Search for a jewel that too casually
Hath left mine arm: it was thy master’s.
Shrew me
If I would lose it for a revenue
Of any king’s in Europe! Cymbeline.
’My dear Fitzjocelyn, what is
to be done? Have you heard? Delaford says
these horrid creatures are rising! There was
an attack on the Hotel de Ville last night!
A thousand people killed, at least! The
National Guard called out!’
’One of the lions of Paris,
my dear aunt; Virginia is seeing it in style.’
’Seeing it! We must go
at once. They will raise those horrid barricades; we
shall be closed in. And Isabel gone to that governess!
I wish I had never consented! How could I come
here at all? Fitzjocelyn, what is to be done?’
‘Drive round that way, if you
are bent on going,’ said Louia, coolly.
‘Meantime, Virginia, my dear, I will thank you
for some coffee.’
‘How can you talk of such things?’
cried his aunt. ’It is all those savage
wretches, mad because the national workshops are closed.
Delaford declares they will massacre all the English.’
’Poor wretches, I believe they
are starving. I think you are making yourself
ill the most pressing danger. Come,
Virginia, persuade your mamma to sit down to breakfast,
while I go to reconnoitre. Where are the passports?’
Virginia had lost all terror in excitement,
but neither she nor her mother could bear to let him
go out, to return they knew not when. The carriage
had already been ordered, but Lady Conway was exceedingly
frightened at the notion of driving anywhere but direct
to the railway station; she was sure that they should
encounter something frightful if they went along the
Boulevards.
‘Could not Delaford go to fetch
Isabel?’ suggested Virginia, ’he might
take a carriage belonging to the hotel.’
Delaford was summoned, and desired
to go to fetch Miss Conway, but though he said, ‘Yes,
my Lady,’ he looked yellow and white, and loitered
to suggest whether the young lady would not be alarmed.
‘I will go with you,’
said Louis. ’Order the carriage, and I
shall be ready.’
Lady Conway, to whom his presence
seemed protection, was almost remonstrating, but he
said, ’Delaford is in no state to be of use.
He would take bonjour for a challenge. Let me
go with him, or he will take care the young lady is
alarmed. When we are all together, we can do
as may seem best, and I shall be able better to judge
whether we are to fight or fly.’
Outside the door he found Delaford,
who begged to suggest to his lordship that my Lady
would be alarmed if she were left without either of
them, he could hardly answer it to himself that she
should remain without any male protector.
‘Oh yes, pray remain to defend
her,’ said Louis, much amused, and hastening
down-stairs he ordered the carriage to drive to Rue
, off the Boulevard St. Martin.
He thought there were signs boding
tempest. Shops were closed, and men in blouses
were beginning to assemble in knots here
and there the red-cap loomed ominously in the far
end of narrow alleys, and in the wider streets the
only passengers either seemed in haste like himself,
or else were National Guards hurrying to their alarm-post.
He came safely to Miss Longman’s
apartments, where he found all on the alert the
governess and her nieces recounting their experiences
of February, which convinced them that there was more
danger in returning than in remaining. Miss
Longman was urgent to keep Isabel and Lord Fitzjocelyn
for at least a few hours, which she declared would
probably be the duration of any émeute, but they
knew this would cause dreadful anxiety, and when Fitzjocelyn
proposed returning alone, Isabel insisted on accompanying
him, declaring that she had no fears, and that her
mother would be miserable if her absence should detain
them. Perhaps she was somewhat deceived by the
cool, almost ludicrous, light in which he placed the
revolution, as a sort of periodical spasm, and Miss
Longman’s predictions that the railway would
be closed, only quickened her preparations.
After receiving many entreaties to
return in case of alarm, they took leave, Louis seating
himself beside the driver, as well to keep a look-out,
as to free Miss Conway from fears of a tete-a-tete.
Except for such a charge of ladies, he would have
been delighted at the excitement of an émeute;
but he was far from guessing how serious a turn affairs
were taking.
The dark blue groups were thickening
into crowds; muskets and pikes were here and there
seen, and once he recognised the sinister red flag.
A few distant shots were heard, and the driver would
gladly have hastened his speed, but swarms of haggard-looking
men began to impede their progress, and strains of
‘Mourir pour la patrie’
now and then reached their ears.
Close to the Porte St. Denis they
were brought to a full stop by a dense throng, above
whose heads were seen a line of carriages, the red
flag planted on the top. Many hands were seizing
the horses’ heads, and Louis leapt down, but
not before the door had been opened, and voices were
exclaiming, ’Descendez citoyenne; au
nom de la nation, descendez.’
The mob were not uncivil, they made way for Louis,
and bade him reassure her that no harm was intended,
but the carriage was required for the service of the
nation.
Isabel had retreated as far as she
could from their hands, but she showed no signs of
quailing; her eyes were bright, her colour high, and
the hand was firm which she gave to Louis as she stepped
out. There was a murmur of admiration, and more
than one bow and muttered apology about necessity
and the nation, as the crowd beheld the maiden in all
her innate nobleness and dignity.
‘Which way?’ asked Louis,
finding that the crowd were willing to let them choose
their course.
‘Home,’ said Isabel, decidedly,
‘there is no use in turning back.’
They pressed on past the barricade
for which their carriage had been required, a structure
of confiscated vehicles, the interstices filled up
with earth and paving stones, which men and boys were
busily tearing up from the trottoirs, and others
carrying to their destination. They were a gaunt,
hungry, wolfish-looking race, and the first words that
Isabel spoke were words of pity, when they had passed
them, and continued their course along the Boulevards,
here in desolate tranquillity. ’Poor creatures,
they look as if misery made them furious! and yet
how civil they were.’
‘Were you much alarmed?
I wish I could have come to you sooner.’
’Thank you; I knew that you
were at hand, and their address was not very terrific,
poor things. I do not imagine there was any real
danger.’
’I wish I knew whether we are
within or without the barricades. If within,
we shall have to cross another. We are actually
becoming historical!’
He broke off, amazed by Isabel’s
change of countenance, as she put her hand to the
arm he held, hastily withdrew it, and exclaimed, ’My
bracelet! oh, my bracelet!’ turning round to
seek it on the pavement.
‘The ivory clasp?’ asked Louis, perceiving
its absence.
‘Oh yes!’ she cried, in
much distress, ’I would not have lost it for
all the world.’
‘You may have left it at Miss Longman’s.’
‘No, no, I was never without it!’
She turned, and made a few retrograde
steps, searching on the ground, as if conscious only
of her loss, shaking off his hand when he touched
her arm to detain her.
A discovery broke on, him. Well that he could
bear it!
‘Hark!’ he said, ’there
is cannon firing! Miss Conway, you cannot go
back. I will do my utmost to recover your clasp,
but we must not stay here.’
‘I had forgotten. I beg
your pardon, I did not think!’ said Isabel,
with a species of rebuked submission, as if impressed
by the calmness that gave authority to his manner;
and she made no remark as he made her resume his arm,
and hurried her on past houses with closed doors and
windows.
Suddenly there was the sound of a
volley of musketry far behind. ‘Heaven
help the poor wretches,’ said Louis; and Isabel’s
grasp tightened on his arm.
Again, again the dropping
sound of shot became continual. And now it was
in front as well as in the rear; and the booming of
cannon resounded from the heart of the city.
They were again on the outskirts of a crowd.
‘It is as I thought,’
said Louis, ’we are between both. There
is nothing for it but to push on, and see whether
we can cross the barricades; are you afraid to encounter
it!’
‘No,’ said Isabel.
’There is a convent not far
off, I think. We might find shelter for you
there. Yet they might break in. It might
not be easy to meet. I believe you are safer
with me. Will you trust in me?’
’I will not have you endanger
yourself for me. Dispose of me as you will in
a convent, or anywhere. Your life is precious,
your safety is the first thing.’
‘You are speaking in irony.’
‘I did not mean it: I beg
your pardon.’ But she coloured and faltered.
’You must distinctly understand that this is
only as Englishman to Englishwoman.’
‘As Englishman to Englishwoman,’
repeated Louis, in her own formula. ‘Or
rather,’ he added, lowering his voice, ’trust
me, for the sake of those who gave the clasp.’
He was answered by her involuntary
pressure of his arm, and finally, to set her at ease,
he said, hurriedly, ’If it went wrong with me,
it would be to Lima that I should ask you to send
my love.’
There was no time for more.
They were again on the freshly-torn ground, whence
the pavement had been wrenched. The throng had
thickened behind them, and seemed to be involving them
in the vortex. Above their heads Louis could
see in front between the tall houses, the summit of
another barricade complete, surmounted with the red
flag, and guarded by a fierce party of ruffians.
All at once, tremendous yells broke
out on all sides. The rattle of a drum, now
and then, might be distinguished, shouts and shrieks
resounded, and there was a sharp fire of musketry from
the barricade, and from the adjoining windows; there
was a general rush to the front, and Louis could only
guard Isabel by pressing her into the recess of the
closed doorway of one of the houses, and standing before
her, preventing himself from being swept away only
by exerting all his English strength against the lean,
wild beings who struggled past him, howling and screaming.
The defenders sprang upon the barricade, and thrust
back and hurled down the National Guards, whose heads
were now and then seen as they vainly endeavoured
to gain the summit. This desperate struggle
lasted for a few minutes, then cries of victory broke
out, and there was sharp firing on both sides, which,
however, soon ceased; the red flag and the blouses
remaining still in possession. Isabel had stood
perfectly silent and motionless through the whole
crisis, and though she clung to her protector’s
arm, it was not with nervous disabling terror, even
in the frightful tumult of the multitude. There
was some other strength with her!
‘You are not hurt?’ said Louis, as the
pressure relaxed.
‘Oh no! thank God! You are not?’
‘Are you ready? We must make a rush before
the next assault.’
A lane opened in the throng to afford
passage for the wounded. Isabel shrank back,
but Louis drew her on hastily, till they had attained
the very foot of the barricade, where a space was
kept clear, and there was a cry ‘Au large, or
we shall fire.’
‘Let us pass, citizens,’
said Louis, hastily rehearsing the French he had been
composing. ’You make not war on women.
Let me take this young lady to her mother.’
Grim looks were levelled at them by
the fierce black-bearded men, and their mutterings
of belle made her cling the closer to her guardian.
‘Let her pass, the poor child!’ said more
than one voice.
‘Hein! they are English, who take
the bread out of our mouths.’
‘If you were a political economist,’
said Louis, gravely, fixing his eyes on the shrewd-looking,
sallow speaker, I would prove to you your mistake;
but I have no time, and you are too good fellows to
wish to keep this lady here, a mark for the Garde
Nationale.’
‘He is right there,’ said
several of the council of chiefs, and a poissarde,
with brawny arms and a tall white cap, thrusting forward,
cried out, ’Let them go, the poor children.
What are they doing here? They look fit to be
set up in the church for waxen images!’
‘Take care you do not break
us,’ exclaimed Louis, whose fair cheek had won
this tribute; and his smile, and the readiness of his
reply, won his admission to the first of the steps
up the barricade.
‘Halte la!’
cried a large-limbed, formidable-looking ruffian on
the summit, pointing his musket towards them; ’none
passes here who does not bring a stone to raise our
barricade for the rights of the Red Republic, and
cry, La liberté, l’egalite, et
la, fraternité, let it fit his perfidious
tongue as it may.’
‘There’s my answer,’
said Louis, raising his right arm, which was dripping;
with blood, ‘you have made me mount the red flag!’
‘Ha!’ cried the friendly
fishwife, ’Wounded in the cause of the nation!
Let him go.’
‘He has not uttered the cry!’ shouted
the rest.
Louis looked round with his cool, pensive smile.
‘Liberty!’ he said, ’what
we mean by liberty is freedom to go where we
will, and say what we will. I wish you had it,
my poor fellows. Fraternity it is
not shooting our brother. Égalité I
preach that too, but in my own fashion, not yours.
Let me pass si cela vou est
egal.’
His nonchalant intrepidity a
quality never lost on the French raised
an acclamation of lé brave Anglais.
No one stirred a hand to hinder their mounting to
the banquette, and several hands were held out to
assist in surmounting the parapet of this extempore
fortification. Isabel bowed her thanks, and Louis
spoke them with gestures of courtesy; and shouts of
high applause followed them as they sped along the
blood-stained street.
The troops were re-forming after the
repulse, and the point was to pass before the attack
could be renewed, as well as not to be mistaken for
the insurgents.
They were at once challenged, but
a short explanation to the officer was sufficient,
and they were suffered to turn into the Rue Richelieu,
where they were only pursued by the distant sounds
of warfare.
‘Oh, Lord Fitzjocelyn!’
cried Isabel, as he slackened his pace, and gasped
for breath.
‘You are sure you are not hurt?’ he said.
‘Oh no, no; but you ’
‘It is very little,’ he
said ’a stray shot only
enough to work on their feelings. What good-natured
rogues they were. I will only twist my handkerchief
round to stop the blood. Thank you.’
Isabel tried to help him, but she
was too much afraid of hurting him to draw the bandage
tight.
They dashed on, finding people on
the watch for tidings, and meeting bodies of the National
Guard, and when at length they reached the Place Vendome,
they found the whole establishment watching for them,
and Virginia flew to meet them on the stairs, throwing
her arms round her sister, while Lady Conway started
forward with the agitated joy, and almost anger, of
one who felt injured by the fright they had made her
suffer.
’There you are! What has
kept you! Delaford said they were slaughtering
every one on the Boulevards!’
‘I warned you of the consequences
of taking me,’ said Louis, dropping into a chair.
‘Mamma! he is all over blood!’ screamed
Virginia.
Lady Conway recoiled, with a slight shriek.
‘It is a trifle,’ said
Louis;’ Isabel is safe. There is all cause
for thankfulness. We could never have got through
if she had not been every inch a heroine.’
‘Oh, Lord Fitzjocelyn, if I could thank you!’
‘Don’t,’ said Louis,
with so exactly his peculiar droll look and smile,
that all were reassured.
Isabel began to recount their adventure.
‘In the midst of those horrid
wretches! and the firing!’ cried Lady Conway.
’My dear, how could you bear it? I should
have died of fright!’
‘There was no time for fear,’
said Isabel, with a sort of scorn; ’I should
have been ashamed to be frightened when Lord Fitzjocelyn
took it so quietly. I was only afraid lest you
should repeat their horrid war-cry. I honour
your refusal.’
’Of course one would not in
their sense, poor things, and on compulsion,’
said Louis, his words coming the slower from the exhaustion
which made him philosophize, rather than exert himself.
’In a true sense, it is the war-cry of our life.’
‘How can you talk so!’
cried Lady Conway. ’Delaford says the ruffians
are certain to overpower the Guard. We must go
directly. Very likely this delay of yours may
prevent us from getting off at all.’
‘I will find out whether the
way be open,’ said Louis, ‘when I have-’
His words failed him, for as he rose,
the handkerchief slipped off, a gush of blood came
with it, and he was so faint that he could hardly
reach the sofa.
Lady Conway screamed, Virginia rang
the bells, Isabel gave orders that a surgeon should
be called.
‘Spirits from the vasty deep,’
muttered Louis, in the midst of his faintness, ‘the
surgeons have graver work on hand.’
‘For heaven’s sake, don’t
talk so!’ cried his aunt, without daring to
look at him; ‘I know your arm is broken!’
’Broken bones are a very different
matter, experto crede. This will be
all right when I can stop the bleeding,’ and
steadying himself with difficulty, he reached the
door, and slowly repaired to his own room, while the
girls sent Fanshawe and Delaford to his assistance.
Lady Conway, unable to bear the sight
of blood, was in a state of nervous sobbing, which
Virginia’s excited restlessness did not tend
to compose; and Isabel walked up and down the room,
wishing that she could do anything, looking reproachfully
at her mother, and exalting to the skies the courage,
presence of mind, and fortitude of the wounded knight.
Presently, Delaford came down with
a message from Lord Fitzjocelyn that it was of no
use to wait for him, for as the butler expressed it,
’the haemorrhage was pertinacious,’ and
he begged that the ladies would depart without regard
to him. ‘In fact,’ said Delaford,
’it was a serious crisis, and there was no time
to be lost; an English gentleman, Captain Lonsdale,
who had already offered his services, would take care
of his lordship, and my Lady had better secure herself
and the young ladies.’
‘Leave Fitzjocelyn!’ cried Virginia.
‘Is it very dangerous, Delaford?’ asked
Lady Conway.
’I would not be responsible
for the consequences of remaining, my Lady,’
was the answer. ‘Shall I order the horses
to be brought out?’
’I don’t know. Is
the street full of people? Oh! there is firing!
What shall I do? Isabel, what do you say!’
Isabel was sitting still and upright;
she hardly raised her eyelids, as she tranquilly said,
‘Nothing shall induce me to go till he is better.’
‘Isabel! this is most extraordinary!
Do you know what you are saying?’
Isabel did not weaken her words by
repetition, but signed to Delaford to leave them,
and he never ventured to disregard Miss Conway.
Virginia hung about her, and declared that she was
quite right; and Lady Conway, in restless despair,
predicted that they would all be massacred, and that
her nephew would bleed to death, and appealed to every
one on the iniquity of all the doctors in Paris for
not coming near him.
Poor Louis himself was finding it
very forlorn to be left to Fanshawe, whose one idea
was essences, and Delaford, who suggested nothing but
brandy. Some aunts and cousins he had, who would
not have left him to their tender mercies. He
was growing confused and feeble, speculating upon
arteries, and then starting from a delusion of Mary’s
voice to realize his condition, and try to waken his
benumbed faculties.
At last, a decided step was heard,
and he saw standing by him a vigorous, practical-looking
Englishman, and a black-eyed, white-hooded little
Soeur de Charite. Captain Lonsdale,
on hearing the calls for surgical aid, had without
a word, hurried out and secured the brisk little Sister,
who, with much gesticulation, took possession of the
arm, and pronounced it a mere trifle, which would have
been nothing but for the loss of blood, the ball having
simply passed through the fleshy part of the arm,
avoiding the bone. Louis, pleased with this encounter
as a result of the adventure, was soon in condition
to rise, though with white cheeks and tottering step,
and to present to Lady Conway her new defender.
The sight of a bold, lively English
soldier was a grand consolation, even though he entirely
destroyed all plans of escape by assuring her that
there was a tremendous disturbance in the direction
of the Northern Railway, and that the only safe place
for ladies was just where she was. He made various
expeditions to procure intelligence, and his tidings
were cheerful enough to counteract the horrible stories
that Delaford was constantly bringing in, throughout
that Saturday, the dreadful 24th of June, 1848.
It was late before any one ventured
to go to bed; and Louis, weak and weary, had wakened
many times from dreamy perceptions that some wonderful
discovery had been made, always fixing it upon Mary,
and then finding himself infinitely relieved by recollecting
that it did not regard her. He was in the full
discomfort of the earlier stage of this oft-repeated
vision, when his door was pushed open, and Delaford’s
trembling voice exclaimed, ’My Lord, I beg your
pardon, the massacre is beginning.’
‘Let me know when it is over,’
said Louis, nearly in his sleep.
Delaford reiterated that the city
was bombarded, thousands of armed men were marching
on the hotel, and my Lady ought to be informed.
A distant cannonade, the trampling of many feet,
and terrified voices on the stairs, finally roused
Louis, and hastily rising, he quitted his room, and
found all the ladies on the alert. Lady Conway
was holding back Virginia from the window, and by
turns summoning Isabel to leave it, and volubly entreating
the master of the hotel to secure it with feather-beds
to defend them from the shot.
‘Oh, Fitzjocelyn!’ she
screamed, ’tell him so tell him to
take us to the cellars. Why will he not put
the mattresses against the windows before they fire?’
’I should prefer a different
relative position for ourselves and the beds,’
said Louis, in his leisurely manner, as he advanced
to look out. ’These are the friends of
order, my dear aunt; you should welcome your protectors.
Their beards and their bayonets by gaslight are a
grand military spectacle.’
’They will fire! There
will be fighting here! They will force their
way in. Don’t, Virginia I desire
you will not go near the window.’
’We are all right. You
are as safe as if you were in your own drawing-room,’
said Captain Lonsdale, walking in, and with his loud
voice drowning the panic, that Louis’s cool,
gentle tones only irritated.
Isabel looked up and smiled, as Louis
stood by her, leaving his aunt and Virginia to the
martial tones of their consoler.
’I could get no one to believe
me when I said it was only the soldiers,’ she
observed, with some secret amusement.
‘The feather-bed fortress was
the leading idea,’ said Louis. ’Some
ladies have a curious pseudo presence of mind.’
‘Generally, I believe,’
said Isabel, ’a woman’s presence of mind
should be to do as she is told, and not to think for
herself, unless she be obliged.’
‘Thinking for themselves has
been fatal to a good many,’ said Louis, relapsing
into meditation ’this poor Paris among
the rest, I fancy. What a dawn for a Sunday morning!
How cold the lights look, and how yellow the gas
burns. We may think of home, and be thankful!’
and kneeling with one knee on a chair, he leant against
the shutter, gazing out and musing aloud.
‘Thankful, indeed!’ said Isabel, thoughtfully.
’Yes first it was
thinking not at all, and then thinking not in the
right way.’
Isabel readily fell into the same
strain. ’They turned from daylight and
followed the glare of their own gas,’ said she.
So they began a backward tracing of
the calamities of France; and, as Louis’s words
came with more than usual slowness and deliberation,
they had only come to Cardinal de Richelieu, when
Captain Lonsdale exclaimed, ’I am sorry to interrupt
you, Lord Fitzjocelyn, but may I ask whether you can
afford to lose any more blood?’
’Thank you; yes, the bandage
is loosened, but I was too comfortable to move,’
said Louis, sleepily, and he reeled as he made the
attempt, so that he could not have reached his room
without support.
The Captain had profited sufficiently
by the Sister’s example to be able to staunch
the blood, but not till the effusion had exhausted
Louis so much that all the next day it mattered little
to him that the city was in a state of siege, and
no one allowed to go out or come in. Even a constant
traveller like Captain Lonsdale, fertile in resource,
and undaunted in search of all that was to be seen,
was obliged to submit, the more willingly that Fitzjocelyn
needed his care, and the ladies’ terror was
only kept at bay by his protection. He sat beside
the bed where lay Louis in a torpid state, greatly
disinclined to be roused to attend when his aunt would
hasten into the room, full of some horrible rumour
brought in by Delaford, and almost petulant because
he would not be alarmed. All he asked of the
Tricolor or of the Drapeau Rouge for the present was
to let him alone, and he would drop into a doze again,
while the Captain was still arguing away her terror.
More was true than he would allow
her to credit and when the little Soeur de
Charite found a few minutes for visiting her patient’s
wound, her bright face was pale with horror and her
eyes red with weeping.
‘Our good Archbishop!’
she sobbed, when she allowed herself to speak, and
to give way to a burst of tears. ’Ah, the
martyr! Ah, the good pastor! The miserable But
no my poor people, they knew not what they
did!’
And as Louis, completely awakened,
questioned her, she told how the good Archbishop Affre
had begun that Sunday of strife and bloodshed by offering
his intercessions at the altar for the unhappy
people, and then offering his own life. ’The
good shepherd giveth his life for the sheep,’
were his words, as he went forth to stand between the
hostile parties, and endeavour to check their fury
against one another. She herself had seen him,
followed by a few priests, and preceded by a brave
and faithful ouvrier, who insisted on carrying before
him a green branch, as an emblem of his peaceful mission.
She described how, at the sight of his violet robes,
and the white cross on his breast, the brave boy gardes
mobiles came crowding round him, all black with powder,
begging for his blessing, some reminding him that he
had confirmed them, while others cried, ’Your
blessing on our muskets, and we shall be invincible,’
while some of the women asked him to carry the bandages
and lint which they wished to send to the wounded.
On he went, comforting the wounded,
absolving the dying, and exhorting the living, and
at more than one scene of conflict the combatants
paused, and yielded to his persuasions; but at the
barricade at the Faubourg St. Antoine, while he was
signing to the mob to give him a moment to speak,
a ball struck him, and followed by the weeping and
horror-struck insurgents, he was borne into the curate’s
house, severely wounded, while the populace laid down
their weapons, to sign a declaration that they knew
not who had fired the fatal shot.
‘No, no, it was none of our
people!’ repeated the little nun. ’Not
one of them, poor lost creatures as too many are,
would have committed the act so sacrilegious,
so ungrateful! Ah! you must not believe them
wicked. It is misery that drove them to rise.
Hold! I met a young man alas!
I knew him well when he was a child I said
to him, ’Ah! my son, you are on the bad train.’
’Bread, mother it is bread we must
have,’ he answered. ’Why, would you
speak to one who has not eaten for twenty-four hours?’
I told him he knew the way to our kitchen. ’No,
mother,’ he said, ‘I shall not eat; I shall
get myself killed.’’
Many a lamentable detail of this description
did she narrate, as she busied herself with the wound;
and Louis listened, as he had listened to nothing
else that day, and nearly emptied his travelling purse
for the sufferers. Isabel and Virginia waylaid
her on the stairs to admire and ask questions, but
she firmly, though politely, put them aside, unable
to waste any time away from her children her
poor wounded!
On Monday forenoon tranquillity was
restored, the rabble had been crushed, and the organized
force was triumphant. Still the state of siege
continued, and no one was allowed free egress or ingress,
but the Captain pronounced this all nonsense, and
resolutely set out for a walk, taking the passports
with him, and promising Lady Conway to arrange for
her departure.
By-and-by he came in, subdued and
affected by the procession which he had encountered the
dying Archbishop borne home to his palace on a litter,
carried by workmen and soldiers, while the troops,
who lined the streets, paid him their military salutes,
and the people crowded to their doors and windows one
voice of weeping and mourning running along Paris as
the good prelate lay before their eyes, pale, suffering,
peaceful, and ever and anon lifting his feeble hand
for a last blessing to the flock for whom he had devoted
himself.
The Captain was so much impressed
that, as he said, he could not get over it, and stayed
for some time talking over the scene with the young
ladies, before starting up, as if wondering at his
own emotion, he declared that he must go and see what
they would do next.
Presently afterwards, Fitzjocelyn
came down stairs. His aunt was judiciously lying
down in her own apartment to recruit her nerves after
her agitation, and had called Virginia to read to her,
and Isabel was writing her journal, alone, in the
sitting-room. Lady Conway would have been gratified
at her eager reception of him, but, as he seemed very
languid, and indisposed for conversation, she continued
her occupation, while he rested in an arm-chair.
Presently he said, ’Is it possible
that you could have left that bracelet at Miss Longman’s?’
‘Pray do not think about it,’
exclaimed Isabel; ’I am ashamed of my childishness!
Perhaps, but for that delay, you would not have been
hurt,’ and her eyes filled with tears, as her
fingers encircled the place where the bracelet should
have been.
‘Perhaps, but for that delay,
we might both have been shot,’ said Louis.
‘No, indeed; I could not wonder at your prizing
it so much.’
‘I little thought that would
be the end of it,’ said Isabel. ’I
am glad you know its history, so that I may have some
excuse;’ and she tried to smile, but she blushed
deeply as she dried her eyes.
‘Excuse? more than excuse!’
said Louis, remembering his fears that it would be
thrown away upon her. ‘I know ’
‘He has told you!’ cried
Isabel, starting with bashful eagerness.
‘He has told me what I understand
now,’ said Louis, coming near in a glow of grateful
delight. ’Oh, I am so glad you appreciate
him. Thank you.’
‘You are inferring too much,’
said Isabel, turning away in confusion.
‘Don’t you mean it!’ exclaimed Louis.
‘I thought ’
‘We must not mistake each other,’
said Isabel, recovering her self-possession.
’Nothing amounting to what you mean ever passed,
except a few words the last evening, and I may have
dwelt on them more than I ought,’ faltered she,
with averted head.
‘Not more than he has done,
I feel certain,’ said Louis; ’I see it
all! Dear old Jem! There’s no such
fellow in existence.’ But here perceiving
that he was going too far, he added, almost timidly,
’I beg your pardon.’
‘You have no occasion,’
she said, smiling in the midst of her blushes.
’I feared I had said what I ought not.
I little expected such kind sympathy.’
She hastily left him, and Lady Conway
soon after found him so full of bright, half-veiled
satisfaction, that she held herself in readiness for
a confession from one or both every minute, and, now
that the panic was over, gave great credit to the
Red Republicans for having served her so effectually,
and forgave the young people for having been so provoking
in their coolness in the time of danger, since it proved
how well they were suited to each other. She
greatly enjoyed the universally-implied conviction
with regard to the handsome young pair. Nor did
they struggle against it; neither of them made any
secret of their admiration for the conduct of the
other, and the scrupulous appellations of Miss
Conway and Lord Fitzjocelyn were discarded for more
cousinly titles.
The young hero fell somewhat in his
aunt’s favour when he was missing at the traveller’s
early breakfast, although Delaford reported him much
better and gone out. ’What if he should
be late for the train? what if he should
be taken up by the police?’ Virginia scolded
her sister for not being equally restless, and had
almost hunted the Captain into going in search of
him; when at last, ten minutes before the moment of
departure, in he came, white, lame, and breathless,
but his eyes dancing with glee, and his lips archly
grave, as he dropped something into Isabel’s
lap.
‘Her bracelet!’ exclaimed
Virginia, as Isabel looked up with swimming eyes,
unable to speak. ‘Where did you find it?’
‘In the carriage, in the heart
of the barricade at the Porte St. Denis.’
‘It is too much!’ cried
Isabel, recovering her utterance, and rising with
her hands locked together in her emotion. ’You
make me repent my having lamented for it!’
‘I had an old respect for Clara’s clasp.’
‘I never saw a prettier attention,’ said
his aunt.
‘It is only a pity that you cannot fasten it
on for her.’
‘That could only be done by
the right hand,’ muttered Louia, under his breath,
enjoying her blush.
‘You have not told us how you got it!’
said Virginia.
’It struck me that there was
a chance, and I had promised to lose none. I
found the soldiers in the act of pulling down the barricade.
What an astonishing construction it is! I spoke
to the officer, who was very civil, and caused me
to depose that I had hired the carriage, and belonged
to the young lady. I believe my sling had a great
effect; for they set up a shout of acclamation when
the bracelet appeared, lying on the cushion as quietly
as if it were in its own drawer.’
‘The value will be greater than
ever now, Isabel,’ said Lady Conway.
‘You will never lose it again!’
Isabel did not gainsay her.
The Captain shrugged his shoulders,
and looked sagacious at his patient’s preparation
for the journey before him.
Louis gravely looked into his face
as he took leave of him, and said, ‘You are
wrong.’
The Captain raised his eyebrows incredulously.
As they left the city, the bells of all the churches
were tolling for the martyred Archbishop. And
not for him alone was there mourning and lamentation
through the city: death and agony were everywhere;
in some of the streets, each house was a hospital,
and many a groan and cry of mortal pain was uttered
through that fair summer-day. Louis, in a low
voice, reminded Isabel that, on this same day, the
English primate was consecrating the abbey newly restored
for a missionary college; and his eyes glistened as
he dwelt with thanksgiving upon the contrast, and thought
of the ‘peace within our walls, and plenteousness
within our palaces.’
He lay back in his corner of the carriage,
too much tired to talk; though, by-and-by, he began
to smile over his own musings, or to make some lazily
ludicrous remark to amuse Virginia. His aunt
caressed her wounded hero, and promoted his intercourse
with Isabel, to his exquisite amusement, in his passive,
débonnaire condition, especially as Isabel
was perfectly insensible to all these manuoevres.
There she sat, gazing out of window,
musing first on the meeting with the live Sir Roland,
secondly on the amends to be made in the ’Chapel
in the valley.’ The Cloten of the piece
must not even be a Vidame nothing distantly connected
with a V; even though this prototype was comporting
himself much more like the nonchalant, fantastic Viscount,
than like her resolute, high-minded Knight at the Porte
St. Denis.