IN WHICH IS RECORDED EVENTS THE READER
MAY NOT HAVE EXPECTED.
While the events we have recorded
in the foregoing chapter, confused, hurried, and curious,
are being enacted in New York, let us once more turn
to Charleston.
You must know that, notwithstanding
our high state of civilization, we yet maintain in
practice two of the most loathsome relics of barbarism we
lash helpless women, and we scourge, at the public
whipping-post, the bare backs of men.
George Mullholland has twice been
dragged to the whipping-post, twice stripped before
a crowd in the market-place, twice lashed, maddened
to desperation, and twice degraded in the eyes of
the very negroes we teach to yield entire submission
to the white man, however humble his grade. Hate,
scorn, remorse every dark passion his nature
can summon rises up in one torturing tempest,
and fills his bosom with a mad longing for revenge.
“Death!” he says, while looking out from
his cell upon the bright landscape without, “what
is death to me? The burnings of an outraged soul
subdue the thought of death.”
The woman through whom this dread
finale was brought upon him, and who now repines,
unable to shake off the smarts old associations crowd
upon her heart, has a second and third time crept
noiselessly to his cell, and sought in vain his forgiveness.
Yea, she has opened the door gently, but drew back
in terror before his dark frown, his sardonic scorn,
his frenzied rush at her. Had he not loved her
fondly, his hate had not taken such deep root in his
bosom.
Two or three days pass, he has armed
himself “to the death,” and is resolved
to make his escape, and seek revenge of his enemies.
It is evening. Dark festoons of clouds hang over
the city, lambent lightning plays along the heavens
in the south. Now it flashes across the city,
the dull panorama lights up, the tall, gaunt steeples
gleam out, and the surface of the Bay flashes out
in a phosphoric blaze. Patiently and diligently
has he filed, and filed, and filed, until he has removed
the bar that will give egress to his body. The
window of his cell overlooks the ditch, beyond which
is the prison wall. Noiselessly he arranges the
rope, for he is in the third story, then paces his
cell, silent and thoughtful. “Must it be?”
he questions within himself, “must I stain these
hands with the blood of the woman I love? Revenge,
revenge I will have revenge. I will
destroy both of them, for to-morrow I am to be dragged
a third time to the whipping-post.” Now
he casts a glance round the dark cell, now he pauses
at the window, now the lightning courses along the
high wall, then reflects back the deep ditch.
Another moment, and he has commenced his descent.
Down, down, down, he lowers himself. Now he holds
on tenaciously, the lightning reflects his dangling
figure, a prisoner in a lower cell gives the alarm,
he hears the watchword of his discovery pass from
cell to cell, the clashing of the keeper’s door
grates upon his ear like thunder he has
reached the end of his rope, and yet hangs suspended
in the air. A heavy fall is heard, he has reached
the ditch, bounds up its side to the wall, seizes a
pole, and places against it, and, with one vault,
is over into the open street. Not a moment is
to be lost. Uproar and confusion reigns throughout
the prison, his keepers have taken the alarm, and
will soon be on his track, pursuing him with ferocious
hounds. Burning for revenge, and yet bewildered,
he sets off at full speed, through back lanes, over
fields, passing in his course the astonished guardmen.
He looks neither to the right nor the left, but speeds
on toward the grove. Now he reaches the bridge
that crosses the millpond, pauses for breath, then
proceeds on. Suddenly a light from the villa
Anna occupies flashes out. He has crossed the
bridge, bounds over the little hedge-grown avenue,
through the garden, and in another minute stands before
her, a pistol pointed at her breast, and all the terrible
passions of an enraged fiend darkening his countenance.
Her implorings for mercy bring an old servant rushing
into the room, the report of a pistol rings out upon
the still air, shriek after shriek follows, mingled
with piercing moans, and death-struggles. “Ha,
ha!” says the avenger, looking on with a sardonic
smile upon his face, and a curl of hate upon his lip,
“I have taken the life to which I gave my own yes,
I have taken it I have taken it!”
And she writhes her body, and sets her eyes fixedly
upon him, as he hastens out of the room.
“Quick! quick!” he says
to himself. “There, then! I am pursued!”
He recrosses the millpond over another bridge, and
in his confusion turns a short angle into a lane leading
to the city. The yelping of dogs, the deep, dull
tramp of hoofs, the echoing of voices, the ominous
baying and scenting of blood-hounds all
break upon his ear in one terrible chaos. Not
a moment is to be lost. The sight at the villa
will attract the attention of his pursuers, and give
him time to make a distance! The thought of what
he has done, and the terrible death that awaits him,
crowds upon his mind, and rises up before him like
a fierce monster of retribution. He rushes at
full speed down the lane, vaults across a field into
the main road, only to find his pursuers close upon
him. The patrol along the streets have caught
the alarm, which he finds spreading with lightning-speed.
The clank of side-arms, the scenting and baying of
the hounds, coming louder and louder, nearer and nearer,
warns him of the approaching danger. A gate at
the head of a wharf stands open, the hounds are fast
gaining upon him, a few jumps more and they will have
him fast in their ferocious grasp. He rushes through
the gate, down the wharf, the tumultuous cry of his
pursuers striking terror into his very heart.
Another instant and the hounds are at his feet, he
stands on the capsill at the end, gives one wild,
despairing look into the abyss beneath “I
die revenged,” he shouts, discharges a pistol
into his breast, and with one wild plunge, is buried
forever in the water beneath. The dark stream
of an unhappy life has run out. Upon whom does
the responsibility of this terrible closing rest?
In the words of Thomson, the avenger left behind him
only “Gaunt Beggary, and Scorn, with many hell-hounds
more.”
When the gray dawn of morning streamed
in through the windows of the little villa, and upon
the parlor table, that had so often been adorned with
caskets and fresh-plucked flowers, there, in their
stead, lay the lifeless form of the unhappy Anna,
her features pale as marble, but beautiful even in
death. There, rolled in a mystic shroud, calm
as a sleeper in repose, she lay, watched over by two
faithful slaves.
The Judge and Mr. Snivel have found
it convenient to make a trip of pleasure into the
country. And though the affair creates some little
comment in fashionable society, it would be exceedingly
unpopular to pry too deeply into the private affairs
of men high in office. We are not encumbered
with scrutinizing morality. Being an “unfortunate
woman,” the law cannot condescend to deal with
her case. Indeed, were it brought before a judge,
and the judge to find himself sitting in judgment upon
a judge, his feelings would find some means of defrauding
his judgment, while society would carefully close
the shutter of its sanctity.
At high noon there comes a man of
the name of Moon, commonly called Mr. Moon, the good-natured
Coroner. In truth, a better-humored man than Mr.
Moon cannot be found; and what is more, he has the
happiest way in the world of disposing of such cases,
and getting verdicts of his jury exactly suited to
circumstances. Mr. Moon never proceeds to business
without regaling his jury with good brandy and high-flavored
cigars. In this instance he has bustled about
and got together six very solemn and seriously-disposed
gentlemen, who proceed to deliberate. “A
mystery hangs over the case,” says one.
A second shakes his head, and views the body as if
anxious to get away. A third says, reprovingly,
that “such cases are coming too frequent.”
Mr. Moon explains the attendant circumstances, and
puts a changed face on the whole affair. One juryman
chalks, and another juryman chalks, and Mr. Moon says,
by way of bringing the matter to a settled point,
“It is a bad ending to a wretched life.”
A solemn stillness ensues, and then follows the verdict.
The body being identified as that of one Anna Bonard,
a woman celebrated for her beauty, but of notorious
reputation, the jury are of opinion (having duly weighed
the circumstances) that she came to her melancholy
death by the hands of one George Mullholland, who was
prompted to commit the act for some cause to the jury
unknown. And the jury, in passing the case over
to the authorities, recommend that the said Mullholland
be brought to justice. This done, Mr. Moon orders
her burial, and the jury hasten home, fully confident
of having performed their duty unswerved.
When night came, when all was hushed
without, and the silence within was broken only by
the cricket’s chirp, when the lone watcher, the
faithful old slave, sat beside the cold, shrouded
figure, when the dim light of the chamber of death
seemed mingling with the shadows of departed souls,
there appeared in the room, like a vision, the tall
figure of a female, wrapped in a dark mantle.
Slowly and noiselessly she stole to the side of the
deceased, stood motionless and statue-like for several
minutes, her eyes fixed in mute contemplation on the
face of the corpse. The watcher looked and started
back, still the figure remained motionless. Raising
her right hand to her chin, pensively, she lifted her
eyes heavenward, and in that silent appeal, in those
dewy tears that glistened in her great orbs, in those
words that seemed freezing to her quivering lips,
the fierce struggle waging in that bosom was told.
She heard the words, “You cannot redeem me now!”
knelling in her ears, her thoughts flashed back over
years of remorse, to the day of her error, and she
saw rising up as it were before her, like a spectre
from the tomb, seeking retribution, the image of the
child she had sacrificed to her vanity. She pressed
and pressed the cold hand, so delicate, so like her
own; she unbared the round, snowy arm, and there beheld
the imprinted hearts, and the broken anchor!
Her pent-up grief then burst its bounds, the tears
rolled down her cheeks, her lips quivered, her hand
trembled, and her very blood seemed as ice in her veins.
She cast a hurried glance round the room, a calm and
serene smile seemed lighting up the features of the
lifeless woman, and she bent over her, and kissed
and kissed her cold, marble-like brow, and bathed it
with her burning tears. It was a last sad offering;
and having bestowed it, she turned slowly away, and
disappeared. It was Madame Montford, who came
a day too late to save the storm-tossed girl, but
returned to think of the hereafter of her own soul.