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CHAPTER XIII Alice Pyncheon
THERE was a message brought, one day, from the worshipful Gervayse Pyncheon to young
Matthew Maule, the carpenter, desiring his immediate presence at the House of the
Seven Gables.
"And what does your master want with me?" said the carpenter to Mr. Pyncheon's black
servant. "Does the house need any repair?
Well it may, by this time; and no blame to my father who built it, neither!
I was reading the old Colonel's tombstone, no longer ago than last Sabbath; and,
reckoning from that date, the house has stood seven-and-thirty years.
No wonder if there should be a job to do on the roof."
"Don't know what *** wants," answered Scipio.
"The house is a berry good house, and old Colonel Pyncheon think so too, I reckon;--
else why the old man haunt it so, and frighten a poor ***, As he does?"
"Well, well, friend Scipio; let your master know that I'm coming," said the carpenter
with a laugh. "For a fair, workmanlike job, he'll find me
his man.
And so the house is haunted, is it? It will take a tighter workman than I am to
keep the spirits out of the Seven Gables.
Even if the Colonel would be quiet," he added, muttering to himself, "my old
grandfather, the wizard, will be pretty sure to stick to the Pyncheons as long as
their walls hold together."
"What's that you mutter to yourself, Matthew Maule?" asked Scipio.
"And what for do you look so black at me?" "No matter, darky," said the carpenter.
"Do you think nobody is to look black but yourself?
Go tell your master I'm coming; and if you happen to see Mistress Alice, his daughter,
give Matthew Maule's humble respects to her.
She has brought a fair face from Italy,-- fair, and gentle, and proud,--has that same
Alice Pyncheon!" "He talk of Mistress Alice!" cried Scipio,
as he returned from his errand.
"The low carpenter-man! He no business so much as to look at her a
great way off!"
This young Matthew Maule, the carpenter, it must be observed, was a person little
understood, and not very generally liked, in the town where he resided; not that
anything could be alleged against his
integrity, or his skill and diligence in the handicraft which he exercised.
The aversion (as it might justly be called) with which many persons regarded him was
partly the result of his own character and deportment, and partly an inheritance.
He was the grandson of a former Matthew Maule, one of the early settlers of the
town, and who had been a famous and terrible wizard in his day.
This old reprobate was one of the sufferers when Cotton Mather, and his brother
ministers, and the learned judges, and other wise men, and Sir William Phipps, the
sagacious governor, made such laudable
efforts to weaken the great enemy of souls, by sending a multitude of his adherents up
the rocky pathway of Gallows Hill.
Since those days, no doubt, it had grown to be suspected that, in consequence of an
unfortunate overdoing of a work praiseworthy in itself, the proceedings
against the witches had proved far less
acceptable to the Beneficent Father than to that very Arch Enemy whom they were
intended to distress and utterly overwhelm.
It is not the less certain, however, that awe and terror brooded over the memories of
those who died for this horrible crime of witchcraft.
Their graves, in the crevices of the rocks, were supposed to be incapable of retaining
the occupants who had been so hastily thrust into them.
Old Matthew Maule, especially, was known to have as little hesitation or difficulty in
rising out of his grave as an ordinary man in getting out of bed, and was as often
seen at midnight as living people at noonday.
This pestilent wizard (in whom his just punishment seemed to have wrought no manner
of amendment) had an inveterate habit of haunting a certain mansion, styled the
House of the Seven Gables, against the
owner of which he pretended to hold an unsettled claim for ground-rent.
The ghost, it appears,--with the pertinacity which was one of his
distinguishing characteristics while alive,--insisted that he was the rightful
proprietor of the site upon which the house stood.
His terms were, that either the aforesaid ground-rent, from the day when the cellar
began to be dug, should be paid down, or the mansion itself given up; else he, the
ghostly creditor, would have his finger in
all the affairs of the Pyncheons, and make everything go wrong with them, though it
should be a thousand years after his death.
It was a wild story, perhaps, but seemed not altogether so incredible to those who
could remember what an inflexibly obstinate old fellow this wizard Maule had been.
Now, the wizard's grandson, the young Matthew Maule of our story, was popularly
supposed to have inherited some of his ancestor's questionable traits.
It is wonderful how many absurdities were promulgated in reference to the young man.
He was fabled, for example, to have a strange power of getting into people's
dreams, and regulating matters there according to his own fancy, pretty much
like the stage-manager of a theatre.
There was a great deal of talk among the neighbors, particularly the petticoated
ones, about what they called the witchcraft of Maule's eye.
Some said that he could look into people's minds; others, that, by the marvellous
power of this eye, he could draw people into his own mind, or send them, if he
pleased, to do errands to his grandfather,
in the spiritual world; others, again, that it was what is termed an Evil Eye, and
possessed the valuable faculty of blighting corn, and drying children into mummies with
the heartburn.
But, after all, what worked most to the young carpenter's disadvantage was, first,
the reserve and sternness of his natural disposition, and next, the fact of his not
being a church-communicant, and the
suspicion of his holding heretical tenets in matters of religion and polity.
After receiving Mr. Pyncheon's message, the carpenter merely tarried to finish a small
job, which he happened to have in hand, and then took his way towards the House of the
Seven Gables.
This noted edifice, though its style might be getting a little out of fashion, was
still as respectable a family residence as that of any gentleman in town.
The present owner, Gervayse Pyncheon, was said to have contracted a dislike to the
house, in consequence of a shock to his sensibility, in early childhood, from the
sudden death of his grandfather.
In the very act of running to climb Colonel Pyncheon's knee, the boy had discovered the
old Puritan to be a corpse.
On arriving at manhood, Mr. Pyncheon had visited England, where he married a lady of
fortune, and had subsequently spent many years, partly in the mother country, and
partly in various cities on the continent of Europe.
During this period, the family mansion had been consigned to the charge of a kinsman,
who was allowed to make it his home for the time being, in consideration of keeping the
premises in thorough repair.
So faithfully had this contract been fulfilled, that now, as the carpenter
approached the house, his practised eye could detect nothing to criticise in its
condition.
The peaks of the seven gables rose up sharply; the shingled roof looked
thoroughly water-tight; and the glittering plaster-work entirely covered the exterior
walls, and sparkled in the October sun, as if it had been new only a week ago.
The house had that pleasant aspect of life which is like the cheery expression of
comfortable activity in the human countenance.
You could see, at once, that there was the stir of a large family within it.
A huge load of oak-wood was passing through the gateway, towards the outbuildings in
the rear; the fat cook--or probably it might be the housekeeper--stood at the side
door, bargaining for some turkeys and
poultry which a countryman had brought for sale.
Now and then a maid-servant, neatly dressed, and now the shining sable face of
a slave, might be seen bustling across the windows, in the lower part of the house.
At an open window of a room in the second story, hanging over some pots of beautiful
and delicate flowers,--exotics, but which had never known a more genial sunshine than
that of the New England autumn,--was the
figure of a young lady, an exotic, like the flowers, and beautiful and delicate as
they.
Her presence imparted an indescribable grace and faint witchery to the whole
edifice.
In other respects, it was a substantial, jolly-looking mansion, and seemed fit to be
the residence of a patriarch, who might establish his own headquarters in the front
gable and assign one of the remainder to
each of his six children, while the great chimney in the centre should symbolize the
old fellow's hospitable heart, which kept them all warm, and made a great whole of
the seven smaller ones.
There was a vertical sundial on the front gable; and as the carpenter passed beneath
it, he looked up and noted the hour. "Three o'clock!" said he to himself.
"My father told me that dial was put up only an hour before the old Colonel's
death. How truly it has kept time these seven-and-
thirty years past!
The shadow creeps and creeps, and is always looking over the shoulder of the sunshine!"
It might have befitted a craftsman, like Matthew Maule, on being sent for to a
gentleman's house, to go to the back door, where servants and work-people were usually
admitted; or at least to the side entrance,
where the better class of tradesmen made application.
But the carpenter had a great deal of pride and stiffness in his nature; and, at this
moment, moreover, his heart was bitter with the sense of hereditary wrong, because he
considered the great Pyncheon House to be
standing on soil which should have been his own.
On this very site, beside a spring of delicious water, his grandfather had felled
the pine-trees and built a cottage, in which children had been born to him; and it
was only from a dead man's stiffened
fingers that Colonel Pyncheon had wrested away the title-deeds.
So young Maule went straight to the principal entrance, beneath a portal of
carved oak, and gave such a peal of the iron knocker that you would have imagined
the stern old wizard himself to be standing at the threshold.
Black Scipio answered the summons in a prodigious, hurry; but showed the whites of
his eyes in amazement on beholding only the carpenter.
"Lord-a-mercy, what a great man he be, this carpenter fellow!" mumbled Scipio, down in
his throat. "Anybody think he beat on the door with his
biggest hammer!"
"Here I am!" said Maule sternly. "Show me the way to your master's parlor."
As he stept into the house, a note of sweet and melancholy music thrilled and vibrated
along the passage-way, proceeding from one of the rooms above stairs.
It was the harpsichord which Alice Pyncheon had brought with her from beyond the sea.
The fair Alice bestowed most of her maiden leisure between flowers and music, although
the former were apt to droop, and the melodies were often sad.
She was of foreign education, and could not take kindly to the New England modes of
life, in which nothing beautiful had ever been developed.
As Mr. Pyncheon had been impatiently awaiting Maule's arrival, black Scipio, of
course, lost no time in ushering the carpenter into his master's presence.
The room in which this gentleman sat was a parlor of moderate size, looking out upon
the garden of the house, and having its windows partly shadowed by the foliage of
fruit-trees.
It was Mr. Pyncheon's peculiar apartment, and was provided with furniture, in an
elegant and costly style, principally from Paris; the floor (which was unusual at that
day) being covered with a carpet, so
skilfully and richly wrought that it seemed to glow as with living flowers.
In one corner stood a marble woman, to whom her own beauty was the sole and sufficient
garment.
Some pictures--that looked old, and had a mellow tinge diffused through all their
artful splendor--hung on the walls.
Near the fireplace was a large and very beautiful cabinet of ebony, inlaid with
ivory; a piece of antique furniture, which Mr. Pyncheon had bought in Venice, and
which he used as the treasure-place for
medals, ancient coins, and whatever small and valuable curiosities he had picked up
on his travels.
Through all this variety of decoration, however, the room showed its original
characteristics; its low stud, its cross- beam, its chimney-piece, with the old-
fashioned Dutch tiles; so that it was the
emblem of a mind industriously stored with foreign ideas, and elaborated into
artificial refinement, but neither larger, nor, in its proper self, more elegant than
before.
There were two objects that appeared rather out of place in this very handsomely
furnished room.
One was a large map, or surveyor's plan, of a tract of land, which looked as if it had
been drawn a good many years ago, and was now dingy with smoke, and soiled, here and
there, with the touch of fingers.
The other was a portrait of a stern old man, in a Puritan garb, painted roughly,
but with a bold effect, and a remarkably strong expression of character.
At a small table, before a fire of English sea-coal, sat Mr. Pyncheon, sipping coffee,
which had grown to be a very favorite beverage with him in France.
He was a middle-aged and really handsome man, with a wig flowing down upon his
shoulders; his coat was of blue velvet, with lace on the borders and at the button-
holes; and the firelight glistened on the
spacious breadth of his waistcoat, which was flowered all over with gold.
On the entrance of Scipio, ushering in the carpenter, Mr. Pyncheon turned partly
round, but resumed his former position, and proceeded deliberately to finish his cup of
coffee, without immediate notice of the guest whom he had summoned to his presence.
It was not that he intended any rudeness or improper neglect,--which, indeed, he would
have blushed to be guilty of,--but it never occurred to him that a person in Maule's
station had a claim on his courtesy, or
would trouble himself about it one way or the other.
The carpenter, however, stepped at once to the hearth, and turned himself about, so as
to look Mr. Pyncheon in the face.
"You sent for me," said he. "Be pleased to explain your business, that
I may go back to my own affairs." "Ah! excuse me," said Mr. Pyncheon quietly.
"I did not mean to tax your time without a recompense.
Your name, I think, is Maule,--Thomas or Matthew Maule,--a son or grandson of the
builder of this house?"
"Matthew Maule," replied the carpenter,-- "son of him who built the house,--grandson
of the rightful proprietor of the soil."
"I know the dispute to which you allude," observed Mr. Pyncheon with undisturbed
equanimity.
"I am well aware that my grandfather was compelled to resort to a suit at law, in
order to establish his claim to the foundation-site of this edifice.
We will not, if you please, renew the discussion.
The matter was settled at the time, and by the competent authorities,--equitably, it
is to be presumed,--and, at all events, irrevocably.
Yet, singularly enough, there is an incidental reference to this very subject
in what I am now about to say to you.
And this same inveterate grudge,--excuse me, I mean no offence,--this irritability,
which you have just shown, is not entirely aside from the matter."
"If you can find anything for your purpose, Mr. Pyncheon," said the carpenter, "in a
man's natural resentment for the wrongs done to his blood, you are welcome to it."
"I take you at your word, Goodman Maule," said the owner of the Seven Gables, with a
smile, "and will proceed to suggest a mode in which your hereditary resentments--
justifiable or otherwise--may have had a bearing on my affairs.
You have heard, I suppose, that the Pyncheon family, ever since my
grandfather's days, have been prosecuting a still unsettled claim to a very large
extent of territory at the Eastward?"
"Often," replied Maule,--and it is said that a smile came over his face,--"very
often,--from my father!"
"This claim," continued Mr. Pyncheon, after pausing a moment, as if to consider what
the carpenter's smile might mean, "appeared to be on the very verge of a settlement and
full allowance, at the period of my grandfather's decease.
It was well known, to those in his confidence, that he anticipated neither
difficulty nor delay.
Now, Colonel Pyncheon, I need hardly say, was a practical man, well acquainted with
public and private business, and not at all the person to cherish ill-founded hopes, or
to attempt the following out of an impracticable scheme.
It is obvious to conclude, therefore, that he had grounds, not apparent to his heirs,
for his confident anticipation of success in the matter of this Eastern claim.
In a word, I believe,--and my legal advisers coincide in the belief, which,
moreover, is authorized, to a certain extent, by the family traditions,--that my
grandfather was in possession of some deed,
or other document, essential to this claim, but which has since disappeared."
"Very likely," said Matthew Maule,--and again, it is said, there was a dark smile
on his face,--"but what can a poor carpenter have to do with the grand affairs
of the Pyncheon family?"
"Perhaps nothing," returned Mr. Pyncheon, "possibly much!"
Here ensued a great many words between Matthew Maule and the proprietor of the
Seven Gables, on the subject which the latter had thus broached.
It seems (although Mr. Pyncheon had some hesitation in referring to stories so
exceedingly absurd in their aspect) that the popular belief pointed to some
mysterious connection and dependence,
existing between the family of the Maules and these vast unrealized possessions of
the Pyncheons.
It was an ordinary saying that the old wizard, hanged though he was, had obtained
the best end of the bargain in his contest with Colonel Pyncheon; inasmuch as he had
got possession of the great Eastern claim,
in exchange for an acre or two of garden- ground.
A very aged woman, recently dead, had often used the metaphorical expression, in her
fireside talk, that miles and miles of the Pyncheon lands had been shovelled into
Maule's grave; which, by the bye, was but a
very shallow nook, between two rocks, near the summit of Gallows Hill.
Again, when the lawyers were making inquiry for the missing document, it was a by-word
that it would never be found, unless in the wizard's skeleton hand.
So much weight had the shrewd lawyers assigned to these fables, that (but Mr.
Pyncheon did not see fit to inform the carpenter of the fact) they had secretly
caused the wizard's grave to be searched.
Nothing was discovered, however, except that, unaccountably, the right hand of the
skeleton was gone.
Now, what was unquestionably important, a portion of these popular rumors could be
traced, though rather doubtfully and indistinctly, to chance words and obscure
hints of the executed wizard's son, and the father of this present Matthew Maule.
And here Mr. Pyncheon could bring an item of his own personal evidence into play.
Though but a child at the time, he either remembered or fancied that Matthew's father
had had some job to perform on the day before, or possibly the very morning of the
Colonel's decease, in the private room
where he and the carpenter were at this moment talking.
Certain papers belonging to Colonel Pyncheon, as his grandson distinctly
recollected, had been spread out on the table.
Matthew Maule understood the insinuated suspicion.
"My father," he said,--but still there was that dark smile, making a riddle of his
countenance,--"my father was an honester man than the bloody old Colonel!
Not to get his rights back again would he have carried off one of those papers!"
"I shall not bandy words with you," observed the foreign-bred Mr. Pyncheon,
with haughty composure.
"Nor will it become me to resent any rudeness towards either my grandfather or
myself.
A gentleman, before seeking intercourse with a person of your station and habits,
will first consider whether the urgency of the end may compensate for the
disagreeableness of the means.
It does so in the present instance."
He then renewed the conversation, and made great pecuniary offers to the carpenter, in
case the latter should give information leading to the discovery of the lost
document, and the consequent success of the Eastern claim.
For a long time Matthew Maule is said to have turned a cold ear to these
propositions.
At last, however, with a strange kind of laugh, he inquired whether Mr. Pyncheon
would make over to him the old wizard's homestead-ground, together with the House
of the Seven Gables, now standing on it, in
requital of the documentary evidence so urgently required.
The wild, chimney-corner legend (which, without copying all its extravagances, my
narrative essentially follows) here gives an account of some very strange behavior on
the part of Colonel Pyncheon's portrait.
This picture, it must be understood, was supposed to be so intimately connected with
the fate of the house, and so magically built into its walls, that, if once it
should be removed, that very instant the
whole edifice would come thundering down in a heap of dusty ruin.
All through the foregoing conversation between Mr. Pyncheon and the carpenter, the
portrait had been frowning, clenching its fist, and giving many such proofs of
excessive discomposure, but without
attracting the notice of either of the two colloquists.
And finally, at Matthew Maule's audacious suggestion of a transfer of the seven-
gabled structure, the ghostly portrait is averred to have lost all patience, and to
have shown itself on the point of descending bodily from its frame.
But such incredible incidents are merely to be mentioned aside.
"Give up this house!" exclaimed Mr. Pyncheon, in amazement at the proposal.
"Were I to do so, my grandfather would not rest quiet in his grave!"
"He never has, if all stories are true," remarked the carpenter composedly.
"But that matter concerns his grandson more than it does Matthew Maule.
I have no other terms to propose."
Impossible as he at first thought it to comply with Maule's conditions, still, on a
second glance, Mr. Pyncheon was of opinion that they might at least be made matter of
discussion.
He himself had no personal attachment for the house, nor any pleasant associations
connected with his childish residence in it.
On the contrary, after seven-and-thirty years, the presence of his dead grandfather
seemed still to pervade it, as on that morning when the affrighted boy had beheld
him, with so ghastly an aspect, stiffening in his chair.
His long abode in foreign parts, moreover, and familiarity with many of the castles
and ancestral halls of England, and the marble palaces of Italy, had caused him to
look contemptuously at the House of the
Seven Gables, whether in point of splendor or convenience.
It was a mansion exceedingly inadequate to the style of living which it would be
incumbent on Mr. Pyncheon to support, after realizing his territorial rights.
His steward might deign to occupy it, but never, certainly, the great landed
proprietor himself.
In the event of success, indeed, it was his purpose to return to England; nor, to say
the truth, would he recently have quitted that more congenial home, had not his own
fortune, as well as his deceased wife's, begun to give symptoms of exhaustion.
The Eastern claim once fairly settled, and put upon the firm basis of actual
possession, Mr. Pyncheon's property--to be measured by miles, not acres--would be
worth an earldom, and would reasonably
entitle him to solicit, or enable him to purchase, that elevated dignity from the
British monarch.
Lord Pyncheon!--or the Earl of Waldo!--how could such a magnate be expected to
contract his grandeur within the pitiful compass of seven shingled gables?
In short, on an enlarged view of the business, the carpenter's terms appeared so
ridiculously easy that Mr. Pyncheon could scarcely forbear laughing in his face.
He was quite ashamed, after the foregoing reflections, to propose any diminution of
so moderate a recompense for the immense service to be rendered.
"I consent to your proposition, Maule!" cried he.
"Put me in possession of the document essential to establish my rights, and the
House of the Seven Gables is your own!"
According to some versions of the story, a regular contract to the above effect was
drawn up by a lawyer, and signed and sealed in the presence of witnesses.
Others say that Matthew Maule was contented with a private written agreement, in which
Mr. Pyncheon pledged his honor and integrity to the fulfillment of the terms
concluded upon.
The gentleman then ordered wine, which he and the carpenter drank together, in
confirmation of their bargain.
During the whole preceding discussion and subsequent formalities, the old Puritan's
portrait seems to have persisted in its shadowy gestures of disapproval; but
without effect, except that, as Mr.
Pyncheon set down the emptied glass, he thought he beheld his grandfather frown.
"This sherry is too potent a wine for me; it has affected my brain already," he
observed, after a somewhat startled look at the picture.
"On returning to Europe, I shall confine myself to the more delicate vintages of
Italy and France, the best of which will not bear transportation."
"My Lord Pyncheon may drink what wine he will, and wherever he pleases," replied the
carpenter, as if he had been privy to Mr. Pyncheon's ambitious projects.
"But first, sir, if you desire tidings of this lost document, I must crave the favor
of a little talk with your fair daughter Alice."
"You are mad, Maule!" exclaimed Mr. Pyncheon haughtily; and now, at last, there
was anger mixed up with his pride. "What can my daughter have to do with a
business like this?"
Indeed, at this new demand on the carpenter's part, the proprietor of the
Seven Gables was even more thunder-struck than at the cool proposition to surrender
his house.
There was, at least, an assignable motive for the first stipulation; there appeared
to be none whatever for the last.
Nevertheless, Matthew Maule sturdily insisted on the young lady being summoned,
and even gave her father to understand, in a mysterious kind of explanation,--which
made the matter considerably darker than it
looked before,--that the only chance of acquiring the requisite knowledge was
through the clear, crystal medium of a pure and *** intelligence, like that of the
fair Alice.
Not to encumber our story with Mr. Pyncheon's scruples, whether of conscience,
pride, or fatherly affection, he at length ordered his daughter to be called.
He well knew that she was in her chamber, and engaged in no occupation that could not
readily be laid aside; for, as it happened, ever since Alice's name had been spoken,
both her father and the carpenter had heard
the sad and sweet music of her harpsichord, and the airier melancholy of her
accompanying voice. So Alice Pyncheon was summoned, and
appeared.
A portrait of this young lady, painted by a Venetian artist, and left by her father in
England, is said to have fallen into the hands of the present Duke of Devonshire,
and to be now preserved at Chatsworth; not
on account of any associations with the original, but for its value as a picture,
and the high character of beauty in the countenance.
If ever there was a lady born, and set apart from the world's vulgar mass by a
certain gentle and cold stateliness, it was this very Alice Pyncheon.
Yet there was the womanly mixture in her; the tenderness, or, at least, the tender
capabilities.
For the sake of that redeeming quality, a man of generous nature would have forgiven
all her pride, and have been content, almost, to lie down in her path, and let
Alice set her slender foot upon his heart.
All that he would have required was simply the acknowledgment that he was indeed a
man, and a fellow-being, moulded of the same elements as she.
As Alice came into the room, her eyes fell upon the carpenter, who was standing near
its centre, clad in green woollen jacket, a pair of loose breeches, open at the knees,
and with a long pocket for his rule, the
end of which protruded; it was as proper a mark of the artisan's calling as Mr.
Pyncheon's full-dress sword of that gentleman's aristocratic pretensions.
A glow of artistic approval brightened over Alice Pyncheon's face; she was struck with
admiration--which she made no attempt to conceal--of the remarkable comeliness,
strength, and energy of Maule's figure.
But that admiring glance (which most other men, perhaps, would have cherished as a
sweet recollection all through life) the carpenter never forgave.
It must have been the devil himself that made Maule so subtile in his preception.
"Does the girl look at me as if I were a brute beast?" thought he, setting his
teeth.
"She shall know whether I have a human spirit; and the worse for her, if it prove
stronger than her own!" "My father, you sent for me," said Alice,
in her sweet and harp-like voice.
"But, if you have business with this young man, pray let me go again.
You know I do not love this room, in spite of that Claude, with which you try to bring
back sunny recollections."
"Stay a moment, young lady, if you please!" said Matthew Maule.
"My business with your father is over. With yourself, it is now to begin!"
Alice looked towards her father, in surprise and inquiry.
"Yes, Alice," said Mr. Pyncheon, with some disturbance and confusion.
"This young man--his name is Matthew Maule- -professes, so far as I can understand him,
to be able to discover, through your means, a certain paper or parchment, which was
missing long before your birth.
The importance of the document in question renders it advisable to neglect no
possible, even if improbable, method of regaining it.
You will therefore oblige me, my dear Alice, by answering this person's
inquiries, and complying with his lawful and reasonable requests, so far as they may
appear to have the aforesaid object in view.
As I shall remain in the room, you need apprehend no rude nor unbecoming
deportment, on the young man's part; and, at your slightest wish, of course, the
investigation, or whatever we may call it, shall immediately be broken off."
"Mistress Alice Pyncheon," remarked Matthew Maule, with the utmost deference, but yet a
half-hidden sarcasm in his look and tone, "will no doubt feel herself quite safe in
her father's presence, and under his all- sufficient protection."
"I certainly shall entertain no manner of apprehension, with my father at hand," said
Alice with maidenly dignity.
"Neither do I conceive that a lady, while true to herself, can have aught to fear
from whomsoever, or in any circumstances!" Poor Alice!
By what unhappy impulse did she thus put herself at once on terms of defiance
against a strength which she could not estimate?
"Then, Mistress Alice," said Matthew Maule, handing a chair,--gracefully enough, for a
craftsman, "will it please you only to sit down, and do me the favor (though
altogether beyond a poor carpenter's deserts) to fix your eyes on mine!"
Alice complied, She was very proud.
Setting aside all advantages of rank, this fair girl deemed herself conscious of a
power--combined of beauty, high, unsullied purity, and the preservative force of
womanhood--that could make her sphere
impenetrable, unless betrayed by treachery within.
She instinctively knew, it may be, that some sinister or evil potency was now
striving to pass her barriers; nor would she decline the contest.
So Alice put woman's might against man's might; a match not often equal on the part
of woman.
Her father meanwhile had turned away, and seemed absorbed in the contemplation of a
landscape by Claude, where a shadowy and sun-streaked vista penetrated so remotely
into an ancient wood, that it would have
been no wonder if his fancy had lost itself in the picture's bewildering depths.
But, in truth, the picture was no more to him at that moment than the blank wall
against which it hung.
His mind was haunted with the many and strange tales which he had heard,
attributing mysterious if not supernatural endowments to these Maules, as well the
grandson here present as his two immediate ancestors.
Mr. Pyncheon's long residence abroad, and intercourse with men of wit and fashion,--
courtiers, worldings, and free-thinkers,-- had done much towards obliterating the grim
Puritan superstitions, which no man of New
England birth at that early period could entirely escape.
But, on the other hand, had not a whole community believed Maule's grandfather to
be a wizard?
Had not the crime been proved? Had not the wizard died for it?
Had he not bequeathed a legacy of hatred against the Pyncheons to this only
grandson, who, as it appeared, was now about to exercise a subtle influence over
the daughter of his enemy's house?
Might not this influence be the same that was called witchcraft?
Turning half around, he caught a glimpse of Maule's figure in the looking-glass.
At some paces from Alice, with his arms uplifted in the air, the carpenter made a
gesture as if directing downward a slow, ponderous, and invisible weight upon the
maiden.
"Stay, Maule!" exclaimed Mr. Pyncheon, stepping forward.
"I forbid your proceeding further!"
"Pray, my dear father, do not interrupt the young man," said Alice, without changing
her position. "His efforts, I assure you, will prove very
harmless."
Again Mr. Pyncheon turned his eyes towards the Claude.
It was then his daughter's will, in opposition to his own, that the experiment
should be fully tried.
Henceforth, therefore, he did but consent, not urge it.
And was it not for her sake far more than for his own that he desired its success?
That lost parchment once restored, the beautiful Alice Pyncheon, with the rich
dowry which he could then bestow, might wed an English duke or a German reigning-
prince, instead of some New England clergyman or lawyer!
At the thought, the ambitious father almost consented, in his heart, that, if the
devil's power were needed to the accomplishment of this great object, Maule
might evoke him.
Alice's own purity would be her safeguard. With his mind full of imaginary
magnificence, Mr. Pyncheon heard a half- uttered exclamation from his daughter.
It was very faint and low; so indistinct that there seemed but half a will to shape
out the words, and too undefined a purport to be intelligible.
Yet it was a call for help!--his conscience never doubted it;--and, little more than a
whisper to his ear, it was a dismal shriek, and long reechoed so, in the region round
his heart!
But this time the father did not turn. After a further interval, Maule spoke.
"Behold your daughter," said he. Mr. Pyncheon came hastily forward.
The carpenter was standing erect in front of Alice's chair, and pointing his finger
towards the maiden with an expression of triumphant power, the limits of which could
not be defined, as, indeed, its scope
stretched vaguely towards the unseen and the infinite.
Alice sat in an attitude of profound repose, with the long brown lashes drooping
over her eyes.
"There she is!" said the carpenter. "Speak to her!"
"Alice! My daughter!" exclaimed Mr. Pyncheon.
"My own Alice!"
She did not stir. "Louder!" said Maule, smiling.
"Alice! Awake!" cried her father.
"It troubles me to see you thus!
Awake!" He spoke loudly, with terror in his voice,
and close to that delicate ear which had always been so sensitive to every discord.
But the sound evidently reached her not.
It is indescribable what a sense of remote, dim, unattainable distance betwixt himself
and Alice was impressed on the father by this impossibility of reaching her with his
voice.
"Best touch her!" said Matthew Maule "Shake the girl, and roughly, too!
My hands are hardened with too much use of axe, saw, and plane,--else I might help
you!"
Mr. Pyncheon took her hand, and pressed it with the earnestness of startled emotion.
He kissed her, with so great a heart-throb in the kiss, that he thought she must needs
feel it.
Then, in a gust of anger at her insensibility, he shook her maiden form
with a violence which, the next moment, it affrighted him to remember.
He withdrew his encircling arms, and Alice- -whose figure, though flexible, had been
wholly impassive--relapsed into the same attitude as before these attempts to arouse
her.
Maule having shifted his position, her face was turned towards him slightly, but with
what seemed to be a reference of her very slumber to his guidance.
Then it was a strange sight to behold how the man of conventionalities shook the
powder out of his periwig; how the reserved and stately gentleman forgot his dignity;
how the gold-embroidered waistcoat
flickered and glistened in the firelight with the convulsion of rage, terror, and
sorrow in the human heart that was beating under it.
"Villain!" cried Mr. Pyncheon, shaking his clenched fist at Maule.
"You and the fiend together have robbed me of my daughter.
Give her back, spawn of the old wizard, or you shall climb Gallows Hill in your
grandfather's footsteps!" "Softly, Mr. Pyncheon!" said the carpenter
with scornful composure.
"Softly, an' it please your worship, else you will spoil those rich lace-ruffles at
your wrists!
Is it my crime if you have sold your daughter for the mere hope of getting a
sheet of yellow parchment into your clutch? There sits Mistress Alice quietly asleep.
Now let Matthew Maule try whether she be as proud as the carpenter found her awhile
since."
He spoke, and Alice responded, with a soft, subdued, inward acquiescence, and a bending
of her form towards him, like the flame of a torch when it indicates a gentle draught
of air.
He beckoned with his hand, and, rising from her chair,--blindly, but undoubtingly, as
tending to her sure and inevitable centre,- -the proud Alice approached him.
He waved her back, and, retreating, Alice sank again into her seat.
"She is mine!" said Matthew Maule. "Mine, by the right of the strongest
spirit!"
In the further progress of the legend, there is a long, grotesque, and
occasionally awe-striking account of the carpenter's incantations (if so they are to
be called), with a view of discovering the lost document.
It appears to have been his object to convert the mind of Alice into a kind of
telescopic medium, through which Mr. Pyncheon and himself might obtain a glimpse
into the spiritual world.
He succeeded, accordingly, in holding an imperfect sort of intercourse, at one
remove, with the departed personages in whose custody the so much valued secret had
been carried beyond the precincts of earth.
During her trance, Alice described three figures as being present to her
spiritualized perception.
One was an aged, dignified, stern-looking gentleman, clad as for a solemn festival in
grave and costly attire, but with a great blood-stain on his richly wrought band; the
second, an aged man, meanly dressed, with a
dark and malign countenance, and a broken halter about his neck; the third, a person
not so advanced in life as the former two, but beyond the middle age, wearing a coarse
woollen tunic and leather breeches, and
with a carpenter's rule sticking out of his side pocket.
These three visionary characters possessed a mutual knowledge of the missing document.
One of them, in truth,--it was he with the blood-stain on his band,--seemed, unless
his gestures were misunderstood, to hold the parchment in his immediate keeping, but
was prevented by his two partners in the
mystery from disburdening himself of the trust.
Finally, when he showed a purpose of shouting forth the secret loudly enough to
be heard from his own sphere into that of mortals, his companions struggled with him,
and pressed their hands over his mouth; and
forthwith--whether that he were choked by it, or that the secret itself was of a
crimson hue--there was a fresh flow of blood upon his band.
Upon this, the two meanly dressed figures mocked and jeered at the much-abashed old
dignitary, and pointed their fingers at the stain.
At this juncture, Maule turned to Mr. Pyncheon.
"It will never be allowed," said he.
"The custody of this secret, that would so enrich his heirs, makes part of your
grandfather's retribution. He must choke with it until it is no longer
of any value.
And keep you the House of the Seven Gables! It is too dear bought an inheritance, and
too heavy with the curse upon it, to be shifted yet awhile from the Colonel's
posterity."
Mr. Pyncheon tried to speak, but--what with fear and passion--could make only a
gurgling murmur in his throat. The carpenter smiled.
"Aha, worshipful sir!--so you have old Maule's blood to drink!" said he jeeringly.
"Fiend in man's shape! why dost thou keep dominion over my child?" cried Mr.
Pyncheon, when his choked utterance could make way.
"Give me back my daughter.
Then go thy ways; and may we never meet again!"
"Your daughter!" said Matthew Maule. "Why, she is fairly mine!
Nevertheless, not to be too hard with fair Mistress Alice, I will leave her in your
keeping; but I do not warrant you that she shall never have occasion to remember
Maule, the carpenter."
He waved his hands with an upward motion; and, after a few repetitions of similar
gestures, the beautiful Alice Pyncheon awoke from her strange trance.
She awoke without the slightest recollection of her visionary experience;
but as one losing herself in a momentary reverie, and returning to the consciousness
of actual life, in almost as brief an
interval as the down-sinking flame of the hearth should quiver again up the chimney.
On recognizing Matthew Maule, she assumed an air of somewhat cold but gentle dignity,
the rather, as there was a certain peculiar smile on the carpenter's visage that
stirred the native pride of the fair Alice.
So ended, for that time, the quest for the lost title-deed of the Pyncheon territory
at the Eastward; nor, though often subsequently renewed, has it ever yet
befallen a Pyncheon to set his eye upon that parchment.
But, alas for the beautiful, the gentle, yet too haughty Alice!
A power that she little dreamed of had laid its grasp upon her maiden soul.
A will, most unlike her own, constrained her to do its grotesque and fantastic
bidding.
Her father as it proved, had martyred his poor child to an inordinate desire for
measuring his land by miles instead of acres.
And, therefore, while Alice Pyncheon lived, she was Maule's slave, in a bondage more
humiliating, a thousand-fold, than that which binds its chain around the body.
Seated by his humble fireside, Maule had but to wave his hand; and, wherever the
proud lady chanced to be,--whether in her chamber, or entertaining her father's
stately guests, or worshipping at church,--
whatever her place or occupation, her spirit passed from beneath her own control,
and bowed itself to Maule.
"Alice, laugh!"--the carpenter, beside his hearth, would say; or perhaps intensely
will it, without a spoken word.
And, even were it prayer-time, or at a funeral, Alice must break into wild
laughter.
"Alice, be sad!"--and, at the instant, down would come her tears, quenching all the
mirth of those around her like sudden rain upon a bonfire.
"Alice, dance."--and dance she would, not in such court-like measures as she had
learned abroad, but some high-paced jig, or hop-skip rigadoon, befitting the brisk
lasses at a rustic merry-making.
It seemed to be Maule's impulse, not to ruin Alice, nor to visit her with any black
or gigantic mischief, which would have crowned her sorrows with the grace of
tragedy, but to wreak a low, ungenerous scorn upon her.
Thus all the dignity of life was lost. She felt herself too much abased, and
longed to change natures with some worm!
One evening, at a bridal party (but not her own; for, so lost from self-control, she
would have deemed it sin to marry), poor Alice was beckoned forth by her unseen
despot, and constrained, in her gossamer
white dress and satin slippers, to hasten along the street to the mean dwelling of a
laboring-man.
There was laughter and good cheer within; for Matthew Maule, that night, was to wed
the laborer's daughter, and had summoned proud Alice Pyncheon to wait upon his
bride.
And so she did; and when the twain were one, Alice awoke out of her enchanted
sleep.
Yet, no longer proud,--humbly, and with a smile all steeped in sadness,--she kissed
Maule's wife, and went her way.
It was an inclement night; the southeast wind drove the mingled snow and rain into
her thinly sheltered ***; her satin slippers were wet through and through, as
she trod the muddy sidewalks.
The next day a cold; soon, a settled cough; anon, a hectic cheek, a wasted form, that
sat beside the harpsichord, and filled the house with music!
Music in which a strain of the heavenly choristers was echoed!
Oh; joy! For Alice had borne her last humiliation!
Oh, greater joy!
For Alice was penitent of her one earthly sin, and proud no more!
The Pyncheons made a great funeral for Alice.
The kith and kin were there, and the whole respectability of the town besides.
But, last in the procession, came Matthew Maule, gnashing his teeth, as if he would
have bitten his own heart in twain,--the darkest and wofullest man that ever walked
behind a corpse!
He meant to humble Alice, not to kill her; but he had taken a woman's delicate soul
into his rude gripe, to play with--and she was dead!