<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> Chapter XII </h2>
<p>My way lay through the city. I had scarcely entered it when I was seized
with a general sensation of sickness. Every object grew dim and swam
before my sight. It was with difficulty I prevented myself from sinking to
the bottom of the carriage. I ordered myself to be carried to Mrs.
Baynton's, in hope that an interval of repose would invigorate and refresh
me. My distracted thoughts would allow me but little rest. Growing
somewhat better in the afternoon, I resumed my journey.</p>
<p>My contemplations were limited to a few objects. I regarded my success, in
the purpose which I had in view, as considerably doubtful. I depended, in
some degree, on the suggestions of the moment, and on the materials which
Pleyel himself should furnish me. When I reflected on the nature of the
accusation, I burned with disdain. Would not truth, and the consciousness
of innocence, render me triumphant? Should I not cast from me, with
irresistible force, such atrocious imputations?</p>
<p>What an entire and mournful change has been effected in a few hours! The
gulf that separates man from insects is not wider than that which severs
the polluted from the chaste among women. Yesterday and to-day I am the
same. There is a degree of depravity to which it is impossible for me to
sink; yet, in the apprehension of another, my ancient and intimate
associate, the perpetual witness of my actions, and partaker of my
thoughts, I had ceased to be the same. My integrity was tarnished and
withered in his eyes. I was the colleague of a murderer, and the paramour
of a thief!</p>
<p>His opinion was not destitute of evidence: yet what proofs could
reasonably avail to establish an opinion like this? If the sentiments
corresponded not with the voice that was heard, the evidence was
deficient; but this want of correspondence would have been supposed by me
if I had been the auditor and Pleyel the criminal. But mimicry might still
more plausibly have been employed to explain the scene. Alas! it is the
fate of Clara Wieland to fall into the hands of a precipitate and
inexorable judge.</p>
<p>But what, O man of mischief! is the tendency of thy thoughts? Frustrated
in thy first design, thou wilt not forego the immolation of thy victim. To
exterminate my reputation was all that remained to thee, and this my
guardian has permitted. To dispossess Pleyel of this prejudice may be
impossible; but if that be effected, it cannot be supposed that thy wiles
are exhausted; thy cunning will discover innumerable avenues to the
accomplishment of thy malignant purpose.</p>
<p>Why should I enter the lists against thee? Would to heaven I could disarm
thy vengeance by my deprecations! When I think of all the resources with
which nature and education have supplied thee; that thy form is a
combination of steely fibres and organs of exquisite ductility and
boundless compass, actuated by an intelligence gifted with infinite
endowments, and comprehending all knowledge, I perceive that my doom is
fixed. What obstacle will be able to divert thy zeal or repel thy efforts?
That being who has hitherto protected me has borne testimony to the
formidableness of thy attempts, since nothing less than supernatural
interference could check thy career.</p>
<p>Musing on these thoughts, I arrived, towards the close of the day, at
Pleyel's house. A month before, I had traversed the same path; but how
different were my sensations! Now I was seeking the presence of one who
regarded me as the most degenerate of human kind. I was to plead the cause
of my innocence, against witnesses the most explicit and unerring, of
those which support the fabric of human knowledge. The nearer I approached
the crisis, the more did my confidence decay. When the chaise stopped at
the door, my strength refused to support me, and I threw myself into the
arms of an ancient female domestic. I had not courage to inquire whether
her master was at home. I was tormented with fears that the projected
journey was already undertaken. These fears were removed, by her asking me
whether she should call her young master, who had just gone into his own
room. I was somewhat revived by this intelligence, and resolved
immediately to seek him there.</p>
<p>In my confusion of mind, I neglected to knock at the door, but entered his
apartment without previous notice. This abruptness was altogether
involuntary. Absorbed in reflections of such unspeakable moment, I had no
leisure to heed the niceties of punctilio. I discovered him standing with
his back towards the entrance. A small trunk, with its lid raised, was
before him in which it seemed as if he had been busy in packing his
clothes. The moment of my entrance, he was employed in gazing at something
which he held in his hand.</p>
<p>I imagined that I fully comprehended this scene. The image which he held
before him, and by which his attention was so deeply engaged, I doubted
not to be my own. These preparations for his journey, the cause to which
it was to be imputed, the hopelessness of success in the undertaking on
which I had entered, rushed at once upon my feelings, and dissolved me
into a flood of tears.</p>
<p>Startled by this sound, he dropped the lid of the trunk and turned. The
solemn sadness that previously overspread his countenance, gave sudden way
to an attitude and look of the most vehement astonishment. Perceiving me
unable to uphold myself, he stepped towards me without speaking, and
supported me by his arm. The kindness of this action called forth a new
effusion from my eyes. Weeping was a solace to which, at that time, I had
not grown familiar, and which, therefore, was peculiarly delicious.
Indignation was no longer to be read in the features of my friend. They
were pregnant with a mixture of wonder and pity. Their expression was
easily interpreted. This visit, and these tears, were tokens of my
penitence. The wretch whom he had stigmatized as incurably and obdurately
wicked, now shewed herself susceptible of remorse, and had come to confess
her guilt.</p>
<p>This persuasion had no tendency to comfort me. It only shewed me, with new
evidence, the difficulty of the task which I had assigned myself. We were
mutually silent. I had less power and less inclination than ever to speak.
I extricated myself from his hold, and threw myself on a sofa. He placed
himself by my side, and appeared to wait with impatience and anxiety for
some beginning of the conversation. What could I say? If my mind had
suggested any thing suitable to the occasion, my utterance was suffocated
by tears.</p>
<p>Frequently he attempted to speak, but seemed deterred by some degree of
uncertainty as to the true nature of the scene. At length, in faltering
accents he spoke:</p>
<p>"My friend! would to heaven I were still permitted to call you by that
name. The image that I once adored existed only in my fancy; but though I
cannot hope to see it realized, you may not be totally insensible to the
horrors of that gulf into which you are about to plunge. What heart is
forever exempt from the goadings of compunction and the influx of laudable
propensities?</p>
<p>"I thought you accomplished and wise beyond the rest of women. Not a
sentiment you uttered, not a look you assumed, that were not, in my
apprehension, fraught with the sublimities of rectitude and the
illuminations of genius. Deceit has some bounds. Your education could not
be without influence. A vigorous understanding cannot be utterly devoid of
virtue; but you could not counterfeit the powers of invention and
reasoning. I was rash in my invectives. I will not, but with life,
relinquish all hopes of you. I will shut out every proof that would tell
me that your heart is incurably diseased.</p>
<p>"You come to restore me once more to happiness; to convince me that you
have torn her mask from vice, and feel nothing but abhorrence for the part
you have hitherto acted."</p>
<p>At these words my equanimity forsook me. For a moment I forgot the
evidence from which Pleyel's opinions were derived, the benevolence of his
remonstrances, and the grief which his accents bespoke; I was filled with
indignation and horror at charges so black; I shrunk back and darted at
him a look of disdain and anger. My passion supplied me with words.</p>
<p>"What detestable infatuation was it that led me hither! Why do I patiently
endure these horrible insults! My offences exist only in your own
distempered imagination: you are leagued with the traitor who assailed my
life: you have vowed the destruction of my peace and honor. I deserve
infamy for listening to calumnies so base!"</p>
<p>These words were heard by Pleyel without visible resentment. His
countenance relapsed into its former gloom; but he did not even look at
me. The ideas which had given place to my angry emotions returned, and
once more melted me into tears. "O!" I exclaimed, in a voice broken by
sobs, "what a task is mine! Compelled to hearken to charges which I feel
to be false, but which I know to be believed by him that utters them;
believed too not without evidence, which, though fallacious, is not
unplausible.</p>
<p>"I came hither not to confess, but to vindicate. I know the source of your
opinions. Wieland has informed me on what your suspicions are built. These
suspicions are fostered by you as certainties; the tenor of my life, of
all my conversations and letters, affords me no security; every sentiment
that my tongue and my pen have uttered, bear testimony to the rectitude of
my mind; but this testimony is rejected. I am condemned as brutally
profligate: I am classed with the stupidly and sordidly wicked.</p>
<p>"And where are the proofs that must justify so foul and so improbable an
accusation? You have overheard a midnight conference. Voices have saluted
your ear, in which you imagine yourself to have recognized mine, and that
of a detected villain. The sentiments expressed were not allowed to
outweigh the casual or concerted resemblance of voice. Sentiments the
reverse of all those whose influence my former life had attested, denoting
a mind polluted by grovelling vices, and entering into compact with that
of a thief and a murderer. The nature of these sentiments did not enable
you to detect the cheat, did not suggest to you the possibility that my
voice had been counterfeited by another.</p>
<p>"You were precipitate and prone to condemn. Instead of rushing on the
impostors, and comparing the evidence of sight with that of hearing, you
stood aloof, or you fled. My innocence would not now have stood in need of
vindication, if this conduct had been pursued. That you did not pursue it,
your present thoughts incontestibly prove. Yet this conduct might surely
have been expected from Pleyel. That he would not hastily impute the
blackest of crimes, that he would not couple my name with infamy, and
cover me with ruin for inadequate or slight reasons, might reasonably have
been expected." The sobs which convulsed my bosom would not suffer me to
proceed.</p>
<p>Pleyel was for a moment affected. He looked at me with some expression of
doubt; but this quickly gave place to a mournful solemnity. He fixed his
eyes on the floor as in reverie, and spoke:</p>
<p>"Two hours hence I am gone. Shall I carry away with me the sorrow that is
now my guest? or shall that sorrow be accumulated tenfold? What is she
that is now before me? Shall every hour supply me with new proofs of a
wickedness beyond example? Already I deem her the most abandoned and
detestable of human creatures. Her coming and her tears imparted a gleam
of hope, but that gleam has vanished."</p>
<p>He now fixed his eyes upon me, and every muscle in his face trembled. His
tone was hollow and terrible—"Thou knowest that I was a witness of
your interview, yet thou comest hither to upbraid me for injustice! Thou
canst look me in the face and say that I am deceived!—An inscrutable
providence has fashioned thee for some end. Thou wilt live, no doubt, to
fulfil the purposes of thy maker, if he repent not of his workmanship, and
send not his vengeance to exterminate thee, ere the measure of thy days be
full. Surely nothing in the shape of man can vie with thee!</p>
<p>"But I thought I had stifled this fury. I am not constituted thy judge. My
office is to pity and amend, and not to punish and revile. I deemed myself
exempt from all tempestuous passions. I had almost persuaded myself to
weep over thy fall; but I am frail as dust, and mutable as water; I am
calm, I am compassionate only in thy absence.—Make this house, this
room, thy abode as long as thou wilt, but forgive me if I prefer solitude
for the short time during which I shall stay." Saying this, he motioned as
if to leave the apartment.</p>
<p>The stormy passions of this man affected me by sympathy. I ceased to weep.
I was motionless and speechless with agony. I sat with my hands clasped,
mutely gazing after him as he withdrew. I desired to detain him, but was
unable to make any effort for that purpose, till he had passed out of the
room. I then uttered an involuntary and piercing cry—"Pleyel! Art
thou gone? Gone forever?"</p>
<p>At this summons he hastily returned. He beheld me wild, pale, gasping for
breath, and my head already sinking on my bosom. A painful dizziness
seized me, and I fainted away.</p>
<p>When I recovered, I found myself stretched on a bed in the outer
apartment, and Pleyel, with two female servants standing beside it. All
the fury and scorn which the countenance of the former lately expressed,
had now disappeared, and was succeeded by the most tender anxiety. As soon
as he perceived that my senses were returned to me, he clasped his hands,
and exclaimed, "God be thanked! you are once more alive. I had almost
despaired of your recovery. I fear I have been precipitate and unjust. My
senses must have been the victims of some inexplicable and momentary
phrenzy. Forgive me, I beseech you, forgive my reproaches. I would
purchase conviction of your purity, at the price of my existence here and
hereafter."</p>
<p>He once more, in a tone of the most fervent tenderness, besought me to be
composed, and then left me to the care of the women.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />