"I note each gracious purpose, "I loathe your wrangling councils, "I bless men and ye curse them, "Ye bow to ghastly symbols, To cross and scourge and thorn; Ye seek his Syrian manger Who in the heart is born. "For the dead Christ, not the living, "O blind ones, outward groping, Who listens to his inward voice "Climb not the holy mountains, "The gods are gone forever From Zanskar's glacier sides, "No more from shaded Delphos The weird responses come; Dodona's oaks are silent, The Hebrew Bath-Col dumb! "No more from rocky Horeb The smitten waters gush; Fallen is Bethel's ladder, "The jewels of the Urim And Thummim all are dim; The fire has left the altar, "No more in ark or hill grove The Holiest abides; Not in the scroll's dead letter The eternal secret hides. "The eye shall fail that searches "What if the earth is hiding Her old faiths, long outworn? "What if the o'erturned altar "Have ye not still my witness My hand that on the keys of life "Still, in perpetual judgment, "A light, a guide, a warning, Through the deep silence of the flesh "My Gerizim and Ebal Are in each human soul, The still, small voice of blessing, "The stern behests of duty, The doom-books open thrown, A gold and purple sunset Flowed down the broad Moselle; The peace of twilight fell. The slow, cool wind of evening Then up rose Master Echard, And marveled: "Can it be That here, in dream and vision, The Lord hath talked with me?' He went his way; behind him He sought the vale of Eltzbach And, at his Order's kloster, He sat, in night-long parle, With Tauler of the Friends of God, And lo, the twain made answer: "Yea, brother, even thus The Voice above all voices "The world will have its idols, And flesh and sense their sign; But the blinded eyes shall open, And the gross ear be fine. "What if the vision tarry? God's time is always best; The true Light shall be witnessed, "In mercy and in judgment He shall turn and overturn, Till the heart shall be His temple, John Greenleaf Whittier. VII. THE EUROPEANS. FELIX YOUNG finished Gertrude's portrait, and he afterwards transferred to canvas the features of many members of that circle of which it may be said that he had become, for the time, the pivot and the centre. I am afraid it must be confessed that he was a decidedly flattering painter, and that he imparted to his models a romantic grace which seemed easily and cheaply acquired by the payment of a hundred dollars to a young man who made "sitting" so entertaining. For Felix was paid for his pictures, making, as he did, no secret of the fact that in guiding his steps to the Western world affectionate curiosity had gone hand in hand with a desire to better his condition. He took his uncle's portrait quite as if Mr. Wentworth had never averted himself from the experiment; and as he compassed his end only by the exercise of gentle violence it is but fair to add that he allowed the old man to give him nothing but his time. He passed his arm into Mr. Wentworth's one summer morning, very few arms, indeed, had ever passed into Mr. Wentworth's, and led him across the garden and along the road into the studio which he had extemporized in the little house among the apple-trees. The grave gentleman felt himself more and more fascinated by his clever nephew, whose fresh, demonstrative youth seemed a compendium of experiences so strangely numerous. It appeared to him that Felix must know a great deal; he would like to learn what he thought about some of those things as regards which his own conversation had always been formal, but his knowledge vague. Felix had a confident, gayly trenchant way of judging human actions which Mr. Wentworth grew little by little to envy; it seemed like criticism made easy. Forming an opinion say on a person's conduct — was, with Mr. Wentworth, a good deal like fumbling in a lock with a key chosen at hazard. He seemed to himself to go about the world with a big bunch of these ineffectual instruments at his girdle. His nephew, on the other hand, with a single turn of the wrist, opened any door as adroitly as a house - thief. He felt obliged to keep up the convention that an uncle is always wiser than a nephew, even if he could keep it up no otherwise than by listening in serious silence to Felix's quick, light, constant discourse. But there came a day when he lapsed from consistency and almost asked his nephew's advice. "Have you ever entertained the idea of settling in the United States?" he asked one morning, while Felix brilliantly plied his brush. "My dear uncle," said Felix, "excuse me if your question makes me smile a little. To begin with, I have never entertained an idea. Ideas often entertain me; but I am afraid I have never seriously made a plan. I know what you are going to say; or rather, I know what you think, for I don't think you will say it, that is very frivolous and loose-minded on my part. So it is; but I am made like that; I take things as they come, and somehow there is always some new thing to follow the last. In the second place, I should never propose to settle. I can't settle, my dear uncle; I'm not a settler. I know that is what strangers are supposed to do here; they always settle. But I have n't— to answer your question-entertained that idea." "You intend to return to Europe and resume your irregular manner of life?" Mr. Wentworth inquired. "I can't say I intend. But it's very likely I shall go back to Europe. After. all, I am a European. I feel that, you know. It will depend a good deal upon my sister. She's even more of a European than I; here, you know, she's a picture out of her setting. And as for resuming,' dear uncle, I really have never given up my irregular manner of life. What, for me, could be more irregular than this?" "Than what?" asked Mr. Wentworth, with his pale gravity. "Well, than everything! Living in the midst of you, this way; this charming, quiet, serious family life; fraternizing with Charlotte and Gertrude; calling upon twenty young ladies, and going out to walk with them; sitting with you in the evening on the piazza and listening to the crickets, and going to bed at ten o'clock." "Your description is very animated," said Mr. Wentworth; "but I see nothing improper in what you describe." "Neither do I, dear uncle. It is extremely delightful; I should n't like it if it were improper. I assure you I don't like improper things; though I dare say you think I do," Felix went on, painting away. "I have never accused you of that.” Pray don't," said Felix, "because, you see, at bottom I am a terrible Philistine." "A Philistine?" repeated Mr. Wentworth. "I mean, as one may say, a plain, God-fearing man." Mr. Wentworth looked at him reservedly, like a mystified sage, and Felix continued, "I trust I shall enjoy a venerable and venerated old age. I mean to live long. I can hardly call that a plan, perhaps; but it's a keen desire, a rosy vision. I shall be a lively, perhaps even a frivolous old man!" "It is natural," said his uncle, sententiously, "that one should desire to prolong an agreeable life. We have perhaps a selfish indisposition to bring our pleasure to a close. But I presume," he added, "that you expect to marry.' "That too, dear uncle, is a hope, a desire, a vision," said Felix. It occurred to him for an instant that this was possibly a preface to the offer of the hand of one of Mr. Wentworth's admirable daughters. But in the name of decent modesty and a proper sense of the hard realities of this world, Felix ban ished the thought. His uncle was the incarnation of benevolence, certainly; but from that to accepting much more postulating the idea of a union between a young lady with a dowry presumptively brilliant and a penniless artist with no prospect of fame, there was a very long way. Felix had lately become conscious of a luxurious preference for the society if possible, unshared with others of Gertrude Wentworth; but he had relegated this young lady, for the moment, to the coldly brilliant category of unattainable possessions. She was not the first woman for whom he had entertained an unpractical admiration. He had been in love with duchesses and countesses, and he had made, once or twice, a perilously near approach to cynicism in declaring that the disinterestedness of women had been overrated. On the whole, he had tempered audacity with modesty; and it is but fair to him, now, to say explicitly that he would have been incapable of taking advantage of his present large allowance of familiarity to make love to the younger of his handsome cousins. Felix had grown up among traditions in the light of which such a proceeding looked like a grievous breach of hospitality. I have said that he was always happy, and it may be counted among the present sources of his happiness that he had, as regards this matter of his relations with Gertrude, a deliciously good conscience. His own deportment seemed to him suffused with the beauty of virtue, a form of beauty that he admired with the same vivacity with which he admired all other forms. "I think that if you marry," said Mr. Wentworth presently, "it will conduce to your happiness." "Sicurissimo!" Felix exclaimed; and then, arresting his brush, he looked at his uncle with a smile. "There is something I feel tempted to say to you. May I risk it?" Mr. Wentworth drew himself up a little. "I am very safe; I don't repeat things." But he hoped Felix would not risk too much. Felix was laughing at his answer. |