all

forbade ever to be gratified, she gloried within herself at having found

one on whom she might with justice fix her burning attachment; for

although the object of them had never before been present to her mind,

the desires for that object, although unseen, had taken root long, long

ago. A false system of education, and a wrong expansion of ideas, as

they became formed, had been put in practice with respect to her

youthful mind; and indulgence strengthened the passions which it behoved

restraint to keep within proper bounds, and which might have unfolded

themselves as coadjutors of virtue, and not as promoters of vicious and

illicit love. Fiercer, nevertheless, in proportion as greater obstacles

appeared in the prosecution of her resolve, flamed the passion of the

devoted Olympia. Her brain was whirled round in the fiercest convulsions

of expectant happiness; the anticipation of gratified voluptuousness

swelled her bosom even to bursting, yet did she rein-in the boiling

emotions of her soul, and resolved to be sufficiently cool, more

certainly to accomplish her purpose.

It was one night when Wolfstein's mansion was the scene of gaiety, that

this idea first suggested itself to the mind of Olympia, and unfolded

itself to her, as it really was love for Wolfstein. In vain the

suggestions of generosity, the voice of conscience, which told her how

doubly wicked would be the attempt of alienating from her the lover of

her friend Megalena, in audible, though noiseless, accents spoke; in

vain the native modesty of her sex represented in its real and hideous

colours what she was about to do: still Olympia was resolved.

That night, in the solitude of her own chamber, in the palazzo of her

father, she retraced in her mind the various events which had led to her

present uncontrollable passion, which had employed her whole thoughts,

and rendered her, as it were, dead to every other outward existence. The

wild transports of maddening desire raved terrific within her breast:

she endeavoured to smother the ideas which presented themselves; but the

more she strove to erase them from her mind, the more vividly were they

represented in her heated and enthusiastic imagination. "And will he not

return my love?" she exclaimed: "will he not?--ah! a bravo's dagger

shall pierce his heart, and thus will I reward him for his contempt of

Olympia della Anzasca. But no! it is impossible. I will cast myself at

his feet; I will avow to him the passion which consumes me,--will swear

to be ever, ever his! Can he then cast me from him? Can he despise a

woman whose only fault is love, nay, idolatry, adoration for him?"

She paused.--The tumultuous passions of her soul were now too fierce for

utterance--too fierce for concealment or restraint. The hour was late;

the moon poured its mildlylustrous beams upon the lengthened colonnades

of Genoa, when Olympia, overcome by emotions such as these, quitted her

father's palazzo, and hastened, with rapid and unequal footsteps,

towards the mansion of Wolfstein. The streets were by no means crowded;

but those who yet lingered in them gazed with slight surprise on the

figure of Olympia, which, light and symmetrical as a celestial sylphid,

passed swiftly onwards.

She soon arrived at the habitation of Wolfstein, and sent the domestic

to announce that one wished to speak with him, whose business was

pressing and secret. She was conducted into an apartment, and there

awaited the arrival of Wolfstein. A confused expression of awe played

upon his features as he entered; but it suddenly gave place to that of

surprise. He started upon perceiving Olympia, and said.

"To what, Lady Olympia, do I owe the unforeseen pleasure of your visit?

What so mysterious business have you with me?" continued he playfully.

"But come, we had just sat down to supper; Megalena is within."--"Oh! if

you wish to see me expire in horrible torments at your feet, inhuman

Wolfstein, call for Megalena! and then will your purpose be

accomplished."--"Dearest Lady Olympia, compose yourself, I beseech you,"

said Wolfstein: "what, what agitates you?"--"Oh! pardon, pardon me," she

exclaimed, with maniac wildness: "pardon a wretched female who knows not

what she does! Oh! resistlessly am I impelled to this avowal;

resistlessly am I impelled to declare to you, that I love you! adore you

to distraction!--Will you return my affection? But, ah! I rave!

Megalena, the beloved Megalena, claims you as her own; and the wretched

Olympia must moan the blighted prospects which were about to open fair

before her eyes."

"For Heaven's sake, dear lady, compose yourself; recollect who you are;

recollect the loftiness of birth and loveliness of form which are so

eminently yours. This, this is far beneath Olympia."

"Oh!" she exclaimed, franticly casting herself at his feet, and bursting

into a passion of tears, "what are birth, fame, fortune, and all the

advantages which are casually given to me! I swear to thee, Wolfstein,

that I would sacrifice not only these, but even all my hopes of future

salvation, even the forgiveness of my Creator, were it required from me.

O Wolfstein, kind, pitying Wolfstein, look down with an eye of

indulgence on a female whose only crime is resistless, unquenchable

adoration of you."

She panted for breath, her pulses beat with violence, her eyes swam,

and, overcome by the conflicting passions of her soul, the frame of

Olympia fell, sickening with faintness, on the ground. Wolfstein raised

her, and tenderly essayed to recall the senses of the hapless girl.

Recovering, and perceiving her situation, Olympia started, seemingly

horrified, from the arms of Wolfstein. The energies of her high mind

instantly resumed their functions, and she exclaimed, "Then, base and

ungrateful Wolfstein, you refuse to unite your fate with mine? My love

is ardent and excessive, but the revenge which may follow the despiser

of it is far more impetuous; reflect well then ere you drive Olympia

della Anzasca to despair."--"No reflection, in the present instance, is

needed, Lady," replied Wolfstein, coolly, yet determinedly. "What man of

honour needs a moment's rumination to discover what nature has so

inerasibly implanted in his bosom--the sense of right and wrong? I am

connected with a female whom I love, who confides in me; in what manner

should I merit her confidence, if I join myself to another? Nor can the

loveliness, the exquisite, the unequalled loveliness of the beautiful

Olympia della Anzasca compensate me for breaking an oath sworn to

another."

He paused.--Olympia spake not, but appeared to be awaiting the dreadful

fiat of her destiny.

"Olympia," Wolfstein continued, "pardon me! Were I not irrevocably

Megalena's, I must be thine: I esteem you, I admire you, but my love is

another's."

The passion which before had choked Olympia's utterance, appeared to

give way to the impetuousness of her emotions.

"Then," she said, as a solemnity of despair toned her voice to firmness,

"then you are irrevocably another's?"

"I am compelled to be explicit; I am compelled to say, I am another's

for ever!" fervently returned Wolfstein.

Again fainting from the excess of painful feeling which vibrated through

her frame, Olympia fell at Wolfstein's feet: again he raised her, and,

in anxious solicitude, watched her varying countenance. At the critical

instant when Olympia had just recovered from the faintness which had

oppressed her, the door burst open, and disclosed to the view of the

passion-grieving Olympia, the detested form of Megalena. A silence,

resembling that when a solemn pause in the midnight-tempest announces

that the elements only hesitate to collect more terrific force for the

ensuing explosion, took place, while Megalena surveyed Olympia and

Wolfstein. Still she spoke not; yet the silence, even more terrible than

the commotion which followed, continued to prevail. Olympia dashed by

Megalena, and faintly articulating "Vengeance!" rushed into the street,

and bent her rapid flight to the Palazzo di Anzasca.

"Wolfstein," said Megalena, her voice quivering with excessive emotion,

"Wolfstein, how have I deserved this? How have I deserved a dereliction

so barbarous and so unprovoked? But no!" she added in a firmer tone;

"no! I will leave you! I will show that I can bear the tortures of

disappointed love, better than you can evade the scrunity of one who did

adore thee."

In vain Wolfstein put in practice every soothing art of tranquillize the

agitation of Megalena. Her frame trembled with violent shuddering; yet

her soul, as it were, superior to the form which enshrined it, loftily

towered, and retained its firmness amidst the frightful chaos which

battled within.

"Now," said she to Wolfstein, "I will leave you!"

"O God! Megalena, dearest, adored Megalena!" exclaimed Wolfstein,

passionately, "stop--I love you, must ever love you: deign, at least, to

hear me."--"What good would accrue from that?" gloomily inquired

Megalena.

Wolfstein rushed towards her; he threw himself at her feet, and

exclaimed, "If ever, for one instant, my soul was alienated from

thee--if ever it swerved from the affection which I have sworn to

thee--may the red right hand of God instantaneously dash me beneath the

lowest abyss of hell! O Megalena! is it as a victim of groundless

jealousy that I have immolated myself at the altar of thy perfections?

Have I only raised myself to this summit of happiness to feel more

deeply the fall of which thou art the cause? O Megalena! if yet one

spark of thy former love lingers in thy breast, oh! believe one who

swears that he must be thine even till the particles which compose the

soul devoted to thee, become annihilated."--He paused.

Megalena heard his wildly enthusiastic expressions in sullen silence.

She looked upon him with a stern and severe gaze:--he yet lay at her

feet, and, hiding his face upon the earth, groaned deeply. "What proof,"

exclaimed Magalena, impatiently, "what proof will Wolfstein, the

deceiver, bring to satisfy me that his love is still mine?"

"Seek for proof in my heart," returned Wolfstein; "that heart which yet

is bleeding from the thorns which thou, cruel girl, hast implanted in

it: seek it in my every action, and then will the convinced Megalena

know that Wolfstein is hers irrevocably--body and soul, for ever!"

"Yet, I believe thee not!" said Mega lena; "for the haughty Olympia

della Anzasca would scarcely recline in the arms of a man who was not

entirely devoted to her."

Yet were the charms of Megalena unfaded; yet their empire over Wolfstein

excessive and complete.

"Still I believe thee not," continued she, as a smile of expectant

malice sat upon her cheek. "I require some proof which will assuredly

convince me, that I am yet beloved: give me proof, and Megalena will

again be Wolfstein's."--"Oh!" said Wolfstein, mournfully, "what farther

proof can I give, but my oath, that never in soul or body have I broken

the allegiance that I formerly swore to thee?"

"The death of Olympia!" gloomily returned Megalena.

"What mean you?" said Wolfstein, starting.

"I mean," continued Megalena, collectedly, as if what she was about to

utter had been the result of serious cogitation; "I mean that, if ever

you wish again to possess my affections, ere to-morrow morning, Olympia

must expire!"

"Murder the innocent Olympia?"

"Yes!"

A pause ensued; during which the mind of Wolfstein, torn by ten thousand

warring emotions, knew not on what to resolve. He gazed upon Megalena;

her symmetrical form shone with tenfold loveliness to his enraptured

imagination: again he resolved to behold those eyes beam with affection

for him, which were now gloomily fixed upon the ground. "Will nothing

else convince Megalena that Wolfstein is eternally hers?"

"Nothing."

"'T is done then," exclaimed Wolfstein, "'t is done. Yet," he muttered,

"I may suffer for this premeditated act tortures now inconceivable; I

may writhe, convulsed, in immaterial agony for ever and for ever--ah! I

cannot. No!" he continued; "Megalena, I am again yours; I will immolate

the victim which thou requirest as a sacrifice to our love. Give me a

dagger, which may sweep off from the face of the earth, one who is

hateful to thee! Adored creature, give me the dagger, and I will restore

it to thee dripping with Olympia's hated blood; it shall have first been

buried in her heart."

"Then, then again art thou mine own! again art thou the idolized

Wolfstein, whom I was wont to love!" said Megalena, enfolding him in her

embrace. Perceiving her returning softness, Wolfstein essayed to induce

her to spare him the frightful proof of the ardour of his attachment;

but she started from his arms as he spoke, and exclaimed.

"Ah! base deceiver, do you hesitate?"

"Oh, no! I do not hesitate, dearest Megalena;--give me a dagger, and I

go."

"Here, follow me then," returned Megalena. He followed her to the

supper-room.

"It is useless to go yet, it has but yet struck one; the inhabitants of

il Palazzo della Anzasca will, about two, be nearly all retired to rest;

till then, let us converse on what we were about to do." So far did

Megalena's seductive blandishment, her artful selection of converse, win

upon Wolfstein, that, when the destined hour approached, his sanguinary

soul thirsted for the blood of the comparatively innocent Olympia.

"Well!" he cried, swallowing down an overflowing goblet of wine, "now

the time is come; now suffer me to go, and tear the soul of Olympia from

her hated body." His fury amounted almost to delirium, as, masked, and

having a dagger, which Megalena had given him, concealed beneath his

garments, he proceeded rapidly along the streets towards the Palazzo

della Anzasca. So eager was he to shed the lifeblood of Olympia, that he

flew, rather than ran, along the silent streets of Genoa. The colonnades

of the lofty Palazzo della Anzasca resounded to his rapid footsteps; he

stopped at its lofty portal:--it was open; unperceived he entered, and,

hiding himself behind a column, according to the directions of Megalena,

waited there. Soon advancing through the hall, he saw the sylphlike

figure of the lovely Olympia; with silent tread he followed it,

experiencing not the slightest sentiment of remorse within his bosom for

the deed which he was about to perpetrate. He followed her to her

apartment, and secreting himself until Olympia might have sunk into

sleep, with sanguinary and remorseless patience, when her loud breathing

convinced him that her slumber was profound, he arose from his place of

concealment, and advanced to the bed, wherein Olympia lay. Her light

tresses, disengaged from the band which had confined them, floated

around a countenance, superhumanly beautiful, and whose expression, even

in slumber, appeared to be tinted by Wolfstein's refusal; convulsive

sighs heaved her fair bosom, and tears, starting from under her eyelids,

fell profusely down her damask cheek. Wolfstein gazed upon her in

silence. "Cruel, inhuman Megalena!" he mentally soliloquized; "could

nothing but immolation of this innocence appease thee?" Again he stifled

the stings of rebelling conscience; again the unquenchable and

resistless ardour of his love for Megalena stimulated him to the wildest

pitch of fury: he raised high the dagger, and, drawing aside the

covering which veiled her alabaster bosom, paused an instant, to decide

in which place it were most instantaneously destructive to strike. Again

a mournful smile irradiated her lovely features; it played with a sweet

softness on her countenance: it seemed as though she smiled in defiance

of the arrows of destiny, but that her soul, nevertheless, lingered with

the wretch who sought her life. Maddened by the sight of so much

beauteous innocence, even the desperate Wolfstein, forgetful of the

danger which he must thereby incur, hurled the dagger from him. The

sound awakened Olympia: she started up in surprise; but her alarm was

changed into ecstacy when she beheld the idolized possessor of her soul

standing before her.

"I was dreaming of you," said Olympia, scarcely knowing whether this

were not a dream; but, impulsively following the first emotions of her

soul, "I dreamed that you were about to murder me. It is not so,

Wolfstein, no! you would not murder one who adores you?"

"Murder Olympia! O God! no!--I take Heaven to witness, that I never now

could do it!"

"Nor could you ever, I hope, dear Wolfstein; but drive away thoughts

like these, and remember that Olympia lives but for thee; and the moment

which takes from her your affections, seals the death-like fiat of her

destiny." These asseverations, strengthened by the most solemn and

deadly vows that he would return to Megalena the destroyer of Olympia,

flashed across Wolfstein's mind. Perpetrate the deed, now, he could not;

his soul became a scene of most terrific agony. "Wilt thou be mine?"

exclaimed the enraptured Olympia, as a ray of hope arose in her mind.

"Never! never can I," groaned the agitated Wolfstein; "I am irrevocably,

indissolubly another's." Maddened by this death-blow to all expectations

of happiness, which the deluded Olympia had so fondly anticipated, she

leaped wildly from the bed. A light and flowing night-dress alone veiled

her form: her alabaster bosom was shaded by the light ringlets of her

hair which rested unconfined upon it. She threw herself at the feet of

Wolfstein. On a sudden, as if struck by some thought, she started

convulsively from the earth: for an instant she paused.

The rays of a lamp, which stood in a recess of the apartment, fell full

upon the dagger of Wolfstein. Eagerly Olympia sprung towards it; and,

ere Wolfstein was aware of her dreadful intent, plunged it into her

bosom. Weltering in purple gore she fell: no groan, no sigh escaped her

lips. A smile, which the pangs of dissolution could not dispel, played

on her convulsed countenance; it irradiated her features with

celestially awful, although terrific expression. "Ineffectually have I

endeavoured to conquer the ardent feelings of my soul; now I overcome

them," were her last words. She utterred them in a tone of firmness,

and, falling back, expired in torments, which her fine, her expressive

features declared that she gloried in.

All was silent in the chamber of death: the stillness was frightful. The

agonies which Wolfstein endured were past description: for a time he

neither moved nor spoke. The pale glare of the lamp fell upon the

features of Olympia, from which the tinge of life had fled for ever.

Suddenly, and in despite of himself, were the affections of Wolfstein

turned from Megalena: he could not but now regard her as a fiend, who

had been the cause of Olympia's destruction; who had urged him to a deed

from which his nature now shrunk as from annihilation. A wild paroxysm

of awful alarm seized upon him: he knelt by the side of Olympia's

corpse; he kissed it, bathed it with his tears, and imprecated a

thousand curses on himself. Her features, although convulsed by the

agonies of violent dissolution, retained an unchanging image of

loveliness, which never might fade away. Her beautiful bosom, in which

her hand yet held the fatal dagger, was discoloured with blood, and

those affection-beaming orbs were now closed in the never-ending slumber

of the grave. Unable longer to endure a sight of so much horror,

Wolfstein started up, and, forgetful of every thing save the frightful

deed which he had witnessed, rushed from the Palazzo della Anzasca, and

mechanically retraced his way towards his own habitation.

Not once that night had Megalena closed her eyes. Her infuriate passions

had wound her soul up to a deadly calmness of expectation. She had not,

during the whole of the night, retired to rest, but sat, with sanguinary

patience, cursing the lagging hours that they passed so slowly, and

waiting to hear tidings of death. Morning had begun to streak the

eastern sky with gray, when Wolfstein hurried into the supper-room,

where Megalena still sat, wildly exclaiming "The deed is done!" Megalena

entreated him to be calm, and, more collectedly, to communicate the

events which had occurred during the night.

"In the first place," he said in an accent of feigned horror, "the

officers of justice are alarmed!"

Deadly affright chilled the soul of Megalena: she turned pale, and,

gasping for breath, inquired eagerly respecting the success of his

attempt.

"O God!" exclaimed Wolfstein, "that has succeeded but too well! the

hapless Olympia welters in her life-blood!"

"Joy! joy!" franticly exclaimed Megalena, her eagerness for revenge

overcoming, for the moment, every other feeling.

"But, Megalena," continued Wolfstein, "she fell not by my hand: no, she

smiled on me in her sleep, and, when she awoke, finding me deaf to her

solicitations, snatched my dagger, and buried it in her bosom."

"Did you wish to prevent the deed?" inquired Megalena.

"Oh! good God of Heaven! thou knowest my heart: I would sacrifice every

remaining earthly good were Olympia again alive!"

Megalena spoke not, but a smile of exquisitely gratified malice

illumined her features with terrific flame.

"We must instantly quit Genoa," said Wolfstein: "the name on the mask

which I left in the Palazzo della Anzasca, will remove all doubt that I

was the murderer of Olympia. Yet indeed I care not much for death; if

you will it so, Megalena, we will even, as it is, remain in Genoa."

"Oh! no, no!" eagerly cried Megalena: "Wolfstein, I love you beyond

expression, and Genoa is destruction; let us seek, therefore, some

retired spot, where we may for a while at least secrete ourselves. But,

Wolfstein, are you persuaded that I love you? need there more proof be

required than that I wished the death of another for thee? it was on

that account alone that I desired the destruction of Olympia, that thou

mightest be more completely and irresistibly mine."

Wolfstein answered not: the feelings of his soul were far different; the

expression of his countenance plainly evinced them: and Megalena

regretted that her effervescent passions should have led her to so rash

an avowal of her contempt of virtue. They then separated to arrange

their affairs, prior to their departure, which, on account of the

pressing necessity of the case, must take place immediately. They took

with them but two domestics, and, collecting all their stock of money,

they were soon far from pursuit and Genoa.

CHAPTER. VII.

How sweet are the scenes endeared to us by ideas which we have cherished

in the society of one we have loved! How melancholy to wander amongst

them again after an absence, perhaps of years; years which have changed

the tenour of our existence,--have changed even the friend, the dear

friend, for whose sake alone the landscape lives in the memory, for

whose sake tears flow at the each varying feature of the scenery, which

catches the eye of one who has never seen them since he saw them with

the being who was dear to him!

Dark, autumnal, and gloomy was the hour; the winds whistled hollow, and

over the expanse of heaven was spread an unvarying sombreness of vapour:

nothing was heard save the melancholy shriekings of the night-bird,

which, soaring on the evening blast, broke the stillness of the scene,

interrupting the meditations of frenzied enthusiasm; mingled with the

sighing of the wind, which swept in languid and varying cadence amidst

the leafless boughs.

Ah! of whom shall the poor outcast wanderer demand protection? Far, far

has she wandered. The vice and unkindness of the world hath torn her

tender heart. In whose bosom shall she repose the secret of her

sufferings? Who will listen with pity to the narrative of her woe, and

heal the wounds which the selfish unkindness of man hath made, and then

sent her with them, unbound, on the wide and pitiless world? Lives there

one whose confidence the sufferer might seek?

Cold and dreary was the night: November's blast had chilled the air. Is

the blast so pitiless as ingratitude and selfishness? Ah, no! thought

the wanderer; it is unkind indeed, but not so unkind as that. Poor

Eloise de St. Irvyne! many, many are in thy situation; but few have a

heart so full of sensibility and excellence for the demoniac malice of

man to deform, and then glut itself with hellish pleasure in the

conviction of having ravaged the most lovely of the works of their

Creator. She gazed upon the sky: the moon had just risen; its full orb

was occasionally shaded by a passing cloud: it rose from behind the

turrets of le Chateau de St. Irvyne. The poor girl raised her eyes

towards it, streaming with tears: she scarce could recognise the

once-loved building. She thanked God for permitting her again to behold

it; and hastened on with steps tottering from fatigue, yet nerved with

the sanguineness of anticipation.

Yes, St. Irvyne was the same as when she had left it five years ago. The

same ivy mantled the western tower; the same jasmine which bloomed so

luxuriantly when she left it, was still there, though leafless from the

season. Thus was it with poor Eloise: she had left St. Irvyne, blooming,

and caressed by every one; she returned to it pale, downcast, and

friendless. The jasmine encircled the twisted pillars which supported

the portal. Alas! whose assistance had prevented Eloise from sinking to

the earth?--no one's. She knocked at the door--it was opened, and an

instant's space beheld her in the arms of a beloved sister. Needless

were it to describe the mutual pleasure, needless to describe the

delight, of recognition; suffice it to say, that Eloise once more

enjoyed the society of her dearest friend; and, in the happiness of her

society, forgot the horrors which had preceded her return to St. Irvyne.

Now were it well for a while to leave Eloise at St. Irvyne, and retrace

the events which, since five years, had so darkly tinged the fate of the

unsuspecting female, who trusted to the promises of man. It was a

beautiful morning in May, and the loveliness of the season had spread a

deeper shade of gloom over the features of Eloise, for she knew that not

long would her mother live. They journeyed on towards Geneva, whither

the physicians had ordered Madame de St. Irvyne to repair, as the last

resort of a hope that she might, thereby, escape a rapid decline. On

account of the illness of her mother, they proceeded slowly; and ere

long they had entered the region of the Alps, the shades of evening,

which rapidly began to increase, announced approaching night. They had

expected, before this time, to have reached a town; but, either owing to

a miscalculation of their route, or the remissness of the postillion,

they had not yet done so. The majestic moon which hung above their

heads, tinged with silver the fleecy clouds which skirted the far-seen

horizon; and, borne on the soft wing of the evening zephyr, shadowy

lines of vapour, at intervals, crossed her orbit; then vanishing into

the dark blue expansiveness of ether, their fantastic forms, like the

phantoms of midnight, became invisible. Now might we almost suppose,

that the sightless spirits of the departed good, enthroned on the genial

breeze of night, watched over those whom they had loved on earth, and

poured into the bosom, to the dictates of which, in this world, they had

listened with idolatrous attention, that tranquillity and confidence in

the goodness of the Creator, which is necessary for us to experience ere

we go to the next. Such tranquillity felt Madame de St. Irvyne: she

tried to stifle the ideas which arose within her mind; but the more she

strove to repress them, in the more vivid characters were they imprinted

on the imagination.

Now had they gained the summit of the mountain, when, suddenly, a crash

announced that the carriage had given way.

"What is to be done?" inquired Eloise. The postillion appeared to take

no notice of her question. "What is to be done?" again she inquired.

"Why, I scarcely know," answered the postillion; "but 't is impossible

to proceed."

"Is there no house nearer than--"

"Oh yes," replied he; "here is a house quite near, but a little out of

the way; and, perhaps, Ma'am'selle will not--"

"Oh, lead on, lead on to it," quickly rejoined Eloise.

They followed the postillion, and soon arrived at the house. It was

large and plain; and although there were lights in some of the windows,

it bore an indefinable appearance of desolation.

In a large hall sat three or four men, whose marked countenances almost

announced their profession to be bandits. One of superior and commanding

figure whispering to the rest, and himself advancing with the utmost and

most unexpected politeness, accosted the travellers. For the ideas with

which the countenance of this man inspired Eloise she in vain

endeavoured to account. It appeared to her that she had seen him before;

that the deep tone of his voice was known to her; and that eye,

scintillating with a coruscation of mingled sternness and surprise,

found some counterpart in herself. Of gigantic stature, yet formed in

the mould of exactest symmetry, was the figure of the stranger who sate

before Eloise. His countenance of excessive beauty even, but dark,

emanated with an expression of superhuman loveliness; not that grace

which may freely be admired, but acknowledged in the inmost soul by

sensations mysterious, and before unexperienced. He tenderly inquired,

whether the night air had injured the ladies, and pressed them to

partake of a repast which the other three men had prepared; he appeared

to unbend a severity, which evidently was habitual, and by extreme

brilliancy and playfulness of wit, joined to talents for conversation,

possessed by few, made Madame de St. Irvyne forget that she was dying;

and her daughter, as in rapturous attention she listened to each accent

of the stranger, remembered no more that she was about to lose her

mother.

In the stranger's society, they almost forgot the lapse of time: a pause

in the conversation at last occurred.

"Can Ma'am'selle sing?" inquired the stranger.

"I can," replied Eloise; "and with pleasure."

She ceased;--the thrilling accents of her interestingly sweet voice died

away in the vacancy of stillness;--yet listened the charmed auditors;

their imaginations prolonged the tender strain; the uncouth attendants

of the stranger were chained in silence, and the enthusiastic gaze of

their host was fixed upon the timid countenance of Eloise with wild and

mysterious expression. It seemed to say to Eloise, "We meet

again;"--and, as the idea struck her imagination, convulsed by a feeling

of indescribable and excessive awe, she started.

At last, the hour being late, they all retired. Eloise sought the couch

prepared for her; her mind, perturbed by emotions, the cause of which

she in vain essayed to develope, could bring its intellectual energies

to act on no one particular point; her imagination was fertile, and,

under its fantastic guidance, she felt her judgment and reason

irresistibly fettered. The image of the fascinating, yet awful stranger,

dwelt on her mind. She sank on her knees to return thanks to her Creator

for his mercies; yet even then, faithless to the task on which it was

employed, her mind returned to the stranger. She felt no particular

affection or esteem for him;--no, she rather feared him; and, when she

endeavoured to connect the chain of ideas which pressed upon her mind,

tears started into her eyes, and she looked around the apartment with

the timid terror of a person who converses at midnight on a subject at

once awful and interesting: but poor Eloise was no philosopher; and to

explain sensations like these, were even beyond the power of the wisest

of them. She felt alarmed, herself, at the violence of the feelings

which shook her bosom, and attempted to compose herself to sleep. Yet

even in her dream was the stranger present. She thought that she met him

on a flowery plain; that the feelings of her bosom, whether she would or

not, impelled her towards him; that before she had been enfolded in his

arms, a torrent of scintillating flame, accompanied by a terrific crash

of thunder, made the earth yawn beneath her feet;--the gay vision

vanished from her fancy, and, in place of the flowery plain, a rugged

and desolate heath extended far before her; its monotonous solitude

unbroken, save by the low and barren rocks which rose occasionally from

its surface. From dreams such as these, dreams which left on her mind

painful presentiments of her future life, Eloise arose, restless and

unrefreshed from slumber.

Why gleams that dark eyeball upon the countenance of Eloise, as she

tenderly inquired for the health of her mother? Why did an hidden

expression of exulting joy light up that demoniac gaze, when Madame de

St. Irvyne said to her daughter, "I feel rather faint to-day, my

child:--'Would we were at Geneva!"--It beams with hell and

destruction!--Let me look again: that, when I see another eye which

gleams so fiendishly, I may know that it is a villain's.--Thus might

have thought the sightless minister of the beneficence of God, as it

hovered round the spotless Eloise. But, hush! what was that scream which

was heard by the ear of listening enthusiasm? It was the shriek of the

fair Eloise's better genius; it screamed to see the foe of the innocent

girl so near--it is fled fast to Geneva. "There, Eloise, will we meet

again," methought it whispered; whilst a low hollow tone, hoarse from

the dank vapours of the grave, seemed lowly to howl in the ear of rapt

Fancy, "We meet again likewise."

Their courteous host conducted Madame de St. Irvyne and Eloise to their

chaise, which was now repaired, and ready for the journey; the stranger

bowed respectfully as they went away. The expression of his dark eye, as

he beheld them for the last time, was even stronger than ever; it seemed

not to affect her mother; but the mystic feelings which it excited in

the bosom of Eloise were beyond description powerful. The paleness of

Madame de St. Irvyne's cheek, on which the only teint was an occasional

and hectic flush, announced that the illness which consumed her, rapidly

increased, and would soon lead her gently to the gates of death. She

talked calmly of her approaching dissolution, and only regretted, that

to no one protector could she entrust the care of her orphaned

daughters. Marianne, her eldest daughter, had, by her mother's

particular desire, remained at the chateau; and, though much wishing to

accompany her mother, she urged it no longer, when she knew Madame de

St. Irvyne to be resolved against it. Now had the illness which had

attacked her assumed so serious and so decided an appearance, that she

could no longer doubt the event;--could no longer doubt that she was

quickly about to enter a better world.

"My daughter," said she, "there is a banker at Geneva, a worthy man, to

whom I shall bequeath the guardianship of my child; on that head are all

my doubts quieted. But, Eloise, my child, you are yet young; you know

not the world; but bear in mind these words of your dying mother, so

long as you remember herself:--When you see a man enveloped in deceit

and mystery; when you see him dark, reserved, and suspicious, carefully

avoid him. Should such a man seek your friendship or affection, should

he seek, by any means, to confer an obligation upon you, or make you

confer one on him, spurn him from you as you would a serpent; as one who

aimed to lure your unsuspecting innocence to the paths of destruction."

The affecting solemnity of her voice, as thus she spoke, touched Eloise

deeply; she wept. "I must remember my mother for ever," was her almost

inarticulate reply; deep sobs burst from her agitated bosom; and the

varying crowds of imagery which followed each other in her mind, were

too complicated to be defined. Still, though deeply grieved at the

approaching death of her mother, was the mysterious stranger uppermost

in her thoughts; his image excited ideas painful and unpleasant. She

wished to turn the tide of them; but the more she attempted it, with the

more painful recurrence of almost mechanical force, did his recollection

press upon her disturbed intellect.

Eloise de St. Irvyne was a girl, whose temper and disposition was most

excellent; she was, indeed, too, possessed of uncommon sensibility; yet

was her mind moulded in an inferior degree of perfection. She was

susceptible of prejudice, to a great degree; and resigned herself,

careless of the consequences which might follow, to the feelings of the

moment. Every accomplishment, it is true, she enjoyed in the highest

excellence; and the very convent at which she was educated, which

afforded the adventitious advantages so highly esteemed by the world,

prevented her mind from obtaining that degree of expansiveness and

excellence, which, otherwise, might have rendered Eloise nearer

approaching to perfection; the very routine of a convent education gave

a false and pernicious bias to the ideas, as, luxuriant in youth, they

unfolded themselves; and those sentiments which, had they been allowed

to take the turn which nature intended, would have become coadjutors of

virtue, and strengtheners of that mind, which now they had rendered

comparatively imbecile. Such was Eloise, and as such she required

unexampled care to prevent those feelings which agitate every mind of

sensibility, to get the better of the judgment which had, by an

erroneous system of education, become relaxed. Her mother was about to

die--who now would care for Eloise?

They entered Geneva at the close of a fine, yet sultry day. The illness

of Madame de St. Irvyne had increased so as now to threaten instant

danger: she was conveyed to bed. A deadly paleness sat on her cheek; it

was flushed, however, as she spoke, with momentary hectics; and, as she

conversed with her daughter, a fire, which almost partook of

etheriality, shone in her sunken eye. It was evening; the yellow beams

of the sun, as his orb shed the parting glory on the verge of the

horizon, penetrated the bed-curtains; and by their effulgence contrasted

the deadliness of her countenance. The poor Eloise sat, watching, with

eyes dimmed by tears, each variation in the countenance of her mother.

Silent, from an ecstacy of grief, she gazed fixedly upon her, and felt

every earthly hope die within her, when the conviction of a

fast-approaching dissolution pressed upon her disturbed brain. Madame de

St. Irvyne, at length exhausted, fell into a quiet slumber; Eloise

feared to disturb her, but, motionless with grief, sate behind the

curtain. Now had sunk the orb of day, and the shades of twilight began

to scatter duskiness through the chamber of death; all was silent; and,

save by the catchings of breath in her mother's slumber, the stillness

was uninterrupted. Yet even in this awful, this terrific crisis of her

existence, the mind of Eloise seemed compelled to exert its intellectual

energies but on one subject;--in vain she essayed to pray;--in vain she

attempted to avert the horror of her meditations, by contemplating the

pallid features of her dying mother: her thoughts were not within her

own control, and she trembled as she reflected on the appalling and

mysterious influence which the image of a man, whom she had seen but

once, and whom she neither loved nor cared for, had gained over her

mind. With the indefinable terror of one who dreads to behold some

phantom, Eloise fearfully cast her eyes around the gloomy apartment;

occasionally she shrank from the ideal form which an unconnected

imagination had conjured up, and could scarcely but suppose that the

stranger's gaze, as last he had looked upon her, met her own with an

horrible and mixed scintillation of mysterious cunning and interest. She

felt no prepossession in his favour; she rather detested him, and gladly

would never have again beheld him; yet, were the circumstances which

introduced him to their notice alluded to, she would turn pale, and

blush, by turns; and Jeanette, their maid, was fully persuaded in her

own mind, and prided herself on her penetration in the discovery, that

Ma'am'selle was violently in love with the hospitable Alpine hunter.

Madame de St. Irvyne had now awakened; she beckoned her daughter to

approach: Eloise obeyed; and, kneeling, kissed the chill hand of her

mother, in a transport of sorrow, and bathed it with her tears.

"Eloise," said her mother, her voice trembling from excessive weakness,

"Eloise, my child, farewell--farewell for ever. I feel, I am about to

die; but, before I die, willingly would I say much to my dearest

daughter. You are now left on the hardhearted, pitiless world; and

perhaps, oh! perhaps, about to become an immolated victim of its

treachery. Oh!--" Here, overcome by extreme pain, she fell backwards; a

transient gleam of animation lighted up her expressive countenance; she

smiled, and--expired. All was still; and over the gloomy chamber reigned

silence and horror. The yellow moonbeam, with sepulchral effulgence,

gleamed on the countenance of her who had expired, and lighted her

features, sweet even in death, with a dire and horrible contrast to the

dimness which prevailed around!--Ah! such was the contrast of the peace

enjoyed by the spirit of the departed one, with the misery which awaited

the wretched Eloise. Poor Eloise! she had now lost almost her only

friend!

In excessive and silent grief, knelt the mourning girl; she spoke not,

she wept-not; her sorrow was toavo violent for tears, but, oh! her heart

was torn by pangs of unspeakable acuteness. But even amid the alarm

which so melancholy an event must have excited, the idea of the stranger

in the Alps sublimed the soul of Eloise to the highest degree of horror,

and despair the most infuriate. For the ideas which crowded into her

mind at this crisis, so eventful, so terrific, she endeavoured to

account; but, alas! her attempt was fruitless! Still knelt she; still

did she press to her burning lips the lifeless hand of departed

excellence, when the morning's ray announced to her, that longer

continuing there might excite suspicion of intellectual derangement. She

arose, therefore, and, quitting the apartment, announced the melancholy

event which had taken place. She gave orders for the funeral; it was to

be solemnized as soon as decency would permit, as the poor friendless

Eloise wished speedily to quit Geneva. She wrote to announce the fatal

event to her sister. Slowly dragged the time. Eloise followed to its

latest bed, the corpse of her mother, and was returning from the

convent, when a stranger put into her hand a note, and quickly

disappeared:--

"Will Eloise de St. Irvyne meet her friend at--Abbey, to-morrow night,

at ten o'clock?"

CHAPTER. VIII.

Yes;--they fled from Genoa; they had eluded pursuit and justice, but

could not escape the torments of an outraged and avenging conscience,

which, with stings the most acute, pursued them whithersoever they might

go. Fortune even seemed to favour them; for fortune will, sometimes, in

this world, appear to side with the wicked. Wolfstein had received

notice, that an uncle, possessed of immense wealth, had died in Bohemia,

and bequeathed to him the whole of his estate. Thither then, with

Megalena, went Wolfstein. Their journey produced no event of

consequence; suffice it to say, that they arrived at the spot where

Wolfstein's new possessions were situated.

Dark and desolate were the scenes which surrounded the no less desolate

castle. Gloomy heaths, in unvarying sadness of immensity, stretched far

and wide. A scathed pine or oak, blasted by the thunderbolts of heaven,

alone broke the monotonous sameness of the imagery. Needless were it to

describe the castle, built like all those of the Bohemian barons, in

mingled Gothic and barbarian architecture. Over the dark expanse the dim

moon beaming, and faintly, with its sepulchral radiance, dispersing the

thickness of the vapours which lowered around (for her waning horn,

which hung low above the horizon, added but tenfold horror to the

terrific desolation of the scene); the night-raven pouring on the dull

ear of evening her frightful screams, and breaking on the otherwise

uninterrupted stillness,--were the melancholy greetings to their new

habitation.

They alighted at the antique entrance, and, passing through a vast and

comfortless hall, were conducted into a saloon not much less so. The

coolness of the evening, for it was late in the autumn, made the wood

fire, which had been lighted, disperse a degree of comfort; and

Wolfstein, having arranged his domestic concerns, continued talking with

Megalena until midnight.

"But you have never yet correctly explained to me," said Megalena, "the

mystery which encircled that strange man whom we met at the inn at

Breno. I think I have seen him once since, or I should not now have

thought of the circumstance."

"Indeed, Megalena, I know of no mystery. I suppose the man was mad, or

wished to make us think so; for my part, I have never thought of him

since; nor ever intend to think of him."

"Do you not?" exclaimed a voice, which enchained motionless to his seat

the horror-struck Wolfstein--when turning round, and starting in

agonized frenzy from his chair, Ginotti himself--Ginotti--from whose

terrific gaze never had he turned unappalled, stood in cool and fearless

contempt before him!

"Do you not?" continued the mysterious stranger." Never again intendest

thou to think of me?--me! who have watched each expanding idea,

conscious to what I was about to apply them, conscious of the great

purpose for which each was formed. Ah! Wolfstein, by my agency shalt

thou--" He paused, assuming a smile expressive of exultation and

superiority.

"Oh! do with me what thou wilt, strange, inexplicable being!--Do with me

what thou wilt!" exclaimed Wolfstein, as an ecstacy of frenzied terror

overpowered his astonished senses. Megalena still sat unmoved: she was

surprised, it is true; but most was she surprised, that an event like

this should have power so to shake Wolfstein; for even then he stood

gazing in enhorrored silence on the majestic figure of Ginotti.

"Fool, then, that thou art, to deny me!" continued Ginotti, in a tone

less solemn, but more severe. "Wilt thou promise me that, when I come to

demand what thou covenantedst with me at Breno, I meet no fears, no

scruples, but that, then, thou wilt perform what there thou didst swear,

and that this oath shall be inviolable?"

"It shall," replied Wolfstein.

"Swear it."

"As I keep my vows with you, may God reward me hereafter!"

"'Tis done then," returned Ginotti. "Ere long shall I claim the

performance of this covenant--now farewell." Speaking thus, Ginotti

dashed away; and, mounting a horse which stood at the gate, sped swiftly

across the heath. His form lessened in the clear moonlight; and, when it

was no longer visible to the straining eyeballs of Wolfstein, he felt,

as it were, a spell which had enthralled him, to be dissolved.

Reckless of Megalena's earnest entreaties, he threw himself into a

chair, in deep and gloomy melancholy; he answered them not, but,

immersed in a train of corroding ideas, remained silent. Even when

retired to repose, and he could, occasionally, sink into a transitory

slumber, would he again start from it, as he thought that Ginotti's

majestic form leaned over him, and that the glance which, last, his

fearful eye had thrown, chilled his breast with indescribable agony.

Slowly lagged the time to Wolfstein; Ginotti, though now gone, and far

away perhaps, dwelt in his disturbed mind; his image was there imprinted

in characters terrific and indelible. Oft would he wander along the

desolate heath; on every blast of wind which sighed over the scattered

remnants of what was once a forest, Ginotti's, the terrific Ginotti's

voice seemed to float; and in every dusky recess, favoured by the

descending shades of gloomy night, his form appeared to lurk, and, with

frightful glare, his eye to penetrate the conscience-stricken Wolfstein

as he walked. A falling leaf, or a hare starting from her heathy seat,

caused him to shrink with affright; yet, though dreading loneliness, he

was irresistibly compelled to seek for solitude. Megalena's charms had

now no longer power to speak comfort to his soul: ephemeral are the

friendships of the wicked, and involuntary disgust follows the

attachment founded on the visionary fabric of passion or interest. It

sinks in the merited abyss of ennui, or is followed by apathy and

carelessness, which amply its origin deserved.

The once ardent and excessive passion of Wolfstein for Megalena, was now

changed into disgust and almost detestation; he sought to conceal it

from her, but it was evident, in spite of his resolution. He regarded

her as a woman capable of the most shocking enormities; since, without

any adequate temptation to vice, she had become sufficiently depraved to

consider an inconsequent crime the wilful and premeditated destruction

of a fellow-creature; still, whether it were from the indolence which he

had contracted, or an indefinably sympathetic connexion of soul, which

forbade them to part during their mortal existence, was Wolfstein

irremediably linked to his mistress, who was as depraved as himself,

though originally of a better disposition. He likewise had, at first,

resisted the allurements of vice; but, overpowered by its incitements,

had resigned himself, indeed reluctantly, to its influence. But Megalena

had courted its advances, and endeavoured to conquer neither the

suggestions of crime, nor the dictates of a nature prone to the attacks

of appetite--let me not call it passion.

Fast advanced winter: cheerless and solitary were the days. Wolfstein,

occasionally, followed the chase; but even that was wearisome: and the

bleeding image of the murdered Olympia, or the still more dreaded idea

of the terrific Ginotti, haunted him in the midst of its tumultuous

pleasures, and embittered every instant of his existence. The pale

corpse too of Cavigni, blackened by poison, reigned in his chaotic

imagination, and stung his soul with tenfold remorse, when he reflected

that he had murdered one who never had injured him, for the sake of a

being whose depraved society every succeeding day rendered more

monotonous and insipid.

It was one evening when, according to his custom, Wolfstein wandered

late: it was in the beginning of December, and the weather was

peculiarly mild for the season and latitude. Over the cerulean expanse

of ether the dim moon, shrouded in the fleeting fragments of vapour,

which, borne on the pinions of the northern blast, crossed her pale orb;

at intervals, the dismal hooting of the owl, which, searching for prey,

flitted her white wings over the dusky heath; the silver beams which

slept on the outline of the far-seen forests, and the melancholy

stillness, uninterrupted save by these concomitants of gloom, conduced

to sombre reflection. Wolfstein reclined upon the heath; he retraced, in

mental review, the past events of his life, and shuddered at the

darkness of his future destiny. He strove to repent of his crimes; but,

though conscious of the connexion which existed between the ideas, as

often as repentance presented itself to his mind, Ginotti rushed upon

his troubled imagination, and a dark veil seemed to separate him for

ever from contrition, notwithstanding he was constantly subjected to the

tortures inflicted by it. At last, wearied with the corroding

recollections, the acme of which progressively increased, he bent his

steps again towards his habitation.

As he was entering the portal, a grasp of iron arrested his arm, and,

turning round, he recognised the tall figure of Ginotti, which enveloped

in a mantle, had leaned against a jutting buttress. Amazement, for a

time, chained the faculties of Wolfstein in motionless surprise: at last

he recollected himself, and, in a voice trembling from agitation,

inquired, did he now demand the performance of the promise?

"I come," he said, "I come to demand it, Wolfstein! Art thou willing to

perform what thou hast promised?--but come--"

A degree of solemnity, mixed with concealed fierceness, toned his voice

as he spoke; yet was he fixed in the attitude in which first he had

addressed Wolfstein. The pale ray of the moon fell upon his dark

features, and his coruscating eye fixed on his trembling victim's

countenance, flashed with almost intolerable brilliancy. A chill horror

darted through Wolfstein's sickening frame; his brain swam around

wildly, and most appalling presentiments of what was about to happen,

pressed upon his agonized intellect. "Yes, yes, I have promised, and I

will perform the covenant I have entered into," said Wolfstein; "I swear

to you that I will!" and as he spoke, a kind of mechanical and inspired

feeling steeled his soul to fortitude; it seemed to arise independently

of himself; nor could he, though he eagerly desired to do so, control,

in the least, his own resolves. Such an impulse as this had first

induced him to promise at all. Ah! how often in Ginotti's absence had he

resisted it! but when the mysterious disposer of the events of his

existence was before him, a consciousness of the inutility of his

refusal compelled him to submit to the mandates of a being, whom his

heart sickening to acknowledge, it unwillingly confessed as a superior.

"Come," continued Ginotti; "the hour is late, I must dispatch."

Unresisting, yet speaking not, Wolfstein conducted Ginotti to an

apartment.

"Bring wine, and light a fire," said he to the servant, who quickly

obeyed him. Wolfstein swallowed an overflowing goblet, hoping thereby to

acquire courage; for he found that, with every moment of Ginotti's stay,

the visionary and awful terrors of his mind augmented.

"Do you not drink?"

"No," replied Ginotti, sullenly.

A pause ensured; during which the eyes of Ginotti, glaring with

demoniacal scintillations, spoke tenfold terrors to the soul of

Wolfstein. He knitted his brows and bit his lips, in vain attempting to

appear unembarrassed. "Wolfstein!" at last said Ginotti, breaking the

fearful silence; "Wolfstein!"

The colour fled from the cheek of his victim, as thus Ginotti spoke: he

moved his posture, and awaited, in anxious and horrible solicitude, the

declaration which was, as he supposed, to ensue. "My name, my family,

and the circumstances which have attended my career through existence,

it neither boots you to know, nor me to declare."

"Does it not?" said Wolfstein, scarcely knowing what to say; yet

convinced, from the pause, that something was expected.

"No! nor canst thou, nor any other existing being, even attempt to dive

into the mysteries which envelope me. Let it be sufficient for you to

know, that every event in your life has not only been known to me, but

has occurred under my particular machinations."

Wolfstein started. The terror which had blanched his cheek now gave way

to an expression of fierceness and surprise; he was about to speak, but

Ginotti, noticing not his motion, thus continued:

"Every opening idea which has marked, in so decided and so eccentric an

outline, the fiat of your future destiny, has not been unknown to or

unnoticed by me. I rejoiced to see in you, whilst young, the progress of

that genius which in mature time would entitle you to the reward which I

destine for you, and for you alone. Even when far, far away, when the

ocean perhaps has roared between us, have I known your thoughts,

Wolfstein; yet have I known them neither by conjecture nor inspiration.

Never would your mind have attained that degree of expansion or

excellence had not I watched over its every movement, and taught the

sentiment, as it unfolded itself, to despise contented vulgarity. For

this, and for an event far more important than any your existence yet

has been subjected to, have I watched over you: say, Wolfstein, have I

watched in vain?"

Each feeling of resentment vanished from Wolfstein's bosom, as the

mysterious intruder spoke: his voice at last died, in a clear and

melancholy cadence, away; and his expressive eye, divested of its

fierceness and mystery, rested on Wolfstein's countenance with a mild

benignity.

"No, no; thou hast not watched in vain, mysterious disposer of my

existence. Speak! I burn with curiosity and solicitude to learn for what

thou hast thus superintended me:" and as thus he spoke, a feeling of

resistless anxiety to know what would be the conclusion of the night's

adventure, took place of horror. Inquiringly he gazed on the countenance

of Ginotti, the features of whom were brightened with unwonted

animation. "Wolfstein," said Ginotti, "often hast thou sworn that I

should rest in the grave in peace:--now listen."

CHAP. IX.

Ah! poor, unsuspecting innocence! and is that fair flower about to

perish in the blasts of dereliction and unkindness? Demon indeed must he

be who could gaze on those mildly-beaming eyes, on that perfect form,

the emblem of sensibility, and yet plunge the spotless mind of which it

was an index, into a sea of repentance and unavailing sorrow. I should

scarce suppose even a demon would act so, were there not many with

hearts more depraved even than those of fiends, who first have torn some

unsophisticated soul from the pinnacle of excellence, on which it sat

smiling, and then triumphed in their hellish victory when it writhed in

agonized remorse, and strove to hide its unavailing regret in the dust

from which the fabric of her virtues had arisen. "Ah! I fear me, the

unsuspecting girl will go;" she knows not the malice and the wiles of

perjured man--and she is gone!

It was late in the evening, and Eloise had returned from her mother's

funeral, sad and melancholy; yet even amidst the oppression of grief,

surprise and astonishment, pleasure and thankfulness, that any one

should notice her, possessed her mind as she read over and over the

characters traced on the note which she still held in her hand. The hour

was late; the moon was down, yet countless stars bedecked the almost

boundless hemisphere. The mild beams of Hesper slept on the glassy

surface of the lake, as, scarcely agitated by the zephyr of evening, its

waves rolled in slow succession; the solemn umbrage of the pine-trees,

mingled with the poplar, threw their undefined shadows on the water; and

the nightingale, sitting solitary in the hawthorn, poured on the

listening stillness of evening, her grateful lay of melancholy. Hark!

her full strains swell on the silence of night, and now they die away,

with lengthened and solemn cadence, insensibly into the breeze, which

lingers, with protracted sweep, along the valley. Ah! with what

enthusiastic ecstacy of melancholy does he whose friend, whose dear

friend, is far, far away, listen to such strains as these! perhaps he

has heard them with that friend,--with one he loves: never again may

they meet his ear. Alas! 't is melancholy; I even now see him sitting on

the rock which looks over the lake, in frenzied listlessness; and

counting in mournful review, the days which are past since they fled so

quickly with one who was dear to him.

It was to the ruined abbey which stood on the southern side of the lake

that, so swiftly, Eloise is hastening. A presentiment of awe filled her

mind; she gazed, in inquiring terror, around her, and scarce could

persuade herself that shapeless forms lurked not in the gloomy recesses

of the scenery.

She gained the abbey; in melancholy fallen grandeur its vast ruins

reared their pointed casements to the sky. Masses of disjointed stone

were scattered around; and, save by the whirrings of the bats, the

stillness which reigned, was uninterrupted. Here then was Eloise to meet

the strange one who professed himself to be her friend. Alas! poor

Eloise believed him. It yet wanted an hour to the time of appointment;

the expiration of that hour Eloise awaited. The abbey brought to her

recollection a similar ruin which stood near St. Irvyne; it brought with

it the remembrance of a song which Marianne had composed soon after her

brother's death. She sang, though in a low voice:

She ceased: the melancholy cadence of her angelic voice died in faint

reverberations of echo away, and once again reigned stillness.

Now fast approached the hour; and, ere ten had struck, a stranger of

towering and gigantic proportions walked along the ruined refectory;

without stopping to notice other objects, he advanced swiftly to Eloise,

who sat on a mishapen piece of ruin, and, throwing aside the mantle

which enveloped his figure, discovered to her astonished sight the

stranger of the Alps, who of late had been incessantly present to her

mind. Amazement, for a time, chained each faculty in stupefaction; she

would have started from her seat, but the stranger, with gentle violence

grasping her hand, compelled her to remain where she was.

"Eloise," said the stranger, in a voice of the most fascinating

tenderness--"Eloise!"

The softness of his accents changed, in an instant, what was passing in

the bosom of Eloise. She felt no surprise that he knew her name; she

experienced no dread at this mysterious meeting with a person, at the

bare mention of whose name she was wont to tremble: no, the ideas which

filled her mind were indefinable. She gazed upon his countenance for a

moment, then, hiding her face in her hands, sobbed loudly.

"What afflicts you, Eloise?" said the stranger: "how cruel, that such a

breast as thine should be tortured by pain!"

"Ah!" cried Eloise, forgetting that she spoke to a stranger; "how can

one avoid sorrow, when there, perhaps, is scarce a being in the world

whom I can call my friend; when there is no one on whom I lay claim for

protection?"

"Say not, Eloise," cried the stranger, reproachfully, yet benignly; "say

not that you can claim none as a friend--you may claim me. Ah! that I

had ten thousand existences, that each might be devoted to the service

of one whom I love more than myself! Make me then the repository of your

every sorrow and secret. I love you, indeed I do, Eloise, and why will

you doubt me?"

"I do not doubt you, stranger," replied the unsuspecting girl; "why

should I doubt you? for you could have no interest in saying so, if you

did not.--I thank you for loving one who is quite, quite friendless;

and, if you will allow me to be your friend, I will love you too. I

never loved any one, before, but my poor mother and Marianne. Will you

then, if you are a friend to me, come and live with me and Marianne, at

St. Irvyne's?"

"St. Irvyne's!" exclaimed the stranger, almost convulsively, as he

interrupted her; then, as fearing to betray his emotions, he paused, yet

quitted not the grasp of Eloise's hand, which trembled within his with

feelings which her mind distrusted not.

"Yes, sweet Eloise, I love you indeed." At last he said, affectionately,

"And I thank you much for believing me; but I cannot live with you at

St. Irvyne's. Farewell, for to-night, however; for my poor Eloise has

need of sleep." He then was quitting the abbey, when Eloise stopped him

to inquire his name.

"Frederic de Nempere."

"Ah! then I shall recollect Frederio de Nempere, as the name of a

friend, even if I never again behold him."

"Indeed I am not faithless; soon shall I see you again. Farewell,

beloved Eloise." Thus saying, with rapid step he quitted the ruin.

Though he was now gone, the sound of his tender farewell yet seemed to

linger on the ear of Eloise; but with each moment of his absence, became

lessened the conviction of his friendship, and heightened the suspicions

which, though unaccountable to herself, possessed her bosom. She could

not conceive what motive could have led her to own her love for one whom

she feared, and felt a secret terror, from the conviction of the

resistless empire which he possessed within her: yet though she shrank

from the bare idea of ever becoming his, did she ardently, though

scarcely would she own it to herself, desire again to see him.

Eloise now returned to Geneva: she resigned herself to sleep, but even

in her dreams was the image of Nempere present to her imagination. Ah!

poor deluded Eloise, didst thou think a man would merit thy love through

disinterestedness? didst thou think that one who supposed himself

superior, yet inferior in reality, to you, in the scale of existent

beings, would desire thy society from love? yet superior as the fool

here supposes himself to be to the creature whom he injures, superior as

he boasts himself, he may howl with the fiends of darkness, in

never-ending misery, whilst thou shalt receive, at the throne of the God

whom thou hast loved, the rewards of that unsuspecting excellence, which

he who boasts his superiority, shall suffer for trampling upon. Reflect

on this, ye libertines, and, in the full career of the lasciviousness

which has unfitted your souls for enjoying the slightest real happiness

here or hereafter, tremble! Tremble! I say; for the day of retribution

will arrive. But the poor Eloise need not tremble; the victims of your

detested cunning need not fear that day: no!--then will the cause of the

broken-hearted be avenged, by Him to whom their wrongs cry for redress.

Within a few miles of Geneva, Nempere possessed a country-house: thither

did he persuade Eloise to go with him; "For," said he, "though I cannot

come to St. Irvyne's, yet my friend will live with me."

"Yes indeed I will," replied Eloise; for whatever she might feel when he

was absent, in his presence she felt insensibly softened, and a

sentiment nearly approaching to love would, at intervals, take

possession of her soul. Yet was it by no means an easy task to lure

Eloise from the paths of virtue; it is true she knew but little, nor was

the expansion of her mind such as might justify the exultations of a

fiend at a triumph over her virtue; yet was it that very timid, simple

innocence, which prevented Eloise from understanding to what the

deep-laid sophistry of her false friend tended; and, not understanding

it, she could not be influenced by its arguments. Besides, the

principles and morals of Eloise were such, as could not easily be shaken

by the allurements which temptation might throw out to her

unsophisticated innocence.

"Why," said Nempere, "are we taught to believe that the union of two who

love each other is wicked, unless authorized by certain rites and

ceremonials, which certainly cannot change the tenour of sentiments

which it is destined that these two people should entertain of each

other?"

"It is, I suppose," answered Eloise calmly, "because God has willed it

so; besides," continued she, blushing at she knew not what, "it would--"

"And is then the superior and towering soul of Eloise subjected to

sentiments and prejudices so stale and vulgar as these?" interrupted

Nempere indignantly. "Say, Eloise, do not you think it an insult to two

souls, united to each other in the irrefragable covenants of love and

congeniality; to promise, in the sight of a Being whom they know not,

that fidelity which is certain otherwise?"

"But I do know that Being!" cried Eloise with warmth; "and when I cease

to know him, may I die! I pray to him every morning, and, when I kneel

at night, I thank him for the mercy which he has shown to a poor

friendless girl like me! He is the protector of the friendless, and I

love and adore him!"

"Unkind Eloise! how canst thou call thyself friendless? Surely, the

adoration of two beings unfettered by restraint, must be most

acceptable!--But, come, Eloise, this conversation is nothing to the

purpose: I see we both think alike, although the terms in which we

express our sentiments are different. Will you sing to me, dear Eloise?"

Willingly did Eloise fetch her harp; she wished not to scrutinize what

was passing in her mind, but, after a short prelude, thus began:

"How soft is that strain!" cried Nempere, as she concluded.

"Ah!" said Eloise, sighing deeply; "It is a melancholy song; my poor

brother wrote it, I remember, about ten days before he died. 'Tis a

gloomy tale concerning him; he ill deserved the fate he met. Some future

time I will tell it you; but now, 'tis very late.--Good-night."

Time passed, and Nempere, finding that he must proceed more warily,

attempted no more to impose upon the understanding of Eloise by such

palpably baseless arguments; yet, so great and so unaccountable an

influence had he gained on her unsuspecting soul, that ere long, on the

altar of vice, pride, and malice, was immolated the innocence of the

spotless Eloise. Ah, ye proud! in the severe consciousness of

unblemished reputation, in the fallacious opinion of the world, why

turned ye away, as if fearful of contamination, when yon poor frail one

drew near? See the tears which steal adown her cheek!--She has repented,

ye have not!

And thinkest thou, libertine, from a principle of depravity--thinkest

thou that thou hast raised thyself to the level of Eloise, by trying to

sink her to thine own?--No!--Hopest thou that thy curse has passed away

unheeded or unseen? The God whom thou hast insulted has marked thee!--In

the everlasting tablets of heaven, is thine offence written!--but poor

Eloise's crime is obliterated by the mercy of Him, who knows the

innocence of her heart.

Yes--thy sophistry hath prevailed, Nempere!--'t is but blackening the

memoir of thine offences!--Hark! what shriek broke upon the enthusiastic

silence of twilight?--'T was the fancied scream of one who loved Eloise

long ago, but now is--dead. It warns thee--alas! 't is unavailing!!--'T

is fled, but not for ever.

It is evening; the moon, which rode in cloudless and unsullied majesty,

in the leaden-coloured east, hath hidden her pale beams in a dusky

cloud, as if blushing to contemplate a scene of so much wickedness.

'T is done; and amidst the vows of a transitory delirium of pleasure,

regret, horror, and misery, arise! they shake their Gorgon locks at

Eloise! appalled she shudders with affright, and shrinks from the

contemplation of the consequences of her imprudence. Beware, Eloise!--a

precipice, a frightful precipice yawns at thy feet! advance yet a step

further, and thou perishest!--No, give not up thy religion--it is that

alone which can support thee under the miseries, with which imprudence

has so darkly marked the progress of thine existence!

CHAPTER. X.

Yet, in an attitude of attention, Wolfstein was fixed, and, gazing upon

Ginotti's countenance, awaited his narrative.

"Wolfstein," said Ginotti, "the circumstances which I am about to

communicate to you are, many of them, you may think, trivial; but I must

be minute, and, however the recital may excite your astonishment, suffer

me to proceed without interruption."

Wolfstein bowed affirmatively--Ginotti thus proceeded:

"From my earliest youth, before it was quenched by complete satiation,

curiosity, and a desire of unveiling the latent mysteries of nature, was

the passion by which all the other emotions of my mind were

intellectually organized. This desire first led me to cultivate, and

with success, the various branches of learning which led to the gates of

wisdom. I then applied myself to the cultivation of philosophy, and the

éclât with which I pursued it, exceeded my most sanguine expectations.

Love I cared not for; and wondered why men perversely sought to ally

themselves with weakness. Natural philosophy at last became the peculiar

science to which I directed my eager inquiries; thence was I led into a

train of labyrinthic meditations. I thought of death--I shuddered when I

reflected, and shrank in horror from the idea, selfish and

self-interested as I was, of entering a new existence to which I was a

stranger. I must either dive into the recesses of futurity, or I must

not, I cannot die.--'Will not this nature--will not the matter of which

it is composed, exist to all eternity? Ah! I know it will; and, by the

exertions of the energies with which nature has gifted me, well I know

it shall.' This was my opinion at that time: I then believed that there

existed no God. Ah! at what an exorbitant price have I bought the

conviction that there is one!!! Believing that priestcraft and

superstition were all the religion which man ever practised, it could

not be supposed that I thought there existed supernatural beings of any

kind. I believed nature to be self-sufficient and excelling; I supposed

not, therefore, that there could be any thing beyond nature.

"I was now about seventeen: I had dived into the depths of metaphysical

calculations. With sophistical arguments had I convinced myself of the

non-existence of a First Cause, and, by every combined modification of

the essences of matter, had I apparently proved that no existences could

possibly be, unseen by human vision. I had lived, hitherto, completely

for myself; I cared not for others; and, had the hand of fate swept from

the list of the living every one of my youthful associates, I should

have remained immoved and fearless. I had not a friend in the world;--I

cared for nothing but self. Being fond of calculating the effects of

poison, I essayed one, which I had composed, upon a youth who had

offended me; he lingered a month, and then expired in agonies the most

terrific. It was returning from his funeral, which all the students of

the college where I received my education (Salamanca), had attended,

that a train of the strangest thought pressed upon my mind. I feared,

more than ever, now, to die; and, although I had no right to form hopes

or expectations for longer life than is allotted to the rest of mortals,

yet did I think it were possible to protract existence. And why,

reasoned I with myself, relapsing into melancholy, why am I to suppose

that these muscles or fibres are made of stuff more durable than those

of other men? I have no right to suppose otherwise than that, at the end

of the time allotted by nature, for the existence of the atoms which

compose my being, I must, like all other men, perish, perhaps

everlastingly.--Here in the bitterness of my heart, I cursed that nature

and chance which I believed in; and, in a paroxysmal frenzy of

contending passions, cast myself, in desperation, at the foot of a lofty

ash-tree, which reared its fantastic form over a torrent which dashed

below.

"It was midnight; far had I wandered from Salamanca; the passions which

agitated my brain, almost to delirium, had added strength to my nerves,

and swiftness to my feet; but after many hours' incessant walking, I

began to feel fatigued. No moon was up, nor did one star illume the

hemisphere. The sky was veiled by a thick covering of clouds; and, to my

heated imagination, the winds, which in stern cadence swept along the

night-scene, whistled tidings of death and annihilation. I gazed on the

torrent, foaming beneath my feet; it could scarcely be distinguished

through the thickness of the gloom, save at intervals, when the

white-crested waves dashed at the base of the bank on which I stood. 'T

was then that I contemplated self-destruction; I had almost plunged into

the tide of death, had rushed upon the unknown regions of eternity, when

the soft sound of a bell from a neighbouring convent, was wafted in the

stillness of the night. It struck a chord in unison with my soul; it

vibrated on the secret springs of rapture. I thought no more of suicide,

but, reseating myself at the root of the ash-tree, burst into a flood of

tears;--never had I wept before; the sensation was new to me; it was

inexplicably pleasing. I reflected by what rules of science I could

account for it: there philosophy failed me. I acknowledged its

inefficacy; and, almost at that instant, allowed the existence of a

superior and beneficent Spirit, in whose image is made the soul of man;

but quickly chasing these ideas, and, overcome by excessive and unwonted

fatigue of mind and body, I laid my head upon a jutting projection of

the tree, and, forgetful of every thing around me, sank into a profound

and quiet slumber. Quiet, did I say? No--It was not quiet. I dreamed

that I stood on the brink of a most terrific precipice, far, far above

the clouds, amid whose dark forms which lowered beneath, was seen the

dashing of a stupendous cataract: its roarings were borne to mine ear by

the blast of night. Above me rose, fearfully embattled and rugged,

fragments of enormous rocks, tinged by the dimly gleaming moon; their

loftiness, the grandeur of their mishapen proportions, and their bulk,

staggering the imagination; and scarcely could the mind itself scale the

vast loftiness of their aerial summits. I saw the dark clouds pass by,

borne by the impetuosity of the blast, yet felt no wind myself.

Methought darkly gleaming forms rode on their almost palpable

prominences.

"Whilst thus I stood, gazing on the expansive gulf which yawned before

me, methought a silver sound stole on the quietude of night. The moon

became as bright as polished silver, and each star sparkled with

scintillations of inexpressible whiteness. Pleasing images stole

imperceptibly upon my senses, when a ravishingly sweet strain of dulcet

melody seemed to float around. Now it was wafted nearer, and now it died

away in tones to melancholy dear. Whilst I thus stood enraptured, louder

swelled the strain of seraphic harmony; it vibrated on my inmost soul,

and a mysterious softness lulled each impetuous passion to repose. I

gazed in eager anticipation of curiosity on the scene before me; for a

mist of silver radiance rendered every object but myself imperceptible;

yet was it brilliant as the noon-day sun. Suddenly, whilst yet the full

strain swelled along the empyrean sky, the mist in one place seemed to

dispart, and, through it, to roll clouds of deepest crimson. Above them,

and seemingly reclining on the viewless air, was a form of most exact

and superior symmetry. Rays of brilliancy, surpassing expression, fell

from his burning eye, and the emanations from his countenance tinted the

transparent clouds below with silver light. The phantasm advanced

towards me; it seemed then, to my imagination, that his figure was borne

on the sweet strain of music which filled the circumambient air. In a

voice which was fascination itself, the being addressed me, saying,

'Wilt thou come with me? wilt thou be mine?' I felt a decided wish never

to be his. 'No, no,' I unhesitatingly cried, with a feeling which no

language can either explain or describe. No sooner had I uttered these

words than methought a sensation of deadly horror chilled my sickening

frame; an earthquake rocked the precipice beneath my feet; the beautiful

being vanished; clouds, as of chaos, rolled around, and from their dark

masses flashed incessant meteors. I heard a deafening noise on every

side; it appeared like the dissolution of nature; the blood-red moon,

whirled from her sphere, sank beneath the horizon. My neck was grasped

firmly, and, turning round in an agony of horror, I beheld a form more

hideous than the imagination of man is capable of portraying, whose

proportions, gigantic and deformed, were seemingly blackened by the

inerasible traces of the thunderbolts of God; yet in its hideous and

detestable countenance, though seemingly far different, I thought I

could recognise that of the lovely vision: 'Wretch!' it exclaimed, in a

voice of exulting thunder; 'saidst thou that thou wouldst not be mine?

Ah! thou art mine beyond redemption; and I triumph in the conviction,

that no power can ever make thee otherwise. Say, art thou willing to be

mine?' Saying this, he dragged me to the brink of the precipice: the

contemplation of approaching death frenzied my brain to the highest

pitch of horror. 'Yes, yes, I am thine,' I exclaimed. No sooner had I

pronounced these words, than the visionary scene vanished, and I awoke.

But even when awake, the contemplation of what I had suffered, whilst

under the influence of sleep, pressed upon my disordered fancy; my

intellect, wild with unconquerable emotions, could fix on no one

particular point to exert its energies; they were strained beyond their

power of exerting.

"Ever, from that day, did a deep-corroding melancholy usurp the throne

of my soul. At last during the course of my philosophical inquiries, I

ascertained the method by which man might exist for ever, and it was

connected with my dream. It would unfold a tale of too much horror to

trace, in review, the circumstances as then they occurred; suffice it to

say, that I became acquainted that a superior being really exists: and

ah! how dear a price have I paid for the knowledge! To one man, alone,

Wolfstein, may I communicate this secret of immortal life: then must I

forego my claim to it,--and oh! with what pleasure shall I forego it! To

you I bequeath the secret; but first you must swear that if--you wish

God may--"

"I swear," cried Wolfstein, in a transport of delight; burning ecstacy

revelled through his veins; pleasurable coruscations were emitted from

his eyes. "I swear," continued he; "and if ever--may God--" "Needless

were it for me," continued Ginotti, "to expatiate further upon themeans

which I have used to become master over your every action; that will be

sufficiently explained when you have followed my directions. Take,"

continued Ginotti, "--and--and--mix them according to the directions

which this book will communicate to you. Seek, at midnight, the ruined

abbey near the castle of St. Irvyne, in France; and there--I need say no

more--there you will meet with me."

CHAPTER. XI.

The varying occurrences of time and change, which bring anticipation of

better days, brought none to the hapless Eloise. Nempere now having

gained the point which his villany had projected, felt little or no

attachment left for the unhappy victim of his baseness; he treated her

indeed most cruelly, and his unkindness added greatly to the severity of

her afflictions. One day, when, weighed down by the extreme asperity of

her woes, Eloise sat leaning her head on her hand, and mentally

retracing, in sickening and mournful review, the concatenated

occurrences which had led her to become what she was, she sought to

change the bent of her ideas, but in vain. The feelings of her soul were

but exacerbated by the attempt to quell them. Her dear brother's death,

that brother so tenderly beloved, added a sting to her sensations. Was

there any one on earth to whom she was now attracted by a wish of

pouring in the friend's bosom ideas and feelings indefinable to any one

else? Ah, no! that friend existed not; never, never more would she know

such a friend. Never did she really love any one; and now had she

sacrificed her conviction of right and wrong to a man who neither knew

how to appreciate her excellence, nor was adequate to excite other

sensation than of terror and dread.

Thus were her thoughts engaged, when Nempere entered the apartment,

accompanied by a gentleman, whom he unceremoniously announced as the

Chevalier Mountfort, an Englishman of rank, and his friend. He was a man

of handsome countenance and engaging manners. He conversed with Eloise

with an ill-disguised conviction of his own superiority, and seemed

indeed to assert, as it were, a right of conversing with her; nor did

Nempere appear to dispute his apparent assumption. The conversation

turned upon music; Mountfort asked Eloise her opinion; "Oh!" said

Eloise, enthusiastically, "I think it sublimes the soul to heaven; I

think it is, of all earthly pleasures, the most excessive. Who, when

listening to harmoniously-arranged sounds of music, exists there, but

must forget his woes, and lose the memory of every earthly existence in

the ecstatic emotions which it excites? Do you not think so, Chevalier?"

said she; for the liveliness of his manner enchanted Eloise, whose

temper, naturally elastic and sprightly, had been damped as yet by

misery and seclusion. Mountfort smiled at the energetic avowal of her

feelings; for, whilst she yet spoke, her expressive countenance became

irradiated by the emanation of sentiment.

"Yes," said Mountfort, "it is indeed powerfully efficient to excite the

interests of the soul; but does it not, by the very act of resuscitating

the feelings, by working upon theperhaps, long dead chords of secret and

enthusiastic rapture, awaken the powers of grief as well as pleasure?"

"Ah! it may do both," said Eloise, sighing.

He approached her at that instant. Nempere arose, as if intentionally,

and left the room. Mountfort pressed her hand to his heart with

earnestness: he kissed it, and then resigning it, said, "No, no,

spotless untainted Eloise; untainted even by surrounding depravity:--not

for worlds would I injure you. Oh! I can conceal it no longer--will

conceal it no longer--Nempere is a villain."

"Is he?" said Eloise, apparently resigned, now, to the severest shocks

of fortune: "then, then indeed I know not with whom to seek an asylum.

Methinks all are villains."

"Listen then, injured innocence, and reflect in whom thou hast confided.

Ten days ago, in the gaming-house at Geneva, Nempere was present. He

engaged in play with me, and I won of him considerable sums. He told me

that he could not pay me now, but that he had a beautiful girl whom he

would give to me, if I would release him from the obligation. 'Est elle

une fille de joye?' I inquired. 'Oui, et de vertu practicable.' This

quieted my conscience. In a moment of licentiousness, I acceded to his

proposal; and, as money is almost valueless to me, I tore the bond for

three thousand zechins: but did I think that an angel was to be

sacrificed to the degrading avarice of the being to whom her fate was

committed? By heavens, I will this moment seek him,--upbraid him with

his inhuman depravity,--and--" "Oh! stop, stop," cried Eloise, "do not

seek him; all, all is well--I will leave him. Oh! how I thank you,

stranger, for this unmerited pity to a wretch who is, alas! too

conscious that she deserves it not."--"Ah! you deserve every thing,"

interrupted the impassioned Mountfort; "you deserve paradise. But leave

this perjured villain; and do not say, unkind fair-one, that you have no

friend; indeed you have a most warm, disinterested friend in me."--"Ah!

but," said Eloise, hesitatingly, "what will the--"

"World say," she was about to have added; but the conviction of having

so lately and so flagrantly violated every regard to its opinion--she

only sighed. "Well," continued Mountfort, as if not perceiving her

hesitation; "you will accompany me to a cottage ornée which I possess at

some little distance hence? Believe that your situation shall be treated

with the deference which it requires; and, however I may have yielded to

habitual licentiousness, I have too much honour to disturb the sorrows

of one who is a victim to that of another." Licentious and free as had

been the career of Mountfort's life, it was by no means the result of a

nature naturally prone to vice; it had been owing to the unchecked

sallies of an imagination not sufficiently refined. At the desolate

situation of Eloise, however, every good propensity in his nature urged

him to take compassion on her. His heart, originally susceptible of the

finest feelings, was touched, and he really and sincerely--yes, a

libertine, but not one from principle, sincerely meant what he said.

"Thanks, generous stranger," said Eloise, with energy; "indeed I do

thank you." For not yet had acquaintance with the world sufficiently

bidden Eloise distrust the motives of its disciples. "I accept your

offer, and only hope that my compliance may not induce you to regard me

otherwise than I am."

"Never, never can I regard you as other than a suffering angel," replied

the impassioned Mountfort. Eloise blushed at what the energetic force of

Mountfort's manner assured her was not intended as a compliment.

"But may I ask my generous benefactor, how, where, and when am I to be

released?"

"Leave that to me," returned Mountfort: "be ready to-morrow night at ten

o'clock. A chaise will wait beneath."

Nempere soon entered; their conversation was uninterrupted, and the

evening passed away uninteresting and slow.

Swiftly fled the intervening hours, and fast advanced the moment when

Eloise was about to try, again, the compassion of the world. Night came,

and Eloise entered the chaise; Mountfort leaped in after her. For a

while her agitation was excessive. Mountfort at last succeeded in

calming her; "Why, my dearest Ma'am'selle" said he, "why will you thus

needlessly agitate yourself? I swear to hold your honour far dearer than

my own life; and my companion--"

"What companion?" Eloise interrupted him, inquiringly.

"Why," replied he, "a friend of mine, who lives in my cottage; he is an

Irishman, and so very moral, and so averse to every species of gaieté de

coeur, that you need be under no apprehensions. In short, he is a

love-sick swain, without ever having found what he calls a congenial

female. He wanders about, writes poetry, and, in short, is much too

sentimental to occasion you any alarm on that account. And, I assure

you," added he, assuming a more serious tone, "although I may not be

quite so far gone in romance, yet I have feelings of honour and humanity

which teach me to respect your sorrows as my own."

"Indeed, indeed I believe you, generous stranger; nor do I think that

you could have a friend whose principles are dishonourable."

Whilst yet she spoke, the chaise stopped, and Mountfort, springing from

it, handed Eloise into his habitation. It was neatly fitted up in the

English taste.

"Fitzeustace," said Mountfort to his friend, "allow me to introduce you

to Madame Eloise de--." Eloise blushed, as did Fitzeustace.

"Come," said Fitzeustace, to conquer mauvaise honte, "supper is ready,

and the lady doubtlessly fatigued."

Fitzeustace was finely formed, yet there was a languor which pervaded

even his whole figure; his eyes were dark and expressive, and as,

occasionally, they met those of Eloise, gleamed with excessive

brilliancy, awakened doubtlessly by curiosity and interest. He said but

little during supper, and left to his more vivacious friend the whole of

Eloise's conversation, who animated at having escaped a persecutor, and

one she hated, displayed extreme command of social powers. Yes, once

again was Eloise vivacious: the sweet spirit of social intercourse was

not dead within,--that spirit which illumes even slavery, which makes

its horrors less terrific, and is not annihilated in the dungeon itself.

At last arrived the hour of retiring--Morning came.

The cottage was situated in a beautiful valley. The odorous perfume of

roses and jasmine wafted on the zephyr's wing, the flowery steep which

rose before it, and the umbrageous loveliness of the surrounding

country, rendered it a spot the most fitted for joyous seclusion. Eloise

wandered out with Mountfort and his friend to view it; and so

accommodating was her spirit, that, ere long, Fitzeustace became known

to her as familiarly as if they had been acquainted all their lives.

Time fled on, and each day seemed only to succeed the other purposely to

vary the pleasures of this delightful retreat. Eloise sung in the summer

evenings, and Fitzeustace, whose taste for music was most exquisite,

accompanied her on his oboe.

By degrees the society of Fitzeustace, to which before she had preferred

Mountfort's, began to be more interesting. He insensibly acquired a

power over the heart of Eloise, which she herself was not aware of. She

involuntarily almost sought his society; and when, which frequently

happened, Mountfort was absent at Geneva, her sensations were

indescribably ecstatic in the society of his friend. She sat in mute, in

silent rapture, listening to the notes of his oboe, as they floated on

the stillness of evening: she feared not for the future, but, as it

were, in a dream of rapturous delight, supposed that she must ever be as

now--happy; not reflecting that, were he who caused that happiness

absent, it would exist no longer.

Fitzeustace madly, passionately doted on Eloise: in all the energy of

incontaminated nature, he sought but the happiness of the object of his

whole affections. He sought not to investigate the causes of his woe;

sufficient was it for him to have found one who could understand, could

sympathize in, the feelings and sensations which every child of nature

whom the world's refinements and luxury have not vitiated, must

feel,--that affection, that contempt of selfish gratification, which

every one whose soul towers at all above the multitude, must

acknowledge. He destined Eloise, in his secret soul, for his own. He

resolved to die--he wished to live with her; and would have purchased

one instant's happiness for her with ages of hopeless torments to be

inflicted on himself. He loved her with passionate and excessive

tenderness: were he absent from her but a moment, he would sigh with

love's impatience for her return; yet he feared to avow his flame, lest

this, perhaps, baseless dream of rapturous and enthusiastic happiness

might fade;--then, indeed Fitzeustace felt that he must die.

Yet was Fitzeustace mistaken: Eloise loved him with all the tenderness

of innocence; she confided in him unreservedly; and, though unconscious

of the nature of the love she felt for him, returned each

enthusiastically energetic prepossession of his towering mind with

ardour excessive and unrestrained. Yet did Fitzeustace suppose that she

loved him not. Ah! why did he think so?

Late one evening, Mountfort had gone to Geneva, and Fitzeustace wandered

with Eloise towards that spot which Eloise selected as their constant

evening ramble on account of its superior beauty. The tall ash and oak,

in mingled umbrage, sighed far above their heads; beneath them were

walks, artificially cut, yet imitating nature. They wandered on, till

they came to a pavilion which Mountfort had caused to be erected. It was

situated on a piece of land entirely surrounded by water, yet

peninsulated by a rustic bridge which joined it to the walk.

Hither, urged mechanically, for their thoughts were otherwise employed,

wandered Eloise and Fitzeustace. Before them hung the moon in cloudless

majesty; her orb was reflected by every movement of the crystalline

water, which, agitated by the gentle zephyr, rolled tranquilly. Heedless

yet of the beauties of nature, the loveliness of the scene, they entered

the pavilion.

Eloise convulsively pressed her hand on her forehead.

"What is the matter, my dearest Eloise?" inquired Fitzeustace, whom

awakened tenderness had thrown off his guard.

"Oh! nothing, nothing; but a momentary faintness. It will soon go off;

let us sit down."

They entered the pavilion.

"'Tis nothing but drowsiness," said Eloise, affecting gaiety; "'t will

soon go off. I sate up late last night; that I believe was the

occasion."

"Recline on this sofa, then," said Fitzeustace, reaching another pillow

to make the couch easier; "and I will play some of those Irish tunes

which you admire so much."

Eloise reclined on the sofa, and Fitzeustace, seated on the floor, began

to play; the melancholy plaintiveness of his music touched Eloise; she

sighed, and concealed her tears in her handkerchief. At length she sunk

into a profound sleep: still Fitzeustace continued playing, noticing not

that she slumbered. He now perceived that she spoke, but in so low a

tone, that he knew she slept.

He approached. She lay wrapped in sleep; a sweet and celestial smile

played upon her countenance, and irradiated her features with a tenfold

expression of etheriality. Suddenly the visions of her slumbers appeared

to have changed; the smile yet remained, but its expression was

melancholy; tears stole gently from under her eyelids:--she sighed.

Ah! with what eagerness of ecstacy did Fitzeustace lean over her form!

He dared not speak, he dared not move; but pressing a ringlet of hair

which had escaped its band, to his lips, waited silently.

"Yes, yes; I think--it may--" at last she muttered; but so confusedly,

as scarcely to be distinguishable.

Fitzeustace remained rooted in rapturous attention, listening.

"I thought, I thought he looked as if he could love me," scarcely

articulated the sleeping Eloise. "Perhaps, though he may not love me, he

may allow me to love him.--Fitzeustace!"

On a sudden, again were changed the visions of her slumbers; terrified

she started from sleep, and cried, "Fitzeustace!"

CHAPTER. XII.

Needless were it to expatiate on their transports; they loved each

other, and that is enough for those who have felt like Eloise and

Fitzeustace.

One night, rather later indeed than it was Mountfort's custom to return

from Geneva, Eloise and Fitzeustace sat awaiting his arrival. At last it

was too late any longer even to expect him; and Eloise was about to bid

Fitzeustace good-night, when a knock at the door aroused them.

Instantly, with a hurried and disordered step, his clothes stained with

blood, his countenance convulsed and pallid as death, in rushed

Mountfort.

An involuntary exclamation of surprise burst from the terrified Eloise.

"What--what is the matter?"

"Oh, nothing, nothing!" answered Mountfort, in a tone of hurried, yet

desperate agony. The wildness of his looks contradicted his assertions.

Fitzeustace, who had been inquiring whether he was wounded, on finding

that he was not, flew to Eloise.

"Oh! go, go!" she exclaimed. "Something, I am convinced, is wrong.--Tell

me, dear Mountfort, what it is--in pity tell me."

"Nempere is dead!" replied Mountfort, in a voice of deliberate

desperation; then, pausing for an instant, he added in an under tone,

"And the officers of justice are in pursuit of me. Adieu,

Eloise!--Adieu, Fitzeustace! You know I must part with you--you know how

unwillingly.--My address is at--London.--Adieu--once again adieu!"

Saying this, as by a convulsive effort of despairing energy, he darted

from the apartment, and mounting a horse which stood at the gate,

swiftly sped away. Fitzeustace well knew the impossibility of his longer

stay; he did not seem surprised, but sighed.

"Ah! well I know," said Eloise, violently agitated, "I well know myself

to be the occasion of these misfortunes. Nempere sought for me; the

generous Mountfort would not give me up, and now is he compelled to

fly--perhaps may not even escape with life. Ah! I fear it is destined

that every friend must suffer in the fatality which environs me.

Fitzeustace!" she uttered this with such tenderness, that, almost

involuntarily, he clasped her hand, and pressed it to his bosom, in the

silent, yet expressive enthusiasm of love. "Fitzeustace! you will not

likewise desert the poor isolated Eloise?"

"Say not isolated, dearest love. Can, can you fear, my love, whilst your

Fitzeustace exists? Say, adored Eloise, shall we now be united, never,

never to part again? Say, will you consent to our immediate union?"

"Know you not," exclaimed Eloise, in a low, faltering voice, "know you

not that I have been another's?

"Oh! suppose me not," interrupted the impassioned Fitzeustace, "the

slave of such vulgar and narrow-minded prejudice. Does the frightful

vice and ingratitude of Nempere sully the spotless excellence of my

Eloise's soul?--No, no,--that must ever continue uncontaminated by the

frailty of the body in which it is enshrined. It must rise superior to

the earth: 't is that which I adore, Eloise. Say, say, was that

Nempere's?"

"Oh! no, never!" cried Eloise, with energy. "Nothing but fear was

Nempere's."

"Then why say you that ever you were his?" said Fitzeustace,

reproachfully. "You never could have been his, destined as you were for

mine, from the first instant the particles composing the soul which I

adore, were assimilated by the God whom I worship."

"Indeed, believe me, dearest Fitzeustace, I love you, far beyond any

thing existing--indeed, existence were valueless, unless enjoyed with

you!"

Eloise, though a something prevented her from avowing them, felt the

enthusiastic and sanguine ideas of Fitzeustace to be true: her soul,

susceptible of the most exalted virtue and expansion, though cruelly

nipped in its growth, thrilled with delight unexperienced before, when

she found a being who could understand and perceive the truth of her

feelings, and indeed anticipate them, as did Fitzeustace; and he, while

gazing on the index of that soul, which associated with his, and

animated the body of Eloise, but for him, felt delight, which, glowing

and enthusiastic as had been his picture of happiness, he never expected

to know. His dark and beautiful eye gleamed with tenfold luster; his

every nerve, his every pulse, confessed the awakened consciousness, that

she, on whom his soul had doted, ever since he acknowledged the

existence of his intellectuality, was present before him.

A short space of time passed, and Eloise gave birth to the son of

Nempere. Fitzeustace cherished it with the affection of a father, and,

when occasionally he necessarily must be absent from the apartment of

his beloved Eloise, his whole delight was to gaze on the child, and

trace in its innocent countenance the features of the mother who was so

beloved by him.

Time no longer dragged heavily to Eloise and Fitzeustace: happy in the

society of each other, they wished nor wanted other joys; united by the

laws of their God, and assimilated by congeniality of sentiment, they

supposed that each succeeding month must be like this, must pass like

this in the full satiety of every innocent union of mental enjoyment.

While thus the time sped in rapturous succession of delight, autumn

advanced.

The evening was late, when, at the usual hour, Eloise and Fitzeustace

took the way to their beloved pavilion. Fitzeustace was unusually

desponding, and his ideas for futurity were marked by the melancholy of

his mind. Eloise in vai, attempted to soothe him; the contention of his

mind was but too visible. She led him to the pavilion. They entered it.

The autumnal moon had risen; her dimly-gleaming orb, scarcely now

visible, was shrouded in the duskiness of the atmosphere: like a spirit

of the spotless ether, which shrinks from the obtrusive gaze of man, she

hung behind a leaden-coloured cloud. The wind in low and melancholy

whispering sighed among the branches of the towering trees; the melody

of the nightingale, which floated upon its dying cadences, alone broke

on the solemnity of the scene. Lives there, whose soul experiences no

degree of delight, is susceptible of no gradations of feelings, at

change of scenery? Lives there, who can listen to the cadence of the

evenign zephyr, and not acknowledge, in his mind, the sensations of

celestial melancholy which it awakens? for if he does, his life were

valueless, his death were undeplored. Ambition, avarice, ten thousand

mean, ignoble passions, had extinguished within him that soft, but

indefinable sensorium of unallayed delight, with which his soul, whose

susceptibility is not destroyed by the demands of selfish appetite,

thrills exultingly, and wants but the union of another, of whom the

feelings are in unison with his own, to constitute almost insupportable

delight.

Let Epicureans argue, and say, "There is no pleasure but in the

gratification of the senses." Let them enjoy their own opinion; I want

not pleasure, when I can enjoy happiness. Let Stoics say, "Every idea

that there are fine feelings, is weak; he who yields to them is even

weaker." Let those too, wise in their own conceit, indulge themselves in

sordid and degrading hypotheses; let them suppose human nature capable

of no influence from anything but materiality; so long as I enjoy the

innocent and congenial delight, which it were needless to define to

those who are strangers to it, I am satisfied.

"Dear Fitzeustace," said Eloise, "tell me what afflicts you; why are you

so melancholy?--Do not we mutually love, and have we not the

unrestrained enjoyment of each other's society?"

Fitzeustace sighed deeply; he pressed Eloise's hand. "Why does my

dearest Eloise suppose that I am unhappy?" The tone of his voice was

tremulous, and a deadly settled paleness dwelt on his cheek.

"Are you not unhappy, then, Fitzeustace?"

"I know I ought not to be so," he replied, with a faint smile;--he

paused--"Eloise," continued Fitzeustace, "I know I ought not to grieve,

but you will, perhaps, pardon me when I say, that a father's curse,

whether from the prejudice of education, or the innate consciousness of

its horror, agitates my mind. I cannot leave you, I cannot go to

England; and will you then leave your country, Eloise, to accommodate

me? No, I do not, I ought not to expect it."

"Oh! with pleasure; what is country? what is every thing without you?

Come, my love, dismiss these fears, we yet may be happy."

"But before we go to England, before my father will see us, it is

necessary that we should be married--nay, do not start, Eloise; I view

it in the light that you do; I consider it an human institution, and

incapable of furnishing that bond of union by which alone can intellect

be conjoined; I regard it as but a chain, which, although it keeps the

body bound, still leaves the soul unfettered: it is not so with love.

But still, Eloise, to those who think like us, it is at all events

harmless; 't is but yielding to the prejudices of the world wherein we

live, and procuring moral expediency, at a slight sacrifice of what we

conceive to be right.

"Well, well, it shall be done, Fitzeustace," resumed Eloise; "but take

the assurance of my promise that I cannot love you more."

They soon agreed on a point of, in their eyes, so trifling importance,

and arriving in England, tasted that happiness, which love and innocence

alone can give. Prejudice may triumph for a while, but virtue will be

eventually the conqueror.

CONCLUSION.

It was night--all was still; not a breeze dared to move, not a sound to

break the stillness of horror. Wolfstein has arrived at the village near

which St. Irvyne stood; he has sped him to the château, and has entered

the edifice; the garden door was open, and he entered the vaults.

For a time, the novelty of his situation, and the painful recurrence of

past events, which, independently of his own energies, would gleam upon

his soul, rendered him too much confused to investigate minutely the

recesses of the cavern. Arousing himself, at last, however, from this

momentary suspension of faculty, he paced the vaults in eager desire for

the arrival of midnight. How inexpressible was his horror when he fell

on a body which appeared motionless and without life! He raised it in

his arms, and, taking it to the light, beheld, pallid in death, the

features of Megalena. The laugh of anguish which had convulsed her

expiring frame, still played around her mouth, as a smile of horror and

despair; her hair was loose and wild, seemingly gathered in knots by the

convulsive grasp of dissolution. She moved not; his soul was nerved by

almost superhuman powers; yet the ice of despair chilled his burning

brain. Curiosity, resistless curiosity, even in a moment such as this,

reigned in his bosom. The body of Megalena was breathless, and yet no

visible cause could be assigned for her death. Wolfstein dashed the body

convulsively on the earth, and, wildered by the suscitated energies of

his soul almost to madness, rushed into the vaults.

Not yet had the bell announced the hour of midnight. Wolfstein sate on a

projecting mass of stone; his frame trembled with a burning anticipation

of what was about to occur; a thirst of knowledge scorched his soul to

madness; yet he stilled his wild energies,--yet he awaited in silence

the coming of Ginotti. At last the bell struck; Ginotti came; his step

was rapid, and his manner wild; his figure was wasted almost to a

skeleton, yet it retained its loftiness and grandeur; still from his eye

emanated that indefinable expression which ever made Wolfstein shrink

appalled. His cheek was sunken and hollow, yet was it flushed by the

hectic of despairing exertion. "Wolfstein," he said, "Wolfstein, part is

past--the hour of agonizing horror is past; yet the dark and icy gloom

of desperation braces this soul to fortitude;--but come, let us to

business." He spoke, and threw his mantle on the ground. "I am blasted

to endless torment," muttered the mysterious. "Wolfstein, dost thou deny

thy Creator?"--"Never, never."--"Wilt thou not?"--"No, no,--any thing

but that."

Deeper grew the gloom of the cavern. Darkness almost visible seemed to

press around them; yet did the scintillations which flashed from

Ginotti's burning gaze, dance on its bosom. Suddenly a flash of

lightning hissed through the lengthened vaults: a burst of frightful

thunder seemed to convulse the universal fabric of nature; and, borne on

the pinions of hell's sulphurous whirlwind, he himself, the frightful

prince of terror, stood before them. "Yes," howled a voice superior to

the bursting thunderpeal; "yes, thou shalt have eternal life, Ginotti."

On a sudden Ginotti's frame mouldered to a gigantic skeleton, yet two

pale and ghastly flames glared in his eyeless sockets. Blackened in

terrible convulsions, Wolfstein expired; over him had the power of hell

no influence. Yes, endless existence is thine, Ginotti--a dateless and

hopeless eternity of horror.

Ginotti is Nempere. Eloise is the sister of Wolfstein. Let then the

memory of these victims to hell and malice live in the remembrance of

those who can pity the wanderings of error; let remorse and repentance

expiate the offences which arise from the delusion of the passions, and

let endless life be sought from Him who alone can give an eternity of

happiness.