AN APOLOGUE.
Two lovers once upon a time had planned
a little summer-house in the form of an antique temple
which it was their purpose to consecrate to all manner
of refined and innocent enjoyments. There they
would hold pleasant intercourse with one another and
the circle of their familiar friends; there they would
give festivals of delicious fruit; there they would
hear lightsome music intermingled with the strains
of pathos which make joy more sweet; there they would
read poetry and fiction and permit their own minds
to flit away in day-dreams and romance; there, in
short for why should we shape out the vague
sunshine of their hopes? there all pure
delights were to cluster like roses among the pillars
of the edifice and blossom ever new and spontaneously.
So one breezy and cloudless afternoon
Adam Forrester and Lilias Fay set out upon a ramble
over the wide estate which they were to possess together,
seeking a proper site for their temple of happiness.
They were themselves a fair and happy spectacle, fit
priest and priestess for such a shrine, although,
making poetry of the pretty name of Lilias, Adam Forrester
was wont to call her “Lily” because her
form was as fragile and her cheek almost as pale.
As they passed hand in hand down the avenue of drooping
elms that led from the portal of Lilias Fay’s
paternal mansion they seemed to glance like winged
creatures through the strips of sunshine, and to scatter
brightness where the deep shadows fell.
But, setting forth at the same time
with this youthful pair, there was a dismal figure
wrapped in a black velvet cloak that might have been
made of a coffin-pall, and with a sombre hat such as
mourners wear drooping its broad brim over his heavy
brows. Glancing behind them, the lovers well
knew who it was that followed, but wished from their
hearts that he had been elsewhere, as being a companion
so strangely unsuited to their joyous errand.
It was a near relative of Lilias Fay, an old man by
the name of Walter Gascoigne, who had long labored
under the burden of a melancholy spirit which was
sometimes maddened into absolute insanity and always
had a tinge of it. What a contrast between the
young pilgrims of bliss and their unbidden associate!
They looked as if moulded of heaven’s sunshine
and he of earth’s gloomiest shade; they flitted
along like Hope and Joy roaming hand in hand through
life, while his darksome figure stalked behind, a type
of all the woeful influences which life could fling
upon them.
But the three had not gone far when
they reached a spot that pleased the gentle Lily,
and she paused.
“What sweeter place shall we
find than this?” said she. “Why should
we seek farther for the site of our temple?”
It was indeed a delightful spot of
earth, though undistinguished by any very prominent
beauties, being merely a nook in the shelter of a
hill, with the prospect of a distant lake in one direction
and of a church-spire in another. There were
vistas and pathways leading onward and onward into
the green woodlands and vanishing away in the glimmering
shade. The temple, if erected here, would look
toward the west; so that the lovers could shape all
sorts of magnificent dreams out of the purple, violet
and gold of the sunset sky, and few of their anticipated
pleasures were dearer than this sport of fantasy.
“Yes,” said Adam Forrester;
“we might seek all day and find no lovelier
spot. We will build our temple here.”
But their sad old companion, who had
taken his stand on the very site which they proposed
to cover with a marble floor, shook his head and frowned,
and the young man and the Lily deemed it almost enough
to blight the spot and desecrate it for their airy
temple that his dismal figure had thrown its shadow
there. He pointed to some scattered stones, the
remnants of a former structure, and to flowers such
as young girls delight to nurse in their gardens,
but which had now relapsed into the wild simplicity
of nature.
“Not here,” cried old
Walter Gascoigne. “Here, long ago, other
mortals built their temple of happiness; seek another
site for yours.”
“What!” exclaimed Lilias
Fay. “Have any ever planned such a temple
save ourselves?”
“Poor child!” said her
gloomy kinsman. “In one shape or other every
mortal has dreamed your dream.” Then he
told the lovers, how not, indeed, an antique
temple, but a dwelling had once stood there,
and that a dark-clad guest had dwelt among its inmates,
sitting for ever at the fireside and poisoning all
their household mirth.
Under this type Adam Forrester and
Lilias saw that the old man spake of sorrow.
He told of nothing that might not be recorded in the
history of almost every household, and yet his hearers
felt as if no sunshine ought to fall upon a spot where
human grief had left so deep a stain or,
at least, that no joyous temple should be built there.
“This is very sad,” said the Lily, sighing.
“Well, there are lovelier spots
than this,” said Adam Forrester, soothingly “spots
which sorrow has not blighted.”
So they hastened away, and the melancholy
Gascoigne followed them, looking as if he had gathered
up all the gloom of the deserted spot and was bearing
it as a burden of inestimable treasure. But still
they rambled on, and soon found themselves in a rocky
dell through the midst of which ran a streamlet with
ripple and foam and a continual voice of inarticulate
joy. It was a wild retreat walled on either side
with gray precipices which would have frowned somewhat
too sternly had not a profusion of green shrubbery
rooted itself into their crevices and wreathed gladsome
foliage around their solemn brows. But the chief
joy of the dell was in the little stream which seemed
like the presence of a blissful child with nothing
earthly to do save to babble merrily and disport itself,
and make every living soul its playfellow, and throw
the sunny gleams of its spirit upon all.
“Here, here is the spot!”
cried the two lovers, with one voice, as they reached
a level space on the brink of a small cascade.
“This glen was made on purpose for our temple.”
“And the glad song of the brook
will be always in our ears,” said Lilias Fay.
“And its long melody shall sing
the bliss of our lifetime,” said Adam Forrester.
“Ye must build no temple here,”
murmured their dismal companion.
And there again was the old lunatic
standing just on the spot where they meant to rear
their lightsome dome, and looking like the embodied
symbol of some great woe that in forgotten days had
happened there. And, alas! there had been woe,
nor that alone. A young man more than a hundred
years before had lured hither a girl that loved him,
and on this spot had murdered her and washed his bloody
hands in the stream which sang so merrily, and ever
since the victim’s death-shrieks were often
heard to echo between the cliffs.
“And see!” cried old Gascoigne;
“is the stream yet pure from the stain of the
murderer’s hands?”
“Methinks it has a tinge of
blood,” faintly answered the Lily; and, being
as slight as the gossamer, she trembled and clung to
her lover’s arm, whispering, “Let us flee
from this dreadful vale.”
“Come, then,” said Adam
Forrester as cheerily as he could; “we shall
soon find a happier spot.”
They set forth again, young pilgrims
on that quest which millions which every
child of earth has tried in turn.
And were the Lily and her lover to
be more fortunate than all those millions? For
a long time it seemed not so. The dismal shape
of the old lunatic still glided behind them, and for
every spot that looked lovely in their eyes he had
some legend of human wrong or suffering so miserably
sad that his auditors could never afterward connect
the idea of joy with the place where it had happened.
Here a heartbroken woman kneeling to her child had
been spurned from his feet; here a desolate old creature
had prayed to the evil one, and had received a fiendish
malignity of soul in answer to her prayer; here a new-born
infant, sweet blossom of life, had been found dead
with the impress of its mother’s fingers round
its throat; and here, under a shattered oak, two lovers
had been stricken by lightning and fell blackened corpses
in each other’s arms. The dreary Gascoigne
had a gift to know whatever evil and lamentable thing
had stained the bosom of Mother Earth; and when his
funereal voice had told the tale, it appeared like
a prophecy of future woe as well as a tradition of
the past. And now, by their sad demeanor, you
would have fancied that the pilgrim-lovers were seeking,
not a temple of earthly joy, but a tomb for themselves
and their posterity.
“Where in this world,”
exclaimed Adam Forrester, despondingly, “shall
we build our temple of happiness?”
“Where in this world, indeed?”
repeated Lilias Fay; and, being faint and weary the
more so by the heaviness of her heart the
Lily drooped her head and sat down on the summit of
a knoll, repeating, “Where in this world shall
we build our temple?”
“Ah! have you already asked
yourselves that question?” said their companion,
his shaded features growing even gloomier with the
smile that dwelt on them. “Yet there is
a place even in this world where ye may build it.”
While the old man spoke Adam Forrester
and Lilias had carelessly thrown their eyes around,
and perceived that the spot where they had chanced
to pause possessed a quiet charm which was well enough
adapted to their present mood of mind. It was
a small rise of ground with a certain regularity of
shape that had perhaps been bestowed by art, and a
group of trees which almost surrounded it threw their
pensive shadows across and far beyond, although some
softened glory of the sunshine found its way there.
The ancestral mansion wherein the lovers would dwell
together appeared on one side, and the ivied church
where they were to worship on another. Happening
to cast their eyes on the ground, they smiled, yet
with a sense of wonder, to see that a pale lily was
growing at their feet.
“We will build our temple here,”
said they, simultaneously, and with an indescribable
conviction that they had at last found the very spot.
Yet while they uttered this exclamation
the young man and the Lily turned an apprehensive
glance at their dreary associate, deeming it hardly
possible that some tale of earthly affliction should
not make those precincts loathsome, as in every former
case. The old man stood just behind them, so
as to form the chief figure in the group, with his
sable cloak muffling the lower part of his visage and
his sombre hat overshadowing his brows. But he
gave no word of dissent from their purpose, and an
inscrutable smile was accepted by the lovers as a
token that here had been no footprint of guilt or sorrow
to desecrate the site of their temple of happiness.
In a little time longer, while summer
was still in its prime, the fairy-structure of the
temple arose on the summit of the knoll amid the solemn
shadows of the trees, yet often gladdened with bright
sunshine. It was built of white marble, with slender
and graceful pillars supporting a vaulted dome, and
beneath the centre of this dome, upon a pedestal,
was a slab of dark-veined marble on which books and
music might be strewn. But there was a fantasy
among the people of the neighborhood that the edifice
was planned after an ancient mausoleum and was intended
for a tomb, and that the central slab of dark-veined
marble was to be inscribed with the names of buried
ones. They doubted, too, whether the form of
Lilias Fay could appertain to a creature of this earth,
being so very delicate and growing every day more
fragile, so that she looked as if the summer breeze
should snatch her up and waft her heavenward.
But still she watched the daily growth of the temple,
and so did old Walter Gascoigne, who now made that
spot his continual haunt, leaning whole hours together
on his staff and giving as deep attention to the work
as though it had been indeed a tomb. In due time
it was finished and a day appointed for a simple rite
of dedication.
On the preceding evening, after Adam
Forrester had taken leave of his mistress, he looked
back toward the portal of her dwelling and felt a
strange thrill of fear, for he imagined that as the
setting sunbeams faded from her figure she was exhaling
away, and that something of her ethereal substance
was withdrawn with each lessening gleam of light.
With his farewell glance a shadow had fallen over the
portal, and Lilias was invisible. His foreboding
spirit deemed it an omen at the time, and so it proved;
for the sweet earthly form by which the Lily had been
manifested to the world was found lifeless the next
morning in the temple with her head resting on her
arms, which were folded upon the slab of dark-veined
marble. The chill winds of the earth had long
since breathed a blight into this beautiful flower;
so that a loving hand had now transplanted it to blossom
brightly in the garden of Paradise.
But alas for the temple of happiness!
In his unutterable grief Adam Forrester had no purpose
more at heart than to convert this temple of many
delightful hopes into a tomb and bury his dead mistress
there. And, lo! a wonder! Digging a grave
beneath the temple’s marble floor, the sexton
found no virgin earth such as was meet to receive the
maiden’s dust, but an ancient sepulchre in which
were treasured up the bones of generations that had
died long ago. Among those forgotten ancestors
was the Lily to be laid; and when the funeral procession
brought Lilias thither in her coffin, they beheld old
Walter Gascoigne standing beneath the dome of the
temple with his cloak of pall and face of darkest
gloom, and wherever that figure might take its stand
the spot would seem a sepulchre. He watched the
mourners as they lowered the coffin down.
“And so,” said he to Adam
Forrester, with the strange smile in which his insanity
was wont to gleam forth, “you have found no better
foundation for your happiness than on a grave?”
But as the shadow of Affliction spoke
a vision of hope and joy had its birth in Adam’s
mind even from the old man’s taunting words,
for then he knew what was betokened by the parable
in which the Lily and himself had acted, and the mystery
of life and death was opened to him.
“Joy! joy!” he cried,
throwing his arms toward heaven. “On a grave
be the site of our temple, and now our happiness is
for eternity.”
With those words a ray of sunshine
broke through the dismal sky and glimmered down into
the sepulchre, while at the same moment the shape
of old Walter Gascoigne stalked drearily away, because
his gloom, symbolic of all earthly sorrow, might no
longer abide there now that the darkest riddle of
humanity was read.