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Graham's Magazine, Vol. XXXII No. 4, April 1848
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Graham's Magazine, Vol. XXXII No. 4, April 1848

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Graham's Magazine, Vol. XXXII No. 4, April 1848

"Yes, great pain," said Bill, with another heart-rending groan.

"Well, then, rise, I insist – Lord! if anybody should catch us in this predicament!"

"Hadn't we better go away?" whispered Ellen, blushing for her sister's sake.

"No, no," I replied, "let's stay and see the fun."

"Not till I persuade you to relent," replied Langley to Mary's oft-repeated request.

"Yes you will. Get up off your knees immediately, or I vow I'll box your ears."

"Strike!" cried Langley, with a theatrical air and tone, at the same time unbuttoning his vest, "strike! and wound the heart which beats for you alone!"

Slap– came Mary's delicate hand across the cheek of her disconsolate lover, with a force which brought an involuntary "ouch!" from his lips. "Get up, I say!" Whackslap– came two more blows, first on one side of his head and then on the other.

"By G – d! madam!" sputtered Langley, rising in a rage, "I wish you were a man for half a minute."

"Why," said Mary, "in that case you couldn't make love to me with any sort of propriety. Hold, hold, Willy, dear! don't go off angry; sit down here, I insist; nay, now, I'll box your ears again if you don't obey me; there, you'll feel perfectly cool in a moment. For shame! Bill, to get angry at a love-tap from a lady!"

"Love-tap, indeed," muttered Langley, rubbing his cheek. "See where your confounded ring scratched my face."

"Did it? Oh! I'm so sorry!" said Mary. "Hold here, while I kiss the place to make it well; there now, don't it feel much better? See! I've got my lips all blood, haven't I? Shall I wipe it off with my handkerchief, or – "

Langley took the hint and kissed the rich ripe lips of his lovely companion, red with nothing but her own warm blood.

"By Jupiter!" cried my shipmate, "Mary, you are the strangest girl I ever saw. One minute I think you love me, the next that you care nothing at all for me; one minute the most teasing little devil, and the next the dearest creature in all the world."

"What am I now?" asked Mary.

"You are the most angelic, adorable – "

"Take care, sir," cried Mary, shaking her finger; "don't have a relapse, or you'll catch it again."

"Well, what shall I say then?" demanded poor Bill, in despair; "you are as hard to please as the skipper of a mud-scow."

"Talk sensibly if you wish, but don't indulge in such lofty flights, unless you have a mind to soar out of hearing. Now, then, Will, what were you about to say?"

"This," said my shipmate, taking the hand of his charming companion, and speaking like a frank, manly fellow, as he really was, "this, dear Mary, that I love you heartily and truly, and have loved you ever since we were children. At present I am a poor seaman, but I hope in a few years to rise in my profession, till I am able to support a wife in the style to which you have been accustomed, if then you will give me your hand I shall be more happy than I can express. Now, don't tease me any longer, but tell me if I have any chance."

Mary's coquettish air was gone. While Langley had been speaking her face became suffused with a charming blush, which extended even to her heaving bosom, and when he finished she raised her eyes, bright and tearful, to his. "William," said she, "you have spoken candidly, without doubt, and deserve a candid answer. If when you become the mate of a ship you are willing to be burthened with me for a wife, dear Will, you can doubtless have me by asking papa."

"Come, Ellen," said I, "let's go now."

CHAPTER X.

The Gentile loses her fore-topsail

The hours flew like lightning until Friday arrived. I went to the convent in the morning, and in an interview with Sister Agatha informed her that in the evening she would probably be called to the sick bed of Ellen. Mr. Stowe bade us good-bye and sailed in the Havana steam-boat at noon, that his presence at the catastrophe might not seem suspicious. At sunset I bade farewell to dear little Ellen, who was indeed as pale as death, and in an hour afterward was on board the ship, where I found every thing in readiness for a hasty departure, the top-sails, jib and spanker were loosed, the anchor at the bows, and its place supplied by a small kedge, attached to the ship by a hawser, easily cut in case of need; the awnings were struck, and the decks covered with rigging and sails. The boat's crew who were to go on the expedition of the evening had already been selected, and were in high spirits at the probable danger, romance and novelty of the affair.

"By thunder! Frank," said Jack Reeves, shaking my hand furiously when I appeared on the forecastle, "you're a trump and no mistake."

"Arrah! now, Masther Frank, how yaller it is ye're lookin'; but it's you that's the boy to get the weather gage of Yaller Jack, let alone the nuns; wont we have a thumping time this night?"

"Why, Teddy, are you going with us? You are the last man I should have thought to enlist in an expedition of this kind!"

"Ay, ay, Masther Frank, its rather agen my conscience, to be sure; but it's the skipper's orders, and I alwus goes by that maxum, ' 'bey orders if you break owners.'"

"Then the skipper has ordered you to go – "

"Of coorse; in the first place he says that he'll send no man into danger widout tellin' him of it, the jewel, and then he just stated the case, and sez he, 'which of yees will go, b'ys?' an' wid that uz all stipt for'ard. 'What,' sez the owld man, sez he, 'Teddy, I thought you was a Catholic!' 'Faix! an' I am that, yer honor,' sez I, makin' a big sign of the cross, 'long life to the Pope and the clargy!' 'It's a nun we're goin' to abductionize to-night,' sez he, 'I thought you understood that.' 'I know that, yer honor,' sez I, 'but if you will jist plaze to order me to go, I can't help meself, and so your own sowl will be damned, beggin' yer honor's pardon,' sez I, 'and not mine.' The officers all laughed, and the owld man, sez he, 'Teddy, you're quite ingenuous!' 'Thank yer honor,' sez I, 'but I'll cotton to Ichabod Green in that line, since he invinted the new spun-yarn mill.'"

Soon after sundown the land wind from the south set in smartly, and by eight o'clock we were not a little fearful lest our kedge might drag. The captain's gig was brought to the stairs, and the party chosen for the expedition took their places, the first mate and ship's cousin and six stout seamen, well armed. Stewart was very nervous and silent; the only remark he made after we left the ship was when we swept by the end of the mole.

It was just nine o'clock when we hauled into the shade of the summer-house and its vines at the foot of Mr. Stowe's garden. I was commissioned to go to the house while the rest staid by the boat. On the stairs of the back verandah I met Mary Stowe.

"Is it you, Frank?" she asked.

"Ay, ay; is Cousin Clara here?"

"Oh, yes! in Ellen's room, and the Superior is in the parlor with mother. Ellen has been terribly sick, but she was well enough to whisper just now, 'Give Frank my best love.'"

"Here, Mary," said I, "give her this kiss a thousand times."

"Oh, heavens! what a pretty one! But I must go and send Sister Agatha to you; we've got a hard part to act when her flight is discovered. I say, Frank, give Langley my love; don't wonder at it now, adieu! I'll see you in two years."

"I waited impatiently for two minutes, which seemed two hours; at last I heard a light step on the stairs, and in a moment more held the runaway nun in my arms.

"Courage!" said I, "you are safe."

Throwing a cloak over her, we hastily ran down the orange-walk. I could not suppress a sigh as I passed the place where Ellen had told me that she thought she loved me. In a moment we reached the boat; Stewart stood upon the shore to receive us, caught the fainting form of Cousin Clara in his arms, and bore her apparently lifeless to the stern-sheets; the men shipped their oars, and I seized the rudder-lines, and gave the word of command.

"Push off – let fall – give way – and now pull for your lives."

The boat shot like lightning down the narrow river to its mouth, then across the broad bay, glittering in the first rays of the just risen moon. The band was playing as we rapidly shot past the barracks.

I sat near the lovers in the stern-sheets, and heard Stewart whisper, "Dearest, do you remember that old Castilian air?" The answer was inaudible, but from the long kiss that Stewart pressed upon the lips which replied to him, I judged that the reply was in the affirmative. At last the ship was reached, and the passengers of the boat were safely transferred to the broad, firm deck of the old Gentile.

The reader will excuse my describing the scene which ensued, for, as I have before said, and as the reader has probably assented, description is not my forte; beside, I am in a devil of a hurry to get the ship under weigh, or all will be lost.

The hawser was cut, and we wore round under our jib; the top-sails were hoisted and filled out before the breeze, and we began our voyage toward home. Sail after sail was set, and the noble old ship danced merrily and swiftly along, leaving the scene of my cousin's suffering far astern; and, alas! every moment adding to the distance between Ellen and me. The lights of the distant city, shining through the mazy rigging of the shipping before it, grew dimmer and more faint, and finally, entirely disappeared; the wide ocean was before us.

The next morning we were seventy miles from the nearest land of Cuba; and ten days afterward the marine lists of the Boston papers announced the arrival of the ship Gentile, Smith, from Matanzas.

CHAPTER XI.

In which the fullness of the Gentiles is accomplished

Great was the joy of my father and mother, and good little sisters, at the unexpected appearance of Cousins Pedro and Clara. The money of the former, it may be recollected, had been brought to Boston in the Cabot, and placed in my father's hands, and though Pedro could not be called a rich man, still the sum now paid him by his uncle was very handsome. This, by advice, was invested in an India venture to send by the Gentile; and my Cousin Pedro, in consequence of this and my father's recommendation, was appointed supercargo of that ship by Mr. Selden, the merchant who had chartered her.

Captain Smith was removed to a new and larger vessel; and the Gentile's list of officers, when she cleared for Canton, stood thus, Benjamin Stewart, master; Pedro Garcia, supercargo; Micah Brewster, 1st officer; William Langley, 2nd do.; Frank Byrne, 3rd do. Jack Reeves was also in the forecastle, but Teddy staid by his old skipper.

It was a very pleasant day when we sailed from the end of Long Wharf; but we had got nearly under weigh before Captain Stewart came on board.

"That's always the way with these new married skippers," growled the pilot, as he gave orders to hoist the maintop-sail."

About a month ago, the senior partner of the firm of Byrne & Co. was heard to say, that he had in his employ three sea captains who had each one wooed his wife in broad daylight, in a garden of the city of Matanzas.

ILENOVAR.

FROM A STORY OF PALENQUE.

A FRAGMENT.

BY WM. GILMORE SIMMS, AUTHOR OF "THE YEMASSEE," "RICHARD HURDIS," ETC

Weary, but now no longer girt by foes,He darkly stood beside that sullen wave,Watching the sluggish waters, whose reposeImaged the gloomy shadows in his heart;Vultures, that, in the greed of appetite,Still sating blind their passionate delight,Lose all the wing for flight,And, brooding deafly o'er the prey they tear,Hear never the low voice that cries, "depart,Lest with your surfeit you partake the snare!"Thus fixed by brooding and rapacious thought,Stood the dark chieftain by the gloomy stream,When, suddenly, his earA far off murmur caught,Low, deep, impending, as of trooping winds,Up from his father's grave,That ever still some fearful echoes gave,Such as had lately warned him in his dream,Of all that he had lost – of all he still might save!Well knew he of the sacrilege that madeThat sacred vault, where thrice two hundred kingsWere in their royal pomp and purple laid,Refuge for meanest things; —Well knew he of the horrid midnight rite,And the foul orgies, and the treacherous spell,By those dread magians nightly practiced there;And who the destined victim of their art; —But, as he feels the sacred amuletThat clips his neck and trembles at his breast —As once did she who gave it – he hath setHis resolute spirit to its work, and wellHis great soul answers to the threatning dread,Those voices from the mansions of the dead!Upon the earth, like stone,He crouched in silence; and his keen ear, prone,Kissed the cold ground in watchfulness, not fear!But soon he rose in fright,For, as the sounds grew near,He feels the accents never were of earth:They have a wilder birthThan in the council of his enemies,And he, the man, who, having but one life,Hath risked a thousand in unequal strife,Now, in the night and silence, sudden findsA terror, at whose touch his manhood flies.The blood grows cold and freezes in his veins,His heart sinks, and upon his lips the breathCurdles, as if in death!Vainly he strives in flight,His trembling knees deny – his strength is gone!As one who, in the depth of the dark night,Groping through chambered ruins, lays his handsOn cold and clammy bones, and glutinous brains,The murdered man's remains —Thus rooted to the dread spot stood the chief,When, from the tomb of ages, came the sound,As of a strong man's grief;His heart denied its blood – his brain spun round —He sank upon the ground!'Twas but an instant to the dust he clung;The murmurs grew about him like a cloud —He breathed an atmosphere of spirit-voices,Most sighing sad, but with a sound between,As of one born to hope that still rejoices,In a sweet foreign tongue,That seemed exulting, starting from its shroud,To a new rapture for the first time seen!This better voice, as with a crowning spell,On the chief's spirit fell;Up starting from the earth, he cried aloud:"Ah! thou art there, and well!I thank thee, thou sweet life, that unto meArt life no longer – thou hast brought me life,Such as shall make thy murderers dread the strife.But for thy ear a gentler speech be mine,And I will wait until the terrible hourHath past, and I may wholly then be thine!Now am I sworn unto a wilder power,But none so clear, or precious, sweetest flower,That ever, when Palenque possessed her towerAnd white-robed priesthood, wert of all thy raceMost queenly, and the soul of truth and grace; —Blossom of beauty, that I could not keep,And know not to resign —I would, but cannot weep!These are not tears, my father, but hot bloodThat fills the warrior's eyes;For every drop that falls, a mighty floodOur foemen's hearts shall yield us, when the dawnBegins of that last dayWhose red light ushers in the fatal fray,Such as shall bring us back old victories,Or of the empire, evermore withdrawn.Shall make a realm of silence and of gloom,Where all may read the doom,But none shall dream the horrid history!I do not weep – I do not shrink – I cryFor the fierce strife and vengeance! Taught by thee,No other thought I see!My hope is strong within, my limbs are free.My arms would strike the foe – my feet would fly,Where now he rides triumphant in his sway —And though within my soul a sorrow deepMakes thought a horror haunting memory,I do not, will not weep!"Then swore he – and he called the tree whose growthOf past and solemn centuries made it wearAn ancient, god-like air,To register his deep and passionate oath.Hate to the last he swore – a wild revenge,Such as no chance can change,Vowed he before those during witnesses,Rocks, waters and old trees.And, in that midnight hour,No sound from nature broke,No sound save that he spoke,No sound from spirits hushed and listening nigh!His was an oath of power —A prince's pledge for vengeance to his race —To twice two hundred years of royalty —That still the unbroken sceptre should have sway,While yet one subject warrior might obey,Or one great soul avenge a realm's disgrace!It was the pledge of vengeance, for long years,Borne by his trampled people as a dowerOf bitterness and tears; —Homes rifled, hopes defeated, feelings tornBy a fierce conqueror's scorn;The national gods o'erthrown – treasure and blood,Once boundless as the flood,That 'neath his fixed and unforgiving eyeCrept onward silently;Scattered and squandered wantonly, by bands,Leaguered in shame, the scum of foreign lands,Sent forth to lengthen out their infamy,With the wild banquet of a pampered mood.Even as he swore, his eyeGrew kindled with a fierce and flaming blight,Red-lowering like the sky,When, heralding the tempest in his might,The muttering clouds march forth and form on high.With sable banners and grim majesty.Beneath his frowning brow a shaft of fire,That told the lurking ire,Shot ever forth, outflashing through the gloomIt could not well illume,Making the swarthy cheeks on which it fellSeem trenched with scarréd lines of hate and hell.Then heaved his breast with all the deep delightThe warrior finds in promise of the fight,Who seeks for vengeance in his victory.For, in the sudden silence in the air,He knew how gracious was the audience there:He heard the wings unfolding at the close,And the soft voice that cheered him once beforeNow into utterance rose:One whispered word,One parting tone,And then a fragrant flight of wings was heardAnd she was gone, was gone —Yet was he not alone! not all alone!Thus, having sworn – the old and witnessing treeBent down, and in his branches registeredEach dark and passionate word;And on the rocks, trenched in their shapeless sides,The terrible oath abides;And the dark waters, muttering to their waves,Bore to their secret mansions and dim cavesThe low of death they heard.Thus were the dead appeased – the listening dead —For, as the warrior paused, a cold breath came,Wrapping with ice his frame,A cold hand pressing on his heart and head;Entranced and motionless,Upon the earth he lies,While a dread picture of the land's distressRose up before his eyes.First came old Hilluah's shadow, with the ringAbout his brow, the sceptre in his hand,Ensigns of glorious and supreme command,Proofs of the conqueror, honored in the king."Ilenovar! Ilenovar!" he cried:Vainly the chief replied; —He strove to rise for homage, but in vain —The deathlike spell was on him like a chain,And his clogged tongue, that still he strove to teach,Denied all answering speech!The monarch bade him markThe clotted blood that, dark,Distained his royal bosom, and that foundIts way, still issuing, from a mortal wound,Ghastly and gaping wide, upon his throat!The shadow passed – another took his place,Of the same royal race;The noble Yumuri, the only sonOf the old monarch, heir to his high throne,Cut off by cunning in his youthful pride;There was the murderer's gash, and the red tideStill pouring from his side;And round his neck the mark of bloody hands,That strangled the brave sufferer while he stroveAgainst their clashing brands.Not with unmoistened eyes did the chief noteHis noble cousin, precious to his love,Brother of one more precious to his thought,With whom and her, three happy hearts in one,He grew together in their joys and fears —And not till sundered knew the taste of tears;Salt, bitter tears, but shed by one alone,Him the survivor, the avenger – heWho vainly shades his eyes that still must see!Long troops came after of his slaughtered race,Each in his habit, even as he died:The big sweat trickled down the warrior's face,Yet could he move no limb, in that deep trance,Nor turn away his glance!They melt again to cloud – at last they fade;He breathes, that sad spectator, – they are gone;He sighs with sweet relief; but lo! anon,A deeper spell enfolds him, as a maid,Graceful as evening light, and with an eyeIntelligent with beauty, like the sky,And wooing as the shade,Bends o'er him silently!With one sweet hand she lifts the streaming hair,That o'er her shoulders droops so gracefully,While with the other she directs his gaze,All desperate with amaze,Yet with a strange delight, through all his fear!What sees he there?Buried within her bosom doth his eyeThe deadly steel descry;The blood stream clotted round it – the sweet lifeShed by the cruel knife! —The keen blade guided to the pure white breast,By its own kindred hand, declares the rest!Smiling upon the deed, she smiles on him,And in that smile the lovely shape grows dim.His trance is gone – his heartHath no more fear! in one wild startHe bursts the spell that bound him, with a cryThat rings in the far sky;He does not fear to rouse his enemy!The hollow rocks reply;He shouts, and wildly, with a desperate voice,As if he did rejoiceThat death had done his worst;And in his very desperation blessed,He felt that life could never more be cursed;And from its gross remains he still might wrestA something, not a joy, but needful to his breast!His hope is in the thought that he shall gainSweet vengeance for the slain —For her, the sole, the oneMore dear to him than daylight or the sun,That perished to be pure! No more! no more!Hath that stern mourner language! But the vow,Late breathed before those spectre witnesses,His secret spirit mutters o'er and o'er,As 't were the very life of him and his —Dear to his memory, needful to him now!A moment and his right hand grasped his brow-Then, bending to the waters, his canoe,Like some etherial thing that mocks the view,Glides silent from the shore.

THE LAST OF HIS RACE.

BY S. DRYDEN PHELPS

'Twas to a dark and solitary glen,Amid New England's scenery wild and bold,A lonely spot scarce visited by men,Where high the frowning hills their summits hold,And stand, the storm-beat battlements of old —Returned at evening from the fruitless chase,Weary and sad, and pierced with autumn's coldAnd laid him mournful in his rocky place,The grief-worn warrior chief – last of his once proud race.He wrapt his mantle round his manly form,And sighed as on his cavern floor he lay;His bosom heaved with passion's varying storm,While he to melancholy thoughts gave way,And mused on deeds of many a by-gone day.Scenes of the past before his vision rose – The fearless clans o'er whom he once held sway,The bloody battle-field and vanquished foes,His wide extended rule, which few had dared oppose.He sees again his glad and peaceful home,His warlike sons and cherished daughters dear;Together o'er his hunting-grounds they roam,Together they their honored sire revere;But trickles down his cheek the burning tear,As fades the spectral vision from his eye: Low at his shrine he bows with listening ear,And up to the Great Spirit sends a cry,To bear him to his rest, and bid his sorrows die.Tired of the lonely world he longs to goAnd join his kindred and the warrior band,Where fruits for him in rich luxuriance grow,Nor comes the pale-face to that spirit-land: Ere he departs for aye, he fain would standAgain upon his favorite rock and gazeO'er the wide realm where once he held command,Where oft he hunted in his younger days,Where, in the joyful dance, he sang victorious lays.Up the bold height with trembling step he passed,And gained the fearful eminence he sought;As on surrounding scenes his eye was cast,His troubled spirit racked with frenzied thought,And urged by ruin on his empire brought,He uttered curses on the pale-faced throng,With whom in vain his scattered warriors foughtAnd on the sighing breeze that swept along,He poured the fiery words that filled his vengeful song:Fair home of the red man! my lingering gazeOn thy ruin now rests, like the sun's fading rays;'Tis the last that I give – like the dim orb of day,My life shall go down, and my spirit away.Loved home of the red man! I leave thee with pain,The place where my kindred, my brothers were slain;The graves of my fathers, whose wigwams were here;The land where I hunted the swift-bounding deer.No longer these hills and these valleys I roam,No more are these mountains and forests my home,No more, on the face of the beautiful tide,Shall the red man's canoe in tranquillity glide.The pale-face hath conquered – we faded away,Like mist on the hills in the sun's burning ray,Like the leaves of the forest our warriors have perished;Our homes have been sacked by the stranger we cherished.May the Great Spirit come in his terrible might,And pour on the white man his mildew and blightMay his fruits be destroyed by the tempest and hail,And the fire-bolts of heaven his dwellings assail.May the beasts of the mountain his children devour,And the pestilence seize him with death-dealing power;May his warriors all perish and he in his gloom,Like the hosts of the red men, be swept to the tomb.Scarce had the wild notes of the chieftain's songDied mournful on the evening breeze away,Ere down the precipice he plunged alongMid ragged cliffs that in his passage lay: All torn and mangled by the fearful fray,Naught save the echo of his fall arose.The winds that still around that summit play,The sporting rill that far beneath it flows,Chant, where the Indian fell, their requiem o'er his woes.
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