On a bright summer evening, two persons stood among the shrubbery of a garden,
stealthily watching a young girl, who sat in the window seat of a neighboring
mansion. One of these unseen observers, a gentleman, was youthful, and had an
air of high breeding and refinement, and a face marked with intellect, though
otherwise of unprepossessing aspect. His features wore even an ominous, though
somewhat mirthful expression, while he pointed his long forefinger at the girl,
and seemed to regard her as a creature completely within the scope of his
influence.
“The charm works!” said he, in a low, but emphatic whisper.
“Do you know, Edward Hamilton,—since so you choose to be
named,—do you know,” said the lady beside him, “that I have
almost a mind to break the spell at once? What if the lesson should prove too
severe! True, if my ward could be thus laughed out of her fantastic nonsense,
she might be the better for it through life. But then, she is such a delicate
creature! And, besides, are you not ruining your own chance, by putting forward
this shadow of a rival?”
“But will he not vanish into thin air, at my bidding?” rejoined
Edward Hamilton. “Let the charm work!”
The girl’s slender and sylph-like figure, tinged with radiance from the
sunset clouds, and overhung with the rich drapery of the silken curtains, and
set within the deep frame of the window, was a perfect picture; or, rather, it
was like the original loveliness in a painter’s fancy, from which the
most finished picture is but an imperfect copy. Though her occupation excited
so much interest in the two spectators, she was merely gazing at a miniature
which she held in her hand, encased in white satin and red morocco; nor did
there appear to be any other cause for the smile of mockery and malice with
which Hamilton regarded her.
“The charm works!” muttered he, again. “Our pretty
Sylvia’s scorn will have a dear retribution!”
At this moment the girl raised her eyes, and, instead of a life-like semblance
of the miniature, beheld the ill-omened shape of Edward Hamilton, who now
stepped forth from his concealment in the shrubbery.
Sylvia Etherege was an orphan girl, who had spent her life, till within a few
months past, under the guardianship, and in the secluded dwelling, of an old
bachelor uncle. While yet in her cradle, she had been the destined bride of a
cousin, who was no less passive in the betrothal than herself. Their future
union had been projected, as the means of uniting two rich estates, and was
rendered highly expedient, if not indispensable, by the testamentary
dispositions of the parents on both sides. Edgar Vaughan, the promised
bridegroom, had been bred from infancy in Europe, and had never seen the
beautiful girl whose heart he was to claim as his inheritance. But already, for
several years, a correspondence had been kept up between tine cousins, and had
produced an intellectual intimacy, though it could but imperfectly acquaint
them with each other’s character.
Sylvia was shy, sensitive, and fanciful; and her guardian’s secluded
habits had shut her out from even so much of the world as is generally open to
maidens of her age. She had been left to seek associates and friends for
herself in the haunts of imagination, and to converse with them, sometimes in
the language of dead poets, oftener in the poetry of her own mind. The
companion whom she chiefly summoned up was the cousin with whose idea her
earliest thoughts had been connected. She made a vision of Edgar Vaughan, and
tinted it with stronger hues than a mere fancy-picture, yet graced it with so
many bright and delicate perfections, that her cousin could nowhere have
encountered so dangerous a rival. To this shadow she cherished a romantic
fidelity. With its airy presence sitting by her side, or gliding along her
favorite paths, the loneliness of her young life was blissful; her heart was
satisfied with love, while yet its virgin purity was untainted by the
earthliness that the touch of a real lover would have left there. Edgar Vaughan
seemed to be conscious of her character; for, in his letters, he gave her a
name that was happily appropriate to the sensitiveness of her disposition, the
delicate peculiarity of her manners, and the ethereal beauty both of her mind
and person. Instead of Sylvia, he called her Sylph,—with the prerogative
of a cousin and a lover,—his dear Sylph Etherege.
When Sylvia was seventeen, her guardian died, and she passed under the care of
Mrs. Grosvenor, a lady of wealth and fashion, and Sylvia’s nearest
relative, though a distant one. While an inmate of Mrs. Grosvenor’s
family, she still preserved somewhat of her life-long habits of seclusion, and
shrank from a too familiar intercourse with those around her. Still, too, she
was faithful to her cousin, or to the shadow which bore his name.
The time now drew near when Edgar Vaughan, whose education had been completed
by an extensive range of travel, was to revisit the soil of his nativity.
Edward Hamilton, a young gentleman, who had been Vaughan’s companion,
both in his studies and rambles, had already recrossed the Atlantic, bringing
letters to Mrs. Grosvenor and Sylvia Etherege. These credentials insured him an
earnest welcome, which, however, on Sylvia’s part, was not followed by
personal partiality, or even the regard that seemed due to her cousin’s
most intimate friend. As she herself could have assigned no cause for her
repugnance, it might be termed instinctive. Hamilton’s person, it is
true, was the reverse of attractive, especially when beheld for the first time.
Yet, in the eyes of the most fastidious judges, the defect of natural grace was
compensated by the polish of his manners, and by the intellect which so often
gleamed through his dark features. Mrs. Grosvenor, with whom he immediately
became a prodigious favorite, exerted herself to overcome Sylvia’s
dislike. But, in this matter, her ward could neither be reasoned with nor
persuaded. The presence of Edward Hamilton was sure to render her cold, shy,
and distant, abstracting all the vivacity from her deportment, as if a cloud
had come betwixt her and the sunshine.
The simplicity of Sylvia’s demeanor rendered it easy for so keen an
observer as Hamilton to detect her feelings. Whenever any slight circumstance
made him sensible of them, a smile might be seen to flit over the young
man’s sallow visage. None, that had once beheld this smile, were in any
danger of forgetting it; whenever they recalled to memory the features of
Edward Hamilton, they were always duskily illuminated by this expression of
mockery and malice.
In a few weeks after Hamilton’s arrival, he presented to Sylvia Etherege
a miniature of her cousin, which, as he informed her, would have been delivered
sooner, but was detained with a portion of his baggage. This was the miniature
in the contemplation of which we beheld Sylvia so absorbed, at the commencement
of our story. Such, in truth, was too often the habit of the shy and musing
girl. The beauty of the pictured countenance was almost too perfect to
represent a human creature, that had been born of a fallen and world-worn race,
and had lived to manhood amid ordinary troubles and enjoyments, and must become
wrinkled with age and care. It seemed too bright for a thing formed of dust,
and doomed to crumble into dust again. Sylvia feared that such a being would be
too refined and delicate to love a simple girl like her. Yet, even while her
spirit drooped with that apprehension, the picture was but the masculine
counterpart of Sylph Etherege’s sylphlike beauty. There was that
resemblance between her own face and the miniature which is said often to exist
between lovers whom Heaven has destined for each other, and which, in this
instance, might be owing to the kindred blood of the two parties. Sylvia felt,
indeed, that there was something familiar in the countenance, so like a friend
did the eyes smile upon her, and seem to imply a knowledge of her thoughts. She
could account for this impression only by supposing that, in some of her
day-dreams, imagination had conjured up the true similitude of her distant and
unseen lover.
But now could Sylvia give a brighter semblance of reality to those day-dreams.
Clasping the miniature to her heart, she could summon forth, from that haunted
cell of pure and blissful fantasies, the life-like shadow, to roam with her in
the moonlight garden. Even at noontide it sat with her in the arbor, when the
sunshine threw its broken flakes of gold into the clustering shade. The effect
upon her mind was hardly less powerful than if she had actually listened to,
and reciprocated, the vows of Edgar Vaughan; for, though the illusion never
quite deceived her, yet the remembrance was as distinct as of a remembered
interview. Those heavenly eyes gazed forever into her soul, which drank at them
as at a fountain, and was disquieted if reality threw a momentary cloud
between. She heard the melody of a voice breathing sentiments with which her
own chimed in like music. O happy, yet hapless girl! Thus to create the being
whom she loves, to endow him with all the attributes that were most fascinating
to her heart, and then to flit with the airy creature into the realm of fantasy
and moonlight, where dwelt his dreamy kindred! For her lover wiled Sylvia away
from earth, which seemed strange, and dull, and darksome, and lured her to a
country where her spirit roamed in peaceful rapture, deeming that it had found
its home. Many, in their youth, have visited that land of dreams, and wandered
so long in its enchanted groves, that, when banished thence, they feel like
exiles everywhere.
The dark-browed Edward Hamilton, like the villain of a tale, would often glide
through the romance wherein poor Sylvia walked. Sometimes, at the most blissful
moment of her ecstasy, when the features of the miniature were pictured
brightest in the air, they would suddenly change, and darken, and be
transformed into his visage. And always, when such change occurred, the
intrusive visage wore that peculiar smile with which Hamilton had glanced at
Sylvia.
Before the close of summer, it was told Sylvia Etherege that Vaughan had
arrived from France, and that she would meet him—would meet, for the
first time, the loved of years—that very evening. We will not tell how
often and how earnestly she gazed upon the miniature, thus endeavoring to
prepare herself for the approaching interview, lest the throbbing of her
timorous heart should stifle the words of welcome. While the twilight grew
deeper and duskier, she sat with Mrs. Grosvenor in an inner apartment, lighted
only by the softened gleam from an alabaster lamp, which was burning at a
distance on the centre-table of the drawing-room. Never before had Sylph
Etherege looked so sylph-like. She had communed with a creature of imagination,
till her own loveliness seemed but the creation of a delicate and dreamy fancy.
Every vibration of her spirit was visible in her frame, as she listened to the
rattling of wheels and the tramp upon the pavement, and deemed that even the
breeze bore the sound of her lover’s footsteps, as if he trode upon the
viewless air. Mrs. Grosvenor, too, while she watched the tremulous flow of
Sylvia’s feelings, was deeply moved; she looked uneasily at the agitated
girl, and was about to speak, when the opening of the street-door arrested the
words upon her lips.
Footsteps ascended the staircase, with a confident and familiar tread, and some
one entered the drawing-room. From the sofa where they sat, in the inner
apartment, Mrs. Grosvenor and Sylvia could not discern the visitor.
“Sylph!” cried a voice. “Dearest Sylph! Where are you, sweet
Sylph Etherege? Here is your Edgar Vaughan!”
But instead of answering, or rising to meet her lover,—who had greeted
her by the sweet and fanciful name, which, appropriate as it was to her
character, was known only to him,—Sylvia grasped Mrs. Grosvenor’s
arm, while her whole frame shook with the throbbing of her heart.
“Who is it?” gasped she. “Who calls me Sylph?”
Before Mrs. Grosvenor could reply, the stranger entered the room, bearing the
lamp in his hand. Approaching the sofa, he displayed to Sylvia the features of
Edward Hamilton, illuminated by that evil smile, from which his face derived so
marked an individuality.
“Is not the miniature an admirable likeness?” inquired he.
Sylvia shuddered, but had not power to turn away her white face from his gaze.
The miniature, which she had been holding in her hand, fell down upon the
floor, where Hamilton, or Vaughan, set his foot upon it, and crushed the ivory
counterfeit to fragments.
“There, my sweet Sylph,” he exclaimed. “It was I that created
your phantom-lover, and now I annihilate him! Your dream is rudely broken.
Awake, Sylph Etherege, awake to truth! I am the only Edgar Vaughan!”
“We have gone too far, Edgar Vaughan,” said Mrs. Grosvenor,
catching Sylvia in her arms. The revengeful freak, which Vaughan’s
wounded vanity had suggested, had been countenanced by this lady, in the hope
of curing Sylvia of her romantic notions, and reconciling her to the truths and
realities of life. “Look at the poor child!” she continued.
“I protest I tremble for the consequences!”
“Indeed, madam!” replied Vaughan, sneeringly, as he threw the light
of the lamp on Sylvia’s closed eyes and marble features. “Well, my
conscience is clear. I did but look into this delicate creature’s heart;
and with the pure fantasies that I found there, I made what seemed a
man,—and the delusive shadow has wiled her away to Shadow-land, and
vanished there! It is no new tale. Many a sweet maid has shared the lot of poor
Sylph Etherege!”
“And now, Edgar Vaughan,” said Mrs. Grosvenor, as Sylvia’s
heart began faintly to throb again, “now try, in good earnest, to win
back her love from the phantom which you conjured up. If you succeed, she will
be the better, her whole life long, for the lesson we have given her.”
Whether the result of the lesson corresponded with Mrs. Grosvenor’s
hopes, may be gathered from the closing scene of our story. It had been made
known to the fashionable world that Edgar Vaughan had returned from France,
and, under the assumed name of Edward Hamilton, had won the affections of the
lovely girl to whom he had been affianced in his boyhood. The nuptials were to
take place at an early date. One evening, before the day of anticipated bliss
arrived, Edgar Vaughan entered Mrs. Grosvenor’s drawing-room, where he
found that lady and Sylph Etherege.
“Only that Sylvia makes no complaint,” remarked Mrs. Grosvenor,
“I should apprehend that the town air is ill-suited to her constitution.
She was always, indeed, a delicate creature; but now she is a mere gossamer. Do
but look at her! Did you ever imagine anything so fragile?”
Vaughan was already attentively observing his mistress, who sat in a shadowy
and moonlighted recess of the room, with her dreamy eyes fixed steadfastly upon
his own. The bough of a tree was waving before the window, and sometimes
enveloped her in the gloom of its shadow, into which she seemed to vanish.
“Yes,” he said, to Mrs. Grosvenor. “I can scarcely deem her
of the earth, earthy. No wonder that I call her Sylph! Methinks she will fade
into the moonlight, which falls upon her through the window. Or, in the open
air, she might flit away upon the breeze, like a wreath of mist!”
Sylvia’s eyes grew yet brighter. She waved her hand to Edgar Vaughan,
with a gesture of ethereal triumph.
“Farewell!” she said. “I will neither fade into the
moonlight, nor flit away upon the breeze. Yet you cannot keep me here!”
There was something in Sylvia’s look and tones that startled Mrs.
Grosvenor with a terrible apprehension. But, as she was rushing towards the
girl, Vaughan held her back.
“Stay!” cried he, with a strange smile of mockery and anguish.
“Can our sweet Sylph be going to heaven, to seek the original of the
miniature?”
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