<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXXIII" id="CHAPTER_XXXIII"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXXIII</h2>
<p>The travellers had proceeded for some time shaded by the
overhanging woods, the distance lengthened by the dreary sameness
of their way, when a wild halloo smote Laura's ear; and she perceived
that three Indians stood at the water-edge, making signs for the boat
to land. To her unspeakable surprise, the sailors joyfully obeyed the
signal. They ran their bark into a creek to which the Indians pointed,
and cheerfully busied themselves in discharging their cargo. Placed
with her attendants on a little eminence, which rose above the
swampy margin of the river, Laura took a fearful survey of the scene
around her. Save where the sluggish stream opened to the day, her
view was bounded to a few yards of marshy ground, rank with
unwholesome vegetation. No track appeared to lead from this
desolate spot. Between the gigantic pines, brushwood and coarse
grass spread in sad luxuriance. No trace was here of human footstep.
All was dreary and forlorn, as the land which the first wanderers
visited unwilling.</p>
<p>She had not long continued her melancholy survey, when the two
stoutest of the Indians approached; and one of them, after talking
apart with her attendants, lifted her female servant in his arms, and
walked on. The other, making some uncouth gestures, prepared to
raise Laura from the ground. She shrunk back alarmed; but the
Indian, in broken French, assured her that he would not hurt her;
and, pointing towards the woods, reminded her of the difficulty of
passing them on foot. Her valet, too, represented the fatigue she
must undergo, if she refused the assistance of the Indian. But Laura
preferring a toilsome march to such a mode of conveyance,
persevered in her refusal; and, bidding them lead the way, followed
into the pathless wild.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_414" id="Page_414">[414]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>They continued their journey for several hours, no object meeting
their sight that might mark the stages of their way. No work of man
appeared, not even the faintest trace that ever man had toiled through
this wilderness; yet Laura perceived that the Indians proceeded
without hesitation. The position of the grass, the appearance of the
leaves, gave indication sufficient to guide them in their route. One of
them carried a bag of provisions; and having reached a spot where
the ground was firm and dry, he invited Laura to sit down and take
some refreshment. Faint with fatigue, Laura thankfully acceded.
Scarcely, however, had she seated herself on the grass, ere her
attention was drawn by a slight though unusual noise; and she was
told that it was caused by a rattlesnake. At this intelligence her maid,
screaming, started up, and was going to dart forward into the wood.
The Indians beheld her terror with silent contempt, while Laura
calmly detained her with gentle force. 'Stay, Mary,' said she. 'If you
tread on the animal you are gone! If we are quiet, we may probably
see and avoid it.' The influence which Laura always acquired over
those with whom she lived, prevailed over Mary's dread; and in a few
moments the serpent was seen by one of the Indians, who killed it
with a single blow.</p>
<p>Their hasty meal ended, the party proceeded on their way; but they
had not gone far ere Laura, worn out with toil and sorrow, sunk upon
the ground. She had now no choice; and the Indian, lifting her with
the same ease as she would have done an infant, went on with more
speed than before.</p>
<p>Towards the close of the day, the woods suddenly opened into a
small field, surrounded by them on every side, which appeared to
have been itself imperfectly redeemed from the same state of waste
luxuriance. In the centre stood a house, or rather cabin, rudely
constructed of the material which nature so lavishly supplied. Around
it a small patch, inclosed by a palisade, bore marks of forsaken
cultivation. Beyond this inclosure, logs of prodigious size lay
scattered through the field, and the roots, which had not been cleared
from the ground, were again shooting luxuriantly. With a faint
sensation of gladness, Laura beheld traces of humankind. Yet no
living creature appeared. Here reigned primeval stillness. The winds
had died away. A sultry calm filled the air. The woods were
motionless. The birds were silent. All was fixed as in death, save
where a dull stream stole under the tall canes that deformed its
margin.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_415" id="Page_415">[415]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Mary's exclamations of grief and surprise first informed Laura that
she had reached her home. To Laura the dreariness of the scene was
of small concern. No outward circumstances could add to the horrors
with which her fears were familiar. While her attendant bewailed
aloud that ever thirst of gain had lured her from happy England,
Laura was inwardly striving to revive the hope that sudden death
might snatch her from the grasp of the oppressor; and renewing her
oft repeated prayer,—'Oh that Thou wouldst hide me in the grave.'
But no selfish sorrow could make her regardless of the woes of
others. 'Courage, Mary,' said she, with a foreboding smile, 'we shall
soon be released; and both, I hope, find shelter in our Father's
house.'</p>
<p>The cabin was divided into three apartments, each entering from
the other. To the innermost Laura was conducted; and she saw that
it had been arranged for her. The window was secured with iron.
The furniture, unlike that of the other rooms, was new and not
inelegant. Laura looked round to observe whether any trace of
Hargrave's presence was visible. None appeared. She examined every
recess and corner of her new abode, as one who fears the lurking
assassin. She ascertained that Hargrave was not its inmate; and
thanked Heaven for the prospect of one night of peace. It was in vain,
however, that she tried to discover how long this reprieve might last.
The servants either could not or would not give her any information.
She was too well acquainted with the character of her oppressor to
hope that he would long delay his coming. 'To-morrow, perhaps'—thought
she; and the cold shivering came over her, which now ever
followed her anticipation of the future. 'Yet why do I despair?' said
she. 'Is any time too short, are any means too feeble for the Power—for
the wisdom in which I trust? But since the hour of trial may be so
near, let me not waste the time which should prepare for it,—prepare
to cast off this poor clog of earth, and rise beyond its sorrows and its
stains.'</p>
<p>Laura's bodily frame, however, could not long keep pace with the
efforts of her mind, for her health and strength were failing under the
continued influence of grief and fear. The form, once rounded in fair
proportion, was wasted to a shadow. The once graceful neck bent
mournfully forward. The lily arms hung down in listless melancholy.
The cheek, once of form inimitable, was sunk and hollow now. The
colour, once quick to tell the modest thought, was fixed in the
paleness of the dead. And death was ever present to her thoughts,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_416" id="Page_416">[416]</SPAN></span>—sole
point to which her hope turned steadily!</p>
<p>One only desire lingered on earth. She wished that some friend
should pity her hard fate, and know that the victim had shrunk from
it, though in vain. Intending to leave behind her some attestation of
her innocence, she besought Mary to procure for her the means of
writing. 'Why should you fear to trust me?' said she. 'To whom upon
earth can my complaint reach now? You may see all I write, Mary; and
perhaps when I am gone you will yourself convey it to my friend.
Your master will not prevent you then; for then he will have pity on
me, and wish that he had not dealt with me so hardly.' The
irresistible sweetness of Laura had won the heart of her attendant,
and Mary promised that she would endeavour to gratify her. She said
that the writing materials were kept carefully locked up by Robert,
the man-servant; that his master's orders on that subject had been
peremptory; that she was sure he would not venture to disobey while
there remained a possibility of conveying intelligence from the place
of their confinement; that two of the Indians were to depart on the
following day; that after they were gone, no means of access to the
habitable world remaining, Robert might possibly relax his strictness,
and permit Laura to amuse herself with writing. Mary's words
awakened in Laura's mind an idea that all was not yet lost. The
Indians were suspected of favouring her. They might then bear her
appeal to human pity, to human justice. If she could find means to
speak with them apart, she would plead so earnestly that even savages
would be moved to mercy! At these thoughts a ray of hope once more
kindled in her breast. It was the last. All day she watched for an
opportunity to address one of the Indians. In vain! Robert guarded
her with such relentless fidelity, that she found it impossible to effect
her purpose. The Indians departed. Mary performed her promise,
and the unfortunate Laura wrote the following letter, which was
afterwards, with Hargrave's permission, conveyed to Mrs Douglas.</p>
<div class="blockquot"><p>'From this dreary land of exile, to whom shall I address myself
save to you, mine own friend, and my father's friend? Where tell
my sad fate save to you, who first taught me the hope that lives
beyond it? And let it comfort your kind heart to know, that while
you are shedding tears over this last memorial of your Laura, I shall
be rejoicing in the full consummation of that hope.</p>
<p>'There is indeed another friend! One to whom my last earthly
thoughts are due! But I cannot tell him, that she who was almost the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_417" id="Page_417">[417]</SPAN></span>
wife of his bosom is gone down to a dishonoured grave. I have not
time to soften my sad tale to him, nor to study words of comfort;
for the moments are precious with me now. A few, a very few, are all
that remain for preparation. I must not rob them of their awful right.
Tell him my story as he is able to bear it. Tell him my innocence,
and he will believe it, for he knew my very soul. But I must hasten,
lest the destroyer come, ere, in these lines, I close my connection
with this world of trial.'</p>
<p>[She then proceeded to give a simple narrative of her wrongs. She
expressed no bitterness against the author of them. She spoke of him
as a misguided being, and pitied the anguish which he was preparing
for himself.] 'Tell Mr De Courcy,' she proceeded, 'that I charge him,
by all the love he bears me, to forgive my enemy, even from the heart
forgive him. Let him do more. Let him pray for him; and if they
meet, admonish him. It may be that his heart will soften when he
remembers me.'</p>
<p>[The remainder of the letter was written at intervals. Laura spent
her time chiefly in acts of devotion, of self-examination, and
repentance. It was only when exhausted nature could no longer
follow these exercises of the soul, that she returned to add another
line to her picture of wretchedness.]</p>
<p>'The saints who resisted unto blood striving against sin, who gave
up their lives in defence of the truth, looked forward to the hour of
their departure rejoicing. But I must go to the grave laden with
shame and sorrow. My soul is weary of my life, and yet I must fear
to die. Yet let my enemy a little while delay his coming and my death
also will be joyful. Let him stay only a few days, and I shall be deaf
to the voice of the oppressor. I am wasting fast away. If he haste not
to catch the shadow, it will be gone.—</p>
<p>'The people whom he has appointed to guard his poor prisoner, no
longer watch me as they once did. It is useless now. A few short
steps and my feeble limbs bend to the earth, reminding me whither
I am hastening.—</p>
<p>'When I am gone, Mary will carry you the ringlets which you were
wont to twine round your finger. Send one of them to her who
should have been my sister; but give not any to my own Montague,
for he will pine over them when he might be happy in some new
connection. Yet tell him that I loved him to the end. I believe he
sometimes doubted of my love; but tell him that I bore him a firm
affection. Passion is unfit for the things of this world.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_418" id="Page_418">[418]</SPAN></span>—</p>
<p>'I have a letter from my enemy. In two days more.—</p>
<p>'I have a knife concealed in my bosom. All night it is hidden
beneath my pillow; and when my weary eyes close for a moment, I
grasp it, and the chill touch rouses me again. Mine own dear friend,
did you think when first you taught me to join my little hands in
prayer, that these hands should be stained with murder?—</p>
<p>'Is it a crime to die when I can no longer live with innocence?
When there is no escape but in the grave, is it forbidden to hide me
there? My mind grows feeble now. I cannot discern between good
and evil.—</p>
<p>'Why is my soul bowed down to the dust, as if the fountain of
compassion were sealed? I will yet trust Him who is the helper of
those who have no help in man. It may be that he will melt the heart
of my enemy, and move him to let me die in peace. Or perhaps even
the sight of my persecutor may be permitted to burst the rending
heart—to scare the trembling spirit from its prison.—</p>
<p>'This day is my last, and it is closing now! The silence of midnight
is around me. Ere it again return a deeper night shall close
for me, and the weary pilgrim shall sink to rest. It is time that I
loosen me from the earth; I will not give my last hours to this land of
shadows. Then fare you well, mine own dear friend! You first
pointed my wishes to that better world where I shall not long wait
your coming. And far thee well, mine own Montague! Take
comfort. I was not fit to linger here; for I had desires that earth
could not satisfy; and thirstings after a perfection which this weak
heart could not attain. Farewell—I will look back no more.'</p>
</div>
<p class="lhead">
<span class="smcap">Hargrave's Letter to Laura.</span></p>
<div class="blockquot"><p>'My dearest Laura—The tantalizing business which has so long
thwarted my wishes will still detain me for two days. Your gentle
mind cannot imagine what this delay costs me. My only recompense
is, that it affords me an opportunity of shewing you somewhat of that
consideration with which I could always wish to treat you. I willingly
forego the advantage of surprise for the sake of allowing you
to exercise that decision which you are so well qualified to use
discreetly. You know Laura how I have doated on you. For near
four long years you have been the desire of my soul; and now that
my happy daring has placed me within reach of my utmost wishes,
I would fain attain them without distress to you. This is no time<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_419" id="Page_419">[419]</SPAN></span>
for concealment; and you must pardon me if I am explicit with you.
I have known the disposition of Lady Pelham's fortune from the
hour when it was made. You know that with all my faults I am not
sordid; but circumstances have rendered money necessary to me.
Except in the event of Lord Lincourt's death, I cannot return to
England otherwise than as your husband. I will own, too, dearest
Laura, that after all I have done, and all that I may be compelled to
do, I dare not trust for pardon to your pity alone. I must interest
your duty in my cause. Consider your situation, then, my beloved,
and spare me the pain of distressing you. I have watched you,
implored you, pined for you—I have borne your coldness, your
scorn. I have ventured my life to obtain you. Judge whether I be of
a temper to be baulked of my reward. You must be mine, bewitching
Laura. No cool, insulting, plausible pretender can cheat me of you
now. Trackless woods divide you from all human kind. I have
provided against the possibility of tracing your retreat. It rests with
you then to choose whether you will bless my love with a willing
and honourable reward, or force me to extort the power of bestowing
obligation. My charming Laura, for now indeed I may call you mine,
pardon, in consideration of its sincerity, the abrupt language I am
compelled to hold.—One thing more. In three weeks I must return
hither. The engagement of your British attendants expires before
that time. I cannot for a moment allow myself to suppose that you
will prefer a hopeless solitary exile to the reparation which I shall
even then be so anxious to make; to the endearments of a fond husband,
of an impassioned lover; to the envy and the homage of an
admiring world. Suffer me rather, dear lovely girl, to exult in the
hope that you will receive, without reluctance, the man to whom fate
assigns you, and that you will recal somewhat of the tenderness you
once confessed for your own ever-devoted,</p>
<p class="asig">
<span class="smcap">'Villiers Hargrave.'</span></p>
</div>
<p class="lhead">
<span class="smcap">Laura's Answer</span><br/>
(sent with the foregoing to Mrs Douglas:)</p>
<div class="blockquot"><p>'I thought my spirit had been broken, crushed never more to rise.
Must the glow of indignation mingle with the damps of death? But I
will not upbraid you. The language of forgiveness best befits me
now. The measure of your injuries to me is almost full; while those
which you have heaped upon yourself are yet more deep and irre<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_420" id="Page_420">[420]</SPAN></span>parable. My blasted fame, my life cut off in its prime, even the
horrible dread that has overwhelmed me, are nothing to the pangs
of hopeless remorse, the unaccepted struggle for repentance.—Yet
a little while, and this darkness shall burst into light ineffable. Yet
a little while, and this sorrow shall be as the remembrance of a
troubled dream. But you—Oh Hargrave, have pity on yourself!</p>
<p>'It was not to warn, it was to plead with you, that I won on my
knees the consent of your messenger to bear my reply. I will strive
to hope; for you were not always pitiless. I have seen you feel for
the sufferings of a stranger, and have you no mercy for me? Alas!
in those pitying tears I saw you shed, began this long train of evil;
for then began my base idolatry, and justly have you been made the
instrument of my punishment.</p>
<p>'My mind wanders. I am weaker than a child. Oh Hargrave, if you
have human pity let the feeble spark expire in peace. Here, where no
Christian footstep shall hallow the turf that covers me, nor song
of Christian praise rise near my grave, here let me lay me down and
die—and I will bless you that I die in peace. I dare not spend my
parting breath in uttering unholy vows, nor die a voluntary partner
in your crimes. Nor would I, had my life been prolonged, have
joined to pollution this dust, which, perishable as it is, must rise
to immortality—which, vile as it is, more vile as it soon may be, shall
yet "put on incorruption." Why then should you come hither? Will
it please you to see this poor piece of clay, for which you have
ventured your soul, faded to an object of horror?—cast uncoffined
into the earth, robbed of the decencies which Christians pay even
to the worst of sinners? When you look upon my stiffened corpse will
you then triumph in the security of your possession? Will you again
exult in hope when you turn from my grave and say, "here lies
the wretch whom I have undone!"</p>
<p>'Come not I charge you, if you would escape the anguish of the
murderer. When did the evil of your deeds stop within your first
intention? Do not amuse your conscience with the dream of reparation.
I am fallen indeed, ere you dare insult me with the thought!
Will you wed the dead? Or could I outlive your injuries, think you
that I would sink so low as to repay them with myself?—reward with
vows of love a crime more black than murder! Though my name,
already degraded through you, must no more claim alliance with the
good and worthy, think you that I would bind myself before heaven
to a wretch who owed his very life to my undeserved mercy?<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_421" id="Page_421">[421]</SPAN></span>
Inhuman! Your insults have roused the failing spirit. Yet I must
quell these last stirrings of nature. Instant, full, and free must be my
forgiveness; for such is the forgiveness which I shall soon require.</p>
<p>'Perhaps, as now you seem to think me fit for any baseness, you
will suppose my forebodings a poor deceit to win you from your
purpose. See then if you can trace in these unsteady lines the vigour
of health. Ask him who bears them to you, how looks now the face
which you call lovely? Ask him if the hand which gave this letter
looks soft and graceful now? I love to gaze upon it. It bids me hope,
for it is like no living thing. Inquire minutely. Ask if there remains
one charm to lure you on to farther guilt. And if death has already
seized on all, if he has spared nothing to desire, will you yet hurry
him on his prey? You have made life a burden too heavy for the
weary frame. Will you make death too dreadful to be endured? Will
you add to its horrors till nature and religion shrink from it in agony.</p>
<p>'I cannot plead with you as I would. My strength fails. My eyes are
dim with weeping. Oh grant that this farewell may be the last—that
we may meet no more till I welcome you with the joy which angels
feel over the sinner that repenteth.'</p>
</div>
<p>The whole of the night preceding Hargrave's arrival, was passed by
Laura in acts of devotion. In her life, blameless as it had appeared to
others, she saw so much ground for condemnation, that, had her
hopes rested upon her own merit, they would have vanished like the
sunshine of a winter storm. Their support was more mighty; and they
remained unshaken. The raptures of faith beamed on her soul. By
degrees they triumphed over every fear; and the first sound that
awoke the morning, was her voice raised in a trembling hymn of
praise.</p>
<p>Her countenance elevated as in hope; her eyes cast upwards; her
hands clasped; her lips half open in the unfinished adoration; her
face brightened with a smile, the dawn of eternal day—she was found
by her attendant. Awe-struck, the woman paused, and at a reverend
distance gazed upon the seraph; but her entrance had called back the
unwilling spirit from its flight; and Laura, once more a feeble child of
earth, faintly inquired whether her enemy were at hand. Mary
answered that her master was not expected to arrive before the
evening; and entreated that Laura would try to recruit her spirits, and
accept of some refreshment. Laura made no opposition. She
unconsciously swallowed what was placed before her; unwittingly<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_422" id="Page_422">[422]</SPAN></span>
suffered her attendant to lead her abroad; nor once heeded ought
that was done to her, nor ought that passed before her eyes, till her
exhausted limbs found rest upon the trunk of a tree, which lay
mouldering near the spot where its root was sending forth a luxuriant
thicket.</p>
<p>The breath of morning blew chill on the wasted form of Laura,
while it somewhat revived her to strength and recollection. Her
attendant seeing her shiver in the breeze, compassionately wrapped
her more closely in her cloak, and ran to seek a warmer covering.
'She feels for my bodily wants,' said Laura. 'Will she have no pity for
the sufferings of the soul? Yet what relief can she afford: What help
is there for me in man? Oh be Thou my help who art the guard of
the defenceless! Thou who canst shield in every danger—Thou who
canst guide in every difficulty!'</p>
<p>Her eye rested as it fell, upon a track as of recent footsteps. They
had brushed away the dew, and the rank grass had not yet risen from
their pressure. The unwonted trace of man's presence arrested her
attention; and her mind, exhausted by suffering, and sharing the
weakness of its frail abode, admitted the superstitious thought that
these marks afforded a providential indication for her guidance.
Transient animation kindling in her frame, she followed the track as
it wound round a thicket of poplar; then, suddenly recollecting
herself, she became conscious of the delusion, and shed a tear over
her mental decay.</p>
<p>She was about to return, when she perceived that she was near the
bank of the river. Its dark flood was stealing noiseless by, and Laura,
looking on it, breathed the oft repeated wish that she could seek rest
beneath its waves. Again she moved feebly forward. She reached the
brink of the stream, and stood unconsciously following its course with
her eye; when a light wind stirring the canes that grew down to the
water edge, she beheld close by her an Indian canoe. With
suddenness that mocks the speed of light, hope flashed on the
darkened soul; and, stretching her arms in wild ecstasy, 'Help, help,'
cried Laura, and sprung towards the boat. A feeble echo from the
further shore alone returned the cry. Again she called. No human
voice replied. But delirious transport lent vigour to her frame. She
sprung into the bark; she pressed the slender oar against the bank.
The light vessel yielded to her touch. It floated. The stream bore it
along. The woods closed around her prison. 'Thou hast delivered
me!' she cried; and sunk senseless.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_423" id="Page_423">[423]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>A meridian sun beat on her uncovered head ere Laura began to
revive. Recollection stole upon her like the remembrance of a
feverish dream. As one who, waking from a fearful vision, still
trembles in his joy, she scarcely dared to hope that the dread hour
was past, till raising her eyes she saw the dark woods bend over her,
and steal slowly away as the canoe glided on with the tide. The
raptures of fallen man own their alliance with pain, by seeking the
same expression. Joy and gratitude too big for utterance long poured
themselves forth in tears. At length returning composure permitting
the language of extasy, it was breathed in the accents of devotion; and
the lone wild echoed to a song of deliverance.</p>
<p>The saintly strain rose unmixed with other sound. No breeze
moaned through the impervious woods. No ripple broke the stream.
The dark shadows trembled for a moment in its bosom as the little
bark stole by, and then reposed again. No trace appeared of human
presence. The fox peeping from the brushwood, the wild duck sailing
stately in the stream, saw the unwonted stranger without alarm,
untaught as yet to flee from the destroyer.</p>
<p>The day declined; and Laura, with the joy of her escape, began to
mingle a wish, that, ere the darkness closed around her, she might
find shelter near her fellow beings. She was not ignorant of the
dangers of her voyage. She knew that the navigation of the river was
interrupted by rapids. A cataract which broke its course had been
purposely described in her hearing. She examined her frail vessel and
trembled; for life was again become precious, and feeble seemed her
defence against the torrent. The canoe, which could not have
contained more than two persons, was constructed of a slender frame
of wood, covered with the bark of the birch. It yielded to the slightest
motion, and caution was necessary to poise in it even the light form
of Laura.</p>
<p>Slowly it floated down the lingering tide; and, when a pine of
larger size or form more fantastic than his fellows enabled her to
measure her progress, she thought that through wilds less impassible
her own limbs would have borne her more swiftly. In vain behind
each tangled point did her fancy picture the haunt of man. Vainly
amid the mists of eve did she trace the smoke of sheltered cottages.
In vain at every winding of the stream she sent forward a longing eye
in search of human dwelling. The narrow view was bounded by the
dark wilderness, repeating ever the same picture of dreary repose.</p>
<p>The sun went down. The shadows of evening fell; not such as in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_424" id="Page_424">[424]</SPAN></span>
her happy native land blend softly with the last radiance of day; but
black and heavy, harshly contrasting with the light of a naked sky
reflected from the waters, where they spread beyond the gloom of
impending woods. Dark, and more dark the night came on. Solemn
even amid the peopled land, in this vast solitude it became more
awful. Ignorant how near the place of danger might be, fearing to
pursue darkling her perilous way, Laura tried to steer her light bark
to the shore, intending to moor it, to find in it a rude resting place,
and in the morning to pursue her way. Laboriously she toiled, and at
length reached the bank in safety; but in vain she tried to draw her
little vessel to land. Its weight resisted her strength. Dreading that it
should slip from her grasp and leave her without means of escape,
she re-entered it, and again glided on in her dismal voyage. She had
found in the canoe a little coarse bread made of Indian corn; and
this, with the water of the river, formed her whole sustenance. Her
frame worn out with previous suffering, awe and fear at last yielded
to fatigue; and the weary wanderer sunk to sleep.</p>
<p>It was late on the morning of a cloudy day, when a low murmuring
sound stealing on the silence awoke Laura from the rest of
innocence. She listened. The murmur seemed to swell on her ear.
She looked up. The dark woods still bent over her. But they no
longer touched the margin of the stream. They stretched their giant
arms from the summit of a precipice. Their image was no more
reflected unbroken. The gray rocks which supported them but half
lent their colours to the rippling water. The wild duck, no longer
tempting the stream, flew screaming over its bed. Each object
hastened on with fearful rapidity, and the murmuring sound was now
a deafening roar.</p>
<p>Fear supplying super-human strength, Laura strove to turn the
course of her vessel. She strained every nerve; she used the force of
desperation. Half-hoping that the struggle might save her, half-fearing
to note her dreadful progress, she toiled on till the oar was
torn from her powerless grasp, and hurried along with the tide.</p>
<p>The fear of death alone had not the power to overwhelm the soul
of Laura. Somewhat might yet be done perhaps to avert her fate, at
least to prepare for it. Feeble as was the chance of life, it was not to
be rejected. Fixing her cloak more firmly about her, Laura bound it
to the slender frame of the canoe. Then commending herself to
heaven with the fervour of a last prayer, she, in dread stillness,
awaited her doom.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_425" id="Page_425">[425]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>With terrible speed the vessel hurried on. It was whirled round by
the torrent—tossed fearfully—and hurried on again. It shot over a
smoothness more dreadful than the eddying whirl. It rose upon its
prow. Laura clung to it in the convulsion of terror. A moment she
trembled on the giddy verge. The next, all was darkness!<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_426" id="Page_426">[426]</SPAN></span></p>
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