unknown; or, on the other hand, a
mysterious,
aerial descent
which should
persuade the nuns that the Devil himself had paid
them a visit. They had
decided upon the latter course in the
secret council held before they left Paris, and subsequently
everything had been done to
insure the success of an expedition
which promised some real
excitement to jaded spirits weary of
Paris and its pleasures.
An
extremely light pirogue, made at Marseilles on a Malayan
model, enabled them to cross the reef, until the rocks rose from
out of the water. Then two cables of iron wire were fastened
several feet apart between one rock and another. These wire
ropes slanted
upwards and
downwards in opposite directions, so
that baskets of iron wire could travel to and fro along them; and
in this manner the rocks were covered with a
system of baskets
and wire-cables, not
unlike the filaments which a certain species
of
spider weaves about a tree. The Chinese, an essentially
imitative people, were the first to take a lesson from the work
of
instinct. Fragile as these bridges were, they were always
ready for use; high waves and the caprices of the sea could not
throw them out of
working order; the ropes hung just sufficiently
slack, so as to present to the breakers that particular curve
discovered by Cachin, the
immortalcreator of the harbour at
Cherbourg. Against this
cunningly devised line the angry surge
is
powerless; the law of that curve was a secret wrested from
Nature by that
faculty of
observation in which nearly all human
genius consists.
M. de Montriveau's
companions were alone on board the
vessel, and
out of sight of every human eye. No one from the deck of a
passing
vessel could have discovered either the brig
hidden among
the reefs, or the men at work among the rocks; they lay below the
ordinary range of the most powerful
telescope. Eleven days were
spent in
preparation, before the Thirteen, with all their
infernal power, could reach the foot of the cliffs. The body of
the rock rose up straight from the sea to a
height of thirty
fathoms. Any attempt to climb the sheer wall of
granite seemed
impossible; a mouse might as well try to creep up the slippery
sides of a plain china vase. Still there was a cleft, a straight
line of
fissure so
fortunately placed that large blocks of wood
could be wedged
firmly into it at a distance of about a foot
apart. Into these blocks the
daring workers drove iron cramps,
specially made for the purpose, with a broad iron
bracket at the
outer end, through which a hole had been drilled. Each
bracketcarried a light deal board which corresponded with a notch made
in a pole that reached to the top of the cliffs, and was
firmlyplanted in the beach at their feet. With
ingenuityworthy of
these men who found nothing impossible, one of their number, a
skilled mathematician, had calculated the angle from which the
steps must start; so that from the middle they rose gradually,
like the sticks of a fan, to the top of the cliff, and descended
in the same fashion to its base. That miraculously light, yet
perfectly firm,
staircase cost them twenty-two days of toil. A
little tinder and the surf of the sea would destroy all trace of
it forever in a single night. A betrayal of the secret was
impossible; and all search for the violators of the
convent was
doomed to failure.
At the top of the rock there was a
platform with sheer
precipiceon all sides. The Thirteen, reconnoitring the ground with their
glasses from the masthead, made certain that though the
ascentwas steep and rough, there would be no difficulty in gaining the
convent garden, where the trees were thick enough for a
hiding-place. After such great efforts they would not risk the
success of their
enterprise, and were compelled to wait till the
moon passed out of her last quarter.
For two nights Montriveau, wrapped in his cloak, lay out on the
rock
platform. The singing at vespers and matins filled him with
unutterable joy. He stood under the wall to hear the music of
the organ, listening
intently for one voice among the rest. But
in spite of the silence, the confused effect of music was all
that reached his ears. In those sweet harmonies defects of
execution are lost; the pure spirit of art comes into direct
communication with the spirit of the
hearer, making no demand on
the attention, no
strain on the power of listening. Intolerable
memories awoke. All the love within him seemed to break into
blossom again at the
breath of that music; he tried to find
auguries of happiness in the air. During the last night he sat
with his eyes fixed upon an ungrated window, for bars were not
needed on the side of the
precipice. A light shone there all
through the hours; and that
instinct of the heart, which is
sometimes true, and as often false, cried within him, "She is
there!"
"She is certainly there! Tomorrow she will be mine," he said
to himself, and joy blended with the slow tinkling of a bell that
began to ring.
Strange unaccountable
workings of the heart! The nun, wasted by
yearning love, worn out with tears and fasting, prayer and
vigils; the woman of nine-and-twenty, who had passed through
heavy trials, was loved more
passionately than the lighthearted
girl, the woman of four-and-twenty, the sylphide, had ever been.
But is there not, for men of
vigorouscharacter, something
attractive in the
sublime expression engraven on women's faces by
the
impetuous stirrings of thought and misfortunes of no ignoble
kind? Is there not a beauty of
suffering which is the most
interesting of all beauty to those men who feel that within them
there is an inexhaustible
wealth of
tenderness and consoling pity
for a creature so
gracious in
weakness, so strong with love? It
is the ordinary nature that is attracted by young, smooth,
pink-and-white beauty, or, in one word, by prettiness. In some
faces love awakens amid the wrinkles carved by sorrow and the
ruin made by
melancholy; Montriveau could not but feel drawn to
these. For cannot a lover, with the voice of a great longing,
call forth a
wholly new creature? a creature athrob with the life
but just begun breaks forth for him alone, from the
outward form
that is fair for him, and faded for all the world besides. Does
he not love two women?--One of them, as others see her, is pale
and wan and sad; but the other, the
unseen love that his heart
knows, is an angel who understands life through feeling, and is
adorned in all her glory only for love's high festivals.
The General left his post before
sunrise, but not before he had
heard voices singing together, sweet voices full of
tendernesssounding
faintly from the cell. When he came down to the foot of
the cliffs where his friends were
waiting, he told them that
never in his life had he felt such enthralling bliss, and in the
few words there was that
unmistakablethrill of repressed strong
feeling, that
magnificentutterance which all men respect.
That night eleven of his
devoted comrades made the
ascent in the
darkness. Each man carried a poniard, a
provision of chocolate,
and a set of house-breaking tools. They climbed the outer walls
with scaling-ladders, and crossed the
cemetery of the
convent.
Montriveau recognised the long, vaulted
gallery through which he
went to the parlour, and remembered the windows of the room. His
plans were made and adopted in a moment. They would effect an
entrance through one of the windows in the Carmelite's half of
the parlour, find their way along the
corridors, ascertain
whether the sister's names were written on the doors, find Sister
Theresa's cell, surprise her as she slept, and carry her off,
bound and gagged. The programme presented no difficulties to men