<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> Chapter V </h2>
<p>Some time had elapsed when there happened another occurrence, still more
remarkable. Pleyel, on his return from Europe, brought information of
considerable importance to my brother. My ancestors were noble Saxons, and
possessed large domains in Lusatia. The Prussian wars had destroyed those
persons whose right to these estates precluded my brother's. Pleyel had
been exact in his inquiries, and had discovered that, by the law of
male-primogeniture, my brother's claims were superior to those of any
other person now living. Nothing was wanting but his presence in that
country, and a legal application to establish this claim.</p>
<p>Pleyel strenuously recommended this measure. The advantages he thought
attending it were numerous, and it would argue the utmost folly to neglect
them. Contrary to his expectation he found my brother averse to the
scheme. Slight efforts, he, at first, thought would subdue his reluctance;
but he found this aversion by no means slight. The interest that he took
in the happiness of his friend and his sister, and his own partiality to
the Saxon soil, from which he had likewise sprung, and where he had spent
several years of his youth, made him redouble his exertions to win
Wieland's consent. For this end he employed every argument that his
invention could suggest. He painted, in attractive colours, the state of
manners and government in that country, the security of civil rights, and
the freedom of religious sentiments. He dwelt on the privileges of wealth
and rank, and drew from the servile condition of one class, an argument in
favor of his scheme, since the revenue and power annexed to a German
principality afford so large a field for benevolence. The evil flowing
from this power, in malignant hands, was proportioned to the good that
would arise from the virtuous use of it. Hence, Wieland, in forbearing to
claim his own, withheld all the positive felicity that would accrue to his
vassals from his success, and hazarded all the misery that would redound
from a less enlightened proprietor.</p>
<p>It was easy for my brother to repel these arguments, and to shew that no
spot on the globe enjoyed equal security and liberty to that which he at
present inhabited. That if the Saxons had nothing to fear from
mis-government, the external causes of havoc and alarm were numerous and
manifest. The recent devastations committed by the Prussians furnished a
specimen of these. The horrors of war would always impend over them, till
Germany were seized and divided by Austrian and Prussian tyrants; an event
which he strongly suspected was at no great distance. But setting these
considerations aside, was it laudable to grasp at wealth and power even
when they were within our reach? Were not these the two great sources of
depravity? What security had he, that in this change of place and
condition, he should not degenerate into a tyrant and voluptuary? Power
and riches were chiefly to be dreaded on account of their tendency to
deprave the possessor. He held them in abhorrence, not only as instruments
of misery to others, but to him on whom they were conferred. Besides,
riches were comparative, and was he not rich already? He lived at present
in the bosom of security and luxury. All the instruments of pleasure, on
which his reason or imagination set any value, were within his reach. But
these he must forego, for the sake of advantages which, whatever were
their value, were as yet uncertain. In pursuit of an imaginary addition to
his wealth, he must reduce himself to poverty, he must exchange present
certainties for what was distant and contingent; for who knows not that
the law is a system of expence, delay and uncertainty? If he should
embrace this scheme, it would lay him under the necessity of making a
voyage to Europe, and remaining for a certain period, separate from his
family. He must undergo the perils and discomforts of the ocean; he must
divest himself of all domestic pleasures; he must deprive his wife of her
companion, and his children of a father and instructor, and all for what?
For the ambiguous advantages which overgrown wealth and flagitious tyranny
have to bestow? For a precarious possession in a land of turbulence and
war? Advantages, which will not certainly be gained, and of which the
acquisition, if it were sure, is necessarily distant.</p>
<p>Pleyel was enamoured of his scheme on account of its intrinsic benefits,
but, likewise, for other reasons. His abode at Leipsig made that country
appear to him like home. He was connected with this place by many social
ties. While there he had not escaped the amorous contagion. But the lady,
though her heart was impressed in his favor, was compelled to bestow her
hand upon another. Death had removed this impediment, and he was now
invited by the lady herself to return. This he was of course determined to
do, but was anxious to obtain the company of Wieland; he could not bear to
think of an eternal separation from his present associates. Their
interest, he thought, would be no less promoted by the change than his
own. Hence he was importunate and indefatigable in his arguments and
solicitations.</p>
<p>He knew that he could not hope for mine or his sister's ready concurrence
in this scheme. Should the subject be mentioned to us, we should league
our efforts against him, and strengthen that reluctance in Wieland which
already was sufficiently difficult to conquer. He, therefore, anxiously
concealed from us his purpose. If Wieland were previously enlisted in his
cause, he would find it a less difficult task to overcome our aversion. My
brother was silent on this subject, because he believed himself in no
danger of changing his opinion, and he was willing to save us from any
uneasiness. The mere mention of such a scheme, and the possibility of his
embracing it, he knew, would considerably impair our tranquillity.</p>
<p>One day, about three weeks subsequent to the mysterious call, it was
agreed that the family should be my guests. Seldom had a day been passed
by us, of more serene enjoyment. Pleyel had promised us his company, but
we did not see him till the sun had nearly declined. He brought with him a
countenance that betokened disappointment and vexation. He did not wait
for our inquiries, but immediately explained the cause. Two days before a
packet had arrived from Hamburgh, by which he had flattered himself with
the expectation of receiving letters, but no letters had arrived. I never
saw him so much subdued by an untoward event. His thoughts were employed
in accounting for the silence of his friends. He was seized with the
torments of jealousy, and suspected nothing less than the infidelity of
her to whom he had devoted his heart. The silence must have been
concerted. Her sickness, or absence, or death, would have increased the
certainty of some one's having written. No supposition could be formed but
that his mistress had grown indifferent, or that she had transferred her
affections to another. The miscarriage of a letter was hardly within the
reach of possibility. From Leipsig to Hamburgh, and from Hamburgh hither,
the conveyance was exposed to no hazard.</p>
<p>He had been so long detained in America chiefly in consequence of
Wieland's aversion to the scheme which he proposed. He now became more
impatient than ever to return to Europe. When he reflected that, by his
delays, he had probably forfeited the affections of his mistress, his
sensations amounted to agony. It only remained, by his speedy departure,
to repair, if possible, or prevent so intolerable an evil. Already he had
half resolved to embark in this very ship which, he was informed, would
set out in a few weeks on her return.</p>
<p>Meanwhile he determined to make a new attempt to shake the resolution of
Wieland. The evening was somewhat advanced when he invited the latter to
walk abroad with him. The invitation was accepted, and they left
Catharine, Louisa and me, to amuse ourselves by the best means in our
power. During this walk, Pleyel renewed the subject that was nearest his
heart. He re-urged all his former arguments, and placed them in more
forcible lights.</p>
<p>They promised to return shortly; but hour after hour passed, and they made
not their appearance. Engaged in sprightly conversation, it was not till
the clock struck twelve that we were reminded of the lapse of time. The
absence of our friends excited some uneasy apprehensions. We were
expressing our fears, and comparing our conjectures as to what might be
the cause, when they entered together. There were indications in their
countenances that struck me mute. These were unnoticed by Catharine, who
was eager to express her surprize and curiosity at the length of their
walk. As they listened to her, I remarked that their surprize was not less
than ours. They gazed in silence on each other, and on her. I watched
their looks, but could not understand the emotions that were written in
them.</p>
<p>These appearances diverted Catharine's inquiries into a new channel. What
did they mean, she asked, by their silence, and by their thus gazing
wildly at each other, and at her? Pleyel profited by this hint, and
assuming an air of indifference, framed some trifling excuse, at the same
time darting significant glances at Wieland, as if to caution him against
disclosing the truth. My brother said nothing, but delivered himself up to
meditation. I likewise was silent, but burned with impatience to fathom
this mystery. Presently my brother and his wife, and Louisa, returned
home. Pleyel proposed, of his own accord, to be my guest for the night.
This circumstance, in addition to those which preceded, gave new edge to
my wonder.</p>
<p>As soon as we were left alone, Pleyel's countenance assumed an air of
seriousness, and even consternation, which I had never before beheld in
him. The steps with which he measured the floor betokened the trouble of
his thoughts. My inquiries were suspended by the hope that he would give
me the information that I wanted without the importunity of questions. I
waited some time, but the confusion of his thoughts appeared in no degree
to abate. At length I mentioned the apprehensions which their unusual
absence had occasioned, and which were increased by their behaviour since
their return, and solicited an explanation. He stopped when I began to
speak, and looked stedfastly at me. When I had done, he said, to me, in a
tone which faultered through the vehemence of his emotions, "How were you
employed during our absence?" "In turning over the Della Crusca
dictionary, and talking on different subjects; but just before your
entrance, we were tormenting ourselves with omens and prognosticks
relative to your absence." "Catherine was with you the whole time?" "Yes."
"But are you sure?" "Most sure. She was not absent a moment." He stood,
for a time, as if to assure himself of my sincerity. Then, clinching his
hands, and wildly lifting them above his head, "Lo," cried he, "I have
news to tell you. The Baroness de Stolberg is dead?"</p>
<p>This was her whom he loved. I was not surprised at the agitations which he
betrayed. "But how was the information procured? How was the truth of this
news connected with the circumstance of Catharine's remaining in our
company?" He was for some time inattentive to my questions. When he spoke,
it seemed merely a continuation of the reverie into which he had been
plunged.</p>
<p>"And yet it might be a mere deception. But could both of us in that case
have been deceived? A rare and prodigious coincidence! Barely not
impossible. And yet, if the accent be oracular—Theresa is dead. No,
no," continued he, covering his face with his hands, and in a tone half
broken into sobs, "I cannot believe it. She has not written, but if she
were dead, the faithful Bertrand would have given me the earliest
information. And yet if he knew his master, he must have easily guessed at
the effect of such tidings. In pity to me he was silent."</p>
<p>"Clara, forgive me; to you, this behaviour is mysterious. I will explain
as well as I am able. But say not a word to Catharine. Her strength of
mind is inferior to your's. She will, besides, have more reason to be
startled. She is Wieland's angel."</p>
<p>Pleyel proceeded to inform me, for the first time, of the scheme which he
had pressed, with so much earnestness, on my brother. He enumerated the
objections which had been made, and the industry with which he had
endeavoured to confute them. He mentioned the effect upon his resolutions
produced by the failure of a letter. "During our late walk," continued he,
"I introduced the subject that was nearest my heart. I re-urged all my
former arguments, and placed them in more forcible lights. Wieland was
still refractory. He expatiated on the perils of wealth and power, on the
sacredness of conjugal and parental duties, and the happiness of
mediocrity.</p>
<p>"No wonder that the time passed, unperceived, away. Our whole souls were
engaged in this cause. Several times we came to the foot of the rock; as
soon as we perceived it, we changed our course, but never failed to
terminate our circuitous and devious ramble at this spot. At length your
brother observed, 'We seem to be led hither by a kind of fatality. Since
we are so near, let us ascend and rest ourselves a while. If you are not
weary of this argument we will resume it there.'</p>
<p>"I tacitly consented. We mounted the stairs, and drawing the sofa in front
of the river, we seated ourselves upon it. I took up the thread of our
discourse where we had dropped it. I ridiculed his dread of the sea, and
his attachment to home. I kept on in this strain, so congenial with my
disposition, for some time, uninterrupted by him. At length, he said to
me, "Suppose now that I, whom argument has not convinced, should yield to
ridicule, and should agree that your scheme is eligible; what will you
have gained? Nothing. You have other enemies beside myself to encounter.
When you have vanquished me, your toil has scarcely begun. There are my
sister and wife, with whom it will remain for you to maintain the contest.
And trust me, they are adversaries whom all your force and stratagem will
never subdue." I insinuated that they would model themselves by his will:
that Catharine would think obedience her duty. He answered, with some
quickness, "You mistake. Their concurrence is indispensable. It is not my
custom to exact sacrifices of this kind. I live to be their protector and
friend, and not their tyrant and foe. If my wife shall deem her happiness,
and that of her children, most consulted by remaining where she is, here
she shall remain." "But," said I, "when she knows your pleasure, will she
not conform to it?" Before my friend had time to answer this question, a
negative was clearly and distinctly uttered from another quarter. It did
not come from one side or the other, from before us or behind. Whence then
did it come? By whose organs was it fashioned?</p>
<p>"If any uncertainty had existed with regard to these particulars, it would
have been removed by a deliberate and equally distinct repetition of the
same monosyllable, "No." The voice was my sister's. It appeared to come
from the roof. I started from my seat. Catharine, exclaimed I, where are
you? No answer was returned. I searched the room, and the area before it,
but in vain. Your brother was motionless in his seat. I returned to him,
and placed myself again by his side. My astonishment was not less than
his."</p>
<p>"Well," said he, at length, "What think you of this? This is the self-same
voice which I formerly heard; you are now convinced that my ears were well
informed."</p>
<p>"Yes," said I, "this, it is plain, is no fiction of the fancy." We again
sunk into mutual and thoughtful silence. A recollection of the hour, and
of the length of our absence, made me at last propose to return. We rose
up for this purpose. In doing this, my mind reverted to the contemplation
of my own condition. "Yes," said I aloud, but without particularly
addressing myself to Wieland, "my resolution is taken. I cannot hope to
prevail with my friends to accompany me. They may doze away their days on
the banks of Schuylkill, but as to me, I go in the next vessel; I will fly
to her presence, and demand the reason of this extraordinary silence."</p>
<p>"I had scarcely finished the sentence, when the same mysterious voice
exclaimed, "You shall not go. The seal of death is on her lips. Her
silence is the silence of the tomb." Think of the effects which accents
like these must have had upon me. I shuddered as I listened. As soon as I
recovered from my first amazement, "Who is it that speaks?" said I,
"whence did you procure these dismal tidings?" I did not wait long for an
answer. "From a source that cannot fail. Be satisfied. She is dead." You
may justly be surprised, that, in the circumstances in which I heard the
tidings, and notwithstanding the mystery which environed him by whom they
were imparted, I could give an undivided attention to the facts, which
were the subject of our dialogue. I eagerly inquired, when and where did
she die? What was the cause of her death? Was her death absolutely
certain? An answer was returned only to the last of these questions.
"Yes," was pronounced by the same voice; but it now sounded from a greater
distance, and the deepest silence was all the return made to my subsequent
interrogatories.</p>
<p>"It was my sister's voice; but it could not be uttered by her; and yet, if
not by her, by whom was it uttered? When we returned hither, and
discovered you together, the doubt that had previously existed was
removed. It was manifest that the intimation came not from her. Yet if not
from her, from whom could it come? Are the circumstances attending the
imparting of this news proof that the tidings are true? God forbid that
they should be true."</p>
<p>Here Pleyel sunk into anxious silence, and gave me leisure to ruminate on
this inexplicable event. I am at a loss to describe the sensations that
affected me. I am not fearful of shadows. The tales of apparitions and
enchantments did not possess that power over my belief which could even
render them interesting. I saw nothing in them but ignorance and folly,
and was a stranger even to that terror which is pleasing. But this
incident was different from any that I had ever before known. Here were
proofs of a sensible and intelligent existence, which could not be denied.
Here was information obtained and imparted by means unquestionably
super-human.</p>
<p>That there are conscious beings, beside ourselves, in existence, whose
modes of activity and information surpass our own, can scarcely be denied.
Is there a glimpse afforded us into a world of these superior beings? My
heart was scarcely large enough to give admittance to so swelling a
thought. An awe, the sweetest and most solemn that imagination can
conceive, pervaded my whole frame. It forsook me not when I parted from
Pleyel and retired to my chamber. An impulse was given to my spirits
utterly incompatible with sleep. I passed the night wakeful and full of
meditation. I was impressed with the belief of mysterious, but not of
malignant agency. Hitherto nothing had occurred to persuade me that this
airy minister was busy to evil rather than to good purposes. On the
contrary, the idea of superior virtue had always been associated in my
mind with that of superior power. The warnings that had thus been heard
appeared to have been prompted by beneficent intentions. My brother had
been hindered by this voice from ascending the hill. He was told that
danger lurked in his path, and his obedience to the intimation had perhaps
saved him from a destiny similar to that of my father.</p>
<p>Pleyel had been rescued from tormenting uncertainty, and from the hazards
and fatigues of a fruitless voyage, by the same interposition. It had
assured him of the death of his Theresa.</p>
<p>This woman was then dead. A confirmation of the tidings, if true, would
speedily arrive. Was this confirmation to be deprecated or desired? By her
death, the tie that attached him to Europe, was taken away. Henceforward
every motive would combine to retain him in his native country, and we
were rescued from the deep regrets that would accompany his hopeless
absence from us. Propitious was the spirit that imparted these tidings.
Propitious he would perhaps have been, if he had been instrumental in
producing, as well as in communicating the tidings of her death.
Propitious to us, the friends of Pleyel, to whom has thereby been secured
the enjoyment of his society; and not unpropitious to himself; for though
this object of his love be snatched away, is there not another who is able
and willing to console him for her loss?</p>
<p>Twenty days after this, another vessel arrived from the same port. In this
interval, Pleyel, for the most part, estranged himself from his old
companions. He was become the prey of a gloomy and unsociable grief. His
walks were limited to the bank of the Delaware. This bank is an artificial
one. Reeds and the river are on one side, and a watery marsh on the other,
in that part which bounded his lands, and which extended from the mouth of
Hollander's creek to that of Schuylkill. No scene can be imagined less
enticing to a lover of the picturesque than this. The shore is deformed
with mud, and incumbered with a forest of reeds. The fields, in most
seasons, are mire; but when they afford a firm footing, the ditches by
which they are bounded and intersected, are mantled with stagnating green,
and emit the most noxious exhalations. Health is no less a stranger to
those seats than pleasure. Spring and autumn are sure to be accompanied
with agues and bilious remittents.</p>
<p>The scenes which environed our dwellings at Mettingen constituted the
reverse of this. Schuylkill was here a pure and translucid current, broken
into wild and ceaseless music by rocky points, murmuring on a sandy
margin, and reflecting on its surface, banks of all varieties of height
and degrees of declivity. These banks were chequered by patches of dark
verdure and shapeless masses of white marble, and crowned by copses of
cedar, or by the regular magnificence of orchards, which, at this season,
were in blossom, and were prodigal of odours. The ground which receded
from the river was scooped into valleys and dales. Its beauties were
enhanced by the horticultural skill of my brother, who bedecked this
exquisite assemblage of slopes and risings with every species of vegetable
ornament, from the giant arms of the oak to the clustering tendrils of the
honey-suckle.</p>
<p>To screen him from the unwholesome airs of his own residence, it had been
proposed to Pleyel to spend the months of spring with us. He had
apparently acquiesced in this proposal; but the late event induced him to
change his purpose. He was only to be seen by visiting him in his
retirements. His gaiety had flown, and every passion was absorbed in
eagerness to procure tidings from Saxony. I have mentioned the arrival of
another vessel from the Elbe. He descried her early one morning as he was
passing along the skirt of the river. She was easily recognized, being the
ship in which he had performed his first voyage to Germany. He immediately
went on board, but found no letters directed to him. This omission was, in
some degree, compensated by meeting with an old acquaintance among the
passengers, who had till lately been a resident in Leipsig. This person
put an end to all suspense respecting the fate of Theresa, by relating the
particulars of her death and funeral.</p>
<p>Thus was the truth of the former intimation attested. No longer devoured
by suspense, the grief of Pleyel was not long in yielding to the influence
of society. He gave himself up once more to our company. His vivacity had
indeed been damped; but even in this respect he was a more acceptable
companion than formerly, since his seriousness was neither incommunicative
nor sullen.</p>
<p>These incidents, for a time, occupied all our thoughts. In me they
produced a sentiment not unallied to pleasure, and more speedily than in
the case of my friends were intermixed with other topics. My brother was
particularly affected by them. It was easy to perceive that most of his
meditations were tinctured from this source. To this was to be ascribed a
design in which his pen was, at this period, engaged, of collecting and
investigating the facts which relate to that mysterious personage, the
Daemon of Socrates.</p>
<p>My brother's skill in Greek and Roman learning was exceeded by that of
few, and no doubt the world would have accepted a treatise upon this
subject from his hand with avidity; but alas! this and every other scheme
of felicity and honor, were doomed to sudden blast and hopeless
extermination.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />