THE MYSTERIES OF UDOLPHO
PART 32
VOLUME 4
CHAPTER I
Is all the council that we two have shared,
the hours that we have spent,
When we have chid the hasty-footed time
For parting us—Oh! and is all forgot?
And will you rend our ancient love asunder?
MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM
In the
evening, when Emily was at length informed, that Count De Villefort requested
to see her, she guessed that Valancourt was below, and, endeavouring to assume
composure and to recollect all her spirits, she rose and left the apartment;
but on reaching the door of the library, where she imagined him to be, her
emotion returned with such energy, that, fearing to trust herself in the room,
she returned into the hall, where she continued for a considerable time, unable
to command her agitated spirits.
When she
could recall them, she found in the library Valancourt, seated with the Count,
who both rose on her entrance; but she did not dare to look at Valancourt, and
the Count, having led her to a chair, immediately withdrew.
Emily
remained with her eyes fixed on the floor, under such oppression of heart, that
she could not speak, and with difficulty breathed; while Valancourt threw
himself into a chair beside her, and, sighing heavily, continued silent, when,
had she raised her eyes, she would have perceived the violent emotions, with
which he was agitated.
At
length, in a tremulous voice, he said, 'I have solicited to see you this
evening, that I might, at least, be spared the further torture of suspense,
which your altered manner had occasioned me, and which the hints I have just
received from the Count have in part explained. I perceive I have enemies,
Emily, who envied me my late happiness, and who have been busy in searching out
the means to destroy it: I perceive, too, that time and absence have weakened
the affection you once felt for me, and that you can now easily be taught to
forget me.'
His last
words faltered, and Emily, less able to speak than before, continued silent.
'O what a
meeting is this!' exclaimed Valancourt, starting from his seat, and pacing the
room with hurried steps, 'what a meeting is this, after our long—long
separation!' Again he sat down, and, after the struggle of a moment, he added
in a firm but despairing tone, 'This is too much—I cannot bear it! Emily, will
you not speak to me?'
He
covered his face with his hand, as if to conceal his emotion, and took Emily's,
which she did not withdraw. Her tears could no longer be restrained; and, when
he raised his eyes and perceived that she was weeping, all his tenderness
returned, and a gleam of hope appeared to cross his mind, for he exclaimed, 'O!
you do pity me, then, you do love me! Yes, you are still my own Emily—let me
believe those tears, that tell me so!'
Emily now
made an effort to recover her firmness, and, hastily drying them, 'Yes,' said
she, 'I do pity you—I weep for you—but, ought I to think of you with affection?
You may remember, that yester-evening I said, I had still sufficient confidence
in your candour to believe, that, when I should request an explanation of your
words, you would give it. This explanation is now unnecessary, I understand
them too well; but prove, at least, that your candour is deserving of the
confidence I give it, when I ask you, whether you are conscious of being the same
estimable Valancourt—whom I once loved.'
'Once
loved!' cried he,—'the same—the same!' He paused in extreme emotion, and then
added, in a voice at once solemn, and dejected,—'No—I am not the same!—I am
lost—I am no longer worthy of you!'
He again
concealed his face. Emily was too much affected by this honest confession to
reply immediately, and, while she struggled to overcome the pleadings of her
heart, and to act with the decisive firmness, which was necessary for her
future peace, she perceived all the danger of trusting long to her resolution,
in the presence of Valancourt, and was anxious to conclude an interview, that
tortured them both; yet, when she considered, that this was probably their last
meeting, her fortitude sunk at once, and she experienced only emotions of
tenderness and of despondency.
Valancourt,
meanwhile, lost in emotions of remorse and grief, which he had neither the
power, or the will to express, sat insensible almost of the presence of Emily,
his features still concealed, and his breast agitated by convulsive sighs.
'Spare me
the necessity,' said Emily, recollecting her fortitude, 'spare me the necessity
of mentioning those circumstances of your conduct, which oblige me to break our
connection forever.—We must part, I now see you for the last time.'
'Impossible!'
cried Valancourt, roused from his deep silence, 'You cannot mean what you
say!—you cannot mean to throw me from you forever!'
'We must
part,' repeated Emily, with emphasis,—'and that forever! Your own conduct has
made this necessary.'
'This is
the Count's determination,' said he haughtily, 'not yours, and I shall enquire
by what authority he interferes between us.' He now rose, and walked about the
room in great emotion.
'Let me
save you from this error,' said Emily, not less agitated—'it is my
determination, and, if you reflect a moment on your late conduct, you will
perceive, that my future peace requires it.'
'Your
future peace requires, that we should part—part forever!' said Valancourt, 'How
little did I ever expect to hear you say so!'
'And how
little did I expect, that it would be necessary for me to say so!' rejoined
Emily, while her voice softened into tenderness, and her tears flowed
again.—'That you—you, Valancourt, would ever fall from my esteem!'
He was
silent a moment, as if overwhelmed by the consciousness of no longer deserving
this esteem, as well as the certainty of having lost it, and then, with
impassioned grief, lamented the criminality of his late conduct and the misery
to which it had reduced him, till, overcome by a recollection of the past and a
conviction of the future, he burst into tears, and uttered only deep and broken
sighs.
The
remorse he had expressed, and the distress he suffered could not be witnessed
by Emily with indifference, and, had she not called to her recollection all the
circumstances, of which Count De Villefort had informed her, and all he had
said of the danger of confiding in repentance, formed under the influence of
passion, she might perhaps have trusted to the assurances of her heart, and
have forgotten his misconduct in the tenderness, which that repentance excited.
Valancourt,
returning to the chair beside her, at length, said, in a calm voice, ''Tis
true, I am fallen—fallen from my own esteem! but could you, Emily, so soon, so
suddenly resign, if you had not before ceased to love me, or, if your conduct
was not governed by the designs, I will say, the selfish designs of another
person! Would you not otherwise be willing to hope for my reformation—and could
you bear, by estranging me from you, to abandon me to misery—to myself!'—Emily
wept aloud.—'No, Emily—no—you would not do this, if you still loved me. You
would find your own happiness in saving mine.'
'There
are too many probabilities against that hope,' said Emily, 'to justify me in
trusting the comfort of my whole life to it. May I not also ask, whether you
could wish me to do this, if you really loved me?'
'Really
loved you!' exclaimed Valancourt—'is it possible you can doubt my love! Yet it
is reasonable, that you should do so, since you see, that I am less ready to
suffer the horror of parting with you, than that of involving you in my ruin.
Yes, Emily—I am ruined—irreparably ruined—I am involved in debts, which I can
never discharge!' Valancourt's look, which was wild, as he spoke this, soon
settled into an expression of gloomy despair; and Emily, while she was
compelled to admire his sincerity, saw, with unutterable anguish, new reasons
for fear in the suddenness of his feelings and the extent of the misery, in
which they might involve him. After some minutes, she seemed to contend against
her grief and to struggle for fortitude to conclude the interview. 'I will not
prolong these moments,' said she, 'by a conversation, which can answer no good
purpose. Valancourt, farewell!'
'You are
not going?' said he, wildly interrupting her—'You will not leave me thus—you
will not abandon me even before my mind has suggested any possibility of
compromise between the last indulgence of my despair and the endurance of my
loss!' Emily was terrified by the sternness of his look, and said, in a
soothing voice, 'You have yourself acknowledged, that it is necessary we should
part;—if you wish, that I should believe you love me, you will repeat the
acknowledgment.'—'Never—never,' cried he—'I was distracted when I made it. O!
Emily—this is too much;—though you are not deceived as to my faults, you must
be deluded into this exasperation against them. The Count is the barrier
between us; but he shall not long remain so.'
'You are,
indeed, distracted,' said Emily, 'the Count is not your enemy; on the contrary,
he is my friend, and that might, in some degree, induce you to consider him as
yours.'—'Your friend!' said Valancourt, hastily, 'how long has he been your
friend, that he can so easily make you forget your lover? Was it he, who
recommended to your favour the Monsieur Du Pont, who, you say, accompanied you
from Italy, and who, I say, has stolen your affections? But I have no right to
question you;—you are your own mistress. Du Pont, perhaps, may not long triumph
over my fallen fortunes!' Emily, more frightened than before by the frantic
looks of Valancourt, said, in a tone scarcely audible, 'For heaven's sake be
reasonable—be composed. Monsieur Du Pont is not your rival, nor is the Count
his advocate. You have no rival; nor, except yourself, an enemy. My heart is
wrung with anguish, which must increase while your frantic behaviour shews me,
more than ever, that you are no longer the Valancourt I have been accustomed to
love.'
He made
no reply, but sat with his arms rested on the table and his face concealed by
his hands; while Emily stood, silent and trembling, wretched for herself and
dreading to leave him in this state of mind.
'O excess
of misery!' he suddenly exclaimed, 'that I can never lament my sufferings,
without accusing myself, nor remember you, without recollecting the folly and
the vice, by which I have lost you! Why was I forced to Paris, and why did I
yield to allurements, which were to make me despicable for ever! O! why cannot
I look back, without interruption, to those days of innocence and peace, the
days of our early love!'—The recollection seemed to melt his heart, and the
frenzy of despair yielded to tears. After a long pause, turning towards her and
taking her hand, he said, in a softened voice, 'Emily, can you bear that we
should part—can you resolve to give up an heart, that loves you like mine—an
heart, which, though it has erred—widely erred, is not irretrievable from
error, as, you well know, it never can be retrievable from love?' Emily made no
reply, but with her tears. 'Can you,' continued he, 'can you forget all our
former days of happiness and confidence—when I had not a thought, that I might
wish to conceal from you—when I had no taste—no pleasures, in which you did not
participate?'
'O do not
lead me to the remembrance of those days,' said Emily, 'unless you can teach me
to forget the present; I do not mean to reproach you; if I did, I should be
spared these tears; but why will you render your present sufferings more
conspicuous, by contrasting them with your former virtues?'
'Those
virtues,' said Valancourt, 'might, perhaps, again be mine, if your affection,
which nurtured them, was unchanged;—but I fear, indeed, I see, that you can no
longer love me; else the happy hours, which we have passed together, would
plead for me, and you could not look back upon them unmoved. Yet, why should I
torture myself with the remembrance—why do I linger here? Am I not ruined—would
it not be madness to involve you in my misfortunes, even if your heart was
still my own? I will not distress you further. Yet, before I go,' added he, in
a solemn voice, 'let me repeat, that, whatever may be my destiny—whatever I may
be doomed to suffer, I must always love you—most fondly love you! I am going,
Emily, I am going to leave you—to leave you, forever!' As he spoke the last
words, his voice trembled, and he threw himself again into the chair, from
which he had risen. Emily was utterly unable to leave the room, or to say
farewell. All impression of his criminal conduct and almost of his follies was
obliterated from her mind, and she was sensible only of pity and grief.
'My
fortitude is gone,' said Valancourt at length; 'I can no longer even struggle
to recall it. I cannot now leave you—I cannot bid you an eternal farewell; say,
at least, that you will see me once again.' Emily's heart was somewhat relieved
by the request, and she endeavoured to believe, that she ought not to refuse
it. Yet she was embarrassed by recollecting, that she was a visitor in the
house of the Count, who could not be pleased by the return of Valancourt. Other
considerations, however, soon overcame this, and she granted his request, on
the condition, that he would neither think of the Count, as his enemy, nor Du
Pont as his rival. He then left her, with a heart, so much lightened by this
short respite, that he almost lost every former sense of misfortune.
Emily
withdrew to her own room, that she might compose her spirits and remove the
traces of her tears, which would encourage the censorious remarks of the
Countess and her favourite, as well as excite the curiosity of the rest of the
family. She found it, however, impossible to tranquillize her mind, from which
she could not expel the remembrance of the late scene with Valancourt, or the
consciousness, that she was to see him again, on the morrow. This meeting now
appeared more terrible to her than the last, for the ingenuous confession he
had made of his ill conduct and his embarrassed circumstances, with the
strength and tenderness of affection, which this confession discovered, had
deeply impressed her, and, in spite of all she had heard and believed to his
disadvantage, her esteem began to return. It frequently appeared to her
impossible, that he could have been guilty of the depravities, reported of him,
which, if not inconsistent with his warmth and impetuosity, were entirely so
with his candour and sensibility. Whatever was the criminality, which had given
rise to the reports, she could not now believe them to be wholly true, nor that
his heart was finally closed against the charms of virtue. The deep
consciousness, which he felt as well as expressed of his errors, seemed to
justify the opinion; and, as she understood not the instability of youthful
dispositions, when opposed by habit, and that professions frequently deceive
those, who make, as well as those, who hear them, she might have yielded to the
flattering persuasions of her own heart and the pleadings of Valancourt, had
she not been guided by the superior prudence of the Count. He represented to
her, in a clear light, the danger of her present situation, that of listening
to promises of amendment, made under the influence of strong passion, and the
slight hope, which could attach to a connection, whose chance of happiness
rested upon the retrieval of ruined circumstances and the reform of corrupted
habits. On these accounts, he lamented, that Emily had consented to a second
interview, for he saw how much it would shake her resolution and increase the
difficulty of her conquest.
Her mind
was now so entirely occupied by nearer interests, that she forgot the old
housekeeper and the promised history, which so lately had excited her
curiosity, but which Dorothee was probably not very anxious to disclose, for
night came; the hours passed; and she did not appear in Emily's chamber. With
the latter it was a sleepless and dismal night; the more she suffered her
memory to dwell on the late scenes with Valancourt, the more her resolution
declined, and she was obliged to recollect all the arguments, which the Count
had made use of to strengthen it, and all the precepts, which she had received
from her deceased father, on the subject of self-command, to enable her to act,
with prudence and dignity, on this the most severe occasion of her life. There
were moments, when all her fortitude forsook her, and when, remembering the
confidence of former times, she thought it impossible, that she could renounce
Valancourt. His reformation then appeared certain; the arguments of Count De
Villefort were forgotten; she readily believed all she wished, and was willing
to encounter any evil, rather than that of an immediate separation.
Thus
passed the night in ineffectual struggles between affection and reason, and she
rose, in the morning, with a mind, weakened and irresolute, and a frame,
trembling with illness.
CHAPTER II
Come, weep with me;—past hope, past cure, past
help!
ROMEO AND JULIET
Valancourt,
meanwhile, suffered the tortures of remorse and despair. The sight of Emily had
renewed all the ardour, with which he first loved her, and which had suffered a
temporary abatement from absence and the passing scenes of busy life. When, on
the receipt of her letter, he set out for Languedoc, he then knew, that his own
folly had involved him in ruin, and it was no part of his design to conceal
this from her. But he lamented only the delay which his ill-conduct must give
to their marriage, and did not foresee, that the information could induce her
to break their connection forever. While the prospect of this separation
overwhelmed his mind, before stung with self-reproach, he awaited their second
interview, in a state little short of distraction, yet was still inclined to
hope, that his pleadings might prevail upon her not to exact it. In the
morning, he sent to know at what hour she would see him; and his note arrived,
when she was with the Count, who had sought an opportunity of again conversing
with her of Valancourt; for he perceived the extreme distress of her mind, and
feared, more than ever, that her fortitude would desert her. Emily having
dismissed the messenger, the Count returned to the subject of their late
conversation, urging his fear of Valancourt's entreaties, and again pointing
out to her the lengthened misery, that must ensue, if she should refuse to
encounter some present uneasiness. His repeated arguments could, indeed, alone
have protected her from the affection she still felt for Valancourt, and she
resolved to be governed by them.
The hour
of interview, at length, arrived. Emily went to it, at least, with composure of
manner, but Valancourt was so much agitated, that he could not speak, for
several minutes, and his first words were alternately those of lamentation,
entreaty, and self-reproach. Afterward, he said, 'Emily, I have loved you—I do
love you, better than my life; but I am ruined by my own conduct. Yet I would
seek to entangle you in a connection, that must be miserable for you, rather
than subject myself to the punishment, which is my due, the loss of you. I am a
wretch, but I will be a villain no longer.—I will not endeavour to shake your
resolution by the pleadings of a selfish passion. I resign you, Emily, and will
endeavour to find consolation in considering, that, though I am miserable, you,
at least, may be happy. The merit of the sacrifice is, indeed, not my own, for
I should never have attained strength of mind to surrender you, if your
prudence had not demanded it.'
He paused
a moment, while Emily attempted to conceal the tears, which came to her eyes.
She would have said, 'You speak now, as you were wont to do,' but she checked
herself.—'Forgive me, Emily,' said he, 'all the sufferings I have occasioned
you, and, sometimes, when you think of the wretched Valancourt, remember, that
his only consolation would be to believe, that you are no longer unhappy by his
folly.' The tears now fell fast upon her cheek, and he was relapsing into the
phrensy of despair, when Emily endeavoured to recall her fortitude and to
terminate an interview, which only seemed to increase the distress of both.
Perceiving her tears and that she was rising to go, Valancourt struggled, once
more, to overcome his own feelings and to sooth hers. 'The remembrance of this
sorrow,' said he, 'shall in future be my protection. O! never again will
example, or temptation have power to seduce me to evil, exalted as I shall be
by the recollection of your grief for me.'
Emily was
somewhat comforted by this assurance. 'We are now parting for ever,' said she;
'but, if my happiness is dear to you, you will always remember, that nothing
can contribute to it more, than to believe, that you have recovered your own
esteem.' Valancourt took her hand;—his eyes were covered with tears, and the
farewell he would have spoken was lost in sighs. After a few moments, Emily
said, with difficulty and emotion, 'Farewell, Valancourt, may you be happy!'
She repeated her 'farewell,' and attempted to withdraw her hand, but he still
held it and bathed it with his tears. 'Why prolong these moments?' said Emily,
in a voice scarcely audible, 'they are too painful to us both.' 'This is
too—too much,' exclaimed Valancourt, resigning her hand and throwing himself
into a chair, where he covered his face with his hands and was overcome, for
some moments, by convulsive sighs. After a long pause, during which Emily wept
in silence, and Valancourt seemed struggling with his grief, she again rose to
take leave of him. Then, endeavouring to recover his composure, 'I am again
afflicting you,' said he, 'but let the anguish I suffer plead for me.' He then
added, in a solemn voice, which frequently trembled with the agitation of his
heart, 'Farewell, Emily, you will always be the only object of my tenderness.
Sometimes you will think of the unhappy Valancourt, and it will be with pity,
though it may not be with esteem. O! what is the whole world to me, without
you—without your esteem!' He checked himself—'I am falling again into the error
I have just lamented. I must not intrude longer upon your patience, or I shall
relapse into despair.'
He once
more bade Emily adieu, pressed her hand to his lips, looked at her, for the
last time, and hurried out of the room.
Emily
remained in the chair, where he had left her, oppressed with a pain at her
heart, which scarcely permitted her to breathe, and listening to his departing
steps, sinking fainter and fainter, as he crossed the hall. She was, at length,
roused by the voice of the Countess in the garden, and, her attention being
then awakened, the first object, which struck her sight, was the vacant chair,
where Valancourt had sat. The tears, which had been, for some time, repressed
by the kind of astonishment, that followed his departure, now came to her
relief, and she was, at length, sufficiently composed to return to her own
room.
CHAPTER III
This is no mortal business, nor no sound
That the earth owes!
SHAKESPEARE
We now
return to the mention of Montoni, whose rage and disappointment were soon lost
in nearer interests, than any, which the unhappy Emily had awakened. His
depredations having exceeded their usual limits, and reached an extent, at
which neither the timidity of the then commercial senate of Venice, nor their
hope of his occasional assistance would permit them to connive, the same
effort, it was resolved, should complete the suppression of his power and the
correction of his outrages. While a corps of considerable strength was upon the
point of receiving orders to march for Udolpho, a young officer, prompted
partly by resentment, for some injury, received from Montoni, and partly by the
hope of distinction, solicited an interview with the Minister, who directed the
enterprise. To him he represented, that the situation of Udolpho rendered it
too strong to be taken by open force, except after some tedious operations;
that Montoni had lately shewn how capable he was of adding to its strength all
the advantages, which could be derived from the skill of a commander; that so
considerable a body of troops, as that allotted to the expedition, could not
approach Udolpho without his knowledge, and that it was not for the honour of
the republic to have a large part of its regular force employed, for such a
time as the siege of Udolpho would require, upon the attack of a handful of
banditti. The object of the expedition, he thought, might be accomplished much
more safely and speedily by mingling contrivance with force. It was possible to
meet Montoni and his party, without their walls, and to attack them then; or,
by approaching the fortress, with the secrecy, consistent with the march of
smaller bodies of troops, to take advantage either of the treachery, or
negligence of some of his party, and to rush unexpectedly upon the whole even
in the castle of Udolpho.
This
advice was seriously attended to, and the officer, who gave it, received the
command of the troops, demanded for his purpose. His first efforts were
accordingly those of contrivance alone. In the neighbourhood of Udolpho, he
waited, till he had secured the assistance of several of the condottieri, of
whom he found none, that he addressed, unwilling to punish their imperious
master and to secure their own pardon from the senate. He learned also the
number of Montoni's troops, and that it had been much increased, since his late
successes. The conclusion of his plan was soon effected. Having returned with
his party, who received the watch-word and other assistance from their friends
within, Montoni and his officers were surprised by one division, who had been
directed to their apartment, while the other maintained the slight combat,
which preceded the surrender of the whole garrison. Among the persons, seized
with Montoni, was Orsino, the assassin, who had joined him on his first arrival
at Udolpho, and whose concealment had been made known to the senate by Count
Morano, after the unsuccessful attempt of the latter to carry off Emily. It
was, indeed, partly for the purpose of capturing this man, by whom one of the
senate had been murdered, that the expedition was undertaken, and its success
was so acceptable to them, that Morano was instantly released, notwithstanding
the political suspicions, which Montoni, by his secret accusation, had excited
against him. The celerity and ease, with which this whole transaction was
completed, prevented it from attracting curiosity, or even from obtaining a
place in any of the published records of that time; so that Emily, who remained
in Languedoc, was ignorant of the defeat and signal humiliation of her late
persecutor.
Her mind
was now occupied with sufferings, which no effort of reason had yet been able
to controul. Count De Villefort, who sincerely attempted whatever benevolence
could suggest for softening them, sometimes allowed her the solitude she wished
for, sometimes led her into friendly parties, and constantly protected her, as
much as possible, from the shrewd enquiries and critical conversation of the
Countess. He often invited her to make excursions, with him and his daughter,
during which he conversed entirely on questions, suitable to her taste, without
appearing to consult it, and thus endeavoured gradually to withdraw her from
the subject of her grief, and to awake other interests in her mind. Emily, to
whom he appeared as the enlightened friend and protector of her youth, soon
felt for him the tender affection of a daughter, and her heart expanded to her
young friend Blanche, as to a sister, whose kindness and simplicity compensated
for the want of more brilliant qualities. It was long before she could
sufficiently abstract her mind from Valancourt to listen to the story, promised
by old Dorothee, concerning which her curiosity had once been so deeply
interested; but Dorothee, at length, reminded her of it, and Emily desired,
that she would come, that night, to her chamber.
Still her
thoughts were employed by considerations, which weakened her curiosity, and
Dorothee's tap at the door, soon after twelve, surprised her almost as much as
if it had not been appointed. 'I am come, at last, lady,' said she; 'I wonder
what it is makes my old limbs shake so, to-night. I thought, once or twice, I
should have dropped, as I was a-coming.' Emily seated her in a chair, and
desired, that she would compose her spirits, before she entered upon the
subject, that had brought her thither. 'Alas,' said Dorothee, 'it is thinking
of that, I believe, which has disturbed me so. In my way hither too, I passed
the chamber, where my dear lady died, and every thing was so still and gloomy about
me, that I almost fancied I saw her, as she appeared upon her death-bed.'
Emily now
drew her chair near to Dorothee, who went on. 'It is about twenty years since
my lady Marchioness came a bride to the chateau. O! I well remember how she
looked, when she came into the great hall, where we servants were all assembled
to welcome her, and how happy my lord the Marquis seemed. Ah! who would have
thought then!—But, as I was saying, ma'amselle, I thought the Marchioness, with
all her sweet looks, did not look happy at heart, and so I told my husband, and
he said it was all fancy; so I said no more, but I made my remarks, for all
that. My lady Marchioness was then about your age, and, as I have often
thought, very like you. Well! my lord the Marquis kept open house, for a long
time, and gave such entertainments and there were such gay doings as have never
been in the chateau since. I was younger, ma'amselle, then, than I am now, and
was as gay at the best of them. I remember I danced with Philip, the butler, in
a pink gown, with yellow ribbons, and a coif, not such as they wear now, but
plaited high, with ribbons all about it. It was very becoming truly;—my lord,
the Marquis, noticed me. Ah! he was a good-natured gentleman then—who would
have thought that he!'—
'But the
Marchioness, Dorothee,' said Emily, 'you was telling me of her.'
'O yes,
my lady Marchioness, I thought she did not seem happy at heart, and once, soon
after the marriage, I caught her crying in her chamber; but, when she saw me,
she dried her eyes, and pretended to smile. I did not dare then to ask what was
the matter; but, the next time I saw her crying, I did, and she seemed
displeased;—so I said no more. I found out, some time after, how it was. Her
father, it seems, had commanded her to marry my lord, the Marquis, for his
money, and there was another nobleman, or else a chevalier, that she liked
better and that was very fond of her, and she fretted for the loss of him, I
fancy, but she never told me so. My lady always tried to conceal her tears from
the Marquis, for I have often seen her, after she has been so sorrowful, look
so calm and sweet, when he came into the room! But my lord, all of a sudden,
grew gloomy and fretful, and very unkind sometimes to my lady. This afflicted
her very much, as I saw, for she never complained, and she used to try so
sweetly to oblige him and to bring him into a good humour, that my heart has
often ached to see it. But he used to be stubborn, and give her harsh answers,
and then, when she found it all in vain, she would go to her own room, and cry
so! I used to hear her in the anti-room, poor dear lady! but I seldom ventured
to go to her. I used, sometimes, to think my lord was jealous. To be sure my
lady was greatly admired, but she was too good to deserve suspicion. Among the
many chevaliers, that visited at the chateau, there was one, that I always
thought seemed just suited for my lady; he was so courteous, yet so spirited,
and there was such a grace, as it were, in all he did, or said. I always
observed, that, whenever he had been there, the Marquis was more gloomy and my
lady more thoughtful, and it came into my head, that this was the chevalier she
ought to have married, but I never could learn for certain.'
'What was
the chevalier's name, Dorothee?' said Emily.
'Why that
I will not tell even to you, ma'amselle, for evil may come of it. I once heard
from a person, who is since dead, that the Marchioness was not in law the wife
of the Marquis, for that she had before been privately married to the gentleman
she was so much attached to, and was afterwards afraid to own it to her father,
who was a very stern man; but this seems very unlikely, and I never gave much
faith to it. As I was saying, the Marquis was most out of humour, as I thought,
when the chevalier I spoke of had been at the chateau, and, at last, his ill
treatment of my lady made her quite miserable. He would see hardly any visitors
at the castle, and made her live almost by herself. I was her constant
attendant, and saw all she suffered, but still she never complained.
'After
matters had gone on thus, for near a year, my lady was taken ill, and I thought
her long fretting had made her so,—but, alas! I fear it was worse than that.'
'Worse!
Dorothee,' said Emily, 'can that be possible?'
'I fear
it was so, madam, there were strange appearances. But I will only tell what happened.
My lord, the Marquis—'
'Hush,
Dorothee, what sounds were those?' said Emily.
Dorothee
changed countenance, and, while they both listened, they heard, on the
stillness of the night, music of uncommon sweetness.
'I have
surely heard that voice before!' said Emily, at length.
'I have
often heard it, and at this same hour,' said Dorothee, solemnly, 'and, if
spirits ever bring music—that is surely the music of one!'
Emily, as
the sounds drew nearer, knew them to be the same she had formerly heard at the
time of her father's death, and, whether it was the remembrance they now
revived of that melancholy event, or that she was struck with superstitious
awe, it is certain she was so much affected, that she had nearly fainted.
'I think
I once told you, madam,' said Dorothee, 'that I first heard this music, soon
after my lady's death! I well remember the night!'— 'Hark! it comes again!'
said Emily, 'let us open the window, and listen.'
They did
so; but, soon, the sounds floated gradually away into distance, and all was
again still; they seemed to have sunk among the woods, whose tufted tops were
visible upon the clear horizon, while every other feature of the scene was involved
in the night-shade, which, however, allowed the eye an indistinct view of some
objects in the garden below.
As Emily
leaned on the window, gazing with a kind of thrilling awe upon the obscurity
beneath, and then upon the cloudless arch above, enlightened only by the stars,
Dorothee, in a low voice, resumed her narrative.
'I was
saying, ma'amselle, that I well remember when first I heard that music. It was
one night, soon after my lady's death, that I had sat up later than usual, and
I don't know how it was, but I had been thinking a great deal about my poor
mistress, and of the sad scene I had lately witnessed. The chateau was quite
still, and I was in the chamber at a good distance from the rest of the
servants, and this, with the mournful things I had been thinking of, I suppose,
made me low spirited, for I felt very lonely and forlorn, as it were, and
listened often, wishing to hear a sound in the chateau, for you know,
ma'amselle, when one can hear people moving, one does not so much mind, about one's
fears. But all the servants were gone to bed, and I sat, thinking and thinking,
till I was almost afraid to look round the room, and my poor lady's countenance
often came to my mind, such as I had seen her when she was dying, and, once or
twice, I almost thought I saw her before me,—when suddenly I heard such sweet
music! It seemed just at my window, and I shall never forget what I felt. I had
not power to move from my chair, but then, when I thought it was my dear lady's
voice, the tears came to my eyes. I had often heard her sing, in her life-time,
and to be sure she had a very fine voice; it had made me cry to hear her, many
a time, when she has sat in her oriel, of an evening, playing upon her lute
such sad songs, and singing so. O! it went to one's heart! I have listened in
the anti-chamber, for the hour together, and she would sometimes sit playing,
with the window open, when it was summer time, till it was quite dark, and when
I have gone in, to shut it, she has hardly seemed to know what hour it was.
But, as I said, madam,' continued Dorothee, 'when first I heard the music, that
came just now, I thought it was my late lady's, and I have often thought so
again, when I have heard it, as I have done at intervals, ever since.
Sometimes, many months have gone by, but still it has returned.'
'It is
extraordinary,' observed Emily, 'that no person has yet discovered the
musician.'
'Aye,
ma'amselle, if it had been any thing earthly it would have been discovered long
ago, but who could have courage to follow a spirit, and if they had, what good
could it do?—for spirits, YOU KNOW, ma'am, can take any shape, or no shape, and
they will be here, one minute, and, the next perhaps, in a quite different
place!'
'Pray
resume your story of the Marchioness,' said Emily, 'and acquaint me with the
manner of her death.'
'I will,
ma'am,' said Dorothee, 'but shall we leave the window?'
'This
cool air refreshes me,' replied Emily, 'and I love to hear it creep along the
woods, and to look upon this dusky landscape. You was speaking of my lord, the
Marquis, when the music interrupted us.'
'Yes,
madam, my lord, the Marquis, became more and more gloomy; and my lady grew
worse and worse, till, one night, she was taken very ill, indeed. I was called
up, and, when I came to her bedside, I was shocked to see her countenance—it
was so changed! She looked piteously up at me, and desired I would call the
Marquis again, for he was not yet come, and tell him she had something
particular to say to him. At last, he came, and he did, to be sure, seem very
sorry to see her, but he said very little. My lady told him she felt herself to
be dying, and wished to speak with him alone, and then I left the room, but I
shall never forget his look as I went.'
'When I
returned, I ventured to remind my lord about sending for a doctor, for I
supposed he had forgot to do so, in his grief; but my lady said it was then too
late; but my lord, so far from thinking so, seemed to think light of her
disorder—till she was seized with such terrible pains! O, I never shall forget
her shriek! My lord then sent off a man and horse for the doctor, and walked
about the room and all over the chateau in the greatest distress; and I staid
by my dear lady, and did what I could to ease her sufferings. She had intervals
of ease, and in one of these she sent for my lord again; when he came, I was
going, but she desired I would not leave her. O! I shall never forget what a
scene passed—I can hardly bear to think of it now! My lord was almost
distracted, for my lady behaved with so much goodness, and took such pains to
comfort him, that, if he ever had suffered a suspicion to enter his head, he
must now have been convinced he was wrong. And to be sure he did seem to be
overwhelmed with the thought of his treatment of her, and this affected her so
much, that she fainted away.
'We then
got my lord out of the room; he went into his library, and threw himself on the
floor, and there he staid, and would hear no reason, that was talked to him.
When my lady recovered, she enquired for him, but, afterwards, said she could
not bear to see his grief, and desired we would let her die quietly. She died
in my arms, ma'amselle, and she went off as peacefully as a child, for all the
violence of her disorder was passed.'
Dorothee
paused, and wept, and Emily wept with her; for she was much affected by the
goodness of the late Marchioness, and by the meek patience, with which she had
suffered.
'When the
doctor came,' resumed Dorothee, 'alas! he came too late; he appeared greatly
shocked to see her, for soon after her death a frightful blackness spread all
over her face. When he had sent the attendants out of the room, he asked me
several odd questions about the Marchioness, particularly concerning the
manner, in which she had been seized, and he often shook his head at my
answers, and seemed to mean more, than he chose to say. But I understood him
too well. However, I kept my remarks to myself, and only told them to my
husband, who bade me hold my tongue. Some of the other servants, however, suspected
what I did, and strange reports were whispered about the neighbourhood, but
nobody dared to make any stir about them. When my lord heard that my lady was
dead, he shut himself up, and would see nobody but the doctor, who used to be
with him alone, sometimes for an hour together; and, after that, the doctor
never talked with me again about my lady. When she was buried in the church of
the convent, at a little distance yonder, if the moon was up you might see the
towers here, ma'amselle, all my lord's vassals followed the funeral, and there
was not a dry eye among them, for she had done a deal of good among the poor.
My lord, the Marquis, I never saw any body so melancholy as he was afterwards,
and sometimes he would be in such fits of violence, that we almost thought he
had lost his senses. He did not stay long at the chateau, but joined his
regiment, and, soon after, all the servants, except my husband and I, received
notice to go, for my lord went to the wars. I never saw him after, for he would
not return to the chateau, though it is such a fine place, and never finished
those fine rooms he was building on the west side of it, and it has, in a
manner, been shut up ever since, till my lord the Count came here.'
'The
death of the Marchioness appears extraordinary,' said Emily, who was anxious to
know more than she dared to ask.
'Yes,
madam,' replied Dorothee, 'it was extraordinary; I have told you all I saw, and
you may easily guess what I think, I cannot say more, because I would not
spread reports, that might offend my lord the Count.'
'You are
very right,' said Emily;—'where did the Marquis die?'—'In the north of France,
I believe, ma'amselle,' replied Dorothee. 'I was very glad, when I heard my
lord the Count was coming, for this had been a sad desolate place, these many
years, and we heard such strange noises, sometimes, after my lady's death,
that, as I told you before, my husband and I left it for a neighbouring
cottage. And now, lady, I have told you all this sad history, and all my
thoughts, and you have promised, you know, never to give the least hint about
it.'—'I have,' said Emily, 'and I will be faithful to my promise,
Dorothee;—what you have told has interested me more than you can imagine. I
only wish I could prevail upon you to tell the name of the chevalier, whom you
thought so deserving of the Marchioness.'
Dorothee,
however, steadily refused to do this, and then returned to the notice of
Emily's likeness to the late Marchioness. 'There is another picture of her,'
added she, 'hanging in a room of the suite, which was shut up. It was drawn, as
I have heard, before she was married, and is much more like you than the
miniature.' When Emily expressed a strong desire to see this, Dorothee replied,
that she did not like to open those rooms; but Emily reminded her, that the
Count had talked the other day of ordering them to be opened; of which Dorothee
seemed to consider much, and then she owned, that she should feel less, if she
went into them with Emily first, than otherwise, and at length promised to shew
the picture.
The night
was too far advanced and Emily was too much affected by the narrative of the
scenes, which had passed in those apartments, to wish to visit them at this
hour, but she requested that Dorothee would return on the following night, when
they were not likely to be observed, and conduct her thither. Besides her wish
to examine the portrait, she felt a thrilling curiosity to see the chamber, in
which the Marchioness had died, and which Dorothee had said remained, with the
bed and furniture, just as when the corpse was removed for interment. The
solemn emotions, which the expectation of viewing such a scene had awakened,
were in unison with the present tone of her mind, depressed by severe
disappointment. Cheerful objects rather added to, than removed this depression;
but, perhaps, she yielded too much to her melancholy inclination, and
imprudently lamented the misfortune, which no virtue of her own could have
taught her to avoid, though no effort of reason could make her look unmoved
upon the self-degradation of him, whom she had once esteemed and loved.
Dorothee
promised to return, on the following night, with the keys of the chambers, and
then wished Emily good repose, and departed. Emily, however, continued at the
window, musing upon the melancholy fate of the Marchioness and listening, in
awful expectation, for a return of the music. But the stillness of the night
remained long unbroken, except by the murmuring sounds of the woods, as they
waved in the breeze, and then by the distant bell of the convent, striking one.
She now withdrew from the window, and, as she sat at her bed-side, indulging
melancholy reveries, which the loneliness of the hour assisted, the stillness
was suddenly interrupted not by music, but by very uncommon sounds, that seemed
to come either from the room, adjoining her own, or from one below. The
terrible catastrophe, that had been related to her, together with the
mysterious circumstances, said to have since occurred in the chateau, had so
much shocked her spirits, that she now sunk, for a moment, under the weakness
of superstition. The sounds, however, did not return, and she retired, to
forget in sleep the disastrous story she had heard.