 |

XIII
Zenobia's Legend
THE ILLUSTRIOUS
Society
of Blithedale, though it
toiled in downright earnest for the good of
mankind, yet not unfrequently illuminated its
laborious life with an afternoon or evening of
pastime. Pic-nics under the trees were
considerably in vogue; and, within doors,
fragmentary bits of theatrical performance, such
as single acts of tragedy or comedy, or dramatic
proverbs and charades. Zenobia, besides, was fond
of giving us readings from Shakspeare, and often
with a depth of tragic power, or breadth of comic
effect, that made one feel it an intolerable wrong
to the world, that she did not at once go upon the
stage. Tableaux vivants were another of
our occasional modes of amusement, in which
scarlet shawls, old silken robes, ruffs, velvets,
furs, and all kinds of miscellaneous trumpery,
converted our familiar companions into the people
of a pictorial world. We had been thus engaged,
on the evening after the incident narrated in the
last chapter. Several splendid works of
art--either arranged after engravings from the Old
Masters, or original illustrations of scenes in
history or romance--had been presented, and we
were earnestly entreating Zenobia for more.
She stood,
with a meditative air, holding a large
piece of gauze, or some such ethereal stuff, as if
considering what picture should next occupy the
frame; while at her feet lay a heap of
many-colored garments, which her quick fancy and
magic skill could so easily convert into gorgeous
draperies for heroes and princesses.
"I am
getting weary of this," said she, after a
moment's thought. "Our own features, and our own
figures and airs, show a little too intrusively
through all the characters we assurne. We have so
much familiarity with one another's realities,
that we cannot remove ourselves, at pleasure, into
an imaginary sphere. Let us have no more
pictures, to-night; but, to make you what poor
amends I can, how would you like to have me trump
up a wild, spectral legend, on the spur of the
moment?"
Zenobia had
the gift of telling a fanciful little
story, off hand, in a way that made it greatly
more effective, than it was usually found to be,
when she afterwards elaborated the same production
with her pen. Her proposal, therefore, was
greeted with acclamation.
"Oh, a
story, a story, by all means!" cried the
young girls. "No matter how marvellous, we will
believe it, every word! And let it be a
ghost-story, if you please!"
"No; not
exactly a ghost-story," answered Zenobia;
"but something so nearly like it that you shall
hardly tell the difference. And, Priscilla, stand
you before me, where I may look at you, and get my
inspiration out of your eyes. They are very deep
and dreamy, to-night!"
I know
not whether the following version of her
story will retain any portion of its pristine
character. But, as Zenobia told it, wildly and
rapidly, hesitating at no extravagance, and
dashing at absurdities which I am too timorous to
repeat--giving it the varied emphasis of her
inimitable voice, and the pictorial illustration
of her mobile face, while, through it all, we
caught the freshest aroma of the thoughts, as they
came bubbling out of her mind--thus narrated, and
thus heard, the legend seemed quite a remarkable
affair. I scarcely knew, at the time, whether she
intended us to laugh, or be more seriously
impressed. From beginning to end it was
undeniable nonsense, but not necessarily the worse
for that.
THE SILVERY VEIL
You have
heard, my dear friends, of the Veiled
Lady, who grew suddenly so very famous, a few
months ago. And have you never thought how
remarkable it was, that this marvellous creature
should vanish, all at once, while her renown was
on the increase, before the public had grown weary
of her, and when the enigma of her character,
instead of being solved, presented itself more
mystically at every exhibition? Her last
appearance, as you know, was before a crowded
audience. The next evening--although the bills
had announced her, at the corner of every street,
in red letters of a gigantic size--there was no
Veiled Lady to be seen! Now, listen to my simple
little tale; and you shall hear the very latest
incident in the known life--(if life it may be
called, which seemed to have no more reality than
the candlelight image of one's self, which peeps
at us outside of a dark window-pane)--the life of
this shadowy phenomenon.
A party
of young gentlemen, you are to understand,
were enjoying themselves, one afternoon, as
young gentlemen are sometimes fond of doing, over
a bottle or two of champagne; and--among other
ladies less mysterious--the subject of the Veiled
Lady, as was very natural, happened to come up
before them for discussion. She rose, as it were,
with the sparkling effervescence of their wine,
and appeared in a more airy and fantastic light,
on account of the medium through which they saw
her. They repeated to one another, between jest
and earnest, all the wild stories that were in
vogue; nor, I presume, did they hesitate to add
any small circumstance that the inventive whim of
the moment might suggest, to heighten the
marvellousness of their theme.
"But what
an audacious report was that," observed
one, "which pretended to assert the identity of
this strange creature with a young lady"--and here
he mentioned her name--"the daughter of one of our
most distinguished families!"
"Ah, there
is more in that story than can well be
accounted for!" remarked another. "I have it on
good authority, that the young lady in question is
invariably out of sight, and not to be traced,
even by her own family, at the hours when the
Veiled Lady is before the public; nor can any
satisfactory explanation be given of her
disappearance. And just look at the thing! Her
brother is a young fellow of spirit. He cannot
but be aware of these rumors in reference to his
sister. Why, then, does he not come forward to
defend her character, unless he is conscious that
an investigation would only make the matter
worse?"
It is
essential to the purposes of my legend to
distinguish one of these young gentlemen from his
companions; so, for the sake of a soft and pretty
name, (such as we, of the literary sisterhood,
invariably bestow upon our heroes,) I deem it fit
to call him "Theodore."
"Pshaw!" exclaimed
Theodore. "Her brother is no
such fool! Nobody, unless his brain be as full of
bubbles as this wine, can seriously think of
crediting that ridiculous rumor. Why, if my
senses did not play me false, (which never was the
case yet,) I affirm that I saw that very lady,
last evening, at the exhibition, while this veiled
phenomenon was playing off her juggling tricks!
What can you say to that?"
"Oh, it
was a spectral illusion that you saw!"
replied his friends, with a general laugh. "The
Veiled Lady is quite up to such a thing."
However, as
the above-mentioned fable could not
hold its ground against Theodore's downright
refutation, they went on to speak of other
stories, which the wild babble of the town had set
afloat. Some upheld, that the veil covered the
most beautiful countenance in the world;
others--and certainly with more reason,
considering the sex of the Veiled Lady--that the
face was the most hideous and horrible, and that
this was her sole motive for hiding it. It was
the face of a corpse; it was the head of a
skeleton; it was a monstrous visage, with snaky
locks, like Medusa's, and one great red eye in the
centre of the forehead. Again, it was affirmed,
that there was no single and unchangeable set of
features, beneath the veil, but that whosoever
should be bold enough to lift it, would behold the
features of that person, in all the world, who was
destined to be his fate; perhaps he would be
greeted by the tender smile of the woman whom he
loved; or, quite as probably, the deadly scowl of
his bitterest enemy would throw a blight over his
life. They quoted, moreover, this startling
explanation of the whole affair:--that the
Magician (who exhibited the Veiled Lady, and who,
by-the-by, was the handsomest man in the whole
world) had bartered his own soul for seven years'
possession of a familiar fiend, and that the last
year of the contract was wearing towards its
close.
If it
were worth our while, I could keep you till
an hour beyond midnight, listening to a thousand
such absurdities as these. But, finally, our
friend Theodore, who prided himself upon his
common-sense, found the matter getting quite
beyond his patience.
"I offer
any wager you like," cried he, setting
down his glass so forcibly as to break the stem of
it, "that, this very evening, I find out the
mystery of the Veiled Lady!"
Young men,
I am told, boggle at nothing, over
their wine. So, after a little more talk, a wager
of considerable amount was actually laid, the
money staked, and Theodore left to choose his own
method of settling the dispute.
How he
managed it, I know not, nor is it of any
great importance to this veracious legend; the
most natural way, to be sure, was by bribing the
door-keeper, or, possibly, he preferred clambering
in at the window. But, at any rate, that very
evening, while the exhibition was going forward in
the hall, Theodore contrived to gain admittance
into the private with drawing-room, whither the
Veiled Lady was accustomed to retire, at the close
of her performances. There he waited,
listening, I suppose, to the stifled hum of the
great audience; and, no doubt, he could
distinguish the deep tones of the Magician,
causing the wonders that he wrought to appear more
dark and intricate, by his mystic presence of an
explanation; perhaps, too, in the intervals of the
wild, breezy music which accompanied the
exhibition, he might hear the low voice of the
Veiled Lady, conveying her sibylline responses.
Firm as Theodore's nerves might be, and much as he
prided himself on his sturdy perception of
realities, I should not be surprised if his heart
throbbed at a little more than its ordinary rate!
Theodore concealed
himself behind a screen. In
due time, the performance was brought to a close;
and whether the door was softly opened, or whether
her bodiless presence came through the wall, is
more than I can say; but, all at once, without the
young man's knowing how it happened, a veiled
figure stood in the centre of the room. It was
one thing to be in presence of this mystery, in
the hall of exhibition, where the warm, dense life
of hundreds of other mortals kept up the
beholder's courage, and distributed her influence
among so many; it was another thing to be quite
alone with her, and that, too, with a hostile, or,
at least, an unauthorized and unjustifiable
purpose. I rather imagine that Theodore now began
to be sensible of something more serious in his
enterprise than he had been quite aware of, while
he sat with his boon-companions over their
sparkling wine.
Very strange,
it must be confessed, was the
movement with which the figure floated to-and-fro
over the carpet, with the silvery veil covering
her from head to foot; so impalpable, so ethereal,
so without substance, as the texture seemed, yet
hiding her every outline in an impenetrability
like that of midnight. Surely, she did not walk!
She floated, and flitted, and hovered about the
room;--no sound of a footstep, no perceptible
motion of a limb;--it was as if a wandering breeze
wafted her before it, at its own wild and gentle
pleasure. But, by-and-by, a purpose began to be
discernible, throughout the seeming vagueness of
her unrest. She was in quest of something! Could
it be, that a subtile presentiment had informed
her of the young man's presence? And, if so, did
the Veiled Lady seek, or did she shun him? The
doubt in Theodore's mind was speedily resolved;
for, after a moment or two of these erratic
flutterings, she advanced, more decidedly, and
stood motionless before the screen.
"Thou art
here!" said a soft, low voice. "Come
forth, Theodore!"
Thus summoned
by his name, Theodore, as a man of
courage, had no choice. He emerged from his
concealment, and presented himself before the
Veiled Lady, with the wine-flush, it may be, quite
gone out of his cheeks.
"What wouldst
thou with me?" she inquired, with
the same gentle composure that was in her former
utterance.
"Mysterious creature,"
replied Theodore, "I would
know who and what you are!"
"My lips
are forbidden to betray the secret!" said
the Veiled Lady.
"At whatever
risk, I must discover it!" rejoined
Theodore.
"Then," said
the Mystery, "there is no way, save
to lift my veil!"
And Theodore,
partly recovering his audacity,
steps forward, on the instant, to do as the Veiled
Lady had suggested. But she floated backward to
the opposite side of the room, as if the young
man's breath had possessed power enough to waft
her away.
"Pause, one
little instant," said the soft, low
voice, "and learn the conditions of what thou art
so bold to undertake! Thou canst go hence, and
think of me no more; or, at thy option, thou canst
lift this mysterious veil, beneath which I am a
sad and lonely prisoner, in a bondage which is
worse to me than death. But, before raising it, I
entreat thee, in all maiden modesty, to bend
forward, and impress a kiss, where my breath stirs
the veil; and my virgin lips shall come forward to
meet thy lips; and from that instant, Theodore,
thou shalt be mine, and I thine, with never more a
veil between us! And all the felicity of earth
and of the future world shall be thine and mine
together. So much may a maiden say behind the
veil! If thou shrinkest from this, there is yet
another way."
"And what
is that?" asked Theodore.
"Dost thou
hesitate," said the Veiled Lady, "to
pledge thyself to me, by meeting these lips of
mine, while the veil yet hides my face? Has not
thy heart recognized me? Dost thou come hither,
not in holy faith, nor with a pure and generous
purpose, but in scornful scepticism and idle
curiosity? Still, thou mayst lift the veil! But
from that instant, Theodore, I am doomed to be thy
evil fate; nor wilt thou ever taste another
breath of happiness!"
There was
a shade of inexpressible sadness in the
utterance of these last words. But Theodore,
whose natural tendency was towards scepticism,
felt himself almost injured and insulted by the
Veiled Lady's proposal that he should pledge
himself, for life and eternity, to so questionable
a creature as herself; or even that she should
suggest an inconsequential kiss, taking into view
the probability that her face was none of the most
bewitching. A delightful idea, truly, that he
should salute the lips of a dead girl, or the jaws
of a skeleton, or the grinning cavity of a
monster's mouth! Even should she prove a comely
maiden enough, in other respects, the odds were
ten to one that her teeth were defective; a
terrible drawback on the delectableness of a kiss!
"Excuse me,
fair lady," said Theodore--and I think
he nearly burst into a laugh--"if I prefer to lift
the veil first; and for this affair of the kiss,
we may decide upon it, afterwards!"
"Thou hast
made thy choice," said the sweet, sad
voice, behind the veil; and there seemed a tender,
but unresentful sense of wrong done to womanhood
by the young man's contemptuous interpretation of
her offer. "I must not counsel thee to pause;
although thy fate is still in shine own hand!"
Grasping at
the veil, he flung it upward, and
caught a glimpse of a pale, lovely face, beneath;
just one momentary glimpse; and then the
apparition vanished, and the silvery veil
fluttered slowly down, and lay upon the floor.
Theodore was alone. Our legend leaves him there.
His retribution was, to pine, forever and ever,
for another sight of that dim, mournful
face--which might have been his life-long,
household, fireside joy--to desire, and waste life
in a feverish quest, and never meet it more!
But what,
in good sooth, had become of the Veiled
Lady? Had all her existence been comprehended
within that mysterious veil, and was she now
annihilated? Or was she a spirit, with a heavenly
essence, but which might have been tamed down to
human bliss, had Theodore been brave and true
enough to claim her? Hearken, my sweet
friends--and hearken, dear Priscilla--and you
shall learn the little more that Zenobia can tell
you!
Just at
the moment, so far as can be ascertained,
when the Veiled Lady vanished, a maiden, pale and
shadowy, rose up amid a knot of visionary people,
who were seeking for the better life. She was so
gentle and so sad--a nameless melancholy gave her
such hold upon their sympathies--that they never
thought of questioning whence she came. She might
have heretofore existed; or her thin substance
might have been moulded out of air, at the very
instant when they first beheld her. It was all
one to them; they took her to their hearts. Among
them was a lady, to whom, more than to all the
rest, this pale, mysterious girl attached herself.
But, one
morning, the lady was wandering in the
woods, and there met her a figure in an Oriental
robe, with a dark beard, and holding in his hand a
silvery veil. He motioned her to stay. Being a
woman of some nerve, she did not shriek, nor run
away, nor faint, as many ladies would have been
apt to do, but stood quietly, and bade him speak.
The truth was, she had seen his face before, but
had never feared it, although she knew him to be a
terrible magician.
"Lady," said
he, with a warning gesture, "you are
in peril!"
"Peril!" she
exclaimed. "And of what nature?"
"There is
a certain maiden," replied the Magician,
"who has come out of the realm of Mystery, and
made herself your most intimate companion. Now,
the fates have so ordained it, that, whether by
her own will, or no, this stranger is your
deadliest enemy. In love, in worldly fortune, in
all your pursuit of happiness, she is doomed to
fling a blight over your prospects. There is but
one possibility of thwarting her disastrous
influence."
"Then, tell
me that one method," said the lady.
"Take this
veil!" he answered, holding forth the
silvery texture. "It is a spell; it is a powerful
enchantment, which I wrought for her sake, and
beneath which she was once my prisoner. Throw it,
at unawares, over the head of this secret foe,
stamp your foot, and cry--'Arise, Magician, here
is the Veiled Lady'--and immediately I will rise
up through the earth, and seize her. And from
that moment, you are safe!"
So the
lady took the silvery veil, which was like
woven air, or like some substance airier than
nothing, and that would float upward and be lost
among the clouds, were she once to let it go.
Returning homeward, she found the shadowy girl,
amid the knot of visionary transcendentalists, who
were still seeking for the better life. She was
joyous, now, and had a rose-bloom in her cheeks,
and was one of the prettiest creatures, and seemed
one of the happiest, that the world could show.
But the lady stole noiselessly behind her, and
threw the veil over her head. As the slight,
ethereal texture sank inevitably down over her
figure, the poor girl strove to raise it, and met
her dear friend's eyes with one glance of mortal
terror, and deep, deep reproach. It could not
change her purpose.
"Arise, Magician!"
she exclaimed, stamping her
foot upon the earth. "Here is the Veiled Lady!"
At the
word, uprose the bearded man in the
Oriental robes--the beautiful!--the dark Magician,
who had bartered away his soul! He threw his arms
around the Veiled Lady; and she was his
bond-slave, forever more!
Zenobia, all
this while, had been holding the
piece of gauze, and so managed it as greatly to
increase the dramatic effect of the legend, at
those points where the magic veil was to be
described. Arriving at the catastrophe, and
uttering the fatal words, she flung the gauze over
Priscilla's head; and, for an instant, her
auditors held their breath, half expecting, I
verily believe, that the Magician would start up
through the floor, and carry off our poor little
friend, before our eyes.
As for
Priscilla, she stood, droopingly, in the
midst of us, making no attempt to remove the veil.
"How do
you find yourself, my love?" said Zenobia,
lifting a corner of the gauze, and peeping beneath
it, with a mischievous smile. "Ah, the dear
little soul! Why, she is really going to faint!
Mr. Coverdale, Mr. Coverdale, pray bring a glass
of water!"
Her nerves
being none of the strongest, Priscilla
hardly recovered her equanimity during the rest of
the evening. This, to be sure, was a great pity;
but, nevertheless, we thought it a very bright
idea of Zenobia's, to bring her legend to so
effective a conclusion.
Page citation: http://www.hawthorneinsalem.org/page/12098/
|  |