“COMUS’ MISTICK WITCHERIES”
That elusive, nocturnal company, “The
Mistick Krewe of Comus,” had appeared “Comus,
deep skilled in all his mother’s witcheries” and
the dwellers in Phantasmagoria were joyfully numerous.
More plentiful than at a modern spectacular performance,
reveled gods, demons and fairies, while the children
resembled a flight of masquerading butterflies.
The ball at the theater, the Roman Veglioni, succeeded
elaborate tableaux, the “Tartarus,” of
the ancients, and “Paradise Lost,” of
Milton, in which the “Krewe” impersonated
Pluto and Proserpine, the fates, harpies and other
characters of the representation. In gallery,
dress-circle and parquet, the theater was crowded,
the spectacle, one of dazzling toilets, many of them
from the ateliers of the Parisian modistes;
a wonderful evolution of Proserpine’s toga and
the mortal robes of the immortal Fates. Picture
followed picture: The expulsion from Paradise;
the conference of the Gorgons, and the court of pandemonium,
where gluttony, drunkenness, avarice and vanity were
skilfully set forth in uncompromising colors.
Availing themselves of the open-house
of the unknown “Krewe,” a composite host
that vanished on the stroke of twelve, many of “Old
Rough and Ready’s” retinue mingled with
the gathering, their uniforms, well-worn, even shabby,
unlike the spick and span regimentals from the costumier.
With bronzed faces and the indubitable air of campaigns
endured, they were the objects of lively interest to
the fair maskers, nor were themselves indifferent
to the complaisance of their entertainers. Hands,
burned by the sun, looked blacker that night, against
the white gowns of waists they clasped; bearded faces
more grim visaged in contrast with delicate complexions;
embroidery and brocade whirled around with faded uniforms;
and dancing aigrettes waved above frayed
epaulets and shoulder straps.
“Loog at ’im!” murmured
a fille a la cassette, regarding one of these
officers who, however, held aloof from the festivities;
a well-built young man, but thin and worn, as though
he, like his uniform, had seen service. “If
he would only carry my trunk!” she laughed,
relapsing into French and alluding to the small chest
she bore under her arm.
“Or my little white lamb!”
gaily added her companion, a shepherdess.
And they tripped by with sidelong
looks and obvious challenge which the quarry of these
sprightly huntresses of men either chose to disregard
or was unconscious of, as he deliberately surveyed
his surroundings with more curiosity than pleasure
and absently listened to a mountebank from “The
Belle’s Strategem.”
“Who’ll buy my nostrums?” cried
the buffoon.
“What are they?” asked Folly, cantering
near on a hobby horse.
“Different kinds for different
people. Here’s a powder for ladies to
dispel the rage for intrigue. Here’s a pill
for politicians to settle bad consciences.
Here’s an eye-water for jealous husbands it
thickens the visual membrane. Here’s something
for the clergy it eliminates windy discourses.
Here’s an infusion for creditors it
creates resignation and teaches patience.”
“And what have you for lovers?”
“Nothing,” answered the
clown; “love like fever and ague must run its
course. Nostrums! Who’ll buy my nostrums?”
“Oh, I’m so glad I came!”
enthusiastically exclaimed a tall, supple girl, laden
with a mass of flowers.
“Isn’t it too bad, though,
you can’t polka with some of the military gentlemen?”
returned her companion who wore a toga and carried
a lantern. “Mademoiselle Castiglione wouldn’t
let you come, until I promised not to allow you out
of my sight.”
“It was lovely of you to take
me,” she said, “and I don’t mind
about the military gentlemen.”
“My dear, if all women were
like you, we poor civilians would not be relegated
to the background! I wish, though, I had worn
some other costume. This ahem, dress! has
a tendency to get between my legs and disconcert my
philosophical dignity. I can understand why Diogenes
didn’t care about walking abroad. My only
wonder is that everybody didn’t stay in his
tub in those days. Don’t talk to me about
the ‘noble Roman!’ Why, he wore skirts!”
“And Monsieur Intaglio lectured
to us for an hour to-day about the wonderful drapery
of the ancients!” laughed the girl. “The
poetry of dress, he called it!”
“Then I prefer prose. Hello!” pausing
and raising his lantern, as they drew near the officer
who had fallen under the observation of the fille
a la cassette. “Colonel Saint-Prosper,
or set me down for an ass or Plato, which
is the same thing!”
“Straws!” said the soldier,
as the bard frankly lifted his mask and tilted it
back over his forehead.
“Glad to see you!” continued
the poet, extending his hand. “I haven’t
run across you before since the night of the banquet;
the debut of Barnes’ company you remember?
You must have left town shortly afterward. Returned
this morning, of course! By the way, there’s
one of your old friends here to-night.”
Saint-Prosper felt the color mount
to his face, and even Straws noted the change.
“Who is that?” asked the soldier, awkwardly.
“Mrs. Service Miss
Duran that was now one of our most dashing I
should say, charitable, ladies. Plenty of men
at Service’s church now. She’s dressed
in Watteau-fashion to-night, so if you see any one
skipping around, looking as though she had just stepped
from the Embarkation for the Island of Venus, set
her down for the minister’s pretty wife!”
“And the minister?” asked Saint-Prosper,
mechanically.
“He brought her; he compromised
on a Roundhead costume, himself! But we must
be off. Au revoir; don’t be backward;
the ladies are all military-mad. It may be a
field of arms” casting his glance
over the assemblage of fashionably dressed ladies,
with a quizzical smile “but not hostile
arms! Come, Celestina Nydia, I mean!”
And Straws’ arm stole about
the waist of his companion, as Saint-Prosper watched
them disappearing in the throng of dancers. It
was Celestina’s first ball, and after her long
training at the Castiglione institute, she danced
divinely. Evidently, too, she was reconciled to
the warden’s edict, denying her the freedom
of the ball-room, for she showed no disposition to
escape from Straws’ watchful care. On the
contrary, though her glance wandered to the wonders
around her, they quickly returned to the philosopher
with the lamp, as though she courted the restraint
to which she was subjected. Something like a pang
shot through the soldier’s breast as he followed
the pair with his gaze; he seemed looking backward
into a world of youth and pleasure, passed beyond
recall.
“It is useless to deny it!
I knew you when I first saw you!” exclaimed
a familiar voice near by, and turning around sharply,
the officer observed approaching a masked lady, graceful
of figure and lacking nothing in the numerical strength
of her escort. It was to her that these words
were addressed by an agile man of medium stature who
had apparently penetrated her disguise. The lady,
who would have attracted attention anywhere by her
bearing, wore a pardessus of white gauze, fitting
close and bordered with a silver band; the sleeves,
short; the skirt of white gauze and very ample, as
the fashion of the day required; the feet shod in
small white silk “bottines”; the
hair in bands, ornamented with wild poppies.
Altogether this costume was described by Phazma as
“ravishing, the gown adorning the lady, and
the lady the gown, her graces set forth against the
sheen of voluminous satin folds, like those of some
portrait by Sir Joshua or Gainsborough.”
“How could you expect any one
not to know you?” continued the speaker, as
this little coterie drew near, their masks a pretext
for mystery. “You may impersonate, but
you can not deceive.”
“That is a poor compliment,
since you take me for an actress,” laughed the
lady. An hilarious outburst from an ill-assorted
cluster of maskers behind them drowned his reply,
and the lady and her attendants passed on.
Saint-Prosper drew his breath sharply.
“She is here, after all,” he said to himself.
“A nostrum for jilted beaux!”
called out a mountebank, seeing him standing there,
preoccupied, alone, at the same time tendering a pill
as large as a plum. A punchinello jarred against
him with: “Pardonnez_ moi, pardie!_”
On the perfumed air the music swelled rapturously;
a waltz, warm with the national life of Vienna; the
swan song of Lanner! Softly, sweetly, breathed
“Die Schoenbrunner;” faster whirled the
moving forms. Eyes flashed more brightly; little
feet seemed born for dancing; cheeks, pale at midday,
were flushed with excitement! Why doesn’t
he dance, wondered the lady with the white lamb.
Carnival comes but once a year; a mad, merry time;
when gaiety should sweep all cares out of doors!
“Said Strephon
to Chloe: ’For a kiss,
I’ll give thee the choice of
my flock.’
Said Chloe to Strephon: ’What
bliss,
If you’ll add to the gift a
new smock,’”
hummed the lively nymph, as she tripped by.
“Said Chloe to Strephon:
’For a kiss,
I’ll return thee the choice of
your flock.
Said Strephon to Chloe: ’What
bliss,
With it I’ll buy Phyllis a new
frock,’”
she concluded, throwing a glance over her shoulder.
A sudden distaste for the festal ferment,
the laughter and merriment; a desire to escape from
the very exuberance of high spirits and cheer led
the soldier to make his way slowly from the ball-room
to the balcony, where, although not removed from the
echoes of liveliness within, he looked out upon the
quietude of the night. Overhead stretched the
sky, a measureless ocean, with here and there a silvery
star like the light on a distant ship; an unfathomable
sea of ether that beat down upon him. Radiant
and serene, in the boundless calm of the heavens,
the splendent lanterns seemed suspended on stationary
craft peacefully rocked at anchor. Longings, suppressed
through months of absence, once more found full sway;
Susan’s words were recalled by the presence
of the count.
Suddenly the song of “Die Schoenbrunner”
ceased within, and, as its pulsations became hushed,
many of the dancers, an elate, buoyant throng, sought
the balcony. Standing in the shadow near the entrance,
aroused from a train of reflections by this abrupt
exodus, the soldier saw among the other merry-makers,
Constance and the count, who passed through the door,
so near he could almost have touched her.
“Here she is,” said the
count, as they approached an elderly lady, seated
near the edge of the balcony. “Ah, Madam,”
he continued to the latter, “if you would only
use your good offices in my behalf! Miss Carew
is cruelty itself.”
“Why, what has she done?” asked the good
gentlewoman.
“Insisted upon deserting the ball-room!”
“In my day,” said the
elderly ally of the nobleman, “you could not
drag the young ladies from cotillion or minuet.
And the men would stay till the dawn to toast them!”
“And I’ve no doubt, Madam,
your name was often on their lips,” returned
the count gallantly, who evidently believed in the
Spanish proverb: “Woo the duenna, not the
maid; then in love the game’s well played!”
The ally in his cause made some laughing
response which the soldier did not hear. Himself
unseen, Saint-Prosper bent his eyes upon the figure
of the young girl, shadowy but obvious in the reflected
light of the bright constellations. Even as he
gazed, her hand removed the mask, revealing the face
he knew so well. In the silence below, the fountain
tinkled ever so loudly, as she stood, half-turned toward
the garden, a silken head-covering around her shoulders;
the head outlined without adornment, save the poppies
in her hair.
Her presence recalled scenes of other
days: the drive from the races, when her eyes
had beamed so softly beneath the starry luster.
Did she remember? He dared not hope so; he did
not. To him, it brought, also, harsher memories;
yet his mind was filled most with her beauty, which
appeared to gloss over all else and hold him, a not
impassive spectator, to the place where she was standing.
She seemed again Juliet the Juliet of inns
and school-house stages the Juliet he had
known before she had come to New Orleans, whose genius
had transformed the barren stage into a garden of
her own creation.
And yet something made her different;
an indefinable new quality appeared to rest upon her.
He felt his heart beating faster; he was glad he had
come; for the moment he forgot his jealousy in watching
her, as with new wealth of perfume, the languid breeze
stirred the tresses above her pallid, immovable features.
But the expression of confidence with which the count
was regarding her, although ostensibly devoting himself
to her companion, renewed his inquietude.
Had she allowed herself to be drawn
into a promised alliance with that titled roue?
Involuntarily the soldier’s face grew hard and
stern; the count’s tactics were so apparent flattering
attention to the elderly gentlewoman and a devoted,
but reserved, bearing toward the young girl in which
he would rely upon patience and perseverance for the
consummation of his wishes. But certainly Constance
did not exhibit marked preference for his society;
on the contrary, she had hardly spoken to him since
they had left the ball-room. Now clasping the
iron railing of the balcony, she leaned farther out;
the flowers of the vine, clambering up one of the
supports, swayed gently around her, and she started
at the moist caress on her bare arm.
“It is cold here,” she said, drawing back.
“Allow me your wrap!”
exclaimed the count, springing to her side with great
solicitude.
But she adjusted the garment without his assistance.
“You must be careful of your
health for the sake of your friends!”
Accompanying the words with a significant glance.
“The count is right!”
interposed the elderly gentlewoman. “As
he usually is!” she added, laughing.
“Oh, Madam!” he said,
bowing. “Miss Carew does not agree with
you, I am sure?” Turning to the girl.
“I haven’t given the matter
any thought,” she replied, coldly. She
shivered slightly, nervously, and looked around.
At that moment the lights were turned
on in the garden another surprise arranged
by the Mistick Krewe! illuminating trees
and shrubbery, and casting a sudden glare upon the
balcony.
“Bravo!” said the count.
“It’s like a fête-champêtre!
And hear the mandolins! Tra-la-la-la-la!
Why, what is it?”
She had given a sudden cry and stood
staring toward the right at the back of the balcony.
Within, the orchestra once more began to play, and,
as the strains of music were wafted to them, a host
of masqueraders started toward the ball-room.
When the inflow of merry-makers had ceased, bewildered,
trembling, she looked with blanched face toward the
spot where the soldier had been standing, but he was
gone.
At that moment the cathedral clock
began to strike twelve times it sounded,
and, at the last stroke, the Mistick Krewe, one by
one began to disappear, vanishing as mysteriously
as they had come. Pluto, Proserpine, the Fates,
fairies and harpies; Satan, Beelzebub; the dwellers
in pandemonium; the aids to appetite all
took their quick departure, leaving the musicians
and the guests of the evening, including the visiting
military, to their own pleasures and devices.
The first carnival had come to a close.