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Title: Imogen: A Pastoral Romance
Author: Godwin, William
Language: English
As this book started as an ASCII text book there are no pictures available.


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Imogen

A Pastoral Romance
_From the Ancient British_

by William Godwin


Contents

 Preface
 BOOK THE FIRST
 BOOK THE SECOND
 BOOK THE THIRD
 BOOK THE FOURTH
 BOOK THE FIFTH
 BOOK THE SIXTH



Preface

[_By_ WILLIAM GODWIN]


The following performance, as the title imports, was originally
composed in the Welch language. Its style is elegant and pure. And if
the translator has not, as many of his brethren have done, suffered the
spirit of the original totally to evaporate, he apprehends it will be
found to contain much novelty of conception, much classical taste, and
great spirit and beauty in the execution. It appears under the name of
Cadwallo, an ancient bard, who probably lived at least one hundred
years before the commencement of our common era. The manners of the
primitive times seem to be perfectly understood by the author, and are
described with the air of a man who was in the utmost degree familiar
with them. It is impossible to discover in any part of it the slightest
trace of Christianity. And we believe it will not be disputed, that in
a country so pious as that of Wales, it would have been next to
impossible for the poet, though ever so much upon his guard, to avoid
all allusion to the system of revelation. On the contrary, every thing
is Pagan, and in perfect conformity with the theology we are taught to
believe prevailed at that time.

These reasons had induced us to admit, for a long time, that it was
perfectly genuine, and justly ascribed to the amiable Druid. With
respect to the difficulty in regard to the preservation of so long a
work for many centuries by the mere force of memory, the translator,
together with the rest of the world, had already got over that
objection in the case of the celebrated Poems of Ossian. And if he be
not blinded by that partiality, which the midwife is apt to conceive
for the productions, that she is the instrument of bringing into the
world, the Pastoral Romance contains as much originality, as much
poetical beauty, and is as happily calculated to make a deep impression
upon the memory, as either Fingal, or Temora.

The first thing that led us to doubt its authenticity, was the striking
resemblance that appears between the plan of the work, and Milton’s
celebrated Masque at Ludlow Castle. We do not mean however to hold
forth this circumstance as decisive in its condemnation. The
pretensions of Cadwallo, or whoever was the author of the performance,
are very high to originality. If the date of the Romance be previous to
that of Comus, it may be truly said of the author, that he soared above
all imitation, and derived his merits from the inexhaustible source of
his own invention. But Milton, it is well known, proposed some
classical model to himself in all his productions. The Paradise Lost is
almost in every page an imitation of Virgil, or Homer. The Lycidas
treads closely in the steps of the Daphnis and Gallus of Virgil. The
Sampson Agonistes is formed upon the model of Sophocles. Even the
little pieces, L’Allegro and Il Penseroso have their source in a song
of Fletcher, and two beautiful little ballads that are ascribed to
Shakespeare. But the classical model upon which Comus was formed has
not yet been discovered. It is infinitely unlike the Pastoral Comedies
both of Italy and England. And if we could allow ourselves in that
licence of conjecture, which is become almost inseparable from the
character of an editor, we should say: That Milton having written it
upon the borders of Wales, might have had easy recourse to the
manuscript whose contents are now first given to the public: And that
the singularity of preserving the name of the place where it was first
performed in the title of his poem, was intended for an ingenuous and
well-bred acknowledgement of the source from whence he drew his
choicest materials.

But notwithstanding the plausibility of these conjectures, we are now
inclined to give up our original opinion, and to ascribe the
performance to a gentleman of Wales, who lived so late as the reign of
king William the third. The name of this amiable person was Rice ap
Thomas. The romance was certainly at one time in his custody, and was
handed down as a valuable legacy to his descendants, among whom the
present translator has the honour to rank himself. Rice ap Thomas,
Esquire, was a man of a most sweet and inoffensive disposition, beloved
and respected by all his neighbours and tenants, and “passing rich with
‘sixty’ pounds a year.” In his domestic he was elegant, hospitable, and
even sumptuous, for the time and country in which he lived. He was
however naturally of an abstemious and recluse disposition. He abounded
in singularities, which were pardoned to his harmlessness and his
virtues; and his temper was full of sensibility, seriousness, and
melancholy. He devoted the greater part of his time to study; and he
boasted that he had almost a complete collection of the manuscript
remains of our Welch bards. He was often heard to prefer even to
Taliessin, Merlin, and Aneurim, the effusions of the immortal Cadwallo,
and indeed this was the only subject upon which he was ever known to
dispute with eagerness and fervour. In the midst of the controversy, he
would frequently produce passages from the Pastoral Romance, as
decisive of the question. And to confess the truth, I know not how to
excuse this piece of jockeyship and ill faith, even in Rice ap Thomas,
whom I regard as the father of my family, and the chief ornament of my
beloved country.

Some readers will probably however be inclined to apologise for the
conduct of Mr. Thomas, and to lay an equivalent blame to my charge.
They will tell me, that nothing but the weakest partiality could blind
me to the genuine air of antiquity with which the composition is every
where impressed, and to ascribe it to a modern writer. But I am
conscious to my honesty and defy their malice. So far from being
sensible of any improper bias in favour of my ancestor, I am content to
strengthen their hands, by acknowledging that the manuscript, which I
am not at all desirous of refusing to their inspection, is richly
emblazoned with all the discoloration and rust they can possibly
desire. I confess that the wording has the purity of Taliessin, and the
expressiveness of Aneurim, and is such as I know of no modern Welchman
who could write. And yet, in spite as they will probably tell me of
evidence and common sense, I still aver my persuasion, that it is the
production of Rice ap Thomas.

But enough, and perhaps too much, for the question of its antiquity. It
would be unfair to send it into the world without saying something of
the nature of its composition. It is unlike the Arcadia of sir Philip
Sidney, and unlike, what I have just taken the trouble of running over,
the Daphnis of Gessner. It neither on the one hand leaves behind it the
laws of criticism, and mixes together the different stages of
civilization; nor on the other will it perhaps be found frigid,
uninteresting, and insipid. The prevailing opinion of Pastoral seems to
have been, that it is a species of composition admirably fitted for the
size of an eclogue, but that either its nature will not be preserved,
or its simplicity will become surfeiting in a longer performance. And
accordingly, the Pastoral Dramas of Tasso, Guarini, and Fletcher,
however they may have been commended by the critics, and admired by
that credulous train who clap and stare whenever they are bid, have
when the recommendation of novelty has subsided been little attended to
and little read. But the great Milton has proved that this objection is
not insuperable. His Comus is a master-piece of poetical composition.
It is at least equal in its kind even to the Paradise Lost. It is
interesting, descriptive and pathetic. Its fame is continually
increasing, and it will be admired wherever the name of Britain is
repeated, and the language of Britain is understood.

If our hypothesis respecting the date of the present performance is
admitted, it must be acknowleged that the ingenious Mr. Thomas has
taken the Masque of Milton for a model; and the reader with whom Comus
is a favourite, will certainly trace some literal imitations. With
respect to any objections that may be made on this score to the
Pastoral Romance, we will beg the reader to bear in mind, that the
volumes before him are not an original, but a translation. Recollecting
this, we may, beside the authority of Milton himself, and others as
great poets as ever existed who have imitated Homer and one another at
least as much as our author has done Comus, suggest two very weighty
apologies. In the first place, imitation in a certain degree, has ever
been considered as lawful when made from a different language: And in
the second, these imitations come to the reader exaggerated, by being
presented to him in English, and by a person who confesses, that he has
long been conversant with our greatest poets. The translator has always
admired Comus as much as the Pastoral Romance; he has read them
together, and been used to consider them as illustrating each other.
Any verbal coincidences into which he may have fallen, are therefore to
be ascribed where they are due, to him, and not to the author. And upon
the whole, let the imperfections of the Pastoral Romance be what they
will, he trusts he shall be regarded as making a valuable present to
the connoisseurs and the men of taste, and an agreeable addition to the
innocent amusements of the less laborious classes of the polite world.



BOOK THE FIRST

CHARACTER OF THE SHEPHERDESS AND HER LOVER.—FEAST OF RUTHYN.—SONGS OF
THE BARDS.


Listen, O man! to the voice of wisdom. The world thou inhabitest was
not intended for a theatre of fruition, nor destined for a scene of
repose. False and treacherous is that happiness, which has been
preceded by no trial, and is connected with no desert. It is like the
gilded poison that undermines the human frame. It is like the hoarse
murmur of the winds that announces the brewing tempest. Virtue, for
such is the decree of the Most High, is evermore obliged to pass
through the ordeal of temptation, and the thorny paths of adversity.
If, in this day of her trial, no foul blot obscure her lustre, no
irresolution and instability tarnish the clearness of her spirit, then
may she rejoice in the view of her approaching reward, and receive with
an open heart the crown that shall be bestowed upon her.

The extensive valley of Clwyd once boasted a considerable number of
inhabitants, distinguished for primeval innocence and pastoral
simplicity. Nature seemed to have prepared it for their reception with
all that luxuriant bounty, which characterises her most favoured spots.
The inclosure by which it was bounded, of ragged rocks and snow-topt
mountains, served but for a foil to the richness and fertility of this
happy plain. It was seated in the bosom of North Wales, the whole face
of which, with this one exception, was rugged and hilly. As far as the
eye could reach, you might see promontory rise above promontory. The
crags of Penmaenmawr were visible to the northwest, and the unequalled
steep of Snowden terminated the prospect to the south. In its farthest
extent the valley reached almost to the sea, and it was intersected,
from one end to the other, by the beautiful and translucent waters of
the river from which it receives its name.

In this valley all was rectitude and guileless truth. The hoarse din of
war had never reached its happy bosom; its river had never been
impurpled with the stain of human blood. Its willows had not wept over
the crimes of its inhabitants, nor had the iron hand of tyranny taught
care and apprehension to seat themselves upon the brow of its
shepherds. They were strangers to riches, and to ambition, for they all
lived in a happy equality. He was the richest man among them, that
could boast of the greatest store of yellow apples and mellow pears.
And their only objects of rivalship were the skill of the pipe and the
favour of beauty. From morn to eve they tended their fleecy
possessions. Their reward was the blazing hearth, the nut-brown beer,
and the merry tale. But as they sought only the enjoyment of a humble
station, and the pleasures of society, their labours were often
relaxed. Often did the setting sun see the young men and the maidens of
contiguous villages, assembled round the venerable oak, or the
wide-spreading beech. The bells rung in the upland hamlets; the rebecs
sounded with rude harmony; they danced with twinkling feet upon the
level green or listened to the voice of the song, which was now gay and
exhilarating, and now soothed them into pleasing melancholy.

Of all the sons of the plain, the bravest, and the most comely, was
Edwin. His forehead was open and ingenuous, his hair was auburn, and
flowed about his shoulders in wavy ringlets. His person was not less
athletic than it was beautiful. With a firm hand he grasped the
boar-spear, and in pursuit he outstripped the flying fawn. His voice
was strong and melodious, and whether upon the pipe or in the song,
there was no shepherd daring enough to enter the lists with Edwin. But
though he excelled all his competitors, in strength of body, and the
accomplishments of skill, yet was not his mind rough and boisterous.
Success had not taught him a despotic and untractable temper, applause
had not made him insolent and vain. He was gentle as the dove. He
listened with eager docility to the voice of hoary wisdom. He had
always a tear ready to drop over the simple narrative of pastoral
distress. Victor as he continually was in wrestling, in the race, and
in the song, the shout of triumph never escaped his lips, the
exultation of insult he was never heard to utter. On the contrary, with
mild and unfictitious friendship, he soothed the breast of
disappointment, and cheered the spirits of his adversary with honest
praise.

But Edwin was not more distinguished among his brother shepherds, than
was Imogen among the fair. Her skin was clear and pellucid. The fall of
her shoulders was graceful beyond expression. Her eye-brows were
arched, and from her eyes shot forth the grateful rays of the rising
sun. Her waist was slender; and as she ran, she outstripped the winds,
and her footsteps were printless on the tender herb. Her mind, though
soft, was firm; and though yielding as wax to the precepts of wisdom,
and the persuasion of innocence, it was resolute and inflexible to the
blandishments of folly, and the sternness of despotism. Her ruling
passion was the love of virtue. Chastity was the first feature in her
character. It gave substance to her accents, and dignity to her
gestures. Conscious innocence ennobled all her reflexions, and gave to
her sentiments and manner of thinking, I know not what of celestial and
divine.

Edwin and Imogen had been united in the sports of earliest infancy.
They had been mutual witnesses to the opening blossoms of understanding
and benevolence in each others breasts. While yet a boy, Edwin had
often rescued his mistress from the rude vivacity of his playmates, and
had bestowed upon her many of those little distinctions which were
calculated to excite the flame of envy among the infant daughters of
the plain. For her he gathered the vermeil-tinctured pearmain, and the
walnut with an unsavoury rind; for her he hoarded the brown filberd,
and the much prized earth-nut. When she was near, the quoit flew from
his arm with a stronger whirl, and his steps approached more swiftly to
the destined goal. With her he delighted to retire from the heat of the
sun to the centre of the glade, and to sooth her ear with the gaiety of
innocence, long before he taught her to hearken to the language of
love. For her sake he listened with greater eagerness to the mirthful
relation, to the moral fiction, and to the song of the bards. His store
of little narratives was in a manner inexhaustible. With them he
beguiled the hour of retirement, and with them he hastened the sun to
sink behind the western hill.

But as he grew to manly stature, and the down of years had begun to
clothe his blushing cheek, he felt a new sensation in his breast
hitherto unexperienced. He could not now behold his favourite companion
without emotion; his eye sparkled when he approached her; he watched
her gestures; he hung upon her accents; he was interested in all her
motions. Sometimes he would catch the eye of prudent age or of
sharp-sighted rivalry observing him, and he instantly became
embarrassed and confused, and blushed he knew not why. He repaired to
the neighbouring wake, in order to exchange his young lambs and his
hoard of cheeses. Imogen was not there, and in the midst of traffic,
and in the midst of frolic merriment he was conscious to a vacancy and
a listlessness for which he could not account. When he tended his
flocks, and played upon his slender pipe, he would sink in reverie, and
form to himself a thousand schemes of imaginary happiness. Erewhile
they had been vague and general. His spirit was too gentle for him not
to represent to himself a fancied associate; his heart was not narrow
enough to know so much as the meaning of a solitary happiness. But
Imogen now formed the principal figure in these waking dreams. It was
Imogen with whom he wandered beside the brawling rill. It was Imogen
with whom he sat beneath the straw-built shed, and listened to the
pealing rain, and the hollow roaring of the northern blast. If a moment
of forlornness and despair fell to his lot, he wandered upon the heath
without his Imogen, and he climbed the upright precipice without her
harmonious voice to cheer and to animate him. In a word, passion had
taken up her abode in his guileless heart before he was aware of her
approach. Imogen was fair; and the eye of Edwin was enchanted. Imogen
was gentle; and Edwin loved.

Simple as was the character of the inhabitants of this happy valley, it
is not to be supposed that Edwin found many obstacles to the enjoyment
of the society of his mistress. Though strait as the pine, and
beautiful as the gold-skirted clouds of a summer morning, the parents
of Imogen had not learned to make a traffic of the future happiness of
their care. They sought not to decide who should be the fortunate
shepherd that should carry her from the sons of the plain. They left
the choice to her penetrating wit, and her tried discretion. They
erected no rampart to defend her chastity; they planted no spies to
watch over her reputation. They entrusted her honour to her own
keeping. They were convinced, that the spotless dictates of conscious
innocence, and that divinity that dwells in virtue and awes the shaggy
satyr into mute admiration, were her sufficient defence. They left to
her the direction of her conduct. The shepherdess, unsuspicious by
nature, and untaught to view mankind with a wary and a jealous eye, was
a stranger to severity and caprice. She was all gentleness and
humanity. The sweetness of her temper led her to regard with an eye of
candour, and her benevolence to gratify all the innocent wishes, of
those about her. The character of a woman undistinguishing in her
favours, and whose darling employment is to increase the number of her
admirers, is in the highest degree unnatural. Such was not the
character of Imogen. She was artless and sincere. Her tongue evermore
expressed the sentiments of her heart. She drew the attention of no
swain from a rival; she employed no stratagems to inveigle the
affections; she mocked not the respect of the simple shepherd with
delusive encouragement. No man charged her with broken vows; no man
could justly accuse her of being cruel and unkind.

It may therefore readily be supposed, that the subject of love rather
glided into the conversation of Edwin and Imogen, than was regularly
and designedly introduced. They were unknowing in the art of disguising
their feelings. When the tale spoke of peril and bravery, the eyes of
Edwin sparkled with congenial sentiments, and he was evermore ready to
start from the grassy hilloc upon which they sat. When the little
narrative told of the lovers pangs, and the tragic catastrophe of two
gentle hearts whom nature seemed to have formed for mildness and
tranquility, Imogen was melted into the softest distress. The breast of
her Edwin would heave with a sympathetic sigh, and he would even
sometimes venture, from mingled pity and approbation, to kiss away the
tear that impearled her cheek. Intrepid and adventurous with the hero,
he began also to take a new interest in the misfortunes of love. He
could not describe the passionate complaints, the ingenuous tenderness
of another, without insensibly making the case his own. “Had the lover
known my Imogen, he would no longer have sighed for one, who could not
have been so fair, so gentle, and so lovely.” Such were the thoughts of
Edwin; and till now Edwin had always expressed his thoughts. But now
the words fell half-formed from his trembling lips, and the sounds died
away before they were uttered. “Were I to speak, Imogen, who has always
beheld me with an aspect of benignity, might be offended. I should say
no more than the truth; but Imogen is modest. She does not suspect that
she possesses half the superiority over such as are called fair, which
I see in her. And who could bear to incur the resentment of Imogen? Who
would irritate a temper so amiable and mild? I should say no more than
the truth; but Imogen would think it flattery. Let Edwin be charged
with all other follies, but let that vice never find a harbour in his
bosom; let the imputation of that detested crime never blot his
untarnished name.”

Edwin had received from nature the gift of an honest and artless
eloquence. His words were like the snow that falls beneath the beams of
the sun; _they melted as they fell_. Had it been his business to have
pleaded the cause of injured innocence or unmerited distress, his
generous sympathy and his manly persuasion must have won all hearts.
Had he solicited the pursuit of rectitude and happiness, his ingenuous
importunity could not have failed of success. But where the mind is too
deeply interested, there it is that the faculties are most treacherous.
Ardent were the sighs of Edwin, but his voice refused its assistance,
and his tongue faultered under the attempts that he made. Fluent and
voluble upon all other subjects, upon this he hesitated. For the first
time he was dissatisfied with the expressions that nature dictated. For
the first time he dreaded to utter the honest wishes of his heart,
apprehensive that he might do violence to the native delicacy of
Imogen.

But he needed not have feared. Imogen was not blind to those
perfections which every mouth conspired to praise. Her heart was not
cold and unimpassioned; she could not see these perfections, united
with youth and personal beauty, without being attracted. The accents of
Edwin were music to her ear. The tale that Edwin told, interested her
twice as much as what she heard from vulgar lips. To wander with Edwin
along the flowery mead, to sit with Edwin in the cool alcove, had
charms for her for which she knew not how to account, and which she was
at first unwilling to acknowledge to her own heart. When she heard of
the feats of the generous lover, his gallantry in the rural sports, and
his reverence for the fair, it was under the amiable figure of Edwin
that he came painted to her treacherous imagination. She was a stranger
to artifice and disguise, and the renown of Edwin was to her the feast
of the soul, and with visible satisfaction she dwelt upon his praise.
Even in sleep her dreams were of the deserving shepherd. The delusive
pleasures that follow in the train of dark-browed night, all told of
Edwin. The unreal mockery of that capricious being, who cheats us with
scenes of fictitious wretchedness, was full of the unmerited
calamities, the heartbreaking woe, or the untimely death of Edwin. From
Edwin therefore the language of love would have created no disgust.
Imogen was not heedless and indiscreet; she would not have sacrificed
the dignity of innocence. Imogen was not coy; she would not have
treated her admirer with affected disdain. She had no guard but virgin
modesty and that conscious worth, _that would be wooed, and not
unsought be won_.

Such was the yet immature attachment of our two lovers, when an
anniversary of religious mirth summoned them, together with their
neighbour shepherds of the adjacent hamlet, to the spot which had long
been consecrated to rural sports and guiltless festivity, near the
village of Ruthyn. The sun shone with unusual splendour; the Druidical
temples, composed of immense and shapeless stones, heaped upon each
other by a power stupendous and incomprehensible, reflected back his
radiant beams. The glade, the place of destination to the frolic
shepherds, was shrouded beneath two venerable groves that encircled it
on either side. The eye could not pierce beyond them, and the
imagination was in a manner embosomed in the vale. There were the
quivering alder, the upright fir, and the venerable oak crowned with
sacred mistletoe. They grew upon a natural declivity that descended
every way towards the plain. The deep green of the larger trees was
fringed towards the bottom with the pleasing paleness of the willow.
From one of the groves a little rivulet glided across the plain, and
was intersected on one side by a stream that flowed into it from a
point equally distant from either extremity of its course. Both these
streams were bordered with willows. In a word, upon the face of this
beautiful spot all appeared tranquility and peace. It was without a
path, and you would imagine that no human footsteps had ever invaded
the calmness of its solitude. It was the eternal retreat of the
venerable anchorite; it was the uninhabited paradise in the midst of
the trackless ocean.

Such was the spot where the shepherds and shepherdesses of a hundred
cots were now assembled. In the larger compartiments of the vale, the
more muscular and vigorous swains pursued the flying ball, or contended
in the swift-footed race. The bards, venerable for their age and the
snowy whiteness of their hair, sat upon a little eminence as umpires of
the sports. In the smaller compartiments, the swains, mingled with the
fair, danced along the level green, or flew, with a velocity that
beguiled the eager sight, beneath the extended arms of their fellows.
Here a few shepherds, apart from the rest, flung the ponderous quoit
that sung along the air. There two youths, stronger and more athletic
than the throng, grasped each others arms with an eager hand, and
struggled for the victory. Now with manly vigour the one shook the
sinewy frame of the other; now they bended together almost to the
earth, and now with double force they reared again their gigantic
stature. At one time they held each other at the greatest possible
distance; and again, their arms, their legs and their whole bodies
entwined, they seemed as if they had grown together. When the weaker or
less skilful was overthrown, he tumbled like a vast and mountain oak,
that for ages had resisted the tumult of the winds; and the whole plain
resounded at his fall. Such as were unengaged formed a circle round the
wrestlers, and by their shouts and applause animated by turns the
flagging courage of either.

And now the sun had gained his meridian height, and, fatigued with
labour and heat, they seated themselves upon the grass to partake of
their plain and rural feast. The parched wheat was set out in baskets,
and the new cheeses were heaped together. The blushing apple, the
golden pear, the shining plum, and the rough-coated chesnut were
scattered in attractive confusion. Here were the polished cherry and
the downy peach; and here the eager gooseberry, and the rich and
plenteous clusters of the purple grape. The neighbouring fountain
afforded them a cool and sparkling beverage, and the lowing herds
supplied the copious bowl with white and foaming draughts of milk. The
meaner bards accompanied the artless luxury of the feast with the
symphony of their harps.

The repast being finished, the company now engaged in those less active
sports, that exercise the subtility of the wit, more than the agility
or strength of the body. Their untutored minds delighted themselves in
the sly enigma, and the quaint conundrum. Much was their laughter at
the wild guesses of the thoughtless and the giddy; and great the
triumph of the swain who penetrated the mystery, and successfully
removed the abstruseness of the problem. Many were the feats of skill
exhibited by the dextrous shepherd, and infinite were the wonder and
admiration of the gazing spectators. The whole scene indeed was
calculated to display the triumph of stratagem and invention. A
thousand deceits were practised upon the simple and unsuspecting, and
while he looked round to discover the object of the general mirth, it
was increased into bursts of merriment, and convulsive gaiety. At
length they rose from the verdant green, and chased each other in mock
pursuit. Many flew towards the adjoining grove; the pursued concealed
himself behind the dark and impervious thicket, or the broad trunk of
the oak, while the pursuers ran this way and that, and cast their wary
eyes on every side. Carefully they explored the bushes, and surveyed
each clump of tufted trees. And now the neighbouring echoes repeated
the universal shout, and proclaimed to the plain below, that the object
of their search was found. Fatigue however, in spite of the gaiety of
spirit with which their sports were pursued, began to assert his
empire, and they longed for that tranquility and repose which were
destined to succeed.

At this instant the united sound of the lofty harp, the melodious
rebec, and the chearful pipe, summoned them once again to the plain.
From every side they hastened to the lawn, and surrounded, with ardent
eyes, and panting expectation, the honoured troop of the bards, crowned
with laurel and sacred mistletoe. And now they seated themselves upon
the tender herb; and now all was stilness and solemn silence. Not one
whisper floated on the breeze; not a murmur was heard. The tumultuous
winds were hushed, and all was placid composure, save where the gentle
zephyr fanned the leaves. The tinkling rill babbled at their feet; the
feathered choristers warbled in the grove; and the deep lowings of the
distant herds died away upon the ear. The solemn prelude began from a
full concert of the various instruments. It awakened attention in the
thoughtless, and composed the frolic and the gay into unbroken
heedfulness. The air was oppressed with symphonious sounds, and the ear
filled with a tumult of harmony.

On a sudden the chorus ceased: Those instruments which had united their
force to fill the echoes of every grove, and of every hill, were
silent. And now a bard, of youthful appearance, but who was treated
with every mark of honour and distinction, and seated on the left hand
of the hoary Llewelyn, the prince of song, struck the lyre with a lofty
and daring hand. His eye sparkled with poetic rapture, and his
countenance beamed with the sublime smile of luxuriant fancy and
heaven-born inspiration. He sung of the wanton shepherd, that followed,
with ungenerous perseverance, the chaste and virgin daughter of
Cadwallo. The Gods took pity upon her distress, the Gods sent down
their swift and winged messenger to shield her virtue, and deliver her
from the persecution of Modred. With strong and eager steps the
ravisher pursued: timid apprehension, and unviolated honour, urged her
rapid flight. But Modred was in the pride of youth; muscular and sinewy
was the frame of Modred. Beauteous and snowy was the person of the
fair: her form was delicate, and her limbs were tender. If heaven had
not interposed, if the Gods had not been on her side, she must have
fallen a victim to savage fury and brutal lust. But, in the crisis of
her fate, she gradually sunk away before the astonished eyes of Modred.
That beauteous frame was now no more, and she started from before him,
swifter than the winds, a timid and listening hare. Still, still the
hunter pursued; he suspended not the velocity of his course. The speed
of Modred was like the roe upon the mountains; every moment he gained
upon the daughter of Cadwallo. But now the object of his pursuit
vanished from his sight, and eluded his eager search. In vain he
explored every thicket, and surveyed all the paths of the forest. While
he was thus employed, on a sudden there burst from a cave a hungry and
savage wolf; it was the daughter of Cadwallo. Modred started with
horror, and in his turn fled away swifter than the winds. The fierce
and ravenous animal pursued; fire flashed from the eye, and rage and
fury sat upon the crest. Mild and gentle was the daughter of Cadwallo;
her heart relented; her soft and tender spirit belied the savage form.
They approached the far famed stream of Conway. Modred cast behind him
a timid and uncertain eye; the virgin passed along, no longer terrible,
a fair and milk white hind. Modred inflamed with disappointment, reared
his ponderous boar spear, and hurled it from his hand. Too well, ah,
cruel and untutored swain! thou levelest thy aim. Her tender side is
gored; her spotless and snowy coat is deformed with blood. Agitated
with pain, superior to fear, she plunges in the flood. When lo! a
wonder; on the opposite shore she rises, radiant and unhurt, in her
native form. Modred contemplates the prodigy with astonishment; his
lust and his brutality inflame him more than ever. Eagerly he gazes on
her charms; in thought he devours her inexpressive beauties. And now he
can no longer restrain himself; with sudden start he leaps into the
river. The waves are wrought into a sudden tempest; they hurry him to
and fro. He buffets them with lusty arms; he rides upon the billows.
But vain is human strength; the unseen messenger of the Gods laughs at
the impotent efforts of Modred. At length the waters gape with a
frightful void; the bottom, strewed with shells, and overgrown with
sea-weed, is disclosed to the sight. Modred, unhappy Modred, sinks to
rise no more. His beauty is tarnished like the flower of the field; his
blooming cheek, his crimson lip, is pale and colourless. Learn hence,
ye swains, to fear the Gods, and to reverence the divinity of virtue.
Modred never melted for another’s woe; the tear of sympathy had not
moistened his cheek. The heart of Modred was haughty, insolent and
untractable; he turned a deaf ear to the supplication of the helpless,
he listened not to the thunder of the Gods. Let the fate of Modred be
remembered for a caution to the precipitate; let the children of the
valley learn wisdom. Heaven never deserts the cause of virtue; chastity
wherever she wanders (_be it not done in pride or in presumption_) is
sacred and invulnerable.

Such was the song of the youthful bard. Every eye was fixed upon his
visage while he struck the lyre; the multitude of the shepherds
appeared to have no faculty but the ear. And now the murmur of applause
began; and the wondering swains seemed to ask each other, whether the
God of song were not descended among them. “Oh glorious youth,” cried
they, “how early is thy excellence! Ere manhood has given nerve and
vigour to thy limbs, ere yet the flowing beard adorns thy gallant
breast, nature has unlocked to thee her hidden treasures, the Gods have
enriched thee with all the charms of poetry. Great art thou among the
bards; illustrious in wisdom, where they all are wise. Should gracious
heaven spare thy life, we will cease to weep the death of Hoel; we will
lament no longer the growing infirmities of Llewelyn.”

While they yet spoke, a bard, who sat upon the right hand of the
prince, prepared to sweep the string. He was in the prime of manhood.
His shining locks flowed in rich abundance upon his strong and graceful
shoulders. His eye expressed more of flame than gaiety, more of
enthusiasm than imagination. His brow, though manly, and, as it should
seem, by nature erect, bore an appearance of solemn and contemplative.
He had ever been distinguished by an attachment to solitude, and a love
for those grand and tremendous objects of uncultivated nature with
which his country abounded. His were the hanging precipice, and the
foaming cataract. His ear drank in the voice of the tempest; he was
rapt in attention to the roaring thunder. When the contention of the
elements seemed to threaten the destruction of the universe, when
Snowdon bowed to its deepest base, it was then that his mind was most
filled with sublime meditation. His lofty soul soared above the little
war of terrestrial objects, and rode expanded upon the wings of the
winds. Yet was the bard full of gentleness and sensibility; no breast
was more susceptible to the emotions of pity, no tongue was better
skilled in the soft and passionate touches of the melting and pathetic.
He possessed a key to unlock all the avenues of the heart.

Such was the bard, and this was the subject of his song. He told of a
dreadful famine, that laid waste the shores of the Menai. Heaven, not
to punish the shepherds, for, alas, what had these innocent shepherds
done? but in the mysterious wisdom of its ways, had denied the
refreshing shower, and the soft-descending dew. From the top of
Penmaenmawr, as far as the eye could reach, all was uniform and waste.
The trees were leafless, not one flower adorned the ground, not one
tuft of verdure appeared to relieve the weary eye. The brooks were
dried up; their beds only remained to tell the melancholy tale, Here
once was water; the tender lambs hastened to the accustomed brink, and
lifted up their innocent eyes with anguish and disappointment. The
meadows no longer afforded pasture of the cattle; the trees denied
their fruits to man. In this hour of calamity the Druids came forth
from their secret cells, and assembled upon the heights of Mona. This
convention of the servants of the Gods, though intended to relieve the
general distress, for a moment increased it. The shepherds anticipated
the fatal decree; they knew that at times like this the blood of a
human victim was accustomed to be shed upon the altars of heaven. Every
swain trembled for himself or his friend; every parent feared to be
bereaved of the staff of his age. And now the holy priest had cast the
lots in the mysterious urn; and the lot fell upon the generous Arthur.
Arthur was beloved by all the shepherds that dwelt upon the margin of
the main; the praise of Arthur sat upon the lips of all that knew him.
But what served principally to enhance the distress, was the attachment
there existed between him and the beauteous Evelina. Mild was the
breast of Evelina, unused to encounter the harshness of opposition, or
the chilly hand and forbidding countenance of adversity. From twenty
shepherds she had chosen the gallant Arthur, to reward his pure and
constant love. Long had they been decreed to make each other happy. No
parent opposed himself to their virtuous desires; the blessing of
heaven awaited them from the hand of the sacred Druid. But in the
general calamity of their country they had no heart to rejoice; they
could not insult over the misery of all around them. “Soon, oh soon,”
cried the impatient shepherd, “may the wrath of heaven be overpast!
Extend, all-merciful divinity, thy benign influence to the shores of
Arvon! Once more may the rustling of the shower refresh our longing
ears! Once more may our eyes be gladdened with the pearly, orient dew!
May the fields be clothed afresh in cheerful green! May the flowers
enamel the verdant mead! May the brooks again brawl along their pebbly
bed! And may man and beast rejoice together!” Ah, short-sighted,
unapprehensive shepherd! thou dost not know the misfortune that is
reserved for thyself; thou dost not know, that thou shalt not live to
behold those smiling scenes which thy imagination forestallest; thou
dost not see the dart of immature and relentless death that is
suspended over thee. Think, O ye swains, what was the universal
astonishment and pity, when the awful voice of the Druid proclaimed the
decree of heaven! Terror sat upon every other countenance, tears
started into every other eye; but the mien of Arthur was placid and
serene. He came forward from the throng; his eyes glistened with the
fire of patriotism. “Hear me, my countrymen,” cried he, “for you I am
willing to die. What is my insignificant life, when weighed against the
happiness of Arvon? Be grateful to the Gods, that, for so poor a boon,
they are willing to spread wide the hand of bounty, and to exhaust upon
your favoured heads the horn of plenty.” While he spoke he turned his
head to the spot from which he had advanced, and beheld, a melting
object, Evelina, pale and breathless, supported in the arms of the
maidens. For a moment he forgot his elevated sentiments and his
heroism, and flew to raise her. “Evelina, mistress of my heart, awake.
Lift up thine eyes and bless thy Arthur. Be not too much subdued by my
catastrophe. Live to comfort the grey hairs, and to succour the
infirmities of your aged parent.” While the breast of Arthur was
animated with such sentiments, and dictated a conduct like this, the
priests were employed in the mournful preparations. The altar was made
ready; the lambent fire ascended from its surface; the air was perfumed
with the smoke of the incense; the fillets were brought forth; and the
sacred knife glittered in the hand of the chief of the Druids. The
bards had strung their harps, and began the song of death. The sounds
were lofty and animating, they were fitted to inspire gallantry and
enterprise into the trembling coward; they were fitted to breathe a
soul into the clay-cold corse. The spirit of Arthur was roused; his eye
gleamed with immortal fire. The aged oak, that strikes its root beneath
the soil, so defies the blast, and so rears its head in the midst of
the whirlwind. But oh, who can paint the distress of Evelina? Now she
dropped her head, like the tender lily whose stalk, by some vulgar and
careless hand has been broken; and now she was wild and ungovernable,
like the wild beast that has been robbed of its young. For an instant
the venerable name of religion awed her into mute submission. But when
the fatal moment approached, not the Gods, if the Gods had descended in
all their radiant brightness, could have restrained her any longer. The
air was rent with her piercing cries. She spoke not. Her eyes, in
silence turned towards heaven, distilled a plenteous shower. At length,
swifter than the winged hawk, she flew towards the spot, and seized the
sacred and inviolable arm of the holy Druid, which was lifted up to
strike the final blow. “Barbarous and inhuman priest,” she cried,
“cease your vile and impious mummery! No longer insult us with the name
of Gods. If there be Gods, they are merciful; but thou art a savage and
unrelenting monster. Or if some victim must expire, strike here, and I
will thank thee. Strike, and my bosom shall heave to meet the welcome
blow. Do any thing. But oh, spare me the killing, killing spectacle!”
During this action the maidens approached and hurried her from the
plain. “Go,” cried Arthur, “and let not the heart of Evelina be sad. My
Death has nothing in it that deserves to be deplored. It is glorious
and enviable. It shall be remembered when this frame is crumbled into
dust. The song of the bards shall preserve it to never dying fame.” The
inconsolable fair one had now been forced away. The intrepid shepherd
bared his breast to the sacred knife. His nerves trembled not. His
bosom panted not. And now behold the lovely youth, worthy to have lived
through revolving years, sunk on the ground, and weltering in his
blood. Yes, gallant Arthur, thou shalt possess that immortality which
was the first wish of thy heart! My song shall embalm thy precious
memory, thy generous, spotless fame! But, ah, it is not in the song of
the bards to sooth the rooted sorrow of Evelina. Every morning serves
only to renew it. Every night she bathes her couch in tears. Those
objects, which carry pleasure to the sense of every other fair, serve
only to renew thy unexhausted grief. The rustling shower, the pearly
dew, the brawling brook, the cheerful green, the flower-enameled mead,
all join to tell of the barbarous and untimely fate of Arthur. Smile no
more, O ye meads; mock not the grief of Evelina. Let the trees again be
leafless; let the rivers flow no longer in their empty beds. A scene
like this suits best the settled temper of Evelina.

He ceased. And his pathetic strain had awakened the sympathy of the
universal throng. Every shepherd hung his mournful head, when the
untimely fate of Arthur was related; every maiden dropped a generous
tear over the sorrows of Evelina. They listened to the song, and forgot
the poet. Their souls were rapt with alternate passions, and they
perceived not the matchless skill by which they were excited. The lofty
bard hurried them along with the rapidity of his conceptions, and left
them no time for hesitation, and left them no time for reflection. He
ceased, and the melodious sounds still hung upon their ear, and they
still sat in the posture of eager attention. At length they recollected
themselves; and it was no longer the low and increasing murmur of
applause: it was the exclamation of rapture; it was the unpremeditated
shout of astonishment.

In the mean time, the reverend Llewelyn, upon whose sacred head ninety
winters had scattered their snow, grasped the lyre, which had so often
confessed the master’s hand. Though far advanced in the vale of years,
there was a strength and vigour in his age, of which the degeneracy of
modern times can have little conception. The fire was not extinguished
in his flaming eye; it had only attained that degree of chasteness and
solemnity, which had in it by so much the more, all that is majestic,
and all that is celestial. His looks held commerce with his native
skies. No vulgar passion ever visited his heaven-born mind. No vulgar
emotion ever deformed the godlike tranquility of his soul. He had but
one passion; it was the love of harmony. He was conscious only to one
emotion; it was reverence for the immortal Gods. He sat like the
anchorite upon the summit of Snowdon. The tempests raise the foaming
ocean into one scene of horror, but he beholds it unmoved. The rains
descend, the thunder roars, and the lightnings play beneath his feet.

Llewelyn struck the lyre, and the innumerable croud was noiseless and
silent as the chambers of death. They did not now wait for the pleasing
tale of a luxuriant imagination, or the pathetic and melting strain of
the mourner. They composed their spirits into the serenity of devotion.
They called together their innocent thoughts for the worship of heaven.
By anticipation their bosoms swelled with gratitude, and their hearts
dilated into praise.

The pious Llewelyn began his song from the rude and shapeless chaos. He
magnified the almighty word that spoke it into form. He sung of the
loose and fenny soil which gradually acquired firmness and density. The
immeasurable, eternal caverns of the ocean were scooped. The waters
rushed along, and fell with resounding, foamy violence to the depth
below. The sun shone forth from his chamber in the east, and the earth
wondered at the object, and smiled beneath his beams. Suddenly the
whole face of it was adorned with a verdant, undulating robe. The
purple violet and the yellow crocus bestrewed the ground. The stately
oak reared its branchy head, and the trees and shrubs burst from the
surface of the earth. Impregnated by power divine, the soil was
prolific in other fruits than these. The clods appeared to be informed
with a conscious spirit, and gradually assumed a thousand various
forms. The animated earth seemed to paw the verdant mead, and to
despise the mould from which it came. A disdainful horse, it shook its
flowing mane, and snuffed the enlivening breeze, and stretched along
the plain. The red-eyed wolf and the unwieldy ox burst like the mole
the concealing continent, and threw the earth in hillocs. The stag
upreared his branching head. The thinly scattered animals wandered
among the unfrequented hills, and cropped the untasted herb. Meantime
the birds, with many coloured plumage, skimmed along the unploughed
air, and taught the silent woods and hills to echo with their song.

Creatures, hymn the praises of your creator! Thou sun, prolific parent
of a thousand various productions, by whose genial heat they are
nurtured, and whose radiant beams give chearfulness and beauty to the
face of nature, first of all the existences of this material universe
acknowledge him thy superior, and while thou dispensest a thousand
benefits to the inferior creation, ascribe thine excellencies solely to
the great source of beauty and perfection! And when the sun has ceased
his wondrous course, do thou, O moon, in milder lustre show to people
of a thousand names the honours of thy maker! Thou loud and wintery
north wind, in majestic and tremendous tone declare his lofty praise!
Ye gentle zephyrs, whisper them to the modest, and softly breathe them
in the ears of the lowly! Ye towering pines, and humble shrubs, ye
fragrant flowers, and, more than all, ye broad and stately oaks, bind
your heads, and wave your branches, and adore! Ye warbling fountains,
warbling tune his praise! Praise him, ye beasts, in different strains!
And let the birds, that soar on lofty wings, and scale the path of
heaven, bear, in their various melody, the notes of adoration to the
skies! Mortals, ye favoured sons of the eternal father, be it yours in
articulate expressions of gratitude to interpret for the mute creation,
and to speak a sublimer and more rational homage.

Heard ye not the music of the spheres? Know ye not the melody of
celestial voices? On yonder silver-skirted cloud I see them come. It
turns its brilliant lining on the setting day. And these are the
accents of their worship. “Ye sons of women, such as ye are now, such
once were we. Through many scenes of trial, through heroic constancy,
and ever-during patience, have we attained to this bright eminence.
Large and mysterious are the paths of heaven, just and immaculate his
ways. If ye listen to the siren voice of pleasure, if upon the neck of
heedless youth you throw the reins, that base and earth-born clay which
now you wear, shall assume despotic empire. And when you quit the
present narrow scene, ye shall wear a form congenial to your vices. The
fierce and lawless shall assume the figure of the unrelenting wolf. The
unreflecting tyrant, that raised a mistaken fame from scenes of
devastation and war, shall spurn the ground, a haughty and indignant
horse; and in that form, shall learn, by dear experience, what were the
sufferings and what the scourge that he inflicted on mankind. The
sensual shall wear the shaggy vesture of the goat, or foam and whet his
horrid tusks, a wild and untame’d boar. But virtue prepares its
possessor for the skies. Upon the upright and the good, attendant
angels wait. With heavenly spirits they converse. On them the dark
machinations of witchcraft, and the sullen spirits of darkness have no
power. Even the outward form is impressed with a beam of celestial
lustre. By slow, but never ceasing steps, they tread the path of
immortality and honour. Then, mortals, love, support, and cherish each
other. Fear the Gods, and reverence their holy, white-robed servants.
Let the sacred oak be your care. Worship the holy and everlasting
mistletoe. And when all the objects that you now behold shall be
involved in universal conflagration, and time shall be no more; ye
shall mix with Gods, ye shall partake their thrones, and be crowned
like them with never-fading laurel.”



BOOK THE SECOND

THUNDER STORM.—THE RAPE OF IMOGEN.—EDWIN ARRIVES AT THE GROTTO OF
ELWY.—CHARACTER OF THE MAGICIAN.—THE END OF THE FIRST DAY.


The song of Llewelyn was heard by the shepherds with reverence and mute
attention. Their blameless hearts were lifted to the skies with the
sentiment of gratitude; their honest bosoms overflowed with the fervour
of devotion. They proved their sympathy with the feelings of the bard,
not by licentious shouts and wild huzzas, but by the composure of their
spirits, the serenity of their countenances, and the deep and
unutterable silence which universally prevailed. And now the hoary
minstrel rose from the little eminence, beneath the aged oak, from
whose branches depended the ivy and the honeysuckle, on which the
veneration of the multitude had placed him. He came into the midst of
the plain, and the sons and the daughters of the fertile Clwyd pressed
around him. Fervently they kissed the hem of his garment; eagerly with
their eyes they sought to encounter the benign rays of his countenance.
With the dignity of a magistrate, and the tenderness of a father, he
lifted his aged arms, and poured upon them his mild benediction.
“Children, I have met your fathers, and your fathers fathers, beneath
the hills of Ruthyn. Such as they were, such are ye, and such ever may
ye remain. The lily is not more spotless, the rose and the violet do
not boast a more fragrant odour, than the incense of your prayers when
it ascends to the footstool of the Gods. Guileless and undesigning are
you as the yearling lamb; gentle and affectionate as the cooing dove.
Qualities like these the Gods behold with approbation; to qualities
like these the Gods assign their choicest blessings. My sons, there is
a splendour that dazzles, rather than enlightens; there is a heat that
burns rather than fructifies. Let not characters like these excite your
ambition. Be yours the unfrequented sylvan scene. Be yours the shadowy
and unnoticed vale of obscurity. Here are the mild and unruffled
affections. Here are virtue, peace and happiness. _Here also are_
GODS.”

Having thus said, he dismissed the assembly, and the shepherds prepared
to return to their respective homes. Edwin and Imogen, as they had
come, so they returned together. The parents of the maiden had confided
her to the care of the gallant shepherds. “She is our only child,” said
they, “our only treasure, and our life is wrapt up in her safety. Watch
over her like her guardian genius. Bring her again to our arms adorned
with the cheerfulness of tranquility and innocence.” The breast of
Edwin was dilated with the charge; he felt a gentle undulation of pride
and conscious importance about his heart, at the honour conferred upon
him.

The setting sun now gilded the western hills. His beams played upon
their summits, and were reflected in an irregular semi-circle of
splendour, spotless and radiant as the robes of the fairies. The heat
of the day was over, the atmosphere was mild, and all the objects round
them quiet and serene. A gentle zephyr fanned the leaves; and the
shadows of the trees, projecting to their utmost length, gave an
additional coolness and a soberer tint to the fields through which they
passed.

The conversation of these innocent and guileless lovers was, as it
were, in unison with the placidness of the evening. The sports, in
which they had been engaged, had inspired them with gaiety, and the
songs they had heard, had raised their thoughts to a sublimer pitch
than was usual to them. They praised the miracles of the tale of
Modred; they sympathised with the affliction of Evelina; and they spoke
with the most unfeigned reverence of the pious and venerable Llewelyn.

But the harmless chearfulness of their conversation did not last long.
The serenity that was around them was soon interrupted, and their
attention was diverted to external objects. Suddenly you might have
perceived a cloud, small and dark, that rose from the bosom of the sea.
By swift advances it became thicker and broader, till the whole heavens
were enveloped in its dismal shade. The gentle zephyr, that anon played
among the trees, was changed into a wind hollow and tumultuous. Its
course was irregular. Now all was still and silent as the caverns of
death; and again it burst forth in momentary blasts, or whirled the
straws and fallen leaves in circling eddies. The light of day was
shrouded and invisible. The slow and sober progress of evening was
forestalled. The woods and the hills were embosomed in darkness. Their
summits were no longer gilded. One by one the beams of the sun were
withdrawn from each; and at length Snowdon itself could not be
perceived.

Our shepherd and his charge had at this moment reached the most
extensive and unprotected part of the plain. No friendly cot was near
to shield them from the coming storm. And now a solemn peal of thunder
seemed to roll along over their heads. They had begun to fly, but the
tender Imogen was terrified at the unexpected crash, and sunk, almost
breathless, into the arms of Edwin. In the mean time, the lightnings
seemed to fill the heavens with their shining flame. The claps of
thunder grew louder and more frequent. They reverberated from rock to
rock, and from hill to hill. If at any time, for a transitory interval,
the tremendous echoes died away upon the ear, it was filled with the
hollow roaring of the winds, and the boisterous dashing of the distant
waves. At length the pealing rain descended. It seemed as if all the
waters of heaven were exhausted upon their naked heads. The anxious and
afflicted Edwin took his beauteous and insensible companion in his
arms, and flew across the plain.

But at this instant, a more extraordinary and terrifying object
engrossed his attention. An oak, the monarch of the plain, towards
which he bent his rapid course, was suddenly struck with the bolt of
heaven, and blasted in his sight. Its large and spreading branches were
withered; its leaves shrunk up and faded. In the very trunk a gaping
and tremendous rift appeared. At the same moment two huge and craggy
cliffs burst from the surrounding rocks, to which they had grown for
ages, and tumbling with a hideous noise, trundled along the plain.

At length a third spectacle, more horrible than the rest, presented
itself to the affrighted eyes of Edwin. He saw a figure, larger than
the human, that walked among the clouds, and piloted the storm. Its
appearance was dreadful, and its shape, loose and undistinguishable,
seemed to be blended with the encircling darkness. From its coutenance
gleamed a barbarous smile, ten times more terrific than the frown of
any other being. Triumph, inhuman triumph, glistened in its eye, and,
with relentless delight, it brewed the tempest, and hurled the
destructive lightning. Edwin gazed upon this astonishing apparition,
and knew it for a goblin of darkness. The heart of Edwin, which no
human terror could appal, sunk within him; his nerves trembled, and the
objects that surrounded him, swam in confusion before his eyes. But it
is not for virtue to tremble; it is not for conscious innocence to fear
the power of elves and goblins. Edwin presently recollected himself,
and a gloomy kind of tranquility assumed the empire of his heart. He
was more watchful than ever for his beloved Imogen; he gazed with
threefold earnestness upon the fearful spectre.

A sound now invaded his ear, from the shapeless rocks behind him. They
repeated it with all their echoes. It was hollow as the raging wind;
and yet it was not the raging wind. It was loud as the roaring thunder;
and yet it was not the voice of thunder. But he did not remain long in
suspense, from whence the voice proceeded. A wolf, whom hunger had made
superior to fear, leaped from the rock, upon the plain below. Edwin
turned his eyes upon the horrid monster; he grasped his boarspear in
his hand. The unconscious Imogen glided from his arms, and he advanced
before her. He met the savage in his fury, and plunged his weapon in
his side. He overturned the monster; he drew forth his lance reeking
with his blood; his enemy lay convulsed in the agonies of death. But
ere he could return, he heard the sound of a car rattling along the
plain. The reins were of silk, and the chariot shone with burnished
gold. Upon the top of it sat a man, tall, lusty, and youthful. His hair
flowed about his shoulders, his eyes sparkled with untamed fierceness,
and his brow was marked with the haughty insolence of pride. It was
Roderic, lord of a hundred hills; but Edwin knew him not. The goblin
descended from its eminence, and directed the course of Roderic. In a
moment, he seized the breathless and insensible Imogen, and lifted her
to his car. Edwin beheld the scene with grief and astonishment; his
senses were in a manner overwhelmed with so many successive prodigies.
But he did not long remain inactive; grief and astonishment soon gave
way to revenge. He took his javelin, still red with the blood of the
mountain wolf, and whirled it from his hand. Edwin was skilled to toss
the dart; from his hand it flew unerring to its aim. Forceful it sung
along the air; but the goblin advanced with hasty steps among the
clouds. It touched it with its hand, and it fell harmless and pointless
to the ground. During this action the car of Roderic disappeared. The
goblin immediately vanished; and Edwin was left in solitude.

The storm however had not yet ceased. The rain descended with all its
former fury. The thunder roared with a strong and deafening sound. The
lightnings flamed from pole to pole. But the lightnings flamed, and the
thunder roared unregarded. The storm beat in vain upon the unsheltered
head of Edwin. “Where,” cried he, with the voice of anguish and
despair, “is my Imogen, my mistress, my wife, the charmer of my soul,
the solace of my heart?” Saying this, he sprung away like the roe upon
the mountains. His pace was swifter than that of the zephyr when it
sweeps along over the unbending corn. He soon reached the avenue by
which the chariot had disappeared from his sight. He leaped from rock
to rock; he ascended to the summit of the cliff. His eye glanced the
swift-flying car of Roderic; he knew him by his gilded carriage, and
his spangled vest. But he saw him only for a moment. His aching eye
pursued the triumphant flight in vain. “Stay, stay, base ravisher,
inglorious coward!” he exclaimed. “If thou art a man, return and meet
me. I will encounter thee hand to hand. I will not fear the strength of
thy shoulders, and the haughtiness of thy crest. If in such a cause,
with the pride of virtue on my side, with all the Gods to combat for
me, I am yet vanquished, then be Imogen thine: then let her be
submitted to thy despotic power, to thy brutal outrage, and I will not
murmur.”

But his words were given to the winds of heaven. Roderic fled far, far
away. The heart of Edwin was wrung with anguish. “Ye kind and merciful
Gods!” exclaimed he, “grant but this one prayer, and the voice of Edwin
shall no more importune you with presumptuous vows. Blot from the book
of fate the tedious interval. Give me to find the potent villain.
Though he be hemmed in with guards behind guards; though his impious
mansion strike its foundations deep to the centre, and rear its head
above the clouds; though all the powers of hell combine on his side, I
will search him out, I will penetrate into his most hidden recess. I
can but die. Oh, if I am to be deprived of Imogen, how sweet, how
solacing is the thought of death! Let me die in her cause. That were
some comfort yet. Let me die in her presence, let her eyes witness the
fervour of my attachment, and I will die without a groan.”

Having thus poured forth the anguish of his bosom, he resumed the
pursuit. But how could Edwin, alone, on foot, and wearied with the
journey of the day, hope to overtake the winged steeds of Roderic? And
indeed had his speed been tenfold greater than it was, it had been
exerted to no purpose. As the ravisher arrived at the edge of the
mountain, he struck into a narrow and devious path that led directly to
his mansion. But Edwin, who had for some time lost sight of the
chariot, took no notice of a way, covered with moss and overgrown with
bushes; and pursued the more beaten road. Swift was his course; but the
swifter he flew, the farther still he wandered from the object of his
search. A rapid brook flowed across his path, which the descending
rains had swelled into a river. Without a moment’s hesitation,
accoutered as he was, he plunged in. Instantly he gained the opposite
bank, and divided the air before him, like an arrow in its flight.

In the mean time, the storm had ceased, the darkness was dispersed, and
only a few thin and fleecy clouds were scattered over the blue expanse.
The sun had for some time sunk beneath the western hills. The heavens,
clear and serene, had assumed a deeper tint, and were spangled over
with stars. The moon, in calm and silver lustre, lent her friendly
light to the weary traveller. Edwin was fatigued and faint. He tried to
give vent to his complaints; but his tongue cleaved to the roof of his
mouth: his spirits sunk within him. No sound now reached his ears but
the baying of the shepherds dogs, and the _drowsy tinklings_ of the
_distant folds_. The owl, the solemn bird of night, sat buried among
the branches of the aged oak, and with her melancholy hootings gave an
additional serenity to the scene. At a small distance, on his right
hand, he perceived a contiguous object that reflected the rays of the
moon, through the willows and the hazels, and chequered the view with a
clear and settled lustre. He approached it. It was the lake of Elwy;
and near it he discovered that huge pile of stones, so well known to
him, which had been reared ages since, by the holy Druids. It was upon
this spot that they worshipped the Gods. But they had no habitation
near it. They repaired thither at stated intervals from the woods of
Mona, and the shores of Arvon. One only Druid lived by the banks of the
silver flood, and watched the temple day and night, that no rude hand
might do violence to the sanctity of the place, and no profaner mortal,
with sacrilegious foot might enter the mysterious edifice. It was
surrounded with a wall of oaks. The humbler shrubs filled up their
interstices, and there was no avenue to the sacred shade, except by two
narrow paths on either side the lake.

The solemn stilness of the scene for a moment hushed the sorrows of
Edwin into oblivion. Ah, short oblivion! scarcely had he gazed around
him, and drank of the quietness and peace of the scene, ere those
recent sorrows impressed his bosom with more anguish than before.
Recollecting himself however, he trod the mead with nimble feet, and
approached, trembling and with hesitation, to the eastern avenue. “Hear
me, sage and generous Madoc,” cried the shepherd, with a voice that
glided along the peaceful lake, “hear the sorrows of the most forlorn
of all the sons of Clwyd!” The hermit, who sat at the door of his
grotto, perceived the sound, and approached to the place from which it
proceeded. The accent was gentle; and he feared no boisterous
intrusion. The accent was tender and pathetic; and never was the breast
of Madoc steeled against the voice of anguish. “Approach, my son,” he
cried. “What disastrous event has brought thee hither, so far from thy
peaceful home, and at this still and silent hour of night? Has any lamb
wandered from thy fold, and art thou come hither in pursuit of it?”
Edwin was silent. His heart seemed full almost to bursting, and he
could not utter a word. “Hast thou wandered from thy companions and
missed the path that led to the well-known hamlet?” “Alas,” said Edwin,
“I had a companion once!” and he lifted up his eyes to heaven in
speechless despair. “Has thy mistress deserted thee, or have her
parents bestowed her on some happier swain?” “Yes,” said Edwin, “I have
lost her, who was dear to me as the _ruddy drops that visit my sad
heart._ But she was constant. Her parents approved of my passion, and
consigned her to my arms.” “Has sickness then overtaken her, or has
untimely death put a period to thy prospects, just as they began to
bloom?” “Oh, no,” said the disconsolate shepherd, “I have encountered a
disaster more comfortless and wasteful than sickness. I had a thousand
times rather have received her last sigh, and closed her eyes in
darkness!”

During this conversation, they advanced along the banks of Elwy, and
drew towards the grotto of the hermit. The hospitable Madoc brought
some dried fruits and a few roots from his cell, and spread them before
his guest. He took a bowl of seasoned wood, and hastening to the
fountain, that fell with a murmuring noise down the neighing [sic]
rock, he presented the limpid beverage. “Such,” said he, “is my humble
fare; partake it with a contented heart, and it shall be more grateful
to thy taste, than the high flavoured viands of a monarch.” In the mean
time, Madoc, pleased with the benevolent pursuit, gathered some bits of
dry wood, and setting them on fire, besought the swain to refresh
himself from the weariness of his travel, and the inclemency of the
storm. But the heart of Edwin was too full to partake of the provisions
that his attentive host had prepared. The chearfulness however of the
blazing hearth and the generous officiousness of the hermit, seemed by
degrees to recover him from the insensibility and lethargy, that for a
time had swallowed up all his faculties.

Madoc had hitherto contemplated his guest in silence. He permitted him
to refresh his wearied frame and to resume his dissipated spirits
uninterrupted; he suppressed the curiosity by which he was actuated, to
learn the story of the woes of Edwin. In the midst of his dejection, he
perceived the symptoms of a nobility of spirit that interested him; and
the anguish of the shepherd’s mind had not totally destroyed the traces
of that mild affability, and that manly frankness for which he was
esteemed.

Edwin had no sooner appeared to shake off a small part of his
melancholy, his eye no sooner sparkled with returning fire, than Madoc
embraced the favourable omen. “My son,” said he, “you seem to be full
of dejection and grief. Grief is not an inmate of the plain; the hours
of the shepherd are sped in gaiety and mirth. Suspicion and design are
stranger to his bosom. With him the voice of discord is not heard. The
scourge of war never blasted his smiling fields; the terror of invasion
never banished him from the peaceful cot. You too are young and
uninured even to the misfortunes of the shepherd. No contagion has
destroyed your flock; no wolf has broken its slender barriers: you have
felt the anguish of no wound, and been witness to the death of no
friend. Say then, my son, why art thou thus dejected and forlorn?”

“Alas,” replied Edwin, “our equal lot undoubtedly removes us from the
stroke of many misfortunes; but even to us adversity extends its rod. I
have been exposed to the ravages of an invader, more fearful than the
wolf, more detested than the conqueror. From an affliction like mine,
no occupation, no rank, no age can exempt. Sawest thou not the
descending storm? Did not the rain beat upon thy cavern, and the
thunder roar among the hills?” “It did,” cried Madoc, “and I was struck
with reverence, and worshipped the God who grasps the thunder in his
mighty hand. Wast thou, my son, exposed to its fury?” “I was upon the
bleak and wide extended heath. With Imogen, the fairest and most
constant of the daughters of Clwyd, I returned from the feast of
Ruthyn. But alas,” added the shepherd, “the storm had no terrors, when
compared with the scenes that accompanied it. I beheld, Madoc, nor are
the words I utter the words of shameless imposition, or coward
credulity; I beheld a phantom, that glided along the air, and rode
among the clouds. At his command, a wolf from the forest, with horrid
tusks, and eyes of fire, burst upon me. I advanced towards it, that I
might defend the fairest of her sex from its fury, and plunged my
javelin in its heart. But, oh! while I was thus engaged, a chariot
advanced on the opposite side! Its course was directed by the spectre.
The rider descended on the plain, and seized the spotless, helpless
Imogen; and never, never shall these eyes behold her more! Such, O thou
servant of the Gods, has been my adversity. The powers of darkness have
arrayed themselves against me. For me the storm has been brewed; all
the arrows of heaven have been directed against my weak, defenceless
head. For me the elements have mixed in tremendous confusion; portents
and prodigies have been accumulated for my destruction. Oh, then,
generous and hospitable Druid, what path is there, that is left for my
deliverance? What chance remains for me, now that a host of invisible
beings combats against me? Teach me, my friend, my father, what it is
that I must do. Tell me, is there any happiness in store for Edwin, or
must I sink, unresisting, into the arms of comfortless despair?”

“My son,” cried the venerable hermit, “hope is at all times our duty,
and despair our crime. It is not in the power of events to undermine
the felicity of the virtuous. Goblins, and spirits of darkness, are
permitted a certain scope in this terrestrial scene; but their power is
bounded; beyond a certain line they cannot wander. In vain do they
threaten innocence and truth. Innocence is a wall of brass upon which
they can make no impression. Virtue is an adamant that is sacred and
secure from all their efforts. He whose thoughts are full of rectitude
and heaven, who knows no guile, may wander in safety through
uncultivated forests, or sandy plains, that have never known the trace
of human feet. Before him the robber is just, and the satyr tame; for
him the monsters of the desert are disarmed of their terrors, and he
shall lead the wild boar and the wolf in his hand. Such is the sanctity
that heaven has bestowed on unblemished truth.”

“Alas, my father,” cried Edwin, “this is the lesson that was first
communicated to my childhood; and my infant heart bounded with the
sacred confidence it inspired. But excuse the presumption of a
distracted heart. This lesson, to which at another time I could have
listened with rapture and enthusiasm, seems now too loose and general
for a medicine to my woes. Innocence the Gods have made superior and
invulnerable. And, oh, in what have I transgressed? Yet, my father, I
am wounded in the tenderest part. Shall I ever recover my Imogen? Is
she not torn from me irreversibly? How shall I engage with powers
invisible, and supernatural? How shall I discover my unknown, human
enemy? No, Madoc, I am lost in impenetrable darkness. For me there is
no hope, no shadow of approaching ease.”

“Be calm, my son,” rejoined the anchorite. “Arrogance and impatience
become not the weak and uninformed children of the earth. Be calm, and
I will administer a remedy more appropriate to your wrongs. But
remember this is your hour of trial. If now you forget the principles
of your youth, and the instructions of the sacred Druids, you shall
fall from happiness, never to regain it more. But if you come forth
pure and unblemished from the fierce assay, your Imogen shall be yours,
the Gods shall take you into their resistless protection, and in all
future ages, when men would cite an example of distinguished felicity,
they shall say, as fortunate as Edwin of the vale.” Edwin bended his
knee in mute submission.

“Listen, my son,” continued the Druid. “I know your enemy, and can
point out to you his obscure retreat.” The shepherd lifted up his eyes,
lately so languid, that now flashed with fire. He eagerly grasped the
hand of Madoc. “Alas,” continued the hermit, “to know him would little
answer the purpose of thy bold and enterprising spirit. They adversary,
as thou mayest have conjectured, is in league with the powers of
darkness. Against them what can courage, what can adventure avail? They
can unthread thy joints, and crumble all thy sinews. They can chain up
thy limbs in marble. For how many perils, how many unforseen disasters
ought he to be prepared, who dares to encounter them?”

“The name of him who has ravished from thee the dearest treasure of thy
heart, is Roderic. His mother—attend, oh Edwin, for whatever the
incredulous may pretend, the tales related by the bards in their
immortal songs, of ghosts, and fairies, and dire enchantment, are not
vain and fabulous.—You have heard of the inauspicious fame and the bad
eminence of Rodogune. She withdrew from the fields of Clwyd within the
memory of the elder of shepherds. Various were the conjectures
occasioned by her disappearance. Some imagined, that for the
haughtiness of her humour, and the malignity of her disposition,
characters that were wholly unexampled in the pastoral life, she had
been carried away before the period limited by nature to the place of
torment by the goblins of the abyss. Others believed that she concealed
herself in the top of the highest mountain that was near them, and by a
commerce with invisible, malignant beings, still exercised the same
gloomy temper in more potent, and therefore more inauspicious harm. The
blight that overspread the meadows, the destructive contagion that
diffused itself among the flocks, the raging tempest that rooted up the
oak, when the thunder roared among the hills, and the lightning flashed
from pole to pole, they ascribed to the machinations and the sorcery of
Rodogune. Their conjectures indeed were blind, but their notions were
not wholly mistaken.

“Rodogune was the mother of Roderic. She was deeply skilled in those
dark and flagitious arts, which have cast a gloom upon this mortal
scene. The intellectual powers bestowed upon her by the Gods were great
and eminent, and were given for a far different purpose than to be
employed in these sinister pursuits. But all conspicuous talents are
liable, my son, to base perversion; and such was the fate of those of
Rodogune. She delighted in the actions which her dark and criminal
alliance with invisible powers enabled her to perform. It was her’s to
mislead the benighted shepherd. It was Sher’s to part the happy lovers.
For this purpose she would swell the waves, and toss the feeble bark.
She dispensed, according to the dictates of her caprice, the mildew
among the tender herb, and the pestilence among the folds of the
shepherds. By the stupendous powers of enchantment, she raised from the
bosom of a hill a wondrous edifice. The apartments were magnificent and
stately; unlike the shepherd’s cot, and not to be conceived by the
imagination of the rustic. Here she accumulated a thousand various
gratifications; here she wantoned in all the secret and licentious
desires of her heart. But her castle was not merely a scene of
thoughtless pleasure. Within its circle she held crouds of degenerate
shepherds, groveling through the omnipotence of her incantations in
every brutal form. Even the spectres and the elves that disobeyed her
authority, she held in the severest durance. She compressed their
tender forms in the narrowest prison, or gave them to the stormy winds,
to be whirled, _with restless violence, round about_ the ample globe.
In a word, her mansion was one uninterrupted scene of ingenious cruelty
and miserable despair. To be surrounded with the face of disappointment
and agony was the happiness of Rodogune.

“When first by her art she raised that edifice which is now inhabited
by her son, she had been desirous to conceal it from the prying eyes of
the wanderer. In order to this, though it stood upon an eminence, she
chose an eminence that was surrounded by higher hills, and hills which,
according to the neighbouring shepherds, were impassable. No
adventurous step had ever since the day they were created pierced
beyond them. It was imagined that the space they surrounded was the
haunt of elves, and the resort of those who held commerce with evil
spirits. The curling smoke, which of late has frequently been seen to
ascend from their bosom, has confirmed this tradition. And in order to
render her habitation still more impervious, Rodogune surrounded it
with a deep grove of oaks, whose thick branches entwined together,
permitted no passage so much as to the light of day.

“Roderic was her only child, the darling of her age, and the central
object of all her cares. At his birth the elves and the fairies were
summoned together. They bestowed upon him every beauty of person and
every subtlety of wit. To every weapon they made him invulnerable. And,
without demanding from him that care and persevering study, that had
planted wrinkles on his mother’s brow, they gave him to enjoy his
wishes instantly and uncontroled. One only goblin was daring enough to
pronounce a curse upon him. ‘WHEN RODERIC,’ cried he, ‘SHALL BE
OVERREACHED IN ALL HIS SPELLS BY A SIMPLE SWAIN, UNVERSED IN THE
VARIOUS ARTS OF SORCERY AND MAGIC: WHEN RODERIC SHALL SUE TO A SIMPLE
MAID, WHO BY HIS CHARMS SHALL BE MADE TO HATE THE SWAIN THAT ONCE SHE
LOVED, AND WHO YET SHALL RESIST ALL HIS PERSONAL ATTRACTIONS AND ALL
HIS POWER; THEN SHALL HIS POWER BE AT AN END. HIS PALACES SHALL BE
DISSOLVED, HIS RICHES SCATTERED, AND HE HIMSELF SHALL BECOME AN
UNFITTED, NECESSITOUS, MISERABLE VAGABOND.’ Such was the mysterious
threat; and dearly did the threatner abide it. In the mean time, an elf
more generous, more attached to Rodogune, and more potent than the
rest, bestowed upon the infant a mysterious ring. By means of this he
is empowered to assume what form he pleases. By means of this it was
hoped he would be able to subdue the most prepossessed, and melt the
most obdurate female heart. By means of this it was hoped, he might
evade not only the simple swain, but all the wiles of the most
experienced and subtle adversary.

“Roderic now increased in age, and began to exhibit the promises of
that manly and graceful beauty that was destined for him. He inherited
his mother’s haughtiness, and his wishes and his passions were never
subjected to contradiction. A few years since that mother died, and the
youth has been too much engaged in voluptuousness and luxury to embark
in the malicious pursuits of Rodogune, Sensuality has been his aim, and
pleasure has been his God. To gratify his passions has been the sole
object of his attentions; and he has remitted no exertion that could
enhance to him the joys of the feast and the fruition of beauty. One
low-minded gratification has succeeded to another; pleasures of an
elevated and intellectual kind have been strangers to his heart; and
were it not that the subtlety of wit was a gift bestowed upon him by
supernatural existencies, he must long ere this have sunk his mind to
the lowest savageness and the most contemptible imbecility.”

Edwin heard the tale of the Druid with the deepest attention. He was
interested in the information it contained; he was astonished at the
unfathomable witcheries of Rodogune; and he could not avoid the being
apprehensive of the unexpanded powers of Roderic. But the daring and
adventurous spirit of youth, and the anxiety that he felt for the
critical situation of Imogen, soon overpowered and obliterated these
impressions. The Druid finished; and he started from his seat. “Point
me, kind and generous Madoc, to the harbour of the usurper. I will
invade his palace. I will enter fearlessly the lime-twigs of his
spells. I will trust in the omnipotency of innocence. Though the
magician should be encircled with all the horrid forms that ingenious
fear ever created, though all the grizly legions of the infernal realm
should hem in, I will find him out, and force him to relinquish his
prize, or drag him by his shining hair to a death, ignominious and
accursed, as has been the conduct of his life.”

The Druid assumed a sterner and a severer aspect. “How long, son of the
valley,” cried he, “wilt thou be deaf to the voice of instruction? When
wilt thou temper thy heedless and inconsiderate courage with the
coolness of wisdom and the moderation of docility? But go,” added he,
“I am to blame to endeavour to govern thy headlong spirit, or stem the
torrent of youthful folly. Go, and endure the punishment of thy
rashness. Encounter the magician in the midst of his spells. Expose thy
naked and unprotected head to glut his vengeance. Over thy life indeed,
he has no power. Deliberate guilt, not unreflecting folly, can deprive
thee of thy right to that. But, oh, shepherd, what avails it to live in
hopeless misery? With ease he shall shut thee up for revolving years in
darkness tangible; he shall plunge thee deep beneath the surface of the
mantled pool, the viscous spume shall draw over thy miserable head its
dank and dismal shroud; or perhaps, more ingenious in mischief, he
shall chain thee up in inactivity, a conscious statue, the silent and
passive witness of the usurped joys that once thou fondly fanciedst thy
own.”

“Oh, pardon me, sage and venerable Madoc,” replied the shepherd. “Edwin
did not come from the hands of nature obstinate and untractable. But
grief agitates my spirits; anxiety and apprehension conjure up a
thousand horrid phantoms before my distracted imagination, and I am no
longer myself. I will however subdue my impatient resentments. I will
listen with coolness to the voice of native sagacity and hoary
experience. Tell me then, my father, and I will hearken with mute
attention, nor think the lesson long,—instruct me how I shall escape
those tremendous dangers thou hast described. Say, is there any remedy,
canst thou communicate any potent and unconquerable amulet, that shall
shield me from the arts of sorcery? Teach me, and my honest heart shall
thank thee. Communicate it, and the benefit shall be consecrated in my
memory to everlasting gratitude.”

“My son,” replied Madoc, “I am indeed interested for thee. Thy heart is
ingenuous and sincere; thy misfortune is poignant and affecting. Listen
then to my directions. Receive and treasure up this small and sordid
root. In its external appearance, it is worthless and despicable; but,
Edwin, we must not judge by appearances; that which is most valuable
often delights to shroud itself under a coarse and unattractive
outside. In a richer climate, and under a more genial sun, it bears a
beauteous flower, whose broad leaves expand themselves to the day, and
are clothed with a deep and splendid purple, glossy as velvet, and
bedropped with gold. This root is a sovereign antidote against all
blasts, enchantments, witchcrafts, and magic. With this about thee,
thou mayest safely enter the haunts of Roderic; thou mayest hear his
incantations unappalled; thou mayest boldly dash from his hand his
magic glass, and shed the envenomed beverage on the ground. Then, when
he stands astonished at the unexpected phenomenon, wrest from him his
potent wand. Invoke not the unhallowed spirits of the abyss; invoke the
spotless synod of the Gods. Strike with his rod the walls of his
palace, and they shall turn to viewless air; the monster shall be
deprived of all his riches, and all his accumulated pleasures; and thou
and thy Imogen, delivered from the powers of enchantment, shall be, for
one long, uninterrupted day, happy in the enjoyment of each other.

“Attend, my son, yet attend, to one more advice, upon which all thy
advantage and all thy success in this moment of crisis hang. Engage not
in so arduous and important an enterprise immaturely. Thou hast yet no
reason for despair. Thou art yet beheld with favour by propitious
heaven. But thou mayest have reason for despair. One false step may
ruin thee. One moment of heedless inconsideration may plunge thee in
years of calamity. One moment of complying guilt may shut upon thee the
door of enjoyment and happiness for ever.”

Such was the sorrow, and such were the consolations of Edwin. But far
different was the situation, and far other scenes were prepared for his
faithful shepherdess. For some time after she had been seized by
Roderic, she had remained unconscious and supine. The terrors that had
preceded the fatal capture, had overpowered her delicate frame, and
sunk her into an alarming and obstinate fit of insensibility. They had
now almost reached the palace of the magician, when she discovered the
first symptoms of returning life. The colour gradually remounted into
her bloodless cheeks; her hands were raised with a feeble and
involuntary motion, and at length she lifted up her head, and opened
her languid, unobserving eyes. “Edwin,” she cried, “my friend, my
companion, where art thou? Where have we been? Oh, it is a long and
tedious evening!” Saying this, she looked upon the objects around her.
The sky was now become clear and smiling; the lowring clouds were
dissipated, and the blue expanse was stretched without limits over
their head. The sources of her former terror were indeed removed, but
the objects that presented themselves were equally alarming. All was
unexpected and all was unaccountable. Imogen had remained without
consciousness from the very beginning of the storm, and it was during
her insensibility that the goblin had been visible, and the magician
descended to the plains. She found herself mounted upon a car, and
hurried along by rapid steeds. She saw beside her a man whose face,
whose garb, and whose whole appearance were perfectly unknown to her.

“Ah,” exclaimed the maiden, in a voice of amazement apprehension,
“where am I? What is become of my Edwin? And what art thou? What means
all this? These are not the well-known fields; this is not the brook of
Towey, nor these hills of Clwyd. Oh, whither, whither do we fly? This
track leads not to the cottage of my parents, and the groves of
Rhyddlan.” “Be not uneasy, my fair one,” answered Roderic. “We go,
though not by the usual path, to where your friends reside. I am not
your enemy, but a swain who esteems it his happiness to have come
between you and your distress, and to have rescued you from the pelting
of the storm. Suspend, my love, for a few moments your suspicions and
your anxiety, and we shall arrive where all your doubts will be
removed, and all I hope will be pleasure and felicitation.” While he
thus spoke the chariot hastened to the conclusion of their journey, and
entered the area in the front of the mansion of Roderic.

The suspicions of Imogen were indeed removed, but in a manner too cruel
for her tender frame. The terror and fatigue she had previously
undergone had wasted her spirits, and the surprise she now experienced,
was more than she could sustain. As the chariot entered the court, she
cried out with a voice of horror and anguish, and sunk breathless into
the arms of her ravisher. Though the passion he had already conceived
for her, made this a circumstance of affliction, he yet in another view
rejoiced, that he was able, by its intervention, to conduct his prize
in a manner by stealth into his palace, and thus to prevent that
struggle and those painful sensations, which she must otherwise have
known. For could she have borne, without emotion, to see herself
conveyed into a wretched imprisonment? Could she have submitted,
without opposition, to be shut up, as it were, from the hope of
revisiting those scenes, where once her careless childhood played, and
those friends whom she valued more than life?

The leading pursuit of Roderic, as it had been stated by the Druid of
Elwy, was the love of pleasure, an attachment to sensuality, luxury and
lust. He often spent whole days in the bosom of voluptuousness,
reposing upon couches of down, under ceilings of gold. His senses were
at intervals awakened, by the most exquisite music, to a variety of
delight. He often recreated his view with beholding, from a posture of
supineness and indolence, the frolic games, and the mazy dance.
Sometimes, in order to diversify the scene, he would mix in the sports,
and, by the graceful activity of his limbs, and the subtle keenness of
his wit, would communicate relish and novelty to that which before had
palled upon the performers. When he moved, every eye was fixed in
admiration. When he spoke all was tranquility of attention, and every
mouth was open to applaud. Then were set forth the luxuries of the
feast. Every artifice was employed to provoke the appetite. The viands
were savoury, and the fruits were blushing; the decorations were
sumptuous, and the halls shone with a profusion of tapers, whose rays
were reflected in a thousand directions by an innumerable multitude of
mirrors and lustres. And now the intoxicating beverage went swiftly
round the board. The conversation became more open and unrestrained.
Quick were the repartees and loud the mirth. Loose, meaning glances
were interchanged between the master of the feast and the mingled
beauties that adorned his board. With artful inadvertence the gauze
seemed to withdraw from their panting bosoms, and new and still newer
charms discovered themselves to enchant the eyes and inflame the heart.
The bed of enjoyment succeeded to the board of intemperance. Such was
the history of the life of Roderic.

But man was not born for the indolence of pleasure and the uniformity
of fruition. No gratifications, but especially not those that address
themselves only to the senses, and pamper this brittle, worthless
mansion of the immortal mind, are calculated to entertain us for any
long duration. We need something to awaken our attention, to whet our
appetite, and to contrast our joys. Happiness in this sublunary state
can scarcely be felt, but by a comparison with misery. It is he only
that has escaped from sickness, that is conscious of health; it is he
only that has shaken off the chains of misfortune, that truly rejoices.
The wisdom of these maxims was felt by Roderic. Full of pleasures,
surrounded with objects of delight, he was not happy. Their uniformity
cloyed him. He had received, by supernatural endowment, an activity and
a venturousness of spirit, that were little formed for such scenes as
these. He was devoured with spleen. He sighed he knew not why; he was
peevish and ill-humoured in the midst of the most assiduous attention
and the most wakeful service. And the command he possessed over the
elements of nature was no remedy for sensations like these.

Oppressed with these feelings, Roderic was accustomed to withdraw
himself from the pomps and luxuries that surrounded him, to fly from
the gilded palace and the fretted roofs, and to mix in the simple and
undebauched scenes of artless innocence that descended on every side
from the hills he inhabited. The name of Roderic was unknown to all the
shepherds of the vallies, and he was received by them with that
officiousness and hospitality which they were accustomed to exercise to
the stranger. It was his delight to give scope to his imagination by
inventing a thousand artful tales of misfortune, by which he awakened
the compassion, and engaged the attachment of the simple hinds. In
order the more effectually to evade that curiosity which would have
been fatal to his ease, he assumed every different time that he came
among them a different form. By this contrivance, he passed unobserved,
he partook freely of their pastimes, he made his observations
unmolested, and was perfectly at leisure for the reflections, not
always of the most pleasant description, that these scenes, of simple
virtue and honest poverty, were calculated to excite. “Oh, impotence of
power,” exclaimed he, wrapt up and secure in the disguise he assumed,
“to what purpose art thou desired? Ambition is surely the most foolish
and misjudging of all terrestrial passions. My condition appears
attractive. I am surrounded with riches and splendour; no man
approaches me but with homage and flattery; every object of
gratification solicits my acceptance. I am not only endowed with a
capacity of obtaining all that I can wish, and that by supernatural
means, but I am almost constantly forestalled in my wishes. Who would
not say, that I am blessed? Who that heard but a description of my
state, would not envy me? O ye shepherds, happy, thrice happy, in the
confinedness of your prospects, ye would then envy me! Instructed as I
am, instructed by too fatal experience, with reason I envy you. Hark to
that swain who is now leading his flock from the durance in which they
were held till the morning peeped over the eastern hills! The little
lambs frisk about him, thankful for the liberty they have regained, and
he stretches out his hand for them to lick. Now he drives them along
the extended green, and in a wild and thoughtless note carols a lively
lay. He sings perhaps of the kind, but bashful shepherdess. His hat is
bound about with ribbon; the memorial of her coy compliance and
much-prized favour. How light is his heart, how chearful his gait, and
how gay his countenance! He leads in a string a little frolic goat with
curving horns: I suppose the prize that he bore off in singing, which
is not yet tamed to his hand, and familiarised to his flock. What
though his coat be frieze? What though his labour constantly return
with the returning day? I wear the attire of kings; far from labouring
myself, thousands labour for my convenience. And yet he is happier than
I. Envied simplicity; venerable ignorance; plenteous poverty! How
gladly would I quit my sumptuous palace, and my magic arts, for the
careless, airy, and unreflecting joys of rural simplicity!”

It was in a late excursion of this kind that he had beheld the
beauteous Imogen. His eye was struck with the charms of her person, and
the amiableness of her manners. Never had he seen a complexion so
transparent, or an eye so expressive. Her vermeil-tinctured lips were
new-blown roses that engrossed the sight, and seemed to solicit to be
plucked. His heart was caught in the tangles of her hair. Such an
unaffected bashfulness, and so modest a blush; such an harmonious and
meaning tone of voice, that expressed in the softest accents, the most
delicate sense and the most winning simplicity, could not but engage
the attention of a swain so versed in the science of the fair as
Roderic. From that distinguished moment, though he still felt
uneasiness, it was no longer vacuity, it was no longer an uneasiness
irrational and unaccountable. He had now an object to pursue. He was
not now subjected to the fatigue of forming wishes for the sake of
having them instantly gratified. When he reflected upon the present
object of his desires, new obstacles continually started in his mind.
Unused to encounter difficulty, he for a time imagined them
insurmountable. Had his desires been less pressing, had his passion
been less ardent, he would have given up the pursuit in despair. But
urged along by an unintermitted impulse, he could think of nothing
else, he could not abstract his attention to a foreign subject. He
determined at least once again to behold the peerless maiden. He
descended to the feast of Ruthyn; and though the interval had been but
short, from the time in which he had first observed her, in the eye of
love she seemed improved. The charms that erst had budded, were now
full blown. Her beauties were ripened, and her attractions spread
themselves in the face of day. Nor was this all. He beheld with a
watchful glance her slight and silent intercourse with the gallant
Edwin; an intercourse which no eye but that of a lover could have
penetrated. Hence his mind became pregnant with all the hateful brood
of dark suspicions; he was agitated with the fury of jealousy. Jealousy
evermore blows the flame it seems formed to extinguish. The passion of
Roderic was more violent than ever. His impatient spirit could not now
brook the absence of a moment. Luxury charmed no longer; the couch of
down was to him a bed of torture, and the solicitations of beauty, the
taunts and sarcasms of infernal furies. He invoked the spirit of his
mother; he brought together an assembly of elves and goblins. By their
direction he formed his plan; by their instrumentality the tempest was
immediately raised; and under the guidance of the chief of all the
throng he descended upon his prey, like the eagle from his eminence in
the sky.

The success of his exploit has already been related. The scheme had
indeed been too deeply laid, and too artfully digested, to admit almost
the possibility of a miscarriage. Who but would have stood appalled,
when the storm descended upon our lovers in the midst of the plain, and
the thunders seemed to rock the whole circle of the neighbouring hills?
Who could have conducted himself at once with greater prudence and
gallantry than the youthful shepherd? Did he not display the highest
degree of heroism and address, when he laid the gaunt and haughty wolf
prostrate at his feet? But it was not for human skill to cope with the
opposition of infernal spirits. Accordingly Roderic had been
victorious. He had borne the tender maiden unresisted from the field;
he had outstripped the ardent pursuit of Edwin with a speed swifter
than the winds. In fine, he had conducted his lovely prize in safety to
his enchanted castle, and had introduced her within those walls, where
every thing human and supernatural obeyed his nod, in a state of
unresisting passivity.

Roderic, immediately upon his entrance into the castle, had committed
the fair Imogen to the care of the attendant damsels. He charged them
by every means to endeavour to restore her to sense and tranquility,
and not to utter any thing in her hearing, which should have the
smallest tendency to discompose her spirits. In obedience to orders,
which they had never known what it was to dispute, they were so
unwearied in their assiduities to their amiable charge, that it was not
long before she began once again to exhibit the tokens of renewed
perception. She raised by degrees a leaden and inexpressive eye, to the
objects that were about her, without having as yet spirit and
recollectedness enough to distinguish them. “My mother,” cried she, “my
venerable Edith, I am not well. My head is quite confused and giddy. Do
press it with your friendly hand.” A female attendant, as she uttered
these words, drew near to obey them. “Go, go,” exclaimed Imogen, with a
feeble tone, and at the same time putting by the officious hand, “you
naughty girl. You are not my mother. Do not think to make me believe
you are.”

While she spoke this she began gradually to gain a more entire
sedateness and self-command. She seemed to examine, with an eager and
inquisitive eye, first one object, and then another by turns. The
novelty of the whole scene appeared for an instant to engross her
attention. Every part of the furniture was unlike that of a shepherd’s
cot; and completely singular and unprecedented by any thing that her
memory could suggest. But this self-deception, this abstraction from
her feelings and her situation was of a continuance the shortest that
can be conceived. All seemed changed with her in a moment. Her eye,
which, from a state of languor and unexpressiveness, had assumed an air
of intent and restless curiosity, was now full of comfortless sorrow
and unprotected distress. “Powers that defend the innocent, support,
guard me! Where am I? What have I been doing? What is become of me? Oh,
Edwin, Edwin!” and she reclined her head upon the shoulder of the
female who was nearest her.

Recovering however, in a moment, the dignity that was congenial to her,
she raised herself from this remiss and inactive posture, and seemed to
be immersed in reflection and thought. “Yes, yes,” exclaimed she, “I
know well enough how it is. You cannot imagine what a furious storm it
was: and so I sunk upon the ground terrified to death: and so Edwin
left me, and ran some where, I cannot tell where, for shelter. But sure
it could not be so neither. He could not be so barbarous. Well but
however somebody came and took me up, and so I am here. But what am I
here for, and what place is this? Tell me, ye kind shepherdesses, (if
shepherdesses you are) for indeed I am sick at heart.”

The broken interrogatories of Imogen were heard with a profound
silence. “What,” said the lovely and apprehensive maiden, “will you not
answer me? No, not one word. Ah, then it must be bad indeed. But I have
done nothing that should make me be afraid. I am as harmless and as
chearly as the little red-breast that pecks out of my hand? So you will
not hurt me, will you? No, I dare swear. You do not frown upon me. Your
looks are quite sweet and good-natured. But then it was not kind not to
answer me, and tell me what I asked you.” “Fair stranger,” replied one
of the throng, “we would willingly do any thing to oblige you. But you
are weak and ill; and it is necessary that you should not exert
yourself, but try to sleep.”

“Sleep,” replied the shepherdess, “what here in this strange place? No,
that I shall not, I can tell you. I never slept from under the thatch
of my father’s cottage in my life, but once, and that was at the
wedding of my dear, obliging Rovena. But perhaps,” added she, “my
father and mother will come to me here. So I will even try and be
compilable, for I never was obstinate. But indeed my head is strangely
confused; you must excuse me.”

Such was the language, and such the affecting simplicity of the
innocent and uncultivated Imogen. She, who had been used to one narrow
round of chearful, rustic scenes, was too much perplexed to be able to
judge of her situation. Her repeated faintings had weakened her
spirits, and for a time disordered her understanding. She had always
lived among the simple; she had scarcely ever been witness to any thing
but sincerity and innocence. Suspicion therefore was the farthest in
the world from being an inmate of her breast. Suspicion is the latest
and most difficult lesson of the honest and uncrooked mind. Imogen
therefore willingly retired to rest, in compliance with the soliciation
of her attendants. She beheld no longer her ravisher, whose eye beamed
with ungovernable desires, and whose crest swelled with pride. Every
countenance was marked with apparent carefulness and sympathy. She was
even pleased with their officious and friendly-seeming demeanour.

Tell me, ye vain cavillers, ye haughty adversaries of the omnipotence
of virtue, where could artful vice, where could invisible and hell-born
seduction, have found a fitter object for their triumph? Imogen was not
armed with the lessons of experience: Imogen was not accoutered with
the cautiousness of cultivation and refinement. She was all open to
every one that approached her. She carried her heart in her hand. Ye, I
doubt not, have already reckoned upon the triumph, and counted the
advantages. But, if I do not much mistake the divine lessons I am
commissioned to deliver, the muse shall tell a very different story.



BOOK THE THIRD

PURPOSES OF RODERIC.—THE CARRIAGE OF IMOGEN.—HER CONTEMPT OF RICHES.


The fatigue which Imogen had undergone in the preceding day, prepared
her to rest during the night with more tranquility than could otherwise
have been expected. The scenes to which she had successively been
witness, and the objects that now surrounded her, were too novel and
extraordinary in their character, to allow much room for the severity
of reflection, and the coolness of meditation. Her frame was tired with
the various exercises in which she had engaged; her mind was hurried
and perplexed without knowing upon what to fix, or in what manner to
account for the events that had befallen her: she therefore sunk
presently into a sweet and profound sleep; and while every thing seemed
preparing for her destruction, while a thousand enchantments were
essayed, and a thousand schemes revolved in the busy mind of Roderic,
she remained composed and unapprehensive. Innocence was the sevenfold
shield that protected her from harm; her eyes were closed in darkness,
and a smile of placid benignity played upon the lovely features of her
countenance.

Roderic in the mean time had retired to his chamber. His mind was
turbid and unquiet. So restless are the waves of the ocean before the
coming tempest. They assume a darker hue, and reflect a more cloudy
heaven. They roll this way and that in a continual motion, and yet
without any direction, till the loud and hoarse-echoing wind determines
their course and carries them in mountains to the sounding shore. The
mind of the victim was all quiet and unruffled; such is the kindly
influence of conscious truth. The mind of the ravisher exhibited
nothing but uneasiness and confusion; such are the boons which vice
bestows upon her misjudging votaries.

The conqueror, doubly misled by fierce and unruly passions and by his
inauspicious commerce with the goblins of the abyss, retired not
immediately to his couch, but walked up and down his apartments, with a
hasty and irregular step. “Thanks to my favourable stars,” exclaimed
he, “I am triumphant! What power can resist me? Where is the being that
shall dare to say, that one wish of my heart shall go unfulfilled? Well
then, I have got the fair the charming she into my power. She is shut
up in a palace, unseen by every human eye, to which no human foot ever
found its way but at my bidding. She is closed round with spells and
enchantment. I can by a word deprive her every limb of motion. If I but
wave this wand, the leaden God of sleep shall sink her in a moment in
the arms of forgetfulness, whatever were before her anxieties and her
wakeful terrors. In what manner then shall I, thus absolute and
uncontroled in all I bid exist, proceed? Shall I press the unwilling
beauty to my bosom, and riot in her hoard of charms, without waiting
like meaner mortals to sue for the consent of her will? There is
something noble, royal, and independent, in the thought. Beauty never
appears so attractive as from behind a veil of tears. Oh, how I enjoy
infancy [sic] the anger that shall flush her lovely cheek! Perhaps she
will even kneel to me to deprecate that which an education of
prejudices has taught her to consider as the worst of evils. Yes, my
lovely maid, I will raise thee. Do not turn from me those scornful
indignant eyes. I will be thy best friend. I will not hurt a hair of
thy head. Oh, when her spotless bosom pants with disdain, how sweet to
beat the little chiders, and by a friendly violence, which true and
comprehensive wisdom cannot stigmatize, to teach her what is the true
value of beauty, and for what purpose such enchanting forms as her’s
were sent to dwell below!”

Thus spoke the ravisher, and as he spoke he assumed, although alone, a
firmer stride and a more haughty crest. Upon the instant however his
ears were saluted with a low and continual sound, that became, by just
degrees, stronger and more strong. The walls of his palace shook; a
sudden and supernatural light gleamed along his apartment, and a
spectre stood before him. Roderic lifted up his eyes, and immediately
recognised the features of that goblin, who from the hour of his birth,
had declared himself his adversary. He had been repeatedly used to the
visits of this malicious spirit, who delighted to subvert all his
schemes, and to baffle his deepest projects. This was the only
misfortune, the sovereign of the hills had ever known; this was the
only instance in which he had at any time been taught what it was to
have his power controled and his nod unobeyed. He had often sought, by
means of the confederacy he held with other spirits of the infernal
regions, to restrain his enemy, or by punishment and suffering to make
him rue his opposition. But the goblin he had to encounter, though not
the most potent, was of all the rest the most crafty in his wiles, and
the most abundant in expedients. As many times as his fellows had by
the instigation of Roderic undertaken to encounter him, so often had
they in the end been eluded and defeated. The contest was now given up,
and the goblin was at liberty to haunt and threaten his impotant
adversary as much as he pleased.

“Roderic,” cried he, with a harsh and unpleasant accent, “I am come to
humble the haughtiness of thy triumph, and to pull down thy aspiring
thoughts. Impotent and rancorous mortal! Know, that innocence is
defended with too strong a shield for thee to pierce! Boast not thyself
of the immensity of thy walls, and put no confidence in the subtlety of
thy enchantments. Before the mightiness that waits on innocence, they
are not less impotent than the liquid wax, or the crumbling ruin.
Learn, oh presumptuous mortal, that sacred and unyielding chastity is
invulnerable to all the violence of men, and all the stratagems of
goblins. I would not name to thee so salutary an advice as to dismiss
thy innocent and unsuspicious prize, did not I know thee too obstinate
and headstrong to listen to the voice of wisdom. Essay then thy base
and low-minded temptations, thy corrupt and sophistical reasonings, to
tarnish the unsullied purity of her mind, and it is well. If by such a
wretch as thee she can be seduced from the obedience of virtue and the
Gods, then let her fall. She were then a victim worthy of thee. But if
thou essayest the means of tyranny and force, the attempt will be fatal
to thee. I will in that case enjoy my vengeance; I will triumph in thy
desolation. In the hour then of action and enterprise, remember me!”

With these words the spectre vanished from his sight. Roderic was
inflamed with anger and disgust; but he had none, upon whom to wreak
his revenge. His heart boiled with the impotence of malice. “What,”
cried he, “am I to be bounded and hedged in, in all my exploits? Am I
to be curbed and thwarted in every wish of my heart? This, this was
nearest to me. This was the first pursuit of my life in which my whole
heart was engaged; the first time I ever felt a passion that deserved
the name of love. But be it so: I was born with wild and impetuous
passions only to have them frustrated; I was endowed with supernatural
powers, and inherited all my mother’s skill, only to be the more
signally disappointed. Still however I will not shrink, I will not
yield an inch to my adversary. I am bid, it seems, to tempt her, and
endeavour to stain the purity of her mind. Yes, I will tempt her. It is
not for an artless and uninstructed shepherdess to defeat my wiles and
baffle all my incitements. I will dazzle her senses with all the
attractions that the globe of earth has to boast. I will wind me into
her secret heart. Thou damned, unpropitious goblin, who seekest to
oppose thyself to my happiness, I will but, by thy warning, gain a
completer triumph! I will subdue her will. She shall crown my wishes
with ripe, consenting beauty. Long shall she remain the empress of my
heart, and partner of my bed. In her I will hope to find those simple,
artless, and engaging charms, which in vain I have often sought in the
band of females, that reside beneath my roof, and wait upon my nod.”

Imogen, though considerably indisposed by the fatigue and terrors of
the preceding day, shook off however that placid and refreshing sleep
which had weighed down her eyelids, long before Roderic deserted the
couch of luxury. Two of the female attendants belonging to the castle
had slept in the same apartment with her, and soon, perceiving her in
motion, followed her example, and officiously pressed around her. One
of them took up a part of the garb of the fair shepherdess, and offered
to assist her in adjusting it. “I thank you,” cried Imogen, with the
utmost simplicity, “for your good-nature; but I am pretty well now; and
every body dresses herself that is not sick.” The inartificial
decorations of her person were quickly adjusted. The delicate
proportion of her limbs was hid beneath a russet mantle; her fair and
flowing tresses were disposed in a braid round her head, and she took
her straw hat in her hand. “Well,” said she, “I am obliged to you for
your favours. I dare say it was best for me, though at the time I
thought otherwise. For my head ached very much, and I was so weak—It
was wrong for me to think of going any farther.—Ah, but then, what have
my poor father and mother done all the while? Have not they missed
their Imogen, and wondered what was become of her, and been quite sad
and forlorn for fear she should have come to any harm? Well, I do not
know whether I was not right too. For their ease was of more
consequence than mine. I cannot tell. However I will not now keep them
in pain. So good morning to you, my dear kind friends!” And saying this
she was tripping away.

But as she drew towards the door, one of the attendants, with a gentle
force, took hold of her hand. “Do not go yet, sweet Imogen,” cried she.
“We want a little more of your company. We have done you all the
service in our power, and you have not paid us for it. We will not ask
any thing hard and unreasonable of you. Only comply with us in this one
thing, to stay with us a few hours, and let us know a little better the
worth of that amiable female we have endeavoured to oblige.” “Indeed,
indeed,” replied Imogen, “I cannot. I am not used to be obstinate; and
you are so kind and fair spoken, that it goes to my heart to refuse
you. But I would not for the world keep my dear, good Edith in a
moment’s suspense. But since you are so desirous of being acquainted
with me, repair as soon and as often as you please to my father’s cot,
that lies on the right hand side of the valley, about a mile from the
sea, and just beside the pretty brawling brook of Towey. There I will
treat you with the nicest apples and the richest cream. And I would
treat you with better, if I knew of any thing better, that I might
thank you for your goodness. Farewel!” added she, and affectionately
pressed the hand that was still untwined with her’s.

“No, Imogen, no, you must not leave us thus. Though we would have done
a thousand times more than we have for your own sake, who are so simple
and so good, it is yet fit that you should know, that we are not
mistresses here, and that all we have done has been by the orders of
the lord of this rich mansion. He will not therefore forgive us, if we
suffer you to depart before he has seen you, and expressed for you that
kindness which induced him to take you under his protection.”
“Heavens!” replied the shepherdess “this is all ceremony and folly, and
therefore cannot be of so much consequence as the peace of my father,
and the consolation of my mother. Tell him, that I thank him, and that
my father shall thank him too, if he will come to our hut. Tell him
that I am sorry for my foolish weakness, that gave him so much trouble,
and made me be so needlessly frightened, when we came to a place where
I have met with nothing but kindness; but I could not help it. And so
that is enough; for if my Edwin had been in his place, and had seen a
stranger shepherdess in the distress that I was, he would surely have
done as much.

“Say so to your lord, as you call him, for I would not seem ungrateful.
But yet I will thank you a great deal more than I do him. For what did
he do for me? He took me, and hurried me away, and paid no attention to
my tears and expostulations. Well, but I need not have been alarmed. So
it seems. But I did not like his looks; they were not kind and
good-natured, but fierce and frightful. And so as soon as he had
brought me here, much against my will, he went away and left me. So
much the better. And then you came and took care of me, and he desired
you to do so. That was well enough. But I am more obliged to you for
your kindness and assiduity, than I am to him only for thinking of it.
And then to tell you the truth, but I ought not to say so to you who
are his friends, there is something about him, I cannot tell what, that
does not please me at all. He looks discontented, and fierce, as if
there was no such thing as soothing and managing him. But why do I say
all this? Pray now let me go, let me go to my dear, dear mother.”

“Sweet Imogen,” replied the attendant, who seemed to take the lead in
the circle, “how lovely and amiable are you even in your resentments!
They are not with you a morose and gloomy sullenness brooding over
imaginary wrongs, and collecting venom and malice from every corner to
the heart. In your breast anger itself takes a milder form, and is
gentle, generous and gay. Yet why, my Imogen, should you harbour any
anger against your protector?”

Such was the honest and artless dialogue of Imogen. The attendants
rather endeavoured to beguile the time, by dexterously starting new
topics of conversation, upon which Imogen delivered her plain and
natural sentiments with the utmost sincerity, than to detain her by
open force. At length one of them slipped out, and hastened to acquaint
Roderic with the impatience of his prize, and to communicate to him the
substance of those artless hints, which, in the hands of so skilful and
potent an impostor, might be of the greatest service. Roderic
immediately rose. But as he was desirous to decorate his person with
the nicest skill, in order to make the most favourable impression upon
his mistress, he ordered the attendant, with some of her companions, to
wait upon Imogen. He commissioned them, if it were necessary, to inform
her of the absolute impossibility of her quitting the castle, and to
persuade her to walk in the meadows adjoining, that she might observe
the riches of their possessor; how fertile were the soil, and how fair
and numerous the flocks.

The patience of Imogen, in the mean time, was nearly exhausted. Her
simplicity could no longer be duped. Though unused to art, it was
impossible for her not at length to perceive the art by which the
conversation was lengthened, and her ardent desire to set out for the
cottage of her father, eluded. She was just beginning to expostulate
upon this ungenerous stratagem, when three or four of those females,
whom Roderic had dispatched entered the apartment. “Well,” cried
Imogen, “you have borne my message to my deliverer, now then let me
go.” “Our lord,” replied the attendant, “is just risen. He will but
adjust his apparel, and will immediately pay you those respects in
person which he can by no means think of omitting.” “Alas, alas,” cried
the shepherdess, half distressed, “what is the meaning of all this?
What is intended by a language so foreign to the homeliness of the
shepherd’s cot, and the admirable simplicity of pastoral life? I know
not what title I have, a poor, unpretending virgin, to the respects of
this lord; but surely if they meaned me well, they would be less hollow
and absurd. Would there not be much more respect, much more civility,
in permitting me to follow my own inclinations, without this arbitrary
and ungrateful restraint?” “Shepherdess,” replied the attendant, “we
are not used to dispute the orders of our master. We would oblige you
if it were in our power. Impute not therefore to us any thing
unfriendly; and as for Roderic, he is too good, and too amiable, not to
be able to satisfy you about his conduct the moment he appears.” “Your
master! and your lord!” replied Imogen, with a tone of displeasure, “I
understand not these words. The Gods have made all their rational
creatures equal. If they have made one strong and another weak, it is
for the purpose of mutual benevolence and assistance, and not for that
of despotism and oppression. Of all the shepherds of the valley, there
is not one that claims dominion and command over another. There is
indeed an obedience due from children to their parents, and from a wife
to her husband. But ye cannot be his children; for he is young and
blooming. And but one of you can be his wife; so that that cannot be
the source of his authority. What a numerous family has this Roderic?
Does that I wonder, make him happier than his fellows?”

“Imogen,” said one of the train, “will you walk with us along the
meadow, by the side of that hazel copse? The morning is delightful, the
sun shines with a mild and cheering heat, the lambs frisk along the
level green, and the birds, with their little throats, warble each a
different strain.” The mind of Imogen was highly susceptible to the
impression of rural beauties. She had that placid innocence, that sweet
serenity of heart, which best prepares us to relish them. Seeing
therefore, that she was a prisoner, and that it was in vain to struggle
and beat her wings against the wiry inclosure, she submitted. “Ah!
unjust, unkind associates!” exclaimed Imogen, “ye can obey the dictates
of a man, who has no right to your obedience, and ye can turn a deaf
ear to the voice of benevolence and justice! Set me at liberty. This
man has no right to see me, and I will not see him. I, that have been
used to wander as free as the inmates of the wood, or the winged
inhabitants of air, shall I be cooped up in a petty cage, have all my
motions dictated, and all my walks circumscribed? Indeed, indeed, I
will not. Imogen can never submit to so ignominious a restraint. She
will sooner die.”

“Why, my lovely maiden,” replied the other, “will you think so harshly
of our lord? He does not deserve these uncandid constructions; he is
all gentleness and goodness. Suspend therefore your impatience for a
moment. By and by you may represent to him your uneasiness, and he will
grant you all the wishes of your heart. Till then, amiable girl,
compose your spirits, and give us cause to believe, that you place that
confidence in us, which for the world we would not deserve to forfeit.”

During this conversation, they passed along a gallery, and, descending
by a flight of stairs, proceeded through one corner of a spacious
garden into the meadow. The mansion, as we have already said, stood
upon a rising ground, which was inclosed on every side by a circle of
hills, whose summits seemed to touch the clouds, and were covered with
eternal snow. Within this wider circumference was a second formed by an
impervious grove of oaks, which, though of no long standing, yet,
having been produced by magical art, had appeared from the first in
full maturity. Their vast trunks, which three men hand in hand could
scarcely span, were marked with many a scar, and their broad branches,
waving to the winds, inspired into the pious and the virtuous that
religious awe, which is one of the principal lessons of the Druidical
religion.

At no great distance, and close on one side to the majestic grove, was
a terrace, raised by the hand of art, so elevated, as to overlook the
tops of the trees as well as the turrets of the castle, and to afford a
complete prospect of all the grounds on this side the precipices. To
this terrace the attendants of Imogen led their charge, and from it she
surveyed the farms and granges of their lord. The view was diversified
by a number of little rills, that flowed down from the mountains, and
gave fertility and cheerfulness to the fields through which they
passed. The inclosures were some of them covered with a fine and rich
herbage, whose appearance was bright and verdant, and its surface
besprinkled with cowslips, king-cups, and daisies. Others of them were
interspersed with sheep that exhibited the face of sleekness and ease,
their fleeces large and ponderous, and their wool of the finest and
most admirable texture. Elsewhere you might see the cattle grazing. The
ox dappled with a thousand spots, which nature seemed to have applied
with a wanton and playful hand; the cow, whose udders were distended
with milk, that appeared to call for the interposition of the maidens
to lighten them of their store; and the lordly and majestic bull. With
them was intermingled the horse, whose limbs seemed to be formed for
speed and beauty. At a small distance were the stag with branching
horns, the timid deer, and the sportive, frisking fawn. Even from the
rugged precipices, that seemed intended by nature to lie waste and
useless, depended the shaggy goat and the tender kid. Beside all this,
Roderic had had communicated to him, by a supernatural afflatus, that
wondrous art, as yet unknown in the plains of Albion, of turning up the
soil with a share of iron, and scattering it with a small quantity of
those grains which are most useful to man, to expect to gather, after a
short interval, a forty-fold increase.

Every thing conspired to communicate to the prospect lustre and
attraction. The birds, with their various song, gave an air of
populousness and animation to the grove. By the side of the rivulets
were scattered here and there the huts of the shepherd and husbandman.
And though these swains were not, like the happy dwellers in the
valley, enlivened with freedom, and made careless and gay by conscious
innocence; yet were they skilful to give clearness and melody to the
slender reed; and the ploughman whistled as he drove afield. But that
in the landscape which most engrossed the attention and awakened the
curiosity of the tender Imogen, was the appearance of the fields of
corn. It was in her eye novel, agreeable, and interesting. The harvest
was near, and the effect of the object was at its greatest height. The
tall and unbending stalk overtopped by far the native herbage of the
meadow, and seemed to emulate the hawthorn and the hazel, which,
planted in even rows, secured the precious crop from the invasion of
the cattle. The ears were embrowned with the continual beams of the
sun, and, oppressed with the weight of their grain, bended from the
stalk. In a word, the whole presented to the astonished view a rich
scene of vegetable gold. Upon this delightful object the shepherdess
gazed with an unwearied regard. Respecting it she asked innumerable
questions, and made a thousand enquiries; and it almost seemed as if
her curiosity would never be satisfied. Such is the power of novelty
over the young and inexperienced, and such the influence of the
beautiful and transcendent beauties of nature upon the ingenuous and
uncorrupted mind. But it was not possible for the shepherdess,
interested as she was in the uneasiness, to which she knew that her
parents must be a prey, long to banish from her mind the affecting
consideration, or to divert her attention to another object, however
agreeable, or however fascinating.

She had just begun to renew her representations upon this head, when
Roderic approached. While he was yet at a distance, he appeared
graceful and gay, as the messenger of the God that grasps the lightning
in his hand. His stature was above the common size. His limbs were
formed with perfect symmetry; the fall of his shoulders was graceful,
and the whole contour of his body was regular and pleasing. Such was
the general effect of his shape, that though his advance was hesitating
and respectful, it was impossible to contemplate his person without the
ideas being suggested of velocity and swiftness. His presence and air
had the appearance of frankness, ingenuousness, and manly confidence.
The natural fire and haughtiness of his eye were carefully subdued, and
he seemed, at least to a superficial view, the very model of
good-nature and disinterested complaisance. His bright and flowing hair
parted on his brow, and formed into a thousand ringlets, waved to the
zephyrs as he passed along. There was something so delicate and
enchanting in his whole figure, as to tempt you to compare it to the
unspotted beauty of the hyacinth; at the same time that you rejoiced,
that it was not a beauty, frail and transient, as the tender flower,
but which promised a manly ripeness and a protracted duration.

Observing that the attention of those around her was suddenly diverted
from the intreaties she employed, Imogen turned her eye, in order to
discover the object that now engaged them. It was immediately met by
the graceful and amiable figure we have described. But to Imogen that
figure presented no such comeliness and beauty. For a moment indeed,
nature prevailed, and she could not avoid gazing, with a degree of
complacence, upon an object, to which the Goddess seemed to have
lavished all her treasures. But this sensation vanished, almost before
it was formed. The mind of the shepherdess was too deeply read in the
lessons of virtue, to acknowledge any beauty in that form, which was
not animated with truth, and in those features, which were not
illuminated with integrity and innocence. Notwithstanding her native
simplicity, and the unsuspecting confidence she was inclined to repose
in every individual of the human race, yet had the conduct of Roderic,
as she had already confessed, displeased her too deeply for her
immediately to assume towards him an unembarrassed and soothing
carriage. He had seized upon her by violence in a moment of
insensibility. He had carried her away without her consent. When she
recovered strength enough to expostulate upon this, he endeavoured, by
ambiguous expressions, to deceive her into an opinion, that he was
conducting her to the cottage of her father. Supposing that, for
reasons good and wise, he had introduced her into a strange place, she
could not be persuaded that those reasons subsisted for detaining her
contrary to her inclination. And independently of any individual
circumstances, there is a native and inexplicable antipathy between
virtue and vice. It is not in the nature of things, it is not within
the range of possibility, that they should coalesce and unite where
both of them exist in a decided manner, or an eminent degree. It was
not the babble of ignorance, it was by an unalterable law of her
nature, that Imogen had been displeased with the looks of him, who
meaned her destruction. The animation that dwells in the features of
virtue, is mild and friendly and lambent; but the sparkles that flash
from the eye of enterprising guilt, are momentary, and unrelenting, and
impetuous. The gentle and the inoffensive instantly feel how
uncongenial they are to their dispositions, and start back from them
with aversion and horror. Such were in some measure the sensations of
Imogen, upon the re-appearance of her betrayer. She turned from him
with unfeigned dislike, and was reluctantly kept in the same situation
till he ascended the terrace. As he drew nearer, Roderic seized the
hand of the lovely captive. In a tone of blandishment he expostulated
with her upon her unkind behaviour and unreasonable aversion. With all
that sophistry, that ingenious vice knows so well how to employ, he
endeavoured to evince that his conduct had been regulated by kindness,
rectitude and humanity. In the mean time the retinue withdrew to a
small distance. Imogen insisted upon not being left wholly alone with
her ravisher.

Able to perplex but not to subvert the understanding of his prize,
Roderic addressed her with the language of love. Naturally eloquent,
all that he now said was accompanied with that ineffable sweetness, and
that soft insinuation, that must have shaken the integrity of Imogen,
had her heart been less constant, and her bosom less glowed with the
enthusiasm of virtue. Her betrayer was conscious to a real, though a
degenerate flame, and was not reduced to feign an ardour he did not
feel. Recollecting however the pure manners, and the delicate and
ingenuous language to which Imogen had been inured among the
inhabitants of Clwyd, the subtle sorcerer did not permit an expression
to escape him, that could offend the chastest ear, or alarm the most
suspicious virtue. His love, ardent as it appeared, seemed to be
entirely under the government of the strictest propriety, and the most
unfeigned rectitude. He knew that the inspirations of integrity and the
lessons of education were not to be eradicated at once; and he
attempted not to gain the acquiescence of his captive by gross and
unsuitable allurements, unconcealed with the gilding of dexterity and
speciousness.

But his eloquence and his address were equally vain. In spite of the
beauty of his person and the urbanity of his manners, the shepherdess
received his declarations with coldness and aversion. She assured him
of the impossibility of his success, that she felt for him emotions
very different from those of partiality, and that her heart was
prepossessed for a more amiable swain. With that sweet simplicity, that
accompanied all she did, she endeavoured to dissuade him from the
pursuit of a hopeless and unreasonable passion; she enumerated to him
all the sources of enjoyment with which he was surrounded; she
intreated him not in the wantonness of opulence to disturb her humble
and narrow felicity; and she besought him in the most pathetic and
earnest language to dismiss her to freedom, contentment and her
parents.

The more she exerted herself to bend his resolution, and the more scope
she gave to the unstudied expression of her artless sentiments, the
more inextricably was the magician caught, and the more firm and
inexorable was his purpose. Perceiving however that he had little to
hope from the most skilful detail of the pleas of passion, he turned
the attention of the shepherdess to a different topic. “Behold Imogen,”
cried he, “the richness of the landscape on our right hand! The spot in
my eye is farthest from the castle, and divided from the rest of the
prospect with a tall hedge of poplars and alders. It is full of the
finest grass, and its soil is rich and luxuriant. It is scattered with
fleckered cows and dappled fawns. In the hither part of it is a field
of the choicest wheat, whose stalks are so rank and pregnant, that the
timid hare and the untamed fox can scarcely force themselves a path
among them. Beside it is an inclosure of barley with strong and pointed
spikes; and another of oats, whose grain, uneared, spreads broader to
the eye. How beautiful the scene! I will not ask you, fairest of your
sex, to give your confidence to unauthorised words. I will afford the
most unquestionable demonstration of the veracity of my declarations.
All these, lovely Imogen, shall be yours: yours exclusively, to be
disposed of at your pleasure, without the interference or control of
any. All my other possessions shall not belong to myself more than to
you. You shall be the mistress of my heart, and the associate of my
counsels. All my business shall be your gratification, all my pleasure
your happiness. Forget then, dearest maiden, the poverty of your former
condition, and the connections you formed in an hour of ignorance and
obscurity. From this moment let a new era and better prospects
commence. Enjoy that wealth, which can no where so well be bestowed;
and those gratifications, which so obviously belong to that delicate
and enchanting form.”

The proposal of Roderic called forth more than ever the spirit and the
resentment of Imogen. She did not feel herself in the slightest degree
attracted by the magnificence of his offers. She knew of no use for
superfluous riches. She felt no wants unsupplied, and no wishes
ungratified. What motive is there in the whole region of human
perceptions, that can excite the contented mind to the pursuit of
affluence? “And dost thou think,” said the fair one, with a gesture of
disdain that made her look ten times more amiable, “to seduce me with
baits like these? Know, mistaken man, that I am happy. I spin the
finest wool of our flocks, and drain the distended udders of our cows.
I superintend the dairies; the butter and the cheese are the produce of
my industry. In these employments my time is spent in chearfulness and
pleasure. Surrounded with our little possessions, I am conscious to no
deficiency; in the midst of my parents and friends, I desire not to
look beyond the narrow circle of the neighbouring hills. If you feel
those wants, which I do not so much as understand, enjoy your fond
mistake. Possess those riches which I will not envy you. Wander from
luxury to luxury unquestioned; I shall be sufficiently happy in the
narrow gratifications that nature has placed within my reach. The gifts
you offer me have no splendour in my eye, and I could not thank you for
them though offered with ever so much disinterestedness. The only gift
it is in your power to make is liberty. Allow me to partake of that
bounty, which nature has bestowed upon the choristers of the grove, to
wander where I will. Under a thousand of those privations that would
render the child of luxury inconsolable, I would support myself;
freedom and independence are the only boons which the whole course of
my life has taught me to cherish.”

“Your ignorance,” rejoined Roderic, “is amiable, though unfortunate.
But your merit is too great not to deserve to be informed. Knowledge,
my lovely maiden, is always regarded as a desirable acquisition by the
prudent and the judicious. To what purpose was a mind so capacious,
competent to the greatest improvements, and formed to comprehend
subjects of the most extensive compass, or the sublimest reach,
bestowed upon us, if it be not employed in the pursuits of science and
experience? Your abilities, my Imogen, appear to be of the very first
description. How much then will you be to be blamed, if you do not
embrace this opportunity of improvement and instruction? Beauty, though
unseen, is not less excellent; and prudence, though unpossessed, is of
value inestimable. The poor man may be contented, because he knows not
the use of riches; but, in spite of this contentment, it were wise to
enlarge our sphere of sensation, and to extend the sources of
happiness.

“If however you still maintain that lovely perverseness, decide if you
please upon your own fate, but let filial piety hinder you from
determining too hastily respecting that of your parents and your
friends. Consider what a new and unbounded scope will be afforded you,
by the participation of my riches, for the exercise of benevolent and
generous propensities. Your parents are now declining fast under the
weight of years and infirmity. It is in your power to make their bed of
down, and to enliven the ground they have yet to traverse with flowers.
It is yours to wrest the sheers from the hand of the weary and
over-laboured ancient, and to remove the distaff from the knees of your
venerable mother. Think, gentle shepherdess, before it be too late, of
the heart-felt pleasures that await the power to do good, when attended
with a virtuous inclination. When you wipe away the tear from the cheek
of distress, when you light up a smile in the eye of misery, think you,
that none of the comfort you administer will flow back in generous and
refreshing streams to your own heart? Are these exertions that Imogen
ought to contemplate with indifference? Is this a power that Imogen can
reject without deliberation?”

Imogen stood for a moment in a sweet and ingenuous state of suspense.
She had a native and indefeasible reverence for every thing that had
the remotest analogy to virtue, and she could not answer a proposal
that came recommended to her by that name with unhesitating
promptitude. She was too good and modest to assume an air of decision
where she did not feel it; she was too simple and unaffected, to
disguise that hesitation to which she was really conscious. “How false
and treacherous,” exclaimed she, “are your reasonings! Among the
virtuous inhabitants of the plain, every one seeks to influence another
by motives which are of weight with himself, and utters the sentiments
of his own heart. Where have you learned the disingenuous and faithless
arts you employ? To what purpose have you cultivated them, and whose
good opinion do you flatter yourself they will obtain for you? False,
perfidious Roderic! the more I see of you, the more I fear and despise
you.

“You would recommend to me your temptations under the colour of
knowlege. Has knowlege any charms for the debauched and luxurious? You
tell me we ought to enlarge our sphere of sensation, and to extend the
sources of happiness. Wisdom indeed, and mental improvements are
desirable. But the sage Druids have always taught me, that the mind is
the nobler part, that the body is to be kept in subjection, and that it
is not our business to seek its gratification beyond the bounds of
necessity and temperance. If I allowed myself to think that I wanted
more than I have, might not the possession of that more extend my
desires, till, from humble and bounded, they became insatiable? Were I
to dismiss those industrious pursuits by means of which my time now
glides so pleasantly, how am I sure that indolence and vacancy would
make me happier?

“To succour indeed the necessitous, and particularly my parents and
relations, is a consideration of more value. But ah, Roderic! though
you talk it so well, I am afraid it is a consideration foreign to your
character. For my parents, they are as yet healthful and active; and
while they continue so, they wish, no more than myself for repose and
indolence. If ever they become incapable of industry, their little
flock will still contribute to their support. They are too much
respected, for the neighbouring shepherds not to watch over it in turn
out of pure love. And, I hope, as I will then exert myself with double
vigour, that the Gods will bless us, and we shall do very well. As to
general distress, heaven is too propitious to us, to permit the
inhabitants of the valley to be overwhelmed by it. And I shall always
have milk from my flocks, and a cheese from my store, to set before the
hungry and necessitous.

“But were these advantages more valuable than they are, it would not be
my duty to purchase them so dear. What, shall I desert all the
connections it has been the business of my life to form, and that happy
state of simplicity I love so much? Shall I shake off the mutual vows I
have exchanged with the most amiable and generous of the swains, and
join myself to one, whose person I cannot love, and whose character I
cannot approve? No, Roderic, enjoy that happiness, if it deserve the
name of happiness, that is congenial to your inclination. Forget the
worthless and unreasonable passion, you pretend to have conceived, in
the multitude of gratifications that are within your reach. Envy not me
my straw-defended roof, my little flock, and my faithful shepherd. I
will never exchange them for all the temptations that the world can
furnish.”



BOOK THE FOURTH

SONG IN HONOUR OF THE FAIR SEX.—HYPOCRISY OF THE MAGICIAN.—THE TRIUMPH
OF IMOGEN.—DESPAIR AND CONSOLATION OF RODERIC.


So much was Roderic discouraged by the apparent spirit and firmness of
these declarations, that at the conclusion of them he abruptly quitted
his captive, and released her for a moment from his unjust
persecutions. His pride however was too strongly piqued, and his
passions too much alarmed to permit her a real respite. “Where ever,”
cried he, as he trod with hasty and irregular steps the level
green,—“where ever were found such simplicity, and so much strength of
judgment, and gaiety of wit in union? Is it possible for the extreme of
simplicity and the perfection of intellect to meet together? These
surely are paradoxes, that not all the goblins of the abyss can solve,
and which, had they been related instead of seen, must have appeared to
constitute an absurd and impossible fiction.

“Well then it is in vain to attack the inexorable fair one with
allurements that address themselves only to the understanding. She is
too well fortified with the prejudices of education, and the principles
of an imaginary virtue, to be reduced by an assault like this. The
pride of her virtue is alarmed, the little train of her sophistries are
awakened, and with that artless rhetoric, of the value of which she is
doubtless sensible, she set[s] all her enemies at defiance. My future
enticements shall therefore address themselves to her senses. Thus
approaching her, it is impossible that success should not follow my
undertaking. Even the most wary, circumspect, and suspicious, might
thus be overcome. But she is innocence itself. She apprehends no
danger, she suspects no ambuscade. Young and unexperienced, and the
little experience she has attained, derived only from scenes of
pastoral simplicity, she knows not the meaning of insincerity and
treachery; she dreads not the serpent that lurks beneath the flower.”

Having determined the plan of his machinations, and given the necessary
orders, he privately signified to the attendants, that they should
propose to their lovely charge to direct her course once again to the
mansion; and as she perceived that Roderic still continued upon a
distant part of the lawn; and as she saw no means of present escape
from her confinement, she consented to do as they desired.

They now entered the mansion, and passing through several splendid
apartments, at length reached a large and magnificent saloon. It was
hung with tapestry, upon which were represented the figures of Sappho
sweeping the lyre; of the Spartan mother bending over the body, and
counting the wounds of her son; of Penelope in the midst of her
maidens, carefully unravelling the funeral web of her husband; of
Lucretia inflicting upon herself a glorious and voluntary death; and of
Arria teaching her husband in what manner a Roman should expire. These
stories had been miraculously communicated to Roderic, and were now
explained by the attendants to the wondering Imogen. At the same time a
band of music, that was placed at the lower end of the hall, struck at
once their various instruments, and, without any previous preparation,
began the lofty chorus. At the upper end of the saloon stood a throne
of ivory, hung round with trappings of gold, and placed upon a floor of
marble, of which a numerous flight of steps, also of marble, composed
the ascent. The hangings were of crimson velvet, and the canopy of the
richest purple. With the musicians were intermingled a number of
supernatural beings under the command of Roderic. Their voices were
melodious beyond all example of human power; they were by turns lofty
and majestic, and by turns tender and melting; and the strain was
divine.

“Such are the honours of the tender sex; and who can speak their
praise? The lily is not so fair, the rose is not so attractive, the
violet and the jessamine have not so elegant a simplicity. By their
charms, by their eloquence, and by their merit, they have assumed an
empire over the bolder sex. How auspicious is the empire! They hold
them in silken chains. They govern, not by harsh decrees, and rigorous
penalties; but by smiles and soft compliances, and winning,
irresistible persuasion. The rewards they bestow are sweet, and
ravishing, and indescribable.

“What were man without the fair? A wild beast of the forest; a rough
and untamed savage; a hungry lion bursting from his den. Without them,
they are gloomy, morose, unfeeling, and unsociable. To them they owe
every civilization, and every improvement. Did Amphion, from the rude
and shapeless stones, raise by his power a regular edifice, houses,
palaces, and cities? Did Orpheus by his lay humanize the rugged beasts
and teach the forests to listen? No, these are wild, unmeaning fables.
It was woman, charming woman, that led unpolished man forth from the
forests and the dens, and taught him to bend before thy shrine,
humanity! See how the face of nature changes! Where late the slough
mantled, or the serpent hissed among the briars and the reeds, all is
pasture and fertility. The cottages arise. The shepherds assume the
guise of gentleness and simplicity. They attire themselves with care,
they braid the garland, and they tune the pipe. Wherefore do they braid
the garland? Why are their manners soft and blandishing? And why do the
hills re-echo the notes of the slender reed? It is to win thy graces,
woman, charming woman!

“When nature formed a man, she formed a creature rational, and erect;
ten times more noble than the birds of the air, and the beasts of the
field. But when she formed a woman—it was then first, that she outdid
herself, and improved her own design. What are the broad and nervous
shoulders, what the compacted figure, and the vigorous step, when
contrasted with the well-turned limbs, the slender waist, the graceful
shoulders, and the soft and panting bosom? What are the manly front,
the stern, commanding eye, and the down-clad cheek, if we compare them
with the smooth, transparent complexion, the soft, faint blushes, and
the pretty, dimpled mouth? What are the strong, slow reason, the deep,
unfathomed science, and the grave and solemn wisdom, if they are
brought into competition with the sprightly sense, the penetrating wit,
and the inexhaustible invention? Does the stronger sex boast of its
learning, its deep researches, its sagacious discoveries? and have they
a coolness, a self-command, a never baffled prudence like that which
woman has exhibited? Do they pique themselves upon their courage, their
gallantry, and their adventure? Where shall we find among them a
patience, a mildness, a fortitude, a heroism, equal to that of the
fair?

“Virtue has dwelt beneath the sun. Themis has left her throne on the
right hand of Jove, and descended to the globe of earth. We have seen
examples of disinterested rectitude, of inviolable truth, of sublime
and heaven-born benevolence. They are written in the roll of fame; they
are handed down from age to age. They are the song of the poet, and the
favourite theme of the servants of the Gods. By whom were they
exhibited, or with whom did they originate? With woman, charming woman?
Well have justice and rectitude been represented under a female form,
for without the softer sex, all had been anarchy and confusion; every
man had preyed upon his neighbour; men, like beasts, had devoured each
other, and virtue fled affrighted to her native skies. This is the
source of all that is good and all that is excellent; of all that is
beautiful and all that is sublime: woman, charming woman!”

At this place the chorus ceased for a moment, and the attendants
observing, that Imogen was standing, intreated her to seat herself. She
was rendered weak and languid by the unexperienced anxieties and
terrors she had undergone, and she did not refuse their request. There
was no seat in the centre of the hall, or nearer than the sumptuous
throne that was placed at the upper end. Thither therefore they led
her. Imogen had been unused to the distinctions of rank and precedence.
Among the shepherds of the valley, every one, except the bards and the
priests, seated himself promiscuously; none sought to take the upper
hand of his neighbour; age was not distinguished by priority of place;
and youth thought not of ceding the _pas_. The shepherdess, as she
advanced towards the chair, paused for an instant, impressed with that
blaze of magnificence which is equally formed to strike every human
eye. She looked round her with an air of timidity and suspense, and
then going forward, ascended the steps and placed herself in the
throne. At this action, as at a signal, the song recommenced.

“Simplicity, child of nature, daughter of the plains, with thee alone
the queen of beauty dwells! What is it that adorns and enhances all the
wild and uncultivated scenes of nature? It is plainness and artless
simplicity. What is it that renders lovely and amiable her most
favourite productions in the animal creation: the tender lamb, the
cooing dove, and the vocal nightingale? It is simplicity; it is, that
all their gestures wear the guise, and their voice speaks the artless,
and unaffected language of nature. What is is that renders venerable
the characters of mankind; that ennobles the song of the bards; that
gives lustre and attraction to immortal, never-fading virtue? It is
simplicity, unaffected simplicity. Of the last and crowning work of
nature, woman, the form is grace; the visage is beauty; the eye
sparkles with intelligence, and smiles with soft and winning graces;
the tongue is clothed with persuasion and eloquence. But what are
these? A body without a soul, a combination of soft and harmonious
names without a meaning; a multitude of rich inestimable gifts, heaped
together in rude and inartificial confusion without the powers of
enchantment and attraction. What is it that can animate the mass, that
can give force and value to the whole, and reduce the shapeless chaos
into form? It is simplicity, unaffected simplicity. Without thee, child
of nature, daughter of the plains, beauty were no more. With thee she
dwells, and in thy mansion can she only dwell. Then be the palm
reserved for thee, and given to thee alone, simplicity, unaffected
simplicity!”

At these words, two supernatural figures appeared below the canopy of
the throne. They had the form of children; their figures appeared so
soft and waxen, that you would imagine they might be indented by the
smallest touch; upon their countenances sat the lively and unexpressive
smile, the sports, and the graces; and their shoulders were furnished
with wings of the softest plumage, variegated with all the colours of
the bow of heaven. In their hands they bore a coronet, at once rich
with jewels, and light and inconsiderable in its weight. The circle was
of gold, and studded with diamonds. With the diamonds were intermingled
every precious gem, the topaz, the jasper, the emerald, the chrysolite,
and the sapphire. The head was of Persian silk, and dyed with Tyrian
purple. This coronet they placed upon the head of Imogen, and then
descending to the footstool of the throne, bowed upon her feet. The
song immediately recommenced.

“Imogen is under the guardianship of simplicity, her favourite pupil.
Pollute not the ear of Imogen with the praises of beauty. What though
her eye be full of amiableness and eloquence; what though her cheeks
rival the peach, and her lips the coral; what though her bosom be soft
as wax and fairer than the face of honour; what though her tresses are
brighter than the shooting star? These are the bounties of nature;
these are the gifts of heaven, in which she claims no merit; these are
not the praises of Imogen. But this is her praise, that the graces
dwell upon her lips; that her words are attired with the garb of sense
and fancy; and that all her conduct is governed by the largest prudence
and the nicest discretion. Heard you the sound of merriment and
applause? They were the gay and unlaboured sallies of the wit of Imogen
that called them forth. Saw you the look of wonder and astonishment,
and the gaze of involuntary approbation and reverence? They were
excited by the modesty, the circumspection, and the virtue of Imogen.
And yet Imogen is artless, unaffected and innocent; her wit is
unconscious of itself, and her virtue the unstudied dictate of nature.
Imogen is under the guardianship of simplicity, her favourite pupil. Be
hers then the crown that simplicity alone can deserve. Simplicity
descends not in person to the surface of the earth; her abode is among
the Gods. But Imogen is her representative, her perfect resemblance.
Should simplicity descend upon the earth, she would not know herself;
she would be astonished to behold another divinity, equally beautiful,
equally excellent. The divinity is Imogen. Be hers then the crown, that
simplicity alone can deserve.”

This was a trying moment to the lovely and generous Imogen. Praise is
congenial to every human sense; the voice of praise is ever grateful to
the ear of virtue. The glory of the shepherd indeed lies within a
narrow compass. But let immortality be named, and the heart of man is
naturally attracted: it is impossible that the good and generous bosom
should not long for such a prize. Nor was this all. Imogen, though
loved and honoured by the borderers of Towey, had been little used to
studied commendation and laboured applause. Pastoral simplicity does
not deal in these; and though it seek to oblige, its endeavours are
unostentatious and silent. Beside, her reverence for song was radical
and deep. It had been instilled into her from her earliest infancy;
from earliest infancy she had considered poetry as the vehicle of
divine and eternal truth. How strange and tremendous an advantage must
he gain over the ear of simplicity, who can present his fascinations
under the garb of all that is sacred and all that is honourable?

The song had begun with celebrating a theme, that must for ever be
congenial to every female breast. The heart of the shepherdess had
instinctively vibrated to the praises of simplicity. Even the
commendations bestowed upon herself were not improper, or
indiscriminate; they had distinguished between the inanity of personal
charms, and the value of prudence, the beauty of innocence and the
merit of virtue. Even the honours she had received were attributed to
these, and not to the other. Were they not therefore such as virtue
would aspire to, and discretion accept?

Alas, Imogen, be not deceived with airy shadows! The reasoning may be
plausible, but it is no better than sophistry. Thou must be taught,
fair and unsuspecting virgin, under a beautiful outside to apprehend
deceit; and to guard against the thorn which closely environs the
flower. Thou must learn, loveliest of thy sex, to dread the poison of
flattery. It is more venemous than the adder, it is more destructive
than hebenon or madragora. It annihilates every respectable quality in
the very act of extolling it; it undermines all that adorns and
elevates the human character. Even now that thou listenest to it, and
drinkest in, without apprehension, its opiate sounds, thou art too near
to the sacrifice of those very excellencies it pretends to admire. For
the head of Imogen was made giddy by the applauses she heard; drunk
with admiration, she was no longer conscious of the things around her,
or of herself; she sunk vanquished and supine, and was supported by one
of the attendants.

At this moment Roderic came forth from an adjoining apartment, and
caught in his arms the vanquished beauty. In the mean time the
attendants, the musicians, and the supernatural beings disappeared, and
she was left alone with her betrayer.

Roderic surveyed his victim with an eye of avidity and triumph. His
eager curiosity wandered over her hoard of charms; and his brutal
passion was soothed with the contemplation of her disorder. Already in
imagination, he had possessed himself of a decisive advantage over so
apparent a weakness; and his breast was steeled against the emotions of
pity.

Imogen cast around her a languid and passive regard, and was in a
moment roused from her supineness by the sight of Roderic. Her subtle
adversary did not however allow her time for complete recollection,
before he discovered an apparent revolution in his sentiments and
language. He had heard, he said, the supernatural and celestial chorus,
and been caught in the extremest degree by the praises of innocence and
the triumph of virtue. He now felt the vanity and folly of those
pursuits in which he had been so deeply immersed, and was determined to
abjure the littleness of pride, and the emptiness of sensual
gratification. He did not now address his destined prize with the
commendations of beauty. He bestowed upon her with profusion the
epithets of discretion, integrity, and heroism; and poured into her ear
the insidious flattery, that was most soothing to her temper. Full, as
he pretended, of the infant purposes of virtue, he besought his captive
in the most importunate manner, to remain with him for a time, to
confirm his wavering rectitude, to instruct him in duty, and thus to
gain one human being to the standard of integrity, and to render so
extensive possessions subservient to the happiness of mankind. All this
he expressed with that ardour, which is congenial to the simplicity of
truth; and with that enthusiasm, which in all instances accompanies
recent conviction.

Imogen was totally uninured to the contemplation of hypocrisy, and
immediately yielded the most unreserved credit to these professions.
Her joy was extreme at the change in the dispositions of Roderic, and
her admiration of the irresistible charms of rectitude pious and
profound. The praises bestowed upon her seemed distinguishing and
sincere, and she drank them in with the most visible complacency. She
expressed however an ingenuous diffidence of her capacity for the task
of an instructor, and she intreated at any rate to be permitted to
withdraw for a short time to dry up the tears of her disconsolate
parents.

These difficulties were too obvious to create any embarrassment to so
consummate a deceiver. He described the danger of that vicious mistrust
of our powers, that is the enemy of all generous and heroic action. He
reminded his captive how recent were his purposes, and how many
unforeseen incidents might be crowded into so eventful a moment. There
were goblins, he said, ever ready to seduce the wanderer from his
wished return; and he had been too much their prey not to have every
thing to dread from the subtlety of their machinations. On the other
hand, no character was suspended on the longer or shorter duration of
the uneasiness of the parents of Imogen; and the joyful surprise they
would ere long experience, might abundantly compensate for any
temporary anxiety and solicitude. He told her of the worship and
reverence that were due to the immortal Gods. Could she imagine that
the scene that had just passed was produced for the mere honour and
gratification of a virtuous character, than for the instruction of the
ignorant, and the restoration of the wandering? Shall she be thus
honoured, and shall this be her gratitude?

Though the web of the sophistry woven by her betrayer might seem
inextricable, though Imogen had no sentiments more predominant than the
love of virtue, and the fear of the Gods, yet her heart involuntarily
resisted his persuasions, and she felt the yearnings of affection still
active in her bosom towards those, to whom she owed her existence.

“And cannot you,” cried the lovely maiden, “attend me in the short
absense I demand? That would prevent every danger, and supersede every
objection.” “Ah, shepherdess,” replied the magician, “this reluctance,
these studied expedients imply diffidence and disobedience. But
diffidence is much unworthy of the heart of Imogen. Your life has been
marked with one tenour of piety. Do not then begin to disobey. Do not
sully the unspotted whiteness of your character.”

“This,” rejoined Imogen, “is too much. This is mere savageness of
virtue. Why in the act of persuading me do you bestow upon me those
laboured commendations, which the very persuasions you employ are
intended to prove that I little deserve? Is it necessary, Roderic, that
your manners should be so strange and unaccountable, as to supply food
for eternal jealousy and suspicion? And what must be that conduct, that
inspires jealousy into a heart unguarded as mine? I talk of suspicion,
but I scarcely know the meaning of the term. And yet there is in your
carriage something precise, plausible and composed, that I have seldom
observed in any other man. Oh, shepherd! you know not what you do, when
you awake all these ideas in a maiden’s breast, when you thus confound
things that heaven and earth put asunder.”

“Ungenerous Imogen,” replied the magician, “wherefore this? Do I claim
any thing more of you than rectitude demands, and your own bosom will
another day approve? Am I not your better genius to guard you against
the errors that might be prompted by too tender a heart? Beside, does
the conduct of beings of a higher order depend upon my nod? Can I
control the spheres, and call down celestial essences from their bright
abodes? And will they be rendered subservient to the purposes of
treachery and guilt?”

“Roderic here break we off our conference. Sure I am that your conduct
is not dictated by a regard for my ease or my welfare. How unworthy
then, as well as how unjust is the pretence? With respect to the
supernatural scenes I have beheld, the question is more difficult. Of
such I have heard from the mouth of the consecrated priests, but never
till this day did I see them. At present however my mind is too much
distracted, to be able to decide. I have already gone far enough; as
far as my heart will permit me. I must now retire.’

“One thing however I will add. From the resolutions you at first
professed, and the impressions you appeared to feel, I had conceived
the most sanguine hopes, and the sincerest pleasure. These are all now
vanished. I cannot account for this. But your conduct is now as
mysterious to my comprehension, as it was before disgusting to my
judgment. I am bewildered in a maze of uncertainty. I am lost in
unwelcome obscurity. May your resolutions and designs be better than my
hopes! But ah, Roderic, for how much have you to answer, how deep must
be your guilt, if all this be mummery, dissimulation, and hypocrisy!”

The magician perceived that it was in vain to urge the stratagem any
further, and he retired from the presence of the shepherdess in
silence. If he had been able to distract her ingenuous mind between
contending duties, he had not however succeeded in his principal
object, that of undermining her virtue, and lessening her attachment to
her parents and her lover. If Imogen were perplexed and confounded,
Roderic was scarcely more happy. He looked back upon the scene with
mortification and astonishment. It was difficult for him to determine
where it had digressed from the auspicious appearances it had at first
exhibited, and yet he found himself in the conclusion of it wide, very
wide indeed, of the success of which he had aimed.

“To what purpose,” exclaimed he, with a voice of anguish and rage,
“have I inherited the most inexhaustible riches? To what purpose is the
command which I boast over the goblins of the abyss, if one weak,
simple, and uninstructed woman shall thus defy my arts? I call the
hills my own. I mount upon the turrets of my castle, and as far as my
eye can survey, the bending corn and the grazing herds belong to me. My
palace is adorned with all that can sooth the wearied frame, or gratify
the luxurious desire. Couches of purple, and services of gold, the most
exquisite viands, and the blandishments of enticing beauty, charms of
which the ruggedness of pastoral life has not so much as the idea, all
these are circled within my walls. Beyond all this, I command myriads
of spirits, invisible, and reputedly omnipotent. If I but stamp my
foot, if I but wave this wand, they fly swifter than the wings of
thought to my presence. One look of favour inspires them with
tranquility and exultation; one frown of displeasure terrifies them
into despair. I dispatch them far as the corners of the moon. At my
bidding they engage in the most toilsome enterprises, and undertake the
labour of revolving years. Oh impotence of power! oh mockery of state!
what end can ye now serve but to teach me to be miserable? Power, the
hands of which are chained and fettered in links of iron; state, which
is bestowed only like a paper crown to adorn the brows of a baby, are
the most cruel aggravations of disappointment, the most fearful insults
upon the weak. But shall I always obey the imperious mandate?”

“Yes, Roderic, thou shalt obey,” exclaimed the inimical goblin, who at
this moment burst through a condensed cloud, that had arisen
unperceived in one corner of the apartment, and appeared before him.
“In vain dost thou struggle with the links of destiny. In vain dost
thou exert thyself to escape from the fillets that on every side
surround thee. The greater and the more obstinate are thy efforts, the
more closely art thou bound, and the more inextricably engaged. This is
the situation in which I wished to see thee. Every pang it wrings from
thy heart, every exclamation it forces from thy tongue, is solace to my
thoughts, and music to my ears. And wert thou vain and weak enough to
imagine, that riches would purchase thee every pleasure, that riches
would furnish an inexhaustible source of enjoyment? Of all mortal
possessions they are the most useless, mischievous, and baleful. The
Gods, when the Gods are willing to perfect a character of depravity, in
order to make vice consummately detestable, or to administer an
exemplary punishment to distinguished wickedness, bestow upon that man,
as the last of curses, and the most refined of tortures, extensive
possessions and unbounded riches. Indulge to the mistaken pride which
these inspire, and wrap thyself up in the littleness of thy heart.—But
no, rise above them. Suffer thy desires to wander into a larger and
more dangerous field. Run with open eyes into the mouth of that
destruction that gapes to devour thee! Why shouldst thou attend to the
voice of destiny, to the immutable laws of the Gods, and the curse that
is suspended over thee? Be a man. Bravely defy all that is most
venerable, and all that is most unchangeable. Oh how I long for thy
ruin! How my heart pants for the illustrious hour in which thy _palaces
shall be crumbled down to the dust of the balance, thy riches
scattered, and thyself become an unpitied, necessitous, miserable
vagabond_! In the mean time, remember, that riches like thine are not
bestowed with u[n]reserving hand, that commerce is not permitted with
the shadows of darkness, without some trifling fall to ill amid this
immensity of uniform happiness. For this end I am commissioned from
time to time to appear before thee in the midst of thy triumph, and to
mingle with thy exultations the boding voice of prophetic woe.”

Roderic did not listen to these bitter sarcasms without exhibiting
every mark of fury and impatience. At length he commanded the spectre
to depart, with a voice so fierce and stern as to terrify him into
submission. For though the authority of the magician was not formidable
enough to make him desist from persecuting him, yet the penalties he
had frequently been able to inflict, inspired the goblin in spite of
himself, with the fear of so potent an adversary. Still choaked however
with agony and resentment, Roderic waved his wand, and summoned his
favourite instrument and the prime minister of his pleasures, the
goblin Medoro, to his presence. The moment he appeared the magician was
relieved from that violent gust of passion, which had held him
motionless, a statue of horror, and throwing himself upon his couch, he
burst into a flood of tears.

Medoro was the goblin that had appeared to Edwin in his return from the
feast of the bards, and had brewed the fatal storm that had preceded
the rape of Imogen. The figure of the spectre was uncouth, and his
countenance was full of savage and shapeless deformity. Nor did his
appearance bely his character. To all other beings, whether of the
terrestrial or the invisible world, his temper was hard, impracticable
and remorseless. To Rodogune alone, a similitude of minds, and a
congenial ferocity of heart had attached him; and the attachment had
descended to her son; though not equally destitute of every agreeable
and every plausible quality. He therefore beheld the affliction of
Roderic with sympathy and compassion.

“Wherefore,” cried Medoro, modulating a voice, that nature had made up
of dissonance and horror, into the most gentle and soothing accent of
which it was capable, and hanging over his couch, “wherefore this
sorrow? What is it that has seemed to mar a happiness so enviable? Art
thou not possessed”—“Talk not to me of possessions,” exclaimed Roderic,
with a tone of frenzy, and starting from his posture, “I give them to
the winds. I banish them from my thoughts for ever. Oh that the earth
would open and swallow them up! Oh that unburdened from them all, I
were free as the children of the vallies, and careless as the shepherd
that carols to the rising day. I had not then been thus entangled in
misfortune, thus every way closed in to remediless despair. I had not
then been a monument of impotence and misery for the world to gaze at.
Ye are all combined against me! Under a specious, smiling countenance
you all conceal a heart of gall. But your hypocrisy and your mummery
shall serve you to little purpose. Point me, this instant point me, to
a path for the gratification of my wishes, or dearly shall you rue the
shallowness of your invention and the treachery of your professions.”

Medoro was astonished at the vehemence of the passion of Roderic,
unusual even in a youth who had never been refused demands the most
unreasonable, and who had been inured to see all the powers of nature
bend to his will. “Is this,” cried he, “a return for services so
unwearied and sincere as mine? Foolish and ungrateful youth! Rut I will
point you to a remedy. Had you not been blinded with fury and
impatience, you would have seen that your situation was not yet
irremediable, by means the most obviously in your power. Did I not at
your birth bestow upon you a ring, that communicates to the wearer the
power of assuming what form he please? I gave it, in order to elude the
curse of the malignant goblin, to subdue the most obdurate female, and
to evade the most subtle adversary. The uses in which thou hast
hitherto employed it have been idle and capricious, governed by whim,
and dictated by the sallies of a sportive fancy. It is now first that
an opportunity is offered to turn it to those purposes for which it was
more immediately destined. Dost thou not now address an obdurate maid?
Is she not full of constancy and attachment for another? What avails it
then to a heart, simple and unvitiated as hers, to offer the bribe of
riches, and to lavish the incense of flattery and adulation. Attack her
in her love. Appear to her in the form of him to whom she is most
ardently attached. If Imogen is vulnerable, this is the quarter from
which she must be approached. Thus far Roderic thou mayest try thy
power; but if by this avenue thou canst not surprise her heart and
overpower her virtue, be then wise. Recollect thy courage, strengthen
thy resolution, and shake off for ever a capricious inclination, which
interrupts the tenour of a life that might otherwise wear the uniform
colour of happiness.”

The information of a new measure for the furthering his darling
pursuit, was a communication of the most reviving kind to the heart of
Roderic. The gloom and petulance that had collected upon his
countenance were dissipated in a moment. His cheek caught anew the
flush of expectation; his eye sparkled anew with the insolence of
victory. His gratitude to the propitious Medoro was now as immoderate
as his displeasure had lately been unreasonable. He walked along the
apartments with the stride of exultation and triumph. He forgot the
pathetic exclamations he had lately uttered upon the impotence of
power, and he was full of congratulation in the possession of that
which he had treated with contempt. The moral lessons which it was his
destiny to have from time to time poured into an unwilling ear were
erased for ever. He exclaimed upon his own stupidity and want of
invention, and he remembered not that vehemence of passion, which had
distracted his understanding, and drawn a cloud over all his ideas. It
was not instantly that he could assume a sufficient degree of
collectedness and composure to put into execution the scheme with which
he was so highly delighted. Presently however the ebriety of unexpected
hope dissipated, and he prepared for that scene which was to be
regarded as the summit of his power, and the irrevocable crisis of his
fate.



BOOK THE FIFTH

THE GARDEN OF RODOGUNE DESCRIBED.—THE HOPES AND DANGER OF IMOGEN.—HER
INCONSOLABLE DISTRESS.


Imogen, immediately after the interview that had so deeply perplexed
her, returning to her apartment, had shut herself up in solitude. Her
reflections were gloomy and unpleasing; the new obscurity that hung
about them had not contributed to lighten their pressure. But though
she was melancholy, her melancholy was of a different hue from that of
her ravisher. If virtue can ever be deprived of those glorious
distinctions that exclusively belong to her, it must be when she is
precluded from the illuminations of duty, and is no longer able to
discern the path in which she ought to tread. But even here, where
distinction seems most annihilated, it yet remains. The cruel
sensations of Imogen were not aggravated by despair, but heightened by
hope. Through them all she was sustained by the consciousness of her
rectitude. The chearfulness of innocence supported her under every
calamity.

She had not long remained alone before she was summoned to partake of
that plainer repast, which in the economy of Roderic usually occupied
the middle of the day, and preceded the sumptuous and splendid
entertainment of the evening, by which the soul was instigated to
prolong the indulgence of the table, and to throw the reins upon the
neck of enjoyment. But Imogen, whose thoughts were dark, and whose mind
brooded over a thousand sad ideas, was desirous of that solitude, which
in the simplicity of pastoral life is ever at hand. She could not away
with the freedom of society, and the levity of mirth. It was painful to
her to have any witnesses of her new sensations, and she wished to
remove herself for ever from the inspection of the officious and the
inquisitive. In compliance with her humour a few viands were served to
her in her own apartment. She was induced by the entreaties of her
attendant, to call up a momentary smile upon her countenance, and to
endeavour to partake of the refreshment that was offered her. But the
effort was vain. It was the sunshine of an April day; her repast in
spite of her was bedewed with tears, and she ate the bread of sorrow.

As soon as it was concluded, she was invited to a short excursion in
the garden of the mansion. Unused to refusal, the natural mildness of
her temper inclined to comply. She saw the necessity of not yielding
herself up to passive and unresisting melancholy. The natural serenity
of innocence did not yet permit her to be insensible to the attractions
of enjoyment; and the transient view she had had of the garden, as she
passed to the terrace, led her to expect from it, something that might
sooth her pensive thoughts, and something that might divert her
affliction.

The garden of Rodogune was an inclosure in a bottom glade, at the
entrance of which, though nigh to the castle, and upon a lower ground,
you wholly lost sight of the mansion, and every external object. But
though these were excluded, the sorceress by her art had also excluded
the appearance of limits and boundaries. The scene was not terminated
by walls and espaliers, but by the entrance on either side of a wild,
meandring wood. The side by which you were introduced was protected by
trees of the thickest foliage; and the gate was masqued with a clump of
hazels and alders, which permitted only two narrow passages on either
side. The eye was shut in, but the imagination was permitted to range
in perfect freedom. Nor was this seeming confinement calculated to
disgust; on the contrary you willingly believed that every charm and
every grace was shut up in the circle, and you trembled lest the
smallest outlet should take off from the richness of the scene. In
entering you were struck with a sensation of coolness, that impervious
shades, a bright and animated verdure, flowers scattered here and there
in agreeable disorder, the prattling of the stream, and the song of a
thousand birds, impressed as strongly upon the imagination, as the
senses. But this did not appear the result of art. Every thing had the
face of uncultivated luxuriance, and impenetrable solitude. You could
not believe that you were not the first mortal that had ever found his
way into the enchanting desert.

The scene however had been solely produced by the skill of Rodogune.
Erewhile the grass had appeared dry and parched; a few solitary and
leafless trees had been scattered up and down; there was no gaiety of
colours to relieve the eye; and not one drop of water to give freshness
to the prospect. But with the operations of magic Rodogune had
delighted to supersede the parsimony of nature. She caused the tree and
the shrub to spring forth in the richest abundance; the sturdiness of
whose trunks, or the deepness of their verdure, cheated the eye with
the semblance of the ripening hand of time. She sprinkled the turf,
short, fine, and vivid, with flowers both native and exotic. She called
forth a thousand fountains to enrich the scene. Sometimes they crept
beneath the turf in almost imperceptible threads; sometimes they ran
beside the alleys, or crossed them in sportive wantonness; and
sometimes you might see them in broader and more limpid currents
rolling over a smooth and spotted bed. Now they rose from the soil in
foamy violence, and fell upon the chalk and pebbly ground beneath; and
anon they formed themselves into the deeper bason [sic], whose calm and
even surface reflected back the reeds and shrubs that were planted
round. There was nothing strait and nothing level; the rule and the
line had never entered the delicious spot; the irregularities of the
soil, and the fantastic, gradual windings of the alleys, were
calculated to give length to the passage, and immensity to the scene.

From time to time you encountered tufts of trees closely planted, and
that cast as brown a shade as the thickest forest. These were partly
composed of wood of the most pliant texture, the extremities of whose
branches, bending to the earth, took root a second time in her bosom.
Elsewhere the rasberry [sic], the rose, the lilac, and a thousand
flowering shrubs, appeared in thickets without either regularity or
symmetry, and contributed at once to adorn, and to give an air of
rudeness and wildness to the prospect. Round the body of the trees,
planted some at their root, and some upon the different parts of the
trunk, crept the withy, the snakeweed, the ivy, and the hop, and
intermingled with them the jessamine and the honeysuckle, in the most
unbounded profusion. Their tendrils hung from the branches, and waved
to the wind; and suggested to you the appearance of garlands scattered
from tree to tree by the nymphs of the grove. All was inexpressible
luxuriance, and a thousand different shades of verdure were placed, one
upon another, in regular confusion, and attractive disorder. An
exuberance of this sort was calculated in a vulgar scene to have
checked the fertility of the plants, and to have given a sickly and
withered appearance to their productions; but it was not so in the
garden of Rodogune. There the cherry and the grape, the downy peach and
the purple plum were half discovered amid the foliage of the hop, and
the clusters of the woodbine. Beneath the delicious shade you wandered
over beds of moss, undeformed with barren sands and intrusive weeds,
and smooth as the level face of ocean when all the winds of heaven
sleep.

Nor was this all. Inanimate and vegetable nature (and the observation
had not escaped the penetration of Rodogune) adorn and arrange it as
you will, infallibly suggests an idea of solitude, that communicates
sadness to the mind. Accordingly your path was here beguiled with the
warbling of a thousand birds, the full-toned blackbird, the mellow
thrush, and the pensive nightingale. The sorceress had invited them to
her retreat, by innumerable assiduities and innumerable conveniences of
food and residence, and had suffered no rude intrusion to disturb the
sacredness of their haunts. Unused to molestation in all their
pursuits, they now showed no terror of human approach, but flew, and
hopped, and sung, and played among the branches and along the ground,
in thoughtless security and wanton defiance.

For a few moments Imogen was immersed in the contemplation of the
beauties of the place, and its delightful coolness and mingled
fragrance were balm and softness to her wounded soul. The domestic who
accompanied her, perceived her propensity to reflection and fell back
to a small distance. The shepherdess, as soon as she found herself
disengaged and alone, revolved with the utmost displeasure her present
situation. “How happy,” cried she, “are the virgins of the vale! To
them every hour is winged with tranquility and pleasure. They laugh at
sorrow; they trill the wild, unfettered lay, or wander, chearful and
happy, with the faithful swain beneath the woodland shade. They fear no
coming mischief; they know not the very meaning of an enemy. Innocent
themselves, they apprehend not guilt and treachery in those around
them. Nor have they reason. Simplicity and frankness are the unvaried
character of the natives of the plain. Liberty, immortal, unvalued
liberty, is the daughter of the mountains. We suspected not that
deceit, insidiousness, and slavery were to be found beneath the sun.
Ah, why was I selected from the rest to learn the fatal lesson!
Unwished, unfortunate distinction! Was I, who am simple and undisguised
as the light of day, who know not how to conceal one sentiment of my
heart, or arm myself with the shield of vigilance and incredulity, was
I fitted by nature for a scene like this? In the mean time have not the
Gods encouraged me by the most splendid appearance, and the most
animating praises? I would not impeach their venerable counsels. But
was this a time for applauses so seducing? How greatly have they
perplexed, and how deeply distressed me! In what manner, alas! are they
to be obeyed, and what am I to think of the professions of my ravisher?
But, no; I dare not permit my purpose to be thus suspended. My danger
here is too imminent. The deliverance of my own honour and the felicity
of my parents are motives too sacred, not to annihilate every ambiguity
and every doubt. Oh, that I could escape at once! Oh, that like the
tender bird, that hops before me in my path, I could flit away along
the trackless air! Why should the little birds that carol among the
trees be the only beings in the domains of Roderic, that know the
sweets of liberty? But it will not be. Still, still I am under the eye
and guardianship of heaven. Wise are the ways of heaven, and I submit
myself with reverence. Only do ye, propitious Gods, support, sustain,
deliver me! Never was frail and trembling mortal less prepared to
encounter with machination, and to brave unheard of dangers. How
fearful are those I have already encountered; and how much have I to
apprehend from what may yet remain! But if I am weak, the omnipotent
support to which I look is strong. I will not give way to impious
despondence. It has delivered, and it may yet deliver me.”

By such virtuous and ingenuous reflections the shepherdess endeavoured
to solace her distress, and to fortify her courage. Now by revolving
her dangers she sought to prepare for their encounter; and now she
dismissed the recollection as too depressing and too melancholy. The
confinedness of the prospect, though rich infinitely beyond any thing
she had yet seen, and though not naturally calculated to fatigue and
disgust, was destructive of all its beauty in the eyes of Imogen. It
presented to her too just an image of the thraldom, which was the
subject of all her complaints. She desired to fling her eye through a
wider prospect; and though unable even from the loftiest ground to
discover the happy valley, she coveted the slender gratification of
beholding the utmost boundaries of the magic circle, and extending her
view as near as possible to her beloved home. She therefore advanced
farther in the garden, and presently arrived at a clear and open brow,
where a beautiful alcove was erected to catch the point of view, from
which the surrounding objects appeared in the greatest variety, and
with the happiest effect. She entered; and the domestic that attended
her remained in a distant part of the garden.

Scarcely had Imogen seated herself, before she discovered, by a casual
glance over the prospect, and at some distance, a youth, who seemed to
advance with hasty steps towards the castle. At first she was tempted
to turn away her eye with carelessness and inattention. There was
however something in his figure, that led her, by a kind of fascination
for which she could not account, to cast upon him a second glance and a
third. He drew nearer. He leaped with an active bound over the fence
that separated him from the garden. It was the form of Edwin. His hair
hung carelessly about his shoulders. His shepherd’s pipe was slung in
his belt. His clear and manly cheeks glowed with the warmth of the day,
and the anxiety of love. He entered the alcove.

Had a ghost risen before Imogen, surrounded with all the horrors of the
abyss, she could not have been struck with greater astonishment. As he
advanced, she gazed in silence. She could not utter a word. Her very
breath seemed suppressed. At length he entered, and for a moment she
had voice enough to utter her surprise. “Gracious powers!” exclaimed
she—“is it possible?—what is it that I see?—Edwin, beloved Edwin!”—and
she sunk breathless upon her seat. The fictitious shepherd approached
her, folded her in his arms, and with repeated, burning kisses, which
he had never before ventured to ravish from his disdainful captive,
restored her to life and perception. The confusion of Imogen did not
allow her to animadvert upon his freedoms. She had the utmost
confidence in the person whose form he wore, and the guileless
simplicity of pastoral life is accustomed to permit many undesigning
liberties, and is slow to take the alarm, or to suspect a sinister
purpose.

Roderic, anxious and timid respecting the success of his adventure, was
backward to enter into conversation. Imogen, on the other hand, charmed
with so unexpected an appearance, and presaging from it the most
auspicious consequences, full of her situation and sufferings, and
having a thousand things that pressed at once to be told, was eager and
impatient to communicate them to her faithful shepherd. She was also
desirous of learning by what undiscoverable means, by what happy
fortune, he had been conducted to this impervious retreat, and at so
critical a juncture. “Edwin,—my gallant Edwin,—how came you
hither?—Sure it was some propitious power,—some unseen angel,—that
conducted you.—Oh, my friend,—I have been
miserable,—perplexed—tortured—but it is now no more—I will not think of
it—Thanks to the immortal Gods, I have no occasion—no room—but for
gratitude.—Edwin—what have you done—and how did you escape the
tempest?—Was it not a fearful storm?—But I ask you a thousand
questions—and you do not answer me.—You seem abashed—uncertain—what is
the meaning of this?—Did you not come to succour my distress?—Was it
not pity for your poor—forlorn—desolate Imogen—that directed your
steps?”

“Yes, loveliest of thy sex,” replied her betrayer. “I flew upon the
wings of love. I was brought along by a celestial, impulsive guidance,
which I followed I knew not why. Oh how gracious the condescension, how
happy the obedience, how grateful the interview! Yes, Imogen, I was in
despair. I was terrified at the concurring prodigies by which we were
separated, and I feared never, never to behold that beauteous form
again. Come then and let me clasp thee to my bosom. Oh, thou art
sweeter than the incense-breathing rose, and brighter than the lily of
the vale!”

For a moment, the affectionate and unsuspicious shepherdess received
his caresses with complacence and pleasure. Suddenly however she
recollected herself; instinctively and without reflection she repulsed
the undue warmth of his attentions. “This,” cried she, “is no time for
fond indulgence, and careless dalliance—Fate is on the wing.—Our
situation is arduous—and we are in the midst of enemies.—Every thing
that surrounds us is full of danger—all is deceit and
treachery—appearances are insidious—all is frightful suspense and
headlong precipice.—The plotter of my ruin is as potent as he is—Ah!
every hour is big with calamity and destruction—every moment that we
stay here is in the last degree hazardous and decisive.—My keepers may
be alarmed—Those eyes that never close may be summoned to attention—we
may be hemmed in—prevented—Oh, Edwin, how fearful is this place—and how
unhoped—how joyful to me—must be an escape.—I thought this hated seat
had been impervious and impassable—Hark!—Did you not hear the sound of
feet?—No—every thing is still—Let us go this way—Say, by what path did
you come—Let us hasten our flight—let us make no delay—not look
behind.”

“Yes, Imogen,” replied Roderic, detaining her, “we will escape—But
this, my lovely maiden, is not the time—I am not yet prepared—We may
remain here in security—already the shades of evening begin to draw.
Every thing is now busy and active. We cannot pass from hence without
observation. In the silence of the night the attempt will be more
practicable. And you, Imogen, are a heroine. The Gods will watch over
us. Silence and darkness have nothing in them at which innocence should
be terrified. Till then let us reconcile ourselves to our situation.
Let us endeavour, by secrecy and stilness, not to attract to us the
attention of the enemies with which we are surrounded. Let us banish
from them curiosity and suspicion. And let us trust in the Gods,
propitious to rectitude, that they will look down with favour upon a
design prompted by virtue and urged by oppression.”

“Alas, Edwin,” replied the shepherdess “it is with regret that I
consent to remain one moment longer in this fatal spot. But I will
submit to your direction, I will confide in your prudence; I will trust
in your fidelity, and your zeal, for the deliverance I so ardently
desire. Here however we cannot long remain undiscovered.—My absence
will be suspicious.—I will return once again to the hated mansion.—You,
my swain, must conceal yourself in the mazes of this friendly
wilderness. It shall not be long ere I come to you again.—With motives
like mine to inspire ingenuity, I shall easily find a way to elude the
strictest guard, and escape from the closest thraldom.—Say, my
Edwin!—this stratagem shall suffice,—and you shall lead me in safety
under the friendly cover of the night to liberty and innocence!”

“Yes,” exclaimed Roderic, suddenly recollecting himself, “you may be
assured that by me nothing shall be omitted, that can further your
escape from this detested prison. The perils I have already incurred
may well convince you of this. It has been through the most fearful
dangers, ready every moment to be overwhelmed with omnipotent mischief,
that I have reached you. I have approached by the most devious and
undiscovered paths. Though the greatest hazards are to be encountered
in the cause of innocence and honour, the conduct we should pursue is
therefore ambiguous, and our success involved in uncertainty and
darkness. Oh Imogen, I may now behold thee for the last time. The
moment we sally from this retreat, I may be discovered by that enemy
from whom we have so much to fear. I may be confined to all the
wantonness of inventive torture, and that beauteous form, and the
smiles of that bewitching countenance may be torn from these longing
eyes for ever. But here, my shepherdess, we are safe. We may here
secure ourselves from sudden intrusion, and a thousand means of
concealment are here in our power. This Imogen is the moment of our
ascendancy, this little period is all our own. In a short time the
precious hours will be elapsed, the invaluable instants will be run
out. Oh, my love, fairest, most angelic of thy sex, while they are yet
ours, let us improve them.”—He ceased; and his countenance glistened
with the anticipations of enjoyment, and his eyes emitted the sparkles
of lust.

But the imagination of Imogen was not sullied with the impressions of
indecency, and the baseness of looser desires. She understood not the
innuendos of Roderic, and she remarked not with an eager and
inquisitive eye the distraction of his visage. She replied therefore
only to the more obvious tendency of what he said. “And is this, Edwin,
all the consolation you bring me? Ah how poor, how heartless, and how
cold! If we accomplish not that flight upon which my hopes and wishes
are suspended, what utility and what pleasure can we derive from this
interview? It will then only be a bitter aggravation of all my trials,
and all my miseries. If a prospect so unexpected and desirable
terminate in no advantage, for what purpose was it opened before me? It
will but render my sensations more poignant, and give a new refinement
to the exquisiteness of despair.

“But no, my Edwin, let us not give way to despondence. The Gods, my
generous swain, the same Gods that give luxuriance and felicity to the
plain, and that have guided you through every hazard to this impervious
spot, will assuredly deliver us. Remember the lessons of the
heaven-taught Druids. There is an innate dignity and omnipotence in
virtue. She may be surrounded with variety of woes, but none of them
shall approach her. The darts of calamity may assail her on every side,
but she is invulnerable to them all. Before her majesty, the fierceness
of all the tenants of the wood is disarmed, and the more untamed
brutality of savage man is awed into mute obedience. She may not indeed
put on the insolence of pride, and the fool-hardiness of presumption.
But wherever her duty calls, she may proceed fearless and unhurt. She
may be attacked, but she cannot be wounded: she may be surprised, but
she cannot be enslaved: she may be obscured for a moment, but it shall
only be to burst forth again more illustrious than ever.

“But you, Edwin, are much better acquainted with these things, and more
able to instruct than I. They were ever the favourite subject of your
attention. I have seen you with rooted eye fixed for hours in listening
admiration of the sublime dictates of the hoary Llewelyn.—It is little
to learn, to understand, and to admire. A barren and ineffectual
enthusiasm for the speculations of truth, was never respectable and was
never venerable. Now, my swain, is the moment in which these sacred
lessons are to be called into action, and in which, beyond all others,
reputation is to be asserted and character fixed. Leave not then to me
the business of inciting and animating you. Be you my leader and
protector.”

“Alas, my charming mistress,” replied her admirer, “I would to God it
were in my power to inspire you with hope and fill you with courage. I
confess that while peril was at a distance, and I sat secure in the
tranquil vale, I received without distinction the doctrines of the
Druids, and bowed assent to their sacred lessons. But practice, my
Imogen, and the scenes of danger differ beyond conception from the
ideas we form of them in the calmness of repose. Something must be
allowed to the unruffled solitude of these sacred men, and something to
the sublime of poetry. Surely it is no part of comprehensive prudence
to banish the idea of those hazards that must be encountered, and to
refuse to survey the snares and the difficulties with which our path is
surrounded. Remember, my fair one, the malignant suspiciousness of your
jailer, and the comfortless darkness of the night.”—

“Oh Edwin, and is this the strain in which you were wont to talk? Why
are you thus altered, and what means this inauspicious
quick-sightedness and alarm? We should indeed survey and prepare for
danger, but we should never suffer it to overwhelm us. The cause of
integrity should never be despaired of. What avails the suspicions of
my keeper? The ever wakeful eye of heaven can make them slumber. Why
should we reck the gloom and loneliness of the night? Virtue is the
ever-burning lamp of the sacred groves. No darkness can cast a shadow
on her beams. Though the sun and moon were hurled below the bosom of
the circling ocean, virtue could see to perform her purposes, and
execute her great designs. Alas, my swain, my voice is weak, and
broken, and powerless. But willingly would I breathe a soul to animate
your timidity. Oh Edwin,” and she folded him in her alabaster arms to
her heaving, anxious bosom, “let me not exhort you in vain! It is but
for a little while, it is but for one short effort, and if the powers
above smile propitious on our purpose, we are happy for ever! Think how
great and beautiful is our adventure. Comfortless and desponding as I
am now, ready to sink without life and animation at your feet, I may be
in a few hours happier than ever.—Oh Edwin, lead on!—Can you
hesitate?—Would it were in my power to reward the virtue I would excite
as it deserves to be rewarded. But the Gods will reward you, Edwin.”—

As she uttered these words, her action was unspeakably graceful, her
countenance was full of persuasion, and her voice was soft, and
eloquent, and fascinating. Roderic gazed upon her with insatiate
curiosity, and drank her accents with a greedy ear. For a moment,
charmed with the loftiness of her discourse and the heroism of her
soul, he was half persuaded to relent, and abjure his diabolical
purpose. It was only by summoning up all the fierceness of his temper,
all the impatience of his passions, and all the mistaken haughtiness
and inflexibility of his purpose, that he could resist the artless
enchantment. During the internal struggle, his countenance by no means
answered to the simplicity of pastoral sentiments. It was now fierce,
and now unprotected and despairing. Anon it was pale with envy, and
anon it was flushed with the triumph of brutal passion. Transitions
like these could not pass unobserved. Imogen beheld them with anxiety
and astonishment, but suspicion was too foreign in her breast, to be
thus excited.

“Imogen,” cried the traitor, “it is in your power to reward the noblest
acts of heroism that human courage can perform. Who in the midst of all
the exultation and applause that triumphant rectitude can inspire,
could look to a nobler prize than the condescension of your smiles and
the heaven of your embraces? No, too amiable shepherdess, it is not for
myself I fear; witness every action of my life; witness all those
dangers that I have this moment unhesitatingly encountered, that I
might fly to your arms. But, oh, when your safety is brought to hazard,
I feel that I am indeed a coward. Think, my fair one, of the dangers
that surround us. Let us calmly revolve, before we immediately meet
them. No sooner shall we set our foot beyond this threshold, than they
will commence. Tyranny is ever full of apprehensions and environed with
guards. Along the gallery, and through the protracted hall, centinels
are placed with every setting sun. Could you escape their observations,
an hundred bolts, and an hundred massive chains secure the hinges of
the impious mansion. Beyond it all will be dark, and the solitude
inviolate. But suppose we meet again,—by what path to cross the wide
extended glade, and to reach the only avenue that can lead us safely
through this horrid cincture, will then be undiscoverable. Amid the
untamed forest and untrod precipices that lie beyond, all the beasts
most inimical to man reside. There the hills re-echo the tremendous
roarings of the boar; the serpents hiss among the thickets; and the
gaunt and hungry wolf roams for prey. Oh, Imogen, how fearful is the
picture! And can your tender frame, and your timid spirits support the
reality?”

Imogen had now preserved the character of heroism and fortitude for a
considerable time. All the energies of her soul had been exerted to
encounter the trials and surmount the difficulties which she felt to be
unavoidable. When the beloved form of Edwin had appeared before her,
she relaxed in some degree from the caution and vigilance she had
hitherto preserved. It is the very nature of joyful surprize to unbend
as it were the strings of the mind, and to throw wide the doors of
unguarded confidence. Before, she had felt herself alone; she saw no
resource but in her own virtue, and could lean upon no pillar but her
own resolution. Now she had trusted to meet with an external support;
she had poured out her heart into the bosom of him in whom she
confided, and she looked to him for prudence, for suggestion and
courage. But, instead of support, she had found debility, and instead
of assistance the resources of her own mind were dried up, and her
native fortitude was overwhelmed and depressed. She turned pale at the
recital of Roderic, her knees trembled, her eyes forgot their wonted
lustre, and she was immersed in the supineness and imbecility of
despair.

“Edwin!”—she cried, with a tone of perturbation; but her utterance
failed her. Her voice was low, hoarse, and inaudible. The fictitious
shepherd supported her in his arms. Her distress was a new
gratification and stimulus to her betrayer. “Edwin, ah, wherefore this
fearful recital? Did you come here for no other purpose than to sink me
ten times deeper in despair? Alas, I had conceived far other
expectations, and far other hopes fluttered in my anxious bosom, when I
first beheld your well known form. I said I have been hitherto constant
and determined, though unsupported and melancholy. I shall now be
triumphant. I shall experience that heaven-descended favour, which ever
attends the upright. Edwin, my firm, heroic Edwin, will perform what I
wished, and finish what I began. And, oh, generous and amiable
shepherd, is it thus that my presages are fulfilled? No, I cannot, will
not bear it. If the courage of Edwin fail, I will show him what he
ought to be. If you dare not lead, think whether you dare follow
whither I guide. You shall see what an injured and oppressed woman can
do. Feeble and tender as we are formed by nature, you shall see that we
are capable of some fortitude and some exertion.” As she said this she
had risen, and was advancing towards the door. But recollecting herself
with a sudden pang, “Alas,” cried she, “whither do I go?—What am I
doing?—What shall I do?—Oh, Edwin!” and, falling at his feet, she
embraced his knees, “do not, do no [sic] not desert me in this sad,
tremendous moment!”

“I will not, my Imogen, I will never desert you. One fate shall attend
us both. And if you are called to calamity, to torture, and to death,
Edwin will not be supine and inactive.” “Oh, now,” cried she, her eyes
moistened with rapture, “I recognize my noble and gallant swain. Come
then, and let us fly. If we must encounter peril and disaster, what
avails it to suspend the trial for a few niggard hours? This, my
friend, my guardian,—this is the time—Now the master dragon
sleeps—Roderic is now unconscious and distant—and I fear him too much
to apprehend any thing from a meaner adversary—Let us fly—let us
escape—let our speed outstrip the rapid winds!”

During their conversation, the heavens had been covered with clouds,
and the rain descended with violence. But the change had not been
noticed by Imogen. “Well then, my fair one, we will depart. What though
the wind whistles along the heath, and the rain patters among the elms?
We will defy their fury. Let us go! But, ah, my Imogen, look there! The
hinds are flying across the plain for shelter; and see! two of them
approach to the clump of trees directly before us on the outside of the
garden. No, shepherdess, it is in vain that we resolve, and in vain
that we struggle: we cannot escape.”

The mind of Imogen was now wrought up to the extremest distress. Her
heart was wrung with anguish. She was ready to charge the immortals
with conspiring against her, had not her piety forbad it. She saw the
reality of what Roderic stated, and yet she was ready to charge him
with raising eternal obstacles. She cast upon him a look of despair and
agony. But she did not read in the countenance of the imaginary
shepherd congenial sentiments. “Methinks,” said she, with a voice full
of reproachful blandishment, and inimitable sweetness, “methinks it is
not with the tenderness of sympathy, that you tell me we must desist.
Sure it is only the mist of tears through which I behold you, that
makes me see the suppressed emotion of pleasure in your countenance.
No, it is not in the heart of Edwin to harbour for a moment the
sentiments of barbarity and insult—But if we cannot now escape—if the
dangers to which we must submit may be diminished by delay—indeed,
Edwin, something must be attempted—at least let us now fix upon a plan,
and determine what to do. Let not delay relax the spirit of enterprise,
or shake the firmness of our purpose.”

“And what plan,” cried the pretended shepherd, “can we form? I have
already trod the intricate and dangerous road, and there is nothing
better for us than to tread my footsteps back again. The day is
particularly unfavourable, as it is accompanied with activity and
business. We must therefore wait for the night. Then we must watch our
opportunities, and embrace the favourable interval. Imogen, I feel not
for myself. I do not throw away a thought upon my own safety, and I am
ready to submit to every evil for your service and your defence. But
yet, my gentle, noble-minded shepherdess, I cannot promise any very
flattering probability of success. Indeed my hopes are not sanguine.
The difficulties that are before us appear to me insurmountable. One
mountain peeps through the breaches of another, and they are like a
wall built by the hand of nature, and reaching to the skies.
Penmaenmawr is heaped upon Snowdon, and Plinlimmon nods upon the summit
of Penmaenmawr. It is only by the intervention of a miracle that we can
ever revisit the dear, lamented fields of Clwyd. Let us then, my
Imogen, compose ourselves to the sedateness of despair. Let us
surrender the success of our future efforts to fate. And let us
endeavor to solace the short and only certain interval that we yet can
call our own, by the recollection of our virtuous loves.”

“Alas,” cried Imogen, “I understand not in what the sedateness of
despair consists. In the prospect of every horrid mischief, mischief
that threatens not merely my personal happiness or mortal existence,
but which bears a malignant aspect upon the dignity of honour and the
peace of integrity, I cannot calmly recollect our virtuous loves, or
derive from that recollection sedateness and composure. Edwin, your
language is dissonant, and the thoughts you seek to inspire, jarring
and incompatible. If you must tell me to despair, at least point me to
some nobler source of consolation, than the coldness of memory; at
least let us prepare for the fate that awaits us in a manner decent,
manly, and heroic.”

“Yes, too amiable shepherdess, if I were worthy to advise, I would
recommend a more generous source of consolation, and teach you to
prepare for futurity in a manner worthy of the simplicity of your
heart; and worthy of that disinterested affection we have ever borne to
each other. Think of those sacred ties that have united us. Think of
the soft and gentle commerce of mutual glances; the chaste and innocent
communication with which we have so often beguiled the noontide hour;
the intercourse of pleasures, of sentiments, of feelings that we have
held; the mingling of the soul. Did not heaven design us for each
other? Is not, by a long probation of simplicity and innocence, the
possession of each other become a mutual purchase? An impious and
arbitrary tyrant has torn us asunder. But do the Gods smile upon his
hated purpose? Does he not rather act in opposition to their decrees,
and in defiance of their authority?”

The magician paused. “Alas,” replied the shepherdess, “what is it you
mean? Whither would you lead me? I understand you not. These indeed
were motives for fortitude and exertion, but what consolation can they
impart to the desponding heart?” “I will tell you,” replied her
seducer, folding her slender waist with one of his arms as he spoke.
“Since the Gods are on our side, since heaven and earth approve our
honest attachment, let us sit here and laugh at the tyrant. While he
doubles his guards, and employs all his vigilance, let us mock his
impotent efforts.”

“Ah,” replied the shepherdess, her eye moistened with despair, and
beaming with unapprehensiveness, “how strange and impracticable an
advice do you suggest! Full of terror, full of despair, you bid me
laugh at fear. Threatened by a tyrant whose power is irresistible, and
whose arts you yourself assure me are not to be evaded, you would have
me mock at those arts, and this dreaded power. Is not his power
triumphant? Is not all his vigilance crowned with a fatal success? Are
we not his miserable, trembling, death-expecting victims? Can we leave
this apartment, can we almost move our hand, or utter our voice, for
solicitude and terror? Oh Edwin, in what mould must that heart have
been cast, what must be its hard and unsusceptible texture, that can
laugh at sorrow, and be full of the sensations of joy, though
surrounded with all the engines of wretchedness?”

“Imogen, your fears are too great, your anxieties exaggerate the
indigence of our condition. Though we are prisoners, yet even the
misfortunes of a prison have their compensations. The activity of the
immaterial mind, will not indeed submit long without reluctance to
confinement and restraint. But we have not yet experienced lassitude
and disgust.” “Alas, Edwin, how strange and foreign are thoughts like
these! Whither do they tend? What would you infer from them?”

“This my love I would infer. That within one little cincture we are yet
absolute. No prying eye can penetrate here. Of our words, of our
actions, during a few remaining hours, we can dispose without
controul.”

“Ah,” exclaimed the shepherdess, struck with a sudden suspicion of the
treacherous purpose, and starting from her betrayer, “ah, Edwin, yet,
yet explain yourself! A thousand horrid thoughts—a thousand dire and
shapeless phantoms—But Edwin,—sure—is plain, and artless, and
innocent.—What boots it that we can dispose of our words and actions
within this cincture?—Will that enable us to escape?—No, no, no,
no.—Escape you say is hopeless—What is it you mean?—Say—explain
yourself—Oh, Edwin!”—

“Be not alarmed,” cried the remorseless villain. “Listen, yet listen
with calmness to the suggestions of my deliberate mind. Imogen, you are
too beautiful—I have beheld you too long—I have admired you with too
fierce an ardour. The Gods—the Gods have joined us. It is guilt and
malignity alone that oppose their purpose.—Let us beat them
down—trample them under our feet—employ worthily the moment that yet
remains.”—

As the magician pronounced these words, he advanced towards his
captive, and endeavoured to seize her in his arms. But she thrust him
from her with the warmest indignation; and contemplating him with an
eye of infinite disdain, “Base unworthy swain!”—she cried—“Insidious
traitor!—abhorred destroyer!—And is it thus that you would approach
me?—Is it thus that you would creep into the weakness of my heart?—But
fly—I know you not—One mark of compassion I will yet exhibit, which you
little deserve—Fly—I will not deliver you into the hands of your rival,
whom yet my soul does not so much loath and abhor—Fly—Live to be
pointed at as an example of degeneracy—Live to blush for and repent of
that crime, which, Edwin!—cannot be expiated.”

Roderic had advanced too far to be thus deterred. He did not wish to
manage the character under which he appeared. His passions by this
interview, more private, and in which his captive had beheld him with
an eye of greater complacency than ever, were inflamed to the extremest
degree. The charms of Imogen had been in turn heightened with joy, and
mellowed with distress. Even the conscious dignity, and haughty air she
now assumed, gave new attractions to her form, and new grace to her
manner. Her muscles trembled with horror and disdain. Her eloquent
blood wrought distinctly in her veins, and spoke in a tone, not more
dignified than enchanting. Her whole figure had a life, an expression,
a loveliness, that it is impossible to conceive.

Roderic rushed forward unappalled, and unsubdued. He had already seized
his unwilling victim. In vain she resisted his violence; in vain she
strove to escape from her betrayer. “For pity’s sake—for mercy’s
sake—for the sake of all our past endearments—spare me!—relent—and
spare me—spare me!—” For a time she struggled; but her tender frame was
soon overcome by the strength of her destroyer. She became cold and
insensible in his arms.

At this moment a flood of splendid lightning filled the apartment. The
air was rent with the hoarse and deafening roar of the thunder, the
door flew open, and the form of that spectre that he most abhorred
stood before Roderic. “Go on,” cried the phantom, “complete thy heroic
purpose. Scorn the tremendous sounds that now appal thee. They are but
the prelude of that scene that shall shortly feast my eyes. Perceivest
thou not the earth to tremble beneath thy feet? Hearest thou not the
walls of thy hated mansion cracking to their ruin? Confusion is at
hand. _Chaos is come again._ Go on then, Roderic. Complete thy heroic
purpose.” The spectre vanished, and all was uninterrupted silence.

The whole mind of Roderic was transformed from what it was. For the
impotence of lust, and the cruelty of inexorable triumph, he felt the
terrors of annihilation, and all the cold, damp tremblings of despair.
But the victory of innocence was not yet complete.

Imogen had sunk for a moment under the horrors that threatened her, but
she had not been so far impercipient as not to hear the murmuring of
the thunder, and to see the gleam of the lightning. The form however
that terrified Roderic, and the voice that addressed him, were
perceived by him alone.

The shepherdess opened her eyes, and beheld the degenerate ravisher
pale, aghast, and trembling. “It is well, Edwin. The Gods have declared
themselves. The Gods have suspended their thunder over the head of the
apostate. Rut, oh Edwin, could I have imagined it! Desolate and
oppressed as I have been, could I have supposed, that that form was
destined to fill up the measure of my woes! I once beheld it as the
harbinger of happiness, as the temple of integrity and innocence. Oh,
how wretched you have made me! How you have shaken all my most rooted
opinions of the residence of virtue among mankind! Am I alone, and
unsupported in her cause? How forlorn and solitary do I seem to myself!
I suffered—once I suffered the thought of Edwin to mix with the love of
rectitude, and the obedience of heaven. They all together confirmed me
in the path I had chalked out for myself. Mistake not these reproaches
for the weakness of returning passion. And yet, Edwin, though I loath,
I pity you! Go, and repent! Go, and blot from the records of your
memory the cold insinuation, the aggravated guilt that you have this
day practised! Go, and let me never, never see you more!”

As she uttered these words, congratulation, reproach, wretchedness,
abhorrence and pity succeeded each other in her countenance. Rut they
were all accompanied with an ineffable dignity, and an angelic purity.
The savage and the satyr might have beheld, and been awed into
reverence. Roderic slunk away, guilty, mortified, and confounded. And
such was the success of this other attempt upon the virtue of Imogen.



BOOK THE SIXTH

IMOGEN ENDEAVOURS TO SUBDUE THE ATTENDANTS OF RODERIC.—THE SUPPER OF
THE HALL.—JOURNEY AND ARRIVAL OF EDWIN.—SUBTLETY OF THE MAGICIAN.—HE IS
DEFEATED.—END OF THE SECOND DAY.


The magician, overwhelmed and confounded with uninterrupted
disappointment, was now ready to give himself up to despair. “I have
approached the inflexible fair one,” cried he, “by every avenue that
leads to the female heart. And what is the amount of the advantages I
have gained? I tempted her with riches. But riches she considered with
disdain; they had nothing analogous to the temper of her mind, and her
uncultivated simplicity regarded them as superfluous and cumbersome. I
taught her to listen to the voice of flattery; I clothed it in all that
is plausible and insinuating; but to no purpose. She was still upon her
guard; all her suspicions were awake; and her integrity and her
innocence were as vigilant as ever. Incapable of effecting any thing
under that form she had learned to detest, I laid it aside. I assumed a
form most prepossessing and most amiable in her eyes. Surely if her
breast had not been as cold as the snow that clothes the summit of
Snowdon; if her virtue had not been impregnable as the groves of Mona,
a stratagem, omnipotent and impenetrable as this, must have succeeded.
She beheld the figure of him she loved, and this was calculated in a
moment of distress to draw forth all her softness. She beheld the
person of him in whom she had been wont to find all integrity, and
place all confidence, and this might have induced her to apprehend no
danger. And yet with how much tender passion, with how distressful an
indignation, with what tumultuous sorrow did she witness his supposed
crime? What then must I do? What yet remains? I love her with a more
frantic and irresistible passion than ever. I cannot abstain from
her.—I cannot dismiss her.—I cannot forget her. Oh Imogen, too lovely,
all-attractive Imogen, for you I stand upon the very brink of fate! Nor
is this all. Soon should I leap the gulph, soon should forget every
prudent and colder prospect in the tumult of my soul, did not that
cursed spectre ever shoot across my path to dash my transports, and to
mar my enjoyments. Which way shall I turn? To leave her, that is
impossible. To possess her by open force and manly violence, that my
fate forbids. My understanding is bewildered, and my invention is
lost.—Medoro!”—

Medoro received the well known signal, and stood before Roderic. He
waited not to be addressed, he read the purposes of the heart of the
magician. “Roderic,” cried he, “this moment is the crisis of you[r]
destiny. The occasion, to which the curse pronounced upon you by the
inimical spectre refers, has already in part taken place. YOU HAVE SUED
TO A SIMPLE MAID, WHO BY YOUR CHARMS HAS BEEN TAUGHT TO HATE THE SWAIN
THAT ONCE SHE LOVED. It only remains that she should persevere in the
resistance she has hitherto made, and that A SIMPLE SWAIN, perhaps her
favoured Edwin, should defy your enchantments. Think then of the
precipice on which you stand. Yet, yet return, while it is in your
power. One step in advance beyond those you have already taken may be
irretrievable. Alas, Roderic, it is thus that I advise! but I foresee
that my advice will be neglected. The Gods permit to the invisible
inhabitants of air, when strongly invoked by a mortal voice, to assist
their vices and teach adroitness to their passions; but they do not
permit an invocation like this to receive for its reward the lesson of
moderation, and the attainment of happiness.

“Go on then, Roderic, in the path upon which you are inflexibly
determined. You succeeded not in the stratagem of flattery; but it
served to take off the keenness of the aversion of Imogen. She
contemplates you now with somewhat less of horror, and with a virtuous
and ingenuous fear of uncandidness and injustice upon your account.
Neither have you succeeded in that deeper stratagem and less penetrable
deceit, the assumption of the form of him she loved. It has however
served to weaken her prepossessions, and relax the chains of her
attachment. She is now the better prepared to receive openly and
impartially the addresses of a stranger swain. Thus even your
miscarriages have furthered your design. Thus may a wise general
convert his defeats into the means of victory. Think not however again
to approach her in the coolness of reason, and the sobriety of the
judgment. Hope not by temptation, by flattery, by prejudice, to shake
the immutable character of her mind. There is yet one way unessayed.
You must advance, if you would form the slightest expectations of
victory, by secret and invisible steps. Her virtue must be surrounded,
entangled and enmeshed, or ever her suspicions be awakened, or her
integrity alarmed. This can be effected only by the instrumentality of
pleasure. Pleasure has risen triumphant over many a heart that riches
could not conquer, and that ambition could not subdue. What though she
has resisted temptation under the most alluring form, when her thoughts
were collected and all around was silence?—Let the board of luxury be
spread. Let the choicest dainties be heaped together in unbounded
profusion. Let the most skilful musicians awake the softest
instruments. Let neatness, and elegance, and beauty exhibit their
proudest charms. Let every path that leads to delight, let every
gratification that inebriates the soul be discovered. If at that moment
temptation approach, even a meaner and less potent temptation may then
succeed. The night advances with hasty feet. Night is the season of
dissipation and luxury. Be this the hour of experiment, and let the
apprehensive mind of Imogen be first assiduously lulled to repose.
Here, Roderic, you must rest your remaining hopes. There is not another
instrument can be discovered, to disarm and vanquish the human mind. If
here you fail, the Gods have decreed it—they will be obeyed—Imogen must
be dismissed from the enchanted halls of Rodogune.”

With these words the goblin disappeared. The warning he had uttered
passed unheeded, but the magician immediately prepared to employ this
last of stratagems. Summoning the train of attendants of either sex
that resided in the castle, he directed them some to make ready the
intended feast, and some to repair to the apartment of Imogen. The
preparations of the enchanted castle were not like those of a vulgar
entertainment. Every thing was accelerated by invisible agents. The
intervention of the retinue of Roderic was scarcely admitted. The most
savoury viands, the most high flavoured ragouts, and the most delicious
wines presented themselves spontaneously to the expecting attendant.
The hall was illuminated with a thousand lustres that depended like
stars from the concave roof, and were multiplied by the reflection of
innumerable mirrors. The whole was arranged with inconceivable
expedition.

In the mean time a few of the more distinguished attendants of her own
sex repaired to the presence of Imogen. They found her feeble,
spiritless and disconsolate. “Come,” exclaimed their leader, in an
accent of persuasion; “comply, my lovely girl, let not us alone have
reason to complain of your unfriendliness and inflexibility.”

Imogen was fatigued and she wished not for repose. Grief and
persecution had in a former instance inspired her with the love of
solitude. But her feelings were now of another kind. The disgrace and
ingratitude of Edwin had wounded her in the tenderest point, and she
could not think of it but with inexpressible anguish. She was for the
first time afraid of her own reflections, and desirous to fly from
herself. “Yes,” exclaimed she, “and I would go, if you will promise me
that it shall not be to the presence of Roderic. The castle and the
fields, the freshness of the morning air and the gloom of a dungeon,
are equal to me, provided I must be kept back from the arms of my
beloved parents, and their anxious and tender spirits must still be
held in suspence. But indeed I must not, I will not, be continually
dragged to the presence of the man I hate. It is ungenerous,
unreasonable, and indecent. What is the meaning of all this compulsion?
Why am I kept here so much against my will? Why am I dragged from place
to place, and from object to object? Surely all this cannot be mere
caprice and tyranny. There must be in it some dark and guilty meaning
that I cannot comprehend. Oh shepherdesses! if ye had any friendship,
if any pity dwelt within your bosoms, ye would surely assist me to
escape this hated confinement. Point but the way, show me but the
smallest hole, by which I might get away to ease and liberty, and I
would thank you a thousand times. You, who appear the leader of the
throng, your brow is smooth, your eyes are gentle and serene, and the
bloom of youth still dwells upon your face. Oh,” added the apprehensive
Imogen, and she threw herself upon her knees—“do not bely the stamp of
benevolence and clemency that nature has planted there. Think if you
had parents as I have, whose happiness, whose existence, are suspended
upon mine, if you abbhorred, and detested, and feared your jailor as I
do, what would be your feelings then, and how you would wish to be
treated by a person in your situation. Grant me only the poor and
scanty boon, that you would then conceive your right. Dismiss me, I
intreat you. I cannot bear my situation. My former days have all been
sunshine, my former companions have all been kindness. I have not been
educated to encounter persecution, and misfortunes, and horrors. I
cannot encounter them. I cannot survive it.”

As she pronounced these words, she sunk, feeble, languid, and
breathless, upon the knees of the attendant. They hastened to raise
her. They soothed her ingenuous affliction, and assured her that she
should not be intruded upon by him of whom she had formed so groundless
apprehensions. Since then she was invited to partake of a slight
refreshment accompanied only by persons of her own sex, she did not
long hesitate, and was easily persuaded to acquiesce. The
unostentatious kindness of the invitation, and the modesty of the
entertainment she expected, dissipated her fears. It was from solitude
that she now wished to escape; and it was to that simple and temperate
relaxation that she had experienced among the inhabitants of Clwyd, to
which she was desirous to repair.

She was conducted towards a saloon, which had less indeed of a
sumptuous and royal appearance, but was more beautiful, more gay, more
voluptuous, and more extatic than that which had been the scene of the
temptation of the morning. The profuseness of the illuminations outdid
the brightness of the meridian sun. The table was spread in a manner to
engage the eye and allure the appetite. Every vessel that was placed
upon it was of massive silver. And in different corners of the
apartment heaps of the most fragrant incense were burning in urns of
gold. The viands were of a nature the most stimulating and delicious;
and the wines were bright and sparkling and gay. As Imogen approached,
a stream of music burst upon her ear of a kind which hitherto she had
never witnessed. It was not the sonorous and swelling notes of praise;
it was not the enthusiastic rapture of the younger bards; it was not
the elevated and celestial sounds that she had been used to hear from
the lyre of Llewelyn. But if it was not so swelling and sublime, it was
soft, and melodious, and insinuating, and overpowering beyond all
conception. You could not listen to it without feeling all the strings
of your frame relaxed, and the nobler powers of your soul lulled into a
pleasing slumber. It was madness all. The ear that heard it could not
cease to attend. The mind that listened to it was no longer master of
itself.

Imogen entered the hall, and was received by a train of nymphs, some of
them more beautiful than any she had yet seen, and all attired with
every refinement of elegance and grace. Their hair was in part braided
round their bright and polished foreheads, and in part it hung in wavy
and careless ringlets about their slender necks, and heaving bosoms.
Their forms were veiled in loose and flowing folds of silk of the
finest texture, and whiter than the driven snow. The robes were not
embroidered with gold and silver; they were not studded with emeralds
and diamonds; but were adorned on every side with chaplets of the
fairest and freshest flowers. Their heads were crowned with garlands of
amaranth and roses. Though their conduct were tainted with
lasciviousness, and their minds were full of looser thoughts, yet, awed
by the virtuous dignity of Imogen, they suppressed the air of dissolute
frolic, and taught by the guileful lessons of their lord, endeavoured
to assume the manners of chaste and harmless joy.

The shepherdess, struck with the objects which so unexpectedly
presented themselves to her eyes and her ears, started back with
involuntary astonishment. “Is this,” cried she, “the artless feast, and
this the simple fare of which you invited me to partake?” “Imogen,”
replied the principal nymph, “we were willing to do you honour, and the
preparation we have made is slight compared with that which the roof
can afford. We considered your fatigue and your extraordinary
abstinence, and we were willing to compensate them by pleasant food,
and a grateful refreshment.”

“And is such the grateful refreshment, and such the simple and
unaffected relaxation that your minds suggested? Alas, were I to
approach this board, it would be to me a business and not an amusement,
an exertion and not a relief. A feast like this is an object foreign
and unpleasing to my eyes. The feasts of the valley are chesnuts, and
cheeses, and apples. Our drink is the water of the limpid brook, or the
fair and foaming beverage that our flocks afford. Such are the
enjoyments of sobriety; such are the gratifications of innocence.
Virgins, I am not weary of the simplicity of the pastoral life. I hug
it to my bosom closer, more fondly than ever.”

“Amiable, spotless maiden! we admire your opinions, and we love your
person. But virtue is not allied to rigour and austerity. Its
boundaries are unconstrained, and graceful, and sweeping. It is a robe
which sits easily on those who are formed to wear it. It gives no
awkwardness to their manner, and puts no force upon their actions.
Partake then, my Imogen, in those refreshments we have prepared for
your gratification. If this be not duty, it is not crime. It is a
venial and a harmless indulgence. Do not then mortify friends that have
sought to please you, and refuse your attention to the assiduities we
have demonstrated.”

“No, my gentle shepherdess, it is in vain you plead. I would willingly
qualify my refusal; but I must withdraw. The more you press me, the
farther it is necessary for me to recede. In the morning of this very
day, I was simple, and incautious, and complying. But now I have
experienced so many wiles and escaped so many snares, that this heart,
formerly so gentle and susceptible, is cased in triple steel. I can
shut my eyes upon the most splendid attractions. I can turn a deaf ear
to enticements the most alluring, and sounds the most insinuating. This
is the lesson—I thank him for it—that your lord has taught me. You must
not then detain me. I must be permitted to retire.” And saying this she
withdrew with trembling speed. In vain they insisted, in vain they
pursued. Imogen escaped like a bird from the fowler, nor looked behind.
Imogen was deaf to their expostulations, and indurate and callous as
adamant to their persuasions.

The disappointment of Roderic, when he learned of this miscarriage of
his great and final attempt was extreme. He coursed up and down the
saloon with all the impatience of a wild boar pierced by the spear of
the hunter, or a wolf from whom they have torn away her young. He
vented his fury upon things inanimate. He tore his hair, and beat his
breast, with tumultuous agony. He imprecated with a hoarse and furious
voice a thousand curses upon those attendants who had permitted his
captive to escape. Through the spacious hall, where every thing a
moment before had worn the face of laboured gaiety and studied smiles,
all was now desolation, and disquiet, and uproar. And urged as the
magician had been by successive provocations, he was ready to overstep
every limit he might once have respected, and to proceed to the most
fatal extremities.

In this situation, and as Roderic was hastening with a determined
resolution to follow to the apartment of Imogen, information was
suddenly brought to him, that a young stranger, tall and graceful in
his form, and of a frank and noble countenance, had by some unknown
means penetrated beyond the precipices with which the enchanted castle
was surrounded, and in spite of the resistance of the retinue of the
magician had entered the mansion. The dark and guilty heart of Roderic
immediately whispered him—“It is Edwin.—It is well.—I thank the Gods
that they do not hold this aspiring soul in a long and dreary suspence!
Let the destinies overtake me. I am prepared to receive them. Death, or
any of the thousand ills that fortune stores for them she hates, could
not come in a more welcome hour.—Oh Imogen, lovely, adorable Imogen,
how vain has been my authority, how vain the space of my command! Let
then my palaces tumble into ruin—Let that wand which once I boasted,
shivered in a thousand fragments, be cast to all the winds of heaven! I
will glory in desolation and forlornness. I will wrap myself in my
poverty. I will retire to some horrid cave in the midst of the untamed
desart, and shagged with horrid shades, that outgloom the blackness of
the infernal regions. There I will ruminate upon my past felicity.
There I will tell over enjoyments never to return. I will make myself a
little universe, and a new and unheard of satisfaction in the darkness
of my reflections, and the depth of my despair.

“And yet surely, surely the Gods have treated me severely, and measured
out to me a hard and merciless fate. What are all the felicities I talk
of, and have prized so much? Oh, they were seasoned, each of them, with
a bitter infusion! Little, little indeed have I tasted of a pure and
unmixed happiness. In my choicest delights, I have felt a vacancy. They
have become irksome and tedious. I have fled from myself; I have fled
from the magnificence of my retinue, to find variety. And yet how
dearly am I to pay for a few gratifications which were in fact no
better than specious allurements to destruction, and flowers that
slightly covered the pit of ruin! In the bloom of manhood, in the full
career of youth to be cast forth an UNPITIED, NECESSITOUS, MISERABLE
VAGABOND! All but this I could have borne without a sigh. Were I
threatened with death, in this opening scene of life, I could submit
with cheerfulness. But to drag along a protracted misery, to be shut
out from hope, and yet ever awake to every cruel reflection and every
bitter remorse—This is too much!”

From this dream of unmanly lamentations Roderic was with difficulty
recovered by the assiduities of the attendants. At length incited by
their expostulations to the collectedness of reflection and the
fortitude of exertion, he determined, with that quickness of invention
with which he had been endowed at his birth, upon a plan to elude, if
possible, the perseverance of Edwin, and the menaces of his fate.
Recollecting that his person was not unknown to the swain, he
communicated his instructions to those who were about him, and withdrew
himself into a private apartment.

It was Edwin. The instructions of the Druid of Elwy had relieved him
from the insupportable burden that had begun to oppress his mind.
Persuaded by him he had submitted to seek the refreshment of sleep. But
sleep shed not her poppies upon his busy, anxious head. His mind was
crouded with a thousand fearful phantoms. A child of the valley, he was
a stranger to misfortune and misery. Upon the favoured sons of nature
calamity makes her deepest impression, and an impression least capable
of being erased. And yet Edwin was full of courage and adventure; he
asked no larger boon than to be permitted to face his rival. But his
inquietude was the offspring of love; and his wariness and caution
originated in the docility of his mind, and his anxious attachment to
innocence and spotless rectitude.

Having passed the watches of the night in uneasy and inexhaustible
reflections, he sprung from his couch as soon as the first dawn of day
proclaimed the approaching sun, and took a hasty leave of the
hospitable hermit. Issuing from the grotto, he bent his steps, in
obedience to the direction of Madoc, to that secret path, which had
never before been discovered by any mortal unassisted by the goblins of
the abyss. Before he reached it the golden sun had begun to decline
from his meridian height. He passed along the winding way beneath the
impending precipices, which formed a dark and sullen vault over his
head. Ever and anon large pieces of stone, broken from their native
mass, and tumbling among the craggy caverns, saluted his ear. Now and
then he heard a bubbling fountain bursting from the rock, which
presently fell with a loud and dashing noise along the declivity, and
was lost in the pebbles below. The only light by which his steps were
guided, was that which fell in partial and scanty streams through the
fissures of the mountain, and served to discover little more than the
shapelessness of the rocks, and the uncultivated horrors of the scene.

Through these Edwin passed unappalled. His heart was naturally firm and
intrepid, and he now cased himself round with the armour of untainted
innocence and unsullied truth. It was not long before he came forth
from this scene of desolation to that beautiful and cultivated prospect
which had already enchanted the heart of Imogen. To him it had
advantages which in the former case it could not boast. He could
contrast its gaiety and brightness with the obscure and dismal scene
from which he had escaped. Nor was he struck only by the verdure of the
prospect, and the vividness of its colours, he also beheld the
inclosure, not, as his amiable mistress had done, from a terrace
adjoining to the mansion; but from the last point of the rock from
which he was ready to descend. The mansion therefore was his principal
point of view from this situation. It stood upon a bold and upright
brow that beetled over the plain below. The ascent was by a large and
spacious flight of marble steps. Its architecture was grand, and
simple, and commanding. It was supported by pillars of the Ionic order.
They were constructed of ivory and jet, and their capitals were
overlaid with the purest gold. An object like this to one who had never
before seen any nobler edifice than a shepherd’s cot, or the throne of
turf upon which the bards were elevated at the feast of the Gods, was
surprising, and admirable, and sublime in the highest degree.

“And this,” exclaimed the gallant shepherd, “is the residence prepared
for infamy and lust. The sun pours upon it his light with as large a
hand, the herbage, the flowers and the fruits as fully partake of the
bounteous care of nature, as the vales of simplicity and the fields of
innocence. How venerable and alluring is the edifice I behold! Does not
peace dwell within, and are not the hours of its possessor winged with
happiness? Had my youth been spent among the beasts of the forests, had
not my ears drank in the sacred instructions of the godlike Druids, I
might have thought so. But, no. In vain in the extensive empire that
the arts of sorcery and magic afford, shall felicity be sought. What
avails all this splendour? and to what purpose this mighty profusion?
All the possessions that I can boast, are my little flock, my wattled
cottage, and my slender pipe. And yet I carol as jocound a lay, my
heart is as light and frolic, and the tranquility of self-acquittal
spreads her wings as wide over my bosom, as they could were I lord of a
hundred hills, and called all the streamlets of the valley my own. The
magician possesses a large hoard of beauty, and he can wander from fair
to fair with unlimited and fearless licence. All merciful and benign
beings, who dwell above this azure concave, give me my Imogen! Restore
her safe and unhurt to these longing, faithful arms! Let not this
arbitrary and imperious tyrant, who grasps wide the fairest productions
of thy creation with a hundred hands,—let him not wrest from me my
solitary lamb,—let him not seize for ever upon that companion, in whom
the most expansive and romantic wishes of my heart had learned to be
satisfied.”

Such were the beautiful and virtuous sentiments of Edwin, as he beheld
the empire of his rival from the head of the rock, and as he crossed
the glade that still divided him from the object of all his exertions.
From the eminence upon which he had paused for a few contemplative
moments, the distance had appeared narrow and trifling. But the equal
height of the ground upon which he stood, and of that which afforded a
situation for the palaces of Roderic, had deceived him. When he looked
towards the scene that was to form the termination of his journey, the
glade below escaped from his sight. But when he descended to the plain,
it was otherwise. One swell of the surface he had to traverse succeeded
another; and the irregularity of the ground caused him sometimes to be
lost, in a manner, in the length of the way, and took from him the
consolation of being able so much as to perceive the object of his
destination. As he passed the hills, and climbed each successive
ascent, a murmur rose in his bosom; his impatience grew more and more
ungovernable, and the eagerness of his pursuit taught him to imagine,
that his little labour would never be done.

Every performance however of human exertion has its period; and Edwin
had at length surmounted the greater part of the distance, and now
gained a larger and more distinct view of the castle. But by this time
the sun was ready to hide himself in the ocean, and his last rays now
gleamed along the valley, and played in the party-coloured clouds.
Meanwhile a dark spot, which had for some time blotted the brightness
of the surrounding azure, expanded itself. The shades gathered, the
light of the sun was hid, and the blackness of the night forestaled.
The wind roared among the mountains, and its terrors were increased by
the hollow bellowings of the beasts they harboured. The shower began;
it descended with fury, and Edwin had scarcely time to gain the
protection of an impervious thicket that crowned the lawn. Here he
stood and ruminated. The solemnity of the scene accorded with the
importance of his undertaking. The pause was friendly. He composed his
understanding, and recollected the lessons of the hospitable hermit. He
fortified himself in the habits of virtue; and, with a manly and
conscious humility, recommended this crisis of his innocence to the
protection of heaven.

The shower ceased, but the darkness continued. He had too well marked
however the bent of his journey during the continuance of the day, to
permit this to be any considerable obstacle. In the mean time it
doubled and rendered more affecting the stilness of the night. Nothing
was to be heard but the low whispers of the falling breeze, and the
murmurs of the prowling wolf that now languished and died away upon the
ear. This was the moment in which magic lords it supreme, in which the
goblin breaks forth from his confinement, and ranges unlimited in the
nether globe; and in which all that is regular and all that is
beautiful give place to the hunger of the savage brute, and the
witcheries of the sorcerer. But Roderic was otherwise engaged. His
heart was employed in inventing guile, and was lulled into
unapprehensive security. But Edwin was heroic. His bosom swelled with
the most generous purposes; and he trusted unwaveringly in that
guardianship that is every where present, and that eye that never
slumbers.

He entered the walls of the enchanted castle. The novelty of the
appearance of a stranger within the circle of those mountains, which no
vulgar mortal had yet penetrated, the dignity of his appearance, and
the boldness of his manner, at first distracted the attendants from the
performance of that, which might have seemed most natural in their
situation, and awed them into passiveness. He still wore that flowing
and graceful garb, which was appropriated by the inhabitants of Clwyd
to the celebration of public solemnities. He had passed through the
midst of the shower, and yet one thread of his garment was not
moistened with the impetuousness of its descent. His face wore a more
beautiful and roseat glow than was native to its complexion. His eye
was full of animation and expressiveness. Expectation, and hope, and
dignity, and resolution had their entire effect in his appearance. “It
is a celestial spirit!” cried they. “It is a messenger from the unseen
regions!” and they sought in his person for the insignia that might
confirm and establish their conjecture.

But such was not the imagination of Roderic. The master-guilt to which
he was conscious, was ever ready to take the alarm upon any unexpected
event; and he had immediately conjectured, by a kind of instinctive
impression, who was this new and unwelcome guest. However unguarded and
unprepared had been his retinue, they had recollected themselves
sufficiently to detain Edwin in the avenue of the mansion, till they
had received the orders of their lord. These were immediately
communicated; and the magician withdrew himself till the proper period
should arrive for his appearance to the swain.

Edwin, when he had entered the palace of Roderic, had been desirous, if
it were possible, to push forward to the presence of his rival, without
making any previous enquiries, or admitting of a moment’s pause. The
frequency however of the domestics had disappointed his purpose, and he
was detained by them in spite of his efforts. “What means,” cried he,
“this violence? I must enter here. I will not be delayed. My purpose
admits not of trifling and parley. To me every moment is big with
fate.” He said. For Edwin disdained the employment of falsehood and
disguise. He lifted the javelin in his hand, but his heart was too full
of gentleness and humanity rashly to employ the instrument of death.
His tone however was resolute, and his gesture commanding, and the
astonished attendants were uncertain in what manner to conduct
themselves.

At this instant a domestic, who had received the instructions of his
lord, entered the court. He had the appearance of superior dignity; and
removing the attendants who pressed with rudeness upon the shepherd, he
enquired of him the cause of his intrusion. “Lead me,” cried Edwin, “to
the lord of your mansion. My business is important and pressing, and
will not admit of being communicated to any other ear. Whence this
difficulty? Innocence does not withdraw from the observation of those
who are desirous to approach it; and a manly courage is not
apprehensive of an enemy.”

“Young stranger,” replied the domestic, “you are misinformed. This
mansion knows not a lord. It belongs solely to proprietors of the
softer sex, whom fortune has indulged as you perceive with every thing
that is calculated to give new relish to the pursuits of life, and
beguile the lazy foot of time. It is our boast and our honour to serve
these damsels. And could my report add one ray to their lustre, I would
tell you, that they are fair as the peep of the morning, and more
fragrant than beds of violets and roses. It is their command, that
humanity should be extended by all around them, not only to man, but to
the humblest and weakest animals. Though you have entered their
residence by mistake, we shall but fulfil the service they expect in
furnishing you with every assistance and every accommodation in our
power. If you are hungry, come in and partake of the liberal plenty the
castle affords. If you thirst, we will cheerfully offer you the
capacious goblet and the richest wines. If you are fatigued with the
travel of the day, or have wandered from your path and are benighted in
your journey, enter their mansion. The accommodations are large, and
they are all free for the use of the poor, the necessitous, the
unfortunate and the miserable.”

Edwin listened with astonishment to the narration. He was not used to
the address of falshood; and strongly warned as he had previously been
of the iniquity of the train, the ingenuousness of his mind induced him
at first without reflection to yield an easy credit to the story that
was told him. It was related with fluency, plausibility, and gravity;
and it was accompanied with a manner seemingly artless and humane,
which it was scarcely possible for one unhackneyed in the stratagems of
deceit to distrust and contradict.

“Surely,” replied Edwin, “I cannot be wholly mistaken. At least has
there not a young shepherdess just arrived here, tall, tender and
beautiful, and whose flaxen tresses are more bright than gold, and more
abundant than the blossoms in the spring?”

Before the officious domestic could reply to his enquiries, two of the
nymphs, who had been attired for the feast of Imogen, came into the
outer apartment in which the shepherd was, and advanced toward him.
“These are my mistresses,” cried the attendant. Edwin approached them
with respect, and repeated his former enquiries. They were the most
beautiful of the train of Roderic. They were clad in garments of the
whitest silk, and profusely adorned with chaplets of flowers. Their
appearance therefore was calculated to give them, in a shepherd’s eye,
an air of sweetness and simplicity that could not easily be resisted.

One of them was tall and majestic, and the other low, and of a shape
and figure the most alluring. This appeared to be like a blossom in
May, whose colours discovered to the attentive observer all their
attractions, without being expanded to the careless eye: And that might
be supposed to be a few summers farther advanced to a delicious
maturity. The majesty of the one had nothing in it of the gross, the
indelicate, and the forbidding; and the softness of the other was
attempered with inexpressible propriety and grace. Both of them were
gentle and affable. But the affability of the former took the name of
benignity and condescension, and the affability of the latter was full
of harmless gaiety, and a cheerful and unpretending spirit of society.

“We cannot,” replied the elder, “attend to your enquiries here. The
apartment is comfortless and inhospitable. You appear fatigued. And we
pretend not, young stranger, merely to contribute what is in our power
to relieve the uneasiness of your mind, we would also refresh your
wearied frame. Come in then, and we will afford you every satisfaction
we are able. Enter the mansion, and partake of the plenty the Gods have
bestowed upon us, and which we desire not to engross to ourselves.”
During these words Edwin surveyed his fair entertainers with wonder and
admiration. But enchanting as they were, they found not the avenue to
his heart. There Imogen reigned alone, and could not admit of a rival.
Even though upon a slighter occasion, and at less important moment, the
purity of his mind, that virtue so much esteemed among the swains,
could have been tainted, yet now that his undertaking whispered him,
“Imogen alone is fair!” now that he feared for her safety, and hoped
every moment to arrive at the dreaded, pleasing period of his anxiety,
he could but be constant and be faithful. He recollected the sage
instructions of the Druid of Elwy: and his resolutions were unshaken as
the roots of Snowdon.

He accepted their invitation. Immediately, as upon a signal, an hundred
flambeaux lighted the area and lined the passage to the saloon of
pleasure. The nymphs placed themselves on each side of the shepherd,
and in this manner they passed along. If Imogen had been struck with
the profuseness of the illumination, the richness of the plate, the
sumptuousness of the viands and the wines, and the fragrant clouds of
incense that filled the apartment, how much more were they calculated
to astonish the soul of Edwin! He had comparatively passed through no
previous scenes; he had not been led on step by step; and the
voluptuousness of the objects that now presented themselves before him
had been unknown and unexpected. The train of the subordinate
attendants of the magician filled the apartment with beauty and with
grace, and seemed to pay the most unreserved obedience to the nymphs
that at first addressed him.

But before the shepherd had time to examine the objects that surrounded
him, the musicians awaked their instruments, and all his faculties were
engrossed with soft melody and enchanting sounds. The instrumental
performance was illustrated and completed with a multitude of
harmonious voices, and those who sang were each of them of the softer
sex.

“What are the possessions most eagerly courted among mankind? Which are
the divinities by mortals most assiduously adored? This goodly universe
was intended for the seat of pleasure, unmixed pleasure. But a
sportive, malicious divinity sent among men a gaudy phantom, an empty
bubble, and called the shadow Honour. In pursuit of a fancied
distinction and a sounding name, the children of the earth have
deserted all that is bland and all that is delicious. Labour, naked,
deformed, and offensive, they willingly embrace. They brave hardship
and severity. They laugh at danger. From hence they derive the virtue
of resolution, the merit of self-denial, and the excellence of
mortification.

“But heaven did not open wide its hand, and scatter delight through
every corner of the universe, without intending that they should be
enjoyed. Enjoyment, indulgence, and felicity are not crimes.
Abstinence, self-denial and mortification have only a specious mien and
a fictitious merit. Did all mankind obey their fallacious dictates, the
unlimited bounties of nature would become a burden to the earth, and
fill it with pestilence and contagion. The soil would be oppressed with
her own fertility; the herds would overmultitude their lords; and the
crouded air would be darkened with the plumes of its numerous
inhabitants. The very gems that now lie buried in the bosom of the
ocean, would then bespangle its surface, and the dumb tenants of the
watery tracts, inured to their blaze, would learn to leave the caverns
of the sea and gaze upon the sun.

“Mortals, open your hearts to the divinity of pleasure! Why should he
be in love with labour, who has a capacious hoard of choice delights
within his reach? Why should we fly from a present good that we
possess, to a future that we do not comprehend? Is this the praise we
owe the bounteous Gods? Can neglect and indifference to their gifts be
gratitude? This were to serve them like a timorous and trembling slave
beneath the eye of an austere and capricious tyrant; and not with that
generosity, that enthusiasm, that liberal self-confidence, which are
worthy of a father, a patron and a friend.

“Ye that are wise, ye that are favoured of propitious heaven, drink
deep of the cup of pleasure. The sun has now withdrawn his splendid
lustre, and his flaring beams. The period of exercise is past, and the
lids of prying curiosity is [are] closed. Night is the season of feast
and the season of gaiety. In the graver hours of activity and industry,
sobriety may be proper. It may then be fit to listen to the dictates of
prudence, and pay some attention to the prejudices of mankind. The
sternness of age and the austerity of censoriousness are now silent.
Now pleasure wears a freer garb; and the manners of enjoyment are more
frank and unrestrained. The thinness of indiscretion and the airy forms
of inadvertence are lost and annihilated amid the shadows of the night.

“Now the numerous inhabitants of the waters come forth from their oozy
beds and play and flounce in the beams of the moon. Round the luminary
of the night the stars lead up the mystic dance, and compose the music
of the spheres. The deities of the woods and the deities of the rivers
come out from their secret haunts, and keep their pastimes
unapprehensive of human intrusion. The elves and the fairies repair to
their sports, and trip along the velvet green with many-twinkling feet.
Let us imitate their amiable alacrity and their cheerful amusements.

“What has sleep to do with the secrecy and silence of the night? It is
the hour of pleasure unrestrained and free. It is the hour in which the
empire of beauty is complete, and those mysteries are disclosed which
the profaner eye of day must never behold. Ye that are wise, ye that
are favoured of propitious heaven, drink deep of the cup of pleasure!
The festive board is spread before you; the flowing bowl is proffered
for your acceptance. Beauty, the crown of enjoyment, the last
perfection of society, is within your reach. Be wise and taste. Partake
of the munificence the Gods vouchsafe.”

As the song proceeded the two nymphs, who had first appeared to Edwin,
and since attended him with the extremest officiousness, endeavoured by
every artful blandishment to engage his attention, and rivet his
partiality. They exerted themselves to suppress the grossness,
inelegance and sensuality to which they had commonly been habituated,
and to cover the looseness of the passions with the veil of simplicity,
delicacy, and softness. As the music ceased, the master of the
spectacle came forth from his retreat. But his figure was no longer
that which bespoke the magician, and which Edwin had already seen. He
appeared in the form of a youth of that age in which the frolic
insignificance of childhood gives place to the eagerness, the
enthusiasm and the engaging manners of blooming manhood. His habit was
that of a cupbearer. His robes were of azure silk, and floated in
graceful folds as he passed along. The beauty of his person was worthy
of the synod of the Gods. His features had all the softness of woman
without effeminacy; and in his eye there sat a lambent fire which
bespoke the man, without roughness, and without ferocity. In one hand
he bore a crystal goblet full of every potent enchantment, and which
rendered him who drank for ever a slave to the most menial offices and
the most wanton caprices of his seducer. In the other hand he held
loosely, and as if it had been intended merely to give a completeness
to his figure and a gracefulness to his step, that irresistible wand by
which the majesty of man had often been degraded, and the reluctant
spirit had been conjured up from the caverns of the abyss. The goblet
he delivered to the elder nymph, who presented it, with inimitable
grace and a bewitching condescension, to the gallant shepherd.

Edwin had the fortitude of a hero, but he had also the feelings of a
man. He could not but be struck with the beauty of the nymphs, he could
not but be surprised with the profuseness of the entertainment, and the
richness of the preparations. The soul of Edwin was full of harmony. It
had been one of his earliest and most ruling passions. No shepherd
excelled him in the skill of the pipe, no shepherd with a sweeter or
more sonorous voice could carol the rustic lay. Even the figure assumed
by Roderic, his garb, his step, his gesture had something in them of
angelic and celestial without the blaze of divinity, and without the
awfulness that surrounds the godlike existencies, that sometimes
condescend to visit this sublunary scene. The shepherd took into his
hand the fatal bowl.

In the midst however of all that was attractive, and all that was
unknown, Edwin had not forgotten the business that had brought him
hither and the lessons of Madoc. The visage of Imogen, ever present to
his soul, suggested these salutary reflections. By her assistance he
strengthened all his resolutions, and gave vigour to the heroism of his
mind. Through the memory of Imogen he derived a body, and communicated
a visible form to the precepts of rectitude; and virtue wore all those
charms that had the most uncontroled empire in his bosom. Half way to
his lips he raised the cup of vice, and inexorable fate sat smiling on
the brim. He paused; he hesitated. By an irresistible impulse of
goodness he withdrew the fatal draught. He shed the noxious composition
upon the ground, and hurled from him with indignation the vessel in
which it had been contained.

Roderic beheld the scene with deep emotion, and was agitated by turns
with a thousand passions. He saw the issue with confusion, despondence
and fury. The roseat smiles of the cupbearer vanished; and, without the
notice and consent of his mind, his limbs resumed their wonted form,
and his features confirmed the suspicions of the shepherd, that he was
now confronted with his mortal enemy. Thrice the magician invoked the
spirit of his mother, and thrice he conjured the goblins, the most
potent that ever mix in the mortal scene. He lifted the wand in his
hand. It was the fiery ordeal that summons human character to the
severest trial. It was the _judgment of God_ in which the lots are
devoutly committed to the disposal of heaven, and the enthroned
Divinity, guided by his omniscience of the innocence of the brave, or
the guilt of the presumptuous, points the barbed spear, and gives a
triple edge to the shining steel. If the shepherd had one base and
earth-born particle in his frame, if his soul confessed one sordid and
sensual desire, now was the time in which for his prospects to be
annihilated and his reputation blotted for ever, and the state and
empire of his rival to be fixed beyond the power of human machinations
to shake or subvert it. “Presumptuous swain!” cried the sorcerer, “what
folly, what unmeaning rashness has brought you within the circle of my
incantations? Know that from them no mortal has escaped; that by them
every swain, whom adventurousness, ignorance, or stratagem has
introduced within these limits, has been impelled to assume the savage
form, and to herd with the most detestable of brutes. Let then thy
foolhardiness pay the penalty which my voice has ever annexed to it.
Hence to thy fellows! Go, and let their hated form bely the reason thou
shalt still retain, and thy own voice affright thee, when thou shalt
groan under irremediable misery!”

The incantation that had never yet failed of its hated purpose was
pronounced in vain. Edwin had heard it unappalled. He wore the amulet
of Madoc. He opposed to it the unconquered shield of spotless
innocence. Even in the midst of the lordly despotism and the imperious
haughtiness of his rival, he had been conscious to the triumph which
nothing but the calmness of fortitude and the serenity of virtue can
inspire. He was mindful of the precepts of the Druid. While Roderic was
overwhelmed with disappointment and despair, he seized the wand of the
magician, and with irresistible vigour wrenched it from his hand. He
struck it with violence upon the ground, and it burst into a thousand
shivers. The castle rocked over his head. Those caverns, which for
revolving years had served to hide the iniquity and the cruelty of
their possessor, disclosed their secret horrors. The whole stupendous
pile seemed rushing to the ground. A flood of lightning streamed across
the scene. A peal of thunder, deafening and tremendous, followed it.
All now was vacancy. Not a trace of those costly scenes and that
magnificent architecture remained. The heaven over-canopied the head of
Edwin. The clouds were dissipated. The light of innumerable stars gave
grandeur to the scene. And the silver moon communicated a milder
lustre, and created a softer shade. Roderic and his train, full of
pusillanimity and consternation, had fled from the direful scene, and
vanished like shadows at the rising of the sun.

No mortal, but our lovers, had ever entered the enchanted mansion
without having their characters disgraced, and their hearts thronged
with all those hateful and dissolute passions, which distinguished the
band of Roderic. No mortal was there, but our lovers, of the numerous
inhabitants of this bad edifice, who had not shrunk from the earthquake
and the solemnities that accompanied its sub-version. Edwin and Imogen
were alone. The shepherdess had listened to all the horrors of the
scene with a gloomy kind of satisfaction. “What new wonders,” cried
she, “are now to be disclosed? What purpose are they intended to
answer! The amendment, or the destruction of my betrayer? But it is
well. Though the elements mix in inextricable confusion, though the
earth be destroyed, yet has innocence no cause to fear. Alas, though I
myself should be buried in the ruin, why should I apprehend, or why
lament it? I was happy; untaintedly, uninterruptedly happy. But I am
miserable. I am confined here in a loathsome, detested prison. Even my
conduct is shut up with difficulties, and my bosom disquieted with the
conflict of seeming duties. Even Edwin, the swain to whom my heart was
united, and from whose memory my integrity derived new strength is
corrupted, depraved and base. Let then destruction come. I will not
lament the being cut off in the bloom of youth. I will not shed one
tear, or feel one fond regret, but for the calamity and disappointment
of my parents.”

But however the despair of Imogen armed her courage against the
concussions of nature, she yet felt that delicacy of constitution which
characterises the most lovely of her sex, and that amiable timidity
which often accompanies the most invincible fortitude. When the thunder
roared with so fearful violence, when the mansion burst in ruins over
her head, she stood, trembling and breathless, at the tumult around
her. Her safety was the first object of the attention of Edwin; and
when she recovered her recollection she found herself in the arms of
her lover. “_My fair one, my Imogen_,” cried he, “have I recovered you
through so many obstacles, and in the midst of so numerous dangers? Oh,
how must our affection, the purest, brightest, that ever lighted a
human breast, be endeared by our mutual calamities! But virtue is ever
triumphant, virtue is never deserted of the watchful care of heaven. My
trials, my lovely shepherdess, have been feeble indeed, when compared
with yours. Your integrity is unrivalled, and your innocence has
surpassed all that the bards have sung in their immortal lays. Come
then, oh, dearer, far dearer than ever to this constant heart, come to
my arms! Let delay be banished. Let the veil of virgin bashfulness be
laid aside. And let us repair together to the presence of your parents
to ask an united blessing.”

While Edwin thus poured forth the raptures of his heart, Imogen turned
towards him a languid eye, full of soft and silent reproach. She
retired from him with involuntary horror. “No, shepherd,” cried she,
and waved her hand with graceful indignation. “Like you I approve the
justice of the Gods in the banishment of Roderic. But I think that
justice would have been more complete, had it included in its
vindictive appearance the punishment of the base, degenerate Edwin.
Unworthy Edwin, to how vile and earth born sentiments has your heart
been conscious! But go. Hence from my sight! The very spectacle of that
form which I had learned to love is mildew and contagion to my eyes.
Oh, Edwin, for your sake I will distrust every attractive form and
every ingenuous appearance. The separation, my swain, is hard. The arts
of Roderic came not near my soul, but your baseness has fixed an
indelible wound. But think not—cherish not the fond mistake—that I will
ever forget your ungenerousness in the hour of my distress and
forlornness, or receive that serpent to my heart again.”

As she pronounced these words, she hastened to fly from her imaginary
enemy. Edwin detained her by a gentle violence. With much intreaty and
a thousand soft blandishments, he wrung from her the story of her
indignation. He related to her the tale of Madoc, and told her of the
magic arts of his rival. He fully explained the scene of the pretended
repentance of Roderic, and the seduction he had attempted to practise
under the form of Edwin. As she listened to the wondrous story, Imogen
trembled at the unknown dangers with which she had been environed, and
admired more than ever the omnipotence of that virtue which had been
able to lead her safely through them all. The conviction she received
of the rectitude and fidelity of Edwin was to her, like the calm breath
of zephyr, which succeeds the tremendous storm upon the surface of the
ocean; and like that sovereign balm, which the sage Druids pour into
the wounds of the shepherd, and restore him at once to salubrity and
vigour. The amiable pair repaired with speed, and arrived with the dawn
of the sun to the cottage of Imogen. At the sight of them the venerable
Edith reared her drooping, desponding head, and the cheeks of the hoary
father were bedewed with the tears of transport. Such were the trials
of our lovers, and of correspondent worth was the reward they received.
Long did they dwell together in the vale of Clwyd, with that simplicity
and attachment which no scenes but those of pastoral life can know.
Their happiness was more sensible than that of the swains around them
in that they had known a reverse of fortune. And their virtue was the
purer and the more benevolent, in that they had passed through the
fields of trial; and that only through the ordeal of temptation, and an
approved fortitude, they had arrived to the unmixed felicity, and the
uninterrupted enjoyment they at length possessed.





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