gp" agifggggggtfiffggiggggtigtajifaKHHmmmmsmxK^ f^ illiil \ m t\ Ai im*'i 9^y i\ ^ \ti\ ■ Mwini i w i iwuK ii b ii mi l iiiii w ii w i i ii r> i iM W ivy i ina agsii^saya ; ..^^i^j^^oiMapsapgp^ i;;\^^vsiiM^ffia;j ^ vS) E.Lr t) n»«>^»*»*«iiii M i n il i iii>i > I rf f y f :^^: :!^f ^ ■^t:::^'"^ \ ■ i 11 R'^ r' €> >M m ft BALLANTVNli, HANSON AND CO. liDlNCUKGlI AND LONDON ALEOY. IXION IN HEAVEN. THE INFEENAL MAEEIAGE. POPANILLA. EIGHT HONORABLE B. DISRAELI. NEW EDITION. LONDON: LONGMANS, GREEN, AND CO. ^^^^ SANTA BARBARA P K E F A C E TO ALEOY. Being at Jerusalem in the year 1831, and visiting the traditionary tombs of the Kings of Israel, my thoughts recm-red to a personage whose marvellous career had, even in boyhood, attracted my attention, as one fraught with the richest materials of poetic fiction. And I then commenced these pages that should commemorate the name of Alkoy. In the twelfth century, when he arose, this was the political condition of the East : The Caliphate was in a state of rapid decay. The Seljukian Sultans, who had been called to the assist- ance of the Commanders of the Faithful, had become, like the Mayors of the palace in France, the real sovereigns of the Empire. Out of the dominions of the successors of the Prophet, they had carved four kingdoms, which conferred titles on four Seljukian Princes, to wit, the Sultan of Bagdad, the Sultan of Persia, the Sultan of Syria, and the Sultan of Koum, or Asia Minor vi TREFACE. But tliese warlike princes, in the relaxed discipline and doubtful conduct of their armies, began themselves to evince the natural effects of luxury and indulgence. They were no longer the same invincible and irresistible warriors who had poured forth from the shores of the Caspian over the fairest regions of the East ; and althougli they still contrived to preserve order in their dominions, they mtnessed witli ill-concealed appre- hension tlie rising power of the Kings of Karasme, whose conquests daily made their territories more con- tiguous. With regard to the Hebrew people, it should be known that, after the destruction of Jerusalem, the Eastern Jews, while they acknowledged the supremacy of their conquerors, gathered 'themselves together for all purposes of jurisdiction, under the control of a native ruler, a reputed descendant of David, whom they dignified with the title of ' The Prince of the Captivity.' If we are to credit the enthusiastic an- nalists of this imaginative people, there were periods of prosperity when the Princes of the Captivity assTmied scarcely less state and enjoyed scarcely less power than the ancient Kings of Judah themselves. Certain it is tliat their power increased always in an exact propor- tion to the weakness of the Caliphate, and, without doubt, in some of the most distracted periods of the Arabian rule, the Hebrew Princes rose into some de- gree of local and temporary importance. Their chief residence was Bagdad, where they remained until the eleventh century, an age fatal in Oriental history, and from the disasters of which the Princes of the Captivity were not exempt. Tliey are heard of even in the PEEFACE. vii twelfth century. I have ventured to j^lace one at Hamadau, which was a favourite residence of the Hebrews, from being the burial-place of Esther and Mordecai. "With regard to the supernatural machinery of this romance, it is Cabalistical and correct. From tlie Spirits of the Tombs to the sceptre of Solomon, autho- rity may be found in the traditions of the Hebrews for the introduction of all these spiritual agencies. GnosvENOE Gate; Jidy 1846. ^ A L R O Y. PAET I. CHAPTER I The cornets sounded a final flonrisli as the Prince of tiio Capti^^ty dismounted from his white mule; his train shouted as if they were once more a people ; and, had it not been for the contemptuous leer Avhich played upon the counte- nances of the Moslem bystanders, it might have been taken for a day of triumph rather than of tribute. ' The glory has not departed ! ' exclaimed the venerable Bostenay, as he entered the hall of his mansion. ' It is not as the visit of Sheba unto Solomon ; nevertheless the glory has not yet departed. You have done well, faithful Caleb.' The old man's courage waxed naore vigorous, as each step within his own walls the more assured him against the recent causes of his fear, the audible curses and the threatened missiles of the unbelieving mob. ' It shall be a day of rejoicing and thanksgiving !' con- tiniied the Prince ; ' and look, my faithful Caleb, that the trumpeters be well served. That last flourish was bravely done. It was not as the blast before Jericho ; nevertheless, it told that the Lord of Hosts was for us. How the accursed Ishmaelites started ! Did you mark, Caleb, that tall Turk in green upon my left ? B}' the sceptre of Jacob, he turned pale ! Oh ! it shall be a day of rejoicing and thanksgiving ! And spare not the wine, nor the flesh-pots for the people. Look you to this, my child, for the people shouted bravely r. 2 ALROY. and witTi a stout voice. It Avas not as the great sliotit in the camp -when the ark returned ; nevertheless, it was boldly- done, and showed that the glory had not yet departed. So spare not the wine, ray son, and drinlc to the desolation of Ishmael in the juice which he dare not quaff.' 'It has indeed been a great day for Israel!' exclaimed Caleb, echoing his master's exultation. ' Had the procession been forbidden,' continued Bostcnay, * had it been reserved for me of all the princes to have drao-o^ed the accursed tribute upon foot, without trumpets and without guards, by this sceptre, my good Caleb, I really think that, sluggishly as this old blood now runs, I would But it is needless now to talk ; the God of our fathers hath been our refuge.' ' Verily, my lord, we were as David in the wilderness of Ziph ; but now we are as the Lord's anointed in the strong- hold of Engedi !' * T^ie glory truly has not yet utterly departed,' resumed the Prince in a more subdued tone ; ' }'ct if I tell you what, Caleb ; praise the Lord that you arc young,' ' My Prince too may yet live to see the good day.' ' Nay, my child, you misinterpret me. Your Prince has lived to see the evil day. 'Twas not of the coming that I thought when I bid you praise the Lord because you were young, the more my sin. I was thinking, Caleb, that if your hair was as mine, if you could recollect, like me, the days that are gone by, the days when it needed no bribe to prove we were princes, the glorious days when we led cap- tivity captive ; I was thinking, I say, my son, what a gainful heritage it is to be born after the joys that have passed away.' ' My father lived at Babylon,' said Caleb. 'Oh! name it not! name it not!' exclaimed the old chieftain. ' Dark was the day that we lost that second Sion ! We were then also slaves to the Egyptian ; but verily we ruled over the realm of Pharaoh. Why, Caleb, Caleb, you who know all, the days of toil, the nights rest- less as a love-sick boy's, which it has cost j^our Prince to ALT.OY. 3 gain permission to grace our tribute-day witL. tlie paltry presence of lialf-a-dozen guards ; you who know all my difficulties, wlio Lave witnessed all my mortifications, what v.'ould you say to the purse of dirhems, surrounded by seven thousand scimetars ?' ' Seven thousand scimetars !' ' Not one less ; my father fl-ourished one.' 'It was indeed a great day for Israel !' ' Nay, that is nothing. When old Alroy was prince, old David Alroy, for thirty years, good Caleb, thirty long years we paid no tribute to the Caliph.' ' JSTo tribute ! no tribute for thirty years ! What marvel then, my Prince, that the Philistines have of late exacted interest ?' 'Nay, that is nothing,' continued old Bostenay, unmind- ful of his servant's ejaculations. ' When Moctador was Caliph, he sent to the same Prince David, to know why the dirhems were not brought up, and David immediately called to horse, and, attended by all the chief people, rode to the palace, and told the CaHph that tribute was an acknowledg- ment made from the weak to the strong to insure protection and support ; and, inasmuch as he and his people had gar- risoned the city for ten years against the Seljuks, he held the Caliph in arrear.' ' We shall yet see an ass mount a ladder,'' exclaimed Caleb, with uplifted eyes of wonder. ' It is true, though,' continued the Prince ; ' often have I heard my father tell the tale. He was then a child, and his mother held him up to see the procession return, and all the people shouted " The sceptre has not gone out of Jacob." ' ' It was indeed a great day for Israel.' ' Nay, that is nothing. I could tell yon such things ! But we prattle ; our business is not yet done. You to the people ; the widow and the orphan are waiting. Give freely, good Caleb, give freely ; the spoils of the Canaanite are no longer ours, nevertheless the Lord is still our God, and, after all, even this is a great day for Israel. And, b2 4 ALROY. Ciiieb, Caleb, hid my nephew, David Ah-oy, know that I Avould speak with him.' ' I will do all promptly, good master ! We Avondered that our honoured lord, your nephew, went not up with the donation this day.' ' Who bade you wonder ? Begone, sir ! How long arc you to idle here ? Away !' ' They wonder he went not up with the tribute to-day. Ay ! surely, a common talk. This boy will be our ruin, a prudent hand to wield our shattered sceptre. I have ob- served him from his infancy; he should have lived iu Babylon. The old Alroy blood flows in his veins, a stiff- necked race. Wlien I was a youth, his grandsire was my friend ; I had some fancies then myself. Dreams, dreams ! we have fallen on evil days, and yet we prosper. I have lived long enough to feel that a rich caravan, laden with the shawls of India and the stuffs of Samarcand, if not exactly like dancing before the ark, is still a goodly sight. And our hard-hearted rulers, with all their pride, can they subsist without us ? Still we wax rich. I have lived to see the haughty Caliph sink into a slave viler far than Israel. And the victorious and voluptuous Seljuks, even now they tremble at the dim mention of the distant name of Arslan. Yet I, Bostenay, and the frail remnant of our scattered tribes, still we exist, and still, thanks to our God ! wo prosper. But the age of power has passed ; it is by pru- dence now that we must flourish. The gibe and jest, the curse, perchance the blow, Israel now must bear, and with a calm or even smiling visage. What then ? For every gibe and jest, for every curse, I'll have a dirhem ; and for every blow, let him look to it who is my debtor, or wills to be so. But see, he comes, my nephew ! His grandsire was my friend. Methinks I look upon him now : the same Alroy that was the partner of my boyish houi-s. And yet that fragile form and girlish face but ill consort with the dark passions and the dangerous fancies, which, I fear, lie bidden iu that tender breast. Well, sir ':' ' Yon want me, uncle r' ALIiOY. 5 ' Wliat then ? Uncles often want wliat ncphc^YS seldom offer.' ' 1 at least can refuse nothing ; for I have nought to gh'c.' ' You have a jewel which I greatly covet.' ' A jewel ! See my chaplet ! You gave it nie, my uncle ; it is yours.' ' I thank you. Many a blazing ruby, many a soft and shadowy pearl, and many an emerald, glowing like a star in the far desert, I behold, my child. They are choice stones, and yet I miss a jewel far more precious, which, when I gave you this rich chaplet, David, I deemed you did possess.' ' How do you call it, sir ?' * Obedience.' ' A word of doubtful imj^ort ; for to obey, when duly is disgi-ace, is not a virtue.' ' I see you read my thought. In a word, I sent for you to know, wherefore you joined me not to-day in ofi'ering our, our ' ' Tribute.' ' Be it so : tribute. Why were you absent ? ' ' Because it was a tribute ; I pay none.' 'But that the dreary course of seventy winters has not erased the memory of my boyish folKes, David, I should esteem you mad. Think you, because I am old, I am enamoured of disgrace, and love a house of bondage ? If life were a mere question between fi^eedom and slavery, gloi'y and dishonour, all could decide. Trust me, there needs but little spirit to be a moody patriot in a sullen home, and vent your heroic spleen upon your fellow- sufferers, whose sufferings you cannot remedy. But of such stuff your race were ever made. Such deliverers ever abounded in the house of Alroy. And what has been the result ? I found you and your sister orphan infants, your sceptre broken, and your tribes dispersed. The tribute, which now at least we pay like princes, was jthen exacted with the scourge and offered in chains. I collected our scattered people, I re-established our ancient throne, and this day, which you look upon as a day of humiliation and of moiu-ning, 6 .•VLKOY. is rightly cousidered by all a day of triumph and of feast- ing; for, has it not proved, iu the very teeth of the Ishmael- ites, that the sceptre has not yet departed from Jacob ? ' ' I pray you, uncle, speak not of these things. I wouLl not -williugly forget you are my kinsman, and a kind one. Let there not be strife between us. What my feelings arc is nothing. They are my own : I cannot change them. And for my ancestors, if they pondei'ed much, and achieved little, Avhy then 'twould seem our pedigree is jDUi-e, and I am their tnie son. At least one Avas a hero.' ' Ah ! the great Alroy ; you may well be proud of such an ancestor.' ' I am ashamed, uncle, ashamed, ashamed.' ' His sceptre still exists. At least, I have not betrayed him. And this brings me to the real purport of our inter- \'iew. That sceptre I would retui'u.' ' To whom ? ' To its right owner, to yourself.' ' Oh ! no, no, no ; I pray you, I pray you not. I do en- treat you, sir, forget that I have a right as utterly as T disclaim it. That sceptre, you have wielded it wisely and well ; I beseech you keep it. Indeed, good uncle, I have no sort of talent for all the busy duties of this post.' ' You sigh tor glory, yet you fly from toil.' ' Toil Avithout glory is a menial's lot.' ' You are a boy ; }'ou may yet live to learn that the sweetest lot of life consists in tranquil duties and well- earned repose.' ' If my lot bo repose, I'U find it in a lair.' ' Ah ! David, David, there is a wildness in your temper, boy, that makes me often tremble. You are already too much alone, child. And for this, as well as weightier reasons, I am desirous that you should at length assume the office you inherit. Wliat my poor expei'ieuce can afford to aid you, as your counsellor, I shall ever proffer ; and, for the rest, om' God AviU not desert you, an orphan cliild, and born of royal blood.' ' Pr'ythce, no more, kind uncle. I have but little heart ALEOY. 7 to mount a throne, wliicli only ranlvs me as the first of slaves.' ' Pooh, pooh, you are young. Live we like slaves ? Is this hall a servile chamber ? These costly carpets, and these rich divans, in what proud harem shall we find their match ? I feel not like a slave. My coffers are full of dirhems. Is that slavish ? The wealthiest company of the caravan is ever Bostenay's. Is that to be a slave ? Walk the bazaar of Bagdad, and you will find my name more potent than the Caliph's. Is that a badge of slavery ? ' 'Uncle, you toil for others.' ' So do we all, so does the bee, yet he is free and happy.' ' At least he has a sting.' ' Which he can use but once, and when he stings ' ' He dies, and like a hero. Such a death is sweeter than his honey.' ' Well, well, you are young, you are young. I once, too, had fancies. Dreams all, dreams all. I willingly would see you happy, child. Come, let that face brighten; after all, to-day is a great day. If you had seen what I have seen, David, you too Avould feel grateful. Come, let us feast. The Ishmaehte, the accursed child of Hagar, he does con- fess to-day that you are a prince ; this day also you com- plete your eighteenth year. The custom of our people now requires that you should assume the attributes of manhood. To-day, then, your reign commences ; and at our festival I will present the elders to their prince. For a while fare- well, my child. Array that face in smiles. I shall most ansiously await your presence.' 'Farewell, sir.' He turned his head and watched his uncle as he departed : the bitter expression of his countenance gradually melted away as Bostenay disappeared : dejection succeeded to sarcasm ; he sighed, he threw himself upon a couch and buried his face in his hands. Suddenly he arose and paced the chamber with an irre- gular and moody step. He stopped, and leant against a column. He spoke in a tremulous and smothered voice. 8 ALROY. * Oh ! my heart is full of care, and my soul is dark with sorrow ! What am I ? What is all this ? A cloud hangs heavy o'er my hfe. God of my ftxthers, let it burst ! ' I know not what I feel, yet -what I feel is madness. Thus to be is not to live, if life be what I sometimes dream, and dare to think it might be. To breathe, to feed, to sleep, to wake and breathe again, again to feel existence Avithout hope ; if this be life, why then these brooding thoughts that whisper death were better ? ' Away ! The demon tempts me. But to what ? What nameless deed shall desecrate this hand ? It must not be : the royal blood of twdce two thousand years, it must not die, die like a dream. Oh ! my heart is full of care, and my soul is dark Avith sorrow ! ' Hark ! the trumpets that sound our dishonour. Oli, that they but sounded to battle ! Lord of Hosts, let me conquer or die ! Let me conquer like David; or die, Lord, like Saul ! ' Why do I live ? Ah ! could the thought that lurks witliin my secret heart but ansAver, not that trumpet's blast could spe.ak as loud or clear. The A'otary of a false idea, I linger in this shadoAA'y Hfe, and feed on silent images Avhich no eye but mine can gaze upon, till at length they are in- vested with all the terrible circumstance of life, and breathe, and act, and form a stirring Avoi'ld of fate and beauty, time, and death, and glory. And then, from out this dazzling wilderness of deeds, I Avander forth and AA'ake, and find myself in this dull house of bondage, CA'en as I do noAV. Horrible ! horrible ! ' God of my fathers ! for indeed I dare not style thee God of their wretched sons ; yet, by the memory of Sinai, let me tell thee that some of the antique blood yet beats Avithin tliese pulses, and there yet is one avIio fain Avould commune Avitli thee face to face, commune and conquer. ' And if the proniise unto Avhich Ave cling be not a cheat, •why, let him come, come, and come quickly, for thy servant Israel, Lord, is noAv a slave so infamous, so Avoe-begone, and BO coutcnmcd, that even Avhen our fathers hung their harps ALEOY. by the sad waters of the Babjloniau stream, why, it "was paradise compai-ed with what we suffer. ' Alas ! they do not suffer ; they endure and do not feci. Or by this time our shadowy cherubim would guard again the ark. It is the will that is the father to the deed, and he who broods over some long idea, however wild, will find his dream was but the prophecy of coming fate. ' And even now a vivid flash darts through the darkness of my mind. Methinks, methinks : ah ! worst of woes to dream of glory in despair. No, no; I live and die a most ignoble thing ; beauty and love, and fame and mighty deeds, the smile of women and the gaze of men, and the ennobling consciousness of worth, and all the fiery course of the creative passions, these are not for me, and I, Alroy, the descendant of sacred kings, and with a soul that pants for empire, I stand here extending my vain arm for my lost sceptre, a most dishonoured slave ! And do I still exist ? Exist ! ay, merrily. Hark ! Festivity holds her fair revel in these light-hearted walls. We are gay to-day ; and yet, ere yon proud sun, whose mighty course was stayed before our SAvords that now he even does not deign to shine upon ; ere yon proud sun shall, like a hero from a glorious field, enter the bright pavilion of his rest, there shall a deed be done. ' My fathers, my heroic fathers, if this feeble arm cannot redeem your heritage ; if the foul boar must still wallow in thy sweet vineyard, Israel, at least I will not disgrace you. No ! let me perish. The house of David is no more ; no more our sacred seed shall lurk and linger, like a blighted thing, in this degenerate earth. If we cannot flourish, why then we will die ! ' ' Oh ! say not so, my brother ! ' He turns, he gazes on a face beauteous as a starry night ; liis heart is full, his voice is low. ' Ah, Miriam ! thou queller of dark spirits ! is it thou ? Why art thou here ? ' ' Why am I here ? Are you not here ? and need I urge a stronger plea ? Oh ! brother dear, I pray 3-ou come, and 10 ALROY. Diingle in our festival ! Our walls are liung with flowers you love ; * I culled them by the fountain's side ; the holy lamps are trimmed and set, and you must raise their earliest flame. Without the gate, my maidens wait, to offer you a robe of state. Then, brother dear, I pray you come and mingle in our festival.* ' Why should we feast ? ' ' Ah ! is it not in thy dear name these lamps are lit, these garlands hung? To-day to us a prince is given, to-day ' ' A prince without a kingdom.' ' But not without that which makes kingdoms precious, and which full many a royal heart has sighed for, willing subjects, David.' ' Slaves, Miriam, fellow-slaves.' ' What Ave are, my brother, our God has willed ; and let us bow and tremble.' ' I will not bow, I cannot tremble.' ' Hush, David, hush ! It was this haughty spint that called the vengeance of the Lord upon us.' *It was this haughty spirit that conquered Canaan.' ' Oh, my brother, my dear brother ! they told me the dark spii'it had fallen on thee, and I came, and hoped that Miriam might have charmed it. What we have been, Alroy, is a bright dream ; and what we may be, at least as bright a hope ; and for what we are, thou art my brother. In thy love I find present fehcity, and value more thy chance embraces and thy scanty smiles than all the vanished splen- dour of our race, our gorgeous gardens, and our ghttcring halls.' ' Who waits without there ? ' ' Caleb.' 'Caleb?' 'My Lord.' ' Go tell my uncle that I will presently join the banquet. Leave me a moment, Miriam. Nay, diy those tears.' • Oh, Alroy ! they are not tears of sorrow.' ' God be with thee ! Tliou art the charm and consolation of my life. Farewell ! farewell ! ' ALEOY. 1 1 ' I do obaei've the influence of womeu very potent over me. 'Tis not of such stuff that they make heroes. I know not love, save that pure affection which doth subsist between me and this girl, an orphan and my sister. We are so alike, that when, last Passover, in mimicry she twined my tui-ban round her head, our uncle called her David. ' The daughters of my tribe, they please me not, though they are passing fair. Were our sons as brave as they are beautiful, we still might dance on Sion, Yet have I often thought that, could I pillow this moody brow upon some snowy bosom that were my own, and dwell in the wilder- ness, far from the sight and ken of man, and all the care and toil and wi^etchedncss that gi'oan and sweat and sigh about me, I might haply lose this deep sensation of over- whelming woe that broods upon by being. No matter ! Life is but a dream, and mine must be a dull one.' CHAPTER II. Without the gates of Hamadan, a short distance from the city, was an enclosed piece of elevated ground, in tlie centre of which rose an ancient sepulchre, the traditionary tomb of Esther and llordecai.-^ This solemn and solitary spot was an accustomed haunt of Alroy, and thither, escap- ing from the banquet, about an hour before sunset, he this day repaired. As he unlocked the massy gate of the btu'ial-place, he heard behind him the trampling of a horse ; and before he had again seciu-ed the entrance, some one shouted to him. He looked up, and recognised the youthful and voluptuous Alschiroch, the governor of the city, and brother of the sultan of the Seljuks. He was attended only by a single running footman, an Arab, a detested favourite, and noto- rious minister of his pleasures. ' Dog! ' exclaimed the irritated Alschii-och, ' art thou deaf, or obstinate, or both? Are we to call twice to our slaves? Unlock that ^ate ! ' 12 ALKOY. ' Wherefore? ' inquirccl Alroy. ' Wherefore ! B}' the holy Proplict he bandies questions with us ! Unlock that gate, or thy head shall answer for it!' ' Who art thou,' inquired Alroy, ' whose voice is so loud? Art thou some holiday Turk, who hath ti-ansgressed the orders of thy Prophet, and drunken aught but water? Go to, or I will summon thee before thy Cadi ;' and, so saying, be turned towards the tomb. ' By the eyes of ray mother, the dog jeers us ! But that we are already late, and this horse is like an untamed tiger, I would impale him on the spot. Speak to the dog, Mus- tapha ! manage him ! ' ' Worthy Hebrew,' said the silky IMustapha, advancing, apparently you are not aw^are that this is our Loi'd Als- chiroch. His highness would fain walk his horse through the burial-ground of thy excellent people, as be is obliged to repair, on urgent matters, to a holy Santon, who sojourns on the other side of the hill, and time presses.' 'If this be our Lord Alschiroch, thou doubtless art his faithful slave, Mustapha.' ' I am, indeed, his poor slave. What then, young master? ' ' Deem thyself lucky that the gate is closed. It was but j'csterday thou didst insult the sister of a sci'vant of my house. I would not willingly sully my hands with such miserable blood as thine, but away, wretch, away ! ' 'Holy Prophet ! who is this dog? ' exclaimed the aston- ished governor. ' 'Tis the young Alroy,' whispered Mustapha, who had not at first recognised liim ; ' he they call their Prince ; a most headstrong youth. ]\Iy lord, we had better proceed.' ' The young Alroy ! I mark hiin. They must have a prince too ! The young Alroy ! Well, let us away, and, dog ! ' shouted Alschiroch, rising in his stirrups, and shak- ing his hand with a threatening air, ' dog ! remember thy tribut(^1 ' Alroy rushed to the gate, but the massy lock was slow to ALROY. 1 3 open ; and ere lie could succeed, the fiery steed had borno Alschiroch beyond pursuit. An expression of baffled rage remained for a moment on liis countenance ; for a moment he remained with his eager eye iixed on the I'oute of his vanished enemy, and then lie walked slowly towards the tomb ; but his excited temjDer was now little in unison with the still reverie in wdiich ho had repaired to the sepulchre to indulge. He was restless and disquieted, and at length he Avandered into the woods, Avhich rose on the summit of the burial-place. He found himself upon a brow crested with young pine- trees, in the midst of which rose a mighty cedar. He threw himself beneath its thick and shadowy bi^anches, and looked upon a valley small and green ; in the midst of which was a marble fountain, the richly- carved cupola,^ supported by twisted columns, and banded by a broad in- scription in Hebi'ew characters. The bases of the white pillars were covered with wild flowers, or hidden by beds of variegated goui'ds. The transjaarent sixnset flung over the whole scene a soft but bi'illiant light. The tranquil hour, the beauteous scene, the sweetness and the stillness blending their odour and serenity, the gentle breeze that softly rose, and summoned forth the languid birds to cool their plumage in the twilight air, and wave their I'adiant wings in skies as bright Ah ! what stern spirit will not yield to the soft genius of subduino- Eve? And Alroy gazed upon the silent loneliness of earth, and a tear stole down his haughty cheek. ' 'Tis singular ! but when I am thus alone at this still hour, I ever fancy I gaze upon the Land of Promise. And often, in my dreams, some sunny spot, the bright memorial of a roving hour, Avill rise upon my sight, and, when I wake, I feel as if I had been in Canaan. Why am I not? The caravan that bears my uncle's goods across the Desert would bear me too. But I rest here, my miserable life running to seed in the dull misery of this wretched city, and do nothing. Wiiy ! the old captivity- was empire to our inglorious bond- 14 ALROY. age. We have no Esther now to share their thrones, no politic Morclecai, no purple-vested Daniel. Jenisalem, Jerusalem ! I do believe one sight of thee would nerve me to the sticldng-point. And yet to gaze upon thy fallen state, my uncle tells me that of the Temple not a stono remains. 'Tis horrible. Is there no hope? ' ' The bricks are fallen, but we will rebuild with marble ; tue stcamokes are cut doavn, but we will replace them ^vith CEDARS.' ' The chorus of our maidens, as they pay their evening visit to the fountain's side.° The burden is prophetic. ' Hark again ! How beautifulh^, upon the soft and flow- ing air, their sweet and mingled voices blend and float ! ' ' Yet AGAIN I WILL BUILD THEE, AND THOU SHALT BE BUILT, Virgin of Israel ! Yet again shalt thou deck thyself WITH THT TABRETS, AND GO FORTH IN THE DANCE OP THOSE THAT MAKE MERRY. YeT AGAIN SHALT THOU PLANT VINEYARDS ON THE MOUNTAINS OF SaMARIA.' ' See ! tlieir white forms break through the sparkling foHage of the sunny shrubs as they descend, with measured step, that mild declivity. A fair society in bright proces- sion : each one clothed in solemn drapery, veiling her shadowy face with modest hand, and bearing on her graceful head a graceful vase. Their leader is my sister. ' And now they reach the fountain's side, and dip their vases in the water, pure and beauteous as themselves. Some repose beneath the marble pillars ; some, seated 'mid the flowers, gather sweets, and twine them into garlands ; and . that wild girl, now that the order is broke, touches with I'ght fingers her moist vase, and showers startling drops of glittering light on her serener sisters. Hark ! aga"n they sing.' ' O VINE OF SiBMAH ! UPON THY SUMMER FRUITS, AND UPON THY VINTAGE, A SPOILER HATH FALLEN ! ' A scream, a shriek, a long wild shriek, confusion, flight, ALROY. 15 despair ! Behold ! from out the woods a turbaned man rushes, and seizes the leader of the chorus. Her companions flj on all sides, Miriam alone is left in the arms of Alschii-och. The water column wildly rising from, the breast of sum- mer ocean, in some warm tropic clime, when the sudden clouds too well discover that the holiday of heaven is over, and the shrieking sea-birds tell a time of fierce commotion, the column rising from the sea, it was not so wild as he, the young Alroy. Pallid and mad, he swift upsprang, and he tore up a tree by its lusty roots, and do'svn the declivity, dashing with rapid leaps, panting and wild, he struck the ravisher on the temple with the mighty pine. Alschiroch fell lifeless on the sod, and Mii-iam fainting into her brother's arms. And there he stood, fijsed and immovable, gazing upon his sister's deathly face, and himself exhausted by passion and his exploit, supporting her cherished but senseless body. One of the fugitive maidens appeared reconnoitring in the distance. When she observed her mistress in the arms of one of her own people, her courage revived, and, desirous of rallying her scattered companions, she raised her voice, and sang : ' Haste, daughters of Jerusalem ; O ! haste, for the Lord has avenged us, and the spoiler is spoiled.' And soon the verse was responded to from various quar- ters of the woods, and soon the virgins re-assembled, singing, ' We come, daughter or Jerusalem ! we come ; for the Lord has avenged us, and the spoiler is spoiled.' They gathered round their mistress, and one loosened her veil, and another brought water from the fountain, and sprinkled her reviving countenance. And Miriam opened her eyes, and said, ' My brother ! ' And he ansAvered, ' I am here.' And she repKed in a low voice, * Fly, David, fly ; for the man you have stricken is a prince among the people.' * He will be merciful, my sister ; and, doubtless, since he first erred, by this time he has forgotten my offence.' 16 ALROY. * Justice aud mercy ! Oh, my broUier, what can these foul tyrants know of either ! Already he has perhaps doomed you to some refined and procrastinated torture, already Ah! what unutterable woe is mine ! fly, my brother, fly ! ' ' Fly, fly, fly ! ' ' There is no foar, my ^Miriam ; Avould all his accursed race could trouble us as little as their sometime rulei*. See, he sleeps soundly. But his carcass shall not defile our fi'esh fountain, and our fragrant flowers. I'll stow it in the woods, and stroll here at night to listen to the jackals at their banquet.' 'You speak wildly, David. What I No ! It is impossible! He is not dead ! You have not slain him ! He sleejjs, he is afraid. He mimics death, that we may leave his side, and he may rise again in safety. Girls, look to him. David, you do not answer. Brother, dear brother, surely he lias swooned ! I thought he had fled. Bear water, maidens, to that terrible man. I dare not look upon him.' 'Away! I'll look on him, and I'll triumph. Dead! Alschiroch dead ! Why, but a moment since, this clotted carcass was a prince, my tyrant ! So Ave can rid ourselves of them, eb ? If the prince fall, why not the people ? Dead, absolutely dead, and I his slayer ! Hab ! at length I am a man. This, this indeed is life. Let me live slaying ! ' 'Woe! woe! our house is fallen! The wildness of his gestui-es frightens me. David, David, I pray thee cease. He hears me not ; my voice, perchance, is thin. I am very faint. Maidens, kneel to your Prince, and soothe the mad- ness of his passion.' ' Sweet is the voice of a sister in the season of soreow, AND wise is the COUNSEL OF THOSE WHO LOVE US ' ' Why, this is my Goliath ! a pebble or a stick, it is the same. The Lord of Hosts is with us. Rightiv am I called David.' 'Deliver us from our enemies, Lord ! fro.m those who rise ul' against us, and 1 ho.se who lie in wait for uti.' ALKOY, 17 * Were but tliis blow multiplied, were but tlie servants of my uncle's bouse to do the same, wlij we should see again the daj-s of Elali ! The Philistine, the foul, lascivious, dam- nable Philistine ! and he must touch my sister ! Oh ! that all his tribe were here, all, all ! I'd tie such tirebrands to their foxes' tails, the blaze should light to freedom ! ' "While he spoke, a maiden, who had not yet rejoined tho corapanj^, came running towards them swiftly with an agi- tated countenance. ' Fly,' she exclaimed, ' they come, they come ! ' ]\Iiriam was reclining in an attendant's arms, feeble and faint, but the luoment her quick ear caught these words she sprang up, and seized her brother's arm. ' Alroy ! David ! brother, dear brother ! I beseech thee, listen, I am thy sister, thy Miriam ; they come, they come, the hard-hearted, wicked men, they come, to kill, perhaps to torture thee, my tender brother. Rouse thyself, David ; rouse thyself from this wild, fierce dream : save thyself, fly ! ' ' Ah ! is it thou, Miriam ? Thou seest he sleepeth soundly. I was dreaming of noble pui-poses and mighty hopes. 'Tia over now. I am myself again. What wouldst thou ? ' ' They come, the fierce retainei'S of this fallen man ; they come, to seize thee. Fly, David ! ' ' And leave thee ? ' ' I and my maidens, we have yet time to escape by the private way we entered, our uncle's garden. When in his house, we are for a moment safe, as safe as our poor race can ever be. Bostenay is so rich, so wise, so prudent, so learned in man's Avays, and knows so well the character and spirit of these men, all will go right ; I fear nothing. But thou, if thou art here, or to be fou.nd, thy blood alone will satiate them. If they be persuaded that thou hast escaped, as I yet pray thou may est, their late master here, whom they could scarcely love, why, give me thy arm an instant, sweet Beruna. So, that's well. I was saying, if well bribed, and they may have all my jewels, why, very soon, he Avill be as little in their memories as he is now in life. I can scarcely speak ; I feel my words wander, or seem to wander ; I could Q 18 AlJiOV. gwoon, but will not ; nay ! do not fear. I will rcacli home. These maidens are my charge. 'Tis in these crises Ave should show the worth of royal blood. I'll see them safe, or die with them.' ' ! my sister, methinks I never knew I was a brother until this hour. j\Iy i^recious Miriam, what is life ? what is revenge, or even fame and freedom Avithout thee? I'll stay.' ' Sweet is the voice of a sister in the season of sokeow, and wise is the counsel of those who love us.' ' Fly, David, fly ! ' ' Fly ! whither and how ? ' The neigh of a horse sounded from the thicket. 'Ah ! they come ! ' exclaimed the distracted Miriam. ' All THIS HAS come upon us, Lord ! yet have we not rORGOTTEN THEE, NEITHER HAVE AVE DEALT FALSELY IN THY COVENANT.' ' Hark ! again it neighs ! It is a horse that calleth to its rider. I see it. Courage, Mii'iam! it is no enemy, but a very present friend in time of trouble. It is Alschu-och's courser. He passed me on it by the tomb crc sunset. I marked it well, a very princely steed.' ' Behold, behold, a ram is caught ; the thicket by his HORNS.' * Our God hath not forgotten us ! Quick, maidens, bring forth the goodly steed. What ! do you tremble ? I'll bo liis groom.' * Nay ! Miriam, beware, bcAvare. It is an untamed beast, wild as the Avhirlwind. Let me deal with him.' He ran after her, dashed into the thicket, and brought forth the horse. Slioi-t time I Avcen that stately steed had parted from his desert home ; his haughty crest, his eye of fire, the glory of his snorting nostril, betokened well his conscious ])ridc, and pure nobility of race. His colour Avas like the habio uight shininj^ Avith a thousand blars, aud he pawed ALKOY. 19 the ground with his delicate hoof, Hke an eagle flapping its wing. Alroy vaulted on his back, and reined him with a master's hand. ' Hah ! ' he exclaimed, ' I feel more like a hero than a fugitive. Farewell, my sister ; farewell, ye gentle maidens ; fare ye well, and cherish my precious Miriam. One em- brace, sweet sister,' and he bent down and whispered, 'Tell the good Bostenay not to spare his gold, for I have a deep persuasion that, ere a year shall roll its heavy course, I shall return, and make our masters here pay for this hurried ride and bitter parting. Now for the desert ! ' 20 ALROY. PART 11. CHAPTER I. Speed, fleetly speed, tliou courser bold, and track tlie desert's trackless way. Beneath tliee is the boundless earth, above thee is the boundless heaven, an iron soil and brazen sky. Speed, swiftly speed, tbou courser bold, and track the desert's trackless way. Ah ! dost thou deem, these salty plains "^ lead to thy Te- men's happy groves, and dost thou scent on the hot breeze the spicy loreath of Araby? A sweet delusion, noble steed, for this briny wilderness leads not to the happy gi'oves of Yemen, and the breath thou scentest on the coming breeze is not the spicy breath of Araby. The day has died, the stars have risen, with all the splendour of a desert sky, and now the Night descending brings solace on her dewy wings to the fainting form and pallid cheek of the youthful Hebrew Prince. Still the courser onward rushes, still his mighty heart supports him. Season and space, the glowing soil, the burning ray, yield to the tempest of his frame ; the thunder of his nerves, and lightning of Lis veins. Food or water they have none. K"o genial fount, no graceful tree, rise with their pleasant company. Never a beast or bird is there, in that hoary desert bare. Nothing breaks the almighty stillness. Even the jackal's felon cry might seem a soothing melody. A grey wild rat, with snowy whiskers, out of a withered bramble stealing, Avith a youthful snake in its ivory teeth, in the moonlight grins with glee. This is their sole society, Mora comes, the fresh uud fragrant morn, fur which c\cn ALEOY. 21 the giiilty sigli. J\Iorn comes, aucT fill is vislblp. And light fixlls like a signet on tlie earth, and its face is turned like wax beneath a seal. Before them and also on their right was the sandy desert ; but in the night they had approached much nearer to the mountainous chain, whicli bounded the desert on the left, and whither Alroy had at first guided the steed. The mountains were a chain of the mighty Elburz ; and, as the sun rose from behind a lofty peak, the horse suddenly stopped and neighed, as if asking for water. But Alroy, himself exhausted, could only soothe him with, caresses. And the horse, full of courage, understood his master, and neighed again more cheerfully. For an hour or two the Prince and his faithful companion proceeded slowly, but, as the day advanced, the heat be- came so oppressive, and the desire to di'ink so overwhelm- ing, that Alroy again urged on the steed towards the mountains, where he knew that he shou.ld find a well. The courser dashed willingly forward, and seemed to shave his master's desire to quit the ai*id and exhausting wil- derness. More than once the unhappy fugitive debated whether lie should not allow himself to drop from his seat and die ; no torture that could await him at Hamadan, but seemed preferable to the prolonged and inexpressible anguish which he now endured. As he rushed along, leaning on his bearer's neck, he perceived a patch of the desert that seemed of a darker colour than the surrounding sand. Here, he believed, might perhaps be found water. He tried to check the steed, but with difficulty he succeeded, and with still greater difficulty dismounted. He knelt down, and feebly raked up the sand with his hands. It Avas moist. He nearly fainted over his fruitless labour. At length, when he had dug about a foot deep, there bubbled up some water. He dashed in his hand, but it was salt as the ocean. When the horse saw tlie water his ears rose, but, when he smelt it, he turned away his head, and neighed most piteously. 22 ALROY. 'Alas, poor beast! ' exclaimed Alroy, 'I am the occasion of thy suffei'iug, I, wlio would be a kind master to thee, if the world would let me. Oh, that we were once more by my own fair fountain ! The thought is madness. And Miriam too ! I fear I am sadly tender-hearted.' He leant against his horse's back, with a feeling of utter exliaustion, and burst into hysteric sobs. And the steed softly moaned, and turned its head, and gently rubbed its face against his arm, as if to solace him in his suffering. And strange, but Alroy was relieved by having given way to his emotion, and, charmed with the fondness of the faithful horse, he leant down and took water, and threw it over its feet to cool them, and wiped the foam from its face, and washed it, and the horse again neighed. And now Alroy tried to remount, but his strength failed him, and the horse immediately knelt down and received him. And the moment that the Prince was in his seat, the horse rose, and again proceeded at a rapid pace in their old direction. Towards sunset they were within a few miles of the broken and rocky gTound iaito which the mountains descended ; and afar off Alroy lecognised the cupola of the long-expected well. With re-animated courage and rallied energies he patted his courser's neck, and pointed in the direction of the cupola, and the horse pricked up its ears, and increased its pace. Just us the sun set, they reached the well.. Alroy jumped off the horse, and would have led it to the fountain, but the animal would not advance. It stood shivering with a glassy eye, and then with a groan fell down and died. CHAPTER n. Night brings rest; night brings solace; rest to the weary, solace to the sad.. And to the desperate night brings despair. The moon has sunk to early rest; but a thousand stars are iji the sky. The mighty mountains rise severe in the ALEOY. 23 clear and silent air. In tlie forest all is still. The tired wind no longor roams, but has lightly dropped on its leafy conch, and sleeps like man. Silent all but the fountain's drip. And bj the fountain's side a youth is lying. Suddenly a ci'eature steals through the black and broken rocks. Ha, ha ! the jackal smells from afar the rich cor- ruption of the courser's clay. Suddenly and silently it steals, and stops, and smells. Brave banqueting I ween to-night for all that goodly company. Jackal, and fox, and marten-cat, haste ye now, ere morning's break shall call the vulture to his feast and rob you of your prey. The jackal lapped the courser's blood, and moaned with exquisite delight. And in a moment, a faint bark was heard in the distance. And the jackal peeled the flesh from one of the ribs, and again burst into a shriek of mournful ecstasy. Hark, their quick tramp ! First six, and then three, galloping with ungodly glee. And a marten-cat came rush- ing down from the woods ; but the jackals, fierce in theii' number, drove her away, and there she stood Avithout the circle, panting, beautifal, and baffled, with her white teeth and glossy skin, and sparkling eyes of rabid rage.^ Suddenly as one of the half-gorged jackals retired from the main corpse, dragging along a stray member by some still palpitating nerves, the marten-cat made a spring at her enemy, carried ofi* his prey, and rushed into the woods. Her wild scream of triumph woke a lion from his lair. His mighty form, black as ebony, moved on a distant emi- nence, his tail flowed like a serpent. He roared, and the jackals trembled, and immediately ceased from their ban- quet, turning their heads in the direction cf their sovereign's voice. He advanced ; he stalked towards them. They re- tired ; he bent his head, examined the carcass with conde- scending curiosity, and instantly quitted it with royal dis- dain. The jackals again collected around their garbage. The lion advanced to the fountain to drink. He beheld a man. His mane rose, his tail was wildly agitated, he bent over the sleeping Prince, he uttered an awful roar, which awoke Alrov. 24 ALRoy. CHAPTER III. He awoke ; liis gaze met the flaming eyes of tlie enormous beast fixed upon him with a bleuded feeling of desire and Bui'prise. He awoke, and from a swoon ; but the dreamless trance had refi'eshed the exhausted energies of the desolate wanderer ; in an instant he collected his senses, remembered all that had passed, and comprehended his present situation. He returned the lion a glance as imperious, and fierce, and sci'utinising, as his own. For a moment, their flashing orbs vied in regal rivalry; but at length the spirit of the mere animal yielded to the genius of the man. The lion, cowed, slunk away, stalked with haughty timidity through tho rocks, and then sprang into the forest. CHAPTER IV. MOEN breaks ; a silver light is shed over the blue and starry sky. Pleasant to feel is the breath of dawn. Night brings repose, but day brings joy. The carol of a lonely bird singing in tho wilderness ! A lonel}^ bird that sings with glee ! Sunny and sweet, and light and clear, its airy notes float through the sk}-, and trill Avith innocent revelry. The lonely youth on the lonely bird upgazes from the fountain's side. High in the air it jiroudly floats, balancing its crimson wings, and its snowy tail, long, delicate, and thin, shines like a sparkling meteor in the sun. The carol of a lonely bird singing in the wilderness ! Sud- denly it downward dashes, and thrice with circling grace it flies around the head of the Hebrew Prince. Then by his side it gently drops a bunch of fresh and fragrant dates. 'Tis gone, 'tis gone ! that cheerful stranger, gone to the palmy land it loves ; gone like a bright and pleasant di-eam. A moment since and it was there, glancing in the sunny air, and now the sky is Avithout a guest. Alas, alas ! no more is heard the carol of that lonely bird singing in the wilderness. ALROY. 25 CHAPTER V. ' As tliou didst feed Elijah, so also liasfc thou fed me, God of my fathers ! ' And Alroy arose, and he took his turban and unfolded it, and knelt and prayed. And then he ate of the dates, and drank of the fountain, and, full of confidence in the God of Israel, the descendant of David pursued his flight. He now commenced the ascent of the mountainous chain, a wearisome and painful toil. Two hours past noon he reached the summit of the fii*st ridge, and looked over a wild and chaotic waste full of precipices and ravines, and dark unfathomable gorges. The surrounding hills were ploughed in all directions by the courses of dried-up cata- racts, and here and there a few savage goats browsed on an occasional patch of lean and sour pasture. This waste ex- tended for many miles ; the distance formed by a more ele- vated range of mountains, and beyond these, high in the blue sky, rose the loftiest peaks of Elburz,^ shining with sharp glaciers of eternal snow. It was apparent that Alroy Avas no stranger in the scene of his flight. He had never hesitated as to his course, and now, after having rested for a short time on the summit, he descended towards the left by a natural but intricate path, iiutil his progress was arrested by a black ravine. Scarcely half a dozen yards divided him from the opposite precipice by which it was formed, but the gulf beneath, no one could shoot a glance at its invisible termination without drawino- back Avith a cold shudder. The Prince knelt down and examined the surroundino- ground with great cai-e. At length he raised a small square stone which covered a metallic plate, and, taking from his vest a carnelian talisman covered with strange characters, he knocked thrice upon the plate with the signet. A low solemn murmur sounded around. Presently the plate flew off, and Alroy pulled forth several yards of an iron chaiu, which he threw over to the opposite precipice. The chain fastened without difficulty to the rock, and was evidently ■20 ALKOY. constrained by some magnetic influence. The Prince, seiz- ing the cliain with both his hands, now swung across the ravine. As ho landed, the chain parted from the rock, swiftly disappeared down the opposite aperture, and its covering closed with the same low, solemn murmur as before. CHAPTER VI. Aleoy proceeded for about a hundred paces through a na- tural cloister of basalt until he arrived at a large uncovered court of the same formation, which a stranger might easily have been excused for believing to have been formed and smoothed by art. In its centre bubbled up a perpetual spring, icy cold ; the stream had worn a channel through the pavement, and might be traced for some time wandering among the rocks, until at length it leaped from a precipice into a gorge below, in a gauzy shower of variegated spray. Crossing the court, Alroy now entered a vast cavern. The cavern was nearly circular in form, lighted fi'om a large aperture in the top. Yet a burning lamp, in a dis- tant and murky corner, indicated that its inhabitant did not trust merely to this natural source of the great blessing of existence. In the centre of the cave was a circular and brazen table, sculptured with strange characters and myste- rious figures : near it was a couch, on which lay several volumes.' Suspended from the walls were a shield, some bows and arrows, and other arms. As the Prince of the Captivity knelt down and kissed the vacant cotich, a figure advanced from the extremity of the cavern into the Hght. He was a man of middle age, con- siderably above the common height, with a remarkably athletic frame, and a strongly-marked but majestic counte- nance. His black beard descended to his waist, over a dark red robe, encircled by a black girdle embroidered with jel- low characters, like those sculptured on the brazen table. Black also was his turban, and black Ins large and luminous eye. ALEOY. 27 The stranger advanced so softly, that Alroy did not per- ceive him, until the Prince again rose up. ' Jabaster ! ' exclaimed the Prince. ' Sacred seed of David,' answered the Cabalist,^° Hhou art expected. I read of thee in the stars last night. They spoke of trouble.' ' Trouble or triumph, Time must prove v^hich it is, great master. At present I am a fugitive and exhausted. The bloodhounds track me, but methinks I have bafSed them now. I have slaia an Ishmaelite.' 28 ALliOY. PART III. CHAPTER I. It was midnight. Alroy slept upon the concli : his sleep Avas troubled. Jabaster stood by his side motionless, and gazing intently upon his slumbering guest. ' Tlie only hoi^e of Israel,' murmured the Cabalist, ' my pupil and my jDriuce ! I have long perceived in his 3'oung mind the seed of mighty deeds, and o'er his futui'e life have often mused with a prophetic hope. The blood of David, the saci'cd offspring of a solemn race. There is a magic in liis flowing veins my science cannot reach. ' Wlicn, in my youth, I raised our standard by my native Tigris, and called our nation to restore their ai'k, why, wo were numerous, wealthy, potent ; we ^^'cre a people then, and they flocked to it boldly. Did we lack counsel? Did we need a leader ? Who can aver that Jabaster's brain or arm Avas ever wanting ? And yet the dream dissolved, the glo- rious vision ! Oh ! when I struck down Marvan, and the Caliph's camp flung its blazing shadow over the bloody river, ah ! then indeed I lived. Twenty years of vigil may gain a pardon that I then forgot we lacked the chief ingre- dient in the spell, the blood that sleeps beside me. ' I recall the glorious rapture of that sacred strife amid the rocks of Caucasus. A fugitive, a proscriljcd and out- lawed wretch, whose life is common sport, and whom the vilest hind may slay without a l)idding. I, who would have been Messiah ! ' Burn thy books, Jabastcr ; break thy brazen tables ; for- get thy lofty science, Calxilist, and read the stars no longer.'" Cut last night, I stood upon the gulf which girds my dwell- ALROY. 29 :ng : la one hand, I held my sacred tallyman, that bears tlio name ineffable ; in the other, the mystic record of our holy race. I remembered that I had evoked spirits, that I had communed with the great departed, and that the glowing heavens were to me a natiiral language. I recalled, as con- solation to my gloomy soul, that never had my science been exercised but for a sacred or a noble purpose. And I re- membered Isi'ael, my brave, my chosen, and my antique race, slaves, wretched slaves. I was strongly temj^ted to fling me down this perilous abyss, and end my learning and my life together. ' But, as I gazed upon the star of David, a sudden halo rose around its rays, and ever and anon a meteor shot from out the silver veil. I read that there was trouble in the holy seed ; and now comes this boy, who has done a deed which ■' ' The ark, the ark ! I gaze upon the ark ! ' ' The slumberer speaks ; the words of sleep are sacred.' ' Salvation only from the house of David. ' 'A mighty truth ; my life too well has proved it.' ' He is more calm. It is the holy hour. I'll steel into the court, and gaze upon the star that sways the fortunes of his royal house.' CHAPTER II. The moonbeam fell upon the fountain ; the pavement of (he court was a flood of light ; the rocks rose dark around. Ja- bastcr, seated by the spring, and holding his talisman in his left hand, shaded his sight with the other as he gazed upon the luminous heavens, A shriek ! his name was called. Alroy, wild and pant- ing, rushed into the court with extended arms. The Ca- balist started up, seized him, and held him in his careful grasp, foaming and in convulsions. * Jabaster, Jabaster ! ' ' I am here, my child.' 30 ALEOY. * The Lord batli spoken.' ' The Lord is our refuge. Calm thyself, son of David, and tell me all.' ' I have been sleeping, master ; is it not so ? ' ' Even so, my child. Exhausted by his flight and tlio exciting narrative of his exploit, my Prince lay down upon the couch and slumbered ; but I fear that slumber Avas not repose.' ' Repose and I have nought in common now. Farewell for ever to that fatal word. I am the Lord's anointed.' ' Drink of the fountain, David : it will restore thee.' ' Restore the covenant, restore the ai'k, restore the holy ciiy.' ' The Spirit of the Lord hath fallen upon him. Son of David, I adjure thee tell me all that hath passed. I am a LcA'ite ; in my hand I hold the name ineffable.' * Take thy trumpet then, summon the people, bid them swiftly raise again our temple. " The bricks have fallen, but we will rebuild with marble." Didst hear that chorus, sir?' ' Unto thy chosen ear alone it sounded.' ' Where am I ? This is not our fountain. Yet thou didst say, " the fountain." Think me not wdld. I know thee, I know all. Thou art not Miriam. Thou art Ja- baster ; I am Alroy. But thou didst say, " the fountain," and it distracted me, and called back my memory to ' ' God of Israel, lo, I kneel before thee ! Here, in the solitude of wildest nature, my only witness here this holy man, I kneel and vow, Lord ! I will do thy bidding. I ani young, God ! and weak ; but thou, Lord, art all-powerful ! What God is Hke to thee ? Doubt not my courage, Lord ; and fill me with thy spii-it ! but remember, remember her, Lord ! remember Miriam. It is the only worldly thought 1 have, and it is pure.' ' Still of his sister, calm thyself, my son.' ' Holy master, thou dost remember when I was thy pupil in this cavern. Thou hast not forgotten those days of trancjuil study, those sweet, long wandering nights of ALROY. 31 eacred science ! I was dutiful, and hung upon eacli accent of thy lore with the devotion that must spring from love.' ' I cannot weep, Alroy ; but, were it in my power, I would yield a tear of homage to the memory of those days.' ' How calmly have Ave sat on some high brow, and gazed upon the stars ! ' ' 'Tis very true, sweet child.' ' And if thou e'er didst chide me, 'twas half in jest, and only for my silence.' ' What would he now infer ? No matter, he grows calmer. How solemn is his visage in the moonlight ! And yet not Solomon, upon his youthful throne, could look more beautiful.' ' I never told thee an untruth, Jabaster.' ' My life upon thy faith.' ' Fear not the pledge, and so believe mc, on the moun- tain brow watching the starry heavens with thyself, I was not calmer than I feel, six*, now.' ' I do believe thee.' ' Then, Jabaster, believe as fully I am the Lord's anointed.' ' Tell me all, my child.' ' EJiow, then, that sleeping on the conch within, my sleep was troubled. Many dreams I had, indefinite and broken. I recall none of then- images, except I feel a dim sensation 'twas my lot to live in brighter days than now rise on our race. Suddenly I stood upon a mountain tall and grey, and gazed upon the stars. And, as I gazed, a trumpet sounded. Its note thrilled through my soul. Never have I heard a sound so awful. The thunder, when it broke over the cavern here, and shivered the peak, whose ruins lie around us, was but a feeble worldly sound to this almighty music. My cheek grew pale, I panted even for breath. A flaming light spread over the sky, the stars melted away, and I beheld, advancing from the burst- ing radiancy, the foremost body of a mighty host. ' Oh ! not when Saul led forth our fight iu"- men against 32 ALROY. the Philistine, not when Joab numbered the warrioi's of my great ancestor, did human vision gaze upon a scene of so much martial splendour. Chariots and cavalry, and glittering trains of plumed warriors too robust to need a courser's solace ; streams of shining spears, and banners like a sunset; reverend priests swinging their perfumed censers, and prophets hymning with their golden harps a most triumphant future. '"Joy, joy," they sa}', "to Israel, for he cometli, he Cometh in his splendour and his might, the great Messiah of our ancient hopes." ' And, lo ! a mighty chariot now appeared, drawn by sti-ange beasts, whose forms were half obscured by the bright flames on which they seemed to float. In that glorious car a warrior stood, proud and immovable his form, his countenance ; hold my hand, Jabaster, -while I speak, that chieftain was myself ! ' ' Proceed, proceed, my son.' 'I started in my dream, and I awoke. I found mj'self upsitting on my couch. The pageantry had vanished, Nought was seen but the bright moonlight and the gloomy cave. And, as I sighed to think I e'er had wakened, and mused upon the strangeness of my vision, a still small voice descended from above and called, " Alroy ! " I started, but I answ^ered not. Methought it "was my fancy. Again my name was called, and now^ I murmured, " Lord, I am here, what wouldst thou ?" Nought responded, and soon gi'cat dread came over mc, and I rushed out and called to thee, Biy master.' *It was "the Daughter of the Voice "'^ that spake. Since the Captivity 'tis the only mode by which the saints are summoned. Oft have I heard of it, but never in these sad degenei'ate days has its soft aspiration fallen upon us. These are strange times and tidings. The building of the temple is at hand. tSou of David, my heart is full. Let u.; to prayer ! ' ALEOY. 33 CHAPTER III. Day dawned upon Jabaster, still musing in solitude among Lis rocks. Within tlie cavern, Alroy remained in prayer. Often and anxiously the Cabalist shot a glance at his companion, and then again relapsed into reverie. ' The time is come that I must to this youth reveal the secrets of my early life. Much will he hear of glory, much of shame. Nought must I conceal, and nought gloss over. ' I must tell how in the plains of Tigris I upraised the sacred standard of our chosen race, and called them from their bondage ; how, despairing of his recreant fathers, and inspired by human power alone, I vainly claimed the mighty office for his sacred blood alone reserved. God of my fathers, grant that future service, the humble service of a contrite soul, may in the coming glory that awaits us, atone for past presumption ! ' But for him great trials are impending. Not lightly must that votary be proved, who fain would free a people. The Lord is faithful to his promise, but the Lord will choose his season and his ministei'. Courage, and faith, and deep humihty, and strong endurance, and the watch- ful soul temptation cannot sully, these are the fruits we Iny upon his altai', and meekly Avatch if some descending flame will vouchsafe to accept and brightly bless them. ' It is written in the dread volume of our mystic lore, that not alone the Saviour shall spring from out our house of princes, but that none shall rise to free us, until, alone and unassisted, he have gained the sceptre which Solomon of old wielded within his cedar .palaces. ' That sceptre must he gain. This fragile youth, untried and delicate, unknowing in the ways of this strange world, Avhere eveiy step is danger, how much hardship, hoAV much peril, what withering disappointment, what dull care, Avhat long despondency, what never-ending lures, now lie in ambush for this gentle boy ! O my countiymen, D 34 ALROy. is tills jour Lope ? And I, with all my lore, and all my courage, and all my deep intelligence of man ; unhappy Israel, why am I not thy Prince ? ' I check the blasphemous thought. Did not his great ancestor, as young and as untried, a beardless stripKng, •with but a pebble, a small smoothed stone, level a mailed giant with the ground, and save his people ? ' He is clearly summoned. The Lord is with him. Be he with the Lord, and we shaU prosper.' CHAPTER IV. It was at sunset, on the third day after the arrival of Alroy at the cave of the Cabahst, that the Prince of .the Captivity commenced his pilgrimage in quest of the sceptre of Solomon. Silently the pilgrim and his master took their way to the brink of the ravine, and there they stopped to part, perhaps for ever. ' It is a bitter moment, Alroy. Human feelings are not for beings lilce us, yet they will have their way. Remember all. Cherish the talisman as thy life : nay.! welcome death with it pressing against thy heart, rather than breathe without it. Be firm, be pious. Think of thy ancestors, think of thy God.' ' Doubt me not, dear master ; if I seem not full of that proud spirit, which was perhaps too much my wont, ascribe it not to fear, Jabaster, nor even to the pain of leaving thee, dear friend. But ever since that sweet and solemn voice summoned me so thrillingly, I know not how it is, but a change has come over my temper ; yet I am firm, oh ! firmer far than when I struck down the Ishmaelite. Indeed, indeed, fear not for me. The Lord, that knoweth all things, knows full well I am prepared even to the death. Thy prayers, Jabaster, and ' ' Stop, stop. I do remember me. See this ring : 'tis a choice emerald. Thou mayst have wondered I should wear ALROY. 35 a bavibic. Alitor, I had a bi'otlier oace : still lie may lire. ATlien we parted, this was the signal of his love : a love, my child, strong, tliough we greatly differed. Take it. The hour may come that thou mayst need his aid. It will com- mand it. If he live, he prospers. I know his temper well. He was made for v/hat the worldly deem prosperity. God be with thee, sacred boy : the God of our great fathers, the God of Abraham, of Isaac, and of Jacob ! ' They embraced. * We linger,' exclaimed the Cabalist, ' we linger. Oh ! in vain we quell the feelings of our kind. God, God bless and be with thee ! Art sure thou hast all ? thy dagger and thy wallet ? That staff has seen some service. I cut it on the Jordan. Ah ! that I could be thy mate ! 'T would be nothing then. At the worst to die together. Such a fate seems sweeter now than parting. I'll watch thy star, my child. Thou weepest ! And I too. Why ! what is this ? Am I indeed Jabaster ? One more embrace, and so we'll not say farewell, but only think it.' 36 ALROY. PART IV. CHAPTER I. Tkadition tanglit tliat tlie sceptre of Solomon oonlcl bo foniul only in the unknown sepulclires of the ancient Hebrew mouarclis, and that none might dare to toncli it but one of their descendants. Armed with the cabalistic talisman, which was to guide him in his awful and difficult researches, Alroy commenced his pilgrimage to the Holy City. At this time, the love of these sacred wanderings was a reigning passion among the Jews as well as the Christians. The Prince of the Captivity was to direct his course into the heart of those great deserts Avhich, in his flight from Hamadan, he had only skirted. Following the track of the caravan, he was to make his way to Babylon, or Bagdad. From the capital of the caliphs, his journey to Jerusalem was one comparatively easy ; but to reach Bagdad he must encounter hardship and danger, the prospect of which would have divested anj- one of hope, Avho did not conceive himself the object of an omnipotent and particular Pro- vidence. Clothed only in a coarse black frock, common among iho Kourds, girded round his waist by a cord which held his daggei', his head shaven, and covered with a large white turban, which screened him from the heat, his feet protected only by slippers, supported by his staff, and bearing on his shoulders a bag of dried meat and parched corn, and a leathern skin of water, behold, toiling over the glowing sands of Persia, a youth whose life had liitherto been a long unbroken dream of domestic luxury and innocent indulgence. He travelled duiing the warm night or the early starlit ALKOY. 37 morn. Durhic^ tLe day he rested : happy if lie could recline by tlie side of some charitable well, shaded by a palm-tree, or frighten a gazelle from its resting-place among the rough bushes of some wild rocks. Were these resources wanting, he threw himself upon the sand, and made an awning with his stafi' and turban. Three weeks had elapsed since h.e quitted the cavern of the Cabalist. Hitherto he had met with no human being. The desert became less arid. A scanty vegetation spi-ang up from a more genial soil ; the ground broke into gentle undulations ; his senses were invigorated with the odour of wild plants, and his sight refreshed by the glancing form of some wandering bird, a pilgrim like himself, but more at ease. Soon sprang up a grove of graceful palm-trees, with their tall thin stems, and bending feathery crowns, languid and beautiful. Around, the verdant sod gleamed like an eme- rald : silver streams, flowing from a bubbling parent spring, Avound their white forms within the brig-ht g-reen turf. From the grove arose the softening song of doves, and showers of gay and sparkling butterflies, borne on their tinted wings of shifting light, danced without danger ia the liquid air. A fair and fresh Oasis ! CHAPTER II. Alroy reposed in this delicious retreat for two days, feeding* on the living dates, and drinking of the fresh water. Fain would he have lingered, nor indeed, until he rested, had he been sufficiently conscious of his previous exertion. But the remembrance of his great mission made him restless, and steeled him to the sufierings which yet awaited him. At the dawn of the second day of his journey from the Oasis he beheld, to his astonishment, faintly but distinctly traced on the far horizon, the walls and turrets of an ex- tensive city. > 3 Animated by this unexpected prospect, ho continued his progress for several hours after sunrise. At 38 ALKOY. Icngtb, utterly exhausted, lie souc^ht refuge from the over- powering Leat beneath the cupola of the ruined tomb of some Moslem saint. At sunset he continued his journey, and in the morning found himself within a few miles of the city. He halted, and watched with anxiety for some evi- dence of its inhabitants. l^Tone was visible. No crowds or cavalcades issued from the gates. Not a single human being, not a solitary camel, moved in the vicinity. The day was too advanced for the pilgrim to proceed, but so great was his anxiety to reach this unknown settle- ment, and penetrate the mystery of its silence, that ere sunset Ali'oy entered the gates. A magnificent city, of an architecture with which he was unacquainted, offei'cd to his entranced \dsion its gorgeous ruins and deserted splendour ; long streets of palaces, with their rich line of lessening pillars, here and there broken by some fallen shaft, vast courts surrounded by ornate and solemn temples, and luxui'ious baths adorned with rare mosaics, and yet bright with antique gilding ; now an arch of triumph, still haughty with its broken friezes; now a granite obehsk covered with strange characters, and proudly towering over a prostrate companion ; sometimes a void and crumbling theatre, sometimes a long and elegant aqueduct, sometimes a porphyry column, once breathing with the heroic statue that now lies shivered at its base, all suffused with the warm twihght of an eastern eve. He gazed with wonder and admiration upon the strange and fascinating scene. The more he beheld, the more his curiosity was excited. He breathed Avith difficulty ; ho advanced with a blended feehno: of eas^erness and hesitation. Fresh wonders successively unfolded themselves. Each turn developed a new scene of still and solemn splendour. The echo of his step filled him Avith awe. He looked around him with an amazed air, a fluttering heart, and a changing countenance. All was silent: alone the Hebrew Prince stood amid the regal creation of the Macedonian captains. Empii-es and dynasties flourish and pass away ; the proud metropolis becomes a soHtude, the conquering kingdom even ALKOY. 39 a desert ; but Israel still remains, still a descendant of tlio most ancient kings breathed amid these royal ruins, and still tlie eternal sun could never rise witliout gilding the towers of living Jerusalem. A word, a deed, a single day, a single man, and we might be a nation. A shout ! he turns, he is seized ; four ferocious Kourdish bandits grapple and bind him. CHAPTER III. The bandits hurried their captive through a street which appeared to have been the principal way of the city. Nearly at its termination, they turned by a small Ionian temple, and, clambering over some fallen pdlars, entered a quarter of the city of a more ruinous aspect than that which Ah'oy had hitherto visited. The path was narrow, often obstructed, and around were signs of devastation for which the exterior of the city had not prepared him. The brilliant but brief twilight of the Orient was fast fading away ; a sombre purple tint succeeded to the rosy flash ; the distant towers rose black, although defined, in the clear and shadowy air ; and the moon, which, when he first entered, had studded the heavens like a small white cloud, now gHttered with deceptive light. Suddenly, before them rose a huge pile. Oval in shape, and formed by tiers of arches, it was evidently much dilapidated, and one enormous, irregular, and undulating rent, extending from the top nearly to the foundation, almost separated the side to which Alroy and his companions advanced. Clambering up the remainder of this massive wall, the I'obbers and their prisoner descended into an immense am- phitheatre, which seemed vaster in the shadowy and stream- ing moonlight. In it were groups of men, horses, and camels. In the extreme distance, recHning or squatting on mats and carpets, was a large assembly, engaged in a rough bat merry banquet. A fire blazed at their side, its red and ■id ALr.oV. niicLvtuin flame mingling with the white and steady moon- beam, and throwing a flickering light over theii* ferocious countenances, their gHstening armour, ample drapery, and shawled heads. 'A spy,' exclaimed the captors, as they dragged Air oy before the leader of the band. 'Hang him, then,' said the chieftain, without even look- ing up. ' This wine, great Scherirah, is excellent, or I am no true ]\[oslem,' said a principal robber; 'but you are too cruel; I liate this summary punishment. Let tis torture him a little, and extract some useful information.' 'As you like, Ki.sloch,' said Scherirah ; ' it may amuse us. Fellow, where do you come from ? He cannot answer. Decidedly a spy. Hang him uj).' The cajjtors half untied the rope tliat bound Alroy, that it might serve him for a further purpose, when another of tlie gentle companions of Scherirah interfered. ' Spies always answer, captain. He is moi'c probabl}' a merchant in disguise.' 'And carries hidden treasure,' added Kislocli ; 'these rough coats often cover jewels. We had better search him.' ' Ah ! search him,' said Scherirah, with his rough brutal voice ; ' do w'hat you like, only give me the bottle. This Greek Avine is choice boot}-. Feed the fire, men. Are you asleep ? And then Kisloch, who hates cruelty, can roast liim if he likes.' The robbers prepared to strip their captive. ' Friends, friends !' exclaimed Alroy, 'for there is no reason Avhy you should not be friends, spare me, spare me. I am poor, I am young, I am innocent. I am neither a spy nor a mer- chant. I have no plots, no wealth. I am a pilgrim.' ' A decided spy,' exclaimed Scherirah ; ' they are ever pilgrims.' ' He speaks too well to speak truth,' exclaimed Kisloch. 'All talkers are liars,' exclaimed Scherirah. ' That is why Kisloch is the most eloquent of the band.' ' A jest at the banquet may prove a cur.-io in the field,' rcjilied Kisloch, ALROY. 41 'Pooa!' exclaimed Sclicrii-ali. 'Fellows, Avhy do you hesitate ? Search the prisoner, I say !' They advanced, they seized him. In vain he struggled. ' Captain,' exclaimed one of the band, ' he wears upon his bi'east a jewel !' ' I told you so,' said the thii-d robber. ' Give it me,' said Scheiirah. But Alroy, in despair at the thought of losing the talis- man, remembering the injunctions of Jabaster, and ani- mated by supernatui-al courage, burst from his searchers, and, seizing a brand from the fire, held them at bay. ' The fellow has spirit,' said Scherii-ah, calmly. "Tis pity it will cost liim his life.' 'Bold man,' exclaimed Alroy, 'for a moment hear me ! I am a pilgrim, j)Oorer than a beggar. The jewel they talk of is a holy emblem, worthless to you, to me invaluable, and to be forfeited only with my life. You may be careless of that. Beware of your own. The first man who advances dies. I pray you humbly, chieftain, let me go.' 'Kill him,' said Scherirah. ' Stab him !' exclaimed Kisloch. ' Give me the jcAvel,' said the third robber. ' The God of David be my refuge, then !' exclaimed Alroy. 'He is a Hebrew, lie is a Hebrew,' exclaimed Scherirah, jumping up. ' Spare him, my mother was a Jewess.' The assailants lowered their arms, and withdrew a few paces. Alroy still remained upon his guard. 'Valiant pilgrim,' said Scherirah, advancing, with a softened voice, ' are you for the holy city ?' ' The city of my fathers.' ' A perilous journey. And whence from ?' ' Hamadan.' 'A dreary way. Yon need repose. Your name ?' ' David.' ' David, you are among friends. Rest, and repose in safety. You hesitate. Fear not ! The memory of my mother is a chai-m that always changes me !' Scherirali unsheathed his dagger, punctured his arm,''' and, throwing 42 ALROY. away the weapon, oflcrcd tbe bleeding- member to Alroy. The Prinee of the Captivity touehed the open vein with his hps. 'My troth is pledged,' said the bandit ; 'I can never be- tray him in whose veins my own blood is flowing.' So say- ing, he led Alroy to his carpet. CHAPTER W. ' Eat, David,' said Scherirah. ' I will eat bread,' answered Alroy. 'AVhat ! have you had so much meat lately that you will refuse this delicate gazelle that I brought down this morn- ing with my own lance ? 'Tis food for a caliph.' ' I pray you give me bread.' ' Oh ! bread if you like. But that a man should i^refer bi'cad to meat, and such meat as this, 'tis miraculous.' ' A thousand thanks, good Scheru'ah ; but with our people the flesh of the gazelle is forbidden. It is unclean. Its foot is cloven.* ' I have heard of these things,' replied Scherirah, with a thoughtful air. My mother was a Jewess, and my father was a Kourd. Wliichever be right, I hope to be saved.' ' There is but one God, and Mahomed is his prophet !' exclaimed Kisloch ; ' though I drink wine. Your health, Ilebrev/.' ' I will join you,' said the third robber. ' My father Avas a Guebre, and sacrificed his property to his faith ; and the consequence is, liis son has got neither.' ' As for me,' said a fourth robber, of very dark com- plexion and singularly small bright eyes, ' I am an Indian, and I believe in the great golden figure with carbuncle eyes, in the temple of Delhi.' 'I have no religion,' said a tall negro in a red turban, grinning with his white teeth ; ' they have none in my country ; but if I had heard of your God before, Calidas, I would have believed in him.' ALKOY. 43 * 1 almost wisL I liad been a Jew,' exclaimed Sclierii-ab, musing. ' My motlier was a good v/oman.' ' The Jews are very rich,' said the third robber. 'When you get to Jerusalem, David, you will sec the Christians,' continued Scherirah. ' The accursed Giaours,' exclaimed Kisloch, ' v/e arc all against them.' ' With their white faces,' exclaimed the negro. 'And their blue eyes,' said the Indian. 'What can you expect of men who live in a couuiry without a sun ?' observed the Guebre. CHAPTER V. Aleoy awoke about two hours after midnight. His com- panions were in deep slumber. The moon had set, the fire had died away, a few red embers alone remaining ; dark masses of shadow hung about the amphitheatre. He arose and cautiously stejoped over the sleeping bandits. He was not in strictness a prisoner ; but who could trust to tlie caprice of these lawless men ? To-morrow might find him their slave, or their companion in some marauding expe- dition, which might make him almost retrace his steps to the Caucasus, or to Hamadan. The temptation to ensure his freedom was irresistible. He clambered up the ruined wall, descended into the intricate windings that led to the Ionic fane, that served him as a beacon, hurried through the silent and starry streets, gained the great portal, and rushed once more into the desert. A vague fear of pursuit made him continue his course many hours without resting. The desert again became sandy, the heat increased. The breeze that plays about the wilderness, and in early spring is often scented with the wild fragrance of aromatic plants, sank away. A lurid brightness suflTused the heavens. An appalling stillness pervaded nature ; even the insects were silent. For the 4-1 ALllOY. first time in his pilgfimago, a feeling of deep despondency fell over the soul of Alroy. His energy appeared sud- douly to have deserted him. A low hot wind began to rise, and fan his cheek with pestiferous kisses, and ener- vate his frame with its poisonous embrace. His head and limbs ached with a dull sensation, more terrible than pain; his sight was dizzy, his tongue swollen. Vainly he looked around for aid ; vainly he extended his forlorn arms, and wrung them to the remorseless heaven. Al- most frantic Avith thirst, the boundless horizon of the desert disaj^peared, and the unhappy victim, in the midst of his torture, found himself apparently surrounded by bright and I'unning streams, the fleeting waters of the false mirage ! The sun became blood-red, the sky dai-ker, the sand rose in fierce eddies, the moaning wind burst into shrieks and exhaled more ardent and still more malignant breath. The pilgrim could no longer sustain himself.'^ Faith, courage, devotion deserted him Avith his failing energies. He strove no longer with his destiny, he delivered himself up to despair and death. He fell upon one knee with drooping head, supporting himself by one quivering hand, and then, full of the anguish of baffled piirposcs and lost affections, raising his face and ai"m to heaven, thus to the elements he ])0urcd his passionate farewell. ' O life ! once vainly deemed a gloomy toil, I feel thy sweetness now ! Farewell, O life, farewell my high re- solves and proud conviction of almighty fame. My days, my short unprofitable days, melt into the past ; and death, with which I struggle, horrible death, ai'rests me in this wilderness. my sister, could thy voice but murmur in my ear one single sigh of love ; could thine eye with its soft radiance but an instant blend with my dim. fading vision, the pang were nothing. Farewell, Miriam ! my heart is with thee by thy fountain's side. Fatal blast, bear her my dying words, my blessing. And ye too, friends, whose too neglected love I think of now, farewell ! Farewell, my uncle ; farewell, pleasant home, and Hama- ALROY. 45 clan's serene and shadowy bowers ! Farewell, Jabaster, and tlie mighty lore of which thou wert the priest and I the pupil ! Thy talisman throbs on m^y faithful heart. Green earth and golden sun, and all the beautiful and glorious sights ye fondly lavish on unthinking man, farewell, fare- well ! I die in the desert : 'tis bitter. No more, oh ! never more for me the hopeful day shall break, and the fresh breeze rise on its cheering wings of health and joy. Heaven and earth, water and air, my chosen country and my antique creed, farewell, farewell ! And thou, too, city of my soul, I cannot name thee, unseen Jerusalem ' Amid the roar of the wind, the bosom of the earlh heaved and opened, swift columns of sand sprang up to the lurid sky, and hurried towards their victim. With the clang of universal chaos, imnenetrable darkness descended on the desert. 4G ALKOy. PART V. CHAPTER I. ' iETow our dreary way is over, now tlie desert's toil ia past. Soon the river broadly flowing, tlarough its green and palmy banks, to our wearied limbs shall offer baths which caliphs cannot buy. Allah-illah, Allah-hu. Allali- illah, Allah-hu.' ' Blessed the man who now may bear a relic from our Prophet's tomb ; blessed the man who now unfolds the treasures of a distant mart, jewels of the duslcy East, and silks of farthest Samarcand. Allah-illah, Allah-hu. Allah- illah, Allah-hu.' ' Him the sacred mosque shall greet with a reverence grave and low ; him the busy Bezestein shall welcome with confiding smile. Holy merchant, now receive the double triumph of thy toil. Allah-illab, Allah-hu. Allah-illah, Allah-hu.' ' The camel jibs, Abdallah ! See, there is something in the track.' ' By the holy stone, '^ a dead man. Poor devil ! One should never make a pilgrimage on foot. I hate your lir.mble piety. Prick the beast and he will pass the corpse.' ' The Prophet preaches charity, Abdallah. He has fa- vou.red my enterprise, and I will practise his precept. Sec if he be utterly dead.' It was the Mecca caravan returning to Bagdad. The pilgrims were within a day's journey of the Euphrates, and welcomed their appi'oach to fertile earth with a trium- phant chorus. Far as the eye could reach, the long line of their straggling procession stroicbed aci'oss the wilderness, ALEOY. 47 thousands of camels in strings, laden Tvitli bales of mcr- cliandise, and each, company headed by an animal of supe- rior size, leading with tinkling bells ; groups of horsemen, clusters of litters ; all the pilgrims armed to their teeth, the van formed by a strong division of Seljukian cavahy, and the rear protected by a Kourdish clan, who guaranteed the security of the pious travellers through their country. Abdallah was the favourite slave of the charitable mer- chant Ali. In obedience to his master's orders, he un- willingly descended from his camel, and examined the body of the apparently lifeless Alroy. ' A Kourd by his dress,' exclaimed Abdallah, with a sneer ; ' what does he here ? ' ' It is not the face of a Kourd,' replied Ali; 'perchance a pilgrim from the mountains.' ' Whatever he be, he is dead,' 'answered the slave : ' I doubt not an accursed Giaour.' ' God is great,' exclaimed Ali ; ' he breathes ; the breast of his caftan heaved.' ' 'Twas the wind,' said Abdallah. ' 'Twas the sigh of a human heart,' answered Ali. Several pilgrims who were on foot now gathered around the group. ' I am a Hakim,''^ observed a dignified Armenian. ' I vn\l feel his pulse ; 'tis dull, but it beats,' * There is but one God,' exclaimed Ali. ' And Mahomed is his Prophet,' responded Abdallah. ' Ton do not believe in him, you Armenian infidel.' ' I am a Hakim,' replied the dignified Ai^menian. ' Al- though an infidel, God has granted me skill to cure true believers. Worthy Ali, believe me, the boy may yet live.' ' Hakim, you shall count your own dirhems if he breathe in my divan in Bagdad,' answered Ali ; ' I have taken a fancy to the boy, God has sent him to me. He shall carry my slippers.' ' Give me a camel, and I will save his h'fo,' * We have none,' said the servant. * Walk, Abdallah,' said the master. 48 ALEOV. ' Is a Iruo believer to walk to save the life of a Kourd ? Master slij)per-bearer shall answer for this, if there be any sweetness in the bastinado,' murmured Abdallah. The Armenian bled Alroy ; the blood floAved slowly but Burely. The Prince of the Captivity opened his eyes. ' There is but one God,' exclaimed Ali. ' The evil eye foil on him !' muttered Abdallah. Tlie Armenian took a cordial from his vest, and poured it dov/n his patient's throat. The blood flowed moi-e freely. ' He will live, worthy merchaiit,' said the phj'sician. ' And Mahomed is his Prophet,' continued Ali. ' B}^ the stone of Mecca, I believe it is a Jew,' shouied Abdallah. ' The dog- !' exclaimed All, ' Pah !' said a negro-slave, drawing back with disgust. ' He will die,' said the Christian physician, not even binding up the vein. ' And be damned,' said Abdallah, again jumping on his camel. The party rode on, the caravan proceeded. A Koui'dish horseman galloped forward. Ho curbed his steed as he passed Alroy bleeding to death. ' What accursed slave has wounded one of my clan r' The Kourd leaped off" his horse, stripped off a slip of his blue shirt, stanched the Avound, and carried the unhap])y Alroy to the rear, I'lio desert ceased, the caravan entered upon a vast but fruitful plain. In the extreme distance might be descried a long undulating line of palm-trees. The vanguard gave a shout, shook their tall lances in the air, and rattled thei)- scimetars in rude chorus against their small round iron shields. All eyes sparkled, all hands were raised, all voices sounded, save those that were breathless from overpower- ing joy. After months wandering in the sultry wilderness, they beheld the great Euphrates. Broad and fresh, magnificent and serene, the mighty waters rolled through the beautiful and fertile earth. A vital breeze rose from their bosom. Every being responded ALROY. 49 to tlieir genial influence. The sick Avere cm-ed, tlie de- sponding became sanguine, the healthy and light-hearted broke into shouts of laughter, jumped from their camels, and embraced the fragrant earth, or, Avild in their renovated strength, galloped over the plain, and threw their vranton jerreeds in the air,'* as if to show that suffering and labour had not deprived them of that skill and strength, without which it were vain again to enter the haunts of their less adventurous brethren. The caravan halted on the banks of the broad river, glowing in the cool sunset. The camp was pitched, the plain glittered with tents. The camels, falling on their knees, crouched in groups, the merchandise piled up in masses by their sides. The unharnessed horses rushed neighing about the plain, tossing their glad heads, and rolling in the unaccustomed pasture. Spreading their mats, and kneeling towards Mecca, the j^ilgrims performed their evening orisons. Never was thanksgiving more sincere. They ai-ose : some rushed into the river, some lighted lamps, some pounded coffee.''' Troops of smiling villagers ariived with fresh provisions, eager to prey upon such light hearts and heavy purses. It was one of those occasions when the accustomed gravity of the Orient disappears. Long through the night the sounds of music and the shouts of laughter were heard on the banks of that starry river ; long- through the night you might have listened with enchant- ment to the wild tales of the storier, or gazed with fasci- nation on the wilder gestures of the dancing girls. ^*' CHAPTER II. The great bazaar of Bagdad afibrded an animated and sumptuous spectacle on the day after the arrival of the caravan. All the rare and costly products of the world were collected in that celebrated mart : the shawls of Cashmere and the silks of Syria, the ivory, and plumes, and E 50 ALROy. gold of Af'ric, the jewels of lud, the talismans of Egypt, tho perfames and manuscripts of Persia, the spices and gums of Ai-aby, beautiful horses, more beautiful slaves, cloaks of sable, pelisses of ermine, armour alike magnificent in ornament and temper, rare animals, still rarer birds, blue apes in silver collars, white gazelles bound by a golden chain, greyhounds, peacocks, paroquets. And everywhere strange, and busy, and excited groups ; men of all nations, creeds, and climes : the sumptuous and haughty Tui-k, the graceful and subtle Arab, the Hebrew with his black cap and anxious countenance ; the Armenian Christian, with his dark flowing robes, and mild demeanour, and serene ■\asage. Here strutted the lively, affected, and superfine Persian ; and there the Circassian stalked with his long hair and chain cuii'ass. The fair Georgian jostled the ebony form of the merchant of Dongola or Sennaar, Tkrough the long, narrow, arched, and winding streets of the bazaar, lined on each side with loaded stalls, all was bustle, bargaining, and barter. A passenger approached, apparently of no common rank. Two pages preceded him, beautiful Georgian boys, clothed in crimson cloth, and caps of the same material, sitting tight to their heads, "with long golden tassels. One bore a blue velvet bag, and the other a clasped and richly bound volume. Four footmen, armed, followed their master, who rode behind the pages on a milk-white mule. He was a man of middle age, eminently handsome. BUs ample robes concealed the only fault in hia appearance, a figure which indulgence had rendered some- what .too exuberant. His eyes were large, and soft, and dark; liis nose aquiline, but delicately moulded ; his mouth small, and beautifully proportioned ; his lip full and red ; his teeth regular and dazzling white. His ebony beard flowed, but not at too great a length, in graceful and natural curls, and was richly perfumed ; a delicate mustachio shaded liis upper lip, but no whisker was permitted to screen the form and shroud the lusti-c of his oval countenance and brilHant complexion. Altogether, the animal perhaps pre- dominated too much in the expression of tho stranger's ALKOY. 51 countenance ; but genius beamed from bis passionate ej-e, and craft lay concealed in that subtle lip. The dress of tbe rider was sumptuous. His turban, formed by a scarlet Cashmere shawl, was of great breadth, and, concealing half of his white forehead, increased by the contrast the radiant height of the other. His under-vest was of white Damascus silk, stiff with silver embroidery, and confined by a girdle formed by a Brusa scarf of gold stufip, and holding a dagger, whose hilt appeared blazing with brilliants and rubies. His loose and exterior robe was of crimson cloth. His white hands sparkled with rings, and his ears glittered with pen- dulous gems. ' Who is this ? ' asked an Egyptian merchant, in a low whisper, of the dealer whose stuffs he was examining. ' 'Tis the Lord Honain,' repKed the dealer. ' And who may he be ? ' continued the Egyptian. ' Is he the Caliph's son ? ' ' A much greater man; his physician.' The white mule stopped at the very stall where this con- versation was taking place. The pages halted, and stood on each side of their master, the footmen kept off the crowd. ' Merchant,' said Honain, with a gracious smile of con- descension, and with a voice musical as a flute, ' Merchant, did you obtain me my wish ? ' ' There is but one God,' replied the dealer, who was the charitable Ali, ' and Mahomed is his Prophet. I succeeded, please your highness, in seeing at Aleppo the accursed Giaoui', of whom I spoke, and behold, that which you desired is here.' So saying, Ali produced several Greek manuscripts, and ofiered them to his visitor. ' Hah ! ' said Honain, with a sparkling eye, ' 'tis well ; their cost ? ' ' The infidel would not part with them under five hundred dirhems,' replied Ali. ' Ibrahim, see that this worthy merchant receive a thousand.' ' As many thanks, my Lord Honain.' Tho Ciiliph's physician bowed gracefully: 52 iVLEOY. * Advance, pages,' continued Honain ; ' why this stop- page ? Ibrahim, sec that our "svay be cleared. AVhat is all this ? ' A crowd of men advanced, pulling along a youth, who, almost exhausted, still singly struggled with his ungene- rous adversaries. ' The Cadi, the Cadi,' cried the foremost of them, ^\ho ■was Abdullah, ' drag him to thv"? Cadi.' '!N"oble lord,' cried the youth, extricating himself by a sudden struggle from the grasp of his captors, and seizing the robe of Honain, ' I am innocent and injured. I pray thy help.' ' The Cadi, the Cadi,' exclaimed Abdallah ; the knave has stolen my ring, the ring given me by my iaithful Fatima on our marriage-day, and which I would not part with for my master's stores.' The youth still clung to the robe of Honain, and, rauto from exhaustion, fixed upon him his beautiful and im- ploring eye. ' Silence,' proclaimed Honain, ' I will judge this cause.' ' The Lord Honain, the Lord Honain, listen to the Lord Honain ! ' ' Speak, thou brawler ; of Avhat hast thou to complain ? ' said Honain to Abdallah. ' May it please your highness,' said Abdallah, in a whining voice, ' I am the slave of your faithful servant, Ali .- often have I had the honour of waiting on your highness. This young knave here, a beggar, has robbed me, while slum- bering in a coli'ee-house, of a ring ; I haA'e my witnesses to prove my slumbering. 'Tis a line emerald, may it please your highness, and doubly valuable to me as a love-token from my Fatima. N^o consideration in the world could induce me to part with it ; and so, being asleep, here are three honest men who will pi'ovc the sleep, comes this little A'aga- bond, may it j^lcase your highness, who while he pretends to offer me my cofl'ce, takes him my finger, and slips off thig ])recious ring, which he now wears upon his beggarly paw, and will not restore to me without the bastinado.' ALEOY. 53 ' Abdallala is a faithful slave, may it please your higliness, aud a Hadgee,' said Ali, his master. ' Aud what sayest thou, boy ? ' inquired Honain. ' That this is a false knave, who lies as slaves ever will.' ' Pithy, and perhaps true,' said Honain. ' Tou call me a slave, you young scoundrel ? ' exclaimed Abdallah ; ' shall I tell you what you are ? Why, your highness, do not listen to him a moment. It is a shame to bring such a creature into your presence ; for, by the holy stone, and I am a Hadgee, I doubt little he is a Jew.' Honain grew somewhat j^ale, and bit his lip. He was jjerhaps annoyed that he had interfered so publicly in behalf of so unpopular a character as a Hebrew, but he was unwilling to desert one whom a moment before he had resolved to befriend, and he inquired of the youth where he had obtained the ring-. ' The ring was given to me by my dearest friend when I first set out iipon an arduous pilgrimage not yet completed. There is but one person in the world, except the donor, to whom I would part Avith it, and Avith that person I am unacquainted. All this may seem improbable, but all this is true. I have truth alone to support me. I am destitute and friendless ; but I am not a beggar, nor will any suffer- ing induce me to become one. Feeling, from various cii'cumstances, utterty exhausted, I entered a coffee-house and lay down, it may have been to die. I could not sleep, although my eyes were shut, and nothing would have roused me fx-om a tremulous trance, which I thought was dying, but this plunderer here, who would not wait until death had permitted him quietly to possess himself of a je\yel I value more than life.' ' Show me the jewel.' The youth held up his hand to Honain, who felt his pulse, and then took off the ring. ' 0, my Fatima ! ' exclaimed Abdallah. ' Silence, sir ! ' said Honain. ' Page, call a jeweller.' Honain examined the ring attentively. Whether he were near-sighted, or ^Y^lethcr the deceptive light of the covered 54 ALROY. bazaar prevented him from examining it with ease, he certainly raised his hand to his brow, and for some moments his countenance was invisible. The jeweller arrived, and, pressing his hand to his heart, bowed before Honain. * Value this ring,' said Honain, in a low voice. The jeweller took the ring, viewed it in all directions with a scrutinising glance, held it to the light, pressed it to his tongue, turned it over and over, and finally declared that he could not sell such a ring under a thousand dirhems. ' Whatever be the justice of the case,' said Honain to Abdallah, ' art thou ready to part Avith this ring for a thousand dirhems ? ' ' Most certainly,' said Abdallah. ' And thou, lad, if the decision be in thy favour, wilt thou fake for the ring double the worth at which the jeweller prizes it ? ' ' My lord, I have spoken the truth. I cannot part with that ring for the palace of the Caliph.' ' The truth for once is triumphant,' said Honain. * Boy, the ring is thine ; and for thee, thou knave,' turning to Abdallah, * liar, thief, and slanderer ! — for thee the bas- tinado,*' which thou destinedst for this innocent youth. Ibrahim, see that he receives five hundred. Young pilgrim, thou art no longer destitute or friendless. Follow me to my palace.' CHAPTER III. The arched chamber was of great size and beautiful pro- portion. The ceiling, encrusted with green fretwork, and studded with silver stars, rested upon clustered columns of white and green marble. In the centre of a variegated pavement of the same material, a fountain rose and fell into a green porphyry basin, and by the side of the fountain, upon a couch of silver, reposed Honain. ALROY. 55 He raised Ms eyes from the illumiiiated volume on wliicli lie liad been long intent ; lie clapped liis hands, and a Nubian slave advanced, and, folding his arms upon his breast, bowed in silence before his lord. ' How fares the Hebrew boy, Analschar ? ' ' Master, the fever has not returned. We gave him the potion ; he slumbered for many hours, and has now awakened, weak but well.' ' Let him rise and attend me. The Nubian disappeared. ' There is nothing stranger than sympathy,' soliloquised the physician of the Caliph, with a meditative air ; ' all resolves itself into this principle, and I confess this learned doctor treats it deeply and well. An erudite spirit truly, and an eloquent pen ; yet he refines too much. 'Tis too scholastic. Observation will teach us more than dogma. Meditating upon my passionate youth, I gathered wisdom. I have seen so much that I have ceased to wonder. How- ever we doubt, there is a mystery beyond our penetration. And yet 'tis near our grasp. I sometimes deem a step, a single step, would launch us into light. Here comes my patient. The rose has left his cheek, and his deep brow is wan and melancholy. Yet 'tis a glorious visage. Medita- tion's throne ; and Passion lingers in that languid eye. I know not why, a strong attraction draws me to this lone child. ' Gentle stranger, how fares it with thee ? ' ' Very well, my lord. I come to thank thee for all thy goodness. My only thanks are words, and those too weak ; and yet the orphan's blessing is a treasure.' ' You are an orphan, then ? ' ' I Jiave no parent but my father's God.' ' And that God is ' ' The God of Israel.' ' So I deemed. He is a Deitj'- we all must honour ; if he be the great Creator whom we all allow.' ' He is what he is, and we are what we are, a fallen people, but Mthful still.' 56 ALROY. ' Fidelity is slrengtli.' ' Thy words arc trutli, and strength must triumph.' ' A prophecy ! ' ' Many a prophet is little honoured, till the future proves liis inspiration.' * You arc young and sanguine.' ' So was uiy ancestor within tlie rale of Elah. But I speak unto a Moslem, and this is foolishness.' ' I have read something, and can take your drift. As for my faith, I believe in truth, and wish all men to do the same. By the bye, might I inquire the name of him who IS the inmate of my house ? ' ' They call mo David.' ' David, you have a ring, an emerald cut with curious characters, Hebrew, I believe.' ' "Tis here.' ' A fine stone, and this inscription means ' ' A simple legend, "Parted, lid one;'' the kind memorial of a brother's love.' ' Your brother ? ' ' I never had a brother.' ' I have a silly fancy for this ring : you hesitate. Search my palace, and choose the treasure you deem its match.' ' Noble sir, the gem is little worth ; but were it such might deck a Caliph's brow, 'twere a poor recompense for all thy goodness. This ring is a trust rather than a pos- session, and strange to say, although I cannot offer it to thee who mayst command, as thou hast saved, the life of its unhappy wearer, some stranger may cross my path to-moiTOw, and almost claim it as his own.' ' And that stranger is ' ' The brother of the donor.' ' The brother of Jabaster ? ' ' Jabaster!' * Even so. I am that parted brother.' ' Great is the God of Israel ! Take the ring. But what is this ? the brother of Jabaster a turbaned chieftain ! a Moslem ! Say, but say that thou has not assumed theii* ALPvOY. 57 base belief; say, but say, that tliou bast not become a traitor to our covenant, and I will bless tlie fortunes of this hour.' ' I am false to no God. Calm thyself, sweet youth. These are higher questions than thy faint strength can master now. Another time we'll talk of this, my boy ; at present of my brother and thyself. He lives and prospers ? ' ' He lives in faith ; the pious ever prosper.' ' A glorious dreamer ! Though our moods are different, I ever loved liim. And thyself ? Thou art not what thou seemest. Tell me all. Jabaster's friend can be no common mind. Thy form has heralded thy fame. Trust me.' ' I am Alroy.' ' What ! the Prince of our Captivity ? ' ' Even so.' ' The slayer of Alschiroch ? ' 'Ay!' My sympathy was prophetic, I loved thee from tlio first. And what dost thou here ? A price is set upon thy head : thou knowest it ? ' ' For the first time ; but I am neither astonished nor alarmed. I am upon the Lord's business.' ' What wouldst thou ? ' ' Free his people.' 'The pupil of Jabaster: I see it all. Another victim to his reveries. I'll save this boy. David, for thy name must not be sounded within this city, the sun is dying. Let us to the terrace, aud seek the solace of the twilight breeze.' CHAPTER IV ' What is the hour, David ? ' ' ISTear to midnight. I marvel if thy brother mav read in the stars oui' happy meeting.' 58 ALEOY. ' Meu read that wliicli tliey wish. Ho is a learned Cabalist.' ' But what we wish comes from above,' * So they say. We make our fortunes, and we call them Fate.' ' Yet the Voice sounded, the Daughter of the Voice that sumnioned Samuel.' ' You have told me strange things ; I have heard stranger solved.' ' My faith is a rock.' ' On which you may split.' ' jVrfc thou a Sadducce ? ' ' I am a man who knows men.' ' You are learned, but different from Jaba,ster.* ' "We are the same, though different. Day and Night arc both portions of Time.* ' And thy portion is ' ' Truth.' ' That is, light.' ' Yes ; so dazzling that it sometimes seems dark.' ' Like thy meaning.' ' You are young.' ' Is youth a defect ? ' ' No, the reverse. But we cannot eat the fruit while the tree is in blossom.' ' What fruit ? ' ' Knowledge.' ' I have studied.' 'What?' * All sacred things.' ' How know you that they are sacred ? ' ' They come from God.' ' So does everything. Is everything sacred ? ' ' They are the deep expi'ession of his will.' * According to Jabastcr. Ask the man who prays in yonder mosque, and he will tell you tliat Jabaster'a wrong.' ' After all, thou art a Moslem ? ' *No.' ALROY. 59 ' WTiat then ? ' ' I have told you, a man.' ' But what dost thou worship ? ' ' What is worship ? ' ' Adoration due from the creature to the Creator.' ' Which is he ? ' ' Our God.' ' Tlie God of Israel ? ' * Even so.' ' A frail minoritj, then, burn incense to him.' * We are the chosen people.' * Chosen for scoffs, and scorns, and contumelies. Com- mend me to such choice.' ' We forgot him, before he chastened us ' * Why did we ? ' ' Thou knowest the records of our holj' race. ' Tes, I know them ; Hke all records, annals of blooa. 'Annals of victory, that vdll dawn again.' ' If redemption he but another name for carnage, I envv no Messiah.' ' Art thou Jabaster's brother ? ' * So our mother was wont to say : a meek and blessed woman.' ' Lord Honain, thou art rich, and wise, and powerful. Tliy fellow-men speak of thee only with praise or fear, and both are cheering. Thou hast quitted our antique ark ; why ; no matter. We'll not discuss it. 'Tis something, if a stranger, at least thou art not a renegade. The world goes well with thee, my Lord Honain. But if, instead of bows and blessings, thou, Hke thy brethren, wert greeted only with the cuff and curse ; if thou didst rise each morning only to feel existence to be dishonour, and to find thyself marked out among surrounding men as some- thing foul and fatal ; if it were thy lot, like theirs, at best to drag on a mean and dull career, hopeless and aimless, or with no other hope or aim but that wliich is degrading, and all this too with a keen sense of thy intrinsic worth, and a deep conviction of superior race ; why then, per- eO ALROY. cliance, Tlonain might oven discover 'twere -worth a struggle to be free and honoured.' * I pray your pardon, sir ; I thought you were Jalias- tcr's pupil, a dreaming student. I see you have a deep ambition.' ' I am a prince ; and I fain would be a prince without my fetters.' ' Listen to me, Alroy,' said Honain in a low voice, and he placed his arm around him, ' I am your friend. Our acquaintance is very brief : no matter, I love you ; I rescued vou in injury, I tended you in sickness, even now your life is in my power, I would protect it with my ovm. You cannot doubt me. Our affections are not under our own control ; and mine are yours. The sympathy between us is entire. You see me, you see what I am ; a Hebrew, though unknown ; one of that despised, rejected, i^ersecuted people, of whom you are the chief. I too would be free and lionourcd. Freedom and honour are mine, but I was my own messiah. I quitted in good time oiir desperate cause, but I gave it a trial. Ask Jabaster how I fought. Youth could be my only excuse for such indiscretion. 1 left this country ; I studied and resided among the Greeks. I retui'ned from Constantinople, with all their lefirning, ."^ome of their craft. jSTo one knew me. I assumed their turban, and I am, the Lord Honain. Take my expe- rience, child, and save yourself much sorrow. Turn your late adventure to good account. No one can recognise you here. I will introduce you amongst the highest as my child by some fair Greek. The world is before you. You may fight, you may love, you may revel. War, and Avomen, and luxuiy are all at your command. With your person and talents you may be grand vizir. Clear your head of nonsense. In the present disordered state of the empire, you may even carve yourself out a kingdom, infinitely more delightful than the barren land of milk and honey. I have Been it, child ; a rocky wilderness, where I would not let my courser graze.' He bent down, and fixed his eyes upon his companion ALROY. 61 with a scrutinising glance. The moonlight fell upon the resolved visage of the Prince of the Captivity. ' Honain,' he replied, pressing his hand, ' I thank thee. Thou knowest not me, but still I thank thee.' ' You are resolved, then, on destruction.' * On glory, eternal glory.' ' Is it possible to succeed ? ' ' Is it possible to fail ? ' ' You are mad.' ' I am a believer.' ' Enough. You have yet one chance. My brother has saddled your enterprise with a condition, and an imj)ossible one. Gain the sceptre of Solomon, and I will agree to be your subject. You will waste a year in this frolic. You are young, and can afford it. I trust you will experience nothing worse than a loss of time, which is, however, valuable. My duty will be, after all your suflerings, to send you forth on your adventures in good condition, and to provide you means for a less toilsome pilgrimage than has hitherto been your lot. Trust me you will return to Bagdad to accept my offers. At present, the dews are descending, and we will return to our divan, and take some coflee.' CHAPTER V. Some few days after this conversation on the terrace, as Alroy was reclining in a bower, in the beautiful garden of his host, meditating on the future, some one touched him on the back. He looked up. It was Honain. ' Follow me,' said the brother of Jabaster. The Prince rose, and followed him in silence. They entered the house, and, passing through the saloon already described, they proceeded down a long gallery, which terminated in an arched flight of broad steps leading to the river. A boat was fastened to the end of the stairs, fioatino- on the blue line of the Tigris, bright in the sun. 62 ALROY. Honain now gave to Alroy a velvet bag, wliich lie re- quested him to carry, and then they descended the steps and entered the covered boat ; and, withont any directions to the rower, they were soon skimming over the water. By the sound of passing vessels, and the occasional shouts of the boatmen, Aboy, although he could observe nothing, was conscious that for some time their course lay through a principal thoroughfare of the city; but by degrees the sounds became less frequent, and in time entirely died away, and all that caught his ear was the regular and mo- notonous stroke of their own oar. At length, after the lapse of nearly an hour from their entrance, the boat stopped, and was moored against a quay. The curtains were withdrawn, and Honain and his com- panion disembarked. A low but extensive building, painted in white and gold arabesque, and irregular but picturesque in form, with many small domes, and tall thin towers, rose amid groves of cypress on the bank of the broad and silent river. The rapid stream had carried them far from the city, which was visible but distant. Around was no habitation, no human being. The opposite bank was occupied by enclosed gar- dens. Not even a boat passed. Honain, beckoning to Alroy to accompany him, but still silent, advanced to a small portal, and knocked. It was instantly opened by a single N'ubian, who bowed reverently as the visitors passed him. They proceeded along a low and gloomy passage, covered with arches of fretwork, until they arrived at a door of tortoiseshell and mother of pearl. ^^ Here Honain, who was in advance, turned round to Alroy, and said, 'Whatever happen, and whoever may address you, as you value your life and mine, do not speak.' The door opened, and they found themselves in a vast and gorgeous hall. Pillars of many-coloured marbles rose from a red and blue pavement of the same material, and supported a vaulted, circular, and highly-embossed roof of purple, scarlet, and gold.'*^ Around a fountain, which rose fifty feet in height from an immense basin of lapis-lazuli, ALROY. 63 and reclining on small yellow Barbary mats, was a group of Nubian eunuchs, dressed in rich habits of scarlet and gold,2* and armed with ivory battle-axes, the white handles Avorked in precious arabesque finely contrasting with the blue and brilHant blades. The commander of the eunuch-g-uard rose on seeing Honain, and, pressing his hand to liis head, mouth, and heart, saluted him. The physician of the Cahph, motion- ing Alroy to remain, advanced somes paces in front of him, and entered into a whispering conversation with the eunuch. After a few minutes, this officer resumed his seat, and Honain, beckoning to Ah'oy to rejoin him, crossed the hall. Passing through an open arch, they entered a quadran- gular court of roses, ^^ each bed of flowers surrounded by a stream of sparkling water, and floating like an enchanted islet upon a fairy ocean. The sound of the water and the sweetness of the flowers blended together, and produced a lulling sensation, which nothing but his strong and strange curiosity naight have enabled Alroy to resist. Pro- ceeding along a cloister of light airy workmanship which connected the hall with the remainder of the buildings, they stood before a lofty and sumptuous portal. It was a monolith gate, thirty feet in height, formed of one block of green and red jasper, and cut into the fanciful undulating arch of the Saracens. The consummate artist had seized the advantage afforded to him by the ruddy veins of the precious stone, and had formed them in bold rehef into two vast and sinuous serpents, which shot forth their crested heads and glittering eyes at Honain and his companion. The physician of the Caliph, taking his dagger from his gu'dle, struck the head of one of the serpents thrice. The massy portal opened with a whirl and a roar, and before thera stood an Abyssinian giant,^^ holding in his leash a roaring lion. ' Hush, Haroun ! ' said Honain to the animal, raising at the same time his arm ; and the beast crouched in silence. 64 ALROy. ' Worth}- !Moi\c:avgon, I bring voii a remembrance.' The Abyssinian showed his tusks, larger and whiter than the lion's, as he grinningly received the tribute of the courtly Honain ; and he uttered a few uncouth sounds, but he could not speak, for he was a mute. The jasper portal introduced the companions to a long and lofty and arched chamber, lighted by high windows of stained glass, hung with tapestry of silk and silyer, covered with prodigious cai'pets, and surrounded by immense couches. And thus througli similar chambers they pro- ceeded, in some of which were signs of recent habitation, until they arrived at another qu.adrangle nearly filled by a most singular fountain which rose from a basin of gold encrusted with pearls, and which was surrounded by figures of every rare quadruped '^'^ in the most costly materials. Here a golden tiger, Avith flaming eyes of ruby and flowing stripes of opal, stole, after some bloody banquet, to tho refreshing brink ; a cameleopard raised its slender neck of silver from the centi'e of a group of every inhabitant of tho forest ; and brilliant bands of monkeys, glittering with pre- cious stones, rested, in every variety of fantastic posture, on the margin of the basin. The fountain itself was a tree of gold and silver ^^ spread- ing into innumerable branches, covered with eveiy variety of curious birds, their plumage appi'opriately imitated by the corresponding tints of precious stones, and which ■warbled in beautiful melody as they poured forth from their bills the musical and refreshing element. It was with difficulty that Alroy could refrain from an admiring exclamation, but Honain, ever quick, turned to him, with his finger pressed on his mouth, and quitting the quadrangle, they entered the gardens. Lofty terraces, dark masses of cypress, winding walks of acacia, in the distance an interminable paradise, and here and there a glittering pavilion and bright kiosk ! Its appearance ou the river had not prepared Ali'oy for the extent of the palace itself. It seemed infinite, and it was evident that he hud only viewed a small portion of it. ALROY. 05 "While they were moviug on, there suddenly arose a sound of trumpets. The sound grew nearer and nearer, louder and louder : soon was heard the tramp of an approaching troop. Honain drew Alroy aside. A procession appeared advancing from a dark grove of cypress. Four hundred men led as many white bloodhounds -with collars of gold and rubies.-^ Then came one hundred men, each with a hooded hawk ; then six horsemen in rich dresses ; after them a single horseman, mounted on a steed, marked on its forehead with a star.'*^ The rider was middle-aged, hand- .some, and dignified. He was plainly dressed, but the staff of his hunting-spear was entirely of diamonds and the blade of gold. He was followed by a company of N'ubian eunuchs, with their scarlet dresses and ivory battle-axes, and the procession closed. ' The CaHph,' whispered Honain, when they had jiassed, placing at the same time his finger on his lip to prevent any inquiry. This was the first intimation that had reached Alroy of what he had already suspected, that he was a visitor to the palace of the Commander of the Faithful, The companions turned down a wild and winding walk, which, after some time, brought them to a small and gently sloping lawn, suri'ounded by cedar-trees of great size. Upon the lawn was a kiosk, a long and many- windowed building, covered with blinds, and further screened by an overhang- ing roof. The kiosk was built of white and green marble, the ascent to it was by a flight of steps the length of the building, alternately of white and gi'een marble, and nearly covei'ed with rose-trees. Honain went up these steps alone, and entered the kiosk. After a few minutes he looked out from the blinds and beckoned to Alroy. David advanced, but Honain, fearful of some indiscretion, met him, and said to him in a low whisper between his teeth, 'Eemember you are deaf, a mute, and a eunnch.' Alroy could scarcely refrain from smiling, and the Prince of the Captivity and the physician of the Caliph entered the kiosk together. Two women, veiled, and two eunuchs of the guard, received 66 ALROY. them in an antechamber. And then they passed into a room which ran nearly the whole length of the kiosk, opening on one side to the gardens, and on the other supported by an ivory wall, with niches painted in green fresco, and in each niche a rose-tree. Each niche, also, was covered with an almost invisible golden grate, which con- fined a nightingale, and made him constant to the rose he loved. At the foot of each niche was a fountain, but, instead of water, each basin was replenished Avith the purest quicksilver.^' The roof of the kiosk was of mother-of-pearl inlaid Avith tortoise-shell ; the pavement, a mosaic of rare marbles and precious stones, representing the most de- licious fruits and the most beautiful flowers. Over this pavement, a Georgian page flung at intervals refreshing jjcrfumes. At the end of this elegant chamber was a divan of light green silk, embroidered with pearls, and covered with cushions of white satin and gold. Upon one of these cushions, in the middle of the divan, sat a lady, her eyes fixed in abstraction upon a volume of Persian poetry lying on her knees, one hand playing with a rosary of pearls and emeralds,22 ^nd the other holding a long gold chain, which imprisoned a white gazelle. The lady looked up as Honain and his companion entered. She was very yonng, as youthful as Alroy. Her long light brown hair, drawn off a high white forehead covered with blue veins, fell braided with pearls over each shoulder. Her eyes were large and deeply blue ; her nose small, but high and aquiline. The fairness of her face was dazzling, and, when she looked up and greeted Honain, her lustrous cheeks broke into dimples, the more fascinating from their contrast with the general expression of her countenance, which was haughty and derisive. The lady was dressed in a robe of crimson silk girded round her waist by a green f^hawl, from which peeped forth the diamond hilt of a small poniard.33 Her round white arms looked infinitely small, as they occasionally flashed forth from their large loose hanging sleeves. One was covered with jewels, and tho right arm was quite bare. ALROY. 67 Honain advanced, and, bending, kissed the lady's prof- fered hand. Alroy fell into the background. ' They told me that the Rose of the World drooped this morning,' said the Physician, bending again as he smiled, ' and her slave hastened at her command to tend her.' ' It was a south -wind. The wind has changed, and the Rose of the World is better,' replied the lady laughing. Honain touched her pulse. ' IiTegular,' said the Physician. ' Like myself,' said the lady. ' Is that a new slave ? ' ' A recent purchase, and a great bargain. He is good- looking, has the advantage of being deaf and dumb, and is harmless in every respect.' ' 'Tis a pity,' replied the lady ; ' it seems that all good- looking people are born to be useless. I, for instance.' ' Yet rumour whispers the reverse,' remarked the Phy- sician. ' How so ? ' inquired the lady. ' The young King of Karasme.' • ' Poh ! I have made up my mind to detest him. A barbarian ! ' ' A hero ! ' ' Did you ever see him ? ' ' I have.' ' Handsome ? ' ' An archangel.' ' And sumptuous ? ' ' Is he not a conqueror ? All the plunder of the world Vidll be yours.' ' I am tired of magnificence. I built this kiosk to forget it.' ' It is not in the least degx'ee splendid,' said Honain, looking round with a smile. ' No,' answered the lady, with a self-satisfied air : ' here, at least, one can forget one has the misfortune to be a princess,' ' It is certainly a great misfortune,' said the Physician. F 2 08 ALKOV. • And yet it must be the only tolerable lot,' replied tho lady. ' Assuredly,' replied Honain. ' For our unhappy sex at least.' ' Very unhappy.' ' If I were only a man ! ' * What a hero you -would be ! ' ' I should like to live in endless confusion.' ' I have not the least doubt of it.' 'Have you got me the books?' eagerly inquired the Princess. ' ^[y slave bears them,' replied Honain. ' Let me see them directly.' Honain took the bag from Alroy, and unfolded its con- tents ; the very volumes of Greek romances Avhich Ali, the merchant, had obtained for him. ' I am tired of poetry, said the Princess, glancing over the costly volumes, and tossing them away ; ' I long to see the world.' ' You would soon be tired of that,' replied the Physician. ' I suppose common people are never tired,' said the Princess. ' Except with labour,' said the Physician; 'care keeps them alive.' ' What is care ? ' asked the Princess, with a smile. ' It is a god,' replied the Physician, ' invisible, but omnipotent. It steals the bloom from the cheek and light- ness from the pulse; it takes away the appetite, and turns ilie hair grey.' ' It is no true divinity, then,' replied the Princess, Init an idol we make ourselves, I am a sincere Moslem, and will not worship it. Tell me some news, Honain.' ' Tiie young King of Kai'asme ' ' Again ! the barbarian ! You are in his pay. I'll none of him. To leave one prison, and to be shut up in another, why do yoii remind me of it ? No, my dear Hakim, if I marry at all, I will marry to be free.' ' An impossibility,' said Ilouain, ' .My niuther was free till she was a queen and a slave. I intend to end as she began. You know what she was.' Honain knew well, but he was too politic not to affect ignorance. ' The daughter of a bandit,' continued the Princess, 'who fought by the side of her father. That is existence ! I must be a robber. 'Tis in the blood. I want my fate foretold, Honain. Yon are an astrologer; do it.' * I have already cast your nativity. Your star is a comot.' ' That augurs well ; brilhant confusion and erratic splen- dour. I wish I were a star,' added the Princess in a deep rich voice, and with a pensive air ; ' a star in the clear blue sky, beautiful and free. Honain, Honain, the gazelle has broken her chain, and is eating my roses.' Alroy rushed forward and seized the graceful truant. Honain shot him an anxious look ; the Princess received the chain from the hand of Alroy, and cast at him a scru- tinisincc o^lance. ' What splendid eyes the poor beast has got ! ' exclaimed the Princess. ' The gazelle ? ' inquired the Physician. ' No, your slave,' replied the Princess. ' "Why, he blushes. Were he not deaf as well as dumb, I could almost believe he understood me.' ' He is modest,' replied Honain, rather alarmed ; ' and is frightened at the liberty he has taken.' ' I like modesty,' said the Princess ; ' it is interesting. I am modest ; you think so ? ' ' Certainly,' said Honain. * And interesting ? ' ' Very.' ' I detest an interesting person. After all, there is liothing like plain dulness.' ' Nothing,' said Honain. ' The day flows on so serenely in such society.' ' It does,' said Honain. ' Xo confusion ; no scenes.' 70 ALKor. ' Xdlic' ' I make it a rule only to have ugly slaves. ' Tou are quite right.' ' Honain, -will you ever contradict me ? You know very •well I have the handsomest slaves in the world.' ' Every one knows it.' ' And do you know, I have taken a great fancy to your new purchase, who, according to your account, is eminently qualified for the post. Why, do you not agree with me ? ' ' Why, yes ; I doubt not your Highness would find him eminently qualified, and certainly few things would give rae greater pleasure than offering him for your acceptance ; but I got into such disgrace by that late afiair of the Cir- cassian, that ' ' Oh ! leave it to me,' said the Princess. ' Certainly,' said the Physician, turning the conversation ; ' and when the young Bang of Karasme arrives at Bagdad, you can ofier him to his majesty as a present.' ' DeHghtful ! and the king is really handsome and young as well as brave ; but has he any taste ? ' * You have enough for both.' ' K he would but make war against the Greeks ! ' ' Why so violent against the poor Greeks ? ' ' You know they are Giaours. Besides, they might beat him, and then I should have the pleasure of being taken prisoner.' ' DeHghtfal ! ' ' Charming ! to see Constantinople, and marry the Em- peror.' ' Marry the Emperor ! ' ' To be sure. Of course he would fall in love with me.' ' Of course.' ' And then, and then, I might conquer Paris !' ' Paris ! ' ' You have been at Paris ? ' ^* « Yes.' * The men are shut up there,' said the Princess with a DTnile, ' are they not ? and the women do what they like ? ' ' You will always do what you like,' said Honain, rising. ALROY. 71 ' You are goiug ? ' ' Mj visits mnst not be too long.' ' Farewell, dear Honain ! ' said the Princess, with a me- lancholy air. ' Ton are the only person who has an idea in all Bagdad, and yon leave me. A miserable lot is mine, to feel everything, and be nothing. These books and flowers, these sweet birds, and this fair gazelle : ah ! poets may feign as they please, bnt how cheerfully would I resign all these elegant consolations of a captive Hfe for one hour of freedom ! I Avrote some verses on myself yesterday ; take them, and get them blazoned for me by the finest scribe in the city ; letters of silver on a violet ground with a fine flowing border ; I leave the design to you. Adieu ! Come hither, mute.' Alroy advanced to her beckon, and knelt. ' There, take that rosary for thy master's sake, and those dark eyes of thine.' The companions withdrew, and reached their boat in silence. It was sunset. The musical and sonorous voice of the Muezzin resounded from the innumerable minarets of the splendid city. Honain threw back the curtains of the barque. Bagdad rose before them in huge masses of sumptuous dwellings, seated amid groves and gardens. An infinite population, summoned by the invigorating twilight, poured forth in all dii-ections. The glowing river was covered with sparkling caiques, the gHttering teri'aces with showy groups. Splendour, and power, and luxury, and beauty were arrayed before them in their most captivating forms, and the heart of Alroy responded to their magni- ficence. ' A glorious vision ! ' said the Prince of the Captivity. ' Yery different from Hamadan,' said the physician of the CaHph. ' To-day I have seen wonders,' said Alroy. ' The world is opening to you,' said Honain. Alroy did not reply ; but after some minutes he said, in a hesitating voice, ' Who was that lady ? ' ' The Princess Schirene,' replied Honain, ' the favourite daughter of the Caliph. Her mother was a Georgian and a Giaour.' ALROY. CHAPTER VI. The moouliglifc fell upon the figure of Alroy lyiug on a couch ; his face was hidden by his arm. He was motion- less, but did not sleep. He rose and paced the chamber with agitated steps ; sometimes he stopped, and gazed on the pavement, fixed in abstraction. He advanced to the window, and cooled his feverish brow in the midnight air. An hour passed away, and the young Prince of the Cap- tivity remained fixed in the same position. Suddenly he turned to a tripod of porphyry, and, seizing a rosary of jewels, pressed it to his li23s. ' The Spii'it of my dreams, she coiiaes at last ; the form for which I have sighed and wept ; the form which rose upon my radiant vision when I shut my eyes against the jarring shadows of this gloomy world, ' Schirene ! Schirene ! here in this solitude I pour to thee the passion long stored up : the passion of my life, no common life, a life full of deep feeling and creative thought. O beautiful ! more than beautiful ! for thou to me art as a dream unbroken : why art thou not mine ? why lose a moment in our glorious lives, and balk our destiny of half its bliss ? ' Fool, fool, hast thou forgotten ? The rajiture of a prisoner in his cell, whoso wild fancy for a moment belies his fetters ! T'he daughter of the Caliph and a Jew ! ' Give me my fathers' sceptre. ' A plague on tahsmans ! Oh ! I need no ins^iiration but lier memoiy, no magic bi;t her name. By heavens ! I Avill enter this gloi'ious city a conqueror, or die. ' Wliy, what is Life? for meditation mingles ever with my passion : why, what is Life ? Throw accidents to the dogs, and tear ofi' the painted mask of false society ! Here am I a hero ; with a mind that can devise all things, and a heart of superhuman daring, Avith youth, with vigour, with a glorious lineage, with a form that has made full ALROY. 7.", many a lovely maiden of our tribe droop her fair head by Hamadan's sweet fount, and I am, nothing. ' Out on Society ! 'twas not made for me. I'll form iny own, and be the deity I sometimes feel. ' We make our fortunes, and we call them Fate.' Thou saidst well, Honain. Most subtle Sadducee ! The saintly blood flowed in my fathers' veins, and they did nothing ; but I have an arm formed to wield a sceptre, and I will win one. ' I cannot doubt my triumph. Triumph is a part of my existence. I am born for glory, as a tree is boi'n to bear its fruit, or to expand its flowers. The deed is done. 'Tis thought of, and 'tis done. I will confront the greatest of my diademed ancestors, and in his tomb. Mighty Solo- mon ! he wedded Pharaoh's daughter. Hah I what a future dawns upon my hope. An omen, a choice omen ! ' Heaven and earth are mingling to form my fortunes. My mournful youth, which I have so often cursed. I hail thee : thou wert a glorious preparation ; and when, feeling no sympathy -with the life around me, I deemed myself a fool, I find that I was a most peculiar being. By heavens, I am joyful ; for the first time in my life I am joyful. I could laugh, and fight, and drink. I am new-born ; I am another being ; I am mad ! ' Time, great Time ! the world belies thy fame. It calls thee swift. Methinks thou art wondrous slow. Fly on, great Time, and on thy coming wings bear me my sceptre ! ' All is to be. It is a lowering thought. My fancy, like a bright and wearied bird, will sometimes flag and fall, and then I am lost. The young King of Karasme, a youthful hero ! Would he had been Alschiroch ! My heart is sick even at the very name. Alas ! my trials have not yet begun, Jabaster warned me : good, sincere Jabaster ! His talisman presses on my frantic heart, and seems to warn me. I am in danger. Braggart to stand here, filling tlio careless air Avith idle words, Avhile all is unaccomphshed. I grow dull. The young King of Karasme ! Wliy, what 74 ALROY. am I compared to this same prince ? NotMng, but in my thoughts. In the full bazaar, they would not deem me ■worthy even to hold his stirrup or his slipper Oh ! this contest, this constant, bitter, never-ending contest between my fortune and my fancy ! Why do I exist ? or, if existing, wliy am I not recognised as I would be ? ' Sweet voice, that in Jabaster's distant cave descendedst from thy holy home above, and whispered consolation, breathe again ! Again breathe thy still summons to my lonely ear, and chase away the thoughts that hover round me ; thoughts dark and doubtful, like fell birds of prey hovei'ing around a hero in expectation of his fall, and gloating on their triumph OA^er the brave. There is some- tbing fatal in these crowded cities. Faith flourishes in solitude.' He threw himself upon the couch, and, leaning down his head, seemed lost in meditation. He started up, and, seizing his tablets, wrote upon them these words : ' Honain, I have been the whole night like Da^ad in the ■wilderness of Ziph ; but, by the aid of the Lord, I have con- quered. I fly from this dangerous city upon his business, which I have too much neglected. Attempt not to discover me, and accept my gratitude.' ALROY. 7 5 PAET VI. CHAPTER I. A SCOKCHIXG sun, a blue and burning sky, on every side lofty ranges of black and barren mountains, dark raviues, deep caverns, unfathomable gorges ! A solitary being moved in the distance. Faint and toihng, a pilgrim slowly clambered up the steep and stony track. The sultry hours moved on ; the pilgrim at length gained the summit of the mountain, a small and rugged table-land, strewn with huge masses of loose and heated rock. All around was desolation : no spring, no herbage ; the bird and the insect were alike mute. Still it was the summit : no loftier peaks frowned in the distance ; the pilgrim stopped, and breathed with more facility, and a faint smile played over his languid and solemn countenance. He rested a few minutes ; he took from his wallet some locusts and wild honey, and a small skin of water. His meal was short as well as simple. An ardent desire to reach his place of destination before nightfall urged him to proceed. He soon passed over the table-land, and com- menced the descent of the mountain. A straggHng oHve- ti^ee occasionally appeared, and then a group, and soon the groups swelled into a grove. His way wound through the grateful and unaccustomed shade. He emerged from the grove, and found that he had proceeded down more tlian half the side of the mountain. It ended precipitously in a dark and narrow ravine, formed on the other side by an opposite mountain, the lofty steep of which was crested by a city gently rising -on a gradual slope. Nothing could be conceived more barren, wild, and 76 ALIIUY. terrible than the sui-rouudiug sceuery, uuillumiucd by a Biiigle trace of culture. The city stood like the last gla- diator iu an amphitheatre of desolation. It was surrounded by a lofty turreted wall, of an archi- tccture to wliich the pilgiim was unaccustomed : gates with drawbridge and portcullis, square towers, and loopholes for the archer. Sentinels, clothed in steel and shining iu the sunset, paced, at regailar intervals, the cautious wall, and on a lofty tower a standard waved, a snowy standard, Avith a red, red cross ! The Prince of the Captivity at length beheld the lost capital of his fathers. ^^ CHAPTER II. A FEW months back, and such a spectacle woiild have called forth all the latent passion of Ah'oy ; but time and suftering, and sharp experience, had already somewhat curbed the Hery spirit of the Hebrew Prince. He gazed upon Jeru- salem, he beheld the City of David gai-risoned by the puissant warriors of Christendom, and threatened by the innumerable armies of the Crescent. The two great divi- sions of the world seemed contending for a prize, which he, a lonely wanderer, had crossed the desert to rescue. If his faith restrained him from doubting the possibility of his enterprise, he was at least deeply conscious that the world was a very different existence from Avhat he had fancied amid the gardens of Hamadan and the' rocks of Caucasus, and that if his purpose could be accomplished, it could only bo effected by one means. Calm, perhaps somewhat depressed, but full of pious humiliation, and not deserted by holy hope, he descended into the Valley of Jehoshaphat, and so, slaking his thirst at Siloah, and mount- ing the opposite height, David Alroy entered Jerusalem by the gate of Sion.^*' He had been instructed that the quarter allotted to hia ALROY. 77 people was near this entrance. He iuquired the direction of the sentinel, who did not condescend to answer him. An old man, in shabby robes, who was passing, beckoned to him. ' What want you, friend ? ' inquired Alroy. ' You were asking for the quarter of our peo^ile. You must be a stranger, indeed, in Jerusalem, to suj^pose that a Frank would speak to a Jew. You were lucky to get neither kicked nor cursed.' ' Kicked and cursed ! Why, these dogs ' ' Hush ! hush ! for the love of God,' said his new com- panion, much alarmed. ' Hare you lent money to their captain that you speak thus ? In Jerusalem our people speak only in a whisper.' ' No matter : the cure is not by words. Where is our quarter.' ' Was the like ever seen ! Why he speaks as if he were a Frank. I save him from having his head broken by a gauntlet, and ' ' Mjr friend, I am tired. Our quarter ? ' ' Whom may you want r ' ' The Chief Eabbi.' ' You bear letters to him ? ' ' What is that to you ? ' ' Hush ! hush ! You do not know what Jerusalem is, young man. You must not think of going on in this way. Where do you come from ? ' ' Bagdad.' ' Bagdad ! Jerusalem is not Bagdad. A Turk is a brute, but a Christian is a demon.' ' But our quarter, our quarter ? ' ' Hush ! 3'ou want the Chief Rabbi r ' ' Ay ! ay ! ' Rabbi Zimri ? ' ' It may be so. I neither know nor care.' ' Neither knows nor cares ! This will never do : you must not go on in this way at Jerusalem. You must not think of it;' 78 ALROY. ' Fellow, I see tliou art a miserable prattler. Show me our quarter, and I will pay thee well, or be off.' ' Be off ! Art thou a Hebrew ? to say ' be off ' to any one. You come from Bagdad ! I tell you -what, go back to Bagdad. You will never do for Jerusalem.' ' Your grizzled beard protects you. Old fool, I am a pilgrim just arrived, wearied beyond expression, and you keep me here listening to your flat talk ! ' ' Flat talk ! Wliy ! what would you ? ' ' Lead me to the Rabbi Zimri, if that be his name.' ' If that be his name ! Why, every one knows Rabbi Zimri, the chief rabbi of Jerusalem, the successor of Aaron. We have our temple yet, say what they like. A very learned doctor is Rabbi Zimri.' ' Wretched driveller. I am ashamed to lose my patience Mdth such a dotard. ' Driveller ! dotard ! Why, v^ho are you ? ' ' One you cannot comprehend. Without another word lead me to your chief.' ' Chief ! you have not far to go, I know no one of the nation who holds his head higher than I do hero, and they call me Zimri.' ' What, the Chief Rabbi, that very learned doctor ? ' ' No less ; I thought you had heard of him.' ' Let us forget the past, good Zimri. When great men play the incognito, they must sometimes hear rough phrases. It is the CaUph's lot as well as yours, I am glad to make the acquaintance of so great a doctor. Though young, and roughly habited, I have seen the world a little, and may offer next Sabbath in the synagogue more dirhems than you Vi'ould perhaps suppose. Good and learned Zimri, I would be your guest.' ' A very worshipful young man ! And he speaks low and soft now ! But it was lucky I was at hand. Good, what's your name ? ' ' David.' ' A very honest name, good David. It was lucky I was at hand when you spoke to the sentinel, though. A Jew ALROY. 79 speak to a Frank, and a sentinel too ! Hah ! hali ! hali ! that is good. How Rabbi Maimon will laugh ! Faith it was very lucky, now, was not it ? ' ' Indeed, most fortunate.' ' Well, that is candid ! Here ! this way. 'Tis not far. We number few, sir, of our brethi-en here, but a better time v/ill come, a better time will come.' ' I think so. This is your door ? ' ' An humble one. Jerusalem is not Bagdad, but you are vrelcome.' CHAPTER in. 'KmG PiKGANDiGUS ^-^ entered them,' said Rabbi Maimon, ' but no one since.' ' And when did he live ? ' inquired Alroy. ' His reign is recorded in the Talmud,' answered Rabbi Zimri, ' but in the Talmud there are no dates.' ' A long while ago ? ' said Alroy. ' Since the Captivity,' answered Rabbi Maimon. ' I doubt that,' said Rabbi Zimri, ' or why should he be called king? ' ' Was he of the house of David ? ' said Alroy. 'Without doubt,' said Rabbi Maimon; 'he was one of our greatest kings, and conquered JuHus Csesar.'^s ' His kingdom was in the northernmost parts of Africa,' said Rabbi Zimri, ' and exists to this day, if we could but find it.' ' Ay, truly,' added Rabbi Maimon, ' the sceptre has never departed out of Judah ; and he rode alv/ays upon a white elephant.' ' Covered with cloth of gold,' added Rabbi Zimri. ' And he visited the Tombs of the Kings ? ' ^^ inquii'ed Alroy. ' Without doubt,' said Rabbi Maimon. ' The whole ac- count is in the Talmud.' ' And no one can now find them? ' ' No one,' replied Rabbi Zimri ; ' but, according to Inai go ALROY. learned doctor, ifoscs Hallevy, tbcy are in a valley in tLa mountains of Lebanon, Avliich -was sealed up by tlie Ai'cii- angel Michael.' ' The illustrious Doctor Abai-banel, of Babylon,' said Rabbi Maimon, 'gives one hundred and twenty reasons in his commentary on the Gemara to prove that they sunk under the earth at the taking of the Temple.' *Xo one reasons like Abarbanel of Babylon,' said Rabbi Zimi-i. ' The great Rabbi Akiba, of Pundebita, has answered them all,' said Rabbi Maimon, ' and holds that they were taken up to heaven.' 'And which is right? ' inquired Rabbi Zimri. ' Neither,' said Rabbi Maimon. ' One hundred and twenty reasons are strong proof,' said Rabbi Zimri. ' The most learned and illustrious Doctor Aaron Men- dola, of Granada,' said Rabbi IMaimon, ' has shown that we must look for the Tombs of the Kings in the south of Spain.' ' All that Mendola writes is worth attention,' said Rabbi Zimri. ' Rabbi Hillel,"*" of Samaria, is worth two IVEendolas any day,' said Rabbi Maimon. ' 'Tis a most learned doctoi*,' said Rabbi Zimri; 'and what thinks he ? ' ' Hillel proves that there are two Tombs of the Kings,' said Rabbi !Maimon, ' and that neither of them are the right ones.' ' What a learned doctor ! ' exclaimed Rabbi Zimri. ' And very satisfactory,' remarked Alroy, ' These are high siibjects,' continued jMaimon, his blear oycH twinkling Avith complacency. ' Your guest, Rabbi Zimri, must read the treatise of the learned Shimei, of ])amascus, on " Effecting Impossibilities." ' ' That is a work ! ' exclaimed Zimri. ' I never slept for three nights after reading that work,' paid Rabbi Maimon. 'It contains twelve thousand five AT.ro Y. 81 limidred and tliirty- seven quotations from the Peutateucli, and not a single original observation.' ' There were giants in those days,' said Rabbi Zimri ; ' we are children now.' ' The first chaj^ter makes equal sense, read backward or forward,' continued Rabbi Mainion. ' Ichabod ! ' exclaimed Rabbi Zimri, ' And the initial letter of every section is a cabalistical type of a king of Judah.' ' The temple will yet be built,' said Rabbi Zimri. ' Ay, ay ! that is learning ! ' exclaimed Rabbi Maimon ; * but what is the great treatise on " Effecting Impossibilities " to that profound, admirable, and ' ' Holy Rabbi ! ' said a youthful reader of the synagogue, who now entered, 'the hour is at hand.' ' Yon don't say so ! Learned Maimon, I must to tho synagogue. I could sit here all day listening to you. Come, David, the people await ns.' Zimri and Alroy quitted the house, and proceeded along the narrow hilly streets to the chief temple of the Hebrews. ' It gi'ieves the venerable Maimon much that he cannot join us,' said Rabbi Zimri. ' Ton have doubtless heard of him at Bagdad ; a most learned doctor.' Ah'oy bowed in silence. ' He bears his years well. You would hardly believe that he was my master.' ' I perceive that you inherit much of his erudition.' 'You are kind. If he have breathed one year, Rabbi Maimon will be a hundred and ten next Passover.' ' I doubt it not.' ' When he is gathered to his fathers, a great light will be extinguished in Israel. You wanted to know something about the Tombs of the Kings ; I told you he was your man. How full he was ! His mind, sir, is an egg.' ' A somewhat ancient one. I fear his guidance will hardly bring me the enviable fortune of Eang Pirgandicus.' ' Between ourselves, good David, talking of King Pirgandicus, I cannot help fancying that the learned o 82 ALROy. IMaimon made a slight mistake. I liold Pirgaudicus was only a prince. It was after the Captivity, and I know no authority for any of our rulers since the destruction as- suming a higher title. Clearly a prince, eh ? But, though I would whisper it to no one but you, I think our worthy friend grows a httlc old. "We should remember his years, sir. A hundi-ed and ten next Passover. 'Tis a great burden.' ' Ay ! with his learning added, a very fearful burden indeed ! ' ' Tou have beeu a week in Jerusalem, and have not yet visited our synagogue. It is not of cedar and ivory, but it is still a temple. This way. Is it only a week that you have been here ? Why, you look another man ! I shall never forget our first meeting : you did not know me. That was good, eh ? And when I told you I was the chief llabbi Zimri, how you changed ! You have quite i-egained your appetite. All ! 'tis pleasant to mix once more with our own people. To the left. So ! we must descend a little. We hold our meetings in an ancient cemetery. You have a finer temple, I warrant me, in Bagdad. Jeru- salem is not Bagdad. But this has its conveniences. 'Tis safe, and we are not very rich, nor wish to seem so.' CHAPTER IV, A LONG passage brought them to a number of small, square, low chambers^' leading into each other. They were lighted by brass lamps, placed at intervals in vacant niches, that once held corpses, and which were now soiled by the smoky flame. Between two and three hundred in- dividuals were assembled in these chambers, at first scarcely distinguishable by those who descended from the broad dayhght ; but by degrees the eyesight became accustomed 1o the dim and vaporous atmosphere, and Alroy recognised in the final and more illumined chamber a hiu'h cedar ALEOY. 83 cabinet, the type of the ark, and which held the sacred vessels and the sanctified copy of the law. Standing in lines, with their heads mystically covered,'*- the forlorn rerojiant of Israel, captives in their ancient city, avowed, in spite of all their sufi'erings, their fidelity to their God, and, notwithstanding all the bitterness of hope de- layed, their faith in the falfilment of his promises. Theu- simple service was completed, their prayers were read, their responses made, their law exhibited, and their chari- table ofierings announced by their high priest. After the service, the venerable Zimri, opening a volume of the Talmud, and fortified by the opinions of all those illus- trious and learned doctors, the heroes of his erudite con- versations with the aged Maimon, expounded the law to the congregation of the people.^^ ' It is written,' said the Rabbi, ' " Thou shalt have none other God but me." Now know ye what our father Abra- ham said when Nimrod ordered him to worship fire? "Why not water," answered Abraham, "which can put out fire? why not the clouds, which can pour forth water ? why not the winds, which can produce clouds ? why not God, which can create winds? " ' A murmur of approbation sounded throughout the con» gregatiou. ' EHezer,' said Zimi-i, addressing himself to a young Rabbi, ' it is wiitten, that he took a rib ffom Adam when he was asleep. Is God then a robber? ' The young Rabbi looked puzzled, and cast his eyes on the ground. The congregation was perplexed and a little alarmed. ' Is there no answer ? ' said Zimri. ' Rabbi,' said a stranger, a tall, swarthy African pilgrim, standing in a corner, and enveloped in a red mantle, over which a lamp threw a flickering light ; ' Rabbi, some rob- bers broke into my house last night, and stole an earthen pipkin, but they left a golden vase in its stead.' ' It is well said ; it is well said,' exclaimed the congrega- tion. The applause was loud. a2 84 aj.kmv, * Learned Zimvi,' continued the African, * it I's Wiitleu in the Geniai-a, that there was a you.tli in Jerusalem who fell in love with a beautiful damsel, and she scorned liim. And the youth was so sti-ickcn with his passion that he could not speak; but when he beheld her, he looked at her im- plorine'ly. and she laughed. And one day the youth, not knowing Avhat to do with himself, went out into the desert ; and towai'ds night he returned home, but the gates of the city were shut. And he went down into the valley of Je- hoshaphat, and entered the tomb of Absalom and slept ; *^ and he dreamed a dream ; and next morning he came into the city smiling. And the maiden met him, and she said, " Is that thou ; art thou a laugher? " and he answered, " Behold, yesterday being disconsolate, I went out of the city into the desert, and I returned home, and the gates of the city were shut, and I went down into the valley of Jchoshaphat, and I entered the tomb of Absalom, and J. slept, and I dreamed a dream, and ever since then I havo laughed." And the damsel said, " Tell nie thy dream." And he answered and said, " I may not tell my dream only to my wife, for it regards her honour." And the maiden grew sad and curious, and said, " I am thy Avife, tell me thy dream." And straightway they went and were married, and ever after they both laughed. Now, learned Zimri, what means this tale, an idle jest for a master of the law, yet it is written by the greatest doctor of the Captivity? ' ' It passeth my comprehension,' said the chief Rabbi. Rabbi EHezer Avas silent ; the congregation groaned. ' Now hear the interpretation,' said the African. * The youth is our people, and the damsel is our lost Sion, and the tomb of Absalom proves that salvation can only como from the house of David. Dost thou hear this, young man ? ' said the African, coming forward and laying his hand on Alroy. ' I speak to thee, because I have observed a deep attention in thy conduct.' The Pi-ince of the Captivity started, and shot a glance at the dai-k visage befure him, but the glance read nothing. The upper part of the countenance of the xyVican waji half ALROY. 8.5 concealed by masses of clai-k matted hair, and the lower Ijy Jiis uncouth robes. A flashing eye was its only character- istic, which dax'ted forth like lightning out of a black cloud. ' Is my attention the only reason that induces you to address me ? ' inquired Alroy. ' AVhoever gave all his reasons ? ' replied the African, with a laughing sneer. ' I seek not to learn them. Suffice it, stranger, that liow much soeyer you may mean, as much I can nndev- stand.' ' 'Tis well. Learned Zimvi, is this thy pupil? I congratu- late thee. I will match him against the hopeful EUezer.' So saying, the lofty African stalked out of the chamber. The assembly also broke up. Alroy would willingly have immediately followed the Afi-ican, and held some further and more private conversation with him ; but some minutes elapsed, owing to the officious attentions of Zimri, before he could escape ; and, when he did, his search after the stranger was vain. He inquired among the congregation, but none knew the African. He was no man's guest and no man's debtor, and ajiparently had never before been seen. CHAPTER V. The trumpet was sounding to close the gates, as Alroy passed the Sion enti'ance. The temptation was irresistible. He rushed out, and ran for more than one hundred yards without looking back, and when he did, he had the satis- faction of ascertaining that he was fairly shut out for the night. The sun had set, still the Mount of Olives waB flushed with the reflection of his dying beams, but Jehosh- aphat at its feet was in deep shadow. He wandered among the mountains for some time, be- holding Jerusalem from a hundred different points of view, and watching the single planets and clustering constella- 86 ALROY. tions tliat gradually btirst into beauty, or gatliered into light. At lengfcli, somewliat exhausted, he descended into the vale. The scanty rill of Siloah *^ looked like a thread of silver winding in the moonlight. Some houseless ■wTetclies were slumbering under the arch of its fountain. Several isolated tombs of considerable size *^ rose at the base of Olivet, and the largest of these Alroy entered. Proceeding through a narrow passage, he entered a small square chamber. On each side was an empty sarcophagus of granite, one with its lid broken. Between these tho Prince of the Captivity laid his robe, and, wearied by his ramble, soon soundly slept. After some hours he woke. He fancied that he had been wakened by the sound of voices. The chamber was not quite dark. A straggling moonbeam fought its way through an open fretwork pattern in the top of the tomb, and just revealed the dim interior. Suddenly a voice spoke, a strange and singular voice. ' Brother, brother, the sounds of the night begin.' Another voice answered, 'Brother, brother, I hear them, too.' ' The woman in labour ! ' ' The thief at his craft ! ' ' The sentinel's challenge ! ' ' The murderer's step ! ' ' Oh ! the merry sounds of the night ! ' ' Brother, brother, let us come forth and wander about the world.' ' We have seen all things. I'll lie here and listen to the baying hound. 'Tis music for a tomb.' ' Choice and rare. Tou are idle. I like to sport in the starry air. Our hours are few, they should be fair.' ' What shall we see, Heaven or Earth? ' ' Hell for me, 'tis more amusinsr.' ' As for me, I am sick of Hades.' ' Let us visit Solomon ! ' ' Til his unknown metropolis? ' ' "J'bat will be rare.' ALEOY. 87 ' But where, oh ! ^^-here ? ' ' Even a spirit cannot tell. But they say, but they say, I dare not whisper what they say.' ' Who told you ? ' ' No one. I overheard an Afrite whispering to a female GLoul he wanted to seduce.' ' Hah, hah ! hah, hah ! choice pair, choice pair ! We are more ethereal.' ' She was a beauty in her way. Her eyes were lumi- nous, though somewhat dank, and her cheek tinged with carnation caught from infant blood.' ' Oh ! gay ; oh ! gay ; what said they ? ' ' He was a deserter without leave from Solomon's body- guard. The trull wriggled the secret out.' ' Tell me, kind brother.' ' I'U show, not tell.' ' I pr'ythee tell me.' ' Well, then, well. In G-enthesma's gloomy cave there is a river none has reached, and you must sail, and you must sail Brother ! ' 'Ay.' _ ' Methinks I smell something too earthly.' 'What's that?' ' The breath of man.' ' Scent more fatal than the morning air ! Away, away ! ' CHAPTER VI. In the range of mountains that lead from Olivet to the river Jordan is the great cavern of Genthesma, a mighty excavation formed by the combined and immemorial work of Nature and of Art ; for on the high basaltic columns are cut strange characters and unearthly forms,^'^ and in many places the natui^al ornaments have been completed by the hands of the sculptor into symmetrical entablatures and fancifal capitals, the work, they say, of captive Dives and conquered Afrites, for the great king. 88 AhlloY. It -was niklniglii ; the cold full moon sliowcrotl its brilliancy upon this narrow valley, shut in on all sides by black and barren mountains. A single being stood at the entrance of the cave. It was Alroy. Desperate and determined, after listening to the spirits in the tomb, he resolved to penetrate the mysteries of Genthesma. He took from his girdle a flint aud steel, -with which he lighted a torch and then ho entered. The cavern narrowed as he cautiously advanced, and soon he found himself at the head of an evidently arti- licial gallery. A crowd of bats rushed forward and ex- tinguished his torch. ^* He leant down to relight it, aud in so doing observed that he trod upon an artificial pave- ment. The gallery was of great extent, with a gradual de- clination.'*^ Being in a straight Hue with the mouth of the cavern, the moonlit scene was long visible, but Alroy, on looking round, now perceived that the exterior was shut out by the eminence that he had left behind him. The sides of the gallery were covered with strange and sculp- tured forms. The Prince of the Captivity proceeded along this gallery for nearly two hours. A distant murmur of falling watei*, which might have been distinguished nearly from the first, inci'eased in sound as he advanced, and now, from the loud roar and dash at hand, he felt that he was on the brink of some cataract. It was very dai-k. His heart trembled. He felt his footing ere he ventured to advance. The spray suddenly leaped forward and extinguished his torch. His imminent danger filled him Avith terror, and he receded some paces, but in vain endeavoured to re-illumine his torch, which was soaked with water. His courage deserted him. Energy and exertion seemed hopeless. He was about to dehver himself up to despair, ■when an expanding lustre attracted his attention in the opposing gloom. A small and bright red cloud seemed sailino- towards ATJiOV. 89 liira. It opened, dlscliarged from its bosom a silvery stai-, and dissolved again into darkness. But the star remained, tlie silvery star, and threw a long line of tremulous light upon the vast and raging rapid, which now, fleet and foam- ing, revealed itself on all sides to the eye of Alroy. The beautiful interposition in his favour re-animated the adventurous pilgrim. A dark shadow in the foreground, breaking the line of light shed by the star upon the waters, attracted his attention. He advanced, regained his former footing, and more nearly examined it. It was a boat, and in the boat, mute and immovable, sat one of those vast, singular, and hideous forms, which he had observed sculp- tured on the walls of the gallery. David Alroy, committing his fortunes to the God of Israel, leapt into the boat. CHAPTER VII. And at the same moment the Afrite, for it was one of those dread beings,^° raised the oars, and the boat moved. The falling waters suddenly parted in the long line of the star's reflection, and the barque glided through their high and severed masses. In this wise they proceeded for a few minutes, until they entered a beautiful and moonlit lake. In the distance was a mountainous country'. Alroy examined his com- ])anion with a feeling of curiosity not unmixed with terror. It was remarkable that Alroy could never succeed in any way in attracting his notice. The Afrite seemed totally unconscious of the presence of his passenger. At lengtli the boat reached the opposite shore of the lake, and the Prince of the Captivity disembarked. He disembarked at the head of an avenue of colossal lions of red gi'anite,*^ extending far as the eye could reach, and ascending the side of the mountain, -which was cut into a flight of magiiificent steps. The easy ascent was 90 ALKOY. in consequence soon accomplished, and Alroy, proceeding alono- the avenue of lions, soon gained the summit of the mountain. To his infinite astonishment he beheld Jerusalem. That strongly-marked locality could not be mistaken: at his feet were Jehoshaphat, Kedron, Siloah ; he stood upon Olivet ; before him was Sion. But in all other respects, how different was the landscape from the one that he had gazed upon a few days back, for the first time ! The sur- rounding hills sparkled -with vineyards, and glowed with summer palaces, and voluptuous pavilions, and glorious gardens of pleasure. The city, extending all over Mount Sion, was encompassed with a wall of white marble, with battlements of gold ; a gorgeous mass of gates and pillars, and gardened terraces ; lofty piles of rarest materials, ce- dar, and ivory, and precious stones ; and costly columns of the richest workmanship and the most fanciful orders, capitals of the lotus and the palm, and flowing friezes of the olive and the vine. And in the front a mighty Temple rose, with inspira- tion in its very form ; a Temple so vast, so sumptuous, that there needed no priest to tell us that no human hand planned that sublime magnificence ! ' God of my fathers ! ' said Alroy, ' I am a poor, weak thing, and my life has been a life of dreams and visions, and I have sometimes thought my brain lacked a sufficient master ; where am I ? Do I sleep or live ? Am I a slumberer or a ghost? This trial is too much.' He sank down, and hid his face in his hands : his over-exerted mind appeared to desert him : he wept. Many minutes elapsed before Alroy grew composed. His wild bursts of weeping sank into sobs, and the sobs died off into sighs. And at length, calm from exhaustion, he again looked up, and lo ! the glorious city was no more ! Before him was a moon-lit plain, over which the avenue of lions still advanced, and appeared to terminate only in tlie mountainous distance. This limit the Prince of the Captivity at length reached, ALEOY. 91 and stood before a stupendons port^xl, cut ont of tlie solid rock, four hundred feet in height, and supported by chisters of colossal Caryatides.^^ Upon the portal were- engraven some Hebrew characters, which upon examination proved to be the same as those upon the talisman of Jabaster. And so, taking from his bosom that all-precious and long- cherished dejDosit, David Alroy, in obedience to his instruc- tions, pressed the signet against the gigantic portal. The portal opened with a crash of thunder louder than an earthquake. Pale, panting, and staggering, the Prince of the Cajitivity entered an illimitable hall, illumined by pendulous balls of glowing metal. On each side of the hall, sitting on golden thrones, was ranged a line of kings, and, as the pilgrim entered, the monarchs rose, and took oif their diadems, and waved them thrice, and thrice repeated, in solemn chorus. ' All hail, Alroy ! Hail to thee, brother king ! Thy crown awaits thee ! ' The Prince of the Captivity stood trembHug, with his eyes fixed upon the ground, and leaning breathless against a column. And when at length he had a little recovered himself, and dared again to look up, he found that the monarchs were re-seated ; and, from their still and vacant visages, apparently unconscious of his presence. And this emboldened him, and so, staring alternately at each side of the hall, but with a firm, perhaps desperate step, Alroy advanced. And he came to two thrones which were set apart from the others in the middle of the hall. On one was seated a noble figure, far above the common stature, with arms folded and down-cast eyes. His feet rested upon a broken sword and a shivered sceptre, which told that he was a monarch, in spite of his discrowned head. And on the opposite throne was a venerable personage, with a long flowing beard, and dressed in white raiment. His countenance was beautiful, although ancient. Age had stolen on without its imperfections, and time had only in- vested it with a sweet dignity and solemn grace. The coun- tenance of the king was upraised with a seraphic gaze. 92 .\i.!;<)Y. niul, ns lie tlnis lonkoil ii)) on Ingli, witli e^'cs full of lovo, and thanksgiving, and prairie, liis consecrated fingers seemed to touch the trembling wires of a golden harp. And further on, and far above the rest, lipon a throne that stretched across the hall, a most imperial presence straightway flashed upon the startled vision of Alroy. Fifty steps of ivory, and each step guarded by golden lions,^^ led to a throne of jasper. A dazzling light blazed foi'th from the glittering diadem and radiant countenance of him who sat upon the throne, one beautiful as a woman, but with the majesty of a god. And in one hand he held a seal, and in the other a sceptre. And when Alroy had reached the foot of the throne, he stopped, and his heart misgave him. Aaid he prayed for some minutes in silent devotion, and, without daring to look up, he mounted the first step of the throne, and the second, and the third, and so on, with slow and faltering feet, until he reached the forty-ninth step. The Prince of the Captivity raised his eyes. He stood before the monarch face to face. In vain Ah*oy attempted to attract his attention, or to fix his gaze. The large dark eyes, full of supernatural lustre, appeared capable of piercing all things, and illuminating all things, biit they flashed on without shedding a ray upon Alroy. Pale as a spectre, the pilgrim, whose pilgrimage seemed now on the point of completion, stood cold and trembling before the object of all his desires and all his labours. But he thought of his country, his people, and his God ; and, "while his noiseless lips breathed the name of Jehovah, Bolenmly he put forth his arm, and with a gentle firmness grasped the unresisting sceptre of his gTeat ancestor. And, as he seized it, the whole scene vanished from hid hight ! ALROY. 93 CHAPTER VIII. Hours or years might Lave passed away, so far as tlio sufferer was concerned, when Alroy again returned to self- consciousness. His eyes slowly opened, lie cast around a vacant stare, he was Ijing in the cavern of Genthesma. The moon had set, but the morn had not broken. A single star glittered over the brow of the black mountains. He faintly moved his limbs ; he would have raised his hand to his bewildered brain, but found that it grasped a sceptre. The memory of the past returned to him. He tried to rise, and found that he was reposing in the arms of a human being. He turned his head ; he met the anxious gaze of Jabaster ! ALROi'. PAET YII. CHAPTER I. * Your pace is troubled, uncle.' ' So is my mind.' ' All may go well.' ' Mii'iam, we liave seen tlie best. Prc^^are yourself for son*ow, gentle girl. I care not for myself, for I am old, and age makes heroes of us all. I baye endured, and can endure more. As we approach our limit, it would appear that our minds grow callous. I have seen my wealth, raised with the labours of a thoughtful hfe, vanish in a morn : my people, a fi-agile remnant, nevertheless a people, dispersed, or what is worse. I have wept for them, al- though no tear of selfish grief has tinged this withered cheek. And, were I but alone, ay ! there's the pang. The solace of my days is now my sorrow.' ' TVeep not for me, dear uncle. Rather let us pray that our God will not forsake us.' 'We know not when we are well. Our hours stole tranquilly along, and then we mumiured. Prospering, we murmured, and now we are rightly stricken. The legend of the past is Israel's bane. The past is a dream ; and, in the waking present, we should discard the enervating shadow. Why should we be free ? We murmured against captivity. This is captivity : this damp, dim cell, where we are brought to die. ' O ! youth, rash youth, thy being is destruction. But yesterday a child, it seems but yesterday I nursed him iu these arms, a thoughtless child, and now oui' house has fallen by his deeds. I will not think of it ; 'twill make mo mad.' ' Unclc; dearest uncle, we have lived together, and we ALEOY. 95 will die together, and botli in love ; but, I pray you, speak no harsli word of David.' ' Shall I praise him ? ' ' Say nothing. What he has done, if done in grief, has been done all in honour. "Would you that he had spared Alschiroch? ' ' Never ! I would have stinick him. myself. Brave boy, he did his duty ; and I, I, Miriam, thy uncle, at whom they wink behind his back and call him niggard, was I wanting in that houi* of trial ? Was my treasure spared to save my people? Did I shrink from all the toil and trouble of that time? A trying time, my Miriam, but compared with this, the building of the Temple ' ' You were then what you have ever been, the best and wisest. And since our fathers' God did not forsake us, even in that wilderness of wildest woe, I offer gratitude in pre- sent faith, and pay him for past mercies by my prayers for more.' ' Well, well, life must end. The hour approaches when we must meet our ralers and mock trial ; precious justice that begins in threats and ends -in torture. You are silent, I\Iiriam.' ' I am speaking to my God.' ' What is that noise ? A figure moves behind the dusky grate. Our gaoler. No, no, it ia Caleb ! Faithful child, I fear you have perilled much.' 'I enter with authority, my lord, and bear good tidings.' ' He smiles ! Is't possible ? Speak on, speak on ! ' * Alroy has captured the harem of our Governor, as they journeyed from Badgad to this city, guarded by his choicest troops. And he has sent to offer that they shall be exchanged for you and for your household. And Hassan has answered that his women shall owe their free- dom to nothing but his sword. But, in the meantime, it is agreed between him and the messenger of your nephew, that both companies of prisoners shall be treated with all becoming courtesy. You, therefore, are remanded to your 0() ALKOY. palace, aud tbc trumpet is now sounding before tLe giwd mosque to summon all the host against Alroy, whom Hassan has vowed to bring to Hamadan dead or alive.' ' The harem of the Governor, guarded too by his choicest Iroops! 'Tis a great deed. He did remember us. Faithful boy ! The hai'cm of the Governor ! his choicest troops I 'Tis a very great deed. Methinks the Lord is with him. He has his gi'eat father's heart. Only think of David, a child ! I nursed him, often. Caleb ! Can this be David, our David, a child, a girl ? Yet he struck Alschii-och ! Miriam ! Avhere is she ? Worthy Caleb, look to your mistress ; she has fallen. Quite gone ! Fetch water. 'Tis not very pure, but we shall be in our palace soon. The hai"em of the Governor ! I can't believe it. Sprinkle, sprinkle. David take them prisoners ! Why, -when they pass, Ave are obliged to turn oitr heads, and dare not look. More water : I'll rub her hand. 'Tis warmer ! Her eyes open ! Miriam, choice news, my child ! The harem of the Governor ! I'll not believe it ! ' CHAPTER It. * OxCE move within oui' walls, Caleb. Life is a miracle. I feci 3'onng again. This is home ; and yet I am a prisoner. You said the host wci"e assembling; he can have no chance. Think you, Caleb, he has any chance ? I hope he Avill die. I would not have him taken. I fear their tortures. We will die too; we will all die. K^ow I am out of that dun- geon, methinks I could even fight. Is it true that he has joined with robbers? ' ' I saw the messenger, and leamt that he first repaired to some bandits in the ruins in the desert. Ho had become acquainted with them in his pilgrimage. They say their leader is one of our people.' 'I am glad of that. He can eat with him. I ^\ ould not have him eat unclean tliinj-s ^vith the Ishmaelite.?.' AXROY. 97 ' Lord, sir ! our people gather to him from all quarters. 'Tis said that Jabaster, the great Cabalist, has joined him from the mountains with ten thousand men.' ' The great Jabaster ! then there is some chance. I know Jabaster well. He is too wise to join a desperate cause. Art sure about Jabaster ? 'Tis a great name, a very potent spirit. I have heard such things of that Jabaster, sir, Avoukl make you stare like Saul before the spirit ! Only think of our David, Caleb, making all this noise ! I am full of hope. I feel not like a prisoner. He beat the Harem guard, and, now he has got Jabaster, he will beat them all.' ' The messenger told me he captured the Harem, only to free his uncle and his sister.' 'He ever loved me; I have done my duty to him; I think I have. Jabaster ! wiy, man, the name is a spell ! There are men at Bagdad who will get up in the night to join Jabaster. I hope David will follow his counsels in all things. I would I had seen his servant, I could have sent him a message.' ' Lord, sir ! the Prince Alroy has no great need of coun- sellors, I can tell jou. 'Tis said he bears the sceptro of great Solomon, which he himself obtained in the lanknown tombs of Palestine.' 'The sceptre of Solomon! could I but believe it ! 'Tis an age of wonders ! Where are we ? Call for Miriam, I'll tell her this. Only think of David, a mere child, our David with the sceptre of Solomon ! and Jabaster too ! I have srreat faith. The Lord confound his enemies!' CHAPTER HI. * Gentle Rachel, I fear I trouble you ; sweet 'Bernna, I thank you for your zeal. I am better now ; the shock was great. These are strange tidings, maitlens.' 'Yes, dear lady! who would have thought of your brother turning out a Captain ? ' a 98 ALROy. ' I am sure I always thought he was the quietest person in the world,' said Beruna, 'though he did kill Alschi- roch.' ' One could never get a word out of him,' said Rachel. ' He was always moping alone,' said Beruna, 'And when one spoke to him he always turned away,' said Leah. ' Or blushed,' added Imra. ' Well, for my part,' said the beautiful Bathsheba, ' I always thought Prince David was a genius. He had such beautiful eyes ! ' ' I hope he will conquer Hassan,' said Rachel. ' So do I,' said Beruna. ' I wonder what he has done with the Harem,' said Leah. ' I don't think he ^dll dare to speak to them,' said Imra. ' You are very much mistaken,' said Bathsheba. ' Hark ! ' said Miriam. ' 'Tis Hassan,' said Bathsheba ; * may he never return ! ' The wild drum of the Seljuks sounded, then a flourish of their fierce trumpets, and soon the tramp of horse. Behind the blinds of their chamber, Miriam and her maidens be- held the magnificent troop of turbaned horsemen, who, glittering with splendid armour and bright shawls, and proudly bounding on their fiery steeds, now went forth to crush and conquer the only hope of Israel. Upon an Arab, darker than night, rode the superb Hassan, and, as lie passed the dwelling of his late prisoners, whether from the exulting anticipation of coming triumph, or from a soft f^uspicion that, behind that lattice, bright eyes and brilliant i'aces were gazing on his state, the haughty but handsome Scljuk flourished his scimetar over his head, as he threw his managed steed into attitudes that displayed the skill of its rider. ' He is handsomer than Alschiroch,' said Rachel. ' What a shawl ! ' said Beruna. ' His scimetar was Hke lightning,' said Leah. ' xind his steed like thunder,' said Imra. ALROY. 09 ' The evil eye full on him ! ' said Bathsheba. ' Loi'd,' exclaimed ]\iiriam, ' remember David and all his afflictions ! ' CHAPTER IV. The deserted city of the wilderness presented a very different appearance from that which met the astonished gaze of Ah-oy, when he first beheld its noble turrets, and wandered in its silent streets of palaces. Without the gates was pitched a numei-ous camp of those low black tents common among the Kourds and Turk- mans ; the principal street was full of busy groups engaged in all the preparations of warfare, and all the bustling ex- pedients of an irregular and adventurous life ; steeds were stalled in ruined chambers, and tall camels raised their still visages among the clustering columns, or crouched. in kneeling tranquillity amid fallen statues and prostrate obelisks. Two months had scarcely elapsed since Alroy and Ja- baster had sought Schex-irah in his haunt, and announced to him theii' sacred mission. The callous heart of him, V/hose 'mother was a Jewess,' had yielded to their inspired annunciations. He embraced their cause with all the fervour of conversion, and his motley band were not long- sceptical of a creed v/hich, while it assuredly offered danger and adventure, held out the prospects of wealth and even empire. From the city of the wilderness the new Messiah sent forth his messengers to the neighbouring cities, to announce his advent to his brethren in captivity. The Hebrews, a proud and stiff-necked race, ever prone to re- bellion, received the announcement of their favourite prince with transport. The descendant of David, and the slayer of Alschiroch, had double claims upon their confi- dence and allegiance, and the flower of the Hebrew youth in the neighbouring cities of the Caliphate repau-ed in crowds to pay their homage to the recovered sceptre of Solomon. 100 ALEOY. The affair was at first treated bj' tlie government witli con- tempt, and the sultan of the Seljnks contented himself with settiuo- a price upon the head of the murderer of his brother; but, when several cities had been placed under contribution, and more than one Moslem caravan stopped, and plundered in the name of the God of Abraham, of Isaac, and of Jacob, orders Avere despatched from Bagdad to the new governor of Hamadan, Hassan Subah, to sup- -prcss the robbers, or the rebels, and to send David Alroy dead or alive to the capital. The Hebrew malcontents were well appi-ised by their less adventurous but still sympathising brethren of everything that took place at the head-quarters of the enemy. Spies arrived on the same day at the city of the wilderness, who informed Alroy that his uncle was thrown into a dungeon at Hamadan, and that a body of chosen troops were about to escort a royal hai-em from Bagdad into Persia. Alroy attacked the escort in person, utterly discomfited them, and captured their charge. It proved to be the liarem of the Governor of Hamadan, and if for a moment the too sanguine fancy of the captor experienced a passing l^ang of disappointment, the prize at least obtained, as we have seen, the freedom and security of his dear though dis- tant friends. This exploit jDrecipitated the expedition which was preparing at Hamadan for his destruction. The enraged Hassan Subah stai'ted from his divan, seized his scimetar, and without waiting for the auxiliaries he had summoned from the neighbouring chieftains, called to horse, and at the head of two thousand of the splendid Seljuk cavalry, hurried to vindicate his love and satiate his revenge. Within the amjihitheatre which he first entered as a prisoner, Alroy sat in council. On his right Avas Jabaster, Scherirah on his left. A youth, little his senior, but tall as a palm-tree, and strong as a young lion, was the fourth captain. In the distance, some standing, some reclining, were about fifty men completely armed. ' Are the people numbered, Abner ? ' inquired Alroy of the youth. ALKOY. 101 ' Even 60 ; three huudred effective horsemen, and two thousand footmen; but the footmen lack arms.' 'The Lord will send them in good time,' said Jabaster ; ' meanwhile let them continiie to make javelins.' ' Trust in the Lord,' murmured Scherirah, bending his head, with his eyes fixed on the gi'ound. A loud shout was heard throughout the city. Alroy started from his carpet. The messenger had returned. Pale and haggard, covered with sweat and sand, the faith- ful envoy was borne into the amjDhitheatre almost upon the shoulders of the people. In vain the guard endea- voured to stem the jiassage of the multitude. They clam- bered tip the tiers of arches, they filled the void and crumbling seats of the antique circus, they supported them- selves upon each other's shoulders, they clung to the capitals of the lofty columns. The whole multitude had assembled to hear the intelligence ; the scene recalled the ancient purpose of the building, and Alroy and his fellow'-warriors seemed Hke the gladiators of some old spectacle. ' Speak,' said Alroy, ' speak the worst. K'o news can be bitter to those whom the Lord will avenge.' ' Ruler of Israel ! thus saith Hassan Subah,' answered the messenger : ' My harem shall owe their freedom to nothing but my sword. I treat not with rebels, but I war not with age or woman ; and between Bosteuay and his household on one side, and the prisoners of thy master on the other, let there be peace. Go, tell Alroy I will seal ifc in his best blood. And lo ! thy uncle and thy sister are again in their palace.' Alroy placed his hand for a moment to his eyes, and then instantly resuming his self-possession, he enquii'ed as to the movements of the enemy. * I have crossed the desert on a swift di'omedary *"* lent to mo by Shelomi of the Gate, whose heart is with our cause. I have not tarried, neither have I slept. Ere to-moiTOw's sunset the Philistines will be here, led by Hassan Subah himself The Lord of Hosts be with us ! Since we con- 1 02 ALROY. qucrcd Canaan, Israel Iiath not struggled with such a power ! ' A murmur ran through the assembly. Men exchanged enqniring glances, and involuntarily pressed each other's arms. ' The trial has come,' said a middle-aged Hebrew, who had fought twenty years ago with Jabaster. 'Let me die for the Ark ! ' said a young enthusiast of the band of Abner. ' I thought we should get into a scrape,' whispered Kis- loch the Kourd to Calidas the Indian. ' What could have ever induced us to give up robbing in a quiet manner ? ' ' And turn Jews ! ' said the Guebre, with a sneer. ' Look at Scherirah,' said the l^egro, grinning. ' If he is not kissing the sceptre of Solomon ! ' * I wish to heaven he had only hung Alroy the first time he met him,' said Calidas. ' Sons of the Covenant! ' exclaimed Alroy, ' the Lord hath delivered them into our hands. To-morrow eve we march to Hamadan ! ' A cheer followed this exclamation. ' It is ^\-i'itten,' said Jabaster, opening a volume, ' Lo ! I will defend this city, to save it, for mine own sake, and for my servant David's sake.' ' And it came to pass that night that the angel of the Lord went out, and smote in the camp of the Assyrians, an hundred four score and five thousand ; and when they arose early in the morning, behold ! they were all dead corpses.' ' Now, as I was gazing upon the stars this morn, and reading the celestial alphabet known to the true Cabalist,-^'' behold ! the star of the house of David and seven other stars moved, and met together, and formed into a circle. And the word they formed was a mystery to me ; but lo ! I have opened the book, and each star is the initial letter of each Jine of the Targum that I have now read to you. There- fore the fate of Sennacherib is the fate of Hassan Subah ! ' ' Trust in niM at all times, ye people ; poun out tour HEART BEFORE HIM : GOD IS A REFUGE FOR US. SeLAH ! ' ALROY. 103 At this moment a female form appeared on the very top of the amphitheatre, upon the slight remains of the upper- most tier of which a soHtary arch alone was left. The chorus instantly died away, every tongue was silent, every eye fixed. Hushed, mute, and immovable, even Easloch and his companions were appalled as they gazed upon Esther the Prophetess. Her eminent position, her imposing action, the flashing of her immense eyes, her beautiful but awful countenance, her black hair, that hung almost to her knees, and the white light of the moon, just rising over the opposite side of the amphitheatre, and v/hich threw a silvery flash upon her form, and seemed to invest her with some miraculous ema- nation, while all beneath her was in deep gloom, these cir- cumstances combined to render her an object of universal interest and attention, while in a powerful but high voice she thus addressed them. ' They come, they come ! But will they go ? Lo ! hear ye this, house of Jacob, which are called by the name of Israel, and are come forth out of the waters of Judah ! I hear their drum in the desert, and the voice of their trumpets is like the wind of eve, but a decree hath gone forth, and it says, that a mortal shall be more precious than fine gold, yea, a man than the rich ore of Ophir. ' They come, they come ! But will they go ? I see the flash of their scimetars, I mark the prancing of their cruel steeds ; but a decree hath gone forth, and it says, a gleanmg shall be left among them, as in the shaking of the oHve-tree ; two or three berries on the top of the uppermost bough ; four or five on the straggling branches. ' They come, they come ! Bnt will they go ? Lo ! a decree hath gone forth, and it says, Hamadan shall be to thee for a spoil, and desolation shall fall upon Babylon. And there shall the wild beasts of the desert lodge, and howling monsters shall fill their houses, and there shall the daughters of the ostrich dwell, and there shall the screecli- owl pitch her tent, and there shall the night-raven lay her eggs, and there shall the satyrs hold then- revels. And 1 1 ALrxOY. ■wolves shall howl to cue another in their palaces, and dragons in their voluptuous pavilions. Her time is near at baud ; her days shall not be prolonged ; the reed and the lotus shall wither in her rivers ; and the meadows by her canals shall be as the sands of the desert. For, is it a light thing that the Lord should send his servant to raise up the ti'ibcs of Jacob, and to restore the preserved of Israel? Sing, heavens, and be joyful, earth, and break forth into singing, mountains, for the Lord hath comforted his people, and will have mercy upon his afflicted ! ' She ceased ; she descended the preciijitous side of the amphitheatre with rapid steps, vaulting from tier to tier, and bounding with wonderful agility from one mass of ruiu to another. At length she reached the level ; and then foaming and panting, she rushed to Alroy, threw herself upon the ground, embraced his feet, and wiped off the dust from his sandals with her hair. The assembly broke into long and loud acclamations of supernatural confidence and sanguine enthusiasm. They beheld their Messiah wave his miraculous sceptre. They thought of Hassan Subah and his Seljuks only as of victims, and of to-morrow only as of a day which was to commence a new era of triumph, freedom, and empire ! CHAPTER V. Hassan Subae, after five days' forced marches pitched his sumptuous pavilion in that beautiful Oasis, which had afforded such delightful refreshment to Alroy Avhen a soli- tary pilgrim. Around for ueai'ly a mile, were the tents of hi.s warriors, and of the numerous caravan that had acconi- j)anied him, laden with water and provisions for his troops. Here, Avhile he reposed, he also sought information as to the position of his enemy. A party of observation, which he had immediately dcs- jjatched, returned almost instantly with a small caravan ALliOY. lOo that bad been recently plundered by the robbers. The mer- chant, a venerable and pious Moslem, was usliered into the presence of the Governor of Hamadan. ' From the robbers' haunt ? ' inquired Hassan. ' Unfortunately so,' answered the merchant. ' Is it far ? ' ' A day's journey.' ' And you quitted it ? ' 'Yesterday morn.' ' What is their force ? ' The merchant hesitated. ' Do they not make prisoners ? ' enquired the Governor, casting a scrutinising glance at his companion. ' Holy Prophet ! what a miserable wretch am I ! ' ex- claimed the venerable merchant, bursting into tears. ' A faithful subject of the Caliph, I am obliged to serve rebels, a devout Moslem, I am forced to aid Jews ! Order me to be hanged at once, my lord,' continued the unfortunate mer- chant, wringing his hands. ' Order me to be hanged at once. I have lived long enough.' ' What is all this ? ' enquired Hassan ; ' speak, friend, without fear.' ' I am a faithful subject of the Caliph,' answered the mer- chant; 'I am a devout Moslem, butl have lost ten thousand dirhems.' ' I am Sony for you, sir* ; I also have lost something, but my losses are nothing to you, nor yours to me.' ' Accursed be the hour when these dogs tempted me ! Tell me, is it sin to break faith with a Jew ? ' ' On the contraiy, I could find you many reverend Mollahs, who will tell you that such a breach is the highest virtue. Come! come, I see how it is: you have received your freedom on condition of not betraying your merciful plunderers. -Pro- mises exacted by terror are the bugbears of fools. Speak, man, all you know. Where are they? What is their force ? Are we supposed to be at hand ? ' ' I am a faithful subject of the Caliph, and I am bound to Berve him,' rejilied the merchant ; ' I am a devout Moslem, lOG ALTIOY. aud 'tis my duty to destroy all Giaours, but I am also a man, and I must look after my own interest. Noble Governor, tlio lonf aud the short is, these scoundrels have robbed ni(! of ten thousand dii-hems, as my slaves -svill tell you: at least, o-oods to that amount. No one can prove that the}^ be worth less. It is true that I include in that calculation the fifty per cent. I was to make on my shawls at Hamadan, but still to me it is as good as ten thousand dirhems. Ask my slaves if such an assortment of shawls was ever yet beheld.' ' To the point, to the point. The robbers ? ' ' I am at the point. The shawls is the point. For when I talked of the shawls and the heaviness of my loss, you must know that the captain of the robbers ' 'Alroy?' ' A fierce young gentleman, I do not know how tbey call him: said the captain tome, "Merchant, yoiilook gloomy."' " Gloomy," I said, " you would look gloomy if you were a prisoner, and had lost ten thousand dirhems." " What, is this trash worth ten thousand dirhems ? " said he. " With the fifty per cent. I was to make at Hamadan." "Fifty per cent.," said he ; "you are an old knave." " Knave! I should like to hear any one call me knave at Bagdad." "Well, knave or not, you may get out of this scrape." " How? " " Why you are a respectable-looking man," said he, "and are a good Moslem into the bargain, I warrant." " That I am," said I, " although you be a Jew: but how tlie faitb i.s to serve mo here I am sure I don't know, unless the angel Gabriel, as in the fifty- fifth verse of the twenty-seventh chapter of the Koran " ' ' Tush, tush ! ' exclaimed Hassan ; ' to the point.' ' I always am at the point, only you put mo out. However, to make it as short as possible, the captain knows all about your coming, and is frightened out of his wits, although he did talk big ; I could easily see that. And he let me go, you see, with some of my slaves, and gave me an order for five thouso^nd dirhems on one Bostenay, of Hamadan, (per- haps you know him ; is he a good man?) on condition that I would fall in with you, and, Mohammed forgive me, tell you a lie ! ' ALEOY. 107 'A lie!' ' Yes, a lie ; but these Jewish dogs do not understand what a truly religious man is, and when I began to tell the lie, I was soon put out. Xow, noble Hassan, if a promise to a Jew be not binding on a true believer, and you will see me straight with the five thousand dirhems, I will be- tray everything at once.' ' Be easy about the five thousand dirhems, good man, and tell me all.' ' You will see me paid ? ' ' My honour upon it.' ' 'Tis well ! Know then, the infamous dogs are very weak, and terrified at the news of your progress : one, whom I think they call Jabastor, has departed with the great majority of the people into the interior of the desert, about seven hundred strong. I heard so ; but mind, I do not know it. The young man, whom yoii call Alroy, being wounded in a recent conflict, coukl not depart with them, but remains among the ruins with some female prisonei's, some treasure, and about a hundred companions hidden in sepulchres. He gave me my freedom on condition that I should fall in with you, and assure you that the dogs, full five thousand strong, had given you the go-by in the night, and marched towards Hamadan. They wanted me to frighten you ; it was a lie, and I could not tell it. And now you know the plain truth ; and if it be a sin to break faith with an infidel, you are responsible for it, as well as for the five thousand dirhems, which, by the bye, ought to have been ten.' ' Where is your order ? ' ' 'Tis here,' said the merchant, drawing it from his vest, ' a very business-like document, drawn upon one Bostenay, whom they described as very rich, and who is here enjoined to pay me five thousand dirhems, if, in consequence of my information, Hassan Subah, that is yourself, return forth- with to Hamadan without attacking them.' ' Old Bostenay's head shall answer for this.' ' I am glad of it. But were I you, T would make him pay me first.' 108 ALHOY. ' Murcliaut,' said Hassan, ' have you any objection to pay auotlier visit to your friend Alroy ? ' ♦Allali forbid!' ' In my company ? ' 'That makes a differeuce.' 'Be our guide. The dirhems shall be doubled.' ' That will make up for the fifty per cent. I hardly like it ; but in your company that makes a diiference. Lose no time. If you push on, Alroy must be captured. Now or never ! The Jewish dogs, to rifle a true believer ! ' ' Oglu,' said Hassan to one of his officers. ' To horse ! You need not sti'ike the tents. Can we reach the city by sunset, merchant ? ' ' An hour before, if you be off at once.' ' Sound the drums. To horse ! to horse ! ' CHAPTER VI. The Seljuks halted before the walls of the deserted city. Their commander ordered a detachment to enter and re- connoitre. They returned and reported its apparent deso- lation. Hassan Subah, then directing that a guard should surround the walls to prevent any of the enemy from es- caping, passed with his warriors through the vast porttd into the silent street. The still magnificence of the strange and splendid scene influenced the temper even of this ferocious cavalry. They gazed around them with awe and admiration. The fierce- ness of their visages was softened, the ardour of their im- pulse stilled. A supernatural feeling of repose stole over tlieir senses. No one brandished his scimetar, the fiery courser seemed as subdued as his lord, and no sound was heard but the melancholy, mechanical tramp of the dis- ciplined march, unrelieved by martial music, inviolate by oatli or jest, and unbroken even by the ostentatious cara- coling of any showy steed, ALEOY 109 It was sunset ; tlie stai" of eve glittered over the white Ionian fane that rose serene and delicate in the flashing and purple sky. ' This waj^, my lord ! ' said the merchant guide, turning round to Hassan Subah, who, surrounded by his officers, led the van. The whole of the great way of the city was filled with the Seljukian wari-iors. Their ebon steeds, their snoAvy tnrbans, adorned with plumes of the black eagle and the red heron, their dazzling shawls, the blaze of their armour in the sunset, and the long undulating perspective of beautiful forms and brilliant colours, this regiment of heroes in a street of palaces. War had seldom afforded a more imposing or more picturesque spectacle. ' This way, my lord ! ' said the merchant, pointing to the narrow turning that, at the foot of the temple, led through ruined streets to the amphitheatre. ' Halt ! ' exclaimed a wild shrill voice. Each warrior suddenly arrested his horse. ' Who spoke ? ' exclaimed Hassan Subah. ' I ! ' answered a voice. A female form stood in the por. tico of the temple, Avith uplifted arms. ' And who art ihoix ? ' enquired Hassan Subah, not a little disconcerted. ' Thine evil genius, Scljuk ! ' Hassan Subah, pale as liis ivory battle-axe, did not an- swer ; every man -within hearing shuddered ; still the dread woman remained immovable within the porch of the temple. 'Woman, witch, ov goddess,' at length exclaimed Hassan Subah, ' what wouldst thou here ? ' ' Seljuk ! behold this star. 'Tis a single drop of light, yet who even of thy wild band can look upon it without awe ? And yet thou worse than Sisera, thou comest to combat against those, for Avhom even " the stars in their courses fought." ' ' A Jewish witch ! ' exclaimed the Seljuk. ' A Jewish witch ! Be it so ; behold, then, my spell falk upon thee, and that spell is Destruction. 110 ALROy. * Awake, awiike, Deborah : awake, awake, uttei* a song ; arise Barak, and load thy captivity captive, tkou son of Aljinoam ! ' Immediately the sky appeared to darken, a cloud of arrows and javelins broke from all sides upon tlio devoted Seljuks : immense masses of stone and marble were burled iVo;n all directions, horses were stabbed by speai'S impelled by invisible hands, and riders fell to the grou.nd without a straggle, and were trampled upon by theu* disordered and afirighted brethren. ' Wo are betrayed,' exclaimed Hassan Siibah, hurling a javelin at the merchant, but the merchant was gone. The Seljuks raised their famous war cry. ' Oglu, regain the desert,' ordered the chieftain. But no sooner had the guard Avithout the walls heard the war cry of their companions, than, alarmed, for their safety, they rushed to their assistance. The retreating forces of Subah, each instant diminishing as they retreated, were baffled in their project by the very eagerness of their auxiliaries. The unwilling contention of the two parties increased the confusion ; and when the Seljuks, recently arrived, having at length formed into some order, had re- gained the gate, they found to theii' dismay that the portal was barricadoed and garrisoned by the enemy. Uninspired by the presence of their commander, who was in the rear, the puzzled soldiers were seized wdth a panic, and spurring their horses, dispersed in all directions of the city. In vain Hassan Subah endeavoured to restore order. The moment Avas past. Dashing with about thirty men to an opeii ground, which his quick eye had observed in his progress down the street, and deahng destruction with every blow, the dreaded Governor of Hamadan, like a true soldier, awaited an ine\dtable fate, not wholly despairing that some chance might 3'et turn up to extricate him from his forlorn situation. And now, as it were by enchantment, "wild armed men seemed to anse from every part of the city. From every mass of ruin, from oA'ory crumbling temple and mouldering ALROY. 1 1 1 mansion, from every catacomb and cellar, from beliind every column and every obelisk, upstarted some desperate waiTior with a bloody weapon. The massacre of the Sel- jaks was universal. The horsemen dashed wildly about the ruined streets, pursued by crowds of footmen ; some- times, formed in small companies, the Seljuks charged and fought desperately ; but, however stout might be their re- sistance to the open foe, it was impossible to withstand their secret enemies. They had no place of refuge, no poAver of gaining even a moment's breathing time. If they retreated to a wall it instantly bristled with spears ; if they endeavoured to form in a court, they sank under the falling masses which were showered upon them. Strange shouts of denunciation blended with the harsh braying of horns, and the clang and clash of cymbals and tambours sounded in every quarter of the city. ' K we could only mount the walls, Ibrahim, and leap into the desert ! ' exclaimed Hassan Subah to one of his few re- maining comrades ; ' 'tis our only chance. We die here like dogs ! Could I but meet Alroy ! ' Three of the Seljuks dashed swiftly across the open ground in front, followed by several Hebrew horsemen. ' Smite all, Abner. Spare none, remember Amalek,' ex- claimed their youthful leader, waving his bloody scimetar. ' They are down ; one, two, there goes the third. My javelin has done for him.' 'Your horse bleeds freely. Where's Jabaster?' ' At the gates ; my arm aches with slaughter. The Lord hath delivered them into our hands. Coidd I but meet their chieftain ! ' ' Tui'n, bloodhound, he is here,' exclaimed Hassan Subah. ' Away, Abner, this affair is mine.' ' Prince, you have already slain your thousands.* ' And Abner his tens of thousands. Is it so ? This bnsicc-ss is for me only. Come on, Turk.' 'Art thou Alroy?' ' The same.' 112 AliHOY. ' The slayer of Alschiroch ? ' ' Eveu so.' ' A rebel and a murderer.' * What you please. Look to yourself.' The Hebrew Pi-ince flung a javelin at the Seljuk. It Manced from the breastplate; but Hassan Subah stag- gered in his seat. Kecoveriug, he charged Alroy with great force. Their scimetars crossed, and the blade of Hassan shivered. ' He who sold me that blade told me it was charmed, and could be broken only by a caliph,' said Hassan Subah. ' He was a liar.' 'As it may be,' said Alroy, and he cut the Seljuk to the ground. Abner had dispersed his comrades. Alroy leaped from his fainting steed, and, mounting the ebon courser of his late enemy, dashed again into the thickest of the fight. The shades of night descended, the clamour gradually decreased, the struggle died away. A few unhappy Moa- lemin who had quitted their saddles and sought concealment an:iongthe ruins, were occasionally hunted out, and brought forward and massacred. Long ere midnight the last of the Seljuks had expired .^^ The moon shed a broad light upon the street of palaces crowded with the accumulated slain and the living victors. Fires were lit, torches illumined, the conquei'ors prepared the eager meal as they sang hymns of praise and thanks- giving. A procession approached. Esther the prophetess, clash- ing her cymbals, danced before the Messiah of Israel, who leant upon his victorious scimetar, surrounded by Jabaster, Abner, Scherirah, and his chosen chieftains. Who could now doubt the validity of his mission? The ^vido and silent desert rang with the acclamations of his enthusiastic TctaricQ. ALEOY. 113 CHAPTER VII. Heavily the anxious hours crept on in the Jewish quarter of Hamadan. Again and again the venerable Bostenay discussed the chances of success with the sympathising but desponding elders. Miriam was buried in constant prayer. Their most sanguine hopes did not extend beyond the escape of their Prince. A fortnight had elapsed, and no news had been received of the progress of the expedition, when suddenly, towards sunset, a sentinel on a watch-tower announced the appear- ance of an armed force in the distance. The walls were instantly lined Avith the anxious inhabitants, the streets and squares filled with curious crowds. Exultation sat on the triumphant brow of the Moslemin ; a cold tremor stole over the fluttering heart of the Hebrew. ' There is but one God,' said the captain of the gate. ' And Mohammed is His prophet,' I'esponded a sentinel. ' To-morrow we will cut off the noses of all these Jewish dogs.' ' The sceptre has departed,' exclaimed the despairing Bostenay. ' Lord remember David ! ' whispered Miriam, as she threw herself upon the court of the palace, and buried her face in ashes. The ^lollahs in solemn procession advanced to the ram- parts, to shed their benediction on the victorious Hassan Subah. The Muezzin ascended the minarets to watch the setting sun, and proclaim the power of Allah with renewed enthusiasm. ' I wonder if Alroy be dead or alive,' said the captain of the gate. ' If he be alive, he will be impaled,' responded a sentinel. ' If dead, the carcass will be given to the dogs,' rejoined the captain ; ' that is the piractice.' ' Bostenay will be hung,' said the sentinel. 'And his niece, too,' answered the captain. I 114 ALROY. ' Hem ! ' said the sentinel. ' Hassan SuLali loves a black eye.' * I hope a true Moslem -will not touch a Jewess,' exclaimed an indignant black eunnch. ' They approach. Wliat a dust ! ' said the captain of the gate. ' I see Hassan Subah ! ' said the sentinel. ' So do I,' said the eunuch, ' I know his black horse.' ' I wonder how many dirhems old Bostenay is worth,' said the captain. ' Immense ! ' said the sentinel. ' Ko plunder, I suppose ? ' said the eunuch. ' We shall see,' said the captain ; ' at any rate, I owe a thousand to old Shelomi. We need not pay now, you know.' ' Certainly not,' said the black eunuch. ' The rebels ! ' A body of horsemen dashed forward. Their leader in ad- vance reined in his fiery charger beneath the walls. ' In the name of the Prophet, who is that ? ' exclaimed the captain of the gate, a little confused. ' I never saw him before,' said the sentinel, ' although he is in the Seljuk dress. 'Tis some one from Bagdad, I guess.' A trumpet sounded. ' Who keeps the gate ? ' called out the warrior. ' I am the captain of the gate,' answered our friend. * Open it, then, to the King of Israel.' ' To Avhom ? ' enquired the astonished captain. * To King David. The Lord hath delivered Hassan Subah and his host into our hands, and of all the proud Scljuks none remaineth. Open thy gates, I say, and lose no time. I am Jabaster, a lieutenant of the Lord ; this scimetar is my commission. Open thy gates, and thou and thy people shall have tliat mercy which they have never shown ; but if thou delayest one instant, thus saith the King our master, " I will burst open your portal, and smite, and atterly destroy all that you have, and spare them not ; but ALEOY. 115 slay both man and -woman, infant and suckling, ox and sheep, camel and ass." ' ' Call forth the venerable Lord Bostenay,' said the cap- tain of the gate, vnth. chattering teeth. ' He will intercede for us.' 'And the gentle Lady Mhiam,' said the sentinel. ' She is ever charitable.' ' I will head the procession,' said the black eunuch ; ' I am accustomed to women.' The procession of Mollahs shuffled back to their college with profane precipitation ; the sun set, and the astounded Muezzin stood with their mouths open, and quite forgot to announce the power of their Deity, and the vaHdity of their Prophet. The people all called out for the venerable Lord Bostenay and the gentlu Lady Miriam, and ran in crov>-ds to see who could first kiss the hem of their garments. The principal gate of Hamadan opened into the square of the great m.osque. Here the whole populatioo of the city appeared assembled. The gates were thrown open ; Jabaster and his companions mounted guard. The short twilight died away, the shades of night descended. The minarets were iUumined,^'' the houses hung -with garlands, the ramparts covered with tapestry and carpets. A clang of drums, trumpets, and cymbals announced the arrival of the Hebrew army. The people shouted, the troops without responded with a long cheer of triumph. Amid the blaze of torches, a youth waving his scimetai', upon a coal-black steed, bounded into the city, at the head of his guards, the people fell upon their knees, and shouted ' Long Uve Alroy ! ' A venerable man, leading a beauteous maiden with down- cast eyes, advanced. They headed a deputation of the chief inhabitants of the city. They came to solicit mercy and protection. At the sight of them, the youthful warrior leaped from his horse, tiung away his scimetar, and clasp- ing tlie maiden in his arms, exclaimed, 'Miriam, my sister, this, this indeed i.s tiiumph ! ' I 2 116 ALEOY, CHAPTER VIII. * DiUNK,' said Kislocli the Koiird to Calidas the Indiuu ; • rou forget, comrade, we are no longer Moslemin.' ' Wine, metbinks, has a peculiarly pleasant flavour in a golden cup,' said the Guebre. ' I got this little ti-ifle to- di\x in the Bazaar,' he added, holding up a magnificent vase studded with gems. ' I thought plunder was forbiddeu,' grinned the Xegro. ' So it is,' replied the Guebre ; ' but we may purchase what we please, upon credit.' ' Well, for my part, I am a moderate man,' exclaimed Calidas the Indian, ' and would not injure even these accui'sed dogs of Tui-ks. I have not cut my host's throat, but only turned him into my porter, and content myself with Lis harem, his baths, his fine horses, and other little trifles.' ' What quarters we arc in I There is nothing like a true Messiah ! ' exclaimed Kisloch, devoutly. ' Nothing,' said Calidas ; ' though to speak truth, I did aiot much believe in the efficacy of Solomon's scepti'c, till his Majesty clove the head of the valliant Seljuk witli it.' ' But now there's no doubt of it,' said the Guebre. 'We should indeed be infidels if we doubted now,' rc- pligd the Indian. ' How lucky,' grinned the Xcgro, ' as I had no religion before, that I have now fixed upon the right one ! ' * Most fortunate ! ' said the Guebre. ' What shall wo do to amuse ourselves to-niaht? ' 'Let us go to the coffee-houses and make the Turks drink \\ane,' said Calidas the Indian. ' What say you to burning down a mosque? ' said Kisloch the Kourd. ' 1 had great fu)i with some Dervishes this morning,' said the Guebre. 'I met one askimr alms with a whc ruu ALROY. 117 through bis clieek,^* so I caiiglit auotlaer, bored bis nose, and tied tbem botb togetber ! ' ' Hah ! bab ! bab ! ' burst the Negro. CHAPTER IX. Asia resounded witb tbe insurrection of the Jews and tba massacre of tbe Seljuks. Crowds of Hebrews, from tbe I'icb cities of Persia and tbe populous settlements on tbe Tigris and tbe Eupbrates, boui'lj jooured into Hamadan. Tbe iri'itated Moslernin persecuted tbe bretbren of tbe successful rebel, and tbis imjiolicj precipitated tbeir fligbt. Tbe wealtb of Bagdad flowed into tbe Hebrew capital. Seated on tbe divan of Hassan Subab, and wielding tbe sceptre of Solomon, tbe King of Israel received tbe bom- age of bis devoted subjects, and despatched bis envoys to Syria and to Egypt. Tbe well-stored magazines and arsenals of Hamadan soon converted tbe pilgrims into warriors. Tbe city was unable to accommodate tbo in- creased and increasing population. An extensive camp, under tbe command of Abner, was formed Avitbout tbe walls, wbere tbe troops were daily disciplined, and wbere tbey were prepared for greater exploits tban a sku'misb in a desert. Within a month after tbe surrender of Hamadan, tbe congTegation of the people assembled in tbe square of tbe great mosque, now converted into a synagogue. Tbe mul- titude was disposed in ordered ranks, and the terrace of every house was crowded. In tbe centre of the square was an altar of cedar and brass, and on each side stood a com- pany of priests guarding tbe vactiuis, one young bullock, and two rams without blemish. Amid tbe flourish of trumpets, tbe gates of the synagogue opened, and displayed to the wondering eyes of the Hebrews a vast and variegated pavilion planted in tbe court. Tbo holy remnant, no longer forlorn, beheld that tabernacle of 118 ALKOY. which they had so long dreamed, once more shining in tho sun, -with its purple and scarlet hangings, its curtains of rare skins, and its furniture of silver and gold. A procession of priests advanced, bearing, with staves of cedar, run through rings of gold, a gorgeous ark, the Avork of the most cunning artificers of Persia. Night and day liad they laboured, under the du-ection of Jabaster, to pro- dace this wondrous spectacle. Once more the children of Israel beheld the cherubim. They burst into a triumphant hymn of thanksgiving, and many drew their swords, and cried aloud to be led against the Canaanites. From the mysterious curtains of the tabernacle, Alroy came forvs'-ard, leading Jabaster. They approached the altar. And Alroy took robes from the surrounding priests, and put them upon Jabaster, and a girdle, and a breast- plate of jewels. And Alroy took a mitre, and placed it upon the head of Jabaster, and upon the mitre he placed a crown ; and, pouring oil ujion his head, the pupil anointed the master High Priest of Israel. The victims were slain, the sin-offering burnt. Amid clouds of incense, bursts of music, and the shouts of a devoted people ; amid odour, and melody, a.nd enthusiasm ; Alroy mounted his charger, and at the head of twenty thousand men, departed to conquer Media. CHAPTER X. The extensive and important province of Aderbijan, of Avhich Hamadan was the capital, was formed of the ancient iliEcdia. Its fate was decided by one battle. On the plain of Nchauend, Alroy met the hastily-raised levies of the Atabek of Kermanshah, and entirely routed them. In the course of a month, every city of the province had acknow- ledged the supremacy of the new Hebrew monarch, and, leaving Abner to complete the conquest of Louristan, Alroy entered Persia. ALP.OY. 119 The incredible and irresistible progress of Alroy roused Togrul, tlie Tnrkisb Sultan of Persia, from tbe luxurious indolence of tlie palaces of Nisliabur. He summoned his emii's to meet him at the imperial city of Rhey, and crush, by one overwhelming effort, the insolent rebel. Religion, valour, and genius, alike inspii'ed the arms of Alroy, b]it he was, doubtless, not a little assisted by the strong national sympathy of bis singular and scattered people, which ever ensured him prompt information of all the movements of his enemy. Without any preparation, he found agents in every court, and camp, and cabinet ; and, by their assistance, he anticipated the designs of his adver- saries, and turned even their ingenuity to their confusion. The imperial . city of Rhey was surprised in the night, sacked, and burnt to the ground. The scared and baffled emirs who escaped, flew to the Sultan Togrul, tearing their beards, and prophesying the approaching termination of the world. The palaces of Nishabur resounded with the im- precations of their master, who, cursing the Jewish dogs, and vowing a pilgi'image to Mecca, placed himself at tlie head of a motley multitude of warriors, and rushed upon the plains of Irak, to exterminate Alroy. The Persian force exceeded the Hebrew at least five times in number. Besides a large division of Seljuks, the Cau- casus lia,d poured forth its strange inhabitants to swell the ranks of the Faithful. The wild tribes of the Bactiari were even enlisted, with their fatal bows, and the savage Turk- mans, tempted hy the sultan's gold, for a moment yielded their liberty, and shook their tall lances in his ranks. But what is a wild Bactiari, and what is a savage Turk- man, and Avhat even a disciplined and imperious Seljuk, to the warriors of the God of Abraham, of Isaac, and of Jacob ? At the first onset, Alroy succeeded in dividing the extended centre of Togrul, and separating the greater part of the Turks from their less disciplined comrades. At the head of his Median cavalry, the Messiah charged and utterly routed the warriors of the Caucasus. The wild tribes of the Bactiari discharged their arrows and fled, and 1 20 ALROY. the savage Turkmans plundered tlie baggage of their own commander. The Turks themselves fought desperately ; but, deserted by their allies, and surrounded by an inspired foe, their efforts Avere unavailing, and their slaughter terrible. Togrul was slain Avliile heading a desperate and fruitless charge, and, after his fall, the battle resembled a massacre rather than a combat. The plain was glotted with Seljnk gore. 1^0 quarter was given or asked. Twenty thousand chosen troops fell on the side of the Turks ; the rest dis- persed and gained the mountains. Leaving Scherirah to restore order, Alroy the next morning pushed on to Nisha- Imr at the head of three thousand horsemen, and sum- moned the city ere the inhabitants were apprised of the defeat and death of their sultan. The capital of Persia escaped the fate of Rhey by an inglorious treaty and a lavish tribute. The treasiu'es of the Chosroes and the Gas- uevides were despatched to Hamadan, on which city day dawned, only to bring intelligence of a victory or a cou< quest. "While Alroy dictated peace on his own terms in the palaces of Xishabur, Abner, having reduced Louristan, crossed the mountains, and entei'ed Persia Avith the rein- forcements he had received from Jabaster. Leaving the government and garrisoning of his new conquests to this valiant captain, Alroy, at the head of the conquerors of Persia, in consequence of intelligence received from Hama- dan, returned by forced mai'ches to that city. CHAPTER XI. Leaving the army within a day's march of the capital, Alroy, accompanied only by his staff, entered Hamadan in tlie evening, and, immediately repairing to the citadel, summoned Jabaster to council. The night was passed by the king and the high priest in deep consultation. The ALKOY. 121 next morning, a decree apprised tlie inhabitants of tlie return of their monarch, of the creation of the new ' King- dom of the Medes and Persians,' of which Hamadan was declared the capital, and Abner the viceroy, and of the in- tended and immediate invasion of Syria, and re-conquest of the Land of Promise. The plan of this expedition had been long matured, and the preparations to effect it were considerably advanced. Jabaster had not been idle during the absence of his pupil. One hundred thousand wari-iors were now assembled^'-^ at the capital of the kingdom of the Medes and Persians ; of these the greater part were Hebrews, but many Arabs, wearied of the Turkish yoke, and many gallant adventurers from the Caspian, easily converted from a vague idolatry to a religion of conquest, swelled the ranks of the army of the Lord of Hosts. The plain of Hamadan was covered with tents, the streets wei-e filled with passing troops, the bazaars loaded A\ith militaiy stores ; long caravans of camels laden with supplies eveiy day arrived from the neighbouring towns ; each instant some high-capped Tartar with despatches*''^ rushed into the city and galloped his steed up the steep of the citadel. The clang of arms, the prance of horses, the floiirish of warlike music, resounded from all quai'ters. The business and the treasure of the world seemed, as it were in an instant, to have become concentrated in Hamadan. Every man had some great object ; gold glittered in every hand. All gi-eat impulses were stirring ; all the causes of human energy wei'e in lively action. Every eye sparkled, every foot trod firm and fast. Each man acted as if tlio imiversal fate depended upon his exertions ; as if the uni- ^ crsal will sympathised with his particular desire. A vast population influenced by a high degree of excitement is the most sublime of spectacles. The commander of the Eaitliful raised the standard of the Prophet on the banks of the Tigris. It was the secret intelligence of this intended event that had recalled Ah'oy nv suddenly from Persia. The latent enthusiasm of the 1 22 ALEOY. Moslemin was excited by tlae rare and mystic ceremony, and its effects were anticipated by previous and judicious preparations. The Seljuks of Bagdad alone amounted to fifty thousand men ; the Sultan of Syria contributed the Avarriors who had conquered the Arabian princes of Da- mascus and Aleppo ; while the ancient provinces of Asia Minor, which formed the rich and powerful kingdom of Seljnkian Roum, poured forth a myriad of that matchless cavalry, which had so often baffled the armies of the Cajsars. Never had so imposing a force been collected on the banks of the Tigris since the reign of Haroun Alras- chid. Each day some warlike Atabek, at the head of his armed train, poured into the capital of the caliphs,^' or pitched his pavilion on the banks of the river ; each day the proud emir of some remote principality astonished or affrighted the luxurious Babylonians by the strange or uncouth warriors that had gathered round his standard in the deserts of Arabia, or on the shores of the Euxine. For the space of twenty miles, the banks of the river were, on either side, far as the eye could reach, covered with the variegated pavilions, the glittering standards, the flowing streamers and twinkling pennons of the mighty host, of which Malek, the Grand Sultan of the Seljuks, and Go- vernor of the Caliph's palace, was chief commander. Such was the power assembled on the plains of Asia to aiTCst the progress of the Hebrew Prince, and to prevent the conquest of the memorable land promised to the faith of his fathers, and forfeited by their infidelity. Before the walls of Hamadan, Alroy reviewed the army of Israel, sixty thousand heavy-armed footmen, thirty thousand archers and Hght troops, and twenty thousand cavalry. Besides these, there had been formed a body of ten thousand picked horsemen, styled the ' Sacred Guard,' all of whom had served in the Persian campaign. In their centre, shrouded in a case of wrought gold, studded with car])uncles, and carried on a lusty lance of cedar, a giant, for the height of Elnebar exceeded that of common men by three feet, bore the sceptre of Solomon. The ALKOY. 123 Sacred Guard was commanded by Asriel, the brother of Abner. The army was formed into three divisions. All marched in solemn order before the throne of Alroy, raised upon the ramparts, and drooped their standards and lances as they passed their heroic leader. Bostenay, and Miriam, and the whole population of the city witnessed the in- spiring spectacle from the walls. That same eve, Scherirah, at the head of forty thousand men, pushed on towards Bagdad, by Kermanshah ; and Jabaster, who commanded in his holy robes, and who had vowed not to lay aside his sword until the rebuilding of the temple, condiicted his division over the victorious plain of ISTehauend. They wei'e to concentrate at the pass of Kerrund, which con- ducted into the province of Bagdad, and await the arrival of the king. At the dawn of day, the royal division and the Sacred, Guard, the whole under the command of Asriel, quitted the capital. Alroy still lingered, and for some hours the warriors of his staff might have been observed lounging about the citadel, or practising their skill in throwing the jerreed as they exercised their impatient chargers before the gates. The king Avas with the lady Miriam, walking in the garden of their uncle. One arm was wound round her delicate waist, and with the other he clasped her soft and graceful hand. The heavy tears burst from her downcast eyes, and stole along her pale and pensive cheek. They walked in silence, the brother and the sister, before the purity of whose surpassing love even ambition vanished. He opened the lattice gate. They entered into the valley small and green; before them was the marble fountain with its columns and cupola, and in the distance the charger of Alroy and his single attendant. They stopped, and Alroy gathered flowers, and placed Ihem in the hair of Miriam. He would have softened the bitterness of parting with a smile. Gently he relaxed his embracing arm, almost insensibly he dropped her quiver- ing: hand. 1 24 ALROY. ' Sister of my soul,' lie whispered, * when we last parted here, I was a fugitive, and now I quit you a conqueror.' SUe turned, she threw herself upon his neck, and buried her face in his breast. ' ^ly Miriam, we shall meet at Bagdad.' He beckoned to her distant maidens ; they advanced, he delivered Miriam into their arms. He pressed her hand to his lips, and, rushing to his horse, mounted and dis- appeared. CHAPTER XII. A r.ODY of irregular cavalry feebly defended the pass of Kerrund. It Avas cai'ried, with slight loss, by the vanguard of Scherirah, and the fugitives prepared the host of the caliph for the approach of the Hebrew army. Upon the plain of the Tigris the enemy formed info battle array. The centre was commanded by Malek, the Grand Sultan of the Seljuks himself, the right wing, headed by the Sultan of Syria, was protected by the river ; and the left, under the Sultan of Roum, was posted upon the ad- vantageous position of some irregular and rising ground. Tlnis proud in the number, valour, discipline, and dispo- sition of his forces, Malek awaited the conqueror of Pei'sia. The glittering columns of the Hebrews might even now be perceived defiling from the mountains, and forming at the exti'emity of the plain. Before nightfall the camp of tho invaders was pitched within hearing of that of Malek. Tho moving lights in the respective tents might plainly be dis- tinguished ; and ever and anon the flourish of hostile music fell with an ominous sound upon the ears of the opposed foemen. A few miles only separated those mighty hosts. Upon to-morrow depended, perhaps, the fortunes of ages. How awful is the eve of battle ! Alroy, attended by a few chieftains, personally visited tlie fonts of the soldiery, promising them on the morrow a triumjili, before whicli < lie victories of Xchauend nnd Nisha- ALRoV. 125 bur would sink into iusigniticaucc. Their fieiy and excited visages pi^oved at once their courage and their faith. The sceptre of Solomon was paraded throughout the camp in solemn procession. On the summit of a huge tumulus, pcr- liaps the sepulchre of some classic hero, Esther, the pro- phetess, surrounded by the chief zealots of the host, poured forth her exciting inspii-ations. It "vvas a grand picture, that beautiful Avild girl, the groups of stern devoted warriors, the red flame of the watch-fires mixing with the silver shadows of the moon as they illumined the variegated tui'- bans and gleaming aiTuour of her votaries ! In the pavilion of Alroy, Jabaster consulted with hi^ jiupil on the conduct of the mon'ow. ' This is a different scene from the cavern of the Cau- casus,' said Alroy, as the high priest rose to retire. ' It has one gi'eat resemblance, sire ; the God of our fathers is with us.' ' Ay ! the Lord of Hosts. Moses was a great man. There is no career except conquest.' ' You muse.' ' Of the past. The present Is prepared. Too much thought Avill mar it.' ' The past is for wisdom, the present for action, but for joy the future. The feeling that the building of the templo is at hand, that the Lord's anointed will once again live in the house of David, absorbs my spirit ; and, Avheu I muse over our coming glory, in my fond ecstacy I almost lose the gravity that doth beseem my sacred office.' ' Jerusalem ; I have seen it. How many hours to dawn ? ' ' Some three.' ' 'Tis strange I could sleep. I remember, on the eve of battle I was ever anxious. How is this, Jabaster ? ' * Tour faith, sire, is profound.' ' Yes, I have no fear. My destiny is not complete. Good night, Jabaster. Sec, Asriel, valiant priest. Pharcz I' ' My lord ! ' ' Kcuse me at the second vratch. Good night, lx>y.' 126 ALROY. * Good night, my lord.' ' Pharez ! Be sure you rouse mo at the second watch. Thmk you it wants three hovirs to dawn ?' 'About tlu-ee hours, my lord.' ' Well ! at the second watch, remember ; good night.' CHAPTER XIII. ' It is the second watch, my |ord.' ' So soon ! Have I slept ? I feel fresh as an eagle. Call Scherirah, boy.' ' 'Tis strange I never dream now. Before my flight my sleep was ever ti-oubled. Say Avhat they like, man is made for action. My life is now harmonious, and sleep has now become what nature willed it, a solace, not a contest. Before, it was a struggle of dark passions and bright dreams, in whose creative fancy and fair vision my soul sought refuge from the dreary bale of daily reality. ' I will withdraw the curtains of my tent. most majestic vision ! And have I raised this host I Over tlie wide plain, far as my eye can range, their snowy tents studding the purple landscape, embattled legions gather round their flags to struggle for my fate. It is the agony of Asia. ' A year ago, upon this very spot, I laid me do-wn to die, an unknown thing, or known and recognised only to be despised, and now the sultans of the world come forth to meet me. I have no fear. My destiny is not complete. And whither tends it? Let that power decide which hitherto has fashioned all my course. 'Jerusalem, Jerusalem! ever harping on Jerusalem. With ail liis lore, he is a narrow-minded zealot whose dreaming memory would fondly make a future like the past. O Bag- dad, Bagdad, •\\'ithin thy glittering halls, there is a charm worth all his Cabala ! ' Hah ! Scherirah ! The dawn is near at hand ; the ALROY. 127 stara still shining. The aiv is very pleasant. To-morrow Avill be a great day, Scherirah, for Israel and for you. You lead the attack. A moment in my tent, my brave Scherirah ! ' CHAPTER XIV. The daAvn broke ; a strong column of the Hebrews, com- manded by Scherirah, poured down upon the centre of the army of the caHph, Another column, commanded by Jabaster, attacked the left wing, headed by the Sultan oi Roum, Ko sooner had Alroy perceived that the onset of Sclierirah had succeeded in penetrating the centre of the Turks, than he placed himself at the head of the Sacred Guard, and by an irresistible charge completed their dis- order and confusion. The division of the Sultan of Syria, and a great part of the centre, were entirely routed and driven into the river, and the remainder of the division of Malek was effectually separated from his left wing. But while to Alroy the victory seemed already decided, a far different fate awaited the division of Jabaster. The Sultan of Roum, posted in an extremely advantageous position, and commanding troops accustomed to the disci- pline of the Romans of Constantinople, received the onset of Jabaster without yielding, and not only repelled his at- tack, but finally made a charge which completely disordered and dispersed the column of the Hebrews. In vain Jabaster endeavoured to rally his troops, in vain ho per- formed prodigies of valour, in vain he himself struck down the standard-bearer of the sultan, and once even pene- trated to the pavilion of the monarch. His division was fairly ro^ited. The eagerness of the Sultan of Roum to efi'ect the annihilation of his antagonists prevented him from observing the forlorn conditioa of the Turkish centre. Had he, after routing the di^dsion of Jabaster, only attacked Alroy in the rear, the fortune of the day might have been widely difierent. As it was, the eagle eye of AJroy soon 123 ALllOY. detcctecl Lis luadvertouce, aud profited by Lis Indiscretion. Leading Ithamar to keep the centre in check, he charged the Sultan of Roum with the Sacred Guard, and afibrded Jabaster an opportunity of rallying some part of his forces. The Sultan of Roum perceiving that the day was lost by the. ill-conduct of his colleagues, withdrew his troops, retreated in liaste, but in good order to Bagdad, carried off the caliph, his harem, and some of his treasure, and effected his escape into Syria. In the meantime the discomfiture of the remain- ing Turkish army w'as complete. The Tigris was dyed with their blood, and the towns ttrougli which the river flowed were apprised of the triumph of Alroy by the floating corpses of his enemies. Thirty thousand Turks were slain in battle : among them the Sultans of Bagdad and Syiia, and a vast number of atabeks, emirs, and chieftains. A whole division, finding themselves surrounded, surren- dered on terms, and delivered up theii* arms. The camps and treasures of the three sultans were alike captured, aud the troops that escaped so completely dispersed, that they did not attempt to rally, but, disbanded and desperate, prowled over and plundered the adjoining pro\'inces. The loss of tlie division of Jabaster was also severe, but the rest of the army suffered little. Alroy liimself was slightly wounded. The battle lasted barely three hours. Its results were immense. David Alroy was now master of tho East. CHAPTER XV. The plain was covered with the cor2)ses of men and horses, arms and standards, and prostrate tents. Returning from the pursuit of the Sultan of Roum, Alroy ordered tho trum- pets to sound to arms, and, covered with gore and dust, dismounted from his charger, and stood before the pavilion of j\Ialok, leaning on his bloody scimetar, and surrounded by his -^-ietorious generals. 'Ah, Jabaster! ' said the conqueror, giving his hand to tho ALROY. 129 pontiff, ' 'twas well your troops Lad siicli a leader. No one but you cou.ld have rallied tliem. You must drill your lads a little before the}'' again meet the Cappadocian cavalry. Brave Scherirah, we shall not forget our chai'ge. Asriel, tell the guard, from me, that the victory of the Tigris ws.s owing to their scimetars. Ithamar, what are our freshest troojDs ? ' ' Tlie legion of Aderbijan, sire.' ' How strong can they muster ? ' ' It counts twelve thousand men : we might collect two- ihirds.' ' Yaliant Itliamar, take the Aderbijans and a division of tlie guards, push on towards Bagdad, and summon the city. If his sultanshijD of Eonm offer battle, take np a position, and he shall quickly have his desire. For the present, after these hasty marches and sharp fighting, the troops nins!: I'cst. I guess he will not tariy. Summon the city, and say that if any resistance be offered, I Avill make it as desolate as old Babylon. Treat with no armed force. Where is the soldier that saved me a cracked skull ; his name Benaiah ? ' 'I wait your bidding, sire.' ' You're a captain. Join the division of Ithamar, and win fresh laui^els ere we meet again. Gentle Asriel, let your brother know our fortnne.' ' Sire, several Tartars have already l)een despatched io ITamadan.' ' 'Tis well. Send another with these tablets to the Lady jMiiiam. Despatch the pavilion of Malek as a trojihy for the town. Elnebar, Goliath of the Hebrews, yon bore our Bacred standard like a hero ! How fares the prophetess ? I saw her chaj-giug in our ranks, waving a sabre with her snowy arm, her long, dark hair streaming like a storm, from wliich her eyes flashed lightning.' ' The king bleeds,' said Jabaster. • ' Slightly. It will do me service. I am somewhat feverish. A kingdom for a draught of water ! And now for our wounded friends. Asriel, do you marshal the camp. It is the Sabbatli eve.'"'^ Time presses.' K 130 ALROY. CHAPTER XVI. The dead were plundered, and thrown into the river, the encampment of the Hebrews completed. Alroy, with his principal officers, visited the wounded, and praised the valiant. The bustle which always succeeds a victory was increased in the present instance by the anxiety of the army to observe with grateful strictness the impending Sabbath. "When the sun set, the Sabbath was to commence. The undulating horizon rendered it difficult to ascertain the pre- cise moment of his fall. The crimson orb sunk behind the purple mountains, the sky was flushed with a rich and rosy glow. Then might be perceived the zealots, proud in their Talmudical lore, holding a skein of white silk in their hands, and announcing the approach of the Sabbath by their obser- vation of its shifting tints. While the skein was yet golden, the forge of the armourer still sounded, the fire of the cook still blazed, still the cavaby led their steeds to the river, and still the busy footmen braced up their tents, and ham- mered at their palisades. The skein of silk became rosy, the armourer worked with renewed energy, the cook puffed with increased zeal, the horsemen scampered from the river, the footmen cast an anxious glance at the fading twilight. The skein of silk: became blue ; a dim, dull, sepulchral, leaden tinge fell over its purity. The hum of g-nats arose, the bat flew in circling whirls over the tents, horns sounded from all quarters, the sun had set, the Sabbath had com- menced. The forge was mute, the fire extinguished, the prance of horses and the bustle of men in a moment ceased. A deep, a sudden, an all-pervading stillness dropped over that mighty host. It was night ; the sacred lamp of the Sabbath sparkled in every tent of the camp, which vied in silence and in brilliancy with the mute and glowing heavens. Morn came ; the warriors assembled around the altar and th.0 sacrifice. The high pi-iest and his attendant Levites ALEOY. 13] proclaimed the unity and the omnipotence of the God of Israel, and the sympathetic responses of his conquering and chosen people re-echoed over the plain. They retired again to their tents, to listen to the expounding of the law ; even the distance of a Sabbath walk was not to exceed that space which lies between Jerusalem and the Mount of Olives. This was the distance between the temple and the tabernacle ; it had been nicely measured, and eveiy Hebrew who ventur-ed forth from the camp this day might be observed counting the steps of a Sabbath-day's journey. At length the sun again set, and on a sudden fires blazed, voices sounded, men stirred, in the same enchanted and instantaneous manner that had characterised the stillness of the preceding eve. Shouts of laughter, bursts of music, announced the festivity of the coming night ; supplies poured in from all the neighbouring villages, and soon the pious conquerors com- memorated their late triumph in a round of banqueting. On the morrow, a Tai^tar arrived from Ithamar, informing Alroy that the Sultan of Roum had retreated into Syi'ia, that Bagdad was undefended, but that he had acceded to the request of the inhabitants that a deputation should wait upon Alroy before the troops entered the city, and had gi'anted a safe conduct for their passage. CHAPTER XVII. On the raorrow, messengers announced the approach of the deputation. All the troops were under arms. Alroy directed that the suppliants should be conducted through the whole camp before they arrived at the royal pavilion, on each side of which the Sacred Guard was mustered in array. The curtains of his tent withdrawn, displayed the conqueror himself, seated on a sumptuous divan. On his right hand stood Jabaster in his priestly robes, on his left Scherirah. Behind him, the giant Elnebar supported the sacred sceptre. A crowd of chieftains was ranged on each side of the pavih'on. K 2 132 ALROY. C3-ml)als sounded, muffled kettle-drums, and the faint flourish of trumpets ; the commencement of the jirocession might be detected in the long perspective of the tented avenue. First came a company of beauteous youths, walking two bv two, and strewing flowers, then a band of musicians in flowino- robes of cloth of gold, plaintively sounding their silver trumpets. After these followed slaves of all climes, boai'ing a tribute of the most rare and costly productions of their countries : Negroes with tusks and teeth of the ele- phant, plumes of ostrich feathers, and caskets of gold dust ; Syrians with rich armour ; Persians with vases of atar-gul, and Indians with panniers of pearls of Ormuz, and soft shawls of Cashmere. Encircled by liis children, each of ■whom held alternately a white or fawn-coloured gazelle, an Arab, clothed in his blue bornouz, led by a thick cord of crimson silk a tall and tawny giraffe. Fifty stout men suc- ceeded two by two, carrying in company a silver shield laden with gold coin, or chased goblets studded with gems. The clash of cymbals announced the presence of the robes of honour,**^ culled from the wardrobe of the commander of the Faithful : the silk of Aleppo and the brocade of Damas- cus, lined with the furs of the sable and the ermine, down from the breast of the swan, and the skins of white foxes. After these followed two grey dromedaries, with furniture of silver, and many caparisoned horses, each led by a groom in rich attire. The last of these was a snow-Avhite steed, upon whose front was the likeness of a rub}- star, a courser of the sacred stud of Solomon, and crossed only by the descendants of the Pi'ophet. The muffled kettle-drums heralded the company of black eunuchs, with their scarlet vests and ivory battle-axes. They surrounded, and shrouded from the vulgar gaze, four- teen beautiful Circassian girls, whose brilliant visages and perfect forms were otherwise concealed by their long veils and ample drapery. The gorgeous procession, as they approached the con- queror, bowed humbly to Alroy, and formed in order on each side of the broad avenue. The deputation appeared ; ALEOY. 133 t\velve of the principal citizens of Bagdad, with folded arms, and downcast eyes, and disordered raiment. Meekly and mutely each touched the eartli with his hand, and kissed it in token of submission, and then, moving aside, made way for the chief envoy and orator of the company, Honain ! CHAPTER XVIII. Humbly, but gracefully, the physician of the cahph bowed before the conqueror of the East, His appeai'ance and de- meanour afforded a contrast to the aspect of his brother envoys ; not less calm or contented his countenance, not less sumptuous or studied his attire, than when he first res- cued Alroy in the Bazaar of Bagdad from the gripe of the false Abdallah. He spoke, and every sound was hushed before the music of his voice. ' Conqueror of the world, that destiny with which it is in vain to struggle, has placed our hves and foi'tunes in your power. You-r slaves offer for your approbation specimens of their riches ; not as tribute, for all is yours ; but to show you the products of security and peace, and to induce you to believe that mercy may be a policy as profitable to the conqueror as to the conquered ; that it may be better to jireseiwe than to destroy ; and wiser to enjoy than to ex- tirpate. ' Fate ordained that we should be born the slaves of the caliph ; that same fate has delivered his sceptre into your hands. We offer you the same devotion that we yielded to him, and we entreat the same protection which he granted to us. 'Whatever may be your decision, we must bow to your decree with the humility that recognises superior force. Yet we are not without hope. We cannot forget that it is o\ir good fortune not to be addressing a barbarous chieftain, unable to sympathise with the claims of civilisation, the 134 ALROY. creations of art, and the finer impulses of humanity. We acknowledge your irresistible power, but we dare to hope everj'thing from a prince whose genius all acknowledge and admire, who has spared some portion of his youth from the cores of government and the pursuits of arms to the enno- bling claims of learning, whose morality has been moulded by a pure and sublime faith, and who draws his lineage from a sacred and celebrated race, the unrivalled antiquity of which even the Prophet acknowledges.' He ceased : a buzz of approbation sounded tlu-oughoat the pavilion, which was hushed instantly as the lips of the conqueror moved. * Noble emir,' rephed Alroy, ' return to Bagdad, and tell your fellow-subjects that the King of Israel grants protec- tion to their persons, and security to their property.' ' And for their faith ?' enquired the envoy, in a lower voice. ' Toleration,' replied Alroy, turning to Jabaster. ' Until further regulations,' added the high priest. ' Emir,' said Alroy, * the person of the caliph will be re- spected.' ' May it please your highness,' replied Honain, ' the Sul- tan of Roum has retired with our late ruler.' ' And his harem ?' ' And his harem.' ' It was needless. We war not with women.' ' Men, as well as women, must acknowledge the gracious mercy of your highness.' *Benomi,' said Alroy, addressing himself to a young offi- cer of the guard, 'command the guard of honour that will attend this noble emir on his return. We soldiers deal only in iron, sir, and cannot vie with the magnificence of Bagdad, yet wear this dagger for the donor's sake :' and Airoy held out to Honain a poniard flaming with gems. The Envoy of Bagdad advanced, took the dagger, pressed it to his lips, and placed it in his vest.^* ' Scherirah," continued Alroy, ' this noble emir is your charge. See that a choice pavilion of the host be for his ALROY. 135 use, and that his train complain not of the rough customs of our camp.' 'May it please jour highness,' rephed Honain, ' I have fulfilled my office, and, with your gracious peiTaission, would at once return. I have business only less urgent than the present, because it concerns myself.' * As you will, noble emir, Benomi, to your post. Fare- well, sir.' The deputation advanced, bowed, a,nd retu-ed. Alroy turned to Jabaster. ' No common person that, Jabaster ?' 'A very gracious Turk, sire.' ' Think you he is a Tui'k ?' ' By his dress.' ' It may be so. Asriel, break up the camp. We'll mai'ch at once to Bagdad.' CHAPTER XIX. The chiefs dispersed to make the necessary arrangements for the march. The news that the army was immediately to advance to Bagdad soon circulated throughout the camp, and excited the most Kvely enthusiasm. Every hand was at work, striking the tents, preparing the arms and horses. Alroy retii'ed to his pavilion. The curtains were drawn. He was alone, and plunged in pi-ofound meditation. 'Alroy!' a voice sounded. He started, and looked up. Before him stood Esther the prophetess. ' Esther ! is it thou ?' ' Alroy ! enter not into Babylon.' ' Indeed.' ' As I live, the Lord hath spoken it. Enter not into Babylon.' ' Not enjoy my fairest conquest, maiden ?' ' Enter not into Babylon.' ' What affi'icrhts thee ?' 33G .U.KOY. ' Enter not into Babylon.' ' I shall surely change the fortunes of my life without a cause ! ' ' The Lord hath spoken. Is not that a cause ?' ' I am the LorcVs anointed. His warning has not reached me.' 'Now it reaches thee. Doth the king despise the pro- phetess of the Lord ? It is the sin of Ahab.' ' Despise thee ! desi^ise the mouth that is the herald of ray victories ! 'Twere rank blasphemy. Prophecy triumph, Esther, and Alroy will never do^^bt thy inspiration.' ' He doubts it now. I see he doubts it now. my king, I say again, enter not into Babylon.' ' Beauteous maiden, those eyes flash lightning. Who can behold their wild and liquid glance, and doubt that Esther is inspired ! Be calm, sweet girl, some dream disturbs thy fancy.' 'Alroy, Alroy, enter not into Babylon !' ' I have no fear, I bear a charmed life.' ' Ah me ! he will not listen. All is lost !' ' All is gained, my beautiful.' ' I would Ave were upon the Holy Mount, and gazing on the stars of sacred Zion,' ' Esther,' said Alro}-, advancing, and gently taking her hand, ' the capital of the East will soon unfold its marvels to thy sight. Prepare thyself for wonders. Girl, we are no longer in the desert. Forget thy fitful fancies. Come, choose a husband from my generals, child, and I will give a kingdom for thy dower. I Avould gladly see a crown upon that imperial brow. It well deserves one.' The prophetess turned her dark eyes full upon Alroy. What passed in her mind was neither evident nor expressed. She gazed intently upon the calm and inscrutable counte- nance of the conqueror, she flung aw ly his hand, and rushed out of the pavilion. PART THE EIGHTH. CHAPTER I. The waving of banners, tlie flourish of trumpets, tlie neighing of steeds, and the glitter of spears ! On the dis- tant horizon they gleam like the morning, -when the gloom of the night shivers bright into day. Hark ! the tramp of the foemen, like the tide of tho ocean, flows onward and onward, and conquers the shore. From the brow of the mountain, Hkc the rush of a river, the column defiling melts into the plain. Warriors of Judah ! holy men that battle for the Lord ! Tlio laud wherein your fathers wept, and touched their l^laintive psaltery ; the haughty city where your sires be- wailed their cold and distant hearth ; your steeds are prancing on its plain, and you shall fill its palaces. Warriors of Judah ! holy men that battle for the Lord ! March, onward march, ye valiant tribes, the hour has come, the hour has come ! All the promises of ages, all the signs of sacred sages, meet in this ravishing hour. Where is now the oppressor's chariot, where your tyrant's purple robe ? The horse and the rider are both overthrown, the horse and the rider are both overthrown ! Rise, Rachel, from, thy wilderness, arise, and weep no more. No more thy lonely palm-tree's shade need shroud thy secret sorrowing. The Lord hath heard the widow's sigh, the Lord hath stilled the widow's tear. Be comforted, be comforted, thy children live again ! Yes ! yes ! upon the boundmg plain fleet Asriel glances like a star, and stout Scherirah shakes his spear by stern Jabaster's scimetar. And Ho is there, tho chosen one, 138 ALROY. Lyruned by prophetic harps, -whose life is like the morning dew on Sion's holy hill : the chosen one, the chosen one, that leads his race to victory ; warriors of Judah ! holy men that battle for the Lord ! They come, thoy come, they come ! The ramparts of the city were croAvded with the inliabit- ants, the river sparkled with ten thousand boats, the bazaars were shut, the streets lined with the pojDulace, and the ter- I'ace of every house covered with spectators. In the morn- ing, Ithamar had entered with his division and garrisoned the city. And noAv the vanguard of the Hebrew army, after having been long distinguished in the distance, ap- proached the walls. A large body of cavalry dashed for- v/ard at full speed fi^om the main force. Upon a milk-white charger, and followed by a glittering train of wari-iors, amid the shouts of the vast multitude, Ah'oy galloped up to the gates. He was received by Ithamar and the members of the deputation, but Honain was not there. Accompanied by his staff and a strong detachment of the Sacred Guard, Alroy was conducted through the principal thoroughfares of the city, until he arrived at the chief entrance of the serail, or palace, of the caliph. The vast portal conducted him into a large quadrangular court, where he dismounted, and where ho was welcomed by the captain of the eunuch guard. Accompanied by his principal generals and his im- mediate attendants, Alroy was then ushered through a suite of apartments which reminded him of his visit ■with Honain, until he arrived at the grand council-chamber of the caliphs. The conqueror threw himself upon the gorgeous divan of the commander of the Faithful. ' An easy seat after a long march,' said Alroy, as he touched with his lips the coffee, which the chief of tlie eunuchs presented to him in a cup of transparent pink porcelain, studded with pearls.^* ' Ithamar, now for your report. What is the temper of the city ? Where is his sultanship of Roum ?' ALROY. 139 * The city, sire, is calm, and I believe content. The sultan and the caliph are still hovering on the borders of the province.' * So I supposed. Scherirah mil settle that. Let the troops be encamped without the walls, the garrison, ten thousand strojig, must be changed monthly. Ithamar, you are governor of the city : Asriel commands the forces. Worthy Jabaster, draw up a report of the civil affairs of the capital. Your quarters are the College of the Dervishes. Bi'ave Scherirah, I cannot afford you a long rest. In three days you must have crossed the river with your division. It vsdll be quick work. I foresee that they will not fight. Meet me all here in council by to-morrow's noon. Farewell.' The chieftains retii'ed, the high priest lingered. ' Were it not an intrusion, sire, I would fain entreat a moment's audience.' ' My own Jabaster, you have but to speak.' ' Su'e, I would speak of Abidan, as valiant a warrior as any in the host. It grieves me much, that by some fatality, his services seem ever overlooked.' ' Abidan ! I know him well, a valiant man, but a dreamer, a dreamer.' * A dreamer, sire ! Believe me, a true son of Israel, and one whose faith is deep.' ' Good Jabaster, we are all true sons of Israel. Yet let me have men about me who see no ^dsions in a mid-day sun. We must beware of dreamers.' 'Dreams are the oracles of God.' ' When God sends them. Very true, Jabaster. But this Abidan, and the company with whom he consorts, are filled with high-flown notions, caught from old traditions, which, if acted on, would render government impracticable, in a word, they are dangei'ous men.' ' The very flower of Israel ! Some one has poisoned your sacred ear against them.' ' No one, worthy Jabaster, I have no counsellor except yourself. They may be the flower of Israel, but they are not the fruit. Good wariioi'S, bad subjects : excellent 1 40 ALJiOY. iiieaus, by Avliich we may accomplisli greater ends. I'll have no dreamers in authority. I must have practical men about me, practical men. See howAbner, Asriel, Ithamar, Medad, see how these conform to what surrounds them, yet invincible captains, invincible captains. But then they nve practical men, Jabaster ; they have eyes and use them They know the difference of times and seasons. But this Abidan, he has no other thought but the rebuilding of the temple : a narrow-souled bigot, who would sacrifice the essence to the form. The rising temple soon Avould fall again with such constructors. Why, sir, what think you, this same Abidan preached in the camp against my entry into Avhat the quaint fanatic chooses to call "Babjdon," because he had seen what he calls a vision.' ' There Avas a time your Majesty thought not so ill of visions.' ' Am I Abidan, sir ? Are other men to mould their con- duct or their thoughts by me ? In this world I stand alone, a being of a difierent order from yourselves, incomprehen- sible even to you. Let this matter cease. I'll hear no more, and have heard too much. To-morrow at council.' The high priest withdrew in silence. * He is gone ; at length. I am alone. I caimot bear tlie presence of these men, except inaction. Their words, even their looks, disturb the still creation of my brooding thought. I o.m once more alone, and loneliness hath been the cradle of my empire. Now I do feel inspired. There needs no mummery now to work a marvel.' ' The scej)tre of Solomon ! It may be so. What then ? Here's now the sceptre of Alroy. What's that without his mind ? The legend said that none should free our people but he who bore the sceptre of great Solomon. The legend knew that none could gain that sceptre, but with a mind to whose supreme volition the fortunes of the world would bow like fate. I gained it ; I confronted the specti-e mo- iiarchs in their sepulchi'e ; and tlie same hand that grasped their shadoAvy rule hath seized the diadem of the mighty caliphs by the broad rushing of their imperial river. ALROy. 141 ' The world is niine : and sliall I yield tlie prize, ilie uni- versal and heroic prize, to realise the dull tradition of some dreaming priest, and consecrate a legend ? He conquered Asia, and he built the temple. Are these my annals ? Shall this quick blaze of empire sink to a glimmering and a twilight sway over some petty province, the decent patriarch of a pastoral horde ? Is the Lord of hosts so slight a God, that we must place a barrier to His sovereignty, and fix the boundaries of Omnipotence between the Jordan and the Lebanon ? It is not thus wi'itten ; and were it so, I'll pit my inspiration against the prescience of my ancestors. I also am a prophet, and Bagdad shall be my Sion, The daughter of the Voice ! Well, I am clearly summoned. ] am the Lord's servant, not Jabaster's. Let me make His worship universal as His power ; and where's the priest shall dare impugn my faith, because His altars smoke on other hills than those of Judali ? ' I must see Honain. That man has a great mind. He alone can comprehend my purpose. Universal empire must :iot be founded on sectarian prejudices and exclusive rights. Jabaster would massacre the Moslemin like Ailialek ; the Moslemin, the vast majority, and most valuable portion, of my subjects. He would depopulate my emjDire, that it mio-ht not be said that Ishmael shared the heritage of Israel. Fanatic ! I'll send him to conquer Judah. We must conciliate. Somethmg must be done to bind the con- quered to our conquering fortunes. That bold Sultan of Roum : I wish Abner had opposed him. To run off Avith the hai-em ! I have half a mind to place myself at the head of the pursuing force, and Passion and policy alike combine : and yet Honain is the man ; I might send him on a mission. Could we make terms ? I detest treaties. My fancy flies from all other topics. I must see him. Could I but tell him all I think ! This door, whither leads it? Hah ! mothinks I do remember yon glittering gallery ! No one in attendance. The discipline of our palace is some- what lax. My warriors are no courtiers. What an ad- mirable marshal of the palace ITonain would make! Silenco 142 ALROy. every wlicrc. So! 'tis -well. These saloons I Lave clearly passed througli before. Could I but reach the private portal by the river side, unseen or undetected ! 'Tis not impossible. Here are many dresses. I Avill disguise my- self. Trusty scimetar, thou hast done thy duty, rest awhile. 'Tis lucky I am beardless. I shall make a capital eunuch. So ! a handsome robe. One dagger for a pinch, shppers powdered with pearls,''*' a caftan of cloth of gold, a Cash- mere girdle, and a pelisse of sables. One glance at the mirror. Good ! I begin to look like the conqueror of the world ! ' CHAPTER II. It was twilight : a small and solitary boat, with a single rower, ghded along the Tigris, and stopped at the archway of a house that descended into the river. It stopped, the boatman withdrew the curtains, and his single passenger disembarked, and ascended the stairs of the archway. The stranger reached the landing-place, and, unfastening a golden grate, proceeded along a gallexy, and entered a beautiful saloon of white and green marble, opening into gardens. !No one was in the apartment ; the stranger threw himself upon a silver couch, placed at the side of a fountain that rose from the centre of the chamber and fell into a porphyry basin. A soft whisper roused the stranger from his reverie, a soft wliisper, that faintly uttered the word ' Honain.' The stranger looked up, a figure, en- veloped in a veil, that touched the ground, advanced from the gardens. ' Honain ! ' said the advancing figure, throM'ing off the veil. ' Honain ! Ah ! the beautiful mute returned ! ' A woman more lovely than the rosy morn, beheld an un- expected guest. They stood, the lady and the stranger, gazing on each other in silence. A man, with a light, entered the extremit;^' of the liall. Carefully he closed the ALROY. 1 43 portal, slowly lie advanced, with a subdued step ; he ap- proached the lady and the stranger. ' Alroy ! ' said the astonished Honain, the light fell from his hand. ' Alroy ! ' exclaimed the lady, with a bewildered air : she turned pale, and leant against a column. ' Daughter of the caHph ! ' said the leader of Israel ; and he advanced, and fell upon his knee, and stole her passive hand. ' I am indeed that Alroy to whom destiny has deli- vered the empire of thy sire ; but the Princess Schirene can have nothing to fear from one who values above all his vic- tories this memorial of her goodwill ; ' and he took from his breast a rosary of pearls and emeralds, and, rising slowly, left it in her trembling hand. Tlie princess turned and hid her face in her arm, which reclined against the column. ' My kind Honain,' said Alroy, ' you thought me forgetful of the past ; you thought me ungrateful. My presence here proves that I am not so. I come to enquire all your wishes. I come to gratify and to fullil them, if that be in my power.' ' Sire,' replied Honain, who had recovered from the emo- tion in which he rarely indulged, and from the surprise Avhich seldom entrapped him, ' Sire, my wishes are slight. You see before you the daughter of ruy master. An inter- view, for which I fear I shall not easily gain that lady's pardon, has made you somewhat acquainted with her situa- tion and her sentiments. The Princess Schii-ene seized the opportunity of the late convulsions to escape from a mode of life long repugnant to all her feelings, and from a des- tiny at which she trembled. I was her only counsellor, and she may feel assured, a faithful, although perhaps an indis- creet one. The irresistible solicitation of the inhabitants that I should become their deputy to their conqueror, pre- vented ns from escaping as we had intended. Since then, from the movement of the troops, I have deemed it more prudent that we should remain at present here, although I have circulated the intelligence of my departure. In tho 1 44 ALKOY. kiosk of my garden, tlic pi-incess is now a willing prisonor*. At twilight she steals forth for the poor relaxation of my society, to listen to the intelligence which I acquire during the day in disguise. The history, sire, is short and simple. We are in your power : but instead of deprecating your in- terfei-encG, I now solicit your protection.' 'Dear Honain, 'tis needless. The Princess Schirene has only to express a wish that it may be fulfilled. I came to speak with you on weighty matters, Honain, but I retire, for I am an intruder now. To-morrow, if it jjlease you, at this hour, and in this disguise, I will again repair hither. In the meantime, this lady may perchance express to you her wishes, and you will bear them to me. If an escort to any country, if any palace or province for her rule and resi- dence But I will not offer to one who should com- mand. Lady! farewell. Pardon the past! To-morrow, good Tlonain! pr'ythee let us meet. Good even!' CHAPTER III. * The royal brow was clouded,' said Ithamar to Asriel, as, departing from the council, they entered their magnificent barque. 'With thought; he has so much upon his mind, 'tis wondrous how he bears himself.' ' I have seen him gay on the eve of battle, and livel}^ though calm, with weightier matters than now oppress him. His brow was clouded, but not, methinks, Avith thought ; one might rather say with te)iij)er. ]\Iark you, how he rated Jabaster ? ' 'Roundly! The stern priest writhed under it; and as lie signed the ordinance, shivered his reed in rage. I never saw -ht arm retained her hand ; he wound the other round hor waist, as he fell upon his knee. ' O beautiful ! more than beautiful ! for thou to me art like a dream unbroken,' exclaimed the young leader of Israel, ' let me, let me breathe my adoration. I oiier thee not empire : I offer thee not wealth ; I offer thee not all the boundless gratification of magnificent fancy, these may be thine, but all these thou hast proved ; but, if the passionate affections of a s^iirit which never has yielded to the power of woman or the might of man, if the deep devotion of the soul of Alroy, be deemed an oftering meet for the shrine of thy sui-passing loveliness, I worship thee, Schirene, I worship thee. I worship thee ! ' Since I first gazed upon thee, since thy beau.ty first rose upon my presence like a star bright with my destiny, in the still sanctuary of my secret love, thy idol has ever rested. Then, then, I was a thing Avhose very touch thy creed might count a contumely. I have avenged the insults of long centuries in the best blood, of Asia ; I have returned, iu glory and in pride, to claim my ancient sceptre; but sweeter far than vengeance, sweeter far than the quick gathering of my sacred tribes, the rush of triumph and the blaze of empire, is this brief moment of adoring love, wherein I pour the passion of my life ! ' O my soul, my life, my very being ! thou art silent, but thy silence is sweeter than others' speech. Yield, yield thee, dear Schirene, yield to thy suppliant ! Thy faith, thy father's faith, thy native customs, these, these shall be re- spected, beauteous lady ! Pharaoh's daughter yielded hor dusky beauty to my great ancestor. Thy face is like the bright inspiring day ! Let it not be said that the daughter of the Nile shared Israel's crown, the daughter of the Tigris ispuiiitd oui- sceptre. I am nut Solomon, but I am one that ALROY. 149 wore Seliireile the partner of m^' throne, wonld make his glowing annals read hke a wearisome and mistj tale to our surpassing lustre ! ' He ceased, the princess turned her hitherto hidden countenance, and bowed it on his heart. ' O Alroy ! ' she exclaimed, ' I have no creed, no country, no hfe, but thee ! ' CHAPTER Y. ' The king is late to-day.' 'Is it true, Asriel, there is an express from Hamadan ? ' ' Of no moment, Ithamnr. I had private letters from Abner, All is quiet.' ' 'Tis much past the hour. When do you depart, Sche- rirali ? ' ' The troops are ready. I wait orders. This morning's council will perchance decide.' ' This morning's council is devoted to the settlement of the civil affairs of the capital,' remarked Jabaster, ' Indeed ! ' said Asriel. ' Is your report prepared, Jabaster ? ' ' 'Tis here,' replied the high priest. ' The Hebrew legis- lator requires but little musing to shape his order. He has a model Avhich time cannot destroy, nor thought improve.' Ithamar and Asriel exchanged significant glances. Sche- rlrab looked solemn. There was a pause, which was broken by Asriel. ' 'Tis a noble city, this Bagdad. I have not yet visited your quai'ters, Jabaster. You are well placed.' ' As it may be. I hope we shall not tarry here long-. The great point is still not achieved.' ' How far is it to the holy city ? ' enquired Scherirah. ' A niontb's march,' replied Jabaster. ' And when you get there ? ' enquired Ithamar. 'You may fight with the Franks,' rejilied Asriel. ' Jabaster, how large is Jerusalem ? ' enquired Ithamar. 150 .4XR0Y. 'Is it true, as I have sometimes heard, that it is not bigger tlian the serail hero, gardens and all ? ' ' Its glory hath departed,' replied the high pi-iest ; * the bricks have fallen, but we will rebuild with marble ; and. Sion, that is now Avithout the Christian walls, shall yet sparkle, as in the olden time, with palaces and jjavilions.' A floui'ish of trumpets, tlie portals flew open, and Alroy entered, leaning on the arm of the envoy of Bagdad. ' Valiant leaders,' said Alroy to the astonished chieftains, ' in this noble stranger, you see one like yourselves entrusted with my unbounded confidence. Jabaster, behold thy brother ! ' ' Honain ! art tliou Honain'?' exclaimed the pontiff start- ing from his seat. ' I have a thousand messengers after thee.' With a countenance alternately palhd with surprise and burning with afiection, Jabaster embraced his brother, and, overpowered with emotion, hid his face on his shoulder. 'Sire,' at length exclaimed the high priest in a low and tremulous voice, ' I must pray your pardon that for an instant in this character I have indulged in any other thoughts than those tliat may concern your welfare. 'Tis past : and you, who know all, will forgive me.' 'All that respects Jabaster must concern my welfare. He is the pillar of my empire ; ' and holding forth his hand, Alroy placed the high priest on his right. ' Scherirah, you depart this eve.' The rough captain bowed in silence. ' What is this ? ' continued Alroy, as Jabaster offered, him a scroll. 'Ah ! your report.' "Order of the Tribes," "Ser- vice of the Levites," "Princes of the People," " Elders of Israel ! " The day may come when this may be effected. At present, Jabaster, we must be moderate, and content ourselves with arrangements which may ensure that order shall bo maintained, property respected, and justice ad- ministered. Is it true that a gang has rifled a mosque ? ' ' Sire ! of that I would speak. They are no plunderers, but men, perhaps too zealous, who have read and who have remembered < hat " Yo shall utterly destroy all the places ALEOY. 151 ■wherein the nations which ye shall possess, served their gods upon the high mountains, and upon the hill, and under every green tree. And ye shall overthrow their altars, and" ' ' Jabaster, is this a synagogue ? Come I to a council of valiant statesmen or dreaming Rabbis ? For a thousand years we have been quoting the laws we dared not practise. Is it with such aid that we captured Nishabur and crossed the Tigris ? Valiant, wise Jabaster, thou art worthy of better things, and capable of all. I entreat thee, urge such matters for the last time. Are these fellows in custody ? ' ' They were in custody. I have freed them,' ' Freed them ! Hang them ! Hang them on the most public grove. Is this the way to make the Moslem a duteous subject ? Jabaster ! Israel honours thee ; and I, its chief, know that one more true, more vahant, or more learned, crowds not around our standard ; but I see, the caverns of the Caucasus are not a school for empire.' ' Sire, I had humbly deemed the school for empire was the law of Moses.' * Ay ! adapted to these times.' ' Can aught divine be changed ? ' ' Am I as tall as Adam ? K man, the crown, the rose of all this fair creation, the most divine of all divine inven- tions, if Time have altered even this choicest of aU godlike works, why shall it spare a law made but to rule his con- duct ? Good Jabaster, we must establish the throne of Israel, that is my mission, and for the means, no matter how, or where. Asriel, what news of Medad ? ' ' All is quiet between the Tigiis and Euphrates. It would be better to recall his division, which has been much harassed. I thought of relie^dng him by Abidan.' ' I think so, too. We may as well keep Abidan out of the city. If the truth were known, I'll wager some of his company plundered the mosque. We must issue a procla- mation on that subject. My good Jabaster, we'll talk over these matters alone. At present I will leave yon with your brother. Scherirah, snp with me to night ; before you quit Asriel, come with nie to my cabinet.' 152 ALROy. CHAPTER VI. ' I MUST see tlie king ! ' ' Holy priest, his liiglmess lias retired. It is impossible.' ' I must see the king. Worthy Pharez, I take all peril on myself.' ' Indeed his highness' orders are imperative. Yovi cannot see him.' ' Knowest thou who I am ? ' ' One whom all pious Hebrews reverence.' ' I say I must see the king.' ' Indeed, indeed, holy Jabaster, it cannot be.' ' Shall Israel perish for a menial's place ? Go to ; I irHl see liim.' ' IS^ay ! if you iiuU, I'll struggle for my duty.' ' Touch not the Lord's anointed. Dog, you shall suffer for this ! ' So saying, Jabaster threw aside Pharez, and, witli the attendant clinging to his robes, rushed into the roj&\ chamber. 'What is all this?' exclaimed Alroy, starting from tlie divan. 'Jabaster! Pharez, withdraw ! How now, is Hag- dad in insurrection ? ' 'Worse, much worse, Israel soon will be.' 'Ay!' ' My fatal brother has told me all, nor would I sleep, until I lifted up my voice to save thee.' ' Am I in danger ? ' ' In the wilderness, when the broad desert quivered beneath thy trembling feet, and the dark heavens poured down their burning torrents, thou wert less so. In that hou'' of death, One guarded thee, who never forgets his fond and faithful offspring, and now, when He has brought thee out of the house of bondage ; now, when thy fortunes, like a uol)le cedar, swell in the air and shadow all the land ; thou, the very leader of His people, His chosen one, for whom He liath worked such marvels, tliv heart is turned ALKOY. 153 from thy fathers' God, and hankers after strange abomina- tions.' Through the broad arch that led into the gardens of the serail, the moonlight fell upon the tall figure and the up- raised arm of the priest ; Alroy stood with folded arms at ~--.r-c distance, watching Jabaster as he spoke, with a calm bnt searching glance. Suddenly he advanced with a quick step, and, placing his hand upon Jabaster's arm, said, in a low, enquiring tone, 'You are speaking of this marriage?' * Of that which ruined Solomon.' ' Listen to me, Jabaster,' said Alroy, interrupting him, in a calm but peremptory tone. ' I cannot forget that I am speaking to my master, as well as to my friend. The Lord, who knoweth all things, hath deemed me worthy of His mission. My fitness for this high and holy office was not admitted without proof. A lineage, which none else could ofier, mystic studies shared by few, a mind that dared en- counter all things, and a frame that could endure most, these were my claims. But no more of this. I have passed the great ordeal ; the Lord of Hosts hath found me not unwoi'thy of His charge ; I have established His ancient people ; His altars blaze with sacrifices ; His priests are honoured, bear witness thou, Jabaster, His omnipotent unity is declared. What wouldst thou, more ? ' 'All!' ' Then Moses knew you well. It is a stiff-necked people.' ' Sire, bear with me. If I speak in heat, I speak in zeal. You ask me what I wish : my answer is, a national existence, which we have not. You ask me what I wish : my answer is, the Land of Promise. You ask me what I wish : my answer is, Jerusalem. You ask me what I wish : my answer is, the Temi^le, all we have forfeited, all we have 3'earned after, all for which we have fought, our beauteous country, our holy creed, our simple manners, and our ancient customs.' ' Manners change with time and circumstances ; customs may be observed evorywhei'e. The ephod on thy breast ])roves our faith; and, fur a country, is the Tigris less than Siloah, or the Enpliratfs inferior to llio Jordan r' 154 ALROY. * Alas ! alas ! there was a glorious prime wlien Israel stood aloof from other nations, a fair and holy thing that God had hallowed. We were then a chosen family, a most peculiar people, set apart for God's entire enjoyment. All about us was solemn, deep, and holy. We shunned the stranger as an unclean thing that must defile our solitary sanctity, and, keeping to ourselves and to our God, our lives flowed on in one great solemn tide of deep religion, making the meanest of oui- multitude feel greater than the kings of other lands. It was a glorious time : I thought it had returned ; but I awake from this, as other dreams.' ' We must leave off dreaming, good Jabaster, we must act. Were I, by any chance, to fall into one of those reveries, with which I have often lost the golden hours at Hamadan, or in our old cave, I should hear, some fine morning, his sultanship of Roum rattling at my gates.' Alroy smiled as he spoke ; he would willingly have intro- duced a lighter tone into the dialogue, but the solemn coun- tenance of the priest was not sjonpathetic with his levity. * My heart is full, and yet I cannot speak : the memory of the past overpowers my thought. I had vainly deemed that my voice, inspii'ed by the soul of truth, might yet pre- serve him ; and now I stand here in his presence, silent and trembling, like a guilty thing. 0, my pi-ince ! my pupil ! ' s^ The household of Medad, in robes of crimson, lined with sable. The standard of Medad. Medad, on a coal-black Arab, followed by three hundrea officers of his division, all mounted on steeds of pui'e race. Slaves, bearing the bridal present of Medad; six Damas- cus sabres of unrivalled temper.'^'^ Twelve choice steeds, sumptuously caparisoned, each led by an Anatolian groom. The household of Ithamar, in robes of violet, lined witJi ermine. The standard of Ithamar, Ithamar, on a snow-white Anatolian charger, followed by six hundred of&cers of his division, all mounted on steeds of pure race. Slaves bearing the marriage present of Ithamar; a golden vase of rubies borne on a violet throne. One hundred Negroes, their noses bored, and hung with rings of brilliants, playing upon wind instruments and kettle-drums. The standard of the City of Bagdad. The deputation from the citizens of Bagdad. Two hundred mules, with caparisons of satin, embroi- dered with gold, and adorned with small golden bells. These bore the sumptuous wardrobe, presented by the city to their princess. Each mule was attended by a girl, m2 164 ALROY. (Tressed like a Peri, ■with starry wiugs, and a man, masked us a hideous Dive. The standard of Egypt. The deputation from the Hebrews of Egypt, mounted on dromedaries, with silver furniture. Fifty slaves, bearing their present to the princess, with golden cords, a mighty bath of jasper, beatifally carved, the sarcophagus of some ancient temple, and purchased for an immense sum. The standard of Syria. The deputation from the Hebrews of the Holy Land, headed by Rabbi Zimi'i himself, each carrying in his hand his offering to the nuptial pair, a precious vase, containing earth from the Morint of Sion. The standard of Hamadan. The deputation from the citizens of Hamadan, headed by the venerable Bostenay himself, whose sumptuous charger was led by Caleb. The present of the city of Hamadan to David Alroy, offered at his own suggestion ; the cup in which the Prince of the Captivity carried his tribute, now borne full of sand. Fifty choice steeds, sumptuously caparisoned, each led by a Median or Persian groom. The household of Abner and Miriam, in number twelve hundred, clad in chain armour of ivory and gold. The standard of the Medes and Persians. Two white elephants, with golden litters, bearing the Viceroy and his Princess. The offering of Abner to Alroy ; twelve elephants of state, with furniture embroidered with jewels, each tended by an Indian clad in chain armour of ivory and gold. The offering of Miriam to Schirene ; fifty plants of roses from Rocnabad ; ^' a white shawl of Cashmere fifty feet in length, which folded into the handle of a fan ; fifty screens, each made of a feather of the roc ; ^^ and fifty vases of crystal full of exquisite perfumes, and each sealed with a tahsman of precious stones. After these followed the eunuch guard. ALEOY. 165 Then came the baud of the sei'ail, coBsisting of three hundred d-^^arfs, hideous indeed to behold, but the most complete musicians in the world. The steeds of Solomon, in number one hundred, each with a natural star upon its front, uncapai-isoned, and led only by a bridle of diamonds. The household of Alroy and Schirene. Foremost, the Lord Honain riding upon a chestnut charger, shod with silver ; the dress of the rider, pink with silver stars. From his rosy turban depended a tremulous aigrette of brilliants,'^* blazing with a thousand shifting tints. Two hundred pages followed him ; and then servants of both sexes, gorgeously habited, amounting to nearly two thousand, carrying rich vases, magnificent caskets, and costly robes. The treasurer and two hundred of his under- lings came next, showering golden dirhems on all sides. The sceptre of Solomon borne by Asriel himself. A magnificent and lofty car, formed of blue enamel with golden wheels, and axletrees of turquoises and brilliants, and drawn by twelve snow-white and saci'ed horses, four abreast ; in the car Alroy and Schirene. Five thousand of the sacred guard closed the procession. Amid the exclamations of the people, this gorgeous pro- cession crossed the j)lain, and moved around the mighty circus. The conqueror and his bride ascended their throne ; its steps were covered by the youths and maidens. On the throne upon their right sat the venerable Bostenay ; on the left, the gallant Viceroy and his Princess. The chai'- taks on each side Avere crowded with the court. The deputations made their offerings, the chiefs and captains paid their homage, the trades of the city moved before the throne in order, and exhibited their various in- genuity. Thrice was the proclamation made, amid the sound of trumpets, and then began the games. A thousand horsemen dashed into the arena and threw the jerreed. They galloped at full speed ; they arrested their fiery charges in mid course, and flung their long javelins at the minute but sparkling tai-get, the imitativQ 166 • ALROY. form of a rare and brilliant bird. The conquerors received their prizes from the hand of the princess herself, bright shawls, and jewelled daggers, and rosaries of gems. Some- times the trumpets announced a prize from the vice-queen, sometimes from the venerable Bostenay, sometimes from the victorious generals, or the loyal deputations, sometimes from the united trades, sometimes from the city of Bagdad, sometimes from the city of Hamadan. The hours flew away in gorgeous and ceaseless Tariety. ' I would we were alone, my own Scliirene,' said Alroy to his bride. ' I would so too ; and yet I love to see all Asia prostrate at the feet of Aboy.' ' Will the sun never set ? Give me thy hand to play with.' ' Hush ! See Miriam smiles.' ' Lovest thou my sister, my own Schirene ? ' ' None dearer but thyself.' * Talk not of my sister, but ourselves. Thinkest thou the sun is nearer setting, love ? ' ' I cannot see ; thine eyes they dazzle nie, they arc so brilliant, sweet ! ' *0 ! my soul, I could pour out my passion on thy breast.' ' Thou art very serious.' ' Love is ever so.' ' ISTay, sweet ! It makes me wild and fanciful. Now I could do such things, but what I Icnow not. I would we had wings, and then we would fly away.' 'See, I m.ust salute this victor in the games. Mnst I unloose thy hand! Dear hand, farewell! Think of me while I speak, my precious life. 'Tis done. Give back thy hand, or else methinks I shall die. What's this ? ' A horseman, in no holiday dress, but covered with dust, noshed into the circus, bearing in his hand a tall lance, on which was fixed a scroll. The marshals of the games endeavoured to prevent his advance, but he would not be stayed. His message was to the king alone. A rumour of news from the army circulated throughout the crowd. And ALEOY. 167 news from the army it was. Another yictory! Scherirah had defeated the Sultan of Ronm, who was now a suppHant for peace and alliance. Sooth to say, the intelligence had arrived at dawn of day, but the courtly Honain had con- trived that it should bo communicated at a later and more effective moment. There scarcely needed this additional excitement to this glorious day. But the people cheered, the golden dirhems were scattered with renewed profusion, and the intelligence was received by all parties as a solemn ratification by Jehovah, or by Allah, of the morning ceremony. The sun set, the court rose, and returned in the same pomp to the serail. The twilight died away, a beacon fired on a distant eminence announced the entrance of Alroy and Schirene into the nuptial chamber, and suddenly, as by magic, the mighty city, every mosque, and minaret, and tower, and terrace, and the universal plain, and the num- berless pavilions, and the immense circus, and the vast and winding river, blazed with light. From every spot a lamp, a torch, a lantern, tinted with every hue, burst forth ; enor- mous cressets of silver radiancy beamed on the top of each chartak, and huge bonfires of ruddy flame started up along the whole horizon. For seven days and seven nights this unparalleled scene of rejoicing, though ever various, never ceased. Long, long was remembered the bridal feast of the Hebrew prince and the caliph's daughter ; long, long did the peasantry on the plains of Tigris sit down by the side of that starry river, and tell the wondrous tale to their marvelling posterity. Now what a glorious man was David Alroy, lord of the mightiest empire in the world, and wedded to the most beautiful princess, surrounded by a prosperous and obe- dient people, guarded by invincible armies, one on whom Earth showered all its fortune, and Heaven all its favour; and all by the power of his own genius! 168 PART IX. CHAPTER I. 'TwAS midnight, and the storm still raged ; 'mid the roar of the thunder and the shrieks of the "wind, the floods of forlcy lightning each instant revealed the broad and billowy breast of the troubled Tigris. Jabaster stood gazing upon the wild scene from the gal- lery of his palace. His countenance was solemn, but dis- quieted. ' I would that he were here ! ' exclaimed the high priest. ' Yet why should I desire his presence, who heralds only gloom 1 Yet ill his absence am I gay ? I am nothing. This Bagdad weighs upon me like a cloak of lead : my spirit is dull and broken.' ' They say Alroy gives a grand banquet in the serail to- night, and toasts his harlot 'mid the thunderbolts. Is there no hand to write upon the wall 1 He is found want- ing, he is weighed, and is indeed found wanting. The parting of his kingdom soon will come, and then, I could weep, oh ! I could weep, and down these stern and sel- dom yielding cheeks pour the wild anguish of my des- perate woe. So young, so great, so favoured! But one more step a God, and now a foul Belshazzar ! ' Was it for this his gentle youth was passed in musing solitude and mystic studies? Was it for this the holy messenger summoned his most religious spirit ? Was it for this he crossed the fiery desert, and communed with his fathers in their tombs? Is this the end of all his vic- tories and all his vast achievements ? To banquet Avith a wanton ! * A year ago, this very night, it Avas the eve of battle, I ALROY. 1G9 stood within his tent to -wait his final word. He mused awhile, and then he said, " Good night, Jabaster !" I believed myself the nearest to his heart, as he has ever been nearest to mine, but that's all over. He never says, " Good night, Jabas- ter," now. Why, what's all this ? Methinks I am a child. ' The Lord's anointed is a prisoner now in the light gi-at- ing of a bright kiosk, and never gazes on the world he con- quered. Egypt and Syi'ia, even farthest Ind, send forth their messengers to greet Alroy, the great, the proud, the invincible. And where is he ? In a soft Pai^dise of girls and eunuchs, crowned with flowers, listening to melting lays, and the wild trilling of the amorous lute. He spares no hours to council ; all is left to his prime favourites, of whom the leader is that juggling fiend I sometime called my brother. ' Why rest I here ? Wliither should I fly ? Methinks my presence is still a link to decency. Should I tear ofi" the ephod, I scarcely fancy 'twould blaze upon another's breast. He goes not to the sacrifice ; they say he keeps no fast, ob- serves no ritual, and that their festive fantasies will not b3 balked, even by the Sabbath. I have not seen him thrice since the marriage. Honain has told her I did oppose it, and she bears to me a hatred that only women feel. Our strong passions break into a thousand purposes : women have one. Their love is dangerous, but their hate is fatal. ' See ! a boat bounding on the waters. On such a night, but one would dare to venture.' Now visible, now in darkness, a single lantern at the prow, Jabaster watched with some anxiety the slight bark bufi'eting the waves. A flash of lightning illumined the whole river, and tipped with a spectral light even the dis- tant piles of building. The boat and the toiling figure of the single rower were distinctly perceptible. Now all again was darkness ; the wind suddenly subsided ; in a few minutes the plash of the oars was audible, and the boat apparently stopped beneath the palace. There was a knocking at the private portal. * Who knocks r' enquired Jabaster. 170 ALROY. ' A friend to Israel.' ' Abidan, by his voice. Art thou alone ?' * The prophetess is with me ; only she.' 'A moment. I'll open the gate. Draw the boat within the arch.' ' Jabaster descended from the gallery, and in a few mo- ments returned with two visitors : the youthful prophetess Esther, and her companion, a man short in stature, but with a powerful and well-knit frame. His countenance was me- lancholj^ and, with harshness in the lower part, not with- out a degree of pensive beauty in the broad clear brow and sunken eyes, unusual in Oriental visages. 'A rough night,' said Jabaster. ' To those who fear it,' replied Abidan, ' The sun has brought so little joy to me, I care not for the storm.' ' What news?' ' Woe ! woe ! woe ! ' ' Thy usual note, my sister. Will the day never come when we may change it ?' ' Yv^oe ! woe ! woe ! unutterable woe !' ' Abidan, how fares it ?' ' Very well.' 'Indeed!' ' As it may turn out.' ' You are brief.' ' Bitter.' ' Have you been to court, that you have learnt to be so wary in your words, my friend ?' . ' I know not what may happen. In time we may all be- come courtiers, though I fear, Jabaster, we have done too much to be rewarded. I gave him my blood, and you some- thing more, and now we are at Bagdad. 'Tis a fine city. I wish to Heaven the shower of Sodom would rain upon its terraces.' ' I know thou hast something terrible to tell. I know it by that gloomy brow of thine, that lowers like tlie tempest. Speak out, man, I can bear the worst, for which I am pre- pared.' ALROY. 171 ' Take it, then. Alroy has proclaimed himself Caliph. Ahner is m.ade Saltan of Persia ; Asriel, Ithamar, Medad, and the chief captains, Yizirs, Honain their chief. Fonr Moslem nobles are sworn into the council. The Princess goes to mosqne in state next Friday ; 'tis said thy pupil doth accompany her.' * I'll not believe it ! By the God of Sinai, I'll not believe it ! Were my own eye the accursed witness of the deed, I'd not believe it. Go to mosque ! They play with thee, my good Abidan, they play with thee.' ' As it may be. 'Tis a rumour, but rumours herald deeds. The rest of my intelligence is true. I had it from my kins- man, stout Zalmunna. He left the banquet.' ' Shall I go to him ? Methinks one single word, To mosque! only a rumour and a false one. I'll never believe it ; no, no, no, never, never ! Is he not the Lord's anointed? The ineffable curse upon this daughter of the Moabite ! ISTo marvel that it thunders ! By heavens, I'll go and beard him in his orgies ! ' ' You know your power better than Abidan. You bearded him before his marriage, yet ' ' He married. 'Tis true. Honain, their chief. And I kept his ring ! Honain is my brother. Have I ne'er a dagger to cut the bond of brotherhood ?' ' We have all daggers, Jabaster, if we knew but how to use them.' ' 'Tis strange, we inet after twenty years of severance. You were not in the chamber, Abidan. 'Twas at council. We met after twenty years of severance. He is my brother. 'Tis strange, I say: I felt that man shrink from my em- brace.' ' Honain is a philosopher, and believes in sympathy. 'Twould appear there was none between you. His system, then, absolves you from all ties.' 'You are sure the rest of the intelligence is true ? I'll not believe the mosque, the rest is bad enough,' ' Zalmunna left the banquet. Hassan Subah's brother sat above him.' 172 ALKUV. ' Subah's brother ! 'Tis all over, then. Is he of tho couucil ?' ' Ay, and others.' * Where now is Israel P' ' She should be in her tents.' * Woe ! woe ! unutterable woe ! ' exclaimed the prophetess, who, standing motionless at the back of the chamber, seemed inattentive to their conversation. ' Jabaster paced the gallery with agitated steps. Sud- denly he stopped, and, walking up to Abidan, seized his arm, and looked him sternly in the face. ' I know thy thoughts, Abidan,' exclaimed the priest ; ' but it cannot be. I have dismissed, henceforth and for ever I have dismissed all feeling from my mind ; now I have no brother, no friend, no pupil, and, I fear, no Saviour. Israel is all in all to me. I have no other life. 'Tis not compunction, then, that stays my arm. My heart's as hard as thine.' 'Why stays it, then r' ' Because with him we fall. He is the last of all his sacred line. There is no other hand to grasp our sceptre.' ' Oiir sceptre ! what sceptre ?' ' The sceptre of our kings.' ' Kings ! ' 'Ay, why dost thou look so dark ?' ' How looked the prophet when the stiff-necked populace forsooth must have a king ! Did he smile ? Did he shout, and clap his hands, and cry, God save his Majesty ! O, Ja- baster ! honoured, rare Jabaster ! thou second Samuel of our lightheaded people ! there was a time Avhen Israel had no king except their God. Were we viler then ? Did kings conquer Canaan ? Who was Moses, who was Aaron, who was mighty Joshua ? Was the sword of Gideon a kingly sword ? Did the locks of Samson shade royal tem- ples r Would a king have kept his awful covenant like solemn Jephtha ? Roj'al words are light as air, when, to maintain them, you injure any other than a subject. ' Kings ! why what's a king ? Why should one man break the equal sanctity of our chosen race ? Is their blood purer ALROY. 1 73 tban onr own ? We are all the seed of Abraliam. Who was Saul, aud who was David ? I never heard that they were ft different breed from our fathers. Grant them devout, which they were not ; and brave and wise, which other men were ; have their posterity a patent for all virtues ? No, Jabaster ! thou ne'er didst err, but when thou placedst a crown upon this haughty stripling. What he did, a thou- sand might have done. 'T^vas thy mind inspired the deed. And now he is a king ; and now Jabaster, the very soul of Israel, who should be our Judge aud leader, Jabaster trem- bles in disgrace, while our unhallowed Sanhedrim is filled with Ammonites ! ' ' Abidan, thou hast touched me to the quick ; thou hast stirred up thoughts that ever and anon, like strong and fatal vapours, have risen from the dark abyss of thought, and I have quelled them.' ' Let them rise, I say ; let them drown the beams of that all-scorching sun we suffer undei*, that drinks all vegetation up, and makes us languish with a dull ex- haustion !' ' Joy ! joy ! unutterable joy !' ' Hark ! the prophetess has changed her note ; and yet she hears us not. The spirit of the Lord is truly with her. Come, Jabaster, I see thy heart is opening to thy people's sufferings ; thy people, my Jabaster, for art not thou our Judge ? at least, thou shalt be.' ' Can we call back the Theocracy ? Is't possible ?' * But say the Avord, and it is done, Jabaster. Nay, stare not. Dost thou think there are no true hearts in Israel ? Dost thou suppose thy children have beheld, without a thought, the foul insults poured on thee ; thee, their priest, their adored high priest, one who recalls the best days of the past, the days of their great Judges ? But one word, one single movement of that mitred head, and But I speak unto a mind that feels more than I can express. Be silent, tongue, thou art a babbling counsellor. Jabaster's patriot soul needs not the idle schooling of a child. If he be silent, 'tis that liis wisdom deems that the hour is not 174 • ALROY. ripe ; but, when lier leader speaks, Israel will not he slack.' ' The Moslemin in council ! We know what must come next. Our national existence is in its last agony. Me- thinks the time is very ripe, Abidan.' ' Why, so we think, great sir ; and say the word, and twenty thousand spears will guard the Ark. I'll answer for my men. Stout Scherirah looks grimly on the Moabites. A word from thee, and the whole Syrian army will join our banner, the Lion of Judah, that shall be our fiag. The tjTant and his satraps, let them die, and then the rest must join us. We'll proclaim the covenant, and, leaving Babylon to a bloody fate, march on to Sion !' ' Sion, his youthful dream, Sion !' 'You muse !' ' King or no king, he is the Lord's anointed. Shall this hand, that poured the oil on his hallowed head, wash out the balmy signet with his blood ? Must 1 slay him ? Shall this kid be seethed even in its mother's milk ?' ' His voice is low, and yet his face is troubled. How now, sir ?' ' What art thou ? Ah ! Abidan, trusty, stanch Abidan ! You see, Abidan, I was thinking, my good Abidan, all this may be the frenzy of a revel. To-morrow's dawn may summon cooler counsels. The tattle of the table, it is sacred. Let us forget it ; let us pass it over. The Lord may turn his heart. Who knows, who knows, Abidan !' 'Noble sir, a moment since your mind was like your faith, firm and resolved, and now ' ' School me not, school me not, good Abidan. There is that within my mind you cannot fathom ; some secret sor- rows which are all my own. Leave me, good friend, leave mo awhile. When Israel calls mo I shall not be Avanting. Be sure of that, Abidan, be sure of that. Nay, do not go ; the night is very rough, and the fair prophetess should not again stem the swelling river. I'll to my closet, and will soon return.* Jabaster quitted the gallery, and entered a small apart- ALROY. 175 ment. Several large volumes, unclasped and open, were lying on various parts of the divan. Before tliem stood his brazen cabaHstic table. He closed the chamber with a cautious air. He advanced into the centre of the apart- ment. He lifted up his hands to heaven, and clasped them with an expression almost of agony. ' Is it come to this ?' he muttered in a tone of deep op- pression. ' Is it come to this ? What is't I have heard ? what done ? Down, tempting devil, down ! life ! glory ! my country, my chosen people, and my sacred creed I why do we live, why act ? Why have we feelino- for aught that's famous, or for aught that's holy ? Let me die ! let, let me die ! The torture of existence is too great.' He flung liimself upon the couch ; he buried his awful countenance in his robes. His mighty heart was convulsed with passion. There did he lie, that great and solemn man, prostrate and woe-begone. CHAPTER II. * The noisy banquet lingers in my ear ; I love to be alone.' 'With me?' ' Thou art myself ; I have no other life.' ' Sweet bird ! It is now a caliph.' ' I am what thou wiliest, soul of my sweet existence ! Pomp and dominion, fame and victory, seem now but flawed and dimly-shaded gems compared with thy bright smile !' ' My plaintive nightingale, shall we hunt to-day ?' ' Alas I my rose, I would rather lie upon this lazy couch, and gaze upon thy beauty 1' ' Or sail upon the cool and azure lake, in some bright barque, like to a sea-nymph's shell, and followed by the swans ?' ' There is no lake so blue as thy deep eye ; there is no swan so white as thy round arm !' ' Or shall we launch our falcons in the air, and bring tho golden pheasant to our feet ?' 17C ALROY. ' I am tlie golden pheasant at thy feet ; why wouldst thou lichcr prey ?' ' Rememberest thou thy eai'Hest visit to this dear kiosk, my gentle mute ? There thou stoodst with folded arms and looks demure as day, and ever and anon with those dark eyes stealing a glance which made my cheek quite pale. Methinks I see thee even yet, shy bird. Dost know, I was so foolish when it quitted me, dost know I cried ?' 'Ah, no ! thou didst not cry r' 'Indeed, I think I did.' * Tell me again, my own Schirene, indeed didst cry r' ' Indeed I did, my soul !' ' I would those tears were in some crystal vase, I'd give a province for the costly urn.' She threw her arms around his neck and covered his face with kisses. Sunset sounded from the minarets. They arose and wan- dered together in the surrounding paradise. The sky was tinted with a pale violet flush, a single star floating by the side of the white moon, that beamed with a dim lustre, soft and shapely as a pearl. ' Beautiful !' exclaimed the pensive Schirene, as she gazed upon the star. 0, my Alroy, why cannot we ever live alone, and ever in a Paradise ?' ' I am wearied of empire,' replied Alroy with a smile, 'let us fly!' ' Is there no island, with all that can make life charming, and yet impervious to man ? How little do we require ! Ah ! if these gardens, instead of being surrounded by hate- ful Bagdad, were only encompassed by some beautiful ocean! ' ' My heart, we live in a paradise, and are seldom dis- turbed, thanks to Honain !' 'But the very consciousness that there are any other per- sons existing besides ourselves is to me painful. Everyone who even thinks of you seems to rob me of a part of your being. Besides, I am weary of pomp and palaces. I should like to live in a sparry grot, and sleep upon a couch of Eiwcet leaves !* ALKOi'. i 7 7 This interesting discnssiou was disturbed by a dwarf, who, in addition to being very small and very ugly, was dumb. He bowed before the Princess, and then had re- course to a great deal of pantomimic action, by which she discovered that it Avas dinner-time. No other person could have ventured to disturb the royal pair, but this little being- was a privileged favourite. So Alroy and Schirene entered the Serail. An immense cresset-lamp, fed with perfumed oil, threw a soft light round the sumptuous chamber. At the end stood a row of eunuchs in scarlet dresses, and each holding a tall silver staff. The Caliph and the Sultana threw themselves upon a couch covered with a hundred cushions ; on one side stood a groiip consisting of the captain of the guard and other officers of the household, on the other, of beautiful female slaves magnificently attired. The line of domestics at the end of the apartment opened, and a body of slaves advanced, carrying trays of ivory and gold, and ebony and silver, covered with the choicest dainties, curiously prepared. These were in turn offered to the Caliph and the Sultana by their surrounding attendants. The Princess accepted a spoon made of a single pearl, the long, thin golden handle of which was studded with rubies, and condescended to partake of some saffron soup, of which she was fond. Afterwards she regaled her- self with the breast of a cygnet, stuffed with almonds, and stewed with violets and cream. Having now a Httle satis- fied her appetite, and wishing to sIioav a mark of her favour to a particular individual, she ordered the captain of the guard instantly to send him the whole of the next course ""* with her compliments. Her attention was then engaged with a dish of those delicate ortolans that feed upon the vine-leaves of Schiraz, and with which the Governor of Nishabur took especial care that she should be well provided. Tearing the delicate birds to pieces with her still more deli- cate fingers, she insisted upon feeding Alroy, who of course yielded to her solicitations. In the meantime, they re- freshed themselves with their favourite sherbet of pome* ITS ALROY. grauates, and the golden wine ol" Mount Lebanon."^ The Cahph, who could eat no more ortolans, although fed by sucli delicate lingers, was at length obliged to call for ' rice,' which was synonymous to commanding the banquet to disappear. The attendants now brought to each basins of gold, and ewers of rock crystal filled with rose water, with tov/els of that rare Egyptian linen which can be made only of the cotton that grows upon the banks of the Nile. While they amused themselves with eating sugar-plums, and drinking coffee flavoured with cinnamon, the female slaves danced before them in the most graceful attitudes to the melody of invisible musicians. ' My enchanting Schirene,' said the Caliph, ' I have dined, thanks to your attention, very well. These slaves of yours dance admirably, and are exceedingly beautiful. Your music, too, is beyond all praise ; but, for my own part, I would rather be quite alone, and listening to one of your songs.' 'I have written a new one to-day. You shall hear it.' So saying, she clapped her little white hands, and all the attendants immediately withdrew. CHAPTER III. ' The stars are stealing forth, and so will I. Sorry sight ! to view Jabaster, with a stealthy step, skulk like a thing dishonoured ! Oh ! may the purpose consecrate the deed ! the die is cast.' So sapng, the High Pi-iest, muffled up in his robe, emerged from liis palace into the busy streets. It is at night that the vitality of Oriental life is most impressive. The narrow winding streets, crowded with a population breathing the now sufferable air, the illuminated coffee- houses, the groups of gay yet sober revellers, the music, and the dancing, and the animated recitals of the poet and the storier, all combine to invest the starry hours -with a ALKOY. 179 beguiling aud even fascinating cliaracter of eajoyment and adventni'e. It was the niglit after the visit of Abidan and the pro- phetess, Jabaster had agreed to meet Abidan in the square of the great mosque two hours after sunset, and thither he now repaii'ed. ' I am somewhat before my time,' he said, as he entered the great square, over which the rising moon threw a fall flood of Ho'ht. A few dark shadows of human beino-s alone moved in the distance. The world was in the streets and coffee-houses. ' I am somewhat before mj time,' said Ja- baster. ' Conspirators are watchful. I am anxious for the meeting, and 3'et I dread it. Since he broke this business, I have never slept. My mind is a chaos. I v/ill not think. If 'tis to be done, let it be done at once. I am more tempted to sheathe this dagger in Jabaster's breast than in Alroy's. If life or empii-e were the paltry stake, I would end a life that now can bring no joy, and yield authority tjiat hath no charm ; but Israel, Israel, thou for whom I have endured so much, let me forget Jabaster had a mother ! ' But for this thought that links me with my God, and leads my temper to a higher state, how vain and sad, how v/earisome and void, were this said world they think of! Bub for this thought, I could sit down and die. Yea ! my great heart could crack, worn out, Avorn out ; my mighty passions, with their fierce but flickering flame, sink down and die ; and the strong brain that ever hath urged my course, and pricked me onward with perpetual thought, desert the rudder it so long hath held, like some baflied pilot in blank discomforture, in the far centre of an un- known sea. ' Study and toil, anxiety and sorrow, mighty action, per- chance Time, and disappointment, which is worse than all, have done their work, and not in vain. I am no locger tlie same Jabaster that gazed upon the stars of Caucasus. Me- thinks even they look dimmer than of yore. The gloiy >f rav life is fading. Mv leaves arc sear, tinged, but not 180 .LLKOY. tainted. I am still the same in one respect ; I Lave not left my God, in deed or thouglit. Ah ! who art thou ? ' ' A friend to Israel.' ' I am glad that Israel hath a friend. Noble Abidan, I have Avell considered all that hath jmssed between us. Sooth to say, you touched upon a string I've played before, but kept it for my loneliness ; a jarring tune, indeed a jar- ring tune, but so it is, and being so, let me at once unto your friends, Abidan.' ' Noble Jabaster, thou art what I deemed thee.' ' Abidan, they say the consciousness of doing justly is the best basis of a happy mind.' ' Even so.' ' And thou believest it ? ' 'Without doubt.' ' We are doing very justly ? ' ' 'Tis a weak w^ord for such a holy purpose.' ' I am most wretched ! ' CHAPTER IV. The High Priest and his companion entered the house of Abidan. Jabaster addressed the already assembled guests. ' Brave Scherirah, it joys me to find thee here. In Israel's cause when was Scherirali wanting ? Stout Zalmunna, we have not seen enough of each other : the blame is mine. Gentle prophetess, thy blessing ! ' Good friends, why we meet here is knoAvn to all. Little did we dream of such a meeting when we crossed the Tigris. But that is nothing. We come to act, and not to argue. Our great minds, they are resolved : our solemn purpose I'cquires no demonstration. If there be one among us who would have Israel a slave to Ishmael, who Avould lose all Ave have prayed for, all we have fought for, all avo have Avon, and all for Avhich avc are prepai'cd to die, if there be one among us who Avould haA'C the ark polluted, and Jehovah's altar stained with a Gentile sacrifice, if there be one among ALROY. iNl US ■who does not sigli for Sion, wlio woulcl not yield lug bi'catli to build the Temple and gain the heritage his fathers lost, why, let him go ! There is none such among vis : then stay, and free your countiy ! ' ' We are prepared, great Jabaster ; we are prepared, all, all!' ' I know it ; you are like myself. Necessity hath taught decision. Now for our plans. Speak, Zahnunna.' ' Noble Jabaster, I see much difficulty. Alroy no longer quits his palace. Our entrance unwatched is, you well know, impossible. What say you, Scherirah ? ' ' I doubt not of my men, but war against Alroy is, to say nought of danger, of doubtful issue.' 'I am prepared to die, but not to fail,' said Abidan. ' We must be certain. Open war I fear. The mass of the army will side with their leaders, and they are with the tyrant. Let us do the deed, and they must joiu us.' ' Is it impossible to gain his jDresence to some sacrifice in honour of some by-gone victory ; what think ye ? ' ' I doubt much, Jabaster. At this moment he little wishes to sanction our national ceremonies with his royal person. The Avoman assuredly will stay him. And, even if he come, success is difficult, and therefore doubtful.' 'Noble warriors, list to a woman's voice,' exclaimed the prophetess, coming forward. ' 'Tis weak, but with such instruments, even the aspirations of a child, the Lord will commune with his chosen people. There is a secret way by which I can gain the gardens of the palace. To-morrow night, just as the moon is in her midnight bower, behold the accursed pile shall blaze. Let Abidan's troop be all prepared, and at the moment when the flames first ascend, march to the Seraglio gate as if with aid. The aff"righted guard will ofier no opposition. While the troops secure the portals, you yourselves, Zalmuima, Abidan, and Jabas- ter, rush to the royal chamber and do the deed. In the pieantime, let brave Scherirah, with his whole division, surround the palace, as if unconscious of the mighty work. Then come you forward, show, if it need, with 182 ALROY. tear?, the fated body to the soldiery, and announce the Theocracy.' ' It is the Loi'd who speaks,' said Abidan, who was doubtless prepared for the proposition. ' He has delivered them into our hands.' ' A bold plan,' said Jabaster, musing, ' and yet I like it, 'Tis quick, and that is something. I think 'tis sure.' ' It cannot fail,' exclaimed Zalmtinna, ' for if the flame ascend not, still we are but wlicre we were.' ' I am for it,' said Scheriraii. 'Well, then,' said Jabaster, 'so let it be. To-morrow's eve will see us here again prepared. Good night.' ' Good night, holy Priest. Hovr seem the stars, Jabaster ? ' ' "Very troubled ; so have they been some days. What they portend I know not,' ' Health to Israel.' 'Let us hope so. Good night, sweet friends.' ' Good night, holy Jabaster. Thou art our corner-stone,' ' Israel hath no other hope but in Jabaster.' ' My Lord,' said Abidan, ' remain, I pray, one moment,' ' What is't ? I fain would go,' ' Alroy must die, my Lord, but dost thou think a single death will seal the covenant?' 'The woman?' ' Ay ! the woman ! I was not thinking of the woman. Asrael, Ithamar, Medad?' 'Valiant soldiers ! doubt not we shall find them useful instruments. I do not fear such loose companions. They follow their leaders, like other things born to obey. Having no head themselves, they must follow us who have.' ' I think so too. There is no other man who might be dangerous ? ' Zalmunna and Scherirah cast their eyes upon the ground. There was a dead silence, broken by the prophetess. 'A judgment hath gone forth against Honain ! ' 'Nay! he is Lord Jabaster's brother,' said Abidan. 'It is enough to save a more inveterate foe to Israel, if such there bo,' ALROY. is; ' I have no brotlier, Sir. The man you speak of I will not slay, since there are others who may do that deed. And so again, good night.' CHAPTER Y. It was the dead of night, a single lamp burned in the cham- ber, which opened into an arched gallery that descended by a flight of steps into the gardens of the Serail. A female figure ascended the flight with slow and cautious steps. She paused on the gallery, she looked around, one foot was in the chamber. She entered. She entered a chamber of small dimensions, but richly adorned. In the farthest corner was a couch of ivory, hung with a gauzy curtain of silver tissue, which, without impeding respiration, protected the slumberer from the fell insects of an Oriental night. Leaning against an ottoman was a large brazen shield of ancient fashion, and near it some helmets and curious weapons. ' An irresistible impulse hath carried me into this cham- ber ! ' exclaimed the prophetess. ' The light haunted me like a spectre ; and wheresoever I moved, it seemed to summon mc. ' A couch and a slumberer ! ' She approached the object, she softly withdrew the cur- tain. Pale and jDanting, she rushed back, yet with a light step. She beheld Alroy ! Por a moment she leant against the wall, overpowered by her emotions. Again she advanced, and gazed on her unconscious victim. 'Can the giiilty sleep like the innocent? Wlio would deem this gentle slumberer had betrayed the highest trust that ever Heaven vouchsafed to favoured man ? He looks not like a tyrant and a traitor : calm his brow, and mild his placid breath ! His long dark hair, dark as the raven's wing, hath bi'oken from its fillet, and courses, like a wild 184 ALKOY. and stormy night, over his pale and moon-lit brow. His check is delicate, and jct repose hath brought a flush ; and on liis lip there seems some word of love, that will not quit it. It is the same Alroy that blessed our vision when, like the fresh and glittering star of morn, he rose tip in the desert, and bringing joy to others, brought to me only ' Oh ! hush my heart, and let thy secret lie hid in tlie charnel-house of crushed affections. Hard is the lot of %voman : to love and to conceal is our sharp doom ! bitter life ! most unnatural lot ! Man made society, and made xis slaves. And so we droop and die, or else take refuge in idle fantasies, to which we bring the fervour that is meant for nobler ends. ' Beauteous hero ! whether I bear thee most hatred or most love I cannot tell. Die thou must ; yet I feel I should die with thee. Oh ! that to-night could lead at the same time unto our marriage bed and funeral pyre. Must that white bosom bleed? and must those delicate limbs be hacked and handled by these bloody butchers ? Is that justice ? They lie, the traitors, when they call thee false to our God. Thou art thyself a god, and I could worship thee ! See those beauteous lips ; they move. Hark to the music ! ' ' Schirene, Schirene ! ' 'There wanted but that word to summon back my senses. Fool ! whither is thy fancy wandering ? I will not ■wait for tardy justice. I will do the deed mj^self. Shall I not kill my Sisera ? ' She seized a dagger from the ottoman, a rare and highly-tempered blade. Up she raised it in the air, and dashed it to his heart -with superhuman force. It struck against the talisman which Jabaster had given to Alroy, and which, from a lingering superstition, he still wore ; it struck, and shivered into a thousand pieces. The Caliph sprang from his couch ; his eyes met the prophetess, standing over him in black despair, with the hilt of the dagger in her hand. ' What is all this ? Schirene ! Who art thou ? Esther ! ' He jumped from the couch, called to Phai'ez, and seized her ALROY, 185 by both hands, * Speak ! ' he continued. 'Ai't thou Esther ? What dost thou here ? ' She broke into a wild laugh ; she wrestled with his grasp, and pulled him towards the gallery. He beheld the chief tower of the Serail in flames. Joining her hands together, grasping them both in one of his, and dragging her towards the ottoman, he seized a helmet and flung it upon the mighty shield. It sounded like a gong. Pharez started from his slumbers, and rushed into the chamber, ' Phai'ez ! Treason ! treason ! Send instant orders that the j)alace gates be opened on no pretence whatever. Go, fly ! See the captain himself. Summon the household. Order all to arms. Speed, for our lives !' The whole palace was now roused. Alroy delivered Esther, exhausted, and apparently senseless, to a guard of eunuchs. Slaves and attendants poured in from all direc- tions. Soon arrived Schirene, with dishevelled hair and hurried robes, attended by a hundred maidens, each bearing a torch. ' My soul, what ails thee ? ' 'Nothing, sweetest; all will soon be well,' replied Alroy, picking up, and examining the fragments of the shivered dagger, which he had just discovered. ' My life has been attempted ; the palace is in flames ; I suspect the city is in insurrection. Look to your mistress, maidens ! ' Schirene fell into their arms, ' I will soon be back,' So saying, he hurried to the grand court. Several thousand persons, for the population of tLe Serail and its liberties was very considerable, were assembled in the grand court ; eunuchs, women, pages, slaves, and ser- vants, and a few soldiers ; all in confusion and alarm, fire raging within, and mysterious and terrible outcries without. A cry of 'The Caliph ! the Caliph ! ' announced the arrival of Alroy, and produced a degree of comparative silence. 'Where is the captain of the guard?' he exclaimed. ' That's well. Open the gates to none. Who will leap the wall, and bear a message to Asriel ? You ? That's well too. To-morrow you shall yourself command, Where's Mesrour ? 186 ALROY. Take the eunucli guard and tlie company of gardeners,"^ and suppi'ess the flames at all cost. Pull down, the intervening buildings. Abidan's troop arrived -with succour, eh ! I doubt it not. I expected them. Open to none. They force an entrance, eh ! I thought so. So that javelin has killed a traitor. Feed me with arms. I'll keep the gate. Send again to Asriel. Where's Pharez ?' ' By your side, my lord.' ' Run to the Queen, my faithful Pharez, and tell her that all's well. I wish it were ! Didst ever hear a din so awful ? j\Iethinks all the tamboui's and cymbals of the city are in full chorus. Foul play, I guess. Oh ! for Asriel ! Has Pharez returned ? ' ' I am by your side, my lord.' ' How's the Queen ? ' ' She would gladly join your side.' ' No, no ! Keep the gates there. Who says they are making fires before them ? 'Tis true. We must sally, if the worst come to the worst, and die at least like soldiers. Asriel ! Asriel ! ' ' May it please your Highness, the troops are pouring in from all quarters.' ' 'Tis Asriel.' ' No, your Highness, 'tis not the guard. Methinks they are Scherirah's men.' ' Hum ! What it all is, I know not : but very foul play, I do not doubt. Where's Honain ? ' ' With the Queen, Sire.' ' 'Tis well. What's that shout ? ' ' Here's the messenger from Asriel. ]\Iake way ! way ! ' Well ! how is't, Sir ? ' ' Please your Highness, I could not reach the guard.' ' Could not reach the guard ! God of my fathers ! who should let thee ? ' ' Sire, I was taken prisoner.' ' Prisoner ! By the thunder of Sinai, are we at war ? Who made thee prisoner ?' ' Sire, they have proclaim.cd thy death.' ALROY. 187 ' The council of tlie Eldei-s. So I lieai'cl. Abidan, Zal- ' Rebels and dogs ! Wbo else ?' ' The High Priest.' ' Hah ! Is it there ? Pharez, fetch me some drink. Is it true Scherirah has joined them ? ' ' His force surrounds the Serail. l!^o aid can reach us without cutting through his ranks.' ' Oh ! that I were there with my good guard ! Are we to die here like rats, fairly murdered? Cowardly knaves! Hold out, hold out, my men ! 'Tis sharp work, but some of us will smile at this hereafter. Wlio stands by Alroy to-night bravely and truly, shall have his heart's content to-morrow. Fear not : I was not born to die in a civic broil. I bear a charmed life. So to it.' CHAPTER YI. * Go to the Caliph, good Honain, I pray thee, go. I can sup- port myself, he needs thy counsel. Bid him not expose his precious Ufe. The wicked men ! Asriel must soon be here. What sayest thou ? ' ' There is no fear. Their plans are ill- devised. I have long expected this stormy night, and feel even now more anxious than alarmed.' ' 'Tis at me they aim ; it is I whom they hate. The High Priest, too ! Ay, ay! Thy proud brother, good Honain, I have ever felt he would not rest until he drove me from this throne, my right ; or washed my hated name from out our annals in my life's blood. Wicked, wicked Jabaster ! He frowned upon me from the first, Honain. Is he indeed thy brother ? ' ' I care not to remember. He aims at something further than thy life ; but Time will toach us more than all our thoughts.' 188 ALROY. CHAPTER VII. TuK fortifications of tlie Serail resisted all the efforts of the rebels. Sclierii-ah remained in his quarters, with his troops under arms, and recalled the small force that he had origi- nally sent out as much to watch the course of events as to assist Abidan. Asriel and Ithamar poured down their columns in the rear of that chieftain, and by dawn a divi- sion of the guard had crossed the river, the care of which had been entrusted to Scherirah, and had thrown themselves into the palace. Alroy sallied forth at the head of these fresh troops. His presence decided a result which was per- haps never douljtful. The division of Abidan fought with the desperation that became their fortunes. The carnage was dreadful, but their discomfiture complete. They no longer acted in m.asses, or with any general system. They thought only of self-preservation, or of selling their lives at the dearest cost. Some dispersed, some escaped. Others entrenched themselves in houses, others fortified the bazaar. All the hoiTors of war in the streets were now experienced. The houses were in flames, the thoroughfares flowed with blood. At the head of a band of fixithful followers, Abidan proved himself, by his courage and resources, worthy of success. At length, he was alone, or surrounded onl}- by his enemies. With his back against a building in a narrow street, Avhere the number of his opponents only embarrassed them, the three foremost of his foes fell before his irresistible scimetar. The barricadoed door yielded to the pressure of the multitude. Abidan rushed up the narrow stairs, and, gaining a landing-place, turned sud- denly round, and cleaved the skull of his nearest pursuer. He hurled the niiglity body at his followers, and, retarding their advance, himself clashed onward, and gained the terrace of the mansion. Three soldiers of the guard fol- lowed him as he bounded from terrace to terrace. One, armed with a javelin, hurled it at the cliieftain. The ALKOY. 189 weapon slightly wounded Abidan, wlio, drawing it from liis arm, sent it back to the heart of its owner. The t^vo other soldiers, armed only with swords, gained npon him. He arrived at the last terrace in the cluster of buildings. He stood at bay on the brink of the precipice. He re- gained his breath. They approached him. He dodged them in their course. Suddenly, with admirable skill, he flung his scimetar edgewise at the legs of his farthest foe, who stopped short, roaring with pain. The chieftain sprang at the foremost, and hurled him doAvn into the street below, where he was dashed to atoms. A trap-door offered itself to the despairing eye of the rebel. He de- scended and found himself in a room filled with women. They screamed, he rushed through them, and descending a staircase, entered a chamber tenanted by a bed-ridden old man. The ancient invalid inquired the cause of the uproar, and died of fright before he could receive an answer, at the sight of the awful being before him, covered with streaming blood. Abidan secured the door, washed his blood-stained face, and disguising himself in the dusty robes of the deceased Armenian, sallied forth to watch the fray. The obscure street Avas silent. The chieftain pro- ceeded unmolested. At the corner he found a soldier holding a charger for his captain. Abidan, unarmed, seized a poniard from the soldier's belt, stabbed him to the heart, and vaulting on the steed, galloped towards the river. No boat was to be found ; he breasted the stream upon the stout courser. He reached the opposite bank. A com- l^any of camels were reposing by the side of a fountain. Alarm had dispersed their drivers. He mounted the fleetest in appearance ; he dashed to the nearest gate of the city. The guard at the gate refused him a passage. He concealed his agitation. A mamage procession, re- turning from the country, arrived. He rushed into the centre of it, and overset the bride in her gilded waggon. In the midst of the confusion, the shrieks, the oaths, and the scuffle, he forced his way through the gate, scoured over the countjpy, and never stopped until he had gained the desert. 190 ALKOY. CHAPTER VIII. The uproar died away. The sliouts of warriors, tlio slirieks of women, the wild clang of warfare, all were silent. The flames were extinguished, the carnage ceased. The insurrection was suppressed, and order restored. The city, all the houses of which were closed, was patrolled by the conquering troops, and by sunset the conqueror him- self, in his hall of state, received the reports and the con- gratulations of his chieftains. The escape of Abidan seemed counterbalanced by the capture of Jabaster. After performing prodigies of valour, the High Priest had been overpowered, and was now a prisoner in the Serail. The conduct of Scherirah was not too curiously criticised ; a commission was appointed to inquire into the mysterious affair, and Alroy retired to the bath"'^ to refresh himself after the fatigues of the victory -which he could not con- sider a triumph. As he reposed upon his couch, melancholy and exhaiisted, Schirene was announced. The Princess threw herself upon his neck and covered him ^vith embraces. His heart yielded to her fondness, his spirit became lighter, his depi'ession melted away. ' My ruby ! ' said Schirene, and she spoke in a low smothered voice, her face hidden and nestled in his breast. ' My ruby ! dost thou love me ? ' He smiled in fondness as he pressed her to his heart. ' My ruby, thy pearl is so frightened, it dai'e not look upon thee. Wicked men ! 'tis I whom they hate, 'tis I whom they would destroy.' ' There is no danger, sweet. 'Tis over now. Speak not, nay, do not think of it.' ' Ah ! wicked men ! There is no joy on earth while such things live. Slay Alroy, their mighty master, who, from vile slaves, hath made them princes ! Ungrateful churls! I am so alarmed, I ne'er shall sleep again. What! slay my innocent bird, my pretty bird, my very heart ! I'll ALBOY. 191 not believe it. It is I wliom they hate. I am sure they Avill kill me. You shall never leave me, no, no, no, no ! You shall not leave me, love, never, never ! Didst hear a noise? Methinks they are even here, ready to plunge their daggers in our hearts, our soft, soft hearts ! I think you love me, child ; indeed, I think you do ! ' ' Take courage, heart ! There is no fear, my soul ; I cannot love thee more, or else I would.' ' All joy is gone ! I ne'er shall sleep again. my suul ! art thou indeed alive ? Do I indeed embrace my own Alroy, or is it all a wild and troubled dream, and are my arms clasped round a shadowy ghost, myself a spectre in a sepul- chre ? Wicked, wicked men ! Can it indeed be true ? What, slay Alroy ! my joy, my only life ! Ah ! woe is me ; our bi'ight felicity hath fled for ever ! ' ' l!^ot so, sweet child ; we are but as we were. A fev/ quick hour's, and all will be as bright as if no storm had crossed our sunny days.' ' Hast seen Asriel? He says such fearful things ! ' ' How now ? ' ' Ah me ! I am desolate. I have no fi-iend.' ' Schirene ! ' ' They will have my blood. I know they will have my blood.' ' Indeed, an idle fancy.' ' Idle ! Ask Asriel, question Ithamar. Idle ! 'tis wiitteu in their tablets, their bloody scroll of rapine and of murder. Thy death led only to mine, and, had they hoped my bhd would but have yielded his gentle mate, they would have spared him. Ay ! ay ! 'tis I whom they hate, 'tis I whom they would destroy. This form, I fear it has lost its lustre, but stiU 'tis thine, and once thou saidst thou lovedst it ; this form was to have been hacked and mangled ; this ivory bosom was to have been ripped up and tortured, and this warm blood, that flows alone for thee, that fell Jabaster was to pour its tide upon the altar of his ancient vengeance. He ever hated me ! ' ' Jabaster ! Schirene ! AYliere are v.'e, and what are 192 ALEOY, we ? Life, life, they lie, that call tliee Nature ! Nature never sent these gusts of agonj. Oli ! my heart will break. I drove him from my thought, and now she calls him up, and now must I remember he is my— prisoner ! God of heaven, God of my fathers, is it come to this ? Why did he not escape ? Why must Abidan, a common cut-throat, save his graceless life, and this great soul, this stern and mighty being Ah me ! I have lived long enough. AVould they had not failed, would ' ' Stop, stop, Alroy ! I pray thee, love, be calm. I came to soothe thee, not to raise thy passions. I did not say Jabaster willed thy death, though Asriel says so ; 'tis me he wars against ; and if indeed Jabaster be a man so near thy heart, if he indeed be one so necessary to thy prosperity, and cannot live in decent order with thy slave that's here, I know my duty, Sir. I would not have thy fortunes marred to save my single heart, although I think 'twill break. I will go, I will die, and deem the hardest accident of life but sheer prosperity if it profit thee.' ' Schirene ! what wouldst thou ? This, this is toi'- ture.' ' To see thee safe and happy ; nothing nioi-e.' ' I am both, if thou art.' ' Cai"e not for me, I am nothing.' ' Thou art all to me.' ' Calm thyself, my soul. It grieves me much that when I came to soothe I have only galled thee. All's well, all's well. Say that Jabaster lives. What then ? He lives, and may he prove more duteous than before ; that's all.' *He lives, ho is my prisoner, he awaits his doom. It must be given.' ' Yes, yes ! ' ' Shall we pardon ? ' ' My lord will do that which it pleases him.' ' Na}', nay, Schirene, I pray thee be inoro kind. J am most wretched. Speak, what wouldst tliouP ' ' If I must speak, I say at once his life.' 'Ah me!' ALEOY. 1 on ' If our past loves liave any charm, if the hope of futuro joy, not less snpreme, be that which binds thee to this shadowy world, as it does me, and does alone, I say his life, his veiy carnal life. He stands between us and our loves, Alroy, and ever has done. There is no happiness if Jabaster breathe ; nor can I be the same Schirene to thee as I have been, if this proud rebel Hve to spy my conduct.' ' Banish him, banish him I ' ' To herd with rebels. Is this thy policy ? ' ' Schirene ! I love not this man, although methinks I should : yet didst thou know but all ! ' ' I know too much, Alroy. From the first he has been to me a hateful tliought. Come, come, sweet bii'd, a boon, a boon unto thy own Schirene, who was so frightened by these wicked men ! I fear it has done more mischief than thou deemest. Ay ! robbed us of our hopes. It may be so. A boon, a boon ! It is not much I ask : a traitor's head. Come, give me thy signet ring. It will not ; nay, then, I'll take it. What, resist ! I know thou oft hast told mc a kiss could vanquish all denial. There it is. Is't sweet? Shalt have another, and another too. I've got the ring! Farewell, my lovely bird, I'll soon j-eturn to pillow in thy nest.' CHAPTER IX. ' SiiK has got the ring ! What's this ? what's this ? Schirene ! art gone ? Nay, surely not. She jests. Jabas- ter ! A traitor's head ! What ho ! there. Pharez, Pliarez ! ' ' My lord.' ' Passed the Queen that way? ' ' She did, my lord.' 'In tears? ' ' Xay ! very joyful ! ' ' Call Honain, quick as my thought. Honaiu ! Ilonaiul 194 ALKOY. He waits witliOTit, I liave seen the best of life, that's very sure. My heart is cracking. She surely jests ! Hah ! Honain. Pardon these distracted looks. Fly to the Ar- moury ! fly, fly ! ' ' For wliat, my lord ? ' ' Ay ! for what, for what ! My brain it wanders. Thy brother, thy great brother, the Queen, the Queen has stolen my signet ring, that is, I gave it her. Fly, fly ! or in a word, Jabaster is no more. He is gone. Pharez ! your arm ; I swoon ! ' CHAPTER X. ' His Highness is sorely indisposed to-day.' ' They say he swooned this morn.' ' Ay, in the bath.' ' No, not in the bath. 'Twas when he heard of Jabaster' s death.' ' How died he, Sir ? ' ' Self-strangled. His mighty heart could not endure disgrace, and thus he ended all his glorious deeds.' ' A great man ! ' ' We shall not soon see his match. The Queen had gained his pardon, and herself flew to the armoury to bear the news ; alas ! too late.' ' These are strange times. Jabaster dead ! ' ' A very great event.' ' Who will be High Priest? ' ' I doubt if the appointment will be filled up. ' ' Sup you with the Lord Ithamar to-night? ' ' I do.' ' I also. We'll go together. The Queen had gained his pardon. Hum ! 'tis strange,' • Passing so. They say Abidan has escaped ? ' * I hear it. Shall we meet Medad to-night? ' "Tis likely.' ALROY. 195 PART X. CHAPTER I. ' She comes not yet ! Ler cheerful form, not yet it sparkles in our mournful sky. She comes not yet ! the shadowy stars seem sad and lustreless without their Queen. She comes not yet ! ' ' We are the watchers of the Moon,'^ and live in lone- liness TO herald light.' ' She comes not yet ! her sacred form, not yet it summons to our holy feast. She comes not yet ! our brethren far wait mute and motionless the saintly beam. She comes not yet ! ' ' We are the watchers op the Moon, and live in lone- liness TO herald light.' ' She comes, she comes ! her beauteous form sails with soft splendour in the gUttering air. She comes, she comes ! The beacons fire, and tell the nation that the month begins ! She comes, she comes ! ' 'We are the watchers op the Moon, to tell the NATION that the MONTH BEGINS.' Instantly the holy watchers fired the beacons on the mountain top, and anon a thousand flames blazed round the land. From Caucasus to Lebanon, on every peak a crown of light. CHAPTER n. ' Sire ! a Tatar has arrived from Hamadan, who will see none but thyself. I have told him your Highness was en- gaged, and sent him to the Lord Honain ; but all denial is o2 I'JO ALROY. lost upon him. And as I thought perhaps tho Lady ]\iii'iam ' 'From Haraadan? You did well, Pharez. Admit him.' The Tatar entered. ' Well, Sir ; good news, I hope ! ' ' Sire, pardon me, the worst. I come from the Lord Abncr, with orders to see the Caliph, and none else.' ' ^\'"ell, Sir, you see the Caliph. Yonr mission ? What of the Viceroy? ' ' Sire, he bade me tell thee, that, the moment the beacon that announced the Feast of the New Moon was tired on Caucasus, the dreaded monarch of Karasme, the gTcat Alp Arslan, entered thy kingdom, and now overruns all Persia.' ' Hah ! and Abner ? ' ' Is in the field, and prays for aid.' ' He shall have it. This is indeed great news ! "Wlieu left you Hamadan? ' 'Night and day I have journeyed upon the swiftest dromedary. The third morn sees me at Bagdad.' ' You have done your duty. See this faithful courier be well tended, Pharez. Summon the Lord Honain.' ' Alp Arslan ! Hah ! a veiy famous warrior. Tho moment the beacon was fired. No sudden impulse then, but long matured. I like it not.' ' Sire,' said Pharez, re-entering, ' a Tatar has arrived from the frontiers of the province, who will see none but thyself. I have told him your Highness was deeply busied, and as methinks he brings but the same news, I " ' 'Tis very likely; yet never tliinlc, good Pharez. I'll see the man.' The Tatar entered. ' Well, Sir, how now ! from whom ? ' ' From ]\Iozul. The Governor bade me see the Cahph and none else, and tell your Highness, that the moment the beacon that announced the Feast of the New Moon was fired on the mountains, the fell rebel Abidan raised tho standard of Judah in the province, and proclaimed war against your Majesty.' AirxOY. 197 * 111 any force ? ' ' The royal power keeps withiu their walls.' ' Sufficient answer. Part of the same movement. "NYe shall have some trouble. Hast summoned Honain 't ' ' I have, Sir.' * Go, see this messenger be duly served, and, Pharez, come hither : let none converse Avith them. You under- stand ? ' ' Your Highness may assure yourself ' Abidan come to life. He shall not escape so well this time. I must see Scherirah. I much susj^ect Avhat's this? More news ! ' A third Tatar entered. ' May it please your Highness, this Tatar has arrived from the Syrian frontier,' ' Mischief in the wind, I doubt not. Speak out, knave ! ' ' Sire ! pardon me ; I bear but sad intelligence,' ' Out with the worst ! ' ' I come from the Lord Medad,' ' Well ! has he rebelled? It seems a catching fever.' * Ah ! no, dread Sire, Lord Medad has no thought but for thy glory. Alas ! alas ! he has now to guard it against fearful odds. Lord Medad bade me see the Caliph and none else, and tell your Highness, that the moment the beacon which announced the Feast of the New Moon was fired on Lebanon, the Sultan of Roum and the old Arabian Caliph unfurled the standard of their Prophet, in great array, and are now marching towards Bagdad.' ' A clear conspii'acy ! Has Honain arrived ? Summon a council of the Vizirs instantly. The world is up against me. Well ! I'm sick of peace. They shall not find mo napping ! ' CHAPTER in. *You sec, my lords,' said Alroy, ere the council broko up, * we must attack them singly. There can be no doubt of that. If they join, we must combat at gi-eat odds, 'Tia 198 ALROY. in detail that Ave must rout them. I will myself to Persia. Ithamar must throw himself between the Sultan and Abidan, Medad fall back on Ithamar. Scherirah must guard the capital. Honain, you are Regent. And so fare- well. I shall set off to-night. Courage, brave companions. 'Tis a storm, but many a cedar survives the thunderbolt.' The council broke up. ' My own Scherirah ! ' said the Caliph, as they retired, * stay awhile. I would speak with you alone. Honain,' continued Alroy, following the Grand Vizir out of the chamber, and leaving Scherirah alone, ' Honain, I have not yet interchanged a word with you in private. What think you of all this? ' ' Sire, I am prepared for the worst, but hope the best.' ' 'Tis wise. If Abner could only keep that Karasraian in check ! I am about to speak with Scherirah alone. I do Buspect him much.' ' I'll answer for his treason.' ' Hah ! I do suspect him. Therefore I give him no command. I would not have him too near his old com- panion, eh? Wo will garrison the city with his rebels.' ' Sire, these are not moments to be nice. Scherirah is a valiant captain, a very valiant captain, but lend me thy signet ring, I pray thee, Sire,' Alroy turned pale. ' No, Sir, it has left me once, and never shall again. Tou have touched upon a string that makes me sad. There is a burden on my conscience, why, or what, I know not. I am innocent, you know I am innocent, Honain ! ' ' I'll answer for your Highness. He who has enough of the milk of human kindness to spare a thing like Scherirah, when he stands in his way, may well be credited for the nobler mercy that spared his better.' ' Ah me ! there's madness in the thought. Why is ho not here ? Had I but followed ; tush ! tush ! Go see the Queen, and tell her all that has happened. I'll to Scherirah.' The Caliph returned. AJLROY. 199 ' Thy pardon, brave ScheriraTi ; in these moinents my friends will pardon lapse of coui^tesy.' ' Your Highness is too considerate.' 'You see, Scherirah, how the wind blows, brave heart. There's much to do, no doubt. I am in sad want of some right trusty friend, on whose devoted bosom I can pillow all my necessities. I was thinking of sending you against this Arslan, but perhaps 'tis better that I should go myself. These are moments one should not seem to shrink, and yet we know not how affairs may run ; no, we know not. The capital, the surrounding province : one disaster and these false Moslemin may rise against us. I should stay here, but if I leave Scherirah, I leave myself. I feel that deeply ; 'tis a consolation. It may be that I must fall back upon the city. Be prepared, Scherirah. Let me fall back upon supporting friends. You have a great trust. Oil I use it wisely ! Worthily I am sure you must do.' ' Your Highness may rest assured I have no other thought but for your weal and glory. Doubt not my devotion. Sire. I am not one of those mealy-mouthed youths, full of their own deeds and lip- worship, Sire, but I have a life devoted to your service, and ready at all times to peril all things.' ' I know that, Scherirah, I know it ; I feel it deeply. What think you of these movements? ' ' They are not ill combined, and yet I doubt not your Majesty will prove your fortunes most triumphant.' ' Think you the soldiery are in good cue ? ' ' I'll answer for my own. They are rough, fellows, like myself, a little too blunt, perhaps, your Highness. We are not holiday guards, but we know our duty, and we will do it.' ' That's well, that's all I want. I shall review the troops before I go. Let a donative be distributed among them; and, by the hye, I have always forgotten it, your legion should be called the Legion of Syria. We owe our faii-est province to their arms.' ' I shall convey to them your Highness' wish. Were it possible, 'twould add to their devotion.' liOO ALKUY. ' I do not wiah it. They are my very cliildren. Sup at tlie Serail to-iiiglit, Scherivab. We shall bo very piivate. Yet let us drink together ere ^ye part. We are old friends, you know. Hast not forgotten our ruined city ? ' CHAPTER IV Alroy entered the apartment of Schireuc. '!^^y soul! thou knowest all ? ' She sprang forward and threw her arms around his neck. ' Fear not, my life, we'll not disgrace our Queen. 'Twill be quick work. Two-thirds of them have been beaten before, and for the new champion, our laui'els must not fade, and his blood shall nourish fresh ones.' ' Dearest, dearest Alroy, go not thyself, I pray thee. May not Asriel conquer? ' ' I hope so, in my company. For a time Ave part, a short one. 'Tis our first parting : may it be our last ! ' ' Oh ! no, no, no : oh ! say not we must part.' 'The troops are under arms; to-morrow's dawn will hear my trumpet.' ' I will not quit thee, no ! I will not quit thee. AVhat business has Schirene without Alroy ? Hast thou not often told me I am thy inspiration ? In the hour of danger hhall I be wanting? Never! I Avill not quit thee; no, I •will not quit thee.' ' Thou art ever present in my thoughts, my soul. In the battle I shall think of her for whom alone I conquer.' ' Nay, nay, I'll go, indeed I must, Alroy. I'll be no hindrance, trust me, sweet boy, I will not. I'll have no train, no, not a single maid. Credit mc, I know how a true soldier's wife should bear herself. I'll watch thee sleeping, and I'll tend thee wounded, and when thou goc.^t forth to combat I'll gird thy sabre round thy maiiial side, and whisper triumph with victorious kisses.' ALKOY. 201 ' My own Scliireiie, there's victory In thine eyes. We'll beat them, girl.' ' Abidan, doubl}^ false Abidan ! vrould he were doubly hanged ! Ere she died, the fatal prophetess foretold this time, and gloated on his future treachery.' ' Think not of him.' * And the Karasmian ; think you he is very strong?' ' Enough, love, for our glory. He is a potent warrior : I trust that Abner will not rob us of our intended victoi-y.' ' So you triumph, I care not by whose sword. Dost go indeed to-morrow ? ' ' At break of dawn. I pray thee stay, my sweet ! ' ' Never ! I will not quit thee. I am quite prepared. At break of dawn ? 'Tis near on midnight now. I'll lay me down upon this couch awhile, and travel in my litter. Art sure Alp Arslan is himself in the held? ' ' Quite sure, my sweet.' ' Confusion on his crown ! We'll conquer. Goes Asriel with us ? ' 'Ay!'^ ' That's well ; at break of dawn, I'm somewhat drowsy. Methinks I'll sleep awhile.' ' Do, my best heart ; I'll to my cabinet, and at break of dawn I'll wake thee with a kiss.' CHAPTER Y. The Caliph repaired to his cabinet, where his secretaries were occupied in writing. As he paced the chamber, ho dictated to them the necessary instructions. ' Who is the officer on guard ? ' ' Benaiah, Sire.' ' I remember him. He saved me a broken skull upon the Tigris. This is for him. The Queen accompanies us. She is his charge. These papers for the Yizir. Let tho troops be under arms by daybreak. This order of the day for tho Lord Asriel. Send this instantly to Plamadan. Is 202 ALROY. the Tatar despatclied to Medad? 'Tis well. You have done your duty. Now to rest. Pharez ? ' 'My lord.' ' I shall not sleep to-night. Give me my drink. Go rest, good boy. I have no wants. Good night.' ' Good night, my gracious lord ! ' ' Let me ponder ! 1 am alone. I am calm, and yet my spirit is not quick. I am not what I was. Four-and- twenty hours ago who would have dreamed of this ? All at stake again ! Once more in the field, and struggling at once for empire and existence ! I do lack the mighty spirit of my former days. I am not what I was. I have little fixith. All about me seems changed, and dull, and grown mechanical. Where are those flasliing eyes and conquering visages that clustered round me on the battle eve, round me, the Lord's anointed? I see none such. They are changed, as I am. Why! this Abidan was a host, and now he fights against me. She spoke of the prophetess; I remember that woman was the stirring trumpet of our ranks, and now where is she ? The victim of my justice ! And where is he, the mightier far, the friend, the counsellor, the constant guide, the master of my boyhood ; the firm, the fond, the faithful guardian of all my bright career ; whose days and nights were one unbroken study to make me glorious ? Alas ! I feel more like a doomed and desperate renegade than a young hero on the eve of battle, flushed with the memory of unbroken triumphs 1 ' Hah ! what awful form art thou that risest from the dusky earth before me? Thou shouldst be one I dare not name, yet will : the likeness of Jabaster. Away ! why frownest thou upon me ? I did not slay thee. Do I live, or dream, or what ? I see liim, ay ! I see thee. I fear thee not, I fear nothing. I am Alroy. ' Speak, oh speak ! I do conjure thee, mighty spectre, speak. By all the memory of the past, although 'tis mad- ness, I do conjure thee, let me hear again the accents of my boyhood.' ALEOY. 203 * Aleot, Aleot, Aleoy ! ' * I listen, as to tlie last trump.' 'Meet me on the plain op ISTehauend.' ' 'Tis gone ! As it spoke it vanished. It was Jabaster ! God of my fathers, it was Jabaster! Life is growing too wild. My courage is broken ! I could lie down and die. It was Jabaster ! The voice sounds in my ear like distant thunder : " Meet vie on the plain of Nehauend." I'll not fail thee, noble ghost, although I meet my doom. Jabaster ! Have I seen Jabaster ! Indeed ! indeed ! Methinks I'm mad. Hah ! What's that ? ' An awfal clap of thunder broke over the palace, followed by a strange clashing sound that seemed to come from one of the chambers. The walls of the Serail rocked. ' An earthquake ! ' exclaimed Alroy. ' Would that the earth would open and swallow all! Hah! Pharez, has it roused thee, too ? Pharez, we live in strange times.' ' Your Highness is very pale.' ' And so art thou, lad ! Wouldst have me men-y ? Pale I we may Avell be pale, didst thou know all. Hah! that awful sound again ! I cannot bear it, Pharez, I cannot bear it. I have borne many things, but this I cannot.' ' My lord, 'tis in the Armoury.' ' Run, see. No, I'll not be alone. Where's Benaiah ? Let him go. Stay with me, Pharez, stay with me. I pray thee stay, my child.' Pharez led the Caliph to a couch, on which Alroy lay pale and trembling. In a few minutes he inquired whether Benaiah had returned. ' Even now he comes, Sire.' 'Well, how is it?' ' Sire ! a most awful incident. As the thunder broke over the palace, the sacred standard fell from its resting- place, and has shivered into a thousand pieces. Strange to say, the sceptre of Solomon can neither be found nor tx'aced.' 204 AL];OY. ' Say notliiiig of tlie past as ye lovo me, lads. Let none enter the Armoury. Leave me, Benaiab, leave me, Pliarez.' They retired. Alroy watclied tlieir departure with a glance of iuespressible anguish. The moment that they had disappeared, he flew to the couch, and throv»-ing himself upon his knees, and, covering his face with his hands, burst into passionate tears, and exclaimed, ' ! my God, 1 have deserted thee, and now thou hast deserted me ! ' CHAPTER VL Sleep crept over the senses of the exhausted and desperate Caliph. He threw himself upon the divan, and was soon buried in profound repose. He might have slept an houi' ; he awoke suddenly. From the cabinet in which he slept, you entered a vast hall, through a lofty and spacious arch, generally covered with draperj^ which was now withdrawn. To the astonishment of Alroy, this pre- sence-chamber appeared at this moment to blaze with light. He rose from his couch, he advanced ; he perceived, with feelings of curiosity and fear, that the hall was filled with beings, terrible indeed to behold, but to his sight more terrible than strange. In the colossal and mysterious forms that lined the walls of the mighty chambei", and each of which held in its extended arm a streaming torch, he recognised the awful Afrites. At the end of the hall, upon a sumptuous throne, surrounded by priests and courtiers, there was seated a monarch, on whom Alroy had before gazed, Solomon the Great ! Alroy beheld him in state and semblance the same Solomon, whose sceptre the Prince of the Captivity had seized in the royal tombs of Judah. The strange assembly seemed perfectly unconscious of the presence of the child of Earth, who, with a desperate courage, leant against a column of the arch, and watched, with wonder, their mute and motionless society. Nothing v.'as said, nothing done. No one moved, no one, even by ALROY. 20."> gesture, seemed sensible of the presence of any other apparition save himself. Suddenly there advanced from the bottom of the hall, near unto Alroy, a procession. Pages and dancing girls, •with eyes of fire and voluptuous gestures, warriors with mighty arms, and venerable forms with ample robes and flowing beards. And, as they passed, even with all the activity of their gestures, they made no sound ; neither did the musicians, whereof there Avas a great band playing upon harps and psalteries, and timbrels and cornets, break, in the slightest degree, the almighty silence. This great crowd poured on in beautiful order, the procession never terminating*, j-et passing thrice round the hall, bowing to him that was upon the throne, and ranging themselves in ranks before the Afrites. And there came in twelve forms, bearing a great seal: the stone green, and the engraven characters of living flame, and the characters were those on the tahsman of Jabaster, which Alroy still wore next to his heart. And the twelve forms placed the great seal before Solomon, and humbled themselves, and the King bowed. At the same moment Alroy was sensible of a pang next to his heart. He instantly put his hand to the sufiering spot, and lo ! the talisman crumbled into dust. The procession ceased ; a single foi'm advanced. Recent experience alone prevented xVlroy from sinking before the spectre of Jabaster. Such was the single form. It ad- vanced, bearing the sceptre. It advanced, it knelt before the throne, it oifered the sceptre to the crowned and solemn vision. And the form of Solomon extended its arm, and took the sceptre, and instantly the mighty assembly vanished ! Alroy advanced immediate!}' into the chamber, but all was dark and silent. A trumpet sounded. He recognised the note of his own soldiery. He groped his way to a curtain, and, piiUing it asidcj beheld the iirst streak of dawn. 206 ALROY. CHAPTER Vn. Once more tipon liis charger, once more surrounded by his legions, once more his senses dazzled and inflamed by the waving banners and the inspiring trumpets, once more conscious of the power still at liis command, and the mighty stake for which he was about to i^lay, Alroy in a great degree recovered his usual spirit and self-possession. His energy returned with his excited pulse, and the vast- ness of the impending danger seemed only to stimulate the fertility of his genius. He pushed on by forced marches towards Media, at the head of fifty thousand men. At the end of the second day's march, fresh couriers arrived from Abner, informing him that, unable to resist the valiant and almost innumer- able host of the King of Karasme, he had entirely evacuated Persia, and had concentrated his forces in Louristan. Alroy, in consequence of this information, despatched orders to Scherirah, to join him with his division instantly, and leave the capital to its fate. They passed again the mountains of Kerrund, and joined Abner and the army of Media, thirty thousand strong, on the river Abzah. Here Alroy rested one night, to refresh his men, and on the ensuing morn pushed on to the Persian frontier, unexpectedly attacked the advanced posts of Alp Arslan, and beat them back with great loss into the pro- vince. But the force of the King of Karasme was so con- siderable, that the Caliph did not venture on a general engagement, and therefore he fell back, and formed in battle array upon the neighbouring plain of Nehauend, the theatre of one of his earliest and most brilliant victories, "where he awaited the hourly-expected arrival of Scherirah. The King of Karasme, who was desirous of bringing affairs to an issue, and felt confident in his superior force, instantly advanced. In two or three days at farthest, it was evident that a'battle must be fought that would decide the fate of the East. ALROY. 207 On tlie mom ensning their arrival at ITeliauend, while the Caliph was out hunting, attended onlj by a few officers, he was suddenly attacked by an ambushed band of Karas- mians. Alroy and his companions defended themselves with such desperation that they at length succeeded in beating off their assailants, although triple their number. The leader of the Karasmians, as he retreated, hurled a dart at the Caliph, which must have been fatal, had not a young officer of the guard interposed his own breast, and received the deadly wound. The party, in confusion, returned with all speed to the camp, Alroy himself bearing the expiring victim of desperate loyalty and militaty enthusiasm. The bleeding officer was borne to the royal pavilion, and placed upon the imperial couch. The most skilful leech was summoned ; he examined the wound, but shook his head. The dying warrior was himself sensible of his desperate condition. His agony could only be alleviated by withdrawing the javelin, which would occasion his immediate decease. He desired to be left alone with his Sovereign. ' Sire ! ' said the officer, ' I must die ; and I die without a pang. To die in your service, I have ever considered the most glorious end. Destiny has awarded it to me ; and if I have not met my fate upon the field of battle, it is some consolation that my death has preserved the most valuable of lives. Sire! I have a sister.' ' Waste not thy strength, dear friend, in naming her. Best assured I shall ever deem thy relatives my own.' ' I doubt it not. Would I had a thousand lives for such a master ! I have a burden on my conscience, Sire, nor can I die in peace unless I speak of it.' ' Speak, speak freely. If thou hast injured any one, and the power or wealth of Alroy can redeem thy oppressed spirit, he will not spare, he will not spare, be assured of that.' 'Noble, noble master, I must be brief; for, although, while this javelin rests within my body, I yet may live, the 208 ALROY. agony is great. Sire, the deed of which I ,spcak 'Joti concern theo.' *Ay!' * I was on guard the day Jabaster died.' ' Powers of heaven ! I. am all ear. Sj^eak on, speak on ' He died self-strangled, so they say ? ' ' So they ever told me.' ' Thou art innocent, thou art innocent ! I thank my God, my King is innocent ! ' ' Rest assured of that, as there is hope in Israel. Tell me all.' ' The Queen came with the signet ring. To such au- thority I yielded way. She entered, and after her, the Lord Honain. I heard high words ! I heard Jabaster's voice. He struggled, yes ! he struggled ; but his mighty form, wounded and fettered, could not long resist. Foul })lay, foul play, Sire ! What could I do against such adversaries ? They left the chamber with a stealth}^ step. Her eyes met mine. I never could forget that fell and glittering visage.' ' Thou ne'er hast spoken of this awful end? ' ' To none but thee. And why I speak it now I cannot tell, save that it seems some inspiration urges me ; and methinks they who did this may do even feller works, if such there be.' 'Thou hast robbed me of all peace and hope of peace ; and yet I thank thee. Now I know the worth of life. I have never loved to think of that sad day ; and yet, though I have sometimes dreamed of villainous w ork, the Avorst Avere innocence to thy dread tale.' ' 'Tis told ; and now I pray thee secui'o thy secret, l)y drawing from my agonised frame this javelin.' ■ Trusty heart, 'tis a sad office.' 'I die with joy if thou performest it.' ' 'Tis done.' ' God save Ali-oy.' ALKOY. 209 CHAPTER Ylir. While Alroy, plunged iu thought, stood over the body of the officer, there arose a flourish of triumphant music, and a eunuch, entering the pavilion, announced the arrival of Schii'ene from Keri-und. Almost immediately after- wards, the Princess, descending from her litter, entered the tent; Alroy tore off his robe, and threw it over the corpse. ' My own,' exclaimed the Princess, as she ran up to the Caliph. 'I have heard all. Be not alarmed for me. I dare look upon a corpse. You know I am a soldier's bride. I am used to blood.' ' Alas ! ' * Why so pale ? Thou dost not kiss me ! Has this unhinged thee so? 'Tis a sad deed ; and yet to-morrow's dawn may light up thousands to as grim a fate. Why? thou tremblest ! Alas ! kind soul ! The sins'le death of this fond, faithful heart, hath quite upset my love. Yet art thou used to battle. Why ! this is foohshness. Art not glad to see me ? What, not one smile ! And I have come to fight for thee ! I will be kissed ! ' She flung herself upon his neck. Alroy faintly returned her embrace, and bore her to a couch. He clapped his hands, and two soldiers entered and bore away the corpse. ' The pavilion, Schirene, is now fitter for thy presence. Rest thyself; I shall soon return.' Thus speaking, he quitted her. He quitted her ; but her humbled look of sorrowful mortification pierced to his heart. He thought of all her love and all her loveliness, he called to mind all the marvellous story of their united fortunes. He felt that for her and her alone he cared to live, that without her quick sympathy, even success seemed unendurable. His judg- ment fluctuated in an eddy of passion and reason. Passion conquered. He dismissed from his intelligeuce all cogni- zance of good and evil ; ho determined, under all circum- 210 ALROY. stances, to cling ever to licr ; he tore from his mind all memory of the late disclosure. Ke returned to the pavilion •with a countenance bcaraino^ with aflTection ; he found her ■weeping, he folded her in his arms, he kissed her Avith a thousand kisses, and whispered between each kiss his ardent love. CHAPTER IX. 'TwAS midnight. Schirene reposed in the arms of Alroy. The Caliph, who was restless and anxious for the arrival of Scherirah, was scarcely slumbering, when the sound of a voice thoroughly aroused him. He looked around ; he beheld the spectre of Jabaster. His hair stood on end, his limbs seemed to loosen, a cold dew crept over his frame, as he gazed upon the awful form within a yard of his couch. Unconsciously he disembarrassed his arms of theii* fair bui'den, and, rising on the couch, leant forwax'd. ' Alroy, Alroy, Alroy ! ' ' I am here.' ' To-morrow Israel is avenged ! ' ' Who is that ? ' exclaimed the Princess, wakening. In a frenzy of fear, Alroy, quite forgetting the spectre, turned and pressed his hand over her eyes. When he again looked round, the apparition was invisible ' What wouldst thou, Alroy ? ' ' Nothing, sweet ! A soldier's wife must bear strange sights, yet I would save you some. One of my men, forgetful you were here, burst into my tent in such a guise as scarce would suit a female eye. I must away, my child. I'll call thy slaves. One kiss ! Farewell ! but for a time.' CHAPTER X. * " To-morrow Israel will be avenged." ^Vhat ! in Ka- rasmian blood ? I have no faith. No matter. All is now ALEOY. 211 beyond my influence. A rushing destiny carries me on- ward. I cannot stem the course, nor guide the vessel. How now ! Who is the officer on guard? ' ' Benomi, Sire, thy servant.' ' Send to the Viceroy. Bid him meet me here. Who is this ? ' ' A courier from the Lord Scherirah, Sire, but just arrived. He passed last night the Kerrund mountains, Sire, and will be with you by the break of day.' ' Good news. Go fetch Abner. Haste ! He'll find me here anon, I'll visit the camp awhile. Well, my brave fellows, you have hither come to conquer again with Alroy. You have fought before, I warrant, on the plain of Nehau- end. 'Tis a rich soil, and shall be richer with Karasmian gore.' ' God save your Majesty ! Our lives are thine.' ' Please you, my little ruler,' said a single soldier, ad- dressing Alroy ; ' pardon my bluntness, but I knew you before you were a Caliph.' ' Stout heart, I like thy freedom. Pr'ythee say on.' ' I was a-saying, I hope you will lead us in the charge to-morrow. Some say you will not.' ' They say falsely.' ' I thought so. I'll ever answer for my little ruler, but then the Queen ? ' ' Is a true soldier's wife, and lives in the camp.' ' That's brave ! There, I told you so, comrades ; you would not believe me, but I knew our little ruler before you did. I lived near the gate at Hamadan, please your Highness : old Shelomi's son.' ' Give me thy hand ; a real friend. What is't ye eafc here, boys ? Let me taste your mess. I'faith I would my cook could dress me such a pilau ! 'Tis admirable ! ' The soldiers gathei^ed round their chieftain with eyes beaming with adoration. 'Twas a fine picture, the hero in the centre, the various groups around, some conversing with him, some cooking, some making coffee, all offering him by word or deed some testimonial of their devotion - p2 212 ALKoV. and blending ■with tlmt devotion the most perfect frank- ness. ' We sliall beat them, lads ! ' ' There is on fear with jou, you always beat.' ' I do my best, and so do you. A good general without good troops is little worth.' ' I'faith that's true. One must have good troops. What think you of Alp Ai-slan? ' ' I think he may give us as much trouble as all our other enemies together, and that's not much.' ' Brave, brave ! God save Alroy ! ' Benomi approached, and announced that the Viceroy was in attendance. ' I must quit you, my children,' said Alroy. 'We'll sup once more together when we have conquered.' ' God save you. Sire ; and we will confound your ene- mies.' ' Good night, my lads. Ere the dawn break we may have hot work.' ' We are ready, we are ready, God save Alroy.' ' They are in good cue, a;nd yet 'twas a difierent spirit that inspired our early daj's. That I strongly feel. These are men true to a leader who has never failed them, and confident in a cause that leads to plunder. They are but splendid mercenaries. No more. Oh ! where are now the lighting men of Judah! AVhere are the men who, when they drew tbeir scimetars, joined in a conquering psalm of holy triumph ! Last eve of battle you would have thought the field a mighty synagogue. Priests and altars, flaming sacrifices, and smoking censers, groups of fi'jry zealots hanging with frenzy on prophetic lips, and sealing with their blood and holiest vows a solemn covenant to conquer Canaan. All is changed, as I am. How now, Abner ? You are well muffled ! ' ' Is it true Scherirah is at hand? ' * I doubt not all is right. Would that the dawn would break ! ' ' The eu^my is advancing. vSume of their columns aro ALROY. 513 in siglit. My scouts have dodged them. They Intend doubtless to form upon the plain.' ' They are in sight, eh ! Then we will attack them at once ere they are formed. Rare, rare ! We'll beat them yet. Courage, dear brother. Scherirah will be here at dawn in good time, very good time : very, very good time.' ' I like the thought.' ' The men are in good heart. At break of dawn, charge with thirty thousand cavalry upon their forming ranks. I'll take the right, Asriel the left. It shall be a family affair, dear Abner. How is Miriam r ' ' I heard this morn, quite well. She sends you her love and prayers. The Queen is here ? ' ' She came this eve. Quite well.' ' She must excuse all courtesy.' ' Say nothing. She is a soldier's wife. She loves thco well, dear Abner.' ' I know that. I hope my sword may guard her children's throne.' ' Well, give thy orders. Instant battle, eh ? 'Indeed I think so.' ' I'll send couriers to hurry Scherirah, All looks well. Reserve the guard.' ' Ay, ay ! Farewell, dear Sire. When we meet again, I trast your enemies may be your slaves ! ' CHAPTER XI. At the first streak of dawn the Hebrew cavalry, with the exception of the guard, charged the advancing coluinns of the Karasmians with irresistible force, and cut them in pieces. Alp Arslan rallied his troops, and at length succeeded in forming his main body in good order. Alroy and Asriel led on their divisions, and the battle now became general. It raged for several hours, and was on both sides well maintained. The slaughter of the Karasmians was great, but their stern character and superior numliers 214 ALPcOY. counterbalanced for a time all the impetuosity of the Hebrews and all the energy of their leaders. This day Alroy threw into the shade all his former exploits. Twelve times he charged at the head of the Sacred Guard, and more than once penetrated to the very pavilion of Alp Arslan. In vain he endeavoured singly, and hand to hand, to meet that famous chieftain. Both monarchs fought in the ranks, and yet Fate decided that their scimetars should never cross. Four hours before noon, it was evident to Alroy, that, unless Scherirah arrived, he could not prevail against the vast superiority of numbers. He was obliged early to call his reserve into the field, and although the number of the slain on the side of Arslan exceeded any in the former victories of the Hebrews, still the Karasmians maintained an immense front, which was constantly supplied by fresh troops. Confident in his numbers, and aware of the weakness of his antagonists, Arslan contented himself with acting on the defensive, and wearying his assailants by resisting their terrible and repeated charge. For a moment, Alroy at the head of the Sacred Guard had withdrawn from the combat. Abner and Asriel still maintained the fight, and the Caliph was at the same time preparing for new efforts, and watching with anxiety for the arrival of Scherirah. In the fifth hour, from an emi- nence he marked with exultation the advancing banners of Ms expected succours. Confident now that the day was won, he announced the exhilarating intelligence to his soldiers ; and, while they were excited by the animating tidings, led them once more to the charge. It was irre- sistible ; Scherirah seemed to have arrived only for the pursuit, only in time to complete the victory. What then was the horror, the consternation of Alroy, when Benaiah, dasliing up to him, informed him that tl^.e long-expected succours consisted of the united forces of Scherirah and Abidan, and had attacked him in the rear. Human genius could afford no resource. The exhausted Hebrews, whose energies had been tasked to the utmost, were surrounded. The Karasmians made a c^eneral and simultaneous advance. ALEOT. 215 In a few mimites the Hebrew army was thrown into con- fusion. The stoutest warriors threw away their swords in despair. Every one tliouglit only of self-preservation. Even Abner fled towards Hamadan. Asriel was slain. Alroy, finding it was all over, rushed to his pavilion at the head of about three hundred of the guards, seized the fainting Schirene, threw her before him on his saddle, and cutting his way through all obstacles, dashed into the desert. For eight-and-forty hours they never stopped. Their band was soon reduced one-third. On the morning of the third day they dismounted and refreshed themselves at a well. Half only regained their saddles. Schii-ene never spoke. On they rushed again, each hour losing some exhausted co-mate. At length, on the fifth day, about eighty strong, they arrived at a grove of palm-trees. Here they dismounted. And Alroy took Schirene in his arms, and the shade seemed to revive her. She opened her eves, and pressed his hand and smiled. He gathered her some dates, and she drank some water. ' Our toils will soon be over, sweetest,' he whispered to her; ' I have lost everything but thee.' Again tliey mounted, and, proceeding at a less rapid pace, they arrived towards evening at the ruined city, whither Alroy all this time had been directing his course. Dashing down the great street, they at length entered the old amphitheatre. They dismounted. Alroy made a couch with their united cloaks for Schirene. Some collected fuel, great store of which was found, and kindled large fiies. Others, while it was yet light, chased the gazelles, and were sufficiently fortunate to provide their banquet, or fetched water from the well known to their leader. In an hour's time, clustering round their fires in groups, and sharing their rude fare, you might have deemed them, instead of the discomfited and luxurious guards of a mighty monarch, the accustomed tenants of this wild abode. ' Come, my lads,' said Alroy, as he rubbed his hands over the ascending flame, 'at any rate this is better than the desert ! ' 216 ALROY. CHAPTER XII. After all his exertions, Aboy fell into profound and dreamless sleep. When he awoke, the sun had been long up. Schirene was still slumbering. He embraced her, and she opened her eyes and smiled. ' You are now a bandit's bride,' he said. 'How like you our new life? ' 'Well! with thee.' ' Rest here, my sweetest : I must rouse our men, and see how fortune speeds.' So saying, and tripping lightly over many a sleeping form, he touched Benaiah. ' So ! my brave captain of the guard, still napping ! Come ! stir, stir.' Benaiah jumped up wath a cheerful face. ' I am ever ready. Sire.' ' I know it ; but remember I am no more a king, only a co-mate. Away with me, and let us form some order.' The companions quitted the amphitheatre and reconnoi- tred the adjoining buildings. They found many stores, the remains of old days, mats, tents, and fuel, drinking-bowls, and other homely furniture. They fixed upon a building for their stable, and others for the accommodation of their band. They summoned their companions to the open place, the scene of Hassan Subah's fate, where Alroy addressed them and explained to them his plans. They were divided into companies ; each man had his allotted duty. Some were placed on guard at diflerent parts ; some were sent out to the chase, or to collect dates from the Oasis ; others led the horses to the contiguous pasture, or remained to attend to their domestic arrangements. The amphitheatre Avas cleared out. A rude but convenient pavilion Avas formed for Schirene. They covered its ground with mats, and each emulated the other in his endeavours to study her accommodation. Her kind words and inspiring smiles animated at the same time their zeal and their invention. They soon became accustomed to their rough but ad- ALROY. 217 ventui'ous life. Its novelty pleased tliem, and the perpetual excitement of urgent necessity left them no time to mourn over their terrible %'icissitudes. While Alroy lived, hope indeed never deserted their sanguine bosoms. And such was the influence of his genius, that the most despondino- feltthattobe discomfited with him was preferable to conquest Avith another. They were a faithful and devoted band, and merry faces were not wanting when at night they assembled in the amphitheatre for their common meal. No sooner had Alroy completed his arrangements than he sent forth spies in all directions to procure intelligence, and especially to communicate, if possible, with Ithamar and Medad, provided that they still survived and maintained themselves in any force. A fortnight passed away without the approach of any stranger ; at the end of which, there arrived four personages at their haunt, not very welcome to their chief, who, how- ever, concealed his chagrin at their appearance. These were Kisloch the Kourd, and Calidas the Indian, and their inseparable companions, the Guebre and the Negro. CHAPTER XIII. 'Noble Captain,' said Kisloch, 'we trust that you will permit us to enlist in the band. This is not the first time we have served under your orders in this spot. Old co- mates i' faith, who have seen the best and the worst. We suspected where you might be found, although, thanks to the ever felicitous invention of man, it is generally received that you died in battle. I hope your Majesty is Avell,' added Kisloch, bowing to Schirene. ' You are welcome, friends,' replied Alroy ; ' I know your worth. You have seen, as you say, the best and the worst, and will, I trust, see better. Died in battle, eh ! that's good.' ' 'Tis so received,' said Calidas. 'And what news of our friends? ' 218 ALROY. ' Kot over good, but strange.' 'How so?' * Hainadan is talven.' ' I am prepared ; tell me all.' ' Old Bostenay and the Lady ^Miriam are borne prisontrg to Bagdad.' ' Prisoners? ' * But so : all will be well with them, I trow. The Lord Honain is in high favour with the conqueror, and will doubtless protect them.' ' Honain in favour ? ' ' Even so. He made terms for the city, and right good ones.' ' Hah ! he was ever dexterous. "Well ! if he save my sister, I care not for his favour.' ' There is no doubt. All may yet be well, Sir.' ' Let us act, not hope. Where's Abner? ' ' Dead.' 'How?' ' In battle.' ' Art sure ? ' * I saw him fall, and fought beside him.' 'A soldier's death is all our fortune now. I am glad he was not captured. "Where's Medad, Ithamar? ' ' Fled into Egypt.' ' "We have no force whatever, then? ' ' None but your guards here.' ' Tliey are strong enough to plunder a caravan, Honain, you say, in favour ? ' ' Very high. He'll make good terms for us,' ' This is strange news.' 'Very, but true.' ' "Well ! you are welcome ! Share our fare ; 'tis rough, and somewhat scanty ; but we have feasted, and may feast again. Fled into Egypt, eh ? ' 'Ay! Sir.' ' Schirene, shouldst like to see the Nile? ' 'I have heard of crocodiles.' ALROY. 219 CHAPTER XIV. If the presence of Kislocli and his companions were not very pleasing to Alroy, Avitli the rest of the band they soon became great favourites. Their local knowledge, and their experience of desert life, made them valuable allies, and their boisterous jocularity and unceasing merriment were not unwelcome in the present monotonous existence of the fugitives. As for Alroy himself, he meditated an escape to Egypt. He determined to seize the first opportunity of procuring some camels, and then, dispersing his band, with the exception of Benaiah and a i'ew faithful retainers, he trusted that, disguised as merchants, they might succeed in crossing Syria, and entering Africa by Palestine. With these plans and prospects, he became each day more cheer- ful and more sanguine as to the future. He had in his possession some valuable jewels, which he calculated upon disposing of at Cairo for a sum sufficient for all his pur- poses ; and having exhausted all the passions of life while yet a youth, he looked forward to the tranquil termination of his existence in some poetic solitude with his beautiful companion. One evening, as they returned from the Oasis, Alroy guiding the camel that boi-e Schirene, and ever and anon looking up in her inspiring fece, her sanguine spirit would have indulgred in a delitjhtful future. ' Thus shall we pass the desert, sweet,' said Schirene. 'Can this be toil?' ' There is no toil with love,' replied Alroy. ' And we were made for love, and not for empire,' re- joined Schirene. ' The past is a dream,' said Alroy. ' So sages teach us ; but, until we act, their wisdom is but wind. I feel it now. Have we ever lived in aught but deserts, and fed on aught but dates? Methinks 'tis very natural. But that I am tempted by the security of distant lands, I could remain here a free and happy outlaw. Time, custom, and necessity 220 ALROi'. form our natures. "When I first met Sclierirali in tlieso ruins, I slirank witli liorror from degraded man ; and now I sigli to be liis lieir. "We must not think ! ' 'No love, -we'll only hope,' replied Schirene ; and they passed through the gates. The night was beaiitiful, the air was still ■warm and sweet. Schirene gazed upon the luminous heavens. ' We thought not of these skies when we were at Bagdad,' she exclaimed ; * and yet, my life, what was the bi'ightness of our palaces compared to these ? All is left to us that man should covet, freedom, beauty, and youth. I do believe, ere long, Alroy, we shall look back upon the wondrous past as on another and a lower world. Would that this were Egypt ! 'Tis my only wish.' ' And it shall soon be gratified. All will soon bo arranged. A few brief day^, and then Schirene will mount her camel for a longer ride than just to gather dates. You'll make a soi'ry traveller, I fear ! ' ' Not I ; I'll tire you all.' They reached the circus, and seated themselves round the blazing fire. Seldom had Alroy, since his fall, appeared more cheerful. Schirene sang an Arab air to the band, who joined in joyous chorus. It was late ere they sought repose ; and they retired to their rest, sanguine and con- tented. A few hours afterwards, at the break of dawn, Alroy was roused from his slumbers by a rude pressure on his bi-east. lie started ; a ferocious soldier was kneeling over him ; he would have spurned him ; he found his hand manacled. He would have risen ; his feet were bound. He looked round for Schii-ene, and called her name ; he was answered only by a shriek. The amphitheatre was filled with Karas- mian troops. His own men were surprised and over- powered. Kisloch and the Guebre had been on guard. He was raised from the ground, and flung upon a camel, which was instantly trotted out of the circus. On every side he beheld a Avild scene of disorder and dismay. He was speechless from passion and despair. The camel was ALRuV. 221 dragged into tlie desert. A body of cavalry iustantly sur- rounded it, and they set off at a rapid pace. The wholo seemed the work of an instant. How many days had passed Ah-oy knew not. He had taken no account of time. ISTight and day were to him the same. He was in a stupor. But the sweetness of the air and the greenness of the earth at length partially roused his attention. He was just conscious that they had quitted the desert. Before him was a noble river ; he beheld the Euphrates from the very spot he had first viewed it in his pilgrimage. The strong association of ideas called back his memory. A tear stole down his cheek; the bitter drop stole to his parched lips ; he asked the nearest horseman for Avater. The guard gave him a wetted sponge, with which he contrived with difficulty to wipe his lips, and then he let it fall to the ground. The Karasmian struck him. They an'ived at the river. The prisoner was taken from the camel and placed in a covered boat. After some hours they stopped and disembarked at a small village. Alroy was placed upon an ass with his back to its head. His clothes were soiled and tattered. The children pelted him with mud. An old woman, with a fanatic curse, placed a crown of paper on his brow. With difficulty his brutal guards prevented their victim from being' torn to pieces. And in such fashion, towards noon of the four- teenth day, David Alroy again entered Bagdad. CHAPTER Xy. The intelligence of the capture of Aboy spread through the agitated city. The Moolahs bustled about as if they had received a fresh demonstration of the authenticity of the prophetic mission. All the Dervishes began begging. The men discussed affairs in the coffee-houses, and the v»'omen chatted at the fountains. "^ ' They may say what they like, but I wish him well,' 222 ALROY. said, a fair Ai'ab, as she arranged lier veil. ' He may be an impostor, but he was a very handsome one.' ' All the women are for him, that's the truth,' responded a companion ; ' but then we can do him no good.' ' We can tear their eyes out,' said a third. 'And what do you think of Alp Arslan, truly ? ' inquired a fourth. ' I wish he were a pitcher, and then I could break his neck,' said a fifth. ' Only think of the Princess ! ' said a sixth. ' Well ! she has had a glorious time of it,' said a seventh. ' Nothing was too good for her,' said an eighth. ' I like true love,' said a ninth. ' Well ! I hope he will be too much for them all yet,' said a tenth. ' I should not wonder,' said an eleventh. *He can't,' said a twelfth, ' he has lost his sceptre.' 'You don't say so? ' said a thirteenth. 'It is too true,' said a fourteenth. 'Do you think he was a wizard? ' said a fifteenth. 'I vow if there be not a fellow looking at us behind those ti-ees.' ' Impudent scoundrel ! ' said a sixteenth. ' I v/ish it were Alroy. Let us all scream, and put down our veils.' And the group ran away. CHAPTER XYI. Two stout soldiers were playing chess ^'^ iu a coffee- house. ' May I slay my mother,' said one, ' but I cannot make a move. I fought under him at Nehauend ; and though I took the amnesty, I have half a mind now to seize my swoi'd and stab the first Turk that enters.' • 'Twere but sheer justice,' said his companion. ' By my ALEOY. 223 father's blessing, lie was the man for a charge. They may say what they like, but compared with him, Alp Arslan is a white-livered Giaour.' ' Here is confusion to him and to thy last move. There's the dirhem, I can play no more. May I slay my mother, though, but I did not think he would let himself be taken.' ' By the blessing of my father, nor I ; but then he was asleep.' ' That makes a difference. He was betrayed.' * All brave men are. They say Kasloch and his set pocket their fifty thousand by the job.' ' May each dirhem prove a plague-spot ! ' ' Amen ! Dost remember Abner ? ' ' May I slay my mother if I ever forget him. He spoke to his men like so many lambs. What has become of the Lady Miriam ? ' ' She is here.' ' That will cut Alroy.' ' He was ever fond of her. Dost remember she gained Adoram's life ? ' ' Oh ! she could do anything, next to the Queen.' ' Before her, I say, before her. He has refused the Queen, he never refused the Lady ]\Iiriam.' ' Because she asked less.* ' Dost know it seemed to m.e that things never went on so well after Jabaster's death?' ' So say I, There was a something, eh ? ' ' A sort of a peculiar, as it were, kind of something, eh ? ' ' You have well described it. Every man felt the same. I have often mentioned it to my comrades. Say what you like, said I, but slay my mother, if ever since the old man strangled himself, things did not seem, as it were, in their natural propinquity. 'Twas the phrase I used.' ' A choice one. Unless there is a natural propinquity, the best-arranged matters will fall out. However, the ass sees farther than his rider, and so it was with Alroy, the best commander I ever served under, all the same.' ' Let us go forth and see how affairs run.' 224 AUIOY. ' Ay, do. If wo bear any one abuse Ab'oy, -we'll eleave bis skull.' ' Tbat will -we. Tbere are a good many of our stout fel- lows about ; we migbt do sometbing yet.' ' Wbo knows ? ' CHAPTER XVII. A 'UJBTERRANEAX DUXGEON of tbe citadel of Bagdad beld iu its gloomy limits tbe late lord of Asia. Tbe captive did not sigb, or weep, or wail. He did not speak. He did not even think. For several days be remained in a state of stupor. On tbe morning of tbe fourtb day, be almost unconsciously partook of tbe Avretcbed provision wbicb bis gaolers brougbt bim. Tbeir torches, round which the bats whirled and flapped tbeir wings, and twinkled tbeir small eyes, threw a ghastly glare over tbe nearer walls of tbe dun- geon, the extremity of wbicb defied the vision of tbe pri- soner ; and, when the gaolei"S retired, Aboy was in complete darkness. The imago of the past came back to bim. He ti-ied in vain to penetrate tbe surrounding gloom. His hands were manacled, bis legs also were loaded with chains. Tbe notion that his life might perhaps have been cruelly spared in order that he might linger on in this horrible state of conscious annihilation filled bim with frenzy. He would have dashed bis fetters against bis brow, but the chain re- strained bim. He flmig himself upon tbe damp and rugged ground. His fall disturbed a thousand obscene things. He heard tbe quick ghde of a serpent, the creeping retreat of tbe clustering scorpions, and the swift escape of the dashing rats. His mighty calamities seemed slight when compared Avith these petty miseries. His great soul could not support bim under these noisome and degrading incidents. He sprang, in disgust, upon bis feet, and stood fearful of mov- ing, lest every step should introduce biiu to some new abumiuatiou. At length, exhausted natui'e was unable any ALROY. 22 J longer to sustain him. He groped his way to the rude seat, cut in the rocky wall, which was his only accommoda- tion. He put forth his hand. It touched the slimy fur of some wild animal, that instantly sprang away, its fiery eyes sparkling in the dark. Alroy recoiled with a sensation of woe-begone dismay. His shaken nerves could not sustain him under this base danger, and these foul and novel trials. He could not refrain from an exclamation of despair ; and, when he remembered that he was now far beyond the reach of all human solace and sympathy, even all human aid, for a moment his mind seemed to desert him ; and he wrung his hands in forlorn and almost idiotic woe. An awfal thing it is, the failure of the energies of a master-mind. He who places implicit confidence in his genius will find himself some day utterly defeated and de- serted. 'Tis bitter ! Every paltry hind seems but to breathe to mock you. Slow, indeed, is such a mind to credit that the never-failing resource can at least be wanting. Bat so it is. Like a dried-ixp fountain, the perennial flow and bright fertility have ceased, and ceased for ever. Then comes the madness of retrospection. Draw a curtain ! draw a curtain ! and fling it over this agonising anatomy. The days of childhood, his sweet sister's voice and smiling love, their innocent pastimes, and the kind solicitude of faithful servants, all the soft detail of mild domestic life : these were the sights and memories that flitted in wild play before the burning vision of Alroy, and rose upon his tor- tured mind. Empire and glory, his sacred nation, his im- perial bride ; these, these were nothing. Their worth had vanished with the creative soul that called them into action. The pure sympathies of nature alone remained, and all his thought and grief, all his intelligence, all his emotion, were centred in his sister. It was the seventh morning. A guard entered at an un- accustomed hour, and, sticking a torch into a niche in the wall, announced that a person was without who had permis- 226 ALROY. sion to speak to the prisoner. Tliey were the first human accents that had met the ear of Alroy during his captivity, which seemed to him an age, a long dark period, that can- celled all things. He shuddered at the harsh tones. He tried to answer, but his unaccustomed Ups refused their office. He raised his heavy arms, and endeavoured to sig- nify his consciousness of what had been uttered. Yet, indeed, he had not listened to the message without emotion. He looked forward to the grate with strange curiosity ; and, as he looked, he trembled. The visitor entered, muf- fled in a dark caftan. The guard disappeared ; and the caftan falling to the ground, revealed Honain. 'My beloved Alroy,' said the brother of Jabaster ; and he advanced, and pressed him to his bosom. Had it been Miriam, Alroy might have at once expired ; but the presence of this worldly man called back his worldliness. The re- vulsion of his feehngs was wonderful. Pride, perhaps even hope, came to his aid ; all the associations seemed to counsel exertion ; for a moment he seemed the same Aboy. ' I rejoice to find at least thee safe, Honain.' ' I also, if my security may lead to thine.' ' Still whispering hope ! ' ' Despair is the conclusion of fools.' ' Honain ! 'tis a great trial. I can play my part, and yet methinks 'twere better we had not again met. How is Schirene ? ' ' Thinking of thee.' ' 'Tis something that she can think. My mind has gone. Where's Miriam ? ' • Free.' 'That's something. Thou hast done that. Good, good Honain, be kind to that sweet child, if only for my sake. Thou art all she has left.' ' She hath thee.' ' Her desolation.' ' Live and be her refuge.' 'How's that? These walls! Escape? No, no; it Is impossible.' ALEOY. 227 ' I do not deem, it so.' ' Indeed ! I'll do anything. Speak ! Can we bribe ? can we cleave their skulls ? can we ' ' Calm thyself, my friend. There is no need of bribes, no need of bloodshed. We must make terms.' ' Terms ! We might have made them on the plains of Nehauend. Terms ! Terms with a captive victim ? ' 'Why victim?' ' Is Arslan then so generous ? ' ' He is a beast, more savage than the boar that grinds its tusks within his country's forests.' ' Why speakest thou then of hope ? ' ' I spoke of certainty. I did not mention hope.' ' Dear Honain, my brain is weak ; but I can bear strange things, or else I should not be here. I feel thy thoughtful friendship ; but indeed there need no winding words to tell my fate. Pr'ythee speak out.' ' In a word, thy life is safe.' 'What! spared?' ' If it please thee.' ' Please me ? Life is sweet. I feel its sweetness. I want but little. Freedom and solitude are all I ask. My life spared ! I'll not beheve it. Thou hast done this deed, thou mighty man, that masterest all souls. Thou hast not forgotten me ; thou hast not forgotten the days gone by, thou hast not forgotten thine own Alroy! Who calls thee worldly is a slanderer. Honain ! thou art too faithful ! ' ' I have no thought but for thy service, Prince.' ' Call me not Prince, call me thine own Alroy. My life spared ! 'Tis wonderful ! When may I go ? Let no one see me. Manage that, Honain. Thou canst manage all things. I am for Egypt. Thou hast been to Egypt, hast thou not, Honain ? ' ' A very wondrous land, 'twill please thee much,' ' When may I go ? Tell me when I may go. When maj I quit this dark and noisome cell ? 'Tis worse than all their tortures, dear Honain. Air and light, and I really think Q 2 228 ALROY. my spmt never would break, but tliis horrible dungeon I scarce can look upon thy face, sweet friend. 'Tis serious.' ' Wouldst thou have me gay ? ' ' Yes ! if we are free.' ' Alroy ! thou art a great spirit, the greatest that I e'er knew, have ever read of. I never knew thy like, and never shall.' ' Tush, tush, sweet friend, I am a broken reed, but still I am free. This is no time for coui'tly phrases. Let's go, and go at once.' 'A moment, dear Alroy. I am no flatterer. What I said came from my heart, and doth concern us much and instantly. I was saying thou hast no common mind, Alroy ; indeed thou hast a mind unlike all others. Listen, my Pi'ince. Thou hast read mankind deeply and truly. Few have seen more than thj'self, and none have so rare a spring of that intuitive knowledge of thy race, which is a gem to which experience is but a jeweller, and Avithout which no action can befriend us.' 'Well, well!' * A moment's calmness. Thou hast entered Bagdad in triumph, and thou hast entered the same city with every contumely which the base spirit of our race could cast upon its victim, 'Twas a great lesson.' ' I feel it so.' ' And teaches us how vile and valueless is the opinion of our fellow-men.' 'Alas! 'tis true.' ' I am glad to see thee in tliis wholesome temper. 'Tis full of wisdom.' ' The miserable are often wise.' ' But to believe is nothing unless we act. Speculation should only sharpen practice. The time hath come to prove thy lusty faith in this philosophy. I told thee we could make terms. I have made them. To-morrow it was doomed Alroy should die — and what a death ! A death of infinite torture ! Hast ever seen a man impaled p ' 8* ' Hah ! ' ALRoy. 229 ' To view it is alone a doom.' ' God of Heaven ! ' ' It is so horrible, that 'tis even marked, that when this direful ceremony occurs, the average deaths in cities greatly increase. 'Tis from the turning of the blood in the specta- tors, who yet from some ungovernable madness cannot refrain from hurrying to the scene. I speak with some authority. I speak as a physician.' ' Speak no more, I cannot endure it.' ' To-morrow this doom awaited thee. As for Schirene ' ' Not for hei", oh ! surely not for her ? ' 'No, they wei'e merciful. She is a Cahph's daughter. 'Tis not forgotten. The axe would close her life. Her fair neck would give shght trouble to the headsman's art. But for thy sister, but for Miriam, she is a witch, a Jewish witch ! They would have burnt her aHve ! ' ' I'll not believe it, no, no, I'll not beheve it : damnable, bloody demons ! When I had power I spared all, all but ah, me ! ah, me ! why did I live ? ' ' Thou dost forget thyself; I speak of that which was to have been, not of that which is to be. I have stepped in and communed with the conqueror. I have made terms.' ' What are they, what can they be ? ' * Easy. To a philosopher like Alroy an idle ceremony.' 'Be bx'ief, be brief.' ' Thou seest thy cai'eer is a great scandal to the Moslemin. I mark their weakness, aiii I have worked upon it. Thy mere defeat or death will not blot out the stain upon their standard and their faith. The public mind is wild with fantasies since Alroy rose. Men's opiuions flit to and fro with that fearful change that bodes no stable settlement of states. None know what to cling to, or where to place their trust. Creeds are doubted, authority disputed. They would gladly account for thy success by other than human means, yet must deny thy mission. There also is the fame of a fair and mighty Princess, a daughter of their Caliphs, which they would gladly clear. I mark all this, observe and work upon it. So, could we devise some means by 230 ALROY. which thy lingering followers could be for ever silenced, this great scandal fairly erased, and the public frame brought to a sounder and more tranquil pulse, "why, they •would concede much, much, very much.' ' Thy meaning, not thy means, are evident.* ' They are in thy power.' 'In mine? 'Tis a deep riddle. Pr'ythee solve it.' ' Thou wilt be summoned at to-morrow's noon before this Arslan. There, in the presence of the assembled people who are now with him as much as they were with thee, thou wilt be accused of magic, and of intercourse with the infernal powers. Plead guilty.' * Well ! is there more? ' ' Some trifle. They will then examine thee about the Princess. It is not difficult to confess that Alroy won the Caliph's daughter by an irresistible speU, and now 'tis broken.' 'So, so. Is that all?' ' The chief. Thou canst then address some phrases to the Hebrew prisoners, denying thy Divine mission, and so forth, to settle the public mind, observe, upon this point for ever.' 'Ay, ay, and then ?' ' No more, except for form. (Upon the completion of the conditions, mind, you will be conveyed to what land you please, with such amount of treasure as you choose.) There is no more, except, I say, for form, I would, if I were you ('twill be expected), I would just publicly afi'ect to renounce our faith, and bow before their Prophet.' ' Hah ! Art thou there ? Is this thy freedom ? Get thee behind me, tempter ! Never, never, never ! Not a jot, not a jot: I'll not yield a jot. Were my doom one everlasting torture, I'd spurn thy terms ! Is this thy high contempt of our poor kind, to outrage my God! to prove myself the vilest of the vile, and baser than the basest ? Rare philosophy ! O Honain ! would we had never met!' ' Or never parted. True. Had my word been taken, Alroy would ne'er have been betrayed.' ALROY. 231 ' No more ; I pray thee, sir, no more. Leave me.' ' Were this a palace, I would. Harsh words are softened by a friendly ear, when spoken in affliction.' ' Say what they will, I am the Lord's anointed. As such I should have lived, as such at least I'll die.' ' And Miriam ? ' * The Lord will not desert her : she ne'er deserted Him.' ' Schireue?' * Schirene ! why ! for her sake alone I will die a hero. Shall it be said she loved a craven slave, a base impostor, a vile renegade, a villanous dealer ia drugs and charms ? Oh ! no, no, no ! if only for her sake, her sweet, sweet sake, my end shall be like my great life. As the sun I rose, like him I set. Still the world is warm with ray bright fame, and my last hour shall not disgrace my noon, stormy indeed, but glorious ! ' Honain took the torch from the niche, and advanced to the grate. It was not fastened : he drew it gently open, and led forward a veiled and female figure. The veiled and female figure threw herself at the feet of Alroy, who seemed lost to what was passing. A soft lip pressed his hand. He started, his chains clanked. ' Alroy ! ' softly murmured the kneeling female. 'What voice is that?' wildly exclaimed the Prince of the Captivity. ' It falls upon my ear like long- forgotten music. I'll not beheve it. No ! I'll not beheve it. Art thou Schirene ?' ' I am that wretched thing they called thy bride.' 'Oh ! this indeed is torture ! What impalement can equal this sharp moment? Look not on me, let not our eyes meet ! They have met before, like to the confluence of two shining rivers blending in one great stream of rushing Hght. Bear off that torch, sir. Let impenetrable' darkness cover our darker fortunes.' 'Alroy.' ' She speaks again. Is she mad, as I am^ that thus she plays with agony?' ' Sire,' said Honain advancing, and laying his hand gently 232 ALlloY. on tlie arm. of the captive, ' I pray thee moderate this passion. Thou hast some faithful friends here, who would fain com- mune in calmness for thy lasting welfare,' ' Welfare ! He mocks me.' ' I beseech thee, Sire, be calm. If, indeed, I speak unto that great Alroy whom all men fear and still may fear, I pray remeraber, 'tis not in palaces or in the battle-field alone that the heroic soul can conquer and command. Scenes like these are the great proof of a superior soul. "While we live, our body is a temple where our genius pours forth its godlike inspiration, and while the altar is not overthrown, the deity may still work marvels. Then rouse thyself, great Sire ; bethink thee that, a Caliph or a captive, there is no man within this breathing world like to Alroy. Shall such a being fall without a struggle, like some poor felon, who has nought to trust to but the dull shuffling accident of Chance ? I, too, am a px'ophet, and I fuel thou still wilt conquer,' ' Give me ray sceptre then, give me the sceptre ! I speak to the wrong brother ! It was not thou, it was not thou that gavest it me,' ' Gain it once more. The Lord desei^ted Da\4d for a time ; still he pardoned him, and still he died a king.' ' A woman worked his fall.' ' But thee a woman raises. This great Princess, has she not suffered too ? Yet her spirit is still unbroken. List to her counsel : it is deep and fond,' ' So Avas our love.' ' And is, my Alroy ! ' exclaimed the Princess. ' Be calm, I pray thee ! For my sake be calm ; I am calm for thine. Thou hast listened to all Honain has told thee, that wise man, my Alroy, who never erred. 'Tis but a word he counsels, an empty word, a most unmeaning form. But speak it, and thou art free, and Ah'oy and Schirene may blend again their glorious careers and lives of sweet fruition. Dost thou not remember when, walking in the garden of our joy, and palled with empire, how often hast thou sighed for some sweet islo unknown to man, where thou mightst .\LROY, 233 pass tliy days witli no companion but my faithful self, and no adventui'es but our constant loves ? ! my beloved, that life may still be thine ! And dost thou falter ? Dost call thyself forlorn with such fidelity, and deem thyself a wretch, when Paradise with all its beauteous gates but wooes thy entrance ? Oh ! no, no, no, no ! thou hast forgot Schirene: I fear me much, thy over-fond Schirene, who doats upon thy image in thy chains more than she did when those sweet hands of thine were bound with gems and played with her bright locks ! ' ' She speaks of another world. I do remember some- thing. Who has sent this music to a dungeon ? My spirit softens with her melting words. My eyes are moist. I weep ! ' Tis pleasant. Sorrow is joy compared Avith my despair. I never thought to shed a tear again. My brain is cooler.' ' Weep, weep, I pray thee weep ; but let me kiss away thy tears, my soul! Didst think thy Schii'ene had deserted thee ? Ah ! that was it that made my bh'd so sad. It shall be free, and fly in a sweet sky, and feed on flowers with its faithful mate. All me ! I am once more happy with my boy. There was no misery but thy absence, sweet ! Methinks this dungeon is our bright kiosk ! Is that the sunbeam, or thy smile, my love, that makes the walls so joyful ? ' ' Did I smile ? I'll not beHeve it.' ' Indeed you did. Ah ! see he smiles again. Why this is freedom ! There is no such thing as sorrow. 'Tis a lie to frighten fools ! ' 'Why, Honain, Avhat's this ? 'Twould seem I am really joyful. There's inspiration in her very breath. I am an- other being. Nay! waste not kisses on those ugly fetters.' 'Methinks they are gold.' They were silent. Schii'une drew Alroy to his rough seat, and gently placing herself on his knees, threw her arms round his neck, and buried her face in his breast. After a few minutes she raised her head, and Avhisperecl in his ear, in irresistible accents of sweet exultation, ' We shall be free to-morrow ! ' 234 ALROY. ' To-morrow ! is tlie trial so near ? ' exclaimed tlie captive, "witli an agitated voice and changing countenance. ' To- morrow ! ' He threw Schirene aside somewhat hastily, and sprang from his scat. ' To-morrow ! would it were over ! To-morrow ! Methinks there is within that single word the fate of ages ! Shall it be said to-morrow that Alroy Hah ! what art thou that risest now before me ? Dread, mighty spirit, thou hast come in time to save me from per- dition. Take me to thy bosom, 'tis not stabbed. They did not stab thee. Thou seest me here communing with thy murderers. What then ? I am innocent. Ask them, dread ghost, and call upon their fiendish souls to say I am pure. They would make me dark as themselves, but shall not.' ' Honain, Honain ! ' exclaimed the Princess in a terrible whisper as she flew to the Physician. ' He is wild again. Calm him, calm him. Mark ! how he stands with his ex- tended arms, and fixed vacant eyes, muttering most awful words ! My spirit fails me. It is too fearful.' The Physician advanced and stood by the side of Alroy, but in vain attempted to catch his attention. He ventured to touch his arm. The Prince started, turned round, and recognising him, exclaimed in a shrieking voice, ' Off, fratricide ! ' Honain recoiled, pale and quivering. Schirene sprang to his arm. ' What said he, Honain ? Thou dost not speak. I never saw thee pale before. Art thou, too, mad ? * ' Would I were ! ' ' All men are growing wild. I am sure he said something. I pray thee tell me what was it ? ' 'Ask him.' ' I dare not. Tell me, tell me, Honain ! ' ' That I dare not.' ' Was it a word ? ' ' Ay! a word to wake the dead. Let us begone.' ' Without our end ? Coward ! I'll speak to him. My own Alroy,' sweetly whispered the Princess, as she advanced before him. 'What, has the fox left the tigress ! Is't so, eh ? Are ALROY. 235 there no jiidgments ? Are the innocent only haunted ? I am innocent! I did not strangle thee! He said rightly, " Beware, beware ! they who did this may do even feller deeds." And here they are quick at their damned work. Thy body suffered, great Jabaster, but me they would strangle body and soul ! ' The Princess shrieked, and fell into the arms of the ad- vancing Honain, who bore her out of the dungeon. CHAPTER XVni. After the fall of Hamadan, Bostenay and Miriam had been carried prisoners to Bagdad. Through the inter- ference of Honain, their imprisonment bad been exempted from the usual hardships, but they Avere still confined to their chambers in the citadel. Hitherto all the endeavours of Miriam to visit her brother had been fruitless. Honain was the only person to whom she could apply for assistance, and he, in answer to her importunities, only regretted his want of power to aid her. In vain had she attempted, by the offer of some remaining jewels, to secure the co-opera- tion of her guards, wdth whom her loveliness and the soft- ness of her manners had already ingratiated her. She had not succeeded even in communicating with Alroy. But after the unsuccessful mission of Honain to the dungeon, the late Vizier visited the sister of the captive, and, breaking to her with dehcate skill the intelligence of the impending catastrophe, he announced that he had at length succeeded in obtaining for her the desired permission to visit her brother ; and, while she shuddered at the proximity of an event for which she had long attempted to prepare herself, Honain, with some modifications, whispered the means by which he flattered himself that it might yet be averted. Miriam Hstened to him in silence, nor could he, with all his consummate art, succeed in extracting fi-om her the slightest indication of her own opinion as to their expediency. They parted, Honain as sanguine as the wicked ever are. 236 ALKOY. As) ^iiiium dreaded, both for lierseli' aud for Alroy, tlio shock of an uuexpected meeting, she availed herself of the influence of Honain to send Caleb to her brother, to prepare him for her presence, aud to consult him as to the desirable moment. Caleb found his late master lying exhausted on the floor of his dungeon. At tirst he would not speak or even raise his head, nor did he for a long time apparently recognise the faithful retainer of his uncle. But at length he grew milder, and when he fully comprehended who tho messenger Avas, and the object of tho mission, he at first seemed altogether disinclined to see his sister, but in the end postponed their meeting for the present, and, pleading great exhaustion, fixed for that sad interview the first hour of dawn. The venerable Bostenay had scarcely ever spoken since the fall of his nephew ; indeed it was but too evident that his faculties, even if they had not entirely deserted him, were at least greatly impaired. He never quitted his couch; he took no notice of what occurred. He evinced no curiosity, scarcely any feeling. If indeed he occasionally did mutter an observation, it was generally of an irritable character, nor truly did he appear satisfied if anyoue ap- proached him, save Miriam, from whom alone he would ac- cept the scanty viands which he ever appeared disinclined to touch. But his devoted niece, amid all her harrowing affliction, could ever spare to the protector of her youth a placid countenance, a watchful eye, a gentle voice, and a ready hand. Her religion and her virtue, the strength of her faith, and the inspiration of her innocence, supported this pure and hapless lady amid all her undeserved and un- paralleled sori'ows. It was long past midnight ; tho j'oung widow of Abner reposed upon a couch in a soft slumber. The amiable Beruna and the beautiful Bathsheba, the blinds Avithdrawn, watched the progress of the night. ' Shall I wake her ?' said the beautiful Bathsheba. ' Me- thinks tho stars are paler ! She bade me rouse her long before the dawn,' ALRoy. 237 ' 'H.ev sleep is too benign ! Let us not wake lier,' replied the amiable Beruna. ' We rouse ber only to sorrow.' ' May her di-eams at least be bappy ; ' rejoined the beau- tiful Batbsbeba. ' She sleeps tranquilly, as a flower.' 'Tbe veil bas flillen from her bead,' said the amiable Beriina. ' I will replace it lightly on her brow. Is that well, my Bathsheba ?' ' It is well, sweet Beruna. Her face shrouded by the shawl is like a pearl in its shell. See ! she moves ! ' ' Bathsheba ! ' ' I am here, sweet lady.' ' Is it near dawn ?' ' N'ot yet, sweet lady ; it is yet night. It is long past the noon of night, sweet lady ; methinks I scent the rising breath of morn ; but still 'tis night, and the young moon shines like a sickle in the heavenly field, amid the starry harvest.' ' Beruna, gentle girl, give me thy arm. I'll rise.' The maidens advanced, and gently raising their mistress, supported her to the window. ' Since our calamities,' said Miriam, ' I have never enjoyed such tranquil slumber. My dreams were slight, but sooth- ing. I saw him, but he smiled. Have I slept long, sweet girls ? Ye are very watchful.' ' Dear lady, let me bring thy shawl. The air is fresh ' ' But sweet ; I thank thee, no. My brow is not so cool as to need a covering. 'Tis a fair night !' Miriam gazed upon the wide prospect of the moonlit capital. The elevated position of the citadel afforded an extensive view of the mighty groups of buildings, each in itself a city, broken only by some vast and hooded cupola, the tall, slender, white minarets of the mosques, or the black and spiral form of some lonely cypress, and through which the rushing Tigris, flooded with hght, sent forth its broad and brilliant torrent. All was silent ; not a single boat floated on the fleet river, not a solitary voice broke tlio stillness of slumbering millions. She gazed, and, as she gazed, she could not refrain from contrasting the present 238 ALROY. scene, which seemed the sepulchre of all the passions of our race, with the unrivalled excitement of that stirring spec- tacle which Bagdad exhibited on the celebration of the marriage of Alroy. How different then, too, was her posi- tion from her present, and how happy ! The only sister of a devoted brother, the lord and conqueror of Asia, the bride of his most victorious captain, one worthy of all her vii'tues, and whose youthful valour had encircled her brow with a diadem. For Miriam, exalted station had brought neither cares nor crimes. It had, as it were, only rendered her charity universal, and her benevolence omnipotent. She could not accuse herself, this blessed woman : she could not accuse herself, even in this searching hour of self-know- ledge : she could not accuse herself, with all her meekness, and modesty, and humility, of having for a moment for- gotten her dependence on her God, or her duty to her neighbour. But when her thoughts recurred to that being from whom they were indeed scarcely ever absent ; and when she re- membered him, and all his life, and all the thousand inci- dents of his youth, mysteries to the world, and known only to her, but which were indeed the prescience of his fame, and thought of all his surpassing qualities and all his sweet affection, his unrivalled glory and his impending fate, the tears, in silent agony, forced their way down her pale and pensive cheek. She bowed her head upon Bathsheba's shoulder, and sweet Beruna pressed her quivering hand. The moon set, the stars grew white and ghastly, and vanished one by one. Over the distant plain of the Tigris, the scene of the marriage pomp, the dark purple horizon shivered into a rich streak of white and orange. The solemn, strain of the Muezzin sounded from the minarets. Some one knocked at the door. It was Caleb. * I am ready,' said Miriam; and for a moment she covered her face vnth her right hand, ' Think of me, sweet maidens ; pray for me ! ' ALROY. 239 CHAPTER XIX. Leaning on Caleb, and lighted by a gaoler, bearing torches, Miriam descended the damp and broken stairs that led to the dungeon. She faltered as whe arrived at the grate. She stopped, and leant against the cold and gloomy wall. The gaoler and Caleb preceded her. She heard the voice of Alroy. It was firm and sweet. Its accents reassured her. Caleb came forth with a torch, and held it to her feet ; and, as he bent down, he said, ' My lord bade me beg you to be of good heart, for he is.' The gaoler, having stuck his torch in the niche, with- drew. Miriam desired Caleb to stay without. Then, sum- moning up all her energies, she entered the dreadful abode. Alroy was standing to receive her. The light fell full upon his countenance. It smiled. Miriam could no longer re- strain herself. She ran forward, and pressed him to her heart. ' O, my best, my long beloved,' whispered Alroy ; ' such a meeting indeed leads captivity captive ! ' But the sister could not speak. She leant her head upon his shoulder, and closed her eyes, that she might not weep. ' Courage, dear heart ; courage, courage ! ' whispered the captive. ' Indeed I am happy ! ' ' My brother, my brother ! ' ' Had we met yesterday, you would have found me per- haps a little vexed. But to-day I am myself again. Since I crossed the Tigris, I know not that I have felt such self- content. I have had sweet dreams, dear Miriam, full of solace. And, more than dreams, the Lord has pardoned me, I truly think.' ' 0, my brother ! your words are full of comfort ; for, in- deed, I too have dreamed, and dreamed of consolation. My spirit, since our fall, has never been more tranquil.' ' Indeed I am happy.' ' Say so again, my David ; let me hear again these words of solace ! ' 240 ALROY. 'Indeed, 'tis very true, my faithful friend. It is not spoken in kind mockery to make you joyous. For know, last eve, ■whether the Lord repented of his wrath, or whether some dreadful trials, of which I will not speak, and wish not to remember, had made atonement for my manifold sins, but so it was, that, about the time my angel Miriam sent her soothing message, a feeling of repose came over me, such as I long have coveted. Anon, I fell into a slumber, deep and sweet, and, instead of those wild and whirling images that of late have darted from my brain when it should rest, glimpses of empire and conspiracy, snatches of fierce wars and mocking loves, I stood beside our native fountain's brink, and gathered flowers with my earliest friend. As I placed the fragrant captives in your flowing locks, there came Jabaster, that great, injui-ed man, no longer stern and awful, but with benignant looks, and full of love. And he said, " David, the Lord hath marked thy faithfulness, in spite of the darkness of thy dungeon." So he vanished. He spoke, my sister, of some strange tempta- tions by heavenly aid withstood. No more of that. I awoke. And lo ! I heard my name still called. Full of my morning dream, I thought it was you, and I answered, " Dear sister, art thou here ? " But no one answered ; and then, reflect- ing, my memory recognised those thrilling tones that sum- moned Alroy in Jabaster's cave.' ' The Daughter of the Voice ?' ' Even that sacred messenger. I am full of faith. The Lord hath pardoned me. Be sure of that.' ' I cannot doubt it, David. You have done gTeat things for Israel ; no one in these latter days has risen like you. If you have fallen, you were young, and strangely tempted.' ' Yet Israel, Israel ! Did I not feel a worthier leader will yet arise, my heart would crack. I have betrayed my country ! ' ' Oh no, no, no ! Y ou have shown Avhat we can do and shall do. Your memory alone is inspiration. A great career, although baulked of its end, is still a landmark of human energy. Failure, when sublime, is not without its ALROY, 241 purpose. Great deeds are great legacies, and work with wondrous usury. By wliat Man lias done, wo learn what Man can do ; and gauge the power and prosjiects of our race.' ' Alas ! there is no one to guard my name. 'Twill be reviled ; or worse, 'twill be forgotten.' ' Never ! the memory of great actions never dies. The sun of glory, though awhile obscured, will shine at last. And so, sweet brother, perchance some poet, in some dis- tant age, within whose veins our saci*ed blood may flow, his fancy fired with the national theme, may strike his harp to Alroy's wild career, and consecrate a name too long for- gotten ?' ' May love make thee a prophetess ! ' exclaimed Alroy, as he bent down his head and embraced her. ' Do not tarry,' he whispered. ' 'Tis better that we should part in this firm mood.' She sprang from him, she clasped her hands. ' We will not part,' she exclaimed with energy ; ' I will die with thee.' * Blessed girl, be calm ! Do not unman me.' ' I am calm. See ! I do not weep, Not a tear, not a tear. They are all in my heart.' ' Go, go, my Miriam, angel of light. Tarry no longer ; I pray thee go. I would not think of the past. Let all my mind be centred in the present. Thy presence calls back our bygone days, and softens me too much. My duty to my uncle. Go, dear one, go ! ' ' And leave thee, leave thee to Oh ! my Da-\dd, thou hast seen, thou hast heard Honain ? ' ' No more ; let not that accursed name profane those holy lips. Raise not the demon in me.' ' I am silent. Yet 'tis madness ! ! my brother, thou hast a fearful trial.' ' The God of Israel is my refuge. He saved our fathers in the fiery furnace. He will save me.' ' I am full of faith. I pray thee let mo stay.' 'I would be bilent; I would be alone. I cannot speak, 242 ALROY. ^Miriam. I ask one favour, the last and dearest, from her who has never had a thought but for my wishes ; blessed being, leave me.' ' I go. Alroj, farevrell ! Let me kiss you. Again, once more ! Let me kneel and bless you. Brother, be- loved brother, great and glorious brother, I am worthy of you : I will not weep. I am prouder in this dread moment of your love than all your foes can be of their hard triumph ! ' CHAPTER XX. Beruxa and Bathsheba received their mistress when she returned to her chamber. They marked her desolate air. She was silent, pale, and cold. They bore her to her couch, whereon she sat with a most listless and unmeaning look ; her quivering lips parted, her eyes fixed upon the ground in vacant abstraction, and her arms languidly folded before her. Beruna stole behind her, and supported her back with pillows, and Bathsheba, unnoticed, wiped the slight foam from her mouth. . Thus Miriam remained for several hours, her faitliful maidens in vain watching for any indication of her self-consciousness. Suildeiily a trumpet sounded. ' What is tliat ?' exclaimed Miriam, in a shrill voice, and looking up witli a distracted glance. Neither of them answered, since they were aware that it betokened the going forth of Alroy to his trial. Miriam remained in the same posture, and with the same expression of wild inquiry. Another trumpet sounded, and after that a shout of the people. Then she raised up her arms to heaven, and bowed her head, and died. ALROY. 243 CHAPTER XXI. ' Has the second trumpet sounded ? ' ' To be sure : ruu, run for a good place. Where is Ab- dallah?' * Selling sherbet in the square. Wo ehall find him. Has Alroy come forth ? ' 'Yes ! he goes the other way. We shall be too late. Only think of Abdallah selling sherbet ! ' ' Father, let me go ? ' 'You Avill be in the way ; you are too young : you will see nothing. Little boys should stay at home,' ' No, they should not, I will go. You can put me on your shoulders.' ' Where is Ibrahim ? Where is Ali? We must all keep together. We shall have to fight for it, I wish Abdallah were here. Only think of his selling sherbet ! ' ' Keep straight forward. That is right. It is no use going that way. The Bazaar is shut. There is Faki-eddin, there is Osman Effendi. He has got a new page.' ' So he has, I declare ; and a very pretty boy too.' 'Father, will they impale Alroy alive ?' ' I am sure I do not know. Never ask questions, my dear. Little boys never should.' ' Yes, they should. I hope they will impale him alive. I shall be so disappointed if they do not,' ' Keep to the left. Dash through the Butchers' Bazaar : that is open. All right, all right. Did you push me, sir?' ' Suppose I did push you, sir, what then, sir ? ' ' Come along, don't quarrel. That is a Karasmian, They think they are to do what they like. We are five to one to be sure, but still there is nothing like peace and quiet. I wish Abdallah were here with his stout shoulders. Only think of his selling sherbet ! ' B 2 244 ALKOY. CHAPTER XXII. TuE Square of tlie Grand Mosqiie, tlio same spot wLcre Jaloaster mot Abitlan by appointment, Avas the destineci scene of the pretended trial of Ah'oy. Thither by break of day the sight-loving thousands of the capital had repaired. In the centre of the square, a large circle was described by a crimson cord, and guarded by Karasmian soldiers. Around this the swelling multitude pressed like the gathering waves of ocean, but, whenever the tide set in with too great an impulse, the savage Karasmians appeased the ungovernable element by raising their battle-axes, and brutally breaking the crowns and belabouring the shoulders of their nearest victims. As the morning advanced, the terraces of the surrounding houses, covered with awnings, were crowded with spectators. All Bagdad was astir. Since the marriage of Alroy, there had never been such a merry morn as the day of his impalement. At one end of the circle was erected a magnificent throne. Half way between the throne and the other end of the circle, but further back, stood a company of Negro eunuchs, hideous to behold, who, clothed in white, and armed with various instruments of torture, surrounded the enormous stakes, tall, thin, and sharp, that were prepared for the final cere- mony. The flourish of trumpets, the clash of cymbals, and the wild beat of the tambour, announced the arrival of Alp Arslan from the Scrail. An avenue to the circle had been preserved through the multitude. The royal procession might be traced as it wound through the populace, by the sparkling and undulating line of plumes of honour, and the dazzling forms of the waving streamers, on Avhlch were inscribed the names of Allah and the Prophet. Suddenly, amid the bursts of music, and the shouts of the spectators, many of wliom on the terraces humbled themselves on their knees, Alp Arslan mounted the throne, around which ranged ALROY. 24,5 themselves his chief captains, and a depntation of the Mool- lahs, and Imams, and Cadis, and other principal personages of the city. The King of Karasme was tall in stature, and somewliat meagTO in form. He was fair, or rather sandy-coloured, with a red beard, and blue eyes, and a flat nose. The mo- ment he was seated, a trumpet was heard in the distance fi'om an opposite quarter, and it was soon understood throughout the assembly that the great captive was about to appear. A band of Karasmian guards first entered the circle, and ranged themselves round the cord, with their backs to the spectators. After them came fifty of the principal Hebrew prisoners, with their hands bound behind them, but evi- dently more for form than securit3^ To these succeeded a small covered waggon drawn by mules, and surrounded by guards, from which was led forth, his legs relieved from their manacles, but his hands still in heavy chains, David Alroy ! A universal buzz of blended sympathy, and wonder, and fear, and triumph arose, throughout the Avhole assembly. Each man involuntarily stirred. The vast populace moved to and fro in agitation. His garments soiled and tattered, his head bare, and his long locks drawn off his forehead, pale and thin, but still unsubdued, the late conqueror and Caliph of Bagdad threw around a calm and imperial glance upon those who were but recently his slaves. The trumpets again sounded, order was called, and a crier announced that his Highness Alp Arslan, the mighty Sove- reign of Karasme, tlieir Lord, Protector, and King", and avenger of Allah and the Prophet, against all rebellious and evil-minded Jews and Giaours, Avas about to speak. There was a deep and univei'sal silence, and then sounded a voice high as the eagle's in a storm. ' David Alroy ! ' said his conqueror, ' you are brought hither this day neither for trial nor for jvidgmeut. Captured in arms against your rightful sovereign, you are of coiTrso prepared, like other rebels, for your doom. "246 ALROY. Such a crime alone deserves the most avenging punish- ments. What then do you merit, who are loaded with a thousand infamies, who have blasphemed Allah and the Prophet, and, hj the practice of magic arts and the aid of the infernal powers, have broken the peace of kingdoms, occasioned infinite bloodshed, outraged all law, religion, and decency, misled the minds of your deluded votaries, and especially by a direct compact with Eblis, by horrible spells and infamous incantations, captivated the senses of an illustrious Princess, heretofore famous for the practice of every virtue, and a descendant of the Prophet himself. ' Behold these stakes of palm- wood, sharper than a lance! The most ten-ible retribution that human ingenuity has devised for the guilty awaits you. But your crimes bafHe all human vengeance. Look forward for 3-0 ur satisfactory reward to those infernal powers by whose dark co-opera- tion you have occasioned such disasters. Your punish- ment is public, that all men may know that the guilty never escape, and that, if your heart be visited by the slightest degree of compunction for your numerous victims, you may this day, by the frank confession of the irresistible means by which you seduced them, exonerate your victims from the painful and ignominious end with which, through your uifluence, they are now threatened. ]\Iark, O as- sembled people, the infinite mercy of the Vicegerent of Allah ! He allows the wretched man to confess his infamy, and to save, by his confession, his unfortunate victims. I have said it. Glory to Allah ! ' And the people shouted, ' He has said it, he has said it ! Glory to Allah 1 He is great, he is great ! and Mahomet is his prophet ! ' ' Am I to speak ? ' inquired Alroy, when the tumult had subsided. The melody of his voice commanded universal attention. Alp Arslan nodded his head in approbation. ' King of Karasme ! I stand here accused of many crimes. Now hear my answers. 'Tis said I am a rebel. My answer is, I am a Pi-ince as thou art, of a wacred race, ALEOY. 247 and far more ancient. I owe fealty to no one but to my God, and if I have broken that I am yet to learn that Alp Arslan is the avenger of His power. As for tliy God and Prophet, I know not them, though they acknowledge mine. 'Tis well understood in every polity, my people stand apart from other nations, and ever will, in spite of suffering. So much for blasphemy ; I am true to a deep faith of ancient days, which even the sacred writings of thy race still reverence. For the arts magical I practised, and the communion with infernal powers 'tis said I held, know, King, I raised the standard of my faith by the direct commandment of my God, the great Creator of the universe. What need of magic, then ? Wliat need of paltering with petty fiends, when backed by His omnipo- tence ? My magic was His inspiration. Need I prove why, with such aid, my people crowded roand me ? The time will come when from out our ancient seed, a wortliier chief will rise, not to be quelled even by thee, Sire. ' For that unhappy Princess of whom something was said (with no great mercy, as it seemed to me), that lady is my wife, my willing wife ; the daughter of a Caliph, still my wife, although your stakes may make her soon a widow. I stand not here to account for female fancies. Believe me. Sire, she gave her beauty to my raptured arms with no persuasions but such as became a soldier and a king. It may seem strange to thee upon thy throne, that the fiower of Asia should be plucked by one so vile as I am. Remember, the accidents of Fortune are most strange. I was not always what I am. We have met before. There ■was a day, and that too not long since, when, but for the treachery of some knaves I mark here. Fortune seemed half inclined to reverse our fates. Had I conquered, I trust I should have shown more mercy.' The King of Karasme was the most passionate of men. He had made a speech according to the advice and instruc- tions of his councillors, who had assured him that the tone he adopted would induce Alroy to confess all tliat he required, and especially to vindicate the reputation of the '>AS ALEOY. Princess Scliirene, who had ah'eady contrived to persuade Alp Arslan that she was the most injured of her sex. The King of Karasmo stamped thi'ice on the platform of his throne, and exclaimed with great fire, ' By my beard, ye have deceived me ! The dog has confessed nothing ! ' All the councillors and chief captains, and the Moollahs, and the Imams, and the Cadis, and the principal personages of the city were in constei'nation. They immediately con- sulted together, and, after much disputation, agreed thai, before they proceeded to extremities, it was expedient to prove what the px-isoner would not confess, A venerable Scheik, clothed in flowing robes of green, with a long white beard, and a turban like the tower of Babel, then rose. His sacred reputation procured silence Avhile he himself delivered a long prayer, supplicating Allah and the Prophet to confound aU blaspheming Jews and Giaours, and to pour forth words of truth from the mouths of religious men. And then the venerable Scheik summoned all witnesses against David Alroy, Immediately advanced Kisloch the Kourd, who, being placed in an eminent jDosi- tion, the Cadi of Bagdad drew forth a scroll from his velvet bag, and read to him a deposition, wherein the worthy Kisloch stated that he first became acquainted with the prisoner, David Alroy, in some ruins in the desert, the haunt of banditti, of whom Alroy was the chief; that he, Kisloch, was a reputable merchant, and that his caravan had been plundered by these robbers, and he himself cap- tured ; that, on the second night of his imprisonment, Alroy appeared to him in the likeness of a lion, and on the third, of a bull with fiery eyes ; that he was in the habit of constantly transforming himself; that he frequently raised spints ; that, at length, on one terrible night, Eblis himself came in great procession, and presented Alroy with the sceptre of Solomon Ben Daoud ; and that the next day Alroy raised his standard, and soon after massacred Hassan Subah and his Seljuks, by the visible aid of many terrible demons, Calidas the Indian, the Guebro, and the Negro, and a ALKUY. 219 few congenial spirits, were not eclii:)secl in tlie satisfactory cliaracter of their evidence by the luminous testimony of KislocL. the Konrd. The irresistible career of the Hebrew conqueror was undeniably accounted for, and the honour of Moslem arms, and the purity of Moslem faith, were esta- blished in their pristine glory and all their unsullied repu- tation. David Alroy was proved to be a child of Eblis, a sorcei'er, and a dealer in charms and magical poisons. The people listened with horror and with indignation. They would have burst through the guards and torn him in pieces, had not they been afraid of the Karasmian battle- axes. So they consoled themselves with the prospect of his approaching tortures. The Cadi of Bagdad bowed himself before the King of Kai-asme, and whispered at a respectful distance in the royal ear. The trumpets sounded, the criers enjoined silence, and the royal lips again moved. ' Hear, ye people, and be wise. The chief Cadi is about to read the deposition of the royal Princess Schirene, chief victim of the sorcerer.' And the deposition was read, which stated that David Alroy possessed, and wore next to his heart, a talisman, given him by Ebhs, the virtue of which was so great that, if once it were pressed to the heart of any woman, she was no longer mistress of her will. Such had been the un- happy fate of the daughter of the Commander of the Faithful. 'Is it so written ?' inquired the captive. ' It is so -written,' replied the Cadi, ' and bears the im- perial signature of the Princess.' ' It is a forgery.' The King of Karasme started from his throne, and in his rage nearly descended its steps. His face was like scarlet, his beard was like a flame. A favourite minister ventured gently to restrain the royal robe. 'Kill the dog on the spot,' muttered the King of Karasme. ' The Princess is herself here,' said the Cadi, ' to bear 250 ALROY. witness to tlie spells of wliicli she was a victim, but from Tvliich, by the power of Allah and the Prophet, she is now released.' Alroy started ! ' Advance, royal Princess,' said the Cadi, ' and, if the deposition thou hast heard be indeed true, condescend to hold up the imperial hand that adorned it with thy signature.' A band of eunuchs near the throne gave way ; a female figure veiled to her feet appeared. She held up her hand amid the breathless agitation of the whole assembly ; the ranks of the eunuchs again closed ; a shriek was heard, and the veiled figure disappeai^ed. 'I am ready for thy tortures, King,' said Alroy, in a tone of deep depression. His firmness appeared to have deserted him. His eyes were cast upon the ground. Apparently he was buried in profound thought, or had delivered himself up to despair. ' Prepare the stakes,' said Alp Arslan. An involuntary, but universal, shudder might be dis- tinguished through the whole assembly. A slave advanced and offered Alroy a scroll. He recog- nised the Nubian who belonged to Honain. His former minister informed him that he was at hand, that the terms he offered in the duiigeon might even yet be granted ; that if Alroy would, as he doubted not, as he entreated him, accept them, he was to place the scroll in his bosom, but that if he were still inexorable, still madly determined on a horrible and ignominious end, he was to tear the scroll and throw it in to the arena. Instantly Alroy took the scroll, and with great energy tore it into a thousand pieces. A puff of wind carried the fragments far and wide. The mob fought for these last memorials of David Alroy , and this little incident occasioned a great con- fusion. In the meantime the negroes prepared the instruments of torture and of death. ' The obstinacy of this Jewish dog makes me mad,' said ALROY. 251 the King of Karasme to his courtiers. ' I will hold some parley with him before he dies.' The favourite minister entreated his sovereign to be content ; but the royal beard grew so red, and the royal eyes flashed forth such terrible sparks of fire, that even the favourite minister at length gave way. The trumpet sounded, the criers called silence, and the voice of Alp Arslan was again heard. ' Thou dog, dost see what is preparing for thee ? Dost know what awaits thee in the halls of thy master Eblis ? Can a Jew be influenced even by false pride ? Is not life sweet ? Is it not better to be my slipper-bearer than to be impaled ? ' 'Magnanimous Alp Arslan,' replied Alroy in a tone of undisguised contempt ; ' thinkest thou that any torture can be equal to the recollection that I have been conquered by thee?' ' By my beard, he mocks me ! ' exclaimed the Karasmian monarch, ' he defies me ! Touch not my i-obe. I will parley with liim. Ye see no farther than a hooded hawk, ye sons of a blind mother This is a sorcerer; he hath yet some master spell ; he will yet save himself. He will fly into the air, or sink into the earth. He laughs at our tortures.' The King of Karasme precipitately descended the steps of his throne, followed by his favourite minister, and his councillors, and chief captains, and the Cadis, and the Moollahs, and the Imams, and the principal personages of the city. 'Sorcerer!' exclaimed Alp Arslan, 'insolent sorcerer! base son of a base mother ! dog of dogs ! dost thou defy us ? Does thy master Eblis whisper hope ? Dost thou laugh at our punishments ? Wilt thou fly into the air ? wilt thou sink into the earth ? eh, eh ? Is it so, is it so ?' The breathless monarch ceased, from the exhaustion of passion. He tore his beard out by the roots, he stamped with uncontrollable rage. ' Thou art wiser than thy councillors, royal Arslan; I do defy thee. My master, although not Eblis, has not deserted 252 ALROY. nie. I laugh at thy punishments. Thy tortures I despise. I shall both sink into the earth and mount into the air. Arfc thou answered ? ' ' By my beard,' exclaimed the enraged Ai'slan, ' I am an- swered. Let Eblis save thee if he can ;' and the King of Karasme, the most famous master of the sabre in Asia, drew his blade like lightning from its sheath, and took off the head of Alroy at a stroke. It fell, and, as it fell, a smile of triumphant derision seemed to play upon the dying features of the hero, and to ask of his enemies, ' Where now are all your tortures r ' ^'■^ NOTES TO ALROY. Note 1, page 3. — We shall yet see an ass mount a ladder, Hebrew proverb. Note 2, page 10. — Our walls are hung withjlowers you love. It is thp custom of the Hebrews in many of their festivals, especially in the feast of the Tabernacle, to hang the walls of their chambers with garlands of flowers. Note 3, page 11. — The traditionary tomb of Esther and Mordecai. ' I accompanied the priest through the town over much ruin and rub- bish to an enclosed piece of ground, rather more elevated than any in its immediate vicinity. In the centre was the Jewish tomb — a square building of brick, of a mosque-like form, with a rather elongated dome at the top. The door is in the ancient sepulchral fashion of the country, very small, consisting of a single stone of great thickness, and turning on its own pivots from one side. Its key is always in possession of the eldest of the Jews resident at Hamadan. Within the tomb are two sarcophagi, made of a very dark wood, carved with great intricacy of pattern and riclmess of twisted ornament, with a line of in- scription in Hebrew,' &c. — Sir B. K. Porter's Travels in Persia, vol. ii. p. 107. Note 4, page 13. — A marble fountain, the richly-carved cupola siqyportcd by twisted colu/nns. The vast magnificence and elaborate fancy of the tombs and fountains is a remarkable feature of Oriental architecture. The Eastern nations devote to these structures the richest and the most durable materials. "While the palaces of Asiatic monarchs are in general built only of wood, painted in fresco, the rarest marbles are dedicated to the sepulchre and the spring, which are often richly gilt, and adorned even with precious stones. Note 5, page 14. — TJie chorus of our maidens. It is still the custom for the women in the East to repair at sunset in company to the fountain for their supply of water. In Egypt, yon may observe at twilight the women descending the banks of the Nile ia pracestdoo fi'om every town aud village. Their graceful drapery. 254 NOTES TO ALEOY. their long veils not coneealinor their flashing eyes, and the classical forms of their vases, render this a most pictiu'esque and agreeable spectacle. Note 6, page 20. I describe the salty deserts of Persia, a locality which my tale re- quired; but I have ventured to introduce here, and in the subsequent pages, the principal characteristics of the great Arabian deserts; the mirage, the simixim, the gazelle, the oasis. Note 7, page 23. — Jackals and marten-cat. At nightfall, especially in Asia Minor, the lonely horseman \nll often meet the jackals on their evening prowl. Their moaning is often heard during the night. I rememl^er, when becalmed off Troy, the most singular screams were heard at intervals throughout the night, from a forest on the opposite shore, wliich a Greek sailor assured me proceeded from a marten-cat, which had probably found the carcass of some horse. Note 8, page 25. Elhurz, or Elborus, the highest range of the Caucasus. Note 9, page 26. — A circular and brazen fable, sculptured with strange characters and mystcrio%is figures ; near it was a couch, on which lag several volumes. A cabalistic table, perhaps a zodiac. The books were doubtless Srpher Happeliah, the Book of Wonders ; Sepher Hakkaneh, the Book of the Pen ; and Srpher Habbahir, the Book of Light. This last unfolds the most sublime mysteries. Note 10, page 27. — Anstvercd the Cabalist. ' Simeon ben Jochai, who flourished in the second century, and was a disciple of Akiblia, is called by tlie Jews the Prince of tlie Cabalists. After the suppression of the sedition in which his master had been so unsuccessful, he concealed himself in a cave, where, according to the Jewish historians, he received revelations, which he afterwards delivered to his disciples, and wlrch they carefully preserved in the book called Snhar. His master, Akibha, who lived soon after the destruction of Jerusalem, was the author of the famous book Jceirah, quoted by the Jews as of Divine authority. Wlien Akibha was far advanced in life, appeared the famous impostor Barchochebas, who, under the character of the Messiah, promised to deliver his countrymen from the power of the Emperor Adrian. Akibha espoused his cause, and aflTorded him the protection and support of his name, and an army of two hundred thou- sand men repaired to bis standard. Tiie Romans at first sliglited the insurrection ; but when they found the insurgents spread slaughter and rapine wherever they came, they sent out a military force against them. At first, the issue of the contest was doubtful. The IMcssiali liimself was not taken until the end of four years.' — Enfidd, Philosophy of the Jews, vol. ii. ' Two methods of instruction wero in use among the Jews ; the on9 XOTES TO .VLEOY. ~ 255 public, 01' fxofcric; the other secret, or esoleric. The esoteric doctrine •\v:is th;it which was openly taught the people from the law of Moses and the traditions of the fathers. The esoteric was that which treated of the mysteries of the Divine nature, and other sublime subjects, and was known by the name of the Cabala. The latter was, after the man- ner of the Pythagorean and Ecryptian mysteries, tanglit only to certain persons, who were bound, under the most solemn anathema, not to divulge it. Concerning the miraculous origin and preservation of tho Cabala, the Jews relate many marvellous tales. They derive these mysteries from Adam, and assert that, while the first man was in Paradise, the angel Easiel brought him a book from heaven, which con- tained the doctrines of heavenly wisdom, and that, when Adam received this book, angels came down to him to learn its contents, but that he refused to admit them to the knowledge of sacred things entrusted to him alone; that, after the Fall, this book was biken back into heaven; that, after many prayers and tears, God restored it to Adam, from whom it passed to Seth. In the degenerate age before the flood this book was lost, and the mysteries it contained almost forgotten ; but they were restored by special revelation to Abraham, who committed them to "writing in the book Jesirah.^ — Vide Enjiild, vol. ii. p. 219. 'The Hebrew word Cabala,'' says Dom Calmet, 'signifies tradition, and the Kabbins, who are named Cabalists, apply tliemselves principally to tlie combination of certain words, numbers, .-ind letters, by the means of which they boasttd they could reveal the future, and penetrate the sense of the most difficult passages of Scripture. This science does not appear to have any fixed principles, but depends upon certain ancient, traditions, whence its name Cahida. The Cabalists have a great num- ber of names which they style sacred, by means of which they raise spirits, and affect to obtain fc-apernatural intelligence.' — See Calmet, art. Cuba 'a. ' We spake before,' snys Lightfoot, ' of the commonness of Magick among them, one singular means whereby they kept their own in delu- sion, and whereby they affronted ours. The general expectation of the nation of Messias coming when he did. had this double and contrary effect, that it fonvarded those that belonged to Guii to believe and re- ceive tlie Gospel ; and those tliat did not, it gave encouragement to some to take upon them they were Clirist or some great prophet, and to others it gave some perstiasion to be deluded by them These deceivers dealt most of them with Magick, and that cheat ended not when Jerusalem ended, though one would have thought that had been a fair term of not further expecting Messias; but, since the people were willing to be de- ceived by such expectation, there rose up deluders still that were willing to deceive them.' — Lightfoot, vol. ii. p. 371. For many curious details of the Cabalistic Magic, Vide Basnage, vol. r. p. 384, &c. Note 11, page 28. — Bead the stars no longer. ' The modern Jews,' says Basnage, ' have a great Idea of the influence of the stars.' Vol. iv. p. 4o4. But astrology was most prevalent among the Babylonian Eabbins, of whom Jabaster was one. Living in the ancient land of the Chaldeans, these sacred seges imbibed a taste for 256 KOTES TO ALKOY. tho mystic lore of their predecessors. Tlie stars moved, aud formed letters and lines, when consulted by tiny of the highly-initialed of the Cabiilists. This they styled tho Celestial Alphabet. Note 12, page 32. — The Daughter of the Voice, 'Both the Talmudick and the latter Eabbins,' says Lightfoot, 'make frequent mention of Ba/k Kol, or Filia J'ocis, or an echoing voice which gerved under the second temple for their utmost refuge of revelation. Tor when Urim and Thummim, the oracle, ■was ceased, and prophecy was decayed and gone, they had, as they say, certain strange and ex- traordinary voices upon certain extraordinary occasions, which were their warnings and advertisements in some special matters. Infinite instances of this might be adduced, if they might be believed. Now here it may be questioned why they called it JBath Kol, the daughter of' a voice, and not a voice itself? If tho strictness of tho Hebrew word Bath bo to be stood upon, which always it is not, it may be answered, that it is called the Daughter of a Voice in relation to the oracles of Urim and Thummim. For whereas that was a voice given from off the mercy-seat, within the vail, and this, upon the decay of that oracle, came as it were in its place, it might not unfitly or improperly bo called a daughter, or successor of that voice.' — Lightfoot, vol. i. pp. 485, 486. Consult also the learned Doctor, vol. ii. pp. 128, 129 : 'It was used for a testimony from heaven, but was indeed performed by magic art.' Note 13, page 37. — The tvaUs and turrets of an extensive cily. In Persia, and the countries of the Tigris and Euphrates, the traveller sometimes arrives at deserted cities of great magnificence and antiquity. Such, for instance, is the city of Anneh. I suppose Alroy to have entered one of tho deserted capitals of the Seleucidte. They are in general the haunt of bandits. Note 14, page 41. — Tunctured his arm. From a story told by an Arab. Note 15, page 44. — The pilgrim could no lonr/cr sustain himself. An endeavour to paint tho simoom. Note IC, page 45. — By the holy stone. The Caaba. — The Caaba is the same to the Maliomedan as the Holy Sepulchre to the Christian. It is the most unseemly, but the most sacred, part of the mosque at Mecca, and is a small, square stone building. Note 17, page 47. — I atn a Ilakim ; i.e. Physician, an almost sacred character in the East. As all English- men travel with medioino-chests, tb'" Turks are not to bo wondered at for coutidering ue phj'siciaus. NOTES TO ALROY. 257 Note 18, page 49. — Threw their ivanionjerreech in the car. The Persians are more famous for throwing the jerreed than any other nation. A Persian gentleman, while riding quietly by your side, will suddenly dash off at full gallop, then suddenly check his horse, and take a long aim with his lance with admirable precision. I should doubt, however, wliether he could hurl a lance a greater distance or with greater force and effect than a Nubian, who will fix a mark at sixty yards with his javelin. Note 19, page 49. — Some pounded coffee. The origin of the use of coffee is obscure ; but there is great reason to believe that it had not been introduced in the time of Alroy. When we consider that the life of an Oriental at the present Any mainly consists in drinking coffee and smoking tobacco, we cannot refrain from asking ourselves, ' What did he do before either of these comparatively modern inventions was discovered?' For a longtime. I was inclined to suspect that tobacco might have been in use in Asia before it was introduced into Europe ; but a passage in old Sandys, in which he mentions the wretched tobacco smoked in Turkey, and accounts for it by that country being supplied with ' the dregs of our markets,' demonstrates that, in his time, there was no native growth in Asia. Yet the choicest tobaccoes lire now grown on the coast of Syria, the real Levant. But did the Asiatics smoke any other plant or substance before tobacco? In Syria, at the present day, they smoke a plant called i'(//(i?«?c; the Chinese smoke opium ; the artificial preparations for the hookah are known to all Indians. I believe, however, that these are all refinements, and for this reason, that in the classic writers, who were as well acquainted with the Oriental nations as ourselves, we find no allusion to the practice of smoking. The anachronism of the pipe I have not therefore ventured to commit, and tluit of coffee will, I trust, be pardoned. Note 20, page 49. — Wilder gesinres of the dancing girls. These dancing girls abound throughout Asia. The most famous are the Almeh of Egypt, and the Nautch of India. These last are a caste, the first only a professic'n. Note 21, page 54. — For thee the bastinado. Tlie bastinado is the common punishment of the East, and an effective and dreaded one. It is administered on the soles of the feet, the instru- ment a long cane or palm-branch. Public executions are very rare. Note 22, page G2. — A door of tortoiseshell and mother -o-^carl. This elegant mode of inlay is common in Oriental palaces, and may be observed also in Alhambra, at Granada. Note 23, page C2. — A vaulted, circular, and highly embossed roof, of ]}itrple, scarlet, and gold. In the very first style of Saracenic architecture. See tlie Hall of the Ambassadors in Alliambra, and many other chambers in that exquisite creation. 258 NOTES TO ALROY. Note 24, p. 63. — Nubian eumichs dressed in rich habits of scarlet and gold. Thus the guard of Nubian Eunuchs of the present Pacha of Egypt, Mehemet Ali, or rather Cahph, a title which he wishes to assume. They ride upon white horses. Note 25, page 63. — A quadrangular court of roses. So in Alhambra, ' The Court of Myrtles,' leading to the Court of Columns, wherein is the famous Fountain of Lions. Note 26, page 63. — An Abyssinian giant. A giant is still a common appendage to an Oriental court even at the present day. See a very amusing story in the picturesque ' Persian Sketches' of that famous elchee, Sir John Malcolm. Note 27, page 64. — Surrounded by figures of every rare quadruped. 'The hall of audience,' says Gibbon, from Cardonne, speaking of the magnificence of the Saracens of Cordova, ' was encrusted with gold and pearls, and a great basin in the centre was surrounded with the ciirious and costly figures of birds and quadrupeds.' — Decline and Fall, vol. X. p. 39. Note 28, page 64. — A tree of gold and silver. ' Among the other spectacles of rare and stupendous luxury was a tree of gold and silver, spreading into eighteen large branches, on which, and on the lesser boughs, sat a variety of birds made of the same precious metals, as well as the leaves of the tree. Wliile the machinery effected spontaneous motions, the several birds warbled their natural harmony.' — G-ibbon, vol. x. p. 38, from Abulfeda, describing the coiu-t of tlie Caliphs of Bagdad in the decline of their power. Note 29, page 65. — Four hundred men led as many white bloodhounds, with collars of gold and rubies. I have somewhere read of au Indian or Persian monarch whose coursing was conducted in this gorgeous style: if I remember right, it was Ma!i- moud the Gaznevide. Note 30, page 65. — A steed marked on its forehead with a star. The sacred steed of Solomon. Note 31, page 66. — Instead of wafer, each basin was replenished with t\i purest quicksilver. ' In a lofty pavilion of the gardens, one of those basins and fountains BO delightful in a sultry climate, was replenished, not with water, but with the purest quicksilver.' — Gibbon, vol. x. from Cardonne. Note 32, page 66. — Playing with a rosary of pearls and emeralds. Moslems of rank are never without the rosary, sometimes of amber Rnd rare woods, sometimes of jewels. The most esteemed is of that peculiar substance called Mecca wood. NOTES TO ALKOY. 259 Note 33, page 66. — The diamond hilt of a small •poniard. The insignia of a royal female. Note 34, page 70. — You have been at Paris. Paris was kno-n-n to the Orientals at this time as a city of considerable luxury and importance. The Embassy from Haroun Alraschid to Charle- magne, at an earlier date, is of course recollected. Note 35, page 76. — At length beheld the lost capital of his fathers. The finest view of Jerusalem is from the Mount of Olives. It is little altered since the period when David Alroy is supposed to have gazed upon it, but it is enrichec? by the splendid Mosque of Omar, built l)y the Moslem conquerors on the supposed site of the temple, and which, with its gardens, and arcades, and courts, and foimtains, may fairly be de- scribed as the most imposing of Moslem fanes. I endeavoured to enter it at the hazard of my life. I was detected, and surrounded by a crowd of turbaned fanatics, and escaped with difficulty ; but I saw enough to feel that minute inspection would not belie the general character I formed of it from the Mount of Olives. I caught a glorious glimpse of splendid courts, and light airy gates of Saracenic triumph, flights of noble steps, long arcades, and interior gardens, where silver fountains spouted their tall streams amid the taller cypresses. Note 36, page 76. — Entered Jerusalem In/ the gate of Sion. The gate of Sion still remains, and from it you descend into the valley of Siloah. Note 37, page 79. — King Pirgandicus. According to a Tabnudieal story, however, of which I find a note, this monarch was not a Hebrew but a Gentile, and a very wicked one. He once invited eleven famous doctors of the holy nation to supper. They were received in the most magnificent style, and were then invited, under pain of death, either to eat pork, to accept a pagan mistress, or to drink wine consecrated to idols. After long consultation, the doctors, in great tribulation, agreed to save their heads by accepting the last alterna' tive, since the two first were forbidden by the law of Moses, and the last only by the Rabbins. The King assented, the doctors drank the impure wine, and, as it was exceedingly good, drank freely. The wine, as will sometimes happen, created a terrible appetite ; the table was covered with dishes, and the doctors, heated by the grape, were not sufficiently careful of what they partook. In short, the wicked King Pirgandicus contrived that they should sup off pork, and being carried from the table quite tipsy, each of the eleven had the mortification of finding himself next morning in the arms of a pagan mistress. In the course of the year all the eleven died sudden deaths, and this visitation occurred to them, not because they had violated the law of Moses, but because they believed that the precepts of the Eabbins could be outraged with more impunity than the Word of God. Note 38, page 79. — And conquered Jtdius Casar. This classic hero often figures in the erratic pages of the Talmud. s 2 2 GO NOTES TO ALROY. Note 09. page 79.— The Tomhs of the Kings. The prf sent pilgrim to Jerusalem will have less trouble than Alroy in discovering the Tombs of the Kings, though he probably would not as easily obtain the sceptre of Solomon. The tombs that bear this title are of the time of the Asmonean princes, and of a more ambitious cha- racter than any other of the remains. An open com-t, about fifty feet in breadth, and extremely deep, is excavated out of the rock. One sido is formed by a portico, the frieze of which is sculptured in a good Syro- Greek style. There is no grand portal ; you crawl into the tombs by a 8mall opening on one of the sides. There are a few small chambers ^^■ith niches, recesses, and sarcophagi, some sculptured in the same flow- ing style as the frieze. This is the most important monument at Jeru- salem ; and Dr. Clarke, who has lavished wonder and admiration on the tombs of Zachariah and Absalom, has declared the Tombs of the Kings to be one of the marvellous productions of antiquity. Note 40.— Page 80. ' liiihbi Hilltl was one of the eminentest that ever was among the Jewish Doctors, both for birth, learning, rule, and children. He was of the seed of David by his mother's side, being of the posterity of Shephatiah, the son of Abital, David's wife. He was brought iip in Babel, from whence he came up to Jerusalem at forty years old, and there studied the law forty years more under Shemaiah and Abtalion, and after them ho was President of the Sanhedrim forty years more. The beginning of his Presidency is generally concluded upon to have bfen .just one hundred years before the Temple was destroyed; by which account ho began eight-and-twenty years before our Saviour was born, and died when he was about twelve years old. He is renowned for his fourscore scholars." — Lightfoot, vol. ii. p. 2008. The great rival of Hillel was Sliammai. Their controvei'sies, and the fierceness of their partisans, are a principal feature ofEabbinical history. They were the same as the Scotists and Thomists. At last the Bath Kol interfere be detei'- mined only by rules of art, but also by the testimony of such jjcrsons a.s deposed before the Sanhedrim, or Great Senate, that they had seen the New Moon. So a committee of three were appointed from among the NOTES TO ALKOY. 2(j,5 Baid SaulicJrim to receive the deposition of the parties aforesaid, wlio, after having calculated what time the moon might possibly appear, dis- patched some persons into high and mountainous ])Iaccs, to ohctrvc and (five their evidence accordingty, concirning the first apjicarancc of the 'Hioon. ' As soon as the new moon was either consecrated or appointed to be observed, notice was given by the Sanhedrim to the rest of the nation what day had been fixed for the New Moon, or tirst day of the month, because that was to be the rule and measure according to wliich they were obliged to keep their feasts and fasts in every mouth respectively. 'This notice was given to them in time of peace, by firing of beacons, set up for that 2mrpose, which was looked upon as the readiest way of communication, but, in time of war, when all places were full of enemies, who made use of beacons to amuse our nation with, it was thought fit to discontinue it.' Note 79, page 221. — The tvomcn chatted at the fmntain. The bath and the fountain are the favourite scenes of feminine cou- versatiou. Note 80, page 222. — Flaying chess. On the walls of the palace of Amenopli the Second, called Medeeucb Abuh, at Egyptian Thebes, the King is represented playing chess with the Queen. This monarch reigned long before the Trojan war. Note 81, page 228. — Impeded. A friend of mine witnessed this horrible punishment in Upper Egypt. The victim was a man who had secretly muidcred nine persons. He held an ofRcial post, and invited travellers and pilgrims to his house, whom he regularly disposed of and plundered. I regret that I have mislaid his MS. account of the ceremony. Note 82, page 2(32. In the Germen Davidis of Gans, translated into Latin by Vorstlus, I.ug. IG.')!, is an extract from a Hebrew MS. containing an account of Alroy. I subjoin a passage respecting his death for the learned reader, ' Scribit R. Maimonides, ^idtanum intcrrogasse ilium, num esset Messias, et dixisse, Sum, et qitcesivisse ah illo regcm, quodnam signuni habes? Et rcspondisse, vt pra;cideret caput, et se in vitam rerersurum. Tunc regem jussisse ut caput ejus ampularent, et obiisse; sed hoc illi dixisse, negravibus tjrmentis ipsum enecaret.' ' Septemannis ante decretum hoc, de quo supra locutisumus,habuerunt Israelita3 vehementes angustias propter viruin Belial, qui seipsum fecit Messiam; etrex atque principes valde accensi sunt excandesceutia contra JiidBoos, ut dicerent, eos quEcrere interituni regni sui Messise petitione. Maledicti Lujus uomen vocatum fuit David El-David, aut Alroy, ex urbe Omadia; efc erat ibi coetus magnus, circiter mille famiiias divites,refertas, honestas et feliees continens. Atque lilcclesia hseceratpi-iucipiumcoetnuni habitantium circa fluvium Sabbathion, a' que erant plus qaam centum Ecclesice. Erat hie iuitium regiouis Mediae, atqus lingua eorum erat 266" NOTES TO ALROY. idioma Thargum : inde autem usque ad regionem Golan est iter 50 dierum, et sunt sub imperio Kegis Porsise, cui dant quotannis tributum a 15 annis et iiltra aureum unum. Vir autem hie David El-David studuit coram principe captivitatis Chasdai et coram excellente Scholarcha in iirbe Bagdad, qui eximius erat sapiens in Thalmude et omnibus scientiis exoticis, atque in omnibus libris divinatorum, magorum et Chaldseorum. Hie vero David El-David ex audacia et arrogantia cordis sui elevavit manum contra regem, et collegit Judaeos babitantes in monte Chophtan, et seduxit eos, ut exirent in praeliiim cum omnibus gentibus. Ostendit lis signa ; sed ignorabant quanam virtute : erant enim homines, qui nsserebant istud per modum magise et prsestigiationis fieri ; alii dicebant, potentiam ejus magnara esse propter manum Dei. Qui consortium ejus veniebant, vocabant eum Messiam, eumqne laudabant et extollebant, ****** "In regno Persiae alio quodam tempore surrexit vir quidam Judseus, et seipsum fecit Messiam, atque valdo prospere egit ; et numerosus ex Israele ad ilium confluxit populus. Cum viro audiret rex omnem ejus potentiam, atque propositum ejus esse descendere in prselium cum ipso, raisit ad Judseos congregates in regiono sua, iisque dixit: Nisi egerint cum hocce viro, ut e medio tollatur, certo sciant, se eos omnes gladio interempturum, et uno die infantes ac foeminas deleturum. Tunc con- gregatus esttotus populus Israelis simul, atque contendit ad virum ilium, ceciditque coram illo in terram : vehementer supplicatus est, clamavit atque ploravit, ut reverteretm" a via sua : et cur seipsum et omnes afilictos conjiceret in periculum : jam enim regem jiirasse se immissurum eis gla- dium, et quomodo posset intueri affiictiouem omnium coetuum Persia?. Eespondit : Vent servatum vos, it non vuliis. Quern mctuistis ? Quisnam coram one consistetl Et quid aget rex Ferris, ut non reformidet me, et gladium incum ? Interrogarunt eum, quodnam signum haberet quod esset Messias : Respoudit, quia FELicrrER hem geeerbt, neque Messiah OPUS UABEEE ALIO siGNO. Respondei'unt multos similiter egisse, neque prosper^ uses fuisse fortuu4; tunc rejecit eo3 a facie sua cum euperba indignatioue.' IXION IN HEAVEN. ADVEETISEMENT. 'Ixion, King of Thess;ily, fainous for its horses, married Dia, daughter of Deioueus, who, in consequence of his son-in-law's non- fultihuent of his engagements, stole away some of the monarch's steeds. Ixion concealed his resentment under the mask of friend- ship. He invited his father-in-law to a feast at I>arissa, the capital of his kingdom ; and when Deioneus arrived according to his appointment, he threw him into a pit Avhich he had previously tilled with burning coals. This treachery so irritated the neigh- bouring princes, that all of them refused to perform the usual ceremony, by which a man was then purified of murder, and Ixion was shunned and despised by all mankind. Jupiter had compassion upon him, carried him to heaven, and introduced him to the Father of the Gods. Such a favour, ^^hicll ought to have awakened gratitude in Ixion, only served to inflame his bad passions ; he became enamoured of Juno, and attempted to seduce her, Juno was willing to gratii'y the passion of Ixion, thongli, according to others,' &c. — Clasdkal liationarij, ait, ' Leiuu.' IXION IN HEAYEN. PAET I. TnE THUXDER groaned, the wind howled, the rain fell in hissing torrents, impenetrable darkness covered the earth. A blue and forky flash darted a momentary light over the landscape. A Doric temple rose in the centre of a small and verdant plain, surrounded on all sides by green and hanging woods. 'Jove is my only friend,' exclaimed a wanderer, as he muffled himself up in his mantle ; ' and Avere it not for the porch of his temple, this night, methinks, would complete the work of my loving wife and my dutiful subjects.' The thunder died away, the wind sank into silence, the rnin ceased, and the parting clouds exhibited the glittering crescent of the young moon. A sonorous and majestic voice sounded from the skies : — ' Who art thou that hast no other friend than Jove ' ' ' One whom all mankind unite in calling a wretch.' ' Art thou a philosopher ? ' ' If philosophy be endurance. But for the rest, I was sometime a king, and am now a scatterling.' ' How do they call thee ? ' ' Ixion of Thessaly.' ' Ixion of Thessaly ! I thought he was a happy man. I heard that he was just married.' ' Father of Gods and men ! for I deem thee such, Thessaly 270 IXION IN HEAVEN. IS not Olympus. Conjugal felicity is only the portion of the Immortals ! ' ' Hem ! What ! was Dia jealous, which is common ; or false, which is commoner ; or both, which is commonest ? ' ' It may be neither. We quarrelled about nothing. "V^Tiere there is little sympathy, or too much, the splitting of a straw is plot enough for a domestic tragedy. I tvas care- less, her friends stigmatised me as callous ; she cold, her friends styled her magnanimous. Public opinion was all on her side, merely because I did not choose that the world should interfere between mo and my wife. Dia took the world's advice upon every point, and the world decided that she always acted rightly. However, life is life, either in a palace or a cave. I am glad you ordered it to leave off thundering.' ' A cool dog this. And Dia left thee Y ' ' No ; I left her.' ' What, craven ? ' ' Not exactly. The truth is 'tis a long story. I was over head and ears in debt.' ' Ah ! that accounts for everything. Nothing so harassing as a want of money ! But what luclcy fellows you Mortals are with your post-obits ! We Immortals are deprived of this resource. I was obliged to get up a rebellion against my father, because he kept me so short, and could not die,' ' You could have married for money. I did.' ' I had no opportunity, there was so little female society in those days. When I came out, there were no heiresses except the ParcEe, confirmed old maids ; and no very rich dowager, except my gTandmother, old Terra.' ' Just the thing ; the older the better. However, I mari-ied Dia, the daughter of Deioneus, with a prodigious portion ; but after the ceremony the old gentleman would not fulfil his part of the contract without my giving up my stud. Can you conceive anything more unreasonable ? I smothered ray resentment at the time ; for the truth is, my tradesmen all renewed my credit on the strength of the match, and so we went on very well for a year ; but at last they began to IXION IN HEAVEN. 271 smell a rat, and grew importunate. I entreated Dia to in- terfere ; but she was a paragon of daughters, aud always took the side of her father. If she had only been dutiful to her husband, she would have been a perfect woman. At last I invited Deioneus to the Larissa races, "with the intention of conciliating him. The unprincipled old man bought the horse that I had backed, and by which I intended to have redeemed my fortunes, and withdrew it. My book was ruined. I dissembled my rage. I dug a pit in our garden, and filled it with burning coals. As my father-in- law and myself were taking a stroll after dinner, the worthy Deioneus feU in, merely by accident. Dia proclaimed me the murderer of her father, and, as a satisfaction to her wounded feelings, earnestly requested her subjects to de- capitate her husband. She certainly was the best of daughters. There was no withstanding public opinion, an infuriated rabble, and a magnanimous wife at the same time. They surrounded my palace : I cut my way thi-ough the greasy-capped multitude, sword in hand, and gained a neighbouring Court, where I solicited my brother princes to purify me from the supposed murder. If I had only murdered a subject, they would have supported me against the people ; but Deioneus being a crowned head, like them- selves, they declared they would not countenance so im- moral a being as his son-in-law. And so, at length, after much "wandering, and shunned by all my species, I am here, Jove, in much higher society than I ever expected to mingle.' ' Well, thou art a frank dog, and in a sufficiently severe scrape. The Gods must have pity on those for whom men have none. It is evident that Earth is too hot for thee at present, so I think thou hadst better come and stay a few weeks with us in Heaven.' ' Take my thanks for hecatombs, great Jove. Thou art, indeed, a God ! ' ' I hardly know whether our life will suit you. We dine at sunset; for Apollo is so much engaged that he cannot join us sooner, and no dinner goes ofl" well without him. In 272 IXIOX IX HEAVRX. tlie morning you are your own master, and must fuifl amuao- ment where you can. ]3iana will show you some tolerable sport. Do you shoot ? ' ' No arrow surer. Fear not for me, -5lIgiochus : I am always at home. But how am I to get to you ? ' ' I will send Mercury ; he is the best travelling companion in the world. What ho ! my Eagle ! ' The clouds joined, and darkness again fell over the earth. n. ' So ! tread softly. Don't be nervous. Are you sick r ' ' A little nausea ; 'tis nothing.' ' The novelty of the motion. The best thing is a lieef- steak. We will stop at Taurus and take one.' ' You have been a great traveller, Mercury ? ' * I have seen the world.' 'Ah ! a wondrous spectacle. I long to travel.' ' The same thing over and over again. Little novelty and much change. I am wearied with exertion, and if T could get a pension would retire.' ' And yet travel brings wisdom.' ' It cures us of cai'e. Seeing much we feel little, and learn how very petty are all those great affairs which cost us such anxiety.' ' I feel that already myself. Floating in this blue sether, what the devil is my wife to me, and her dirty earth ! My persecuting enemies seem so many pismires ; and as for my debts, which have occasioned me so many brooding mo- ments, honour and infamy, cz'edit and beggary, seem to me alike ridiculous.' ' Your mind is opening, Ixion. You will soon be a maTi of the world. To the left, and keep clear of that star.' ' Who lives there ? ' ' The Fates knoAV, not I. Some low jieople who are trying to shine into notice. 'Tis a parvenu planet, and only sprung into sjiace within this century. We do not visit them.' ' Poor devils ! I feel liuncrrv.' IXiON IN HEAVEN. 273 * All riglit. We sliall get into Heaven by the first diuuer bolt. You caunot arrive at a strange bouse at a better moment. We shall just have time to dress. I would not spoil my appetite by luncheon. Jupiter keeps a capital cook.' ' I have heard of Nectar and Ambrosia.' ' Poh ! nobody touches them. They are regular old- fasliioned celestial food, and merely put upon the side-table. Nothing goes down in Heaven now but infernal cookery. We took our c7te/from Proserpine.' ' Were you ever in Hell ? ' ' Several times. 'Tis the fasliion now among the Olym- pians to pass the winter there.' ' Is this the season in Heaven ? ' ' Yes ; you are lucky, Olympus is quite full.' * It Avas kind of Jupiter to invite me.' ' Ay ! he has his good points. And, no doubt, he hag taken a liking to you, which is all very well. But be upon your guard. He has no heart, and is as caiuncious as he ia tyi'annical.' ' Gods cannot be more unkind to me than men have been.' ' All those who have suftered think they have seen the worst. A great mistake. However, you are now in the high road to preferment, so we will not be dull. There are some good fellows enough amongst us. You will like old Neptune.' ' Is he thei^e now ? ' ' Yes, he generally passes his summer Avith us. There is little stirring in the ocean at that season.' ' I am anxious to see Mars.' ' Oh ! a brute, more a bully than a hero. Not at all in the best set. These nuTstachioed gentry are by no means the rage at present in Olympus. The women are all literary now, and Minerva has quite eclipsed Yenus. Aj^oUo is oiir hero. You must read his last work.' ' I hate reading.' ' So do I. I have no time, and seldom do anything ia X 274 IXION IN HEAVEN. that way but glance at a newsj^aper. Study and action will not combine.' ' I suppose I shall find the Goddesses very proud ? ' ' You will find them as you find women below, of dif- ferent dispositions with the same object. Yenus is a flirt ; Minerva a prude, who fancies she has a correct taste and a strong" mind ; and Juno a politician. As for the rest, faint heart never won fair lady, take a friendly hint, and do not be alarmed.' 'I fear nothing. My mind mounts with my fortunes. We are above the clouds. They form beneath us a vast and snowy region, dim and irregular, as I have sometimes seen them clustering upon the horizon's ridge at sunset, like a raging sea stilled by some sudden supernatural frost and frozen into form ! How bright the air above us, and how delicate its fragrant breath ! I scarcely breathe, and yet my pulses beat like my first youth. I hardly feel my being. A splendour falls upon your presence. You seem, indeed, a God ! Am I so glorious ? This, this is Heaven ! ' III. The travellers landed on a vast flight of sparkhng steps of lapis-lazuli. Ascending*, they entered beautiful gardens ; winding walks that yielded to the feet, and accelerated your passage by their rebounding pressure ; fragrant shrubs covered with dazzling flowers, the fleeting tints of which changed every moment ; groups of tall trees, with strange birds of brilliant and variegated plumage, singing and reposing in their sheeny foliage, and fountains of perfumes. Before them rose an illimitable and golden palace, with high spreading domes of pearl, and long windows of crystal. Around the huge portal of ruby was ranged a company of winged genii, who smiled on Mercury as he passed them ANnth his charge. ' The father of Gods and men is dressing,' said the son of Maia. 'I shall attend his toilet and inform him of your arrival. These are your rooms. Dinner will be ready in half an houi*. I will call for you as I go down. You can I IXION IN HEAVEN. 275 bo formally presented in the evening. At that time, inspired by liqiieurs and his matchless band of wind instru- ments, you Avill agree with the Avorld that ^giochus is the most finished God in existence.' IV. ' Now, Ixion, are you ready ? ' ' Even so. "What says Jove ? ' ' He smiled, but said notliing. He was trying on a new robe. By this time he is seated. Hark ! the thunder. Come on ! ' They entered a cupolaed hall. Seats of ivory and gold were ranged round a circular table of cedar, inlaid with the campaigns against the Titans, in silver exquisitely worked, a nuptial present of Vulcan. The service of gold plate threw all the ideas of the King of Thessaly as to royal magnificence into the darkest shade. The enormous plateau represented the constellations. Ixion viewed the father of Gods and men with great interest, who, however, did not notice him. He acknowledged the majesty of that counte- nance whose nod shook Olympus. Majestically robust and luxuriantly lusty, his tapering waist was evidently immortal, for it defied Time, and his splendid auburn curls, parted on his forehead with celestial precision, descended over cheeks glowing with the purple radiancy of perpetual manhood. The haughty Juno was seated on his left hand and Ceres on his right. For the rest of the company there was Nep- tune, Latona, Minerva, and Apollo, and when Mercury and Ixion had taken their places, one seat was stUl vacant. ' Where is Diana ? ' inquired Jupiter, with a frown. * My sister is hunting,' said Apollo. ' She is always too late for dinner,' said Jupiter. ' No habit is less Goddess-like.' ' Godlike pursuits cannot be expected to induce Goddess- like manners,' said Juno, with a sneer. ' I have no doubt Diana will be here dii'ectly,' said Latona, mildly. T 2 276 IXION IN IIEAVKN. Jupiter seemed pacified, and at that instant tlie absent guest returned. ' Good sport, Di ? ' inquired Neptune. ' Very fair, uncle. Mamma,' continued the sister of Apollo, addressing herself to Juno, Avhom she ever thus styled when she wished to conciliate her, ' I have bi-ought you a new peacock.' Juno was fond of pets, and was conciliated by the pre- sent, ' Bacchus made a great noise about this wine, INIercury,' said Jupiter, ' but I think Avith little cause. What think you?' ' It pleases me, but I am fatigued, and then all wine is agreeable." ' You have had a long journey,' replied the Thunderer. * Ixion, I am glad to see you in Heaven.' ' Your Majesty arrived to-day ? ' inquired Minerva, to whom the King of Thessaly sat next. ' Within this hour.' ' You must leave oif talking of Time now,' said Minerva, with a severe smile. ' Pray is there anytliing new iu Greece ? ' * I have not been at all in society lately.' ' No ncAV edition of Homer ? I admire him exceedingly.' 'AH about Greece interests me,' said Apollo, who, although handsome, was a somewhat melancholy lack-a- daisical looking personage, with his shirt collar throAVu open, and his long curls theatrically arranged. ' All about Greece interests me. I always consider Greece my peculiar property. My best poems were Avritten at Delphi. I tra- velled in Greece Avhen I Avas young. I enA'y mankind.' * Indeed ! ' said Ixion. ' Yes : they at least can look fomvard to a termination of the ennui of existence, but for us Celestials there is no prospect. Say Avhat they like. Immortality is a bore.' ' You eat nothing, Apollo,' said Ceres. ' Nor drink,' said Neptune. ' To eatj to drink, what is it but to live ; an.I what is life IXION IN HEAVEN. 277 but deaili, if death be that which all meu deem it, a thing insufferable, and to be shunned. I refresh myself now only Avith soda-water and biscuits. Ganymede, bring some.' Now, although the cuisine of Olympus was considered jitrfect, the forlorn poet had unfortunately fixed upon the only two articles wliich were not comprised in its cellar or larder. In Heaven, there was neither soda-water nor biscuits. A great confusion consequently ensued ; but at length the bard, Avhose love of fame was only equalled by his horror of getting fat, consoled himself with a swan stuffed with truffles, and a bottle of strong Tenedos wine. ' What do you think of Homer ? ' inquired Minerva of Apollo. ' Is he not delightful ? ' ' If you think so.' ' Xay, I am desirous of your opinion.' ' Then you should not have given me yours, for your taste in too fine for me to dare to differ with it.' ' I have susioected, for some time, that you are rather a heretic' 'Why, the truth is,' replied Apollo, playing with his rings, ' I do not think much of Homer. Homer was not esteemed in his own age, and our contemporaries are gene- rally our best judges. The fact is, there are very few people who are qualified to decide ;ipon matters of taste. A certain set, for certain reasons, resolve to cry up a cer- tain writer, and the great mass soon join in. All is cant. And the present admiration of Homer is not less so. They say I have borroAved a great deal from him. The truth is, I never read Homer since I was a child, and I thought of him then what I think of him now, a writer of some wild irregular powei', totally deficient in taste. Depend upon it, our contemporaries are our best judges, and his contempo- raries decided that Homer was nothing. A great poet can- not be kept down. Look at my case. Marsyaa said of my first volume that it was pretty good poetry for a God, and in answer I wrote a satire, and flayed !Marsyas alive. But what is poetry, and what is criticism, and what is life ? Air. And wliat is Air ? Do you know ? I don't. All is 278 IXION IN HEAVEN. inysterj, and all is gloom, and ever and anon from out the clouds a star breaks foitli, and glitters, and that star is Poetry.' * Splendid ! ' exclaimed Minerva. * I do not exactly imderstand you,' said Keptune. ' Have you heard from Proserpine, lately ? ' inquired Jupiter of Ceres. ' Yesterday,' said the domestic mother. ' They talk of soon joining us. But Pluto is at present so busy, owing to the amazing quantity of wars going on now, that I am almost afraid he Avill scarcely be able to accompany her.' Juno exchanged a telegraphic nod with Ceres. The Goddesses rose, and retired. ' Come, old boy,' said Jupiter to Ixion, instantly throwing ofi" all his chivalric majesty, ' I drink your welcome in a magnum of Maraschino. Damn your poetry, Apollo, and Mercury give us one of your good stories.' * Well ! what do you think of him ? ' asked Juno. 'He appears to have a fine mind,' said Minerva. 'Poh ! he has very fine eyes,' said Juno. 'He seems a very nice, quiet young gentleman,' said Ceres. ' I have no doubt he is very amiable,' said Latona, ' He must have felt very strange,' said Diana. VI. Hercules arrived with liis bride Hebe; soon after the Graces dropped in, the most delightful personages in the world for a soiree, so useful and ready for anything. After- wards came a few of the Muses, Thaha, Melpomene, and Terpsichore, famous for a charade or a provei^b. Jupiter liked to be amused in the evening. Bacchus also came, but finduig that the Gods had not yet left their wine, re- tired to pay them a previous visit. IXION IN HEAVEN. 279 VII, Granymede annoTinced coffee in the saloon of Juno. Jupiter was in superb good humour. He was amused by his mortal guest. He had condescended to tell one of his best stories in his best style, about Leda, not too scandalous, but gay. ' Those were bright days,' said Neptune. 'We can remember,' said the Thunderer, with a twink- ling eye. ' These youths have fallen upon duller times. There are no fine women now. Ixion, I drink to the health of your wife.' ' With all my heart, and may we never be nearer than we are at present.' ' Good ! i'faith; Apollo, your arm. Now for the ladies. La, la, la, la ! la, la, la, la ! ' VIII. The Thunderer entered the saloon of Juno with that bow which no Grod could rival ; all rose, and the King of Heaven seated himself between Ceres and Latona. The melancholy Apollo stood apart, and was soon carried off by Minerva to an assembly at the house of Mnemosyne. Mer- cuiy chatted with the Grraces, and Bacchus with Diana. The three Muses favoured the company with singing, and the Queen of Heaven approached Ixion. ' Does your Majesty dance ? ' she haughtily inquired. ' On earth ; I have few accompHshments even there, and none in Heaven.' ' You have led a strange life ! I have heard of your ad- ventures.' ' A king who has lost his crown may generally gain at least experience.' ' Your courage is firm.' ' I have felt too much to care for much. Yesterday I was a vagabond exposed to every pitiless storm, and now I am the guest of Jove. While there is life there is hope, and he who laughs at Destiny will gain Fortune. I would go through the past again to enjoy the present, and feel 280 IXION IN HEAVEN. iliat, after all, I am my wife's debtor, since, tlirotigli her condiicfc, I can gaze upon you.' ' No great spectacle. If that be all, I wish yoTi better fortune.' ' I desire no greater.' ' You are moderate.' ' I am perhaps moi*e unreasonable than you imagine.' ' Indeed ! ' Their eyes met ; the dark orbs of the Thessalian did not quail before the flashing vision of the Goddess. Juno grew pale. Juno turned away. IXION IN HEAVEN. 281 TAET IT. ' Others say it was only a cloud.' Meecuet ana Ganymede were eacli lolling on an opposite couoh in the antechamber of Olympus. ' It is wonderful,' said the son of Maia, yawning. * It is incredible,' rejoined the cup-bearer of Joro, stretching his legs. 'A miserable mortal! ' exclaimed the God, elevating his eyebrows. ' A vile Thessalian ! ' said the beautiful Phrygian, shrug- ging his shoulders. ' Not three days back an outcast among his own wretched species ! ' ' And now commanding everybody in Heaven.' ' He shall not command me, though,' said Mercury. ' Will he not ? ' replied Ganymede. ' ^^Tiy, what do you think ? only last night ; hark ! here he comes.' The companions jumped up from their couches ; a light laugh was heard. The cedar portal was flung open, and Ixion lounged in, habited in a loose morning robe, and kicking before him one of his slippers. 'Ah !' exclaimed the King of Thessaly, ' the ver}- fellows I wanted to see ! Ganymede, bring me some nectar ; and, Mercury, run and tell Jove that I shall not dine at homo to-day.' The messenger and the page exchanged looks of indig- nant consternation. ' Well ! what are you waiting for ? ' continued Ixion, looking round from the mirror in which he was arrano-infj his locks. The messenger and the page disappeared. 282 IXION IN HEAVEN. < So ! this is Heaven,' exclaimed the husband of Dia, flinoTDo- himself upon one of the couches ; ' and a very pleasant place too. These worthy Immortals required their minds to be opened, and I trust I have effectually per- formed the necessary operation. They wanted to keep me down with their dull old-fashioned celestial airs, but I fancy I have given thena change for their talent. To make your way in Heaven you must command. These exclusives sink under the audacious invention of an aspiring mind. Jove himself is really a fine old fellow, with some notions too. I am a prime favourite, and no one is greater autho- rity with ^giochus on all subjects, from the character of the fair sex or the pedigree of a courser, down to the cut of a robe or the flavour of a dish. Thanks, Granymede,' con- tinued the Thessalian, as he took the goblet from his retiu"ning attendant. ' I drink to your honnes fortunes. Splendid ! This nectar makes me feel quite immortal. By-the-bye, I hear sweet sounds. Who is in the Hall of Music ? ' ' The Goddesses, royal sir, practise a new air of Euterpe, the words by Apollo. 'Tis pretty, and will doubtless be very popular, for it is all about moonlight and the misery of existence.' ' I warrant it.' 'You have a taste for poetry yourself?' inquired Ganymede. ' Not the least,' replied Ixion. ' Apollo,' continued the heavenly page, ' is a great genius, though Marsyas said that he never would be a poet because he was a god, and had no heart. But do you think, sir, that a poet does indeed need a heart ? ' ' I really cannot say. I know my wife always said I had a bad heart and worse head ; but what she meant, upon my honour I never could understand.' ' Minerva will ask you to write in her album.' * Will she indeed ! I am sorry to hear it, for I can scarcely scrawl my signature. I should think that Jove himself cared little for all this nonsense.' IXION IN HEAVEN. 283 ' Jove loves an epigram. He does not esteem Apollo's •works at all. Jove is of the classical school, and admires satire, provided there be no allusions to gods and kings.' ' Of course ; I quite agree with him. I remember we had a confounded poet at Larissa who proved my family lived before the deluge, and asked me for a pension. I refused him, and then he wrote an epigram asserting that I sprang from the- veritable stones thrown by Deucalion and Pyrrha at the re-peopHng of the earth, and retained all the properties of my ancestors,' ' Ha, ha ! Hark ! there's a thunderbolt ! I must run to Jove.' 'And I will look in on the musicians. This way, I think ?' ' Up the ruby staircase, turn to your right, down the amethyst gallery. Farewell !' ' Good bye ; a lively lad that ! ' The King of Thessaly entered the Hall of Music vrith its golden walls and crystal dome. The Queen of Heaven was reclining in an easy chair, cutting out peacocks in small sheets of note paper. Minerva was making a pencil obser- vation on a manuscript copy of the song : Apollo listened with deference to her laudatory criticisms. Another divine dame, standing by the side of Euterpe, who was seated by the harp, looked up as Ixion entered. The v/ild liquid glance of her soft but radiant countenance denoted the famed Goddess of Beauty. Juno just acknowledged the entrance of Ixion by a slight and haughty inclination of the head, and then resumed her employment. Minerva asked him his opinion of her amend- ment, of which he gi'eatty approved. Apollo greeted him with a melancholy smile, and congratulated him on being mortal. Venus complimented him on his visit to Olympus, and expressed the pleasure that she experienced in making his acquaintance. ' Wliat do you tliink of Heaven ?' inquired Venus, in a Boft still voice, and -^vith a smile like summer lightning. £84 IXIOX IN HEAVEN. % ' I never found, it so encliauting as at (Lis momeni,' re- plied Ixion. ' A little dull ? For myself, I pass my time cliiefly at Cnidos : you must come and visit me there. 'Tis the most charming place in the world. 'Tis said, you know, that oirr onions are like other people's roses. We will take care of you, if your wife come.' ' ISTo fear of that. She always remains at home and piques herself on her domestic virtues, which means pick- ling, and quarrelling with her husband.' ' Ah ! I see you are a droll. Very good indeed. "Well, for my part, I like a watering-place existence. Cnidos, Paphos, Cythera ; you will usually find me at one of these places. I like the easy distraction of a career without any visible result. At these fascinating spots your gloomy race, to whom, by-the-bye, I am exceedingly partial, appear emancipated from the wearing fetters of their regular, dull, orderly, methodical, moral, political, toiling existence. I pride myself upon being the Goddess of Watering-places. You really must pay me a visit at Cnidos.' ' Such an invitation requii'es no repetition. And Cnidos is your favourite spot ?' ' Why, it was so ; but of late it has become so inundated with invalid Asiatics and valetudinarian Persians, that the simultaneous influx of the handsome heroes who swarm in from the islands to look after their daughters, scarcely com- pensates for the annoying pi'esence of their yellow faces and shaking limbs. No, I think, on the whole, Paphos is my favourite.' ' I have heard of its magnificent luxury.' ' Oh ! 'tis lovely ! Quite my idea of country life. Not a single tree ! When Cyprus is very hot, you run to Paphos for a sea-breeze, and are sure to meet every one whose pre- sence is in the least desirable. All the bores remain behind, as if by instinct.' ' I remember when we married, wo talked of passing the lioneymoon at Cythera, but Dia would have her waiting- maid and a bandbox stuffed between us in the chariot, so I got sulky ofter the first singe, and returned by myself,' IXION IN HEAVEJN. 285 ' You were quite right, I liate bandboxes : tliey are always in the way. You Avould have liked Cythera if you had been in the least in love. High rocks and green knolls, bowery woods, winding walks, and delicious sunsets. I have not been there much of late,' continued the Goddess, looking somewhat sad and serious, ' since : but I will not talk sentiment to Ixion.' ' Do you think, then, I am insensible ?' ' Yes.' ' Perhaps you are right. We mortals grow callous.' ' So I have heai'd. How very odd ! ' So saying, the Goddess glided away and saluted Mars, who at that mo- ment entered the hall. Ixion was presented to the military hero, who looked fierce and bowed stiffly. The King of Thessaly turned upon his heel. Minerva opened her album, and invited him to inscribe a stanza. ' Goddess of Wisdom,' replied the King, 'unless you in- spire me, the virgin page must remain pure as thyself. I can scarcely sign a decree.' 'Is it Ixion of Thessaly who says this ; one who has seen so much, and, if I am not mistaken, has felt and thought so much ? I can easily conceive why such a mind may desire to veil its movements from the common herd, but pray con- cede to Minerva the gratifjdng compliment of assuring her that she is the exception for whom this rule has been esta- bhshed.' ' I seem to listen to the inspired music of an oracle. Give me a pen.' ' Ilei'e is one, plucked from a sacred owl.' ' So ! I write. There ! Will it do ?' ]\Iiner-\'a read the inscription : — I HAVE SEEN THE WORLD, AND MORE THAN THE WORLD : I HAVE STUDIED THE HEART OF MAN, AND NOW I COT\^SOET WITH Immortals. The fruit of my tree of knowledge IS plucked, and it is this, * 'aiifanTtuvr^ arc to tI)E Qtfljrnturoiis.' Written in the Album of Minerva, Inj ^yiow in lljpafacit. 286 IXION IN HE-iVEN. ' 'Tis brief,' said the Goddess, with a musing air, ' but full of meaning. You have a daring soul and pregnant mind.' * I have dared much : what I may produce we have yet to see.' 'I must to Jove,' said IMinerva, 'to council. We shall meet again. Farewell, Ixiou.' ' Fai-ewell, Glaucopis.' The King of Thessaly stood away from the remaining guests, and leant with folded arms and pensive brow against a wreathed column. Mars Hstened to Venus with an aii- of deep devotion. Euterpe played an inspiring accompaniment to their conversation. The Queen of Heaven seemed en- grossed in the creation of her paper peacocks. Ixion advanced and seated himself on a couch near Juno. His manner was divested of that reckless bearing and care- less coolness by which it was in general distinguished. He was, perhaps, even a little embarrassed. His ready tongue deserted him. At length he spoke. ' Has your Majesty ever heard of the peacock of the Queen of Mesopotamia ?' ' No,' replied Juno, with stately reserve ; and then she added with an air of indifferent curiosity, ' Is it in any way remarkable ?' ' Its breast is of silver, its wings of gold, its eyes of car- buncle, its claws of amethyst.' ' And its tail ?' eagerly inquii-ed Juno. ' That is a secret,' rephed Ixion. ' The tail is the most wonderful part of all.' ' Oh ! tell me, pray tell me ! ' ' I forget.' ' No, no, no ; it is impossible ! ' exclaimed the animated Juno. ' Provoking mortal ! ' continued the Goddess. ' Let me entreat you ; tell me immediately.' ' There is a reason which prevents me.' ' What can it be ? How very odd ! What reason can it possibly be ? Now tell me ; as a particular, a personal f'avoui-, I request you, do tell me.' rXION IN HEAVEN. 287 * What ! The tail or the reason ? The tail is wonderful, but the reason is much more so. I can only tell one. ISTow choose.' ' What provoking things these human beings are ! The tail is wonderful, but the reason is much more so. Well then, the reason ; no, the tail. Stop, now, as a particular favour, pray tell me both. What can the tail be made of and what can the reason be? I am Literally dying of curiosity.' ' Tour Majesty has cut out that peacock wrong,' remarked Ixion. ' It is more like one of Minerva's owls.' ' Who cares about paper peacocks, when the Queen of Mesopotamia has got such a miracle ! ' exclaimed Juno ; and she tore the labours of the morning to pieces, and threw away the fragments with vexation. ' Now tell me instantly ; if you have the slightest regard for me, tell me instantly. What was the tail made of? ' ' And you do not wish to hear the reason ?' 'That afterwards. Now! I am all ears.' At this mo- ment Ganymede entered, and whispered the Goddess, who rose in evident vexation, and retired to the presence of Jove. m. The King of Thessaly quitted the Hall of Music. Moody, yet not uninfluenced by a degree of wild excitement, he wandered forth into the gardens of Olympus. He came to a beautiful green retreat surrounded by enormous cedars, so vast that it seemed they must have been coeval with the creation ; so fresh and brilhaut, you would have deemed them wet with the dew of their first spring. The turf, softer than down, and exhaling, as you pressed it, an ex- quisite perfume, invited him to recline himself upon this natural couch. He threw himself upon the aromatic herb- age, and leaning on his arm, fell into a deep reverie. Hours flew away; the sunshiny glades that opened in the distance had softened into shade. * Ixion, how do you do ? ' inquired a voice, wild, sweet, and thrilUng as a bhd. The King of Thessaly started and 288 IXION IN HEAVEN. looked up TV'itli the distracted air of a man roused from a dream, or from complacent meditation over some strange, sweet seci'et. His cheek was flushed, his dark eyes flashed fire ; his brow trembled, his dishevelled hair played in the fitful breeze. The King of Thessaly looked up, and beheld a most beautiful youth. Apparently, he had attained about the age of puberty. His stature, however, was rather tall for his age, but exquisitely moulded and proportioned. Very fair, his somewhat round cheeks were tinted with a rich but delicate glow, like the rose of twiUght, and lighted by dimples that twinkled like stars. His large and deep-blue eyes sparkled with exultation, and an air of ill-suppressed mockery quivered round his pouting li^DS, His light auburn hair, braided ofi" his white forehead, clustered in massy curls on each side of his face, and fell in sunny torrents down his neck. And from the back of the beautiful youth there flut- tered forth two Avings, the tremulous plumage of Avhicli seemed to have been bathed in a sunset: so various, so radiant, and so novel Avere its shifting and wondrous tints ; purple, and crimson, and gold ; streaks of azure, dashes of orange and glossy black ; now a single feather, whiter than light, and sparkling like the frost, stars of emerald and car- buncle, and then the prismatic blaze of an enormous bril- liant ! A quiver hung at the side of the beautiful youth, and he leant upon a bow. ' Oh ! god, for god thou must be ! ' at length exclaimed Ixion. ' Do I behold the bright divinity of Love ? ' 'I am indeed Cupid,' repHed the youth; ' and am curious to know what Ixion is thinking about.' ' Thought is often bolder than speech.' ' Oracular, though a mortal ! You need not be afraid to trust me. My aid I am sure you must need. Who ever was found in a reverie on the green turf, under the shade of spreading trees, without requiring the assistance of Cupid ? Come ! be frank, who is the heroine ? Some love-sick nymph deserted on the far earth ; or worse, some treache- rous mistress, whose frailty is more easily forgotten than IXION IN HEAVEN. 289 lier charms ? 'Tis a miserable situation, no dovibt. It can- not be your wife ? ' ' Assuredly not,' replied Ixion, witb energy. ' Another man's ? ' 'No.' 'What! an obdurate maiden?' Ixion shook his head. * It must be a widow, then,' continued Cupid. ' Who ever heard before of sach a piece of work about a widow ! ' ' Have pity upon me, dread Cupid ! ' exclaimed the King of Thessaly, rising suddenly from the ground, and falling on his knee before the God. ' Thou art the universal friend of man, and all nations alike throw their incense on thy altars. Thy divine discrimination has not deceived thee. I a'jn in love ; desperately, madly, fatally enamoured. The object of my passion is neither my own wife nor another man's. In spite of all they have said and sworn, I am a moral member of society. She is neither a maid nor a widow. She is ' ' What ? what ? ' exclaimed the impatient deity. 'A Goddess ! ' replied the King. ' Wheugh ! ' whistled Cupid. ' "What ! has my mis- chievous mother been indulging you with an innocent flirtation ? ' ' Yes ; but it produced no eflect upon me.' ' You have a stout heart, then. Perhaps you have been reading poetry with Minerva, and are caught in one of her Platonic man- traps.' ' She set one, but I broke away.' ' You have a stout leg, then. But where are you, where are you ? Is it Hebe ? It can hardly be Diana, she is so cold. Is it a Muse, or is it one of the Graces ? ' Ixion again shook his head. ' Come, my dear fellow,' said Cupid, quite in a confiden- tial tone, ' you have told enough to make further reserve mere aifectation. Ease your heart at once, and if I can assist you, depend upon my exertions.' ' Beneficent God ! ' exclaimed Ixion, ' if I ever return to U 290 IXION IN HEAVEN. Larissa, the brightest temple in Greece shall hail thee for its inspirino- deity. I address thee with all the confiding frankness of a devoted votary. Know, then, the heroine of my reverie was no less a personage than the Queen of Heaven herself ! ' ' Juno ! by all that is sacred ! ' shouted Cupid. 'I am here,' responded a voice of majestic melody. The stately form of the Queen of Heaven advanced from a neigh- bouring bower. Ixion stood with his eyes fixed upon the ground, with a throbbing heart and burning cheeks. Juno stood motionless, pale, and astounded. The God of Love burst into excessive laughter. 'A pretty pair,' he exclaimed, fluttering between both, and laughing iu their faces. ' Truly a pretty pair. Well ! I see I am in your way. Good bye ! ' And so saying, the God pulled a couple of arrows from his quiver, and with the rapidity of lightning shot one in the respective breasts of the Queen of Heaven and the King of Thessaly. IV. The amethystine twilight of Olympus died away. The stars blazed with tints of every hue. Ixion and Juno re- turned to the palace. She leant upon his arm ; her eyes were fixed upon the ground ; they were in sight of the gorgeous pile, and yet she had not spoken. Ixion, too, was silent, and gazed with abstraction upon the glowing sky. Suddenly, when within a hundred yards of the portal, Juno stopped, and looking up into the face of Ixion with an irresistible smile, she said, ' I am sure you cannot now refuse to tell me what the Queen of Mesopotamia's peacock's tail was made of ! ' ' It is impossible now,' said Ixion. ' Know, then, beautiful Goddess, that the tail of the Queen of Mesopotamia's pea- cock was made of some plumage she had stolen from the wings of Cupid.' ' And what was the I'eason that prevented you from tell- ing me before ? ' IXION IN HEAVEN. 291 * Because, beautiful Juno, I am the most discreet of men, and respect the secret of a lady, however trifling.' ' I am glad to hear that,' replied Juno, and they re-entered the palace. V. Mercury met Juno and Ixion in the gallery leading to the grand banqueting hall. * I was looking for you,' said the God, shaking his head. 'Jove is in a sublime rage. Dinner has been ready this hour.' The King of Thessaly and the Queen of Heaven ex- changed a glance and entered the saloon. Jove looked up with a brow of thunder, but did not condescend to send forth a single flash of anger. Jove looked up and Jove looked down. All Olympus trembled as the father of Gods and men resumed his soup. The rest of the guests seemed nervous and reserved, except Cupid, who said immediately to Juno, ' Your Majesty has been detained ? ' ' I fell asleep in a bower reading Apollo's last poem,' re- pKed Juno. ' I am lucky, however, in finding a companion in my negligence. Ixion, where have you been ? ' ' Take a glass of nectar, Juno,' said Cupid, with eyes twinkling with mischief; ' and perhaps Ixion will join us.' This was the most solenm banquet ever celebrated in Olympus. Every one seemed out of humour or out of spirits. Jupiter spoke only in monosyllables of suppressed rage, that sounded like distant thunder. Apollo whispered to Minerva. Mercury never opened his lips, but occasionally exchanged significant glances with Ganymede. Mars compensated, by his attentions to Venus, for his want of conversation. Cupid employed himself in asking disagreeable questions. At length the Goddesses re- tired. Mercury exerted himself to amuse Jove, but the Thunderer scarcely deigned to smile at his best stories. Mars picked his teeth, Apollo played with his rings, Ixion was buried in a profound reverie. V 2 292 IXIOX IN HEAVEN. VI. It was a gi'eat relief to all when Ganymede summoned tliem to the presence of their late companions. ' I have written a comment upon your inscription,' said Minerva to Ixion, ' and am anxious for your opinion of it.' ' I am a wretched critic,' said the King, breaking away from her. Juno smiled upon him in the distance. ' Ixion,' said Venus, as he passed by, ' come and talk to me.' The bold Thessalian blushed, he stammered out an un- meaning excuse, he quitted the astonished but good-natured Goddess, and seated himself by Juno, and as he seated him- self his moody brow seemed suddenly illumined with bril- liant light. * Is it so ? ' said Venus. ' Hem ! ' said !Minerva. ' Ha, ha ! ' said Cupid. Jupiter played piquette with Mercury. ' Everything goes wrong to-day,' said the King of Heaven; ' cards wretched, and kept waiting for dinner, and by a mortal ! ' ' Your Majesty must not be surprised,' said the good- natured Mercury, with whom Ixion was no favourite. ' Your Majesty must not be very much surprised at the conduct of this creatui'e. Considering what he is, and where he is, I am only astonished that his head is not more turned than it appears to be. A man, a thing made of miid, and in Heaven ! Only think, sire ! Is it not enough to inflame the brain of any child of clay? To be sure, keeping your Majesty from dinner is little short of celestial high treason. I hardly expected that, indeed. To order me about, to treat Ganymede as his own lacquey, and, in short, to command the whole household ; all this might be expected from such a person in such a situation, but I confess I did think he had some little respect left for your Majesty.' 'And he does order you abou.t, eh? ' inquired Jove. ' I have the spades.' IXION IN HEAVEN. 293 ' Oil ! 'tis qiiite ludicrous,' responded the son of Maia. ' Tour Majesty would not expect from me the offices that this upstart daily requires.' ' Eternal destixiy ! is't possible ? That is my trick. And Ganymede, too ? ' ' Oh ! quite shocking, I assure you, sire,' said the beau- tiful cupbearer, leaning over the chair of Jove with all the easy insolence of a privileged favourite. ' Really six-e, if Ixion is to go on in the way he does, either he or I must quit.' ' Is it possible ? ' exclaimed Jupiter. ' Bixt I can believe anything of a man who keeps me waiting for dmner. Two and three make five.' ' It is Juno that encoiu'ages him so,' said Ganymede. ' Does she encourage him ? ' inquired Jove. ' Everybody notices it,' protested Ganymede. ' It is indeed a little noticed,' observed Mercury. 'What business has such a fellow to speak to Juno?' exclaimed Jove. ' A mere mortal, a mere miserable mortal ! You have the point. How I have been deceived in this fellow ! Who ever could have supposed that, after all my generosity to him, he would ever have kept me waitmg for dinner ? ' ' He was walking with Juno,' said Ganymede. ' It was all a sham about their having met by accident. Cupid saw them.' 'Ha!' said Jupiter, turning pale; 'you don't say so ! Repiqucd, as I am a God. That is mine. Where is tho Queen ? ' 'Talking to Ixion, sire,' said Mercury. ' Oh, I beg your pardon, sire ; I did not know you meant the queen of diamonds.' ' IN'ever mind. I am repiqued, and I have been kept waiting for dinner. Accursed be this day ! Is Ixion really talking to Juno ? We will not endure this.' 294 IXION IN HEAVEN. ' Where is Juno ? ' demanded Jupiter. ' I am sure I cannot say,' said Venus, with a smile. ' I am sure I do not know,' said IVIinerva, with a sneer ' Where is Ixion? ' said Cupid, laughing outright. ' Mercury, Ganymede, find the Queen of Heaven in- stantly,' thundered the father of Gods and men. The celestial messenger and the heavenly page flew away out of different doors. There was a terrible, an immortal silence. Sublime rage lowered on the brow of Jove like a storm upon the mountain-top. Minerva seated herself at the card-table and played at Patience. Venus and Cupid tittered in the background. Shortly returned the envoys. Mercury looking solemn, Ganymede malignant. ' Well? ' inquired Jove ; and all Olympus trembled at the monosyllable. Mercury shook his head. ' Her Majesty has been walking on the terrace with the King of Thessaly,' replied Ganymede. 'Where is she now, sir? ' demanded Jupiter. Mercury shrugged his shoulders. ' Her Majesty is resting herself in the paviHon of Cupid, with the King of Thessaly,' replied Ganymede. ' Confusion ! ' exclaimed the father of Gods and men ; and he rose and seized a candle fi-om the table, scattering the cards in all directions. Every one present, Minerva and Venus, and Mars and Apollo, and Mercury and Ganymede, and the Muses, and the Graces, and all the winged Genii — ■ each seized a candle ; rifling the chandeHers, each followed Jove. * This way,' said Mercury. * This way,' said Ganymede. * This way, this way ! ' echoed the celestial crowd. 'Mischief ! ' cried Cupid ; ' I must save my victims.' They Avere all upon the terrace. The father of Gods and men, though both in a passion and a hurry, moved with dignity. It was, as customary in Heaven, a clear and starry IXION IN HEAVEN. 295 nigiit ; but this eve Diana was indisposed, or otherwise engaged, and there was no moonHght. They were in sight of the pavilion. ' What are you ? ' inquired Cupid of one of the Genii, who accidentally extinguished his candle. *I am a Cloud,' answered the winged Genius. ' A Cloud ! Just the thing. Now do me a shrewd turn, and Cupid is ever your debtor. Fly, fly, pretty Cloud, and encompass yon paviHon with your form. Away ! ask no questions ; swift as my word.' ' I declare there is a fog,' said Venus. ' An evening mist in Heaven ! ' said Minerva. ' Where is Nox? ' said Jove. ' Everything goes wrong. Who ever heard of a mist in Heaven ? ' ' My candle is out,' said Apollo. ' And mine, too,' said Mai's. * And mine, and mine, and mine,' said Mercury and Gany- mede, and the Muses and the Graces. ' All the candles are out ! ' said Cupid ; ' a regular fog. I cannot even see the pavilion : it must be hereabouts, though,' said the God to himself. ' So, so ; I should be at home in my own pavilion, and am tolerably accustomed to steaHng about in the dark. There is a step ; and here, surely, is the lock. The door opens, but the Cloud enters before me. Juno, Juno,' whispered the God of Love, ' we are all here. Be contented to escape, like many other innocent dames, with your reputation only under a cloud : it will soon disperse ; and lo ! the heaven is clearing.' ' It must have been the heat of our flambeaux,' said Venus ; ' for see, the mist is vanished ; here is the pavihon.' Ganymede ran forward, and dashed open the door. Ixion was alone. * Seize him ! ' said Jove. ' Juno is not here,' said Mercury, with an air of blended congratulation and disappointment. ' Never mind,' said Jove ; ' seize biTn ! He kept me wait- ing for dinner.' 'Is this your hospitahty, .^giochus?' exclaimed Ixion, 296 IXION IN II KAY EN. in a toue of bullying innocence. ' I sliall defend my- Belf.' ' Seize liim, seize liiin. ! ' exclaimed Ju})iter. ' What ! do you all falter? Are you afraid of a mortal? * ' And a Thessalian ? ' added Ganymede. No one advanced. ' Send for Hercules,' said Jove. ' I Avill fetch him iu an instant,' said Ganymede, ' I protest,' said the King of Thessaly, ' against this vio- lation of the most sacred rights.' ' The marriage tie ? ' said Mercury. ' The dinner-hour ? ' said Jove. ' It is no use talking sentiment to Ixion,' said Venus ; ' all mortals are callous.' * Adventures are to the adventurous,' said Minerva. ' Here is Hercules ! here is Hercules ! ' ' Seize him ! ' said Jove ; ' seize that man.' In vain the mortal struggled with the iiTesistible demi- god. ' Shall I fetch your thunderbolt, Jove ? ' inquired Gany- mede. ' Anything short of eternal punishment is unworthy of a God,' answered Jupiter, with great dignity. * Apollo, bring me a wheel of your chariot.' * What shall I do to-morrow moi'ning? ' inquu-ed the God of Light. * Order an eclipse,' replied Jove. ' Bind the insolent wretch to the wheel ; hurl him to Hades ; its motion shall be perpetual.' * What am I to bind him with? ' inquired Hercules, ' The girdle of Venus,' replied the Thunderer. ' What is all this ? ' inquired Juno, advancing, pale and agitated. ' Come along ; you shall see,' answered Jupiter. ' Follow me, follow me.' They all followed the leader, all the Gods, all the Genii ; in the midst, the brawny husband of Hebe beai-ing Ixion aloft, bound to the fatal wheel. They reached the ten-ace ; IXION IN HEAVEN. 297 tliey descended the sparkling steps of lapis-lazuli. Hei'culea held his burthen on high, ready, at a nod, to plunge the hapless but presumptuous mortal through space into Hades. The heavenly group surrounded him, and peeped over the starry abyss. It was a fine moral, and demonstrated the usual infelicity that attends unequal connections. ' Celestial despot ! ' said Ixion. In a moment all sounds were hushed, as they listened to the last words of the unrivalled victim. Juno, in despair, leant upon the respective arms of Veniis and Minerva. ' Celestial despot ! ' said Ixion, ' I defy the immortal in- genuity of thy cruelty. My memory must be as eternal as thy torture : that will support me.' THE INFEENAL MAEKIAGE. Proserpiue was the daugliter of Jupiter aud Ceres. Pluto, tlio God of Hell, became enamoured of her. His addresses were favoured by her father, but opposed by Oeres. Under these cir- cumstances, he surprised hnv on the plains of Enna, and carried her oft' in his chariot. THE INFEENAL MAEEIAGE. PART I. It was clearly a runaway matcli — never indeed was sncli a sublime elopement. The four horses were coal-black, with blood-red manes and tails ; and they were shod with rubies. Tliey were harnessed to a basaltic car by a single rein of flame. Waving his double-pronged trident in the air, the God struck the blue breast of Cyane, and the waters instantly paited. In rushed the wild chariot, the pale and in- sensible Proserpine clinging to the breast of her grim lover. Through the depths of the hitherto unfathomed lake the infernal steeds held their breathless course. The car jolted against its bed. ' Save me ! ' exclaimed the future Queen of Hades, and she clung with renewed energy to the bosom of the dai'k bridegroom. The earth opened ; they entered the kingdom of the Gnomes. Here Pluto was popular. The lurid populace gave him a loud shout. The chariot whirled along through shadowy cities and by dim highways, swarming with a busy race of shades. ' Ye flowery meads of Enna ! ' exclaimed the terrified Proserpine, ' shall I never vicAV you again ? What an execrable climate ! ' ' Here, however, in-door nature is charming,' responded Pluto. ' 'Tis a great nation of manufacturers. You are better, I hope, my Proserpine. The passage of the water is never very agreeable, especially to ladies.' * And which is our next stage ? ' inquired Proserpine. 302 THE INFERNAL IVLiERIAGE. ' Tlie centre of Earth,' replied Pluto. ' Travelling is so much improved that at this rate we shall reach Hades before night.' ' Alas ! ' exclaimed Proserpine, ' is not this night ? ' ' Tou are not unhappy, my Proserpine ? ' ' Beloved of my heart, I have given up everything for you ! I do not repent, but I am thinking of my mother.'' ' Time will pacify the Lady Ceres. What is done cannot be undone. In the winter, when a residence among us is even desirable, I should not be surprised were she to pay us a visit.' ' Her prejudices are so strong,' murmured the bride. ' I my Pluto, I hope your family will be land to me.' ' Who could be unkind to Proserpine ? Ours is a very domestic circle. I can assure you that everything is so well ordered among us that I have no recollection of a domestic broil.' ' But marriage is such a revolution in a bachelor's estab- lishment,' replied Proserpine, despondingly. ' To tell the truth, too, I am half frightened at the thought of the Furies. I have heard that their tempers are so violent.' ' They mean well ; their feelings are strong, but thr.W heai'ts are in the right place. I flatter myself you will like my nieces, the ParcsB. They are accomplished, and favourites among the men.' ' Indeed ! ' ' Oh ! quite irresistible.' ' My heart misgives me. I %vish you had at least paid them the compliment of apprising them of our marriage.' ' Cheer up. For myself, I have none but pleasant antici- pations. I long to be at home once more by my own fire- side, and patting my faithful Cerberus.' ' I think I shall like Cerberus ; I am fond of dogs. ' ' I am sure you will. He is the most faithful creature in the world.' ' Is he very fierce ? ' ' Not if he takes a fancy to you ; and who can help taking a fancy to Proserpine ? ' ' Ah ! my Pluto, you are in love.' THE INEEENAL MAERIAGE. 303 ' Is this Hades ? ' inquired Proserpine. An avenue of colossal bulls, sculptured in basalt and breathing living flame, led to gates of brass, adorned with friezes of rubies, representing the Avars and discomfiture of the Titans. A crimson cloud concealed the height of the immense portal, and on either side hovered o'er the extend- ing Tvalls of the city ; a watch-tower or a battlement oc- casionally flashing forth, and forcing their forms through the lurid obscurity, ' Queen of Hades ! welcome to your capital ! ' exclaimed Pluto. The monarch rose in his car and whirled a javelin at the gates. There was an awful clang, and then a still more terrible growl. ' My faithful Cerberus ! ' exclaimed the King. The portals flew open, and revealed the gigantic form of the celebrated watch-dog of Hell. It completely filled their wide expanse. "Who but Pluto could have viewed without horror that enormous body covered with shaggy spikes, those frightful paws clothed with claws of steel, that tail like a boa constrictor, those fiery eyes that blazed like the blood-red lamps in a pharos, and those thi-ee forky tongues, round each of which were entwined a vigorous family of green rattlesnakes ! ' Ah ! Cei'by ! Cerby ! ' exclaimed Pluto ; ' my fond and faithful Cerby!' Proserpine screamed as the animal gambolled up to the side of the chariot and held out its paw to its master. Then, licking the royal palm with its three tongues at once, it renewed its station with a wag of its tail which raised such a cloud of dust that for a few minutes nothing was perceptible. ' The monster ! ' exclaimed Proserpine. ' My love,' exclaimed Pluto, with astonishment. ' The hideous brute ! ' ' My dear ! ' exclaimed Pluto. GOl' THE INFERNAL MARRIAGE. * He shall never toucli nic' ' Proserpine ! ' ' Don't toucli mc -svitli tbat hand. Yon never shall touch me, if you allow that disgusting animal to lick your hand.' ' I beg to inform you that there are few beings of any kind for whom I have a greater esteem than that fiiithful and affectionate beast.' ' Oh ! if you like Cerberus better than me, I have no more to say,' exclaimed the bride, bi-idling up with indigna- tion. ' My Proserpine is perverse,' replied Pluto ; ' her memoiy has scarcely done me justice.' ' I am sui-e you said you liked Cerberus better than any- thing in the world,' continued the Goddess, with a voice trembling with passion. ' I said no such thing,' replied Pluto, somewhat sternly. 'I see how it is,' replied Proserpine, with a sob; ' you are tired of me.' * My beloved ! ' *I never expected this.' ' My child ! ' * Was it for this I left my mother ? ' ' Powers of Hades ! How you can say such tilings !' ' Broke her heart ? ' ' Proserpine ! Proserpine ! ' ' Gave up daylight ? ' 'For the sake of Heaven, then, calm yourself!' * Sacrificed everything ? ' ' My love ! my hfe ! my angel ! what is all this ? ' ' And then to be abused for the sate of a dog ! ' ' By all the shades of Hell, but this is enough to provoke even immortals. What have I done, said, or thought, to justify such treatment ? ' ' Oh ! me ! ' ' Proserpine ! ' * Heigho ! ' ' Proserpine ! Proserpine ! ' 'So soon is the veil withdrawn !' TilE INFERNAL MARRIAGE. 30a ' Dearest, you must be unwell. This journey has been too much foi' you.' ' On our very bridal day to be so treated ! ' ' Soul of my existence, don't make me mad. I love you, I adore you ; I have no hope, no wish, no thought but you. I swear it ; I swear it by my sceptre and my throne. Speak, speak to your Pluto : tell him all your wish, all your desire. What would you have me do ? ' ' Shoot that horrid beast.' 'Ah! me!' ' What, you will not ! I thought how it would be. I am Proserpine, your beloved, adored Proserpine. You havo no wish, no hope, no thought but for me ! I have only to speak, and what I desire will be instantly done ! And I do speak, I tell you my wish, I exjDress to you my desire, and I am instantly refused ! And what have I requested ? Is it such a mighty favour ? Is it anything unreasonable ? Is there, indeed, in my entreaty anything so vastly out of the way? The death of a dog, a disgusting animal, which has already shaken my nerves to pieces ; and if ever (here she hid her face in his breast), if ever that event should occur which both must desire, my Pluto, I am sure the very sight of that horrible beast will, I dare not say what it will do.' Pluto looked puzzled. ' Indeed, my Proserpine, it is not in my power to grant your request ; for Cerberus is immortal, like ourselves.' ' Me ! miserable ! ' * Some arrangement, however, may be made to keep him out of your sight and hearing. I can banish him.' ' Can you, indeed ? Oh ! banish him, my Pluto ! pi'ay banish him ! I never shall be happy until Cerberus is banished.' ' I will do anything you desire ; but I confess to you I have some misgivings. He is au invaluable watch-dog ; and I fear, without his superintendence, the guardians of the gate will scarcely do their duty.' ' Oh ! yes : I am sure they -will, my Pluto ! I will a«k X 306 THE INFERNAL JMAKPJAGE. them to, I will ask them myself, I will request them, as a jDarticalai' and personal favour to myself, to be very careful indeed. And if they do their duty, and I am sure they will, they shall be styled, as a reward, " Proserpine's Own Guards." ' ' A reward, indeed ! ' said the enamoured monarch, as, with a sigh, he signed the order for the banishment of Cer- berus in the form of his promotion to the ofl&ce of Master of the royal and imperial blood-hounds. III. The burning waves of Phlegethon assumed a lighter hue. It was morning. It was the morning after the arrival of Pluto and his unexpected bride. In one of the principal rooms of the palace three beautiful females, clothed in cei'ulean robes spangled with stars, and their heads adorned with golden crowns, were at work together. One held a distaff, from which the second spun ; and the third wielded an enormous pair of adamantine shears, with which she perpetually severed the labours of her sisters.- Tall were they in stature and beautiful in form. Very fair ; an ex- pression of haughty serenity pervaded their majestic coun- tenances. Their three companions, however, though apparently of the same sex, were of a different character. If women can ever be ugly, certainly these three ladies might put in a valid claim to that epithet. Their complexions were dark and withered, and their eyes, though bright, were bloodshot. Scantily clothed in black garments, not un- Btained with gore, their wan and offensive forms were but slightly veiled. Their hands were talons ; their feet cloven ; and serpents were wreathed round their brows instead of hair. Their restless and agitated carriage afforded also not less striking contrast to the polished and aristocratic de- meanour of their companions. They paced the chamber with hurried and unequal steps, and wild and uncouth ges- tures ; waving, with a reckless ferocity, burning torches and whips of scorpions. It is hardly necessary to add that THE INFEKNAL JVIAEPJAGE. 307 these were the Furies, and that the conversation which I am about to report was carried on with the Fates. ' A thousand serpents ! ' shrieked Tisiphone. ' I will never beheve it.' ' Racks and flames ! ' squeaked Megtera. ' It is im- possible.' 'Eternal torture ! ' moaned Alecto. ' 'Tis a lie.' ' Not Jupiter himself should convince us ! ' the Furies joined in internal chorus. ' 'Tis nevertheless true,' calmly observed the beautiful Clotho. ' You will soon have the honour of being presented to her,' added the serene Lachesis. ' And whatever we may feel,' observed the considerate Atropos, ' I think, my dear girls, you had better restrain yourselves.' ' And what sort of thing is she ? ' inquired Tisiphone, with a shriek. ' I have heard that she is lovely,' answei'ed Clotho. ' lu- deed, it is impossible to account for the affair in any other way.' ^ ''Tis neither possible to account for nor to justify it,' squeaked Megaera. ' Is there, indeed, a Queen in Hell ? ' moaned Alecto. ' We shall hold no more drawing-rooms,' said Lachesis. ' We will never attend hers,' said the Furies. ' You must,' replied the Fates. ' I have no doubt she will give herself airs,' shrieked Tisiphone. ' We must remember where she has been brought up, and be considerate,' replied Lachesis. 'I dare say you three will get on very well with her,' squeaked Mega^ra. ' You always get on well with people.' ' We must remember how very strange things here must appear to hei-,' observed Atropos. ' No one can deny that there are some very disagreeable eights,' said Clotho. * There is something in that,' replied Tisiphone, looking X 2 30^ THE l^i'KiixVAL MAKBIACiE, in the glass, and arranging' her serpents ; ' and for my part, poor girl, I ahnost pity her, when I think she will have to visit the Harpies.' IV. At this moment four little pages entered the room, who, without exception, Avere the most hideous dwarfs that ever attended upon a monarch. They were clothed only in parti-coloured tunics, and their breasts and legs were quite bare. From the countenance of the first you would have supposed he was in a convulsion ; his hands were clenched and his hair stood on end : this was Terror ! The protruded veins of the second seemed ready to burst, and his rubicund visage decidedly proved that he had blood in his head : this was Rage ! The third was of an ashen colour throughout : this was Paleness ! And the fourth, with a countenance not without traces of beauty, was even more disgusting than his companions from the quantity of horrible flies, centipedes, snails, and other noisome, slimy, and indescrib< able monstrosities that were crawling all about his body and feeding on his decaying features. The name of this fourth page was Death ! ' The King and Queen ! ' announced the Pages. Pluto, during the night, had prepared Proserpine for the worst, and had endeavoured to persuade her that his love would ever compensate for all annoyances. She was in excellent spirits and in very good humour; therefore, though .she could with difficulty stifle a scream when she recognised the Puries, she received the congratulations of the Parca3 with much cordiality. ' I have the pleasure, Proserpine, of presenting you to my family,' said Pluto. ' Who, I am sure, hope to make Hades agreeable to your Majesty,' rejoined Clotho. The Furies uttered a supjiressed sound between a murmur and a growl. ' I have ordered the chariot,' said Pluto. ' I proj^ose to take the Queen a ride, and show her some of our lions.' ' She will, I am sure, be delighted,' said Lachesis. ' I long to see Ixion,' said Proscrpiuo. THE INFERNAL ]SL\RRIAGE. 309 ' The ■s\Tetcl'i ! ' shrieked Tisiplione, ' I cannot help thinking that he has been xery unfiiirly treated,' said Proserpine. ' What ! ' squeaked Megtcra. ' The ravisher ! ' * Ay ! it is all very well,' replied Proserpine ; ' but, for my part, if Ave knew the truth of that affair ' ' Is it possible that your Majesty can speak in such a tono of levity of such an offender ? ' shrieked Tisiphone. ' Is it possible ? ' moaned Alecto. ' Ah ! you have heard only one side of the question ; but for my part, knowing as much of Juno as I do ' ' The Queen of Heaven ! ' observed Atropos, with an in- iimidating glance. ' Tlie Queen of Fiddlestick ! ' said Prosei'pine ; ' as great a flirt as ever existed, with all her prudish looks.' The Fates and the Furies exchanged glances of astonish- ment and horror. ' For my part,' continued Proserpine, ' I make it a rule to support the weaker side, and nothing will ever persuade me that Ixion is not a victim, and a pitiable one.' ' Well ! men generally have the best of it in these affairs,' said Lachesis, with a forced smile. ' Juno ought to be ashamed of herself,' said Proserpine, ' Had I been in her situation, they should have tied me to a wheel first. At any rate, they ought to have punished him in Heaven. I have no idea of those people sending every mauvais sujet to Hell.' ' But what shall we do ? ' inquired Pluto, who wished to turn the conversation. * Shall we turn out a sinner and hunt him for her Ma- jesty's diversion ? ' suggested Tisiphone, flanking her ser- pents. 'Nothing of the kind will ever divert me,' said Proser- •|nne ; ' for I have no hesitation in saying that I do not at all approve of these eternal punishments, or, indeed, of any pn):iishment whatever.' ' The hei'etic ! ' whispered Tisiphone to Megjera. Alecto moaned. 310 THE INFERNAL MARRIAGE. ' It mio'ht be more interesting to her Majesty,' said Atropos, ' to witness some of those extraordinaiy instances of predestined misery with which Hades abounds. Sliall we visit CEdipns ? ' ' Poor fellow ! ' exclaimed Proserpine. ' For myself, I willingly confess that Torture disgusts and Destiny puzzles me.' The Fates and the Furies all alike started. ' I do not understand this riddle of Destiny,' continued the young Queen. ' If you, Parcae, have predestined that a man should commit a crime, it appears to me very unjust that you should afterwards call upon the Furies to punish him for its commission.' * But man is a free agent,' observed Lachesis, in as mild a tone as she could command. ' Then what becomes of Destiny ? ' replied Proserpine. ' Destiny is eternal and irresistible,' rephed Clotho. ' All is ordained ; but man is, nevei-theless, master of Ms own actions.' ' I do not understand that,' said Proserpine. ' It is not meant to be understood,' said Atropos ; ' but you must nevertheless believe it.' ' I make it a rule only to believe what I understand,' replied Proserpine. 'It appears,' said Lachesis, with a blended glance of contempt and vengeance, ' that your Majesty, though a Goddess, is an Atheist.' ' As for that, anybody may call me just what they please, provided they do nothing else. So long as I am not tied to a wheel or whipped with scorpions for speaking my mind, I shall be as _ tolerant of the speech and acts of others as I expect them to be tolerant of mine. Come, Pluto, I am snre that the chariot must be ready ! ' So saying, her Majesty took the arm of her spouse, and with a haughty curtsey left the apartment. ' Did you ever i ' shrieked Tisiplione, as the door closed. * "No ! never ! ' squeaked Megtera. * Never ! never ! ' moaned Alecto. THE INFERN.IL MAHRIAGE. 311 * She must understand what she believes, must she ? ' said Lachesis, scarcely less irritated. ' I never heard such nonsense,' said Clotho. ■ What next ! ' said Atropos. ' Disgusted with Torture ! ' exclaimed the Furies. ' Puzzled with Destiny ! ' said the Fates. It was the third morning after the Infernal Marriage ; the slumbering Proserpine reposed in the arms of the snoring Pluto. There was a loud knocking at the chamber- door. Pluto jumped up in the middle of a dream. * My life, what is the matter ? ' exclaimed Proserpine. The knocking was repeated and increased. There was also a loud shout of ' ti'eason, murder, and fire ! ' * What is the matter ? ' exclaimed the God, jumping out of bed and seizing his trident. ' Who is there ? ' ' Your pages, your faithful pages ! Treason ! treason ! For the sake of Hell, open the door. Murder, fire, treason ! ' ' Enter ! ' said Pluto, as the door was unlocked. And Terror and Rage entered. ' You frightful things, get out of the room ! ' cried Proserpine. ' A moment, my angel ! ' said Pluto, * a single moment. Be not alarmed, my best love ; I pray you be not alarmed. Well, imps, why am I disturbed ? ' ' Oh ! ' said Terror. Rage could not speak, but gnashed his teeth and stamped his feet. * 0-o-o-h ! ' repeated Terror. ' Speak, cursed imps ! ' cried the enraged Pluto ; and he raised his arm. ' A man ! a man ! ' cried Terror. ' Treason, treason ! a man ! a man ! ' ' What man ? ' said Pluto, in a rage. ' A man, a Kve man, has entered Hell ! ' ' You don't say so ? ' said Proserpine ; ' a man, a live man. Let me see him immediately.' ' Where is he ? ' said Pluto : ' what is he doing ? ' 312 THE INFEENAL MARRIAGE. ' He is liere, there, find everywliere ! asking for your ■wife, and singing like anything.' ' Proserpine ! ' said Pluto, reproachfully ; but, to do the God justice, he was more astounded tlian jealous. ' I am sure I shall be deliglited to see him ; it is so long since I have seen a live man,' said Proserpine. 'Who can he be ? A man, and a live man ! How delightful ! It must be a messenger from my mother.' ' But how came he here ? ' ' Ah ! how came he here ? ' echoed Terror. ' No time must be lost ! ' exclaimed Pluto, scrambling on his robe. ' Seize him, and bring him into the council chamber. My charming Proserpine, excvise me for a moment.' ' Not at all ; I will accompany you.' ' But, my love, my sweetest, tnj own, this is business ; these are affairs of state. The council chamber is not a place for you.' ' And why not ? ' said Proserpine. ' I have no idea of ever leaving you for a moment. Why not for me as well as for the Fates and the Furies ? Am I not Queen ? I have no idea of such nonsense ! ' 'My love ! ' said the deprecating husband. 'You don't go without me,' said the imperious wife, seizing his robe. ' I must,' said Pluto. ' Then you shall never return,' said Proserpine, ' Enchantress ! be reasonable.' ' I never was, and I never will be,' rephed the Goddess. ' Treason ! treason ! ' screamed Terror. ' Mj love, I must go ! ' 'Pluto,' said Proserpine, 'understand me once for all, 1 will not be contradicted.' llage stamped his foot. ' Proserpine, understand me once for all, it is iinpns=ublo,' said the God, frowning. ' ]\[y Pluto!' said the Queen. 'Is it my Plufo who speaks thus sternly to me r Is it he who, but an hour THE INFEENAL MAEKIAGE. 313 ago, a short hour ago, died upon my bosom in transports and stifled me with kisses ! Unhappy woman ! wretched, miserable Proserj)ine ! Oh! my mother ! my kind, my affectionate mother ! Have I disobeyed you for this ! For this have I deserted you ! For this have I broken your beloved heart ! ' She bui'ied her face in the crimson counterpane, and bedewed its gorgeous embroidery with her fast-flowing tears. ' Treason ! ' shouted Terror. ' Ha ! ha ! ha ! ' exclaimed the hysterical Proserpine. ' What am I to do ? ' cried Pluto. ' Proserpine, my adored, m.y beloved, my enchanting Proserpine, compose yourself ; for my sake, compose yourself. I love you ! I adore you ! You know it ! oh ! indeed you know it ! ' The hysterics increased. ' Treason ! treason ! ' shouted Terror. ' Hold your infernal tongue,' said Pluto. ' What do I care for treason when the Queen is in this state ? ' Ho knelt by the bedside, and tried to stop her mouth with kisses, and ever and anon whispered his passion. ' My Proserpine, I beseech you to be calm ; I will do anything you like. Come, come, then, to the council ! ' p The hysterics ceased ; the Qneen clasped him in her arms and rewarded him with a thousand embraces. Then, jump- ing up, she bathed her swollen eyes with a beautiful cos- metic that she and her maidens had distilled from the flowers of Enna ; and, wrapping herself up in her shawl, descended with his Majesty, who was quite as much puzzled about the cause of this disturbance as when he was first roused. vr. Crossing an immense covered bridge, the origin of the Bridge of Sighs at Venice, over the royal gardens, which consisted entirely of cypress, the royal pair, preceded ]iy the pages in waiting, entered the council chamber. Tiie council was already assembled. On either side of a tlirone of sulpliur, from which issued the four infernal rivers of 314 THE INFERNAI, iVL\ERIAGE. Lethe, Phlegethon, Cocytus, and Acheron, -were ranged the Eumenides and the Parcae. Lachesis and her sisters tnrned np their noses when they observed Pi'oserpine ; but the Eumenides conld not stifle their fury, in spite of the hints of their more subdued but not less malignant companions. ' What is all this ? ' inquired Pluto. ' The constitution is in danger,' said the Parca3 in chorus. • Both in chui'ch and state,' added the Furies. ' 'Tis a case of treason and blasphemy;' and they waved their torches and shook their whips with delighted anticipation of their use. ' Detail the circumstances,' said Pluto, waving his hand majestically to Lachesis, in whose good sense he had great confidence. 'A man, a living man, has entered your kingdom, un- known and unnoticed,' said Lachesis. ' By my sceptre, is it true ? ' said the astonished Kjng. ' Is he seized ? ' ' The extraordinary mortal baffles our efforts,' said Lachesis. ' He bears with him a lyre, the charmed gift of Apollo, and so seducing are his strains that in vain our guards advance to arrest his course ; they immediately begin dancing, and he easily eludes their efforts. The general confusion is indescribable. All business is at a standstill : Ixion rests upon his wheel ; old Sisyphus sits down on his mountain, and his stone has fallen with a terrible plash into Acheron. In short, unless we are energetic, we are on the eve of a revolution.' ' His purpose ? ' * He seeks yourself and — her Majesty,' added Lachesis, with a sneer. ' Immediately announce that we will receive him.' The unexpected guest was not slow in acknowledging the royal summons. A hasty treaty was drawn up ; he was to enter the palace unmolested, on condition that he ceased playing his lyre. Tlie Fates and the Furies ex- changed significant glances as his approach was announced. THE IXFERK4X MAERIAGE. 315 The man, the live man, who had committed the unprece- dented crime of entering Hell ■without a licence, and the previous deposit of his soul as security for the good be- haviour of his body, stood before the surprised and indig- nant Court of Hades. Tall and graceful in stature, and crovsTied with latirels, Proserpine was glad to observe that the man, who was evidently famous, was also good-looking. ' Thy purpose, mortal ? ' inquired Pluto, vnth awful majesty. ' Mercy ! ' answered the stranger in a voice of exquisite melody, and sufficiently embarrassed to render him in- teresting. ' What is mercy ? ' inquired the Fates and the Furies. ' Speak, stranger, without fear,' said Proserpine. ' Thy name ? ' ' Is Orpheus ; but a few days back the too happy hus- band of the enchanting Eurydice. Alas ! dread Bang, and thou too, beautiful and benignant partner of his throne, I won her by my lyre, and by my lyre I would redeem her. Know, then, that in the very glow of our gratified passion a serpent crept under the flowers on which we reposed, and by a fatal sting summoned my adored to the shades. Why did it not also summon me ? I will not say why should I not have been the victim in her stead ; for I feel too keenly that the doom of Eurydice would not have been less forlorn, had she been the wretched being who had been spared to life. O Bang ! they whispered on earth that thou too hadst yielded thy heart to the charms of love. Pluto, they whispered, is no longer stem : Pluto also feels the all-subduing influence of beauty. Dread monarch, by the self-same passion that rages in our breasts alike, I implore thy mercy. Thou hast risen from the couch of love, the arm of thy adored has pressed upon thy heart, her honied lips have clung with rapture to thine still echo in thy ears all the enchanting phrases of her idolatry. Then, by the memory of these, by all the higher and inefiable joys to which these lead. King of Hades, spare me, oh ! spare me, Eurydice ! ' 316 THE INFERNAL MARRIAGE. Proserpine threw lier arms round tlie neck of her hns- baud, and, hiding her face in his breast, wept. ' Rash mortal, you demand that which is not in the power of Pluto to concede,' said Lachesis. ' I have heard much of treason since my enti-ance into Hades,' replied Orpheus, ' and this sounds like it.' ' Mortal ! ' exclaimed Clotho, with contempt. ' Nor is it in yoiu" power to return, sir,' said Tisiphone, shaking her whip. ' We have accounts to settle with you,' said Megsera. ' Spare her, spare her,' murmured Proserpine to her lover. ' King of Hades ! ' said Lachesis, -with much dignity, ' I hold a I'esponsible oflBce in your realm, and I claim the constitutional privilege of your attention. I protest against the undue influence of the Queen. She is a power un- known in our constitution, and an irresponsible agent that I will not recognise. Let her go back to the drawing-room, where all Avill bow to her.' ' Hag ! ' exclaimed Pi'oserpine. ' King of Hades, I, too, can appeal to you. Have I accepted your crown to be in- sulted by your subjects ? ' ' A subject, may it please your Majesty, who has duties as strictly defined by our infernal constitution as those of your royal spouse ; duties, too, which, let me tell you, ]\radam, I and my order are resolved to perform.' ' Gods of Olympus ! ' cried Prosei'pine. ' Is this to be a Queen ? ' 'Befox'e we proceed further in this discussion,' said Lachesis, ' I must move an inquiry into the conduct of his Excellency the Governor of the Gates. I move, then, that Cerberus be summoned.' Pluto started, and the blood rose to his dark cheek. ' I have not yet had an opiiortunity of mentioning,' said his Majesty, in a low tone, and with an air of considerable con- fusion, ' that I have thought tit, as a reward for his past ser\nces, to promote Cerberus to the office of the Master of the Hounds. He therefore is no longer responsible.' THE INFERNAL MARKIAGfi. 317 * — h ! ' shi-ieked tlie Furies, as they ele^•ated their trdeous eyes. ' The constitutiou has invested your Majesty "with a power in the appointment of your Officers of State which your Majesty has undoubtedly a right to exercise,' said Lachesis. ' What degree of discretion it anticipated in the exercise, it is now unnecessary, and would be extremely disagreeable, t85 without practice, and without preparation, I have no doubt, with the aid of a treatise or two, you will make a consum- mate naval commander, although 3'ou have never been at sea in the Avhole course of your life. Farewell, Captain Popanilla ! ' No sooner was this adieu uttered thg,n four brawny lords of the bedchamber seized the Turgot of Fantaisie by the shoulders, and carried him with inconceivable rapidity to the shore. His pupils, who would have fled to his rescue, were stifled with the embraces of their former partners, and their utilitarianism dissolved in the arms of those they once so rudely rejected. As for their tutor, he was thrust into one of the canoes, with some fresh water, bread-fruit, dried fish, and a basket of alligator-pears, A band of mermaids cai-ried the canoe with exquisite management through the shallows and over the breakers, and poor Popanilla in a few minutes found himself out at sea. Tremendously frightened, he offered to recant all his opin- ions, and denounce as traitors any individuals whom the Court might select. But his former companions did not exactly detect the utility of his return. His offers, his supplications, were equally fruitless ; and the only answer which floated to him on the wind was, ' Farewell, Captain Popanilla ! ' CHAPTER YI. Night fell upon the waters, dark and drear, and thick and misty. How unlike those brilliant hours that once summoned him to revelry and love ! Unhappy Popanilla ! Thy delicious Fantaisie has vanished ! Ah, pitiable youth ! What could possibly have induced you to be so very rash ? And all from that unlucky lock of hair ! After a few natural paroxysms of rage, terror, anguish, and remorse, the Captain as naturally subsided into de- spair, and awaited with sullen apathy that fate which could not be far distant. The only thing which puzzled the pbilosophical narigator was his inability to detect c G 386 POPANILLA. whatusefal end could be attained by his death. At length, remembering that fish must be fed, his theory and his des- peration were at the same time confirmed. A clear, dry morning succeeded the wet, gloomy night, and Popanilla had not yet gone down. This extraordinary suspension of his fate roused him from his stupor, and between the consequent excitement and the morning air he acquired an appetite. Philosophical physicians appear to have agreed that sorrow, to a certain extent, is not unfavourable to digestion ; and as Popanilla began to entertain some indefinite and unreasonable hopes, the alli- gator-pears quickly disappeared. In the meantime the little canoe cut her way as if she were chasing a smuggler ; and had it not been for a shark or two who, in anticipation of their services being required, never left her side for a second, Popanilla really might have made some ingenious obser- vations on the nature of tides. He was rather surprised, certainly, as he watched his frail bark cresting the waves ; but he soon supposed that this was all in the natural course of things ; and he now ascribed his previous fright, not to the peril of his situation, but to his inexperience of it. Although his apprehension of being drowned was now removed, yet when he gazed on the boundless vacancy before him, and also observed that his provisions rapidly decreased, he began to fear that he was destined for a still more horrible fate, and that, after having eaten his own shoes, he must submit to be starved. In this state of despondency, with infinite delight and exultation he clearly observed, on the second day, at twenty-seven minutes past three P.M., though at a considerable distance, a mountain and an island. His joy and his pride were equal, and excessive : he called the first Alligator Mountain, in gra- titude to the pears ; and christened the second after his mistress, that unlucky mistress ! The swift canoe soon reached the discoveries, and the happy discoverer further found, to his mortification, that the mountain was a mist and the island a sea-weed. Popanilla now grew sulky, and threw himself down in the bottom of his boat. POPANILLA. 387 On the third morning he was awakened by a tremendous roar ; on looking around him he perceived that he was in a valley formed by two waves, each several hundi'ed feet high. This seemed the crisis of his fate ; he shut his eyes, as people do when they are touched by a dentist, and in a few minutes was still bounding on the ocean in the eternal canoe, safe but senseless. Some tremendous peals of thunder, a roaring wind, and a scathing lightning con- firmed his indisposition ; and had not the tempest subsided, Popanilla would iDrobably have been an idiot for life. The dead and soothing calm which succeeded this tornado called him back again gradually to existence. He opened his eyes, and, scarcely daring to try a sense, immediately shut them ; then heaving a deep sigh, he shrugged his shoulders, and looked as pitiable as a prime minister with a rebellious cabinet. At length he ventured to lift up his head ; there was not a wrinkle on the face of ocean ; a halcyon fluttered over him, and then scudded before his canoe, and game- some porpoises were tumbling at his side. The sky was cloudless, except in the direction to which he was driving ; but even as Popanilla observed, with some misgivings, the mass of vapours which had there congregated, the great square and solid black clouds drew off like curtains, and revealed to his entranced vision a magnificent city rising out of the sea. Tower, and dome, and arch, column, and spire, and obelisk, and lofty terraces, and many-windowed palaces, rose in all directions from a mass of building which ap- peared to him each instant to grow more huge, till at length it seemed to occupy the whole horizon. The sun lent additional lustre to the dazzling quays of white marble which apparently surrounded this mighty city, and which rose immediately from the dark blue waters. As the navi- gator drew nearer, he observed that in most parts the quays were crowded with beings who, he trusted, were human, and already the hum of multitudes broke upon his inexperienced ear : to him a sound far more mysterious and far more exciting than the most poetical of winds to c c 2 388 POPANILLA. the most wiiiJy of poets. On the i-ight of this vast city rose what was mistaken by PopaniUa foi* an immense but leafless forest ; but more j^ractical men than the Fantaisian Captain have been equally confounded by the first sight of a million of masts. The canoe cut its Avay -with increased rapidity, and ere Popanilla had recovered himself sufficiently to make even an ejaculation, he found himself at the side of a quay. Some amphibious creatures, whom he supposed to be mer- men, immediately came to his assistance, rather stared at liis serpent-skin coat, and then helped him up the steps. Popanilla was instantly surrounded. ' Who are you ? ' said one. ' What are you ? ' asked another. ' Who is it ? ' exclaimed a third. ' What is it ?' screamed a fourth. ' My finends, I am a man ! ' ' A man ! ' said the women ; ' are you sure you are a real man?' ' He must be a sea-god ! ' said the females. ' She must be a sea-goddess!' said the n:iales. ' A Triton ! ' maintained the women. ' A Nereid ! ' argued the men. ' It is a great fish ! ' said the boys. Thanks to the Universal Linguist, Captain Popanilla, under these peculiar circumstances, Avas more loquacious than could have been Captain Parry. ' Good people ! you see before you the most injured of liuman beings.' This announcement insjiired general enthusiasm. The women wept, the men shook hands with him, and all the boys huzzaed. Popanilla proceeded : — ' Actuated by the most pure, the most patriotic, the most noble, the most enlightened, and the most useful sentiments, I aspired to ameliorate the condition of my fellow-men. To this grand object I have sacrificed all that makes life delightful : I have lost my station in society, my taste for dancing, my popularity with the men, my favour with POPANILLA. 380 tlie women ; and last, but, oli ! not least (excuse tLis emotion), I have lost a veiy particular lock of hair. In one -word, my friends, yon see before you, banished, ruined, and unhappy, the victim of a despotic sovereign, a corrupt aristocracy, and a misguided people.' No sooner had he ceased speaking than Popanilla really imagined that he had only escaped the dangers of sedition and the sea to exj)ire by less hostile, thougli not less effective, means. To be strangled was not much better than to be starved : and certainly, with half-a-dozen highly respectable females clinging round his neck, he was not reminded for the first time in his life what a domestic bowstring is an affectionate woman. In an agony of suffo- cation he thought very little of his arms, although the admiration of the men had already, in his imagination, separated these useful members from his miserable body ; and had it not been for some justifiable kicking and plung- ing, the veneration of the ingenuous and surrounding youth, which manifested itself by their active exertions to divide his singular gai-raent into relics of a martyr of liberty-, would soon have effectually prevented the ill-starred Popanilla from being again mistaken for a J^Tereid. Order was at length restored, and a committee of eight appointed to regulate the visits of the increasing mob. The arrangements were judicious ; the whole populace was mai'shalled into ranks ; classes of twelve jDersons were allowed consecutively to walk past the victim of tyranny, corruption, and ignorance ; and each person had the honour to touch his finger. During this proceeding, which lasteda few hours, an influential personage generously offered to receive the eager subscriptions of the assembled thou- sands. Even the boys subscribed, and ere six hours had passed since his arrival as a coatless vagabond in this liberal city, Captain Popanilla found himself a person of considerable means. The receiver of the subscriptions, while he crammed Popanilla's serpent-skin pockets full of gold pieces, at the same time kindly offered the stranger to introduce liim to 390 POPANILLA. an hotel. Popanilla, wlio was quite beside himself, could only bow his assent, and mechanically accompanied his conductor. When he had regained his faculty of speech, he endeavoured, in wandering sentences of grateful inco- herency, to express his deep sense of this unparalleled liberality. ' It was an excess of generosity in which man- kind could never have before indulged ! ' ' By no means ! ' said his companion, with great coolness ; ' far from this being an unparalleled affair, I assure you it is a matter of hourly occurrence : make your mind quite easy. You are probably not aware that you are now living in the richest and the most charitable country in the world ? ' ' Wonderful ! ' said Popanilla ; ' and what is the name, may I ask, of this charitable city ? ' ' Is it possible,' said his companion, with a faint smile, ' that you are ignorant of the great city of Hubbabub ; the largest city not only that exists, but that ever did exist, aad the capital of the island of Vraibleusia, the most famous island not only that is known, but that ever was known? ' While he was speaking they were accosted by a man upon crutches, who, telling them in a broken voice that he had a wife and twelve infant children dependent on his support, supplicated a little charity. Popanilla was about to empty part of his pocketfuls into the mendicant's cap, but his companion repressed his unphilosopliical facility. * By no means ! ' said his friend, who, turning round to the beggar, advised him, in a mild voice, to ^vor'k ; calmly adding, that if he presumed to ask charity again he should certainly have him bastinadoed. Then they walked on. Popanilla's attention was so distracted by the variety, the number, the novelty, and the noise of the objects which were incessantly hurried upon his observation, that he found no time to speak ; and as his companion, though exceedingly polite, was a man of few words, conversation rather flagged. At last, overwhelmed by the magnificence of the streets, the splendour of the shop?, the number of human beings, the rattling of the vehicles, the dashing of the horses, and POPANILLA. 391 a thousand other sounds and objects, Popanilla gave loose to a loud and fervent wish that his hotel might have the good fortune of being situated in this interesting quarter. ' By no means ! ' said his companion ; ' we have yet much further to go. Far from this being a desirable situation for you, my friend, no civilised person is ever seen here ; and had not the cause of civil and religious liberty for- tunately called me to the water-side to-day, I should have lost the opportunity of showing how greatly I esteem a gentleman who has suffered so severely in the cause of national amelioration.' ' Sir ! ' said Popanilla, ' your approbation is the only reward which I ever shall desire for my exertions. You will excuse me for not quite keeping up with you ; but the fact is, my pockets are so stuffed with cash that the action of my legs is greatly impeded.' ' Credit me, my friend, that you are suffering from an inconvenience which you will not long experience in Hub- babub. ISTevertheless, to remedy it at present, I think the best thing we can do is to buy a purse.' They accordingly entered a shop where such an article might be found, and taking up a small sack, for Popanilla was very rich, his companion inquired its price, which he was informed was four crowns. No sooner had the desired information been given than the proprietor of the opposite shop rushed in, and offered him the same article for three crowns. The original merchant, not at all surprised at the intrusion, and not the least apologising for his former extortion, then demanded two. His rival, being more than his match, he courteously dropped upon his knee, and requested his customer to accept the article gratis, for his sake. The generous dealer would infalHbly have carried the day, had not his rival humbly supplicated the purchaser not only to receive his article as a gift, but also the com- phment of a crown inside. 'What a terrible cheat the first merchant must have been ! ' said the puzzled Popanilla, as they proceeded on their way. ;392 POPAiNILLA. ' By no means ! ' said his calm companion ; * the pm'so was sufficiently cheap even at four crowns. This is not Cheatery ; this is Competition ! ' ' What a wonderful nation, then, this must be, where you not only get purses gratis but even well loaded ! What i;se, then, is all this lieavy gold? It is a tremendous trouble to carry ; I will empty the bag into this kennel, for money surely can be of no use in a city where, when in want of cash, you have only to go into a shop and buy a purse ! ' ' Your pardon ! ' said his companion ; ' far from this being the case, Vraibleusia is, without doubt, the dearest country in the world.' 'If, then,' said the inquisitive Popanilla, with great ani- mation, ' if, then, this country be the dearest in the world ; if, how ' ' My good friend ! ' said his companion, ' I really am the last person in the world to answer questions. All that I know is, that this country is extremely dear, and that the only way to get things cheap is to encourage Competition.' Here the progress of his companion was impeded for some time by a great crowd, which had assembled to catch a glimpse of a man who was to fly off a steeple, but Avho had not yet arrived. A chimney-sweeper observed to a scientific friend that probably the density of the atmosphere might prevent the intended volitation ; and Popanilla, Avho, having read almost as many pamphlets as the observer, now felt quite at home, exceedingly admired the obser- vation. 'He must be a very superior man, this gentleman in black ! ' said Popanilla to his comjianiou. ' By no means! he is of the lowest class in society. Bat you are probably not aware that you are in the most educated country in the world.' ' Delightful ! ' said Popanilla. The Captain was exceedingly desirous of witnessing the flio-ht of the Vraibleu.sian Da;dalus, but his friend advised their progress. This, however, Avas not easy; and Popa- nilla, animated for the moment by his natural aristocratic POPANILLA. 393 disposition, aud emboldened by his superioi* size and strength, began to clear his way in a manner which was more cogent than logical. The chimney-sweeper and his comrades were soon in arms, and Popanilla would certainly have been killed or ducked by this superior man and his friends, had it not been for the mild remonstrance of his conductor and the singular appearance of his costume. ' What could have induced you to be so imprudent ? ' said his rescuer, when they had escaped from the crowd. ' Truly,' said Popanilla, ' I thought that in a country where you may bastinado the wretch who presumes to ask you for alms, there could surely be no objection to my knocking down the scoundrel who dared to stand in my way.' 'By no means!' said his friend, slightly elevating his ej'ebrows. ' Here all men are equal. You are probably noL aware that you are at present in the freest countiy i-n the world.' ' I do not exactly understand you ; what is this freedom ? ' 'My good friend, I really am the last person in the world to answer questions. Freedom is, in one word, Liberty: a kind of thing which you foreigners never can understand, and which mere theory can make no man under- stand. When you have been in the island a few weeks all will be quite clear to you. In the naeantime, do as others do, and never knock men down ! ' CHAPTER YII. 'Although we ai'e yet some way from our hotel,' remarked Popanilla's conductor, 'we have now arrived at a part of the city where I can ease you, without difficulty, from your troublesome burthen ; let us enter here ! ' As he spoke, they stopped before a splendid palace, and proceeding through various halls full of individuals appa- rently intently busied, the companions were at last ushered into an apartment of smaller size, but of more elegant cha- 394 POPANILLA. racier. A personage of prepossessing appearance was lolling on a couch of an appearance equally prepossessing. Before him, on a table, were some papers, exquisite fruits, and some liqueurs. Popanilla was presented, and received with fasci- nating complaisance. His friend stated the object of their visit, and handed the sackful of gold to the gentleman on the sofa. The gentleman on the sofa ordered a couple of attendants to ascertain its contents. While this computa- tion was going on he amused his guests by his lively con- versation, and charmed Popanilla by his poKshed manners and easy civility. He ofl'ered him, during his stay in Vraibleusia, the use of a couple of equipages, a villa, and an opera-box ; insisted upon sending to his hotel some pine- apples and some rare wine, and gave him a pei'petual ticket to his picture-gallery. When his attendants had concluded their calculation, he ordered them to jjlace Popanilla' s precious metal in his treasury; and then, presenting the Captain with a small packet of pink shells, he kindly en- quired whether he could be of any further use to him. Popanilla was loth to retire without his gold, of the utility of which, in spite of the conveniency of competition, he seemed to possess an instinctive conception ; but as his friend rose and withdrew, he could do nothing less than accompany him ; for, having now known him nearly half a day, his confidence in his honour and integrity was natu- rally unbounded. ' That was the King, of course ? ' said Popanilla, when they were fairly out of the palace. ' The Kjng ! ' said the unknown, nearly surprised into an exclamation ; ' by no means ! ' ' And what then ? ' ' My good friend ! is it possible that you have no bankers in your country ? ' ' Yes, it is very possible ; but we have mermaids, who also give us shells which are pretty. What then are your bankers ? ' ' Really, my good friend, that is a question which I never remember having been asked before ; but a banker is a man who — keeps our money for us,' POPANILLA. 395 * Ah ! and he is bound, I suppose, to return your money when you choose ? ' ' Most assuredly ! ' * He is, then, in fact, your servant : you must pay him handsoraely, for him to hve so well ? ' ' By no means ! we pay him nothing.' ' That is droll ; he must be very rich then ? ' ' Really, my dear friend, I cannot say. Why, yes ! I — I suppose he may be very rich ! ' ' 'Tis singular that a rich man should take so much trouble for others ! ' ' My good friend ! of course he lives by his trouble.' ' Ah ! How, then,' continued the inquisitive Fantaisian, ' if you do not pay him for his services, and he yet lives by them ; how, I pray, does he acquire these immense riches ? ' ' Really, my good sir, I am, in truth, the very last man iu the world to answer questions : he is a banker ; bankers are always rich ; but why they are, or how they are, I really never had time to inquire. But I suppose, if the truth were known, they must have very great opportu- nities.' ' Ah ! I begin to see,' said Popanilla. ' It was really very kind of him,' continued the Captain, ' to make me a present of these little pink shells : what would I not give to turn them into a necklace, and send it to a certain person at Fantaisie ! ' ' It would be a very expensive necklace,' observed his companion, almost surprised. ' I had no idea, I confess, from your appearance, that in your country they indulged in such expensive tastes in costume.' ' Expensive ! ' said Popanilla. ' We certainly have no such shells as these in Fantaisie ; but we have much more beautiful ones. I should think, from their look, they must be rather common.' His conductor for the first time nearly laughed. ' I forgot,' said he, ' that you could not be aware that these pink shells are the most precious coin of the land, com- pared with which those bits of gold vnth which you have 396 POPANILLA. receutly parted are nothing ; jovlv whole fortune is now in that little packet. The fact is,' continued the unknown, making an effort to communicate, ' although wc possess in this country more of the precious metals than all the rest of the world together, the quantity is nevertheless utterly disproportioned to the magnitude of our Avealth and our wants. We have been, therefore, under the necessity of resorting to other means of representing the first and supplying the second ; and, taking advantage of our insular situation, we have introduced these small pink shells, which abound all round the coast. Being much more convenient to carry, they are in general circulation, and no genteel person has ever anything else in his pocket.' ' Wonderful ! But surely, then, it is no very difficult thing in this country to accumulate a fortune, since all that is necessar}^ to give you every luxury of life is a stroll one morning of your existence along the beach ? ' ' By no means, my friend ! you are really too rapid. The fact is, that no one has the power of originally circu- lating these shells but our Government ; and if any one, by any chance, choose to violate this arrangement, we make up for depriving him of his solitary walks on the shore by instant submersion in the sea.' ' Then the whole circulation of the country is at the mercy of your Government ? ' remarked Popanilla, sum- moning to his recollection the contents of one of those shipwrecked brochures which had exercised so strange an influence on liis destiny. ' Suppose they do not choose to issue ? ' ' That is always gu.arded against. The mere quarterly payments of interest upon our national debt will secm-e an ample supply.' ' Debt ! I thought you wei'o the richest nation in tlio world ? ' ' 'Tis true; nevertheless, if there were a golden pyramid with a base as big as the whole earth and an apex touching the heavens, it would not supply us with sufficient metal to satisfy our creditors.' POPANILLA. 397 ' But, my dear sir,' exclaimed the perplexed Popanilla, * if this really be true, how then can you be said to be the riohest nation in the world ? ' ' It is very simple. The annual interest upon our debt exceeds the whole wealth of the rest of the Avorld ; there- fore we must be the richest nation in the world.' ' 'Tis true,' said Popanilla ; ' I see I have yet much to learn. But with regard to these pink shells, how can you possibly create for them a certain standard of valne ? It is merely agreement among yourselves that fixes any value to them.' ' By no means ! you are so rapid ! Each shell is imme- diately convertible into gold ; of which metal, let me again remind you, we possess more than any other nation ; but which, indeed, we only keep as a sort of dress coin, chiefly to indulge the prejudices of foreigners.' ' But,' said the perpetual Popanilla, ' suppose every man who held a shell on the same day were to ' ' My good friend ! I really am the last person in the world to give explanations. In Vraibleusia, we have so much to do that we have no time to think ; a habit which only becomes nations who are not employed. You are now fast approaching the Great Shell Question ; a question which, I confess, affects the interests of every man in this island more than any other ; but of which, I must candidly own, every man in this island is more ignorant than of any other. No one, however, can deny that the system works well ; and if anything at any time go wrong, why really jMr. Secretary Periwinkle is a wonderful man, and our most eminent conchologist. He, no doubt, will set it right ; and if, b}^ any chance, things are past even his management, why then, I suppose, to use our national motto, something will turn up.' Here they arrived at the hotel. Having made every arrangement for the comfort and convenience of the Fan- taisian stranger, Popanilla's conductor took his leave, pre- viously informing him that his name was Skindeep ; that he was a member of one of the largest families in the island ; that, had he not been engaged to attend a lecture, he 398 POPANILLA. would have stayed and dined with him ; but that lie would certainly call upon him on the morrow. Compared with his hotel the palace of his banker was a dungeon ; even the sunset voluptuousness of Fantaisie was now remembered without regret in the blaze of artificial light and in the artificial gratification of desires which art had alone created. After a magnificent repast, his host politely inquired of Popanilla whether he would like to go to the Opera, the comedy, or a concert ; but the Fantaisian philosopher was not yet quite corrupted ; and, still inspired with a desire to acquire useful knowledge, he begged hia landlord to procure him immediately a pamphlet on the Shell Question. While his host was engaged in procuring this luxury a man entered the room and told Popanilla that he had walked that day two thousand five hundred paces, and that the tax due to the Excise upon this promenade was fifty crowns. The Captain stared, and remarked to the excise-officer that he thought a man's paces were a strange article to tax. The excise-officer, with great civility, an- swered that no doubt at first sight it might appear rather strange, but that it was the only article left untaxed in Vraibleusia ; that there was a slight deficiency in the last quarter's revenue, and that therefore the Government had no alternative ; that it was a tax which did not press heavily upon the individual, because the Vraibleusians were of a sedentary habit ; that, besides, it was an opinion every day more received among the best judges that the more a man was taxed the richer he ultimately would prove ; and he concluded by saying that Popanilla need not make him- self uneasy about these demands, because, if he were ruined to-morrow, being a foreigner, he was entitled by the law of the land to five thousand a-year ; whereas he, the excise- man, being a native-born Vraibleusian, had no claims what- ever upon the Government ; thei-efore he hoped his honour would give him something to drink. His host now entered witli the ' Novum Organon ' of the great Periwinkle. While Popanilla devoured the lively POPANILLA. 399 pages of this treatise, lie discovered that the system which had heen so subtilely introduced by the Government, and which had so surprised him in the morning, had soon been adopted in private life ; and although it was drowning matter to pick up pink shells, still there was nothing to prevent the whole commerce of the country from being carried on by means of a system equally conchological. He found that the social action in every part of the island was regulated and assisted by this process. Oyster-shells were first introduced ; muscle-shells speedily followed ; and, as commerce became more comphcate, they had even been obhged to have recourse to snail-shells. Popanilla retired to rest with admiration of the people who thus converted to the most useful purposes things apparently so useless. There was no saying now what might not be done even with a nutshell. It was evident that the nation who con- trived to be the richest people in the world while they were over head and ears in debt must be fast approaching to a state of perfection. Finally, sinking to sleep in a bed of eiderdown, Popanilla was confirmed in his prejudices against a state of nature. CHAPTER Vni. Skindeep called upon Popanilla on the following morn- ing in an elegant equipage, and with gTeat politeness pro- posed to attend him in a drive about the city. The island of Vraibleusia is one hundred and fifty miles in circumference, two-thirds of which are covered by the city of Hubbabub. It contains no other city, town, or vil- lage. The rest of the island consists of rivers, canals, and railroads. Popanilla was surprised when he was informed that Hubbabub did not contain more than five millions of inhabitants ; but his surprise was decreased when their journey occasionally lay through tracts of streets, consist- ing often of capacious mansions entirely tenantless. On seeking an explanation of this seeming desolation, he was told that the Hubbabubians were possessed by a frenzy of 400 I'OPANILLA. always moving westward ; and that coiisequently great quarters of the city are perpetually dcsei-ted. Even as Skindeep was speaking their passage was stopped by a large caravan of carriages and waggons heavily laden with human creatures and their children and chattels. On Skin- deep inquiring the cause of this great movement, he was informed by one on horseback, who seemed to be the leader of the horde, that they were the late dwellers in sundry squares and streets situated far to the east ; that their houses having been ridiculed by an itinerant ballad-singer, the female part of the tribe had insisted upon immediately quitting their unfashionable fatherland ; and that now, after three days' journey, they had succeeded in reaching the late settlement of a horde who had migrated to the extreme west. Quitting regions so subject to revolutions and vicissi- tudes, the travellers once more emerged into quarters of a less transitory reputation ; and in the magniticent parks, the broad streets, the ample squares, the palaces, the trium- phal arches, and tbe theatres of occidental Hubbabub, Po- pauilla lost those sad and mournful feelings which are ever engendered by contemplating the gloomy relics of departed gi'oatness. It was impossible to admire too much the ar- chitecture of this part of the city. The elevations were indeed imposing. In general, the massy Egyptian appro- priately graced the attic-stories ; while the finer and moi^e elaborate architecture of Corinth was placed on a level with the eye, so that its beauties might be more easily dis- covered. Spacious colonnades were flanked by porticoes, surmounted by domes ; nor Avas the number of columns at all limited, for you occasionally met with porticos of two tiers, the lower one of which consisted of three, the higher one of thirty columns. Pedestals of the purest Ionic Gothic were ingeniously intermixed witli Palladian pediments ; and the surging spire exquisitely hannonised with the horizon- tal architecture of the ancients. But perhaps, after all, the most charming efiect was produced by the pyramidd, surmounted by weathercocks. POPANILLA. 401 Popanilla was particulai-lj pleased by some chimneys of Caryatides, and did not for a moment hesitate in assenting to the assertion of Skindeep that the Vraibleusians were the most architectural nation in the world. Tnie it was, they had begun late ; their attention as a people having been, for a considerable time, attracted to much more im- portant affairs ; but they had compensated for their tardy attention by their speedy excellence.* Before they returned home Skindeep led Popanilla to the top of a tower, from whence they had a complete view of the whole island. Skindeep particularly directed the Captain's attention to one spot, where flourished, as he said, the only corn-fields in the country, which supplied the whole nation, and were the property of one individual. So unrivalled was his agi'icultural science that the vulgar only accounted for his admirable produce by a miraculous fecundity ! The proprietor of these hundred golden acres was a rather mysterious sort of personage. He was an aboriginal inhabitant, and, though the only one of the abo- rigines in existence, had lived many centuries, and, to the consternation of some of the Vraibleusians and the exulta- tion of others, exhibited no signs of decay. This awful being was without a name. "When spoken of by his ad- mirers he Avaa generally described by such panegyrical periphrases as ' soul of the country, ' ' foundation of the State,' ' the only real, and true, and substantial being ; ' while, on the other hand, those who presumed to differ from those sentiments were in the habit of styling him ' the dead weight,' ' the vampire,' ' the night-mare,' and other titles equally complimentary. They also maintained that, instead of being either real or substantial, he was, in fact, the most flimsy and fictitious personage in the whole island ; and then, lashing themselves up into metaphor, they would call him a meteor, or a vapour, or a great windy bubble, that would some day burst. * See a work which will be shortly published, entitled, ' The differ- ence detected between Architecture and Parchitccturc, by Sansovino the Second.' D D 402 POPANILLA. The Aboriprinal insisted that it was the commoB law of the land that the islanders should jiurchase their corn only of him. They grnmlled, but he growled ; he swore that it was the constitution of the countiy ; that there was an uninterrupted line of precedents to confirm the claim ; and that, if they did not approve of the arrangement, they and their fathers should not have elected to have settled, or presumed to have been spawned, upon his island. Then, as if he were not desirous of resting his claim on its mere legal merits, he would remind them of the superiority of his grain, and the impossibility of a scarcity, in the event of which calamity an insular people could always find a plen- tiful though temporary resource in sea-weed. He then clearly proved to them that, if ever they had the impru- dence to change any of their old laws, they would neces- sarily never have more than one meal a day as long as they lived. Finally, he recalled to their recollection that he had made the island what it was, that he was their mainstay, and that his counsel and exertions had rendered them the wonder of the world. Thus, between force, and fear, and flattery, the Vraibleusians paid for their corn nearly its weight in gold ; but what did that signify to a nation with so many pink shells ! CHAPTER IX. The third day after his drive with his friend Skindeep, Popanilla was waited upon by the most eminent bookseller in Hubbabub, who begged to have the honour of intro- ducing to the public a Narrative of Captain Popauilla's Voyage. This gentleman assured Popanilla that the Vrai- bleusian public were nervously alive to anything connected with discovery ; that so ardent was their attachment to science and natural philosophy that voyages and travels were sure to be read with eagerness, particularly if they had coloured plates. Popanilla was charmed with the proposition, but blushingly informed the mercantile Mfficenaa POPANILLA. 403 that he did not know how to write. The publisher told him that this circumstance was not of the slightest im- portance ; that he had never for a moment supposed that so sublime a savage could possess such a vulgar accom- plishment ; and that it was by no means difficult for a man to publish his travels without writing a line of them, Popanilla having consented to become an author upon these terms, the publisher asked him to dine with him, and introduced him to an intelligent individual. This intelli- gent individual listened attentively to all Popanilla's ad- ventures. The Captain concealed nothing. He began with the eternal lock of hair, and showed how wonderfully this world was constituted, that even the loss of a thing was not useless ; from which it was clear that Utility was Providence. After drinking some capital wine, the intelli- gent individual told Popanilla that he was wrong in sup- posing Fantaisie to be an island ; that, on the contrary, it was a great continent ; that this was proved by the pro- bable action of the tides in the part of the island which had not yet been visited; that the consequence of ttese tides would be that, in the course of a season or two, Fan- taisie would become a great receptacle for icebergs, and be turned into the North Pole ; that, therefore, the seasons throughout the world would be changed ; that this year, in Vraibleusia, the usual winter would be omitted, and that when the present summer was finished the dog-days would again commence. Popanilla took his leave highly delighted with this intelligent individual and with the bookseller's wine. Owing to the competition which existed between the publishers, the printers, and the engravers of the city of Hubbabub, and the great exertions of the intelligent in- dividual, the Narrative of Captain Popanilla's Voyage was brought out in less than a week, and was immediately in everybody's hand. The work contained a detailed account of everything which took place daring the whole of the three days, and formed a quarto volume. The plates wei*e numerous and highly interesting. There was a line on- u D 2 404 POPANILLA. graving of Alligator Mountain and a mezzotint of Seaweed Island ; a view of the canoe N.E. ; a view of the canoe N.W. ; a view of the canoe S.E. ; a view of the canoe S. W. There were highly-finished coloui'ed drawings of the dried Ush and the bread-fruit, and an exquisitely tinted repre- sentation of the latter in a mouldy state. But the chef- (Vceuvre was the portrait of the Author himself. He was represented trampling on the body of a boa constrictor of the first quality, in the skin of which he was dressed; at his back were his bow and arrows ; his right hand rested on an uprooted pine-tree ; he stood in a desert between two volcanoes ; at his feet was a lake of magnitude ; the distance lowered with an approaching tornado ; but a lucky flash of lightning revealed the range of the Andes and both oceans. Altogether he looked the most dandified of savages, and the most savage of dandies. It was a sublime lithograph, and produced scarcely less important effects upon Popanilla's fortune than that lucky ' lock of hair ; ' for no sooner was the portrait published than Popanilla received a ticket for the receptions of a lady of quality. On showing it to Skindeep, he was told that the honour was immense, and therefore he must go by all means. Skin- deep regretted that he could not accompany him, but he was engaged to a lecture on shoemakiug ; and a lecture was a thing he made it a point never to miss, because, as he very properly observed, ' By lectures you may become extremely well informed without any of the inconveniences of study. No fixity of attention, no continuity of medita- tion, no habits of reflection, no aptitude of combination, are the least requisite ; all which things only give you a nervous headache; and yet you gain all the results of all these processes. True it is that that which is so easily acquired is not always so easily remembered ; but what of that ? Suppose you forget any subject, why then you go to another lecture,' ' Very true ! ' said Popanilla. Popanilla failed not to remember his invitation from Lady Spirituelle ; and at the proper hour his announce- r-icnt produced a sensation throughout her crowded saloons. POrANILLA. 405 Spirituelle was a most encliauting lady ; she asked Popa- iiilla how tall he really was, and whether the women in Fantaisie were as handsome as the men. Then she said that the Vraibleiisians were the most intellectual and the most scientific nation in the world, and that the society at her house was the most intellectual and the most scientific in Vraibleusia. She told him also that she had hoped by this season the world would have been completely regulated by mind ; but that the subversion of matter was a more substantial business than she and the Committee of Man- agement had imagined : she had no doubt, howevei', that in a short time mind must carry the day, because matter was mortal and mind eternal ; therefore mind had the best chance. Finally, she also told him that the passions were the occasion of all the misery which had ever existed ; and that it was impossible for mankind either to be happy or great until, like herself and her friends, they were ' all soul.' Popanilla was charmed with his company. What a difi'erence between the calm, smiling, easy, uninteresting, stupid, sunset countenances of Fantaisie and those around him. All looked so interested and so intelligent ; their eyes were so anxious, their gestures so animated, their manners so earnest. They must be very clever ! He drew nearer. If before he were charmed, now he was enchanted. What an universal acquisition of useful knowledge ! Three or four dukes were earnestly imbibing a new theory of gas from a brilliant little gentleman in black, who looked like a Will-o'-the-wisp. The Prime Minister was anxious about pin- making ; a Bishop equally interested in a dissertation on the escapements of watches ; a Field- Marshal not less intent on a new specific from the concentrated essence of hellebore. But what most delighted Popanilla was hearing a lecture from the most eminent lawyer and statesman in Vraibleusia on liis first and favourite study of hydrostatics. His associa- tions quite overcame him : all Fantaisie rushed upon his memory, and he was obliged to retire to a less frequented pai't of the room to relieve his too excited feelings. 406 POPANILLA. He was in a few minutes addressed by the identical little gentleman who had recently been speculating with the three dukes. The little gentleman told him that he had heard with great pleasure that in Fantaisie they had no historians, poets, or novelists. He proved to Popanilla that no such thing as experience existed ; that, as the world was now to be regulated on quite different principles from those by which it had hitherto been condacted, similar events to those which had occurred could never again take place ; and therefore it was absolutely useless to know anything about the past. With regard to literary fiction, he ex- plained that, as it was absolutely necessary, from his nature, that man should experience a certain quantity of excite- ment, the false interest which these productions created prevented their readers from obtaining this excitement by methods which, by the discovery of the useful, might greatly benefit society. ' You are of opinion, then,* exclaimed the delighted Popanilla, ' that nothing is good which is not useful ? ' ' Is it possible that an individual exists in this world who doubts this great first principle ? ' said the little man, with great animation. ' Ah, ray dear friend 1 ' said Popanilla, ' if you only knew what an avowal of this great first principle has cost me ; what I have suffered ; what I have lost ! ' 'What have you lost ? ' asked the little gentleman. 'In the first place, a lock of hair ' ' Poh, nonsense ! ' * Ah ! you may say Poh ! but it was a particular lock of hair.' ' My friend, that word is odious. Nothing ig particular, everything is general. Rules are general, feelings are general, and property should be general ; and, sir, I tell you what, in a very short time it must be so. Why should Lady Spirituelle, for instance, receive me at her house, rather than I receive her at mine ?' * Why don't you, then ? ' asked the simple Popanilla. POPANILLA. 407 * Because I have not got one, sir !' roared the little gen- tleman. He would certainly have broken away had not Popanilla begged him to answer one question. The Captain, reitera- ting in the most solemn manner his firm belief in the dogma that nothing was good which was not useful, and again detailing the persecutions which this conviction had brought upon him, was delighted that an opportunity was noAV afforded to gain from the lips of a distinguished phi- losopher a definition of what utilitij really was. The dis- tinguished philosopher could not refuse so trifling a favour, ' Utility,' said he, ' is ' At this critical moment there was a universal buzz throughout the rooms, and everybody looked so interested that the philosopher quite forgot to finish his answer. On inquiring the cause of this great sensation, Popanilla was informed that a rumour was about that a new element had been discovered that afternoon. The party speedily broke up, the principal philosophers immediately rushing to their clubs to ascertain the truth of this report. Popanilla was unfashionable enough to make his acknowledgments to his iiostess before he left her house. As he gazed upon her ladyship's brilliant eyes and radiant complexion, he felt convinced of the truth of her theory of the passions ; he could not refrain from pressing her hand in a manner which violated etiquette, and which a nativity in the Indian Ocean could alone excuse ; the pressure was graciously returned. As Popanilla descended the staircase, he discovered a little note of pink satin paper entangled in his ruffle. He opened it with curiosity. It was * All soul.' He did not return to his hotel quite so soon as he expected. CHAPTER X. Popanilla breakfasted rather late the next morning, and on looking over the evening papers, which were just published, his eyes lighted on the following paragraph : — 408 rOPANILLA. 'AiTivecT yesterday at the Hotel Diplomatique, His Ex- cellency Prince Popanilla, Ambassador Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary from the newly-recognised State of Fantaisie.' Before his Excellency could either recover from his asto- nishment or make any inquiries which might throw any illustration upon its cause, a loud shout in the street made him naturally look out of the window. He observed three or four magnificent equipages drawing up at the door of the hotel, and followed by a large crowd. Each carriage was drawn by four horses, and attended by footmen so radiant with gold and scarlet that, had Popanilla been the late ingenious Mr. Keates, he would have mistaken them for the natural children of Phoebus and Aurora. Tlie Ambassador forgot the irregularity of the paragi'aph in the splendour of the liveries. He felt triumphantly conscious that the most beautiful rose in the world must look ex- tremely pale by the side of scarlet cloth ; and this new example of the superiority of art over nature reminding him of the inferionty of bread-fruit to grilled muffin, ho resolved to retui^n to breakfast. But it was his fate to be reminded of the inutility of the best resolutions, for ere the cup of coffee had touched his parched lips the door of his room flew open, and the Mar- quess of Moustache was announced. His Lordship was a young gentleman with an expressive countenance ; that is to say, his face was so covered with hair, and the back of his head cropped so bald, that you generally addressed him in the rear by mistake. He did not speak, but continued bowing for a considerable time, in that diplomatic manner which means so much. By the time he had finished bowing his suite had gained the apart- ment, and his Private Secretary, one of those uncommonly able men who onlj' want an opportunity, seized the present one of addressing Popanilla. Bowing to the late Captain with studied respect, ho in- formed him that the Marquess Moustache was the nobleman appointed by the Government of Yraibleusia to attend upon rOrANILLA. 409 his Excellency during the first few weeks of his mission, A\ath the view of affording him all information upon those objects which might naturally be expected to engage the interest or attract the attention of so distinguished a per- sonage. The ' ancien marin' and present Ambassador had been so used to miracles since the loss of that lock of hair, that he did not think it supernatural, having during the last few days been in turn a Fantaisian nobleman, a post- captain, a fish, a goddess, and, above all, an author, he should now be transformed into a plenipotentiary. Drink- ing, therefore, his cup of coffee, he assumed an air as if he really were used to have a Marquess for an attendant, and said that he was at his Lordship's service. The Marquess bowed low, and the Private Secretary remarked that the first thing to be done by his Excellency was to be presented to the Government. After that he was to visit all the manufactories in Vraibleusia, subscribe to all the charities, and dine with all the Corporations, attend a dejeuner a la fourchette at a palace they were at present building under the sea, give a gold plate to be run for on the fashionable racecourse, be present at morning- prayers at the Government Chapel, hunt once or twice, give a dinner or two himself, make one pun, and go to the Play, by which various means, he said, the good under- standing between the two countries would be materially increased and, in a manner, established. As the Fantaisian Ambassador and his suite entered their carriages, the sky, if it had not been for the smoke, would certainly have been rent by the acclamations of the mob. ' Popanilla for ever ! ' sounded from all quarters, except where the shout was varied by ' Vraibleusia and Fantaisie against the world ! ' which perhaps was even the most popular sentiment of the two. The Ambassador was quite agitated, and asked the Marquess what he was to do. The Private Secretary told his Excellency to bow. Popanilla bowed with such grace that in five minutes the horses Avere taken out of his carriage, and that carriage dragged in tnumph by the enthusiastic populace. He continued 410 POPANTLLA. bowing, and their cntlinsiasm continued increasins];. In the meantime his Excellency's portrait was sketched by an artist who hung upon his wheel, and in less than half an hour a lithographic likeness of the popular idol was wor- shipped iu eveiy print-shop in Hubbabuh. As they drew nearer the Hall of Audience the crowd kept increasing, till at length the whole city seemed poured forth to meet him. Although now feeling conscious that he was the greatest man in the island, and therefore only thinking of himself, Popanilla's attention was nevertheless at this moment attracted by a singular figure. He was apparently a man : in stature a Patagonian, and robust as a well-fed ogre. His countenance was jolly, but consequen- tial ; and his costume a curious mixture of a hunting-dress and a court suit. He was on foot, and in spite of the crowd, with the aid of a good whip and his left fist made his way with great ease. On inquiring who this extraor- dinary personage might be, Popanilla was informed that it was THE Aboriginal Inhabitant. As the giant passed the Ambassador's carriages, the whole suite, even Lord Mous- tache, rose and bent low ; and the Secretary told Popanilla that there was no person in the island for whom the Government of Vraibleusia entertained so profound a respect. The crowd was now so immense that even the progress of the Aboriginal Inhabitant was for a moment impeded. The great man got surrounded by a large body of little mechanics. The contrast between the pale perspiring visages and lean forms of these emaciated and half-gene- rated creatures, and the jolly form and ruddy countenance, gigantic limbs and ample frame, of the Aboriginal, was most striking ; nor could any one view the group for an instant without feeling convinced that the latter was really a superior existence. The mechanics, who were worn by labour, not reduced by famine, far from being miserable, were impudent. They began rating the mighty one for the dearness of his corn. He received their attacks ■with mildness. He reminded them that the regulaticm POPANILLA. 411 ■by which they procured theu- bread was the aboriginal law of the island, under which they had all so greatly flourished. He explained to them that it was owing to this protecting priiuiple that he and his ancestors, having nothing to do but to hunt and shoot, had so preserved their health that, unlike the rest of the human race, they had not degene- rated from the original form and nature of man. He showed that it was owing to the vigour of mind and body consequent upon this fine health that Vraibleusia had become the wonder of the world, and that they themselves were so actively employed ; and he inferred that they surely could not grudge him the income which he derived, since that income was, in fact, the foundation of their own profits. He then satisfactorily demonstrated to them that if by any circumstances he were to cease to exist, the whole island would immediately sink under the sea. Having thiTS condescended to hold a little parley with his fellow-subjects, though not fellow-creatures, he gave them all a good sound flogging, and departed amidst the enthusiastic cheering of those whom he had so briskly lashed. By this time Popanilla had arrived at the Hall of Audience. * It was a vast and venerable pile.' His Excellency and suite quitted their carriages amidst the renewed acclamations of the mob. Proceeding through a number of courts and quadrangles, crowded with guards and ofiicials, they stopped before a bronze gate of great height. Over it was written, in vast characters of Living flame, this inscription : TO THE WISEST AND THE BEST, THE RICHEST AND THE MIGHTIEST, THE GLORY AND THE ADMIRATION, THE DEFENCE AND THE CONSTERNATION. On reading this mysterious inscription his Excellency experienced a sudden and awful shudder. Lord Moustache, however, who was more used to mysteries, taking up a 412 POPANILLA. silver trumpet, wLicli was fixed to the portal by a crimson cord, gave a loud blast. The gates flew open with tho sound of a whirlwind, and Popanilla found himself in what at first appeared an illimitable hall. It was crowded, but perfect order was preserved. The Ambassador was con- ducted with great pomp to the upper end of the apartment, where, after an hour's walk, his Excellency arrived. At; the extremity of the hall was a colossal and metallic Statue of exti'aordinary appearance. It represented an armed monarch. The head and bust were of gold, and the curHng hair was crowned with an imperial diadem ; the body and arms were of silver, worked in the semblance of a complete suit of enamelled armour of the feudal ages ; and the thighs and legs were of iron, which the artist had clothed in the bandaged hose of the old Saxons. The figure bore the appeai'ance of great antiquity, but had evidently been often repaired and renovated since its first formation. The workmanship was clearly of different eras, and the repa- rations, either from ignorance or intention, had often been efiected with little deference to the original design. Part of the shoulders had been supplied by the other, though less precious, metal, and the Roman and Imperial orna- ments had unaccountably been succeeded by the less classic, though more picturesque, decorations of Gothic armour. On the other hand, a great portion of the chivalric and precious material of the body had been removed, and re- placed by a style and substance resembling those of the lower limbs. In its right hand the Statue brandished a naked sword, and with its left leant upon a huge, though extremely rich and elaborately carved, crosier. It trampled iTpon a shivered lance and a broken chain. ' Your Excellency perceives,' said the Secretary, pointing to the Statue, ' that ours is a mixed Government,' Popanilla was informed that this extraordinary Statue enjoyed all the faculties of. an intellectual being, with tho additional advantage of some faculties which intellectual beings do not enjoy. It possessed not only the faculty of epeech, but of speaking truth ; not only the power of judg- POPANILLA. 413 ment, but ol judging rightly ; not only the habit of listening, but of listening attentively. Its antiquity was so remote that the most profound and acute antiquarians had failed iu tracing back its origin. The Aboriginal Inhabitant, how- ever, asserted that it was the work of one of his ancestors ; and as his assertion was confirmed by all traditions, the allegation was received. Whatever might have been its origin, certain it was that it was now immortal, for it could never die ; and to whomsoever it might have been originally indebted for its power, not less sure was it that it was now omnipotent, for it could do all things. Thus alleged and thus believed the Vraibleusians, marvellous and sublime people ! who, with all the impotence of mor- tality, have created a Government which is both immortal and omnipotent ! Generally speaking, the Statue was held in gi-eat reve- rence and viewed with great admiration by the whole Vraibleusian people. There were a few persons, indeed, who asserted that the creation of such a Statue was by no means so mighty a business as it had been the fashion to suppose ; and that it was more than probable that, with the advantages afforded by the scientific discoveries of modern times, they would succeed in making a more useful one. This, indeed, they offered to accomplish, provided the present Statue were preliminarily destroyed ; but as they wei-e well assured that this offer would' never be accepted, it was generally treated by those who refused it as a braggadocio. There were many also who, though they in general greatly admired and respected the present Statue, affected to believe that, though the execution was wonderful, and the interior machinery indeed far beyond the powers of the present age, nevertheless the design was iu many parts somewhat rude, and the figure altogether far from being well-proportioned. Some thought the head too big, some too small ; some that the body was dispropor- tionately little ; others, on the contraiy, that it was so much too large that it had the appearance of being dropsical ; others maintained that the legs were too weak for the S'jp- 414 POPANILLA. port of the whole, and that they should be rendered more important and j)rominent members of the figure ; while, on the contrary, there were yet others who cried out that really these members were already so extravagantly huge, so coarse, and so ungenteel, that they quite marred the general effect of a beautiful piece of sculpture. The same differences existed about the comparative ex- cellence of the three metals and the portions of the body which they respectively formed. Some admired the gold, and maintained that if it were not for the head the Statue would be utterly useless ; others preferred the silver, and would assert that the body, which contained all the ma- chinery, must clearly be the most precious portion ; while a third party triumphantly argued that the iron legs which supported both body and head must surely be the most valuable part, since without them the Statue must fall. The first party advised that in all future repai-ations gold only should be introduced ; and the other parties, of course, recommended Avith equal zeal their own favourite metals- It is observable, however, that if, under these circumstances, the iron race chanced to fail in carrying their point, they invariably voted for gold in preference to silver. But the . most contradictory opinions, perhaps, were those which were occasioned by the instruments with which the Statue was armed and supported. Some affected to be so frightened by the mere sight of the brandished sword, although it never moved, that they pretended it was dan- gerous to live even under the same sky with it ; while others, treating very Hghtly the terrors of this warlike instrument, would observe that much more was really to be apprehended from the remarkable strength and thick- ness of the calm and peace-inspiring crosier ; and that as long as the Government was supported by this huge pas- toral staff nothing could prevail against it ; that it could dare all things, and even stand without the help of its legs. All these various opinions at least proved that, although the present might not be the most miraculous Statue that could possibly be created, it was nevertheless POPANILLA. 415 qtiite impossible ever to form one -wliicii would please aU parties. The care of this wonderful Statue was entrusted to twelve * Managers,' whose duty it was to wind-up and regulate its complicated machinery, and who answered for its good management by their heads. It was their business to consult the oracle upon all occasions, and by its decisions to administer and regulate all the affairs of the State. They alone were permitted to hear its voice ; for the Sta- tue never spoke in public save on rare occasions, and its sentences were then really so extremely commonplace that, had it not been for the deep wisdom of its general conduct, the Vraibleusians would have been almost tempted to believe that they really might exist without the ser\'ices of the capital member. The twelve Managers surrounded the Statue at a respectful distance ; their posts were the most distinguished in the State ; and indeed the duties at- tached to them were so numerous, so difficult, and so respon- sible, that it required no ordinary abilities to fulfil, and demanded no ordinary courage to aspire to, them. The Fantaisian Ambassa,dor, ha'sdng been presented, took his place on the right hand of the Statue, next to the Aboriginal Inhabitant, and public business then com- menced. There came forward a messenger, who, knocking his nose three times with great reverence on the floor, a knock for each metal of the figure, thus spoke : ' O thou wisest and best ! thou richest and mightiest ' thou glory and admiration ! thou defence and consterna- tion ! Lo ! the King of the North is cutting all his subjects' heads ofi" ! ' This announcement produced a great sensation. The Marquess Moustache took snuff; the Private Secretary said he had long suspected that this would be the case ; and the Aboriginal Inhabitant remarked to Popanilla that the corn in the North was of an exceedingly coarse grain. While they were making these observations the twelve Manager^ had assembled in deep consultation around the 416 POPANILLA. Statue, and iu a very few minutes the Oracle was pre- pared. The answer was very simple, but the exordium was Bublime. It professed that the Vraibleusian nation was the saviour and champion of the world ; that it was the first principle of its policy to maintain the cause of any people struggling for their rights as men ; and it avowed itself to be the grand patron of civil and religious liberty in all quarters of the globe. Forty-seven battalions of infantry and eighteen regiments of cavalry, twenty-four sail of the line, seventy transports, and fifteen bombketches, were then ordered to leave Vraibleuoia for the North in less than sixty minutes ! ' What energy ! ' said Popanilla ; ' what decision ! what rapidity of execution ! ' 'Ay ! ' said the Aboriginal, smacking his thigh ; ' let them say what they like about their proportions, and mixtures, and metals — abstract nonsense ! No one can deny that our Government wox'ks well. But see ! here comes another messenger ! ' ' thou wisest and best ! thou richest and mightiest ! thou glory and admiration ! thou defence and consterna- tion ! Lo ! the people of the South have cut their king's head off!' ' Well ! I suppose that is exactly what you. all want,' said the innocent Popanilla. The Private Secretary looked mysterious, and said that he was not prepared to ans^ver ; that his department never having been connected with this species of business, he was unable at the moment to give his Excellency the requisite information. At the same time, he begged to state that, provided anything he said should not commit him, he had ao objection to answer the question hypothetically. The A.boriginal Inhabitant said that he would have no hypo- theses or Jacobins ; that he did not approve of cutting off kings' heads ; and that the Vraibleusians were the most monarchical people in the world. So saying, he walked up, without any ceremony, to the chief Manager, and taking POPANILLA. 417 Liiu by the batton, conversed with him some time in an earnest manner, which made the stocks fall two per cent. The Statue ordered three divisions of the grand army and a battering-train of the first grade off to the South without the loss of a second. A palace and establishment were immediately directed to be prepared for the family of the murdered monarch, and the commander-in-chief was instructed to make every exei;tion to bring home the body of his Majesty embalmed. Such an immense issue of pink shells was occasioned by this last expedition that stocks not only recovered themselves, but rose considerably. The excitement occasioned by this last announcement, evaporated at the sight of a third messenger. He informed the Statue that the Emperor of the East was unfortunately unable to pay the interest upon his national debt ; that his treasury was quite empty and his resources utterly ex- hausted. He requested the assistance of the most wealthy and the most generous of nations ; and he ofiered them as security for their advances his gold and silver mines, which, for the breadth of their veins and the richness of their ores, he said, were unequalled. He added, that the only reason they were unworked was the exquisite flavour of the water-melons in his empire, which was so delicious that his subjects of all classes, passing their whole day in devouring them, could be induced neither by force nor per- suasion to do anything else. The cause was so reasonable, and the security so satisfactory, that the Yraibleusian Government felt themselves authorised in shipping off im- mediately all the gold in the island. Pink shells abounded, and stocks were still higher. ' You have no mines in Vraibleusia, I believe ? ' said Popanilla to the Aboriginal. ' No ! but we have taxes.' ' Yery true ! ' said Popanilla. ' I understand that a messenger has just arrived from the West,' said the Secretary to the Fantaisian Plenipo- tentiary. ' He must bring interesting intelligence from such interesting countries. Next to ourselves, they are E E 418 POPANILLA. evidently the most happy, the most wealthy, the most en- lightened, and the most powerful Governments in the world. Although founded only last week, they already rank in the first class of nations. I will send you a little pamphlet to-morrow, which I have just published upon this subject, in which you will see that I have combated, I trust not unsuccessfully, the ridiculous opinions of those cautious statesmen who insinuate that the stability of these Govern- ments is even yet questionable.' The messenger from the Republics of the West now prostrated himself before the Statue. He informed it that two parties had, unfortunately, broken out in these coun- tries, and threatened their speedy dissolution ; that one party maintained that all human government originated in the wants of man ; while the other party asserted that it originated in the desires of man. That these factions had become so violent and so universal that public business was altogether stopped, trade quite extinct, and the instal- ments due to Vraibleusia not forthcoming. Finally, he entreated the wisest and the best of nations to send to these distracted lands some discreet and trusty personages, well instructed in the first principles of government, in order that they might di^aw up constitutions for the igno- rant and irritated multitude. The, Private Secretary told Popanilla that this was no more than he had long expected; that all this would subside, and that he should pubHsh a postscript to his pamphlet in a few days, which he begged to dedicate to him. A whole corps diplomatique and another shipful of abstract philosophers, principally Scotchmen, were imme- diately ordered off to the West ; and shortly after, to render their first principles still more effective and their administrative arrangements still more influential, some brigades of infantry and a detachment of the guards followed. Free constitutions are apt to be misunderstood until half of the nation are bayoneted and the rest im- prisoned. As this mighty Vraibleusian nation had, within the last POPANILLA. 419 half-hour, received intelligence fr-om all quarters of the globe, and interfered in all possible affairs, civil and mili- tary, abstract, administrative, diplomatic, and financial, PopaniUa supposed that the assembly would now break up. Some petty business, however, remained. War was de- clared against the KJing of Sneezeland, for presuming to buy pocket-handkerchiefs of another nation ; and the Em- peror of Pastilles was threatened with a bombardment for daring to sell his peppers to another people. There were also some dozen commercial treaties to be signed, or can- vassed, or cancelled ; and a report having got about that there was a rumour that some disturbance had broken out in some parts unknown, a flying expedition was despatched, with sealed orders, to circumnavigate the globe and arrange affairs. By this time Popanilla thoroughly understood the meaning of the mysterious inscription. Just as the assembly was about to be dissolved another messenger, who, in his agitation, even forgot the accustomed etiquette of salutation, rushed into the presence. ' most mighty ! Sir Bombastes Furioso, who com- manded our last expedition, having sailed, in the hurry, with wrong orders, has attacked our ancient ally by mis- take, and utterly destroyed him ! ' Here was a pretty business for the Best and Wisest ! At first the Managers behaved in a manner the most undiplo- matic, and quite lost their temper ; they raved, they stormed, they contradicted each other, they contradicted themselves, and swore that Sir Bombastes' head should answer for it. Then they subsided into sulkiness, and at length, beginning to suspect that the fault might ultimately attach only to themselves, they got frightened, and held frequent consultations with pale visages and quivering lips. After some time they thought they could do nothing wiser than put a good face upon the affair ; whatever might be the result, it was, at any rate, a victory, and a victory would please the vainest of nations : and so these blundering and blustering gentlemen determined to adopt the con- queror, whom they were at first weak enough to disclaim, E B 2 420 POPANILLA. tlien vile enough to bully, and finally forced to rewaixl. The Statue accordingly whispered a most elaborate pane- gyric on Furioso, which was of course duly delivered. The Admiral, who was neither a coward nor a fool, was made ridiculou.s by being described as the greatest commander that ever existed ; one whom Nature, in a gracious freak, had made to shame us little men ; a happy compound of the piety of Noah, the patriotism of Themistocles, the skill of Columbus, and the courage of Nelson ; and his exploit styled the most glorious and unrivalled victory that was ever achieved, even by the Vraibleusians ! Honours were decreed in profusion, a general illumination ordered for the next twenty nights, and an expedition immediately despatched to attack the right man. All this time the conquerors wei'e in Avaiting in an ante- room, in great trepidation, and fully prepared to be cashiered or cut in quarters. They were rather surprised when, bowing to the ground, they were saluted by some half- dozen lords-in-waiting as the heroes of the age, congra- tulated upon their famous achievements, and humbly re- quested to appear in the Presence. The warriors accordingly walked up in procession to the Statue, who, opening its mighty mouth, vomited forth a flood of ribbons, stars, and crosses, which were divided among the valiant band. This oral discharge the Vraibleu- sians called the ' fountain of honour.' Scarcely had the mighty Furioso and his crew disap- peared than a body of individuals arrived at the top of the hall, and, placing themselves opposite the ]\Ianagers, began rating them for their inefficient administration of the island, and expatiated on the inconsistency of their late conduct to the conquering Bombastes. The Managers defended them- selves in a manner perfectly in character with their recent behaviour ; but their opponents were not easily satisfied with their confused explanations and their explained con- fusions, and the speeches on both sides grew warmer. At length the opposition proceeded to expel the administration from their places by force, and an eager scuffle between tho POPAlSaLLA. 421 two pai-ties now commenced. The general body of specta- tors continued only to observe, and did not participate in the fray. At first, this melee only excited amusement ; but as it lengthened some wisely observed that public business greatly suifered by these private squabbles ; and some even ventured to imagine that the safety of the Statue might be implicated by their continuance. But this last fear was futile. Popanilla asked the Private Secretary which party ho thought would ultimately succeed. The Private Secretary said that, if the present Managers retained their places, he thought that they would not go out ; but if, on the other hand, they were expelled by the present opposition, it was probable that the present opposition would become Managers. The Aboriginal thought both parties equally incompetent ; and told Popanilla some long stones about a person who was chief Manager in his youth, about five hundred years ago, to whom he said he was indebted for all his political principles, which did not surpi-ise Popanilla. At this moment a noise was heard throughout the hall which made his Excellency believe that something un- toward had again happened, and that another conqueror by mistake had again arrived. A most wonderful being galloped up to the top of the apartment. It was half man and half horse. The Secretary told Popanilla that this was the famous Centaur Chiron ; that his Horseship, having wearied of his ardent locality in the constellations, had descended some years back to the island of Vraibleusia ; that he had commanded the armies of the nation in all the great wars, and had gained every battle in which he had ever been engaged. Chiron was no less skilful, he said, in civil than in military affairs; but the Vraibleusians, being very jealous of allowing themselves to be governed by their warriors, the Centaur had lately been out of employ. While the Seci-etary was giving hun this information Popanilla perceived that the great Chiron was attacking the com- batants on both sides. The tutor of Achilles, Hercules, and ./Eneas, of course, soon succeeded in kicking them all out, 422 tOPANILLA. and constituted himself chief and sole Manager of the Statue. Some grumbled at this autocratic conduct ' upon principle,' but they were chiefly connections of the expelled. The great majority, wearied with public squabbles occa- sioned by private ends, rejoiced to see the pubhc interest entrusted to an individual who had a reputation to lose. Intelligence of the appointment of the Centaur was speedily diffused throughout the island, and produced great and general satisfaction. There were a few, indeed, impartial personages, who had no great taste for Centaurs in civil capacities, fi'om an apprehension that, if he could not succeed in persuading them by his eloquence, his Grace miglit chance to use his heels. CHAPTER XI. On the evening of his presentation day his Excellency the Fantaisian Ambassador and suite honoui'ed the national theatre with their presence. Such a house was never known ! The pit was miraculously overflown before the doors were opened, although the proprietor did not permit a single private entrance. The enthusiasm was uuiversal, and only twelve persons were killed. The Private Secre- tary told Popanilla, with an air of great complacency, that the Vraibleusian theatres were the largest in the world. Popanilla had little doubt of the truth of this information, as a long time elapsed before he could even discover the stage. He observed that every person in the theatre carried a long black glass, which he kept perpetually fixed to his eye. To sit in a huge room hotter than a glass-house, in a posture emulating the most sanctified Faquir, with a throbbing head-ache, a breaking back, and twisted legs, with a heavy tube held over one eye, and the other covered with the unemployed hand, is in Vraibleusia called a pubhc amusement. The play was by the most famous dramatist that Vrai- POPANILLA. 423 bleusia ever produced ; and certainly, wlien his Excellency witnessed the first scenes, it was easier to imagine that he was once more in his own sunset Isle of Fantaisie than in the railroad state of Vraibleusia : but, ujifortunately, this evening the principal characters and scenes were omitted, to make room for a moving panorama, which lasted some hours, of the chief and most recent Yraibleusian victories. The audience fought their battles o'er again with great fervour. Duiing the play one of the inferior actors was supposed to have saluted a female chorus-singer with an ardour which was more than theatrical, and every lady in the house immediately fainted ; because, as the eternal Secretary told Popanilla, the Vraibleusians are the most modest and most moral nation in the world. The male part of the audience insisted, in indignant terms, that the offending performer should immediately be dismissed. In a few minutes he appeared upon the stage to make a most humble apology for an offence which he was not conscious of having committed ; but the most moral and the most modest of nations was implacable, and the wretch was expelled. Having a large family dependent upon his exer- tions, the actor, according to a custom prevalent in Vrai- bleusia, went immediately and drowned himself in the nearest river. Then the ballet commenced. It was soon discovered that the chief dancer, a celebrated foreigner, who had been announced for this evening, was absent. The uproar was tremendous, and it was whispered that the house would be pulled down ; because, as Popanilla was informed, the Vraibleusians are the most particular and the freest people in the world, and never will permit themselves to be treated with disrespect. The principal chandelier having been destroyed, the manager appeared, and regretted that Signor Zephyrino, being engaged to dine with a Grandee of the first class, was unable to fulfil his ensrasrement. The house became frantic, and the terrified manager sent immediately for the Signor. The artist, after a proper time had elapsed, appeared with a napkin round his neck and a fork in his hand, with which he stood some 424 POPANILLA. momenis, until tlie upi'oar had subsided, picking his teetli. At length, when silence was obtained, he told them that ho was surpi-ised that the most jiolished and liberal nation in the world should behave themselves in such a brutal and narrow-minded manner. He threatened them that he would throw up his engagement immediately, and announce to all foreign parts that they were a horde of barbarians ; then, abusing them for a few seconds in round terms, he retired, amidst the checrings of the whole house, to finish his wine. When the performances were finished the audience rose and joined in chorus. On Popauilla enquiring the name and nature of this effusion, he was told that it was the national air of the Isle of Fantaisie, sung in compliment to himself. His Excellency shrugged his shoulders and bowed low. The next morning, attended by his suite, Popanilla visited the most considerable public offices and manufactories in Hubbabub. He was received in all places with the greatest distinction. He was invariably welcomed either by tlie chiefs of the department or the proprietors themselves, and a sumptuous collation Avas pj-epared for liim in eveiy place. His Excellency evinced the liveliest interest in everything that was pointed out to him, and instantaneously perceived that the Vraibleusians exceeded the rest of the world in manufactures and public works as much as they did in arms, morals, modesty, philosophy, and politics. The Pri- vate Secretary being absent upon his postscript, Popanilla received the most satisfactory infoi-mation upon all subjects from the Marquess himself. Whenever he addi*essed any question to his Lordship, his noble attendant, with the greatest politeness, begged him to take some refreshment. Popanilla returned to his hotel with a great admiration of the manner in which refined philosophy in Vraibleusia was applied to the common purposes of life ; and found that ho had that morning acquired a general knowledge of the chief arts and sciences, oaten some hundred sandwiches, and tasted as many bottles of sherry. POPANILLA. 425 CHAPTER XII. The most commercial imtion in tlie world was now busily preparing to diffuse the blessings of civilisation and com- petition throughout the native country of their newly- acquired friend. The greatest exporters that ever existed had never been acquainted "s^'ith such a subject for exportation as the Isle of Fantaisie. There everything was wanted. It was not a partial demand which was to be satisfied, nor a particular deficiency Avhich was to be supplied ; but a vast population wa.3 thoroughly to be furnished with every article which a vast population must require. From the manufacturer of steam-engines to the manufacturer of stockings, all were alike employed. There was no branch of trade in Yraibleusia which did not equally rejoice at this new opening for commercial enterprise, and Avhich was not equally interested in this new theatre for Vraibleusiau industry, Yraibleusian invention, Vraibleusian activity, and, above all, Yraibleusian competition. Day and night the whole island was employed in pre- paring for the great fleet and in huzzaing Popanilla. When at home, every ten minutes he was obliged to appear in the balcony, and then, with hand on heart and hat in liand, ah ! that bow ! that perpetual motion of popularity ! If a man lore ease, let him be most unpopular. The Ma- nagers did the impossible to assist and advance the in- tercourse between the two nations. They behaved in a liberal and enlightened manner, and a deputation of liberal and enlightened merchants consequently waited upon them Avith a vote of thanks. They issued so many pink shells that the price of the public funds was doubled, and affairs arranged so skilfully that money was universally declared to be worth nothing, so that every one in the island, from the Premier down to the Mendicant whom the lecture-lov- ing Skindeep threatened with the bastinado, was enabled to participate, in some degree, in the approaching venture, if we should use so dubious a term in speaking of profits so certain. 426 POPANILLA. Compared witli the Fantaisian connection, tlie wliole coramerce of the world appeared to the Vraibleusians a retail business. All other customers were neglected or discarded, and each individual seemed to concentrate his resources to supply the wants of a country where they dance by moonlight, live on fruit, and sleep on flowers. At length the first fleet of five hundred sail, laden with wonderful specimens of Vraibleusian mechanism, and in- numerable bales of Vraibleusian manufactures ; articles raw and refined, goods dry and damp, wholesale and retail ; silks and woollen cloths ; cottons, cutlery, and camlets ; flannels and ladies' albums; under waistcoats, kid gloves, en- gravings, coats, cloaks, and ottomans; lamps and looking- glasses ; sofas, round tables, equipages, and scent-bottles ; fans and tissue-flowers ; porcelain, poetry, novels, news- papers, and cookery books ; bear's-grease, blue pills, and bijouterie ; arms, beards, poodles, pages, mustachios, court- guides, and bon-bons ; music, pictures, ladies' maids, scrap- books, buckles, boxing-gloves, guitars, and snuiF-boxes ; together with a company of opera-singers, a band of come- dians, a popular preacher, some quacks, lecturers, artists, and Hterary gentlemen, principally sketch-book men, quitted, one day, with a favourable wind, and amid the exultation of the inhabitants, the port of Hubbabub ! When his Excellency Prince Popanilla heard of the contents of this stupendous cargo, notwithstanding his implicit confidence in the superior genius and usefal know- ledge of the Vraibleusians, he could not refrain from ex- pressing a doubt whether, in the present undeveloped state of his native land, any returns could be made pro- portionate to so curious and elaborate an importation ; but whenever he ventured to intimate his opinion to any of the most commercial nation in the world he was only listened to with an incredulous smile which seemed to pity his inexperience, or told, with an air of profound self-complacency, that in Fantaisie ' there must be great resources.' In the meantime, public companies were formed for POPANILLA. 427 ■working tlic mines, colonizing the waste lands, and cutting tlie coral rocks of the Indian, Isle, of all whicli associations Popanilla was chosen Director by acclamation. These, however, it mnst be confessed, were speculations of a some- what doubtful nature ; but the Branch Bank Society of the Isle of Fantaisie really held out flattering prospects. When the fleet had sailed they gave Popanilla a public dinner. It was attended by all the principal men in the island, and he made a speech, which was received in a rather difierent manner than was his sunset oration by the monarch whom he now represented. Fantaisie and its accomplished Envoy were at the same time the highest and the universal fashion. The ladies sang d la Syrette, dressed their hair a la Idermede, and themselves a la Fan- tastique; which, by-the-bye, was not new ; and the gentle- men wore boa-constrictor cravats and waltzed a la mer Indienne — a title probably suggested by a remembrance of the dangers of the sea. It was soon discovered that, without taking into con- sideration the average annual advantages which would necessarily spring from their new connection, the profits which must accrue upon the present expedition alone had akeady doubled the capital of the island. Everybody in Vraibleusia had either made a fortune, or laid the founda- tion of one. The penniless had become prosperous, and the principal merchants and manufacturers, having realised large capitals, retired from business. But the colossal fortunes were made by the gentlemen who had assisted the administration in raising the price of the public funds and in managing the issues of the pink shells. The efiect of this immense increase of the national wealth and of this creation of new and powerful classes of society was speedily felt. Great moves to the westward were perpetual, and a variety of sumptuous squares and streets were immediately run up in that chosen land. Butlers were at a premium ; coach-makers never slept ; card-engravers, having exhausted copper, had recourse to steel ; and the demand for arms at the Heralds' College v/as so great that even the mystical 428 POPANILLA. genius of Garter was oxliausted, and hostile meetings "were commenced between the junior members of some ancient families, to wliom the same crest had been unwittingly ap- portioned ; but, the seconds interfering, they discovered themselves to be relations. All the eldest sons were im- mediately to get into Parliament, and all the younger ones as quickly into the Guards ; and the simple Fantaisian En- voy, who had the peculiar felicity of taking everything au pled du lettre, made a calculation that, if these arrange- ments were duly effected, in a short time the Vraibleusian representatives would exceed the Vraibleusian represented ; and that there would be at least three officers in the Vrai- bleusian Guards to every private. Judging from the beards and mustachios which now abounded, this great result was near at hand. With the snub nose which is the character- istic of the millionaires, these appendages produce a pleasing effect. When the excitement had a little subsided ; when their mighty mansions were magnificently furnished ; when their bright equipages were fairly launched, and the due comple- ment of their liveried retainers perfected ; when, in short, they had imitated the aristocracy in every point in which wealth could rival blood : then the new people discovered with dismay that one tiling was yet wanting, which treasure could not purchase, and which the wit of others could not supply — Manner. In homely phrase, the millionaires did not know how to behave themselves. Accustomed to the counting-house, the factory, or the exchange, they looked queer in saloons, and said ' Sir ! ' when they addressed you ; and seemed stiff, and hard, and hot. Then the solecisms they committed in more formal society, oh ! they were out- rageous ; and a leading article in an eminent joui*nal was actually written upon the subject. I dare not write the deeds they did ; but it was whispered that when they drank wine they filled their glasses to the very brim. All this delighted the old class, who were as envious of their riches as the new people were emulous of their style. In any other country except Vraibleusia persons so POPANILLA. 429 situated would have consoled themselves for their disagree- able position by a consciousness that their posterity would not be annoyed by the same deficiencies ; but the wonder- ful Vraibleusian people resembled no other, even in their faiUngs, They determined to acquire in a day that which had hitherto been deemed the gradual consequence of tedious education. A ' Society for the Diffusion of Fashionable Knowledge ' was announced ; the Millionaires looked triumphantly mys- terious, the aristocrats quizzed. The object of the society is intimated by its title ; and the method by which its insti- tutors proposed to attain this object was the periodical publication of pamphlets, under the superintendence of a competent committee. The first treatise appeared : its subject was noxchalaxce. It instructed its students ever to appear inattentive in the society of men, and heartless when they conversed with women. It taught them not to understand a man if he were witty ; to misunderstand him if he were eloquent ; to yawn or stare if he chanced to elevate his voice, or presumed to ruffle the placidity of the social calm by addressing his fellow-creatures with teeth imparted. Excellence was never to be recognised, but only disparaged with a look : an opinion or a sentiment, and the nonchalant was lost for ever. For these, he was to substitute a smile like a damp sunbeam, a moderate curl of the upper lip, and the all-speaking and perpetual shrug- of the shoulders. By a skilful management of these qualities it was shown to be easy to ruin another's reputation and ensure your own without ever opening your mouth. To woman, this exquisite treatise said much in few words : ' Listlessness, listlessness, listlessness,' was the edict by which the most beautiful works of nature were to be regu- lated, who are only truly charming when they make us feel and feel themselves. ' Listlessness, listlessness, list- lessness ; ' for when you choose not to be listless, the con- trast is so striking that the triumph must be complete. The treatise said much more, which I shall omit. It foro-ot, however, to remark that this vaunted nonchalance 430 POPANILLA. may be the offspring of the most contemptible and the most odious of passions : and that while it may be exceedingly refined to appear uninterested when others are interested, to witness excellence without emotion, and to listen to genius without animation, the heart of the Insensible may as often be inflamed by Envy as inspired by Fashion. Dissertations ' On leaving cards,' ' On cutting intimate friends,' ' On cravats,' ' On dinner courses,' ' On poor rela- tions.' ' On bores,' ' On lions,' were announced as speedily to appear. In the meantime, the Essay on Nonchalance produced the best effects. A ci-devant stock-broker cut a Duke dead at his club the day after its publication ; and his daughter yawned while his Grace's eldest son, the Marquess, made her an offer as she was singing ' Di tanti palpiti.' The aristocrats got a little frightened, and when an eminent hop-merchant and his lady had asked a dozen Countesses to dinner, and forgot to be at home to receive them, the old class left off quizzing. The pamphlets, however, continued issuing forth, and the new people advanced at a rate which was awful. They actually began to originate some ideas of their own, and there was a whisper among the leaders of voting the aris- tocrats old-fashioned. The Diffusion Society now caused these exalted personages great anxiety and uneasiness. They argued that Fashion was a relative quality ; that it was quite impossible, and not to be expected, that all people were to aspire to be fashionable ; that it was not in the nature of things, and that, if it were, society could not exist ; that the more their imitators advanced the more they should baffle their imitations ; that a first and fashion, able class was a necessary consequence of the organisation of man ; and that a line of demarcation would for ever be drawn between them and the other islanders. The warmth and eagerness with which they maintained and promul- gated their opinions might have tempted, however, an impartial person to suspect that they secretly entertained some doubts of their truth and soundness. On the other hand, the other party maintained that POPAOTLLA. 431 Ffisliion was a positive quality ; that tlie moment a person obtained a certain degi'ee of refinement he or she became, in fact and essentially, fashionable ; that the views of the old class were unphHosophical and illiberal, and unworthy of an enlightened age ; that men are equal, and that every- thing is open to everybody ; and that when we take into consideration the nature of man, the origin of society, and a few other things, and duly consider the constant inclination and progression towards perfection which man- kind evince, there was no reason why, in the course of time, the whole nation should not go to Almack's on the same night. At this moment of d' ibt and dispiite the Government of Yraibleusia, with that spirit of conciliation and liberality and that perfect wisdom for which it had been long cele- brated, caring very httle for the old class, whose interest, it well knew, was to support it, and being exceedingly desirous of engaging the affections of the new race, declared in their favour ; and acting upon that sublime scale of measures for which this great nation has always been so famous, the Statue issued an edict that a new lite- rature should be invented, in order at once to complete the education of the MiUionaires and the triumph of the Romantic over the Classic School of Manners. The most eminent writers were, as usual, in the pay of the Government, and Burlington, a Tale of Fashionable Life, in three volumes post octavo, was sent forth. Two or three similar works, bearing titles equally euphonious and aristocratic, were published daily ; and so exquisite was the style of these productions, so naturally arti- ficial the construction of their plots, and so admirably inventive the conception of therr characters, that many who had been repulsed by the somewhat abstract matter and arid style of the treatises, seduced by the interest of a story, and by the dazzling delicacies of a charming style, reaUy now picked up a considerable quantity of very usefal knowledge ; so that when the delighted students had eaten some fifty or sixty imaginary dinners in my lord's dining- 432 POPANILLA. room, and whirled some fifty or sixty imaginary waltzes in my lady's dancing-room, there wn,3 scarcely a brute left among the whole Millionaires. Bat what produced tho most beneficial effects on the new people, and excited tho gx'eatest indignation and despair among the old class, were some voUxmes which the Government, with shocking Machiavelism, bribed some needy scions of nobility to scribble, and which revealed certain secrets vainly believed to be quite sacred and inviolable. CHAPTER XIII. Shortly after the sailing of the great fleet the Private Secretary engaged in a speculation which was rather more successful than any one contained in his pamphlet on ' Tlio Present State of the Western Republics.' One morning, as he and Popanilla were Avalking on a quay, and deliberating on the clauses of the projected com- mercial treaty batweeu Vraibleusia and Fantaisie, the Secretary suddenly stopped, as if he had seen his father's ghost or lost the thread of his argument, and asked Popa- nilla, with an air of suppressed agitation, whether he observed anything in the distance. Popanilla, who, like all .savages, was long-sighted, applying to his eye the glass which, in conformity to the custom of the country, he always wore round his neck, confessed that he saw nothing. The Secretary, who had never unfixed his glass nor moved a step since he asked the question, at length, by pointing with his finger, attracted Popanilla's attention to what his Excellency conceived to be a porpoise bobbing up and down in the waves. The Secretary, however, was not of the same opinion as the Ambassador. He was not very com- municative, indeed, as to his own opinion upon this grave subject, but he talked of making fiirther observations when the tide went down ; and was so listless, abstracted, and absent, during the rest of their conversation, that it soon ceased, and they speedily parted. POPANILLA. 433 The next day, wlien Popanilla read the morning papers, a feat which he regularly performed, for spelling the news- paper was quite delicious to one who had so recently learned to read, he found that they spoke of nothing hut of the discovery of a new island, information of whiah had been received by the Government only the preceduig night. The Fantaisian Ambassador turned quite pale, and for the first time in his life experienced the passion of jealousy, the green-eyed monster, so called from only being experi- enced by green-horns. Already the prominent state he represented seemed to retire to the background. He did not doubt that the Vraibleusians were the most capricious as well as the most commercial nation in the world. His reigu was evidently over. The new island would send forth a Prince still more popular. His allowance of pink shells would be gradually reduced, and finally withdrawn. His doubts, also, as to the success of the recent expedition to Fantaisie began to revive. His rising reminiscences of his native land, which, with the joint assistance of popu- larity and philosophy, he had hitherto succeeded in stifling, were indeed awkward. He could not conceive his mistress ■with a page and a poodle. He feared much that the cargo was not well assorted. Popanilla determined to enquire after his canoe. His courage, however, was gi*eatly reassured when, on reading the second edition, he learned that the new island was not of considerable size, though most eligibly situate ; and, raoreover, that it was perfectly void of inhabitants. "When the third edition was published he found, to his surprise, that the Private Secretary was the discoverer of this opposition island. This puzzled the Plenipotentiaiy greatly. He read on ; he found that this acquisition, upon which all Vraibleusia was congratulated in such glowing terms by all its journals, actually produced nothing. His Excellency began to breathe ; another paragraph, and he found that the rival island was, a rock ! He remembered tlie porpoise of yesterday. The island certainly cou.ld not be very large, even at low water. Popanilla once moro 434 POPANILLA. felt like a Prince : he defied all the discoverers that could ever exist. He thought of the great resources of the gi*eat country he represented with proud satisfaction. He waited with easy confidence the return of the fleet which had carried out the most judicious assortment with which he had ever been acquainted to the readiest market of which he had any knowledge. He had no doubt his mistress would look most charmingly in a barege. Popanilla determined to present his canoe to the National Museum. Although his Excellency had existed in the liighest state of astonisliment during his whole mission to Vraibleusia, it must bo confessed, now that he understood his companion's question of yesterday, he particularly stared. His wonder was not decreased in the evening, when the ' Government Gazette ' appeared. It contained an order for the imme- diate fortification of the new island by tlie most skilful engineei's, without estimates. A strong garrison was in- stantly embarked. A Governor, and a Deputy-Governor, and Storekeepers, more plentiful than stores, were to ac- company them. The Private Secretary Avent out as Presi- dent of Council. A Bishop was promised ; and a complete Court of Judicature, Chancery, King's Bench, Common Pleas, and Exchequer, were to be ofi" the next week. It is only due to the characters of courtiers, who are so often reproached with ingratitude to their patrons, to record that the Private Secretary, in the most delicate manner, placed at the disposal of his former employer, the Marquess Moustache, the important office of Agent for the Indemnity Claims of the original Inhabitants of the Island ; the post being a sinecure, the income being considerable, and local attendance being unnecessary, the noble Lord, in a manner equally delicate, appointed himself. ' U]Jon what system,' one day enquired that unwearied political student, tlie Fantaisian Ambassador, of his old friend Skindeep, ' does your Government surround a small rock in the middle of the sea with fortifications, and cram it full of clerks, soldiers, lawyers, and priests ? ' * Why, really, your Excellency, I am the last man in the POPANILLA. 435 ■world to answer questions ; but I believe we call it the Colonial System ! ' Before the President, and Governor, and Deputy- Go- vernor, and Storekeepers bad embarked, the Vraibleusian journals, who thought that the public had been satiated with congratulations on the Colonial System, detected that the present colony was a job. Their reasoning was so con- vincing, and their denunciations so impressive, that the Managers got frightened, and cut off one of the Deputy- Storekeepers. The President of Council now got more frightened than the Managers. He was one of those men who think that the world can be saved by writing a pam- phlet. A pamphlet accordingly appeared upon the subject of the new colony. The writer showed that the debateable land was the most valuable acquisition ever attained by a nation famous for their acquisitions ; that there was a spring of water in the middle of the rock of a remarkable fresh- ness, and which was never dry except during the summer and the earlier winter months ; that all our outward-bound ships would experience infinite benefit from this fresh water ; that the scurvy would therefore disappear from the service ; and that the naval victories which the Vraibleu- sians would gain in future wars would consequently be occasioned by the present colony. No one could mistake the felicitous reasoning of the author of ' The Present State of the Western Republics ! ' About this time Popanilla fell ill. He lost his appetite and his spirits, and his digestion was sadly disordered. His friends endeavoured to console him by telling him that dyspepsia was the national disease of Vraibleusia ; that its counection with civil and religious liberty was indissoluble ; that every man, woman, and child above fifteen in the island was a martyr to it ; that it was occasioned by their rapid mode of despatching their meals, which again was occasioned by the little time which the most active nation in the world could afford to bestow upon such a losing business as eating. AU this was no consolation to a man who had lost hia F F 2 436 POPANILLA. appetite ; and so Popanilla sent for a gentleman wlio, lie was told, was the most eminent physician in the island. The most eminent physician, when he arrived, wotild not listen to a single syllable that his patient wished to address to him. He told Popanilla that his disorder was 'de- cidedly liver ; ' that it was occasioned by his eating his meat before his bread instead of after it, and drinking at the end of the first course instead of the beginning of the second ; that he had only to correct these ruinous habits, and that he would then regain his tone, Popanilla observed the instructions of the eminent phj'- sician to the very letter. He invariably eat his bread before his meat, and watched the placing of the first dish, of the second course upon the table ere be ventured to refresh himself with any liquid. At the end of a week he was infinitely worse. He now called in a gentleman who was recommended to him as the most celebrated practitioner in all Vraibleusia. The most celebrated practitioner Hstened with great atten- tion to every particular that his patient had to state, but never condescended to open his own mouth. Popanilla was delighted, and revenged himself for the imtability of the eminent physician. After two more visits, the most cele- brated practitioner told Popanilla that his disorder was ' unquestionably nervous ; ' that he had over-excited himself by talking too much ; that in future he must count five between each word he uttered, never ask any questions, and avoid society ; that is, never stay at an evening party on any consideration later than twenty-two minutes past two, and never be induced by any persuasion to dine out more than once on the same day. The most celebrated practitioner added that he had only to observe these regu- lations, and that he would speedily recover his energy. Popanilla never asked a question for a whole week, and Skindeep never knew him more delightful. He not only counted five, but ten, between every word he uttered ; and determining that his cure should not be delayed, whenever he had nobody to S]oeak to he continued counting. In a POPANILLA. 437 fow days this solitary computation brought on a slow fever. He now determined to have a consultation between tho most eminent physician and the most celebrated practi- tioner. It was delightful to witness the meeting of these great men. Not a shade of jealousy dimmed the sunshine of their countenances. After a consultation, they agreed that Popanilla's disorder was neither ' liver,' nor ' nervous,' but ' mind : ' that he had done too much ; that he had over- worked his brain ; that he must take moi'e exercise ; that he must breathe more air ; that he must have relaxation ; that he must have change of scene. ' Where shall I go ? ' was the first question which Po- panilla had sent forth for a fortnight, and it was addressed to Skindeep. ' Really, your Excellency, I am the last man in the world to answer questions ; but the place which is generally fre- quented by us Mdien we are sufi'ering from your comj)laint is Blunderland.' ' Well, then, to Blunderland let us go ! ' Shortly before Popanilla's illness he had been elected a member of the Vraibleusian Horticultural Societj'-, and ono evening he had endeavoured to amuse himself by reading tlie following^ Chaptek on Fkuit. CHAPTER XIV. That a taste for fruit is inherent in man is an opinion which is sanctioned by the conduct of man in all ages and in all countries. While some nations have considered it profanation or pollution to nourish themselves with flesh or solace themselves with fish, while almost every member of the animal creation has in turn been considered either sacred or unclean, mankind, in all climes and in all coun- tries, the Hindoo and the Plebrew, the Egyptian and the Greek, the Roman and the Frank, have, in some degree, made ffood their boastful claim to reason, by universally 438 POPANILLA. feeding upon tliose deliglitfal productions of Nature •whicli are nourished with the dews of heaven, and which hve for ever in its breath. And, indeed, when we consider how exceedingly refresh- ing at all times is the flavour of fruit ; how very natural, and, in a manner, born in him, is man's inclination for it ; how little it is calculated to pall upon his senses ; and how conducive, when not eaten to excess, it is to his health, as well as to his pleasure ; we must not be surprised that a conviction of its excellence should have been one of those few subjects on which men have never disagreed. Tliat some countries are more favoured in their fruit than others is a fact so notorious that its notice is unnecessary ; but we are not therefore to suppose that their appetite for it is more keen than the appetite of other nations for their fruit who live in less genial climes. Indeed, if we were not led to believe that all nations are inspired by an equal love for this production, it might occasionally be suspected that some of those nations who are least skilful as horticul- turists evince a greater passion for their inferior growths than more fortuna.te people for their choicer produce. The effects of bad fruit, however, upon the constitution, and consequently upon the national character, are so injurious that every liberal man must regret that any people, either from ignorance or obligation, should be forced to have re- course to anything so fatal, and must feel that it is the duty of everyone who professes to be a philanthropist to propagate and encourage a taste for good frnit throughout all countries of the globe. A vast number of centuries before Popanilla had the for- tune to lose his mistress's lock of hair, and consequently to become an ambassador to Vraibleusia, the inhabitants of that island, then scarcely more civilised than their new allies of Fantaisie were at present, suffered very consider- ably from the trash which they devoured, from that innate taste for fruit already noticed. In fact, although there are antiquaries who pretend that the Vraibleusians pos- sessed some of the species of wild plums and apples even POPANILLA. 439 at that early period, the majority of enquirers are disposed to bcHeve that their desserts were solely confined to the ■wildest berries, horse-chestnuts, and acorns. A tradition runs, that while they were committing these abominations a ship, one of the first ships that had ever touched at the island, arrived at the present port of Hub- babub, then a spacious and shipless bay. The master of the vessel, on being brought before the King (for the story I am recording happened long before the construction of the miraculous Statue), presented, with his right hand, to his Majesty, a small pyramidal substance of a golden hue, which seemed to spring out of green and purple leaves. His Majesty did not exactly understand the intention of this ceremony ; but of course, like a true legitimate, con- strued it into a symbol of homage. No sooner had the King brought the unknown substance near to his eyes, with the intention of scrutinising its nature, than the fragrance was so delightful that by mistake he applied it to his mouth. The King only took one mouthful, and then, with a cry of rapture, instantly handed the delicacy to his favourite, who, to the great mortification of the Secretary of State, finished it. The stranger, however, immediately supplied the surrounding coui'tiers from a basket which was slung on his left arm ; and no sooner had they all tasted his gift than they fell upon their knees to worship him, vowinj? that the distributor of such deli":ht must be more than man. If this avowal be considered absurd and extra- ordinary in this present age of philosophy, we must not forget to make due allowance for the palates of individuals who, having been so long accustomed merely to horse- chestnuts and acorns, suddenly, for the first time in their lives, tasted Pine -apple. The stranger, with an air of great humility, disclaimed their profiered adoration, and told them that, far from being superior to common mortals, he was, on the contrary, one of the lowliest of the human race ; in fact, he did not wish to conceal it ; in spite of his vessel and his attendants, he was merely a market-gardener on a great scale. This 440 POPANILLA. beautiful fruit lie had recently tliscovered iu tlie East, to ■which quarter of the world he annually travelled in order to obtain a sufficient quantity to supply the great Western hemisphere, of which he liiuiself was a native. Accident had driven him, with one of his ships, into the Island of Vraibleusia ; and, as the islanders appeared to be pleased ■with his cargo, he said that he should have great pleasure in supplying them at present and receiving their orders for the future. The proposition was greeted with enthusiasm. The Kang immediately entered into a contract Avith the market-gar- dener on his own terms. The sale, or cultivation, or even the eating of all other fruits was declared high-treason, and pine-apple, for weighty reasons duly recited in the royal proclamation, announced as the established fruit of the realm. The cai-go, under the superintendence of some of the most trusty of the crew, was unshipped for the im- mediate supply of the island ; and the merchant and his customers parted, mutually delighted and mutually profited. Time flew on. The civilisation of Vraibleusia was pro- gressive, as civilisation always is ; and the taste for pine- apples ever on the increase, as the taste for pine-apples ever should be. The supply was regular and excellent, the prices reasonable, and the tradesmen civil. They, of course, had not failed to advance in fair propoi'tion witli the national prosperity. Their numbers had much in- creased as well as their castomers. Fresh agents arrived with every fresh cargo. They had long quitted the stalls •with which they had been contented on their first settle- ment in the island, and now were the dapper owners of neat depots in all parts of the kingdom where depots could find customers. A few more centuries, and affairs began to change. All that I have related as matter of fact, and which certainly is not better authenticated than many other things that happened two or three thousand years ago, which, how- ever, the most sceptical will not presume to maintain did not take place, "was treated as the most idle and ridiculous fable by the dealers in pine-apples themselves. They said POPANILLA. 441 that tliey knew notiiing about a market-gardener ; that they were, and had always been, the subjects of the greatest Prince in the world, compared with whom all other crowned heads ranked merely as subjects did with their immediate sovereigns. This Prince, they said, lived in the most dehcious region in the world, and the fruit which they imported could only be procured from his private gardens, where it sprang from one of the trees that had bloomed in the gardens of the Hesperides. The Vrai- bleusians were at first a little surprised at this information, but the old tradition of the market-gardener was certainly an improbable one ; and the excellence of the fruit and the importance assumed by those who supplied it were deemed exceedingly good evidence of the truth of the present story. When the dealers had repeated their new tale for a certain number of years, there was not an individual in the island who in the slightest degree suspected its veracity. One more century, and no person had ever heard that any sus- picions had ever existed. The immediate agents of the Prince of the "World could, of course, be no common personages ; and the servants of the gardener, who some centuries before had meekly dis- claimed the proffered reverence of his delighted customers, now insisted upon constant adoration from every eater of pine-apples in the island. In spite, however, of the arro- gance of the dealers, of theu" refusal to be responsible to the laws of the country in which they lived, and of the universal precedence which, on all occasions, was claimed even by the shop-boys, so decided was the taste which the Vraibleusians had acquired for pine-apples that there is little doubt that, had the dealers in this delicious fruit been contented with the respect and influence and profit which were the consequences of their vocation, the Vraibleusians would never have presumed to have grumbled at their arrogance or to have questioned their privileges. But the agents, wearied of the limited spliere to which their exer- tions were confined, and encoiu-aged by the success which every new claim and pretence on then- part invariably 442 POPANILLA. experienced, began to evince an inclination to interfere in otlier affairs besides those of fruit, and even expressed their willingness to undertake no less an office than the management of the Statue. A ceutury or two were solely occupied by conflicts occa- sioned by the unreasonable ambition of these dealers iu pine-apples. Such great political effects could be produced by men apparently so unconnected with politics as market- gardeners ! Ever supported by the lower ranks, whom they supplied with fruit of the most exquisite flavour with- out charge, they were, for a long time, often the successful opponents, always the formidable adversaries, of the Vrai- bleusian aristocracy, who were the objects of their envy and tlie victims of their rapaciousness. The Government at last, by a vigorous effort, triumphed. In spite of the wishes of the majority of the nation, the whole of the dealers were one day expelled the island, and the Managers of the Statue immediately took possession of their establish- ments. By distributing the stock of fruit which was on hand hberally, the Government, for a short time, reconciled the people to the change ; but as their warehouses became daily less furnished they were daily reminded that, unless some system were soon adopted, the Islanders must be deprived of a luxury to which they had been so long accustomed that its indulgence had, in fact, become a second nature. No one of the managers had the hardihood to propose a recurrence to horse-chestnuts. Pride and fear alike forbade a return to their old purveyor. Other fruits there were which, in spite of the contract with the market-gardener, had at various times been secretly introduced into the island ; but they had never greatly flourished, and the Statue was loth to recommend to the notice of his subjects productions an indulgence in which, through the instiga- tion of the recently-expelled agents, it had so often de- nounced as detrimental to the health, and had so often discouraged by the severest punishments. At this difficult and delicate crisis, when even expedients POPANILLA. 443 seemed exTiansted and statesmen were at fault, the genius of an individual offered a substitute. An inventive mind discovered the power of propagating suckers. The expelled dealers had either been ignorant of this power, or had con- cealed their knowledge of it. They ever m.aintained that it was impossible for pine-apples to grow except in one spot, and that the whole earth must be supplied from the gardens of the palace of the Prince of the World. Now, the Vrai- bleusians were flattered with the patriotic fancy of eating pine-apples of a home-growth ; and the blessed fortune of that nation, which did not depend for their supply of fruit upon a foreign country, was eagerly expatiated on. Secure from extortion and independent of caprice, the Vraibleu- sians were no longer to be insulted by the presence of foreigners ; who, while they violated their laws with im- punity, referred the Vraibleusians, when injured and com- plaining, to a foreign master. No doubt this appeal to the patriotism, and the common sense, and the vanity of the nation would have been suc- cessful had not the produce of the suckers been both inferior in size and deficient in flavour. The Vraibleusians tasted and shook their heads. The supply, too, was as imperfect as the article ; for the Government gardeners were but soiTy horticulturists, and were ever making experiments and alterations in their modes of culture. The article was scarce, though the law had decreed it universal; and the Vraibleusians were obliged to feed upon fruit which they considered at the same time both poor and expensive. They protested as strongly against the present system as its promulgators had protested against the former one, and they revenged themselves for their grievances by break- ing the shop- windows. As any result was preferable, in the view of the Statue, to the re-introduction of foreign fruit and foreign agents, and as the Managers considered it highly important that an indissoluble connection should in future exist between the Government and so influential and profitable a branch of trade, they determined to adopt the most vigorous mea- 444 POPANILLA. sures to infuse a taste for suckers in the discontentei popu- lace. But the eating of fruit being clearly a matter of taste, it is evidently a habit which should rather be encouraged by a plentiful supply of exquisite produce than enforced by the introduction of burning and bayonets. The consequences of the strong measures of the Government were universal discontent and partial rebellion. The Islanders, foolishly ascribing the miseries which they en- dured, not so much to the folly of the Government as to the particular fruit through which the dissensions had originated, began to entertain a disgust for pine-apples altogether, and to sicken at the very mention of that production which had once occasioned them so much pleasure, and which had once commanded such decided admiration. They universally agreed that there wei'e many other fi'uits in the world besides Pine-apple which had been too long neglected. One dilated on the ricli flavour of Melon ; another panegyrised Pumpkin, and offered to make up by quantity for any slight deficiency in gout ; Cherries were not without their advocates ; Strawberries were not forgotten. One maintained that the Fig had been pointed out for the established fruit of all countries ; while another asked, with a reeling eye, whetlier they need go far to seek when a God had condescended to preside over the Grape ! In short, there was not a fruit which flourishes that did not find its votaries. Strange to say, another foreign product, imported from a neighbouring country famous for its barrenness, counted the most ; and the fruit faction which chiefly frightened the Vraibleusian Government was an acid set, who crammed themselves with Crab-apples. It was this party which first seriously and practically conceived the idea of utterly abolishing the ancient custom of eating pine-apples. While they themselves professed to devour no other fruit save crabs, they at the same time preached the doctrine of an universal fruit toleration, which tliey showed would be the necessary and natural conse- quence of the destruction of the old monopoly. Influenced POPANILLA. 445 bj these repi-esentatlons, the great body of the people openly joined the Crab-apple men in their open attacks. The minority, who still retained a taste for pines, did not yield without an arduous though ineffectual struggle. During the riots occasioned by this rebelHon the Hall of Audience was broken open, and the miraculous Statue, which was reputed to have a great passion for pine-apples, dashed to the ground. The Managers were either slain or disappeared. The whole affairs of the kingdom were con- ducted by a body called ' the Fruit Committee ; ' and thus a total revolution of the Govei"nment of Vraibleusia was occasioned by the prohibition of foreign pine-apples. Wliat an argument in favour of free-trade ! Every fruit, except that one which had so recently been supported by the influence of authority and the terrors of law, might now be seen and devoured in the streets of Hubbabub. In one corner men were sucking oranges, as if they had lived their whole lives on salt : in another, stuffing pumpkin, like cannibals at their first child. Here one took in at a mouthful a bunch of grapes, from which might have been pressed a good quart. Another was lying on the ground from a surfeit of mulberries. The effect of this irrational excess will be conceived by the judicious reader. Calcutta itself never suffered from a cholera morbus half so fearful. Thousands were dying. Were I Thucydides or Boccaccio, I would write pages on this plague. The com- monwealth itself must soon have yielded its ghost, for all order had ceased throughout the island ever since they had deserted pine-apples. There was no Government : anarchy alone was perfect. Of the Fruit Committee, many of the members were dead or dying, and the rest were robbing orchards. At this moment of disorganisation and dismay a stout soldier, one of the crab-apple faction,who had possessed suffi- cient command over himself, in spite of the seeming voracity of his appetite, not to indulge to a dongerous excess, made his way one morning into the old Hall of Audience, and there, gToping about, succeeded in finding the golden 446 fOPANILLA. head of the Statue ; which placing on the hilt of his sword, the point of which he had stuck in the pedestal, he an- nounced to the city tliat he had discovered the secret of conversing with this wonderful piece of mechanism, and that in future he would take care of the health and fortane of the State. There were some who thought it ratlier strange that the head-piece should possess the power of resuming its old functions, although deprived of the aid of the body which contained the greater portion of the machinery. As it was evidently well supported by the sword, they were not surprised that it should stand without the use of its legs. But the stout soldier was the only one in the island who enjoyed the blessing of health. He was fresh, vigorous, and vigilant ; they, exhausted, weak, and careless of every- thing except cure. He soon took measures for the pre- vention of future mischief and for the cure of the present ; and when his fellow-islanders had recovered, some were grateful, others fearful, and all obedient. So long as the stout soldier lived no dissensions on tho subject of fruit ever broke out. Although he himself never interfered in the sale of the article, and never attempted to create another monopoly, still, by his influence and autho- rity, he prevented any excess being occasioned by the Fruit toleration which was enjoyed. Indeed, the Vraibleusians themselves had suffered so severely from their late indis- cretions that such excesses were not likely again to occur. People began to discover that it was not quite so easy a thing as they had imagined for every man to be his own Fruiterer ; and that gardening was a craft which, liko others, required great study, long practice, and early ex- perience. Unable to supply themselves, the majority be- came the victims of quack traders. They sickened of spongy apricots, and foxy pears, and withered plums, and blighted apples, and tasteless berries. They at length suspected that a nation might fare better if its race of fruiterers were overseen and supported by the State, if their skill and their market were ahke secured. Although, uo longer being POPANILLA. 447 tempted to suffer from a surfeit, the health of the Islanders had consequently recovered, this was, after all, but a negative blessing, and they sadly missed a luxury once so reasonable and so refreshing. They sighed for an estab- lished fruit and a protected race of cultivators. But the stout soldier was so sworn an enemy to any Government Fruit, and so decided an admirer of the least delightful, that the people, having no desire of being forced to eat crab-apples, only longed for more delicious food in silence. At length the stout soldier died, and on the night of his death the sword which had so long supported the pre- tended Government snapped in twain. No arrangement existed for cari-ying on the administration of affairs. The master-naind was gone, without having imparted the secret of conversing with the golden head to any successor. The people assembled in agitated crowds. Each knew his neighbour's thoughts without their being declared. All smacked their hps, and a cry for pine-apples rent the skies. At this moment the Aboriginal Inhabitant appeared, and announced that in examining the old Hall of Audience, which had been long locked up, he had discovered in a corner, where they had been flung by the stout soldier when he stole away the head, the remaining portions of the Statue; that they were quite uninjured, and that on fixing the head once more upon them, and winding up the works, he was delighted to find that this great work of his ancestor, under whose superintendence the nation had so flourished, re- Ksumed all its ancient fanctions. The people were in a state of mind for a mii-acle, and they hailed the joyful wonder with shouts of triumph. The Statue was placed under the provisional care of the Aboriginal. All arrangements for its superintendence were left to his discretion, and its advice was instantly to be taken upon that subject which at present was nearest the people's hearts. But that subject was encompassed with difficulties. Pine- apples could only be again procured by an application to the Prince of the World, whose connection they had re- jected, and by an introduction into the island of thoBO 448 POPAKILLA. foreign agents, who, now convinced that the Vraibleusians could not exist without their presence, would be more arro- gant and ambitious and turbulent than ever. Indeed, the Aboriginal feared that the management of the Statue vrould be the sine qua non of negotiation with the Prince. If this were granted, it was clear that Vraibleusia must in future only rank as a dependent state of a foreign power, since the direction of the whole island would actually be at the will of the supplier of pine- apples. All ! this mysterious taste for fruit ! In politics it lias often occasioned infinite embarrassment. At this critical moment the Aboriginal received informa- tion that, although the eating of pine-apples had been utterly abolished, and although it was generally supposed that a specimen of this fruit had long ceased to exist in the country, nevertheless a body of persons, chiefly consisting of the descendants of the Government gardeners who had succeeded the foreign agents, and who had never lost their taste for this pre-eminent fruit, had long been in the habit of secretly raising, for their private eating, pine-apples from the produce of those suckers which had originally excited such odium and occasioned such misfortunes. Long prac- tice, they said, and infinite study, had so perfected them in this art that they now succeeded in producing joine-apples which, both for size and flavour, were not inferior to the boasted produce of a foreign clime. Their specimens veri- fied their assertion, and the whole nation were invited to an instant trial. The long interval which had elapsed since any man had enjoyed a treat so agreeable lent, perhaps, an additional flavour to that which was really excellent ; and so enraptured and enthusiastic were the great majority of the people that the propagators of suckers would have had no difficulty, had they pushed the point, in procuring as favourable and exclusive a contract as the market- gardener of ancient days. But the Aboriginal and his advisers were wisely mhidful that the passions of a people are not arguments for legisla- tion ; and they felt conscious that when the first enthusiasm had subsided, and when then- ajipetites were somewhat POPANILLA. 449 patisfied, tlie discontented voices of many wlao had been long used to other frnits would be recognised even amidst the sliouts of the majority. They therefoi'e greatly qnahfiedthe contract between the nation and the present fruiterers. An universal Toleration of Fruit wa's allowed; but no man was to take oi£ce under Government, or enter the services, or in any way become connected with the Court, who was not supplied from the Government depots. Since this happy restoration Pine-apple has remained the estabhshed fruit of the Island of Yraibleusia ; and, it must be confessed, has been found wonderfully conducive to the health and hapjDiness of the Islanders. Some sectarians still remain obstinate, or tasteless enough to prefer pump- kin, or gorge the most acid apples, or chew the commonest pears ; but they form a sliglit minority, which will gradually altogether disappear. The votaries of Pine-apple pretend to observe the characteristic effect which such food pro- duces upon the feeders. They denounce them as stupid, sour, and vulgar. But while, notwithstanding an universal toleration, such an unanimity of taste apparently prevails thi^oughout the island, as if Fruit were a subject of such pecuhar nicety that difference of opinion must necessarily rise among men, great Fruit factions even noAV prevail in Vraibleusia ; and, what is more extraordinary, prevail even among the admi- rers of pine-apples themselves. Of these, the most im- portant is a sect which professes to discover a natural deficiency not only in all other fruits, but even in the finest pine-apples. Fruit, they maintain, should never be eaten in the state in which Nature yields it to man ; and they consequently are indefatigable in prevailing upon the less discriminating part of mankind to heighten the flavour of their pine-apples with ginger, or even with pepper. Al- though they profess to adopt these stimulants from the great admiration which they entertain for a high flavour, there are, nevertheless, some less ardent people who sus- pect that they rather have recourse to them from tho weakness of their digestion. G G 450 POPANILLA. CHAPTER XV. As Ills Excellency Priuce Popanilla really could not tMuk of being annoyed by the attentions of the mob during his ^dsit to Bluuderland, he travelled quite in a quiet way, under the name of the Chevalier de Fantaisie, and was accompanied only by Skindeep and two attendants. As Blunderland was one of the islands of the Vraibleusian Ai-chipelago, they arrived there after the sail of a few hours. The country was so beautiful that the Chevalier was almost reminded of Fantaisie. Green meadows and flourish- ing trees made him remember the railroads and canals of Vraibleusia without regret, or with disgust, which is much the same. The women were angelic, which is the highest praise ; and the men the most light-hearted, merry, obliging, entertaining fellows that he had met with in the whole course of his life. Oh ! it was delicious. After an hour's dashing drive, he arrived at a city which, had he not seen Hubbabub, he should have imagined was one of the most considerable in the world ; but compared with the Vraibleusian capital it was a street. Shortly after his arrival, according to the custom of the place, Popanilla joined the pubhc table of his hotel at dinner. He was rather surprised that, instead of knives and forks being laid for the convenience of the guests, the plates were flanked by daggers and pistols. As Popanilla now made a point of never asking a question of Skindeep, he addressed himself for information to his other neighbour, one of the civilcat, most hospitable, and joyous rogues that ever set a table in a roar. On Popanilla inquiring the reason of their using these singular instruments, his neighbour, with an air of great astonishment, confessed his ignorance of any people ever using any other ; and in his turn asked how they could possibly eat their dinner without. The Chevalier was puzzled, but he was now too well bred ever to pursue an enquiry. POPANILLA. 451 Popanilla, being thirsty, helped himself to a goblet of water, wbich was at hand. It was the most delightful water that he ever tasted. In a few minutes he found that he was a Little dizzy, and, supposing this megrim to be occasioned by the heat of the room, he took another draught of water to recover himself. As his neighbour was telling him an excellent joke a man entered the room and shot the joker through the head. The opposite guest immediately charged his pistol with effect, and revenged the loss. A party of men, well armed, now rushed in, and a brisk conflict immediately ensued. Popanilla, who was very dizzy, was fortunately pushed under the table. When the firing and slashing had ceased, he ventured to crawl out. He found that the assailants had been beaten ofi", though unfortunately with the total loss of all the guests, who lay lifeless about the room. Even the prudent Skindeep, who had sought refuge in a closet, had lost bis nose, which was a pity; because, although this gen- tleman bad never been in Blunderland before, he had passed his whole life in maintaining that the accounts of the dis- turbances in that country were greatly exaggerated. Popa- nilla rang the bell, and the waiters, who were remarkably attentive, swept away the dead bodies, and brought him a roasted potato for supper. The Chevalier soon retired to rest. He found at the side of his bed a blunderbuss, a cutlass, and a pike ; and he was directed to secure the door of his chamber with a great chain and a massy iron bar. Peeling great confidence in his securities, although he was quite ignorant of the cause of alarm, and very much exhausted with the bustle of the day, he enjoyed sounder sleep than had refreshed him for many weeks. He was awakened in the middle of the night by a loud knocking at his door. He immediately seized his blunderbuss, but, recognising the voice of his own valet, he only took his pike. His valefc told him to unbar without loss of time, for the house had been set on fire. Popanilla immediately made his escape, but found himself surrounded by the incendiaries. He gave himself \\p for lost, when a o G 3 452 POPANILLA. sudden charge of cavalry brouglit him off in triumph. He Avas convinced of the utility of light-horse. The military had arrived with such despatch that the fire was the least effective that had wakened the house for the whole week. It was soon extinguished, and Popanilla again retired to liis bedroom, not forgetting his bar and his chain. In the morning Popanilla was roused by his landlord, who told him that a large party was about to partake of the pleasures of the chase, and most politely enquired whether he would like to join them. Popanilla assented, and after having eaten an excellent breakfast, and received a favour- able bulletin of Skindeep's wound, he mounted his horse. The party was numerous and well armed. Popanilla en- quired of a huntsman what sport they generally followed in Blunderland. According to the custom of this country, where they never give a direct answer, the huntsman said that he did not know that there was any other sport but one. Popanilla thought him a brute, and dug his spui's into his horse. They went off at a fine rate, and the exercise was most exhilarating. In a short time, as they were cantering along a defile, they received a sharp fire from each side, which rather reduced their numbers ; but they revenged themselves for this loss when they regained the plain, where they bui'nt two villages, slew two or three hundred head of women, and bagged children without number. On their return home to dinner they chased a small body of men over a lieatli for nearly two hours, which afforded good sport ; but they did not succeed in running them down, as they them- selves wei'c in turn chased by another party. Altogether, the day was not deficient in interest, and Po^Danilla found in the evening his powers of digestion improved. After passing his days in this manner for about a fort- night, Popanilla perfectly recovered from his dyspepsia ; and Skindeep's wound having now healed, he retired with regret from this healthy climate. He took advantage of the leisure moment which was afforded during the sail to i POPANILLA. 453 enquire the reason of the disturbed state of this interesting country. He was told that it was in consequence of the majority of the inhabitants persisting in importing their own pine-apples. CHAPTER XVI. On his return to Hubbabub, the ChevaHer de Fantaisie found the city in the greatest confusion. The military were marshalled in all directions; the streets were lined with field-pieces ; no one was abroad ; all the shops were shut. Although not a single vehicle was visible, Popa- nilla's progress was slow, from the quantity of shells of all kinds which choked up the public way. When he arrived at his hotel he found that all the windows were broken. He entered, and his landlord immediately jDresented him with his bill. As the landlord was pressing, and as Popa- nilla wished for an opportunity of showing his confidence in Skindeep's friendship, he requested him to pay the amount, Skindeep sent a messenger immediately to hia banker, deeming an ambassador almost as good security a? a nation, which Ave all know to be the very best. This little arrangement being concluded, the landlord resuraed his usual civility. He informed the travellers that the whole island was in a state of the greatest commotion, and that martial law universally prevailed. He said that this disturbance was occasioned by the return of the expe-. dition destined to the Isle of Fantaisie. It appeared, from his account, that after sailing about from New Guinea to New Holland, the expedition had been utterly unable not only to reach their new customers, but even to obtain the slightest intelligence of their locality. No such place as Fantaisie was known at Ceylon, Sumatra gave informa- tion equally unsatisfactory. Java shook its head. Celebes conceived the enquirers were jesting. The Philippine Isles ofiered to accommodate them with spices, but could assist them in no other way. Had it not been too hot at Borneo, 454 POPANILLA. they would have fairly laughed outright. The Maldives and the Moluccas, the Luccadives and the Andamans, were nearly as impertinent. The five hundred ships and the judiciously-assorted cargo were therefore under the neces- sity of returning home. No sooner, however, had they reached Vraibleusia than the markets were immediately glutted with the unsold goods. All the manufacturers, who had been working day and night in preparing for the next expedition, were in- stantly thrown out of employ. A run commenced on the Government Bank. That institution perceived too late that the issues of pink shells had been too unrestncted. As the Emperor of the East had all the gold, the Govern- ment Bank only protected itself from failure by bayoneting its creditors. The manufacturers, who were starving, con- soled themselves for the absence of food by breaking all the windows in the country with the discarded shells. Every tradesman faUed. The shi^Dping interest advertised two or three fleets for firewood. Riots were universal. The Aboriginal was attacked on all sides, and made so stout a resistance, and broke so many cudgels on the backs of his assailants, that it was supposed he would be finally exhausted by his own exertions. The public funds sunk ten per cent, daily. All the Millionaires crashed. In a word, dismay, disorganisation, despair, pervaded in all di- rections the wisest, the greatest, and the richest nation in the world. The master of the hotel added, with an air of becoming embarrassment, that, had not his Excellency been fortunately absent, he probably would not have had the pleasure of detailing to him this little narrative ; that he had often been enquired for by the populace at his old balcony ; and that a crowd had perpetually surrounded the house till within the last day, when a report had got about that his Excellency had turned into steam and disappeared. He added that caricatures of his Highness might be pro- cui-ed in any shop, and his account of his voyage obtained at less than half-price. POPANILLA. 455 * All ! ' said Popanilla, in a tone of great anguish, ' and all this from losing a lock of hair ! ' At this moment the messenger whom Skindeep had despatched retui^ned, and informed him with great regret that his banker, to whom he had entrusted his whole for- tune, had been so unlucky as to stop payment during his absence. It was expected, however, that when his stud was sold a respectable dividend might be realised. This was the pei'sonage of prepossessing appearance who had presented Popanilla with a perpetual ticket to his picture gallery. On examining the banker's accounts, it was dis- covered that his chief loss had been incurred by supporting that competition establishment where purses Avere bought full of crowns. In spite of his own misfortunes, Popanilla hastened to console his friend. He explained to him that things were not quite so bad as they appeared ; that society consisted of two classes, those who laboured, and those who paid the labourers ; that each class was equally usefal, because, if there were none to pay, the labourers would not be remu- nerated, and if there Avere none to labour, the payers woixld not be accommodated ; that Skindeep might still rank in one of these classes ; that he might therefore still be a useful member of society ; that, if he were useful, he must therefore be good ; and that, if lie were good, he must therefore be happy ; because happiness is the consequence of assisting the beneficial development of the ameliorating principles of the social action. As he was speaking, two gentlemen in blue, with red waistcoats, entered the chamber and seized Popanilla by the collar. The Yraibleusian Government, which is so famous for its interpretation of ISTational Law, had ari'estod tlie Ambassador for high treason. 466 POPANILLA. CHAPTER XVII. A PRISON conveyed the most lugubrious ideas to tl)e mind of the unhappy Plenipotentiary ; and shut up in a hackney-coach, Avith a man on each side of liim with a cocked pistol, he formed the most gloomy conceptions of dark dungeons, confined cells, overwhelming fetters, black bread, and green -water. -He arrived at the principal gaol in Hubbabub. He -was ushered into an elegantly furnished apartment, with Prench sash windows and a piano. Its lofty walls were entirely hung with a fanciful paper, which represented a Tuscan vineyard ; the ceiling was covered with sky and clouds ; roses were in abundance ; and the windows, though well secured, excited no jarring associa- tions in the mind of the individual they illumined, pro- tected, as they were, by polished bars of cut steel. Tliis retreat had been fitted up by a poetical politician, who had recently been confined for declaring that the Statue was an old idol originally imported from the Sandwich Isles. Taking up a brilliantly bound volume which reposed upon a rosewood table, Popanilla recited aloud a sonnet to Liberty; but the account given of the goddess by the bard was so confused, and he seemed so little acquainted with his subject, that the reader began to suspect it was an effusion of the gaoler. ISText to being a Plenipotentiary, PopaniUa preferred being a prisoner. His daily meals consisted of every deh- cacy in season : a marble bath was ever at his service ; a billiard-room and dumb-bells always ready ; and his old friend, the most eminent physician and the most cele- brated practitioner in Hubbabub, called upon him daily to feel his pulse and look at his tongue. These attentions authorised a hope that he might yet again be an Ambassa- dor, that his native land might still be discovered, and its resources still be developed : but when his gaoler told him that the rest of the prisoners were treated in a manner equally indulgent, because the Vraibleusians are the most POPANILLA. 457 humane people in the world, Popanilla's si^u-its hecame somewhat depressed. He was greatly consoled, however, by a daily visit from a body of the most beautifal, the most accomplished, and the most virtuous females in Hubbabub, who tasted his food to see that his cook did his duty, recommended him a plen-- tiful use of pine-apple well peppered, and made him a pre- sent of a very handsome shu-t, with woi'ked frills and ruffles, to be hanged in. This enchanting committee gene- rally confined their attentions to murderers and other victims of the passions, who were deserted in their hour of need by the rest of the society they had outraged ; but Popanilla, being a foreigner, a Prince, and a Plenipo- tentiary, and not ill-looking, naturally attracted a great deal of notice, from those who desire the amelioration of their species. Popanilla was so pleased with his mode of life, and had acquii'ed such a taste for poetry, pine-apples, and pepper since he had ceased to be an active member of society, that he applied to have his ti-ial postponed, on the ground of the prejudice which had been excited against him by the public press. As his trial was at present inconvenient to the Government, the postponement was allowed on these grounds. In the meantime, the public agitation was subsiding. The nation reconciled itself to the revolution in its for- tunes. The ci-devant millionaii'es were busied with re- trenchment ; the Government engaged in sweeping in as many pink shells as were lying about the country ; the mechanics contrived to Hve upon chalk and sea-weed ; and as the Aboriginal would not give his corn away gratis, the Vraibleusians determined to give up bread. The intellec- tual part of the nation were intently interested in disco- vering the cause of the National Distress. One of the philosophers said that it might all be traced to the effects of a war in which the Vraibleusians had engaged about a century before. Another showed that it was altogether clearly ascribable to the pernicious custom of issuing pink 458 POPANILLA. shells ; but if, instead of this mode of representing wealth, they had had recourse to blue shells, the nation would now have advanced to a state of prosperity which it had never yet reached. A thii'd demonstrated to the satisfaction of himself and his immediate circle that it was all owing to the Statue having recently been repaired with silver instead of iron. The public were unable to decide between these conflicting opinions ; but they were still more de- sirous of finding out a remedy for the evil than the cause of it. An eloquent and philosophical writer, who entertains con- solatory opinions of human nature, has recently told us that ' it is in the nature of things that the intellectual wants of society should be supplied. Whenever the man is re- quired invai-iably the man Avill appear.' So it happened in the present instance. A pubHc instructor jumped up in the person of Mr. Flummery Flam, the least insinuating and the least plausible personage that ever performed the easy task of gulling a nation. His manners were vulgar, his voice was sharp, and his language almost unintelligible. Flummery Flam was a provisional optimist. He maintained that everything would be for the best, if the nation would only follow his advice. He told the Vraibleusians that the present universal and overwhelming distress was all and en- tirely and merely to be ascribed to 'a slight over-trading,' and that all that was required to set everything right again was 'a little time.' He showed that this over-trading and every other injudicious act that had ever been committed were entirely to be ascribed to the nation being imbued with erroneous and imperfect ideas of the nature of Demand and Supply. He proved to them that if a tradesman cannot find customers his goods will generally stay upon his own hands. He explained to the Aboriginal the meaning of rent ; to the mechanics the nature of wages ; to the manu- facturers the signification o^ profits. He recommended that a large edition of his own work should be printed at the public exj)ense and sold for his private profit. Finally, he erplained how immediate, though temporary, relief would POPANILLA. 459 bo afforded to the State by the encouragement of Emi- gration. The Vraibleusians began to recover their spirits. The Government had the highest confidence in FhTmmery Flam, because Fkimmery Flam served to divert the public thoughts. By his direction lectures were instituted at the corner of eveiy street, to instil the right principles of poli- tics into the mind of the great body of the people. Every person, from the Managers of the Statue down to the chalk- chewing mechanics, attended lectures on Flummery- Flam- mism. The Yraibleusians suddenly discovered that it was the great object of a nation not to be the most powerful, or the richest, or the best, or the wisest, but to be the most Flummery-Flammistical. CHAPTER XVIII. The day fixed for PopaniUa's trial was at hand. The Prince was not unprepared for the meeting. For some weeks before the appointed day he had been deeply studying the published speeches of the greatest rhetorician that flourished at the Vraibleusian bar. He was so inflated with their style that he nearly blew down the gaoler every morning when he rehearsed a passage before him. Indeed, Popa- nilla looked forward to his trial with feelings of anticipated triumph. He determined boldly and fearlessly to state the principles upon which his public conduct had been founded, the sentiments he professed on most of the important sub- jects which interest mankind, and the views he entertained of the progress of society. He would then describe, in the most glowing language, the domestic happiness which he enjoyed in his native isle. He would paint, in harrowing sentences, the eternal misery and disgrace which his igno- minious execution would entail upon the grey-headed father, who looked up to him as a prop for his old age ; the affectionate mother, who perceived in him her husband again a youth j the devoted wife, who could never survive 460 POPANILLA. his loss ; and the sixteen children, chiefly girls, whom his death would infallibly send upon the parish. This, with an eulogistic peroration on the moral qualities of the Vrai- hleusians and the pohtical importance of Vraibleusia, would, he had no doubt, not only save his neck, but even gain him a moderate pension. The day arrived, the Court was crowded, and Popanilla had the satisfaction of observing in the newspapers that tickets for the best gallery to witness his execution were •selling at a premium. The indictment was read. He listened to it with intense attention. To his surprise, he found himself accused of stealing two hundred and nineteen Camelopards. All was now explained. He perceived that he had been mistaken the whole of this time for another person. He could not contain himself. He burst into an exclamation. He told the judge, in a voice of mingled delight, humility, and triumph, that it was possible he might be guilty of high treason, because he was ignorant of what the crime con- sisted ; but as for stealing two hundred and nineteen Came- lopards, he declared that such a larceny was a moral impos- sibility, because he had never seen one such animal in the whole course of his life. The judge was kind and considerate. He told the pri- soner that the charge of stealing Camelopards was a fiction of law ; that he had no doubt he had never seen one in the whole course of his life, nor in all probability had any one in the Avhole Court, He explained to Popanilla, that originally this animal greatly abounded in Vrai- bleusia ; that the present Court, the highest and most ancient in the kingdom, had then been instituted for the punishment of all those who molested or injured that splendid animal. The species, his lordship continued, had been long extinct ; but the Vraibleusians, duly reverencing the institutions of their ancestors, had never presumed to abrogate the authority of the Camelopard Court, or invest any other with equal privileges. Therefore, his lordship added, in order to try you in this Court for a modern POPANILLA. 461 offence of high treason, you must first be introduced by fiction of law as a stealer of Camelopards, and then being in prcesentl regie, in a manner, we proceed to business by a special power for the absolute ofi'ence. Popanilla was so confounded by the kindness of the judge and the clearness of his lordship's statement that he quite lost the thread of his peroration. The trial proceeded. Everybody with whom Popanilla had conversed during his visit to Vraibleusia was subpoenaed against him, and the evidence was conclusive. Skindeep, who was brought up by a warrant from the King's Bench, proved the fact of Popanilla's landing ; and that he had given himself out as a political exile, the victim of a tyrant, a corrupt aristocracy, and a misguided people. But, either from a secret feeling towards his former friend or from his aversion to answer questions, this evidence was on the whole not very satisfactory. The bookseller proved the publication of that fatal volume whose deceptive and glowing statements were alone sufiB.- cient to ensure Popanilla's fate. It was in vain that the author avowed that he had never written a line of his own book. This only made his imposture more evident. The little philosopher with whom he had conversed at Lady Spirituelle's, and who, being a friend of Flummeiy Flam, had now obtained a place under Government, invented the most condemning evidence. The Marquess of Moustache sent in a state paperj desiring to be excused from giving evidence, on account of the delicate situation in which he had been placed with regard to the prisoner ; but he referred them to his former Private Secretary, who, he had no doubt, would afford every information. Accordingly, the President of Fort Jobation, who had been brought over specially, finished the business. The Judge, although his family had suffered considerably by the late madness for speculation, summed up in the most impartial manner. He told the jury that, although the case was quite clear against the prisoner, they were bound to give him the advantage of every reasonable 462 POPANILLA. doubt. Tlie foreman was about to deHver the verdict, when a trumpet sounded, and a Government messenger ran breathless into Court. Presenting a scroll to the presiding genius, he informed him that a remarkably able young man, recently appointed one of the Managers of the Statue, in consequence of the inconvenience which the public sus- tained from the innumerable quantity of edicts of the Statue at present in force, had last night consolidated them all into this single act, which, to render its operation still more simple, was gifted with a retrospective power for the last half century. His lordship, looking over the scroll, joassed a high eulo- gium upon the young consolidator, compared to whom, he said, Justinian was a country attorney. Observing, how- ever, that the crime of high treason had been accidentally omitted in the consoHdated legislation of Vraibleusia, ho directed the jury to find the prisoner ' not guilty.' As in Vraibleusia the law believes every man's character to be perfectly pure until a jury of twelve persons finds the re- verse,- Popanilla was kicked out of court, amid the hootings of the mob, without a stain upon his reputation. It was late in the evening when he left the court. Ex- hausted both in mind and body, the mischief being now done, and being totally unemployed, according to custom, he began to moralise. ' I begin to perceive,' said he, ' that it is possible for a nation to exist in too artificial a state ; that a people may both think too much and do too much. All here exists in a state of exaggeration. The nation itself professes to be in a situation in which it is impossible for any nation ever to be naturally placed. To maintain them- selves in this false position, tliey necessarily have recourse to much destructive conduct and to many fictitious prin- ciples. And as the character of a people is modelled on that of their Government, in private life this system of exaggeration equally prevails, and equally produces a due quantity of ruinous actions and false sentiment ! In the meantime, I am starving, and dare not show my face in the Hght of day ! ' POPANILLA. 463 Aa he said this tlie house opposite was suddenly lit up, and the words 'emigration committee' were distinctly visible on a transparent blind. A sudden resolution entered Popa- nilla's mind to make an application to this body. He entered the Committee-room, and took his place at the end of a row of individuals, who were severally examined. When it was his turn to come forward he began to tell his story from the beginning, and would certainly have got to the lock of hair had not the President enjoined silence. Popanilla was informed that the last Emigration-squadron was about to sail in a few minutes ; and that, although the number was completed, his broad shoulders and powerfiil frame had gained him a place. He was presented with a spade, a blanket, and a hard biscuit, and in a quarter of an hour was quitting the port of Hubbabub. Once more upon the waters, yet once more ! As the Emigration-squadron quitted the harbour two large fleets hove in sight. The first was the expedition which had been despatched against the decapitating King of the ISTorth, and which now returned heavily laden with his rescued subjects. 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