XXI. The Departure
The sudden death of so prominent a member of the social world as
the Honorable Judge Jaffrey Pyncheon created a sensation (at least,
in the circles more immediately connected with the deceased) which
had hardly quite subsided in a fortnight. It may be remarked,
however, that, of all the events which constitute a person's
biography, there is scarcely one—none, certainly, of anything like
a similar importance—to which the world so easily reconciles itself
as to his death. In most other cases and contingencies, the
individual is present among us, mixed up with the daily revolution
of affairs, and affording a definite point for observation. At his
decease, there is only a vacancy, and a momentary eddy,—very small,
as compared with the apparent magnitude of the ingurgitated
object,—and a bubble or two, ascending out of the black depth and
bursting at the surface. As regarded Judge Pyncheon, it seemed
probable, at first blush, that the mode of his final departure
might give him a larger and longer posthumous vogue than ordinarily
attends the memory of a distinguished man. But when it came to be
understood, on the highest professional authority, that the event
was a natural, and—except for some unimportant particulars,
denoting a slight idiosyncrasy—by no means an unusual form of
death, the public, with its customary alacrity, proceeded to forget
that he had ever lived. In short, the honorable Judge was beginning
to be a stale subject before half the country newspapers had found
time to put their columns in mourning, and publish his exceedingly
eulogistic obituary. Nevertheless, creeping darkly through the
places which this excellent person had haunted in his lifetime,
there was a hidden stream of private talk, such as it would have
shocked all decency to speak loudly at the street-corners. It is
very singular, how the fact of a man's death often seems to give
people a truer idea of his character, whether for good or evil,
than they have ever possessed while he was living and acting among
them. Death is so genuine a fact that it excludes falsehood, or
betrays its emptiness; it is a touchstone that proves the gold, and
dishonors the baser metal. Could the departed, whoever he may be,
return in a week after his decease, he would almost invariably find
himself at a higher or lower point than he had formerly occupied,
on the scale of public appreciation. But the talk, or scandal, to
which we now allude, had reference to matters of no less old a date
than the supposed murder, thirty or forty years ago, of the late
Judge Pyncheon's uncle. The medical opinion with regard to his own
recent and regretted decease had almost entirely obviated the idea
that a murder was committed in the former case. Yet, as the record
showed, there were circumstances irrefragably indicating that some
person had gained access to old Jaffrey Pyncheon's private
apartments, at or near the moment of his death. His desk and
private drawers, in a room contiguous to his bedchamber, had been
ransacked; money and valuable articles were missing; there was a
bloody hand-print on the old man's linen; and, by a powerfully
welded chain of deductive evidence, the guilt of the robbery and
apparent murder had been fixed on Clifford, then residing with his
uncle in the House of the Seven Gables. Whencesoever originating,
there now arose a theory that undertook so to account for these
circumstances as to exclude the idea of Clifford's agency. Many
persons affirmed that the history and elucidation of the facts,
long so mysterious, had been obtained by the daguerreotypist from
one of those mesmerical seers who, nowadays, so strangely perplex
the aspect of human affairs, and put everybody's natural vision to
the blush, by the marvels which they see with their eyes shut.
According to this version of the story, Judge Pyncheon, exemplary
as we have portrayed him in our narrative, was, in his youth, an
apparently irreclaimable scapegrace. The brutish, the animal
instincts, as is often the case, had been developed earlier than
the intellectual qualities, and the force of character, for which
he was afterwards remarkable. He had shown himself wild,
dissipated, addicted to low pleasures, little short of ruffianly in
his propensities, and recklessly expensive, with no other resources
than the bounty of his uncle. This course of conduct had alienated
the old bachelor's affection, once strongly fixed upon him. Now it
is averred,—but whether on authority available in a court of
justice, we do not pretend to have investigated,—that the young man
was tempted by the devil, one night, to search his uncle's private
drawers, to which he had unsuspected means of access. While thus
criminally occupied, he was startled by the opening of the
chamber-door. There stood old Jaffrey Pyncheon, in his
nightclothes! The surprise of such a discovery, his agitation,
alarm, and horror, brought on the crisis of a disorder to which the
old bachelor had an hereditary liability; he seemed to choke with
blood, and fell upon the floor, striking his temple a heavy blow
against the corner of a table. What was to be done? The old man was
surely dead! Assistance would come too late! What a misfortune,
indeed, should it come too soon, since his reviving consciousness
would bring the recollection of the ignominious offence which he
had beheld his nephew in the very act of committing! But he never
did revive. With the cool hardihood that always pertained to him,
the young man continued his search of the drawers, and found a
will, of recent date, in favor of Clifford, —which he
destroyed,—and an older one, in his own favor, which he suffered to
remain. But before retiring, Jaffrey bethought himself of the
evidence, in these ransacked drawers, that some one had visited the
chamber with sinister purposes. Suspicion, unless averted, might
fix upon the real offender. In the very presence of the dead man,
therefore, he laid a scheme that should free himself at the expense
of Clifford, his rival, for whose character he had at once a con
tempt and a repugnance. It is not probable, be it said, that he
acted with any set purpose of involving Clifford in a charge of
murder. Knowing that his uncle did not die by violence, it may not
have occurred to him, in the hurry of the crisis, that such an
inference might be drawn. But, when the affair took this darker
aspect, Jaffrey's previous steps had already pledged him to those
which remained. So craftily had he arranged the circumstances,
that, at Clifford's trial, his cousin hardly found it necessary to
swear to anything false, but only to withhold the one decisive
explanation, by refraining to state what he had himself done and
witnessed. Thus Jaffrey Pyncheon's inward criminality, as regarded
Clifford, was, indeed, black and damnable; while its mere outward
show and positive commission was the smallest that could possibly
consist with so great a sin. This is just the sort of guilt that a
man of eminent respectability finds it easiest to dispose of. It
was suffered to fade out of sight or be reckoned a venial matter,
in the Honorable Judge Pyncheon's long subsequent survey of his own
life. He shuffled it aside, among the forgotten and forgiven
frailties of his youth, and seldom thought of it again. We leave
the Judge to his repose. He could not be styled fortunate at the
hour of death. Unknowingly, he was a childless man, while striving
to add more wealth to his only child's inheritance. Hardly a week
after his decease, one of the Cunard steamers brought intelligence
of the death, by cholera, of Judge Pyncheon's son, just at the
point of embarkation for his native land. By this misfortune
Clifford became rich; so did Hepzibah; so did our little village
maiden, and, through her, that sworn foe of wealth and all manner
of conservatism, —the wild reformer,—Holgrave! It was now far too
late in Clifford's life for the good opinion of society to be worth
the trouble and anguish of a formal vindication. What he needed was
the love of a very few; not the admiration, or even the respect, of
the unknown many. The latter might probably have been won for him,
had those on whom the guardianship of his welfare had fallen deemed
it advisable to expose Clifford to a miserable resuscitation of
past ideas, when the condition of whatever comfort he might expect
lay in the calm of forgetfulness. After such wrong as he had
suffered, there is no reparation. The pitiable mockery of it, which
the world might have been ready enough to offer, coming so long
after the agony had done its utmost work, would have been fit only
to provoke bitterer laughter than poor Clifford was ever capable
of. It is a truth (and it would be a very sad one but for the
higher hopes which it suggests) that no great mistake, whether
acted or endured, in our mortal sphere, is ever really set right.
Time, the continual vicissitude of circumstances, and the
invariable inopportunity of death, render it impossible. If, after
long lapse of years, the right seems to be in our power, we find no
niche to set it in. The better remedy is for the sufferer to pass
on, and leave what he once thought his irreparable ruin far behind
him. The shock of Judge Pyncheon's death had a permanently
invigorating and ultimately beneficial effect on Clifford. That
strong and ponderous man had been Clifford's nightmare. There was
no free breath to be drawn, within the sphere of so malevolent an
influence. The first effect of freedom, as we have witnessed in
Clifford's aimless flight, was a tremulous exhilaration. Subsiding
from it, he did not sink into his former intellectual apathy. He
never, it is true, attained to nearly the full measure of what
might have been his faculties. But he recovered enough of them
partially to light up his character, to display some outline of the
marvellous grace that was abortive in it, and to make him the
object of No less deep, although less melancholy interest than
heretofore. He was evidently happy. Could we pause to give another
picture of his daily life, with all the appliances now at command
to gratify his instinct for the Beautiful, the garden scenes, that
seemed so sweet to him, would look mean and trivial in comparison.
Very soon after their change of fortune, Clifford, Hepzibah, and
little Phoebe, with the approval of the artist, concluded to remove
from the dismal old House of the Seven Gables, and take up their
abode, for the present, at the elegant country-seat of the late
Judge Pyncheon. Chanticleer and his family had already been
transported thither, where the two hens had forthwith begun an
indefatigable process of egg-laying, with an evident design, as a
matter of duty and conscience, to continue their illustrious breed
under better auspices than for a century past. On the day set for
their departure, the principal personages of our story, including
good Uncle Venner, were assembled in the parlor. "The country-house
is certainly a very fine one, so far as the plan goes," observed
Holgrave, as the party were discussing their future arrangements.
"But I wonder that the late Judge—being so opulent, and with a
reasonable prospect of transmitting his wealth to descendants of
his own—should not have felt the propriety of embodying so
excellent a piece of domestic architecture in stone, rather than in
wood. Then, every generation of the family might have altered the
interior, to suit its own taste and convenience; while the
exterior, through the lapse of years, might have been adding
venerableness to its original beauty, and thus giving that
impression of permanence which I consider essential to the
happiness of any one moment." "Why," cried Phoebe, gazing into the
artist's face with infinite amazement, "how wonderfully your ideas
are changed! A house of stone, indeed! It is but two or three weeks
ago that you seemed to wish people to live in something as fragile
and temporary as a bird's-nest!" "Ah, Phoebe, I told you how it
would be!" said the artist, with a half-melancholy laugh."You find
me a conservative already! Little did I think ever to become one.
It is especially unpardonable in this dwelling of so much
hereditary misfortune, and under the eye of yonder portrait of a
model conservative, who, in that very character, rendered himself
so long the evil destiny of his race." "That picture!" said
Clifford, seeming to shrink from its stern glance. "Whenever I look
at it, there is an old dreamy recollection haunting me, but keeping
just beyond the grasp of my mind. Wealth, it seems to say!
—boundless wealth!—unimaginable wealth! I could fancy that, when I
was a child, or a youth, that portrait had spoken, and told me a
rich secret, or had held forth its hand, with the written record of
hidden opulence. But those old matters are so dim with me,
nowadays! What could this dream have been?" "Perhaps I can recall
it," answered Holgrave. "See! There are a hundred chances to one
that no person, unacquainted with the secret, would ever touch this
spring." "A secret spring!" cried Clifford. "Ah, I remember Now! I
did discover it, one summer afternoon, when I was idling and
dreaming about the house, long, long ago. But the mystery escapes
me." The artist put his finger on the contrivance to which he had
referred. In former days, the effect would probably have been to
cause the picture to start forward. But, in so long a period of
concealment, the machinery had been eaten through with rust; so
that at Holgrave's pressure, the portrait, frame and all, tumbled
suddenly from its position, and lay face downward on the floor. A
recess in the wall was thus brought to light, in which lay an
object so covered with a century's dust that it could not
immediately be recognized as a folded sheet of parchment. Holgrave
opened it, and displayed an ancient deed, signed with the
hieroglyphics of several Indian sagamores, and conveying to Colonel
Pyncheon and his heirs, forever, a vast extent of territory at the
Eastward. "This is the very parchment, the attempt to recover which
cost the beautiful Alice Pyncheon her happiness and life," said the
artist, alluding to his legend. "It is what the Pyncheons sought in
vain, while it was valuable; and now that they find the treasure,
it has long been worthless." "Poor Cousin Jaffrey! This is what
deceived him," exclaimed Hepzibah. "When they were young together,
Clifford probably made a kind of fairy-tale of this discovery. He
was always dreaming hither and thither about the house, and
lighting up its dark corners with beautiful stories. And poor
Jaffrey, who took hold of everything as if it were real, thought my
brother had found out his uncle's wealth. He died with this
delusion in his mind!" "But," said Phoebe, apart to Holgrave, "how
came you to know the secret?" "My dearest Phoebe," said Holgrave,
"how will it please you to assume the name of Maule? As for the
secret, it is the only inheritance that has come down to me from my
ancestors. You should have known sooner (only that I was afraid of
frightening you away) that, in this long drama of wrong and
retribution, I represent the old wizard, and am probably as much a
wizard as ever he was. The son of the executed Matthew Maule, while
building this house, took the opportunity to construct that recess,
and hide away the Indian deed, on which depended the immense
land-claim of the Pyncheons. Thus they bartered their eastern
territory for Maule's garden-ground." "And now" said Uncle Venner
"I suppose their whole claim is not worth one man's share in my
farm yonder!" "Uncle Venner," cried Phoebe, taking the patched
philosopher's hand, "you must never talk any more about your farm!
You shall never go there, as long as you live! There is a cottage
in our new garden,—the prettiest little yellowish-brown cottage you
ever saw; and the sweetest-looking place, for it looks just as if
it were made of gingerbread,—and we are going to fit it up and
furnish it, on purpose for you. And you shall do nothing but what
you choose, and shall be as happy as the day is long, and shall
keep Cousin Clifford in spirits with the wisdom and pleasantness
which is always dropping from your lips!" "Ah! my dear child,"
quoth good Uncle Venner, quite overcome, "if you were to speak to a
young man as you do to an old one, his chance of keeping his heart
another minute would not be worth one of the buttons on my
waistcoat! And—soul alive!—that great sigh, which you made me
heave, has burst off the very last of them! But, never mind! It was
the happiest sigh I ever did heave; and it seems as if I must have
drawn in a gulp of heavenly breath, to make it with. Well, well,
Miss Phoebe! They'll miss me in the gardens hereabouts, and round
by the back doors; and Pyncheon Street, I'm afraid, will hardly
look the same without old Uncle Venner, who remembers it with a
mowing field on one side, and the garden of the Seven Gables on the
other. But either I must go to your country-seat, or you must come
to my farm,—that's one of two things certain; and I leave you to
choose which!" "Oh, come with us, by all means, Uncle Venner!" said
Clifford, who had a remarkable enjoyment of the old man's mellow,
quiet, and simple spirit. "I want you always to be within five
minutes, saunter of my chair. You are the only philosopher I ever
knew of whose wisdom has not a drop of bitter essence at the
bottom!" "Dear me!" cried Uncle Venner, beginning partly to realize
what manner of man he was. "And yet folks used to set me down among
the simple ones, in my younger days! But I suppose I am like a
Roxbury russet,—a great deal the better, the longer I can be kept.
Yes; and my words of wisdom, that you and Phoebe tell me of, are
like the golden dandelions, which never grow in the hot months, but
may be seen glistening among the withered grass, and under the dry
leaves, sometimes as late as December. And you are welcome,
friends, to my mess of dandelions, if there were twice as many!" A
plain, but handsome, dark-green barouche had now drawn up in front
of the ruinous portal of the old mansion- house. The party came
forth, and (with the exception of good Uncle Venner, who was to
follow in a few days) proceeded to take their places. They were
chatting and laughing very pleasantly together; and—as proves to be
often the case, at moments when we ought to palpitate with
sensibility—Clifford and Hepzibah bade a final farewell to the
abode of their forefathers, with hardly more emotion than if they
had made it their arrangement to return thither at tea-time.
Several children were drawn to the spot by so unusual a spectacle
as the barouche and pair of gray horses. Recognizing little Ned
Higgins among them, Hepzibah put her hand into her pocket, and
presented the urchin, her earliest and staunchest customer, with
silver enough to people the Domdaniel cavern of his interior with
as various a procession of quadrupeds as passed into the ark. Two
men were passing, just as the barouche drove off. "Well, Dixey,"
said one of them, "what do you think of this? My wife kept a
cent-shop three months, and lost five dollars on her outlay. Old
Maid Pyncheon has been in trade just about as long, and rides off
in her carriage with a couple of hundred thousand, —reckoning her
share, and Clifford's, and Phoebe's,—and some say twice as much! If
you choose to call it luck, it is all very well; but if we are to
take it as the will of Providence, why, I can't exactly fathom it!"
"Pretty good business!" quoth the sagacious Dixey,—"pretty good
business!"
Maule's well, all this time, though
left in solitude, was throwing up a succession of kaleidoscopic
pictures, in which a gifted eye might have seen foreshadowed the
coming fortunes of Hepzibah and Clifford, and the descendant of the
legendary wizard, and the village maiden, over whom he had thrown
Love's web of sorcery. The Pyncheon Elm, moreover, with what
foliage the September gale had spared to it, whispered
unintelligible prophecies. And wise Uncle Venner, passing slowly
from the ruinous porch, seemed to hear a strain of music, and
fancied that sweet Alice Pyncheon—after witnessing these deeds,
this bygone woe and this present happiness, of her kindred
mortals—had given one farewell touch of a spirit's joy upon her
harpsichord, as she floated heavenward from the House of the Seven Gables!