Remorse.
They call’d her cold and proud,
Because her lip and brow
Amid the mirthful crowd
No kindred mirth avowed;
Alas! nor look nor language e’er
reveal
How much the sad can love, the lonely
feel.
The peopled earth appears
A dreary desert wide;
Her gloominess and tears
The stern and gay deride.
O God! life’s heartless mockeries
who can bear
When grief is dumb and deep thought brings
despair?
During the terrible storm that passed
over the Church at the commencement of the third century,
we have a thrilling incident which shows the terror
and remorse of the pagan emperors when they returned
to their golden house after witnessing the execution
of their martyred victims.
Diocletian, being enraged with Adrian,
the governor of Aninoe who, from being
an ardent persecutor of the Church, had become a fervent
follower of Christ caused him to be dragged
to Nicomedia, where, seized with implacable rage a
the sight of the constancy of the martyr, who had
once been his friend and confidant, he ordered him
to be thrown chained hand and foot, at the decline
of day, into a deep pit, which was filled with earth
and stones before the emperor’s eyes. When
the last cry of the victim had been stifled under the
accumulated earth, the emperor stamped on it with
his feet and cried out in a tone of defiance:
“Now, Adrian, if thy Christ loves thee, let him
show it.”
He then quitted the field of punishment,
but felt himself so overpowered by such an extraordinary
feeling that he knew not whether it was the termination
of his passion or the commencement of his remorse.
His Thessalian courtiers bore him rapidly away from
the accursed spot. Night fell; Diocletian, agitated
and restless, prepared to retire to rest, for his
head was burning. He entered his chamber, which
was hung around with purple, but the walls of which
now seemed to distil blood. He advanced a few
steps, when, lo! a corpse appeared to rise slowly
on his golden couch; his bed was occupied by a spectre,
and near the costly lamp, which shed a pale light
round the chamber, the chains of the martyr seemed
to descend from the ceiling. Diocletian uttered
a cry that might have penetrated the grave. His
guards ran in, but instantly grew pale, drew back,
and, pointing to the object which caused an icy sweat
to cover the imperial brow, they said with horror
to each other: “It is the Christian.”
Thus a guilty conscience summons imaginary
terrors around it. Cain fled when no one pursued.
Nero heard invisible trumpets ringing his death-knell
around the tomb of his mother. How often has
the mountain bandit, whose hand trembled not at murder,
shuddered with fear, as he hastened through the forest,
at the sound of a branch waving in the wind, or felt
his hair stand erect with terror on beholding a distant
bush fantastically enlightened by the moon! Conscience
has made cowards of the most sanguinary freebooters
and the most shameless oppressors. The dreadful
“worm that dieth not,” and banishes every
cheerful thought from the guilty soul, is not inaptly
compared to the wretch we read of in the annals of
Eastern crime, condemned to carry about with him the
dead and decomposing body of his murdered victim.
It is not to be expected that Charles
escaped the agonies of a guilty conscience.
From the moment she left the church in Milan the usual
and dreadful struggle between shame and grace, humility
and pride, commenced in her heart. Although
now and then forgotten in the excitement of the extraordinary
disguise she had assumed, nevertheless the feeling
of remorse dampened every pleasure, and added to the
disguise of her person another disguise of false joy
to her countenance. This reaction caused an important
feature in the life of Alvira during her stay in the
beautiful town of Messina, whither we must ask our
reader to follow our heroines to commence in their
military career the most interesting part of his historical
romance.
The Milanese recruits were busily
engaged in going through military instruction, when
orders were received that the division should sail
immediately for Messina. There are few acquainted
with the military life who do not know how disagreeable
are orders to move. The bustle, the packing,
the breaking up of associations, and the inevitable
want of comfort in the military march try the courage
of the brave man more than the din of battle, and
robs the military career of much of its boasted enthusiasm.
The stalwart son of Mars, who forgets there are such
things as danger and fatigue in the exciting hour
of battle, will grumble his discontent at the inconveniences
of the hour of peace. We will leave it to the
imagination of the reader to conceive the feelings,
the regrets and misgivings, of our young heroines
as their little vessel set sail from the town of Spezzia
for the fortress of Messina. Although their
biographers say nothing of their voyage, we cannot
but imagine it was an unpleasant one. Although
the blue headlands of the Italian coast, and the snow-capped
Apennines in the distance, supplied the place of the
compass, and their calls at the different ports deprived
their journey of the painful monotony of a long sea-voyage,
yet the associations, the cloud that hung over their
thoughts, embittered every source of pleasure.
Arrived at Messina, Charles and Henry
were quartered in the old fortress. It was an
antiquated, quadrangular edifice, perched high up
on the side of the hill, looking down on beautiful
white houses built one over the other, and descending
in terraces to the sea. Its old walls were dilapidated
and discovered by the touch of time, and threatened
every minute, as it afterwards did in the earthquake
of 1769, to commence the awful avalanche of destruction
that swept this fair city into the sea.
The first glimpse of their barracks
did not rouse in Henry any ejaculations of gladness.
The old Castello, as the people called it, ill-agreed
with the noble edifices she was wont to call castles
in her earlier days no lofty battlements
crested with clouds; no drawbridges swung on ponderous
chains; no mysterious keeps haunted with traditionary
horrors; no myriads of archers in gold and blue to
rend the heavens with a mighty shout of welcome.
Alvira’s dream of military glory was a veritable
castle in the air in the presence of the ruinous,
ill-kept, and dilapidated fortress they had come to
reinforce.
Everything around seemed to increase
the gloom that hung over Charles’s heart.
The ill-clad and poverty-stricken people, squatting
in idleness and dirt in the streets; the miserable
shops; the doce far niente so conspicuously
characteristic of Italian towns, were contrasted with
the beautiful and busy capitals Charles and Henry had
come from. But nowhere was this contrast so
keen as in their domestic arrangements. The bleak
apartments, the campbed, the iron washstand, and the
rough cuisine contrasted sadly with the magnificence
of their father’s splendid mansion in Paris.
No wonder our young heroines wept when alone over
the memories of the past.
Charles and Henry kept together; they
avoided all society; they loved to ramble along the
beautiful beach that ran for some miles on the north
side of the town, and there, in floods of tears, seek
relief for their broken hearts. Oh! how memory
will on these occasions wake up the happy past lost
and gone, and the wicked past yet to be atoned for.
What heart weighted with the agony of remorse will
not feel the sting of guilt more keen in the rememberance
of the blissful days of innocence and childhood?
Many a blue wave has wrapt in its icy shroud the
child of misfortune who was unable to bear the shame
and reproof of her own conscience. It was in
the recollection of virtuous childhood that Charles
and Henry felt their greatest sorrows. Every
tender admonition of their dying mother; the instruction
of the aged abbe who prepared them for their first
confession and communion; and the piety and noble
example of their little brother, Louis Marie, who
had fled in his childhood from the world they now hated,
were subjects often brought up in their lonely rambles.
At night Charles would often awake
with frightful dreams. The cold, bloodstained
face of her murdered father would come in awful proximity
to her. Her screams would bring her fellow-officers
to her assistance, but they knew not the cause of
her terror. The young officers had the sympathy
of the whole garrison; even the people who saw them
return from their evening walk remarked them to be
lonely and sad, and their eyes often red from crying.
Three long and miserable months were
thus passed by our heroines at Messina. They
were now as skilful in their military exercises as
they were in their disguise. But wearied of the
military life, and longing to return to the society
of their sex, they had determined to leave, to declare
who they were, and endeavor, by some means, to get
back to France. Whilst deliberating on this movement
an incident occurred which changed their plans and
cast them again into an extraordinary circle of vicissitudes.