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HEINRICH HEINE
As the moon her face advances
Through the darkened cloudy veil;
So, from darkened times arising,
Dawns on me a vision pale.
In consequence of what Euphra had caused him to believe without
saying it, Hugh felt more friendly towards his new acquaintance; and
happening -- on his side at least it did happen -- to meet him a few
days after, walking in the neighbourhood, he joined him in a stroll.
Mr. Arnold met them on horseback, and invited Von Funkelstein to
dine with them that evening, to which he willingly consented. It
was noticeable that no sooner was the count within the doors of
Arnstead House, than he behaved with cordiality to every one of the
company except Hugh. With him he made no approach to familiarity of
any kind, treating him, on the contrary, with studious politeness.
In the course of the dinner, Mr. Arnold said:
"It is curious, Herr von Funkelstein, how often, if you meet with
something new to you, you fall in with it again almost immediately.
I found an article on Biology in the newspaper, the very day after
our conversation on the subject. But absurd as the whole thing is,
it is quite surpassed by a letter in to-day's Times about
spirit-rapping and mediums, and what not!"
This observation of the host at once opened the whole question of
those physico-psychological phenomena to which the name of
spiritualism has been so absurdly applied. Mr. Arnold was profound
in his contempt of the whole system, if not very profound in his
arguments against it. Every one had something to remark in
opposition to the notions which were so rapidly gaining ground in
the country, except Funkelstein, who maintained a rigid silence.
This silence could not continue long without attracting the
attention of the rest of the party; upon which Mr. Arnold said:
"You have not given us your opinion on the subject, Herr von
Funkelstein."
"I have not, Mr. Arnold; -- I should not like to encounter the
opposition of so many fair adversaries, as well as of my host."
"We are in England, sir; and every man is at liberty to say what he
thinks. For my part, I think it all absurd, if not improper."
"I would not willingly differ from you, Mr. Arnold. And I confess
that a great deal that finds its way into the public prints, does
seem very ridiculous indeed; but I am bound, for truth's sake, to
say, that I have seen more than I can account for, in that kind of
thing. There are strange stories connected with my own family,
which, perhaps, incline me to believe in the supernatural; and,
indeed, without making the smallest pretence to the dignity of what
they call a medium, I have myself had some curious experiences. I
fear I have some natural proclivity towards what you despise. But I
beg that my statement of my own feelings on the subject, may not
interfere in the least with the prosecution of the present
conversation; for I am quite capable of drawing pleasure from
listening to what I am unable to agree with."
"But let us hear your arguments, strengthened by your facts, in
opposition to ours; for it will be impossible to talk with a silent
judge amongst us," Hugh ventured to say.
"I set up for no judge, Mr. Sutherland, I assure you; and perhaps I
shall do my opinions more justice by remaining silent, seeing I am
conscious of utter inability to answer the a priori arguments which
you in particular have brought against them. All I would venture to
say is, that an a priori argument may owe its force to a mistaken
hypothesis with regard to the matter in question; and that the true
Baconian method, which is the glory of your English philosophy,
would be to inquire first what the thing is, by recording
observations and experiments made in its supposed direction."
"At least Herr von Funkelstein has the best of the argument now, I
am compelled to confess," said Hugh.
Funkelstein bowed stiffly, and was silent.
"You rouse our curiosity," said Mr. Arnold; "but I fear, after the
free utterance which we have already given to our own judgments, in
ignorance, of course, of your greater experience, you will not be
inclined to make us wiser by communicating any of the said
experience, however much we may desire to hear it."
Had he been speaking to one of less evident social standing than
Funkelstein, Mr. Arnold, if dying with curiosity, would not have
expressed the least wish to be made acquainted with his experiences.
He would have sat in apparent indifference, but in real anxiety
that some one else would draw him out, and thus gratify his
curiosity without endangering his dignity.
"I do not think," replied Funkelstein, "that it is of any use to
bring testimony to bear on such a matter. I have seen -- to use the
words of some one else, I forget whom, on a similar subject -- I have
seen with my own eyes what I certainly should never have believed on
the testimony of another. Consequently, I have no right to expect
that my testimony should be received. Besides, I do not wish it to
be received, although I confess I shrink from presenting it with a
certainty of its being rejected. I have no wish to make converts to
my opinions."
"Really, Herr von Funkelstein, at the risk of your considering me
importunate, I would beg --"
"Excuse me, Mr. Arnold. The recital of some of the matters to which
you refer, would not only be painful to myself, but would be
agitating to the ladies present."
"In that case, I have only to beg your pardon for pressing the
matter -- I hope no further than to the verge of incivility."
"In no degree approaching it, I assure you, Mr. Arnold. In proof
that I do not think so, I am ready, if you wish it -- although I
rather dread the possible effects on the nerves of the ladies,
especially as this is an old house -- to repeat, with the aid of those
present, certain experiments which I have sometimes found perhaps
only too successful."
"Oh! I don't," said Euphra, faintly.
An expression of the opposite desire followed, however, from the
other ladies. Their curiosity seemed to strive with their fears,
and to overcome them.
"I hope we shall have nothing to do with it in any other way than
merely as spectators?" said Mrs. Elton.
"Nothing more than you please. It is doubtful if you can even be
spectators. That remains to be seen."
"Good gracious!" exclaimed Mrs. Elton.
Lady Emily looked at her with surprise -- almost reproof.
"I beg your pardon, my dear; but it sounds so dreadful. What can it
be?"
"Let me entreat you, ladies, not to imagine that I am urging you to
anything," said Funkelstein.
"Not in the least," replied Mrs. Elton. "I was very foolish." And
the old lady looked ashamed, and was silent.
"Then if you will allow me, I will make one small preparation. Have
you a tool-chest anywhere, Mr. Arnold?"
"There must be tools enough about the place, I know. I will ring
for Atkins."
"I know where the tool chest is," said Hugh; "and, if you will allow
me a suggestion, would it not be better the servants should know
nothing about this? There are some foolish stories afloat amongst
them already."
"A very proper suggestion, Mr. Sutherland," said Mr. Arnold,
graciously. "Will you find all that is wanted, then?"
"What tools do you want?" asked Hugh.
"Only a small drill. Could you get me an earthenware plate -- not
china -- too?"
"I will manage that," said Euphra.
Hugh soon returned with the drill, and Euphra with the plate. The
Bohemian, with some difficulty, and the remark that the English ware
was very hard, drilled a small hole in the rim of the plate -- a
dinner-plate; then begging an H B drawing-pencil from Miss Cameron,
cut off a small piece, and fitted it into the hole, making it just
long enough to touch the table with its point when the plate lay in
its ordinary position.
"Now I am ready," said he. "But," he added, raising his head, and
looking all round the room, as if a sudden thought had struck
him -- "I do not think this room will be quite satisfactory."
They were now in the drawing-room.
"Choose the room in the house that will suit you," said Mr. Arnold.
"The dining-room?"
"Certainly not," answered Funkelstein, as he took from his
watch-chain a small compass and laid it on the table. "Not the
dining-room, nor the breakfast-room -- I think. Let me see -- how is it
situated?" He went to the hall, as if to refresh his memory, and
then looked again at the compass. "No, not the breakfast-room."
Hugh could not help thinking there was more or less of the charlatan
about the man.
"The library?" suggested Lady Emily.
They adjourned to the library to see. The library would do. After
some further difficulty, they succeeded in procuring a large sheet
of paper and fastening it down to the table by drawing-pins. Only
two candles were in the great room, and it was scarcely lighted at
all by them; yet Funkelstein requested that one of these should be
extinguished, and the other removed to a table near the door. He
then said, solemnly:
"Let me request silence, absolute silence, and quiescence of thought
even."
After stillness had settled down with outspread wings of intensity,
he resumed:
"Will any one, or, better, two of you, touch the plate as lightly as
possible with your fingers?"
All hung back for a moment. Then Mr. Arnold came forward.
"I will," said he, and laid his fingers on the plate.
"As lightly as possible, if you please. If the plate moves, follow
it with your fingers, but be sure not to push it in any direction."
"I understand," said Mr. Arnold; and silence fell again.
The Bohemian, after a pause, spoke once more, but in a foreign
tongue. The words sounded first like entreaty, then like command,
and at last, almost like imprecation. The ladies shuddered.
"Any movement of the vehicle?" said he to Mr. Arnold.
"If by the vehicle you mean the plate, certainly not," said Mr.
Arnold solemnly. But the ladies were very glad of the pretext for
attempting a laugh, in order to get rid of the oppression which they
had felt for some time.
"Hush!" said Funkelstein, solemnly. -- "Will no one else touch the
plate, as well? It will seldom move with one. It does with me.
But I fear I might be suspected of treachery, if I offered to join
Mr. Arnold."
"Do not hint at such a thing. You are beyond suspicion."
What ground Mr. Arnold had for making such an assertion, was no
better known to himself than to any one else present. Von
Funkelstein, without another word, put the fingers of one hand
lightly on the plate beside Mr. Arnold's. The plate instantly began
to move upon the paper. The motion was a succession of small jerks
at first; but soon it tilted up a little, and moved upon a changing
point of support. Now it careered rapidly in wavy lines, sweeping
back towards the other side, as often as it approached the extremity
of the sheet, the men keeping their fingers in contact with it, but
not appearing to influence its motion. Gradually the motion ceased.
Von Funkelstein withdrew his hand, and requested that the other
candle should be lighted. The paper was taken up and examined.
Nothing could be discovered upon it, but a labyrinth of wavy and
sweepy lines. Funkelstein pored over it for some minutes, and then
confessed his inability to make a single letter out of it, still
less words and sentences, as he had expected.
"But," said he, "we are at least so far successful: it moves. Let
us try again. Who will try next?"
"I will," said Hugh, who had refrained at first, partly from dislike
to the whole affair, partly because he shrank from putting himself
forward.
A new sheet of paper was fixed. The candle was extinguished. Hugh
put his fingers on the plate. In a second or two, it began to move.
"A medium!" murmured Funkelstein. He then spoke aloud some words
unintelligible to the rest.
Whether from the peculiarity of his position and the consequent
excitement of his imagination, or from some other cause, Hugh grew
quite cold, and began to tremble. The plate, which had been
careering violently for a few moments, now went more slowly, making
regular short motions and returns, at right angles to its chief
direction, as if letters were being formed by the pencil. Hugh
shuddered, thinking he recognised the letters as they grew. The
writing ceased. The candles were brought. Yes; there it was! -- not
plain, but easily decipherable -- David Elginbrod. Hugh felt sick.
Euphra, looking on beside him, whispered:
"What an odd name! Who can it mean?"
He made no reply
Neither of the other ladies saw it; for Mrs. Elton had discovered,
the moment the second candle was lighted, that Lady Emily was either
asleep or in a faint. She was soon all but satisfied that she was
asleep.
Hugh's opinion, gathered from what followed, was, that the Bohemian
had not been so intent on the operations with the plate, as he had
appeared to be; and that he had been employing part of his energy in
mesmerising Lady Emily. Mrs. Elton, remembering that she had had
quite a long walk that morning, was not much alarmed. Unwilling to
make a disturbance, she rang the bell very quietly, and, going to
the door, asked the servant who answered it, to send her maid with
some eau-de-cologne. Meantime, the gentlemen had been too much
absorbed to take any notice of her proceedings, and, after removing
the one and extinguishing the other candle, had reverted to the
plate. -- Hugh was still the operator.
Von Funkelstein spoke again in an unknown tongue. The plate began
to move as before. After only a second or two of preparatory
gyration, Hugh felt that it was writing Turriepuffit, and shook from
head to foot.
Suddenly, in the middle of the word, the plate ceased its motion,
and lay perfectly still. Hugh felt a kind of surprise come upon
him, as if he waked from an unpleasant dream, and saw the sun
shining. The morbid excitement of his nervous system had suddenly
ceased, and a healthful sense of strength and every-day life took
its place.
Simultaneously with the stopping of the plate, and this new feeling
which I have tried to describe, Hugh involuntarily raised his eyes
towards the door of the room. In the all-but-darkness between him
and the door, he saw a pale beautiful face -- a face only. It was the
face of Margaret Elginbrod; not, however, such as he had used to see
it -- but glorified. That was the only word by which he could
describe its new aspect. A mist of darkness fell upon his brain,
and the room swam round with him. But he was saved from falling, or
attracting attention to a weakness for which he could have made no
excuse, by a sudden cry from Lady Emily.
"See! see!" she cried wildly, pointing towards one of the windows.
These looked across to another part of the house, one of the oldest,
at some distance. -- One of its windows, apparently on the first
floor, shone with a faint bluish light.
All the company had hurried to the window at Lady Emily's
exclamation.
"Who can be in that part of the house?" said Mr. Arnold, angrily.
"It is Lady Euphrasia's window," said Euphra, in a low voice, the
tone of which suggested, somehow, that the speaker was very cold.
"What do you mean by speaking like that?" said Mr. Arnold,
forgetting his dignity. "Surely you are above being superstitious.
Is it possible the servants could be about any mischief? I will
discharge any one at once, that dares go there without permission."
The light disappeared, fading slowly out.
"Indeed, the servants are all too much alarmed, after what took
place last year, to go near that wing -- much less that room," said
Euphra. "Besides, Mrs. Horton has all the keys in her own charge."
"Go yourself and get me them, Euphra. I will see at once what this
means. Don't say why you want them."
"Certainly not, uncle."
Hugh had recovered almost instantaneously. Though full of
amazement, he had yet his perceptive faculties sufficiently
unimpaired to recognise the real source of the light in the window.
It seemed to him more like moonlight than anything else; and he
thought the others would have seen it to be such, but for the effect
of Lady Emily's sudden exclamation. Perhaps she was under the
influence of the Bohemian at the moment. Certainly they were all in
a tolerable condition for seeing whatever might be required of them.
True, there was no moon to be seen; and if it was the moon, why did
the light go out? But he found afterwards that he had been right.
The house stood upon a rising ground; and, every recurring cycle,
the moon would shine, through a certain vista of trees and branches,
upon Lady Euphrasia's window; provided there had been no growth of
twigs to stop up the channel of the light, which was so narrow that
in a few moments the moon had crossed it. A gap in a hedge made by
a bull that morning, had removed the last screen. -- Lady Euphrasia's
window was so neglected and dusty, that it could reflect nothing
more than a dim bluish shimmer.
"Will you all accompany me, ladies and gentlemen, that you may see
with your own eyes that there is nothing dangerous in the house?"
said Mr. Arnold.
Of course Funkelstein was quite ready, and Hugh as well, although he
felt at this moment ill-fitted for ghost-hunting. The ladies
hesitated; but at last, more afraid of being left behind alone, than
of going with the gentlemen, they consented. Euphra brought the
keys, and they commenced their march of investigation. Up the grand
staircase they went, Mr. Arnold first with the keys, Hugh next with
Mrs. Elton and Lady Emily, and the Bohemian, considerably to Hugh's
dissatisfaction, bringing up the rear with Euphra. -- This
misarrangement did more than anything else could have done, to
deaden for the time the distraction of feeling produced in Hugh's
mind by the events of the last few minutes. Yet even now he seemed
to be wandering through the old house in a dream, instead of
following Mr. Arnold, whose presence might well have been sufficient
to destroy any illusion, except such as a Chinese screen might
superinduce; for, possessed of far less imagination than a horse, he
was incapable of any terrors, but such as had to do with robbers, or
fire, or chartists -- which latter fear included both the former. He
strode on securely, carrying a candle in one hand, and the keys in
the other. Each of the other gentlemen likewise bore a light. They
had to go through doors, some locked, some open, following a
different route from that taken by Euphra on a former occasion.
But Mr. Arnold found the keys troublesome. He could not easily
distinguish those he wanted, and was compelled to apply to Euphra.
She left Funkelstein in consequence, and walked in front with her
uncle. Her former companion got beside Lady Emily, and as they
could not well walk four abreast, she fell behind with him. So Hugh
got next to Euphra, behind her, and was comforted.
At length, by tortuous ways, across old rooms, and up and down
abrupt little stairs, they reached the door of Lady Euphrasia's
room. The key was found, and the door opened with some
perturbation -- manifest on the part of the ladies, and concealed on
the part of the men. The place was quite dark. They entered; and
Hugh was greatly struck with its strange antiquity. Lady
Euphrasia's ghost had driven the last occupant out of it nearly a
hundred years ago; but most of the furniture was much older than
that, having probably belonged to Lady Euphrasia herself. The room
remained just as the said last occupant had left it. Even the
bed-clothes remained, folded down, as if expecting their occupant
for the last hundred years. The fine linen had grown yellow; and
the rich counterpane lay like a churchyard after the resurrection,
full of the open graves of the liberated moths. On the wall hung
the portrait of a nun in convent-attire.
"Some have taken that for a second portrait of Lady Euphrasia," said
Mr. Arnold, "but it cannot be. -- Euphra, we will go back through the
picture gallery. -- I suspect it of originating the tradition that
Lady Euphrasia became a nun at last. I do not believe it myself.
The picture is certainly old enough to stand for her, but it does
not seem to me in the least like the other."
It was a great room, with large recesses, and therefore irregular in
form. Old chairs, with remnants of enamel and gilding, and seats of
faded damask, stood all about. But the beauty of the chamber was
its tapestry. The walls were entirely covered with it, and the rich
colours had not yet receded into the dull grey of the past, though
their gorgeousness had become sombre with age. The subject was the
story of Samson.
"Come and see this strange piece of furniture," said Euphra to Hugh,
who had kept by her side since they entered this room.
She led him into one of the recesses, almost concealed by the
bed-hangings. In it stood a cabinet of ebony, reaching nearly to
the ceiling, curiously carved in high relief.
"I wish I could show you the inside of it," she went on, "but I
cannot now."
This was said almost in a whisper. Hugh replied with only a look of
thanks. He gazed at the carving, on whose black surface his candle
made little light, and threw no shadows.
"You have looked at this before, Euphra," said he. "Explain it to
me."
"I have often tried to find out what it is," she answered; "but I
never could quite satisfy myself about it."
She proceeded, however, to tell him what she fancied it might mean,
speaking still in the low tone which seemed suitable to the awe of
the place. She got interested in showing him the relations of the
different figures; and he made several suggestions as to the
possible intention of the artist. More than one well-known subject
was proposed and rejected.
Suddenly becoming aware of the sensation of silence, they looked up,
and saw that theirs was the only light in the room. They were left
alone in the haunted chamber. -- They looked at each other for one
moment; then said, with half-stifled voices:
"Euphra!"
"Hugh!"
Euphra seemed half amused and half perplexed. Hugh looked half
perplexed and wholly pleased.
"Come, come," said Euphra, recovering herself, and leading the way
to the door.
When they reached it, they found it closed and locked. Euphra
raised her hand to beat on it. Hugh caught it.
"You will drive Lady Emily into fits. Did you not see how awfully
pale she was?"
Euphra instantly lifted her hand again, as if she would just like to
try that result. But Hugh, who was in no haste for any result, held
her back.
She struggled for a moment or two, but not very strenuously, and,
desisting all at once, let her arms drop by her sides.
"I fear it is too late. This is a double door, and Mr. Arnold will
have locked all the doors between this and the picture-gallery.
They are there now. What shall we do?"
She said this with an expression of comical despair, which would
have made Hugh burst into laughter, had he not been too much pleased
to laugh.
"Never mind," he said, "we will go on with our study of the cabinet.
They will soon find out that we are left behind, and come back to
look for us."
"Yes, but only fancy being found here!"
She laughed; but the laugh did not succeed. It could not hide a
real embarrassment. She pondered, and seemed irresolute. Then with
the words -- "They will say we stayed behind on purpose," she moved
her hand to the door, but again withdrew it, and stood irresolute.
"Let us put out the light." said Hugh laughing, "and make no
answer."
"Can you starve well?"
"With you."
She murmured something to herself; then said aloud and hastily, as
if she had made up her mind by the compulsion of circumstances:
"But this won't do. They are still looking at the portrait, I
daresay. Come."
So saying, she went into another recess, and, lifting a curtain of
tapestry, opened a door.
"Come quick," she said.
Hugh followed her down a short stair into a narrow passage, nowhere
lighted from the outside. The door went to behind them, as if some
one had banged it in anger at their intrusion. The passage smelt
very musty, and was as quiet as death.
"Not a word of this, Hugh, as you love me. It may be useful yet."
"Not a word."
They came through a sliding panel into an empty room. Euphra closed
it behind them.
"Now shade your light."
He did so. She took him by the hand. A few more turns brought them
in sight of the lights of the rest of the party. As Euphra had
conjectured, they were looking at the picture of Lady Euphrasia, Mr.
Arnold prosing away to them, in proof that the nun could not be she.
They entered the gallery without being heard; and parting a little
way, one pretending to look at one picture, the other at another,
crept gradually round till they joined the group. It was a piece of
most successful generalship. Euphra was, doubtless, quite prepared
with her story in case it should fail.
"Dear Lady Emily," said she, "how tired you look! Do let us go,
uncle."
"By all means. Take my arm, Lady Emily. Euphra, will you take the
keys again, and lock the doors?"
Mrs. Elton had already taken Hugh's arm, and was leading him away
after Mr. Arnold and Lady Emily.
"I will not leave you behind with the spectres, Miss Cameron," said
Funkelstein.
"Thank you; they will not detain me long. They don't mind being
locked up."
It was some little time, however, before they presented themselves
in the drawing-room, to which, and not to the library, the party had
gone: they had had enough of horrors for that night.
Lest my readers should think they have had too many wonders at
least, I will explain one of them. It was really Margaret Elginbrod
whom Hugh had seen. Mrs. Elton was the lady in whose service she
had left her home. It was nothing strange that they had not met,
for Margaret knew he was in the same house, and had several times
seen him, but had avoided meeting him. Neither was it a wonderful
coincidence that they should be in such close proximity; for the
college friend from whom Hugh had first heard of Mr. Arnold, was the
son of the gentleman whom Mrs. Elton was visiting, when she first
saw Margaret.
Margaret had obeyed her mistress's summons to the drawing-room, and
had entered while Hugh was stooping over the plate. As the room was
nearly dark, and she was dressed in black, her pale face alone
caught the light and his eye as he looked up, and the giddiness
which followed had prevented him from seeing more. She left the
room the next moment, while they were all looking out of the window.
Nor was it any exercise of his excited imagination that had
presented her face as glorified. She was now a woman; and, there
being no divine law against saying so, I say that she had grown a
lady as well; as indeed any one might have foreseen who was capable
of foreseeing it. Her whole nature had blossomed into a still,
stately, lily-like beauty; and the face that Hugh saw was indeed the
realised idea of the former face of Margaret.
But how did the plate move? and whence came the writing of old
David's name? I must, for the present, leave the whole matter to
the speculative power of each of my readers.
But Margaret was in mourning: was David indeed dead?
He was dead. -- Yet his name will stand as the name of my story for
pages to come; because, if he had not been in it, the story would
never have been worth writing; because the influence of that
ploughman is the salt of the whole; because a man's life in the
earth is not to be measured by the time he is visible upon it; and
because, when the story is wound up, it will be in the presence of
his spirit.
Do I then believe that David himself did write that name of his?
Heaven forbid that any friend of mine should be able to believe it!
Long before she saw him, Margaret had known, from what she heard
among the servants, that Master Harry's tutor could be no other than
her own tutor of the old time. By and by she learned a great deal
about him from Harry's talk with Mrs. Elton and Lady Emily. But she
did not give the least hint that she knew him, or betray the least
desire to see him.
Mrs. Elton was amusingly bewildered by the occurrences of the
evening. Her theories were something astounding; and followed one
another with such alarming rapidity, that had they been in
themselves such as to imply the smallest exercise of the thinking
faculty, she might well have been considered in danger of an attack
of brain-fever. As it was, none such supervened. Lady Emily said
nothing, but seemed unhappy. As for Hugh, he simply could not tell
what to make of the writing. But he did not for a moment doubt that
the vision he had seen was only a vision -- a home-made ghost, sent
out from his own creative brain. Still he felt that Margaret's
face, come whence it might, was a living reproof to him; for he was
losing his life in passion, sinking deeper in it day by day. His
powers were deserting him. Poetry, usually supposed to be the
attendant of love, had deserted him. Only by fits could he see
anything beautiful; and then it was but in closest association of
thought with the one image which was burning itself deeper and
deeper into his mental sensorium. Come what might, he could not
tear it away. It had become a part of himself -- of his inner
life -- even while it seemed to be working the death of life. Deeper
and deeper it would burn, till it reached the innermost chamber of
life. Let it burn.
Yet he felt that he could not trust her. Vague hopes he had, that,
by trusting, she might be made trustworthy; but he feared they were
vain as well as vague. And yet he would not cast them away, for he
could not cast her away.
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