a haunt of pelicans, the
corpse of a child. Some locks of bright
hair still adhering to the skull, a string of red beads, a white
muslin dress, a
handkerchief broidered with the initials
"A.L.B.,"--were secured as clews; and the little body was
interred where it had been found.
And, several days before, Captain Hotard, of the relief-boat
Estelle Brousseaux, had found, drifting in the open Gulf
(latitude 26 degrees 43 minutes;
longitude 88 degrees 17
minutes),--the
corpse of a fair-haired woman, clinging to a
table. The body was disfigured beyond
recognition: even the
slender bones of the hands had been stripped by the nibs of the
sea-birds-except one finger, the third of the left, which seemed
to have been protected by a ring of gold, as by a charm. Graven
within the plain yellow circlet was a date,--"JUILLET--1851" ;
and the names,--"ADELE + JULIEN,"--separated by a cross. The
Estelle carried coffins that day: most of them were already
full; but there was one for Adele.
Who was she?--who was her Julien? ... When the Estelle and many
other vessels had discharged their
ghastly cargoes;--when the
bereaved of the land had assembled as
hastily as they might for
the du y of identification;--when memories were strained almost
to
madness in
research of names, dates, incidents--for the
evocation of dead words, resurrection of vanished days,
recollection of dear promises,--then, in the
confusion, it was
believed and declared that the little
corpse found on the pelican
island was the daughter of the wearer of the
wedding ring: Adele
La Brierre, nee Florane, wife of Dr. Julien La Brierre, of New
Orleans, who was numbered among the missing.
And they brought dead Adele back,--up
shadowy river windings,
over linked
brightnesses of lake and lakelet, through many a
green glimmering bayou,--to the Creole city, and laid her to rest
somewhere in the old Saint-Louis Cemetery. And upon the tablet
recording her name were also graven the words--
.....................
Aussi a la memoire de
son mari;
JULIEN RAYMOND LA BRIERRE,
ne a la paroisse St. Landry,
le 29 Mai; MDCCCXXVIII;
et de leur fille,
EULALIE,
agee de 4 as et 5 mois,--
Qui tous perirent
dans la grande tempete qui
balaya L'Ile Derniere, le
10 Aout, MDCCCLVI
..... + .....
Priez pour eux!
VII.
Yet six months afterward the face of Julien La Brierre was seen
again upon the streets of New Orleans. Men started at the sight
of him, as at a spectre
standing in the sun. And nevertheless
the
apparition cast a shadow. People paused, approached, half
extended a hand through old habit, suddenly checked themselves
and passed on,--wondering they should have forgotten, asking
themselves why they had so nearly made an
absurd mistake.
It was a February day,--one of those
crystalline days of our
snowless Southern winter, when the air is clear and cool, and
outlines
sharpen in the light as if viewed through the focus of a
diamond glass;--and in that
brightness Julien La Brierre perused
his own brief
epitaph, and gazed upon the sculptured name of
drowned Adele. Only half a year had passed since she was laid
away in the high wall of tombs,--in that strange colonial
columbarium where the dead slept in rows, behind squared marbles
lettered in black or
bronze. Yet her resting-place,--in the
highest range,--already seemed old. Under our Southern sun, the
vegetation of cemeteries seems to spring into being
spontaneously--to leap all suddenly into
luxuriant life!
Microscopic mossy growths had begun to mottle the slab that
closed her in;--over its face some
singular creeper was crawling,
planting tiny reptile-feet into the chiselled letters of the
inscription; and from the moist soil below speckled euphorbias
were growing up to her,--and morning glories,--and beautiful
green tangled things of which he did not know the name.
And the sight of the pretty lizards, puffing their
crimsonpouches in the sun, or undulating athwart
epitaphs, and shifting
their color when approached, from
emerald to ashen-gray;--the
caravans of the ants, journeying to and from tiny chinks in the
masonry;--the bees
gathering honey from the
crimson blossoms of
the crete-de-coq, whose radicles sought sustenance, perhaps from
human dust, in the decay of generations:--all that rich life of
graves summoned up fancies of Resurrection, Nature's
resurrection-work--wondrous transformations of flesh, marvellous
bans
migration of souls! ... From some forgotten
crevice of that
tomb roof, which alone intervened between her and the vast light,
a
sturdy weed was growing. He knew that plant, as it quivered
against the blue,--the chou-gras, as Creole children call it:
its dark berries form the mockingbird's favorite food ... Might
not its roots, exploring darkness, have found some unfamiliar
nutriment within?--might it not be that something of the dead
heart had risen to
purple and
emerald life--in the sap of
translucent leaves, in the wine of the
savage berries,--to blend
with the blood of the Wizard Singer,--to lend a strange sweetness
to the
melody of his wooing? ...
... Seldom, indeed, does it happen that a man in the prime of
youth, in the possession of
wealth, habituated to comforts and
the elegances of life, discovers in one brief week how minute his
true relation to the human aggregate,---how
insignificant his
part as one living atom of the social
organism. Seldom, at the
age of twenty-eight, has one been made able to comprehend,
through experience alone, that in the vast and
complex Stream of
Being he counts for less than a drop; and that, even as the blood
loses and replaces its corpuscles, without a variance in the
volume and vigor of its current, so are individual existences
eliminated and replaced in the pulsing of a people's life, with
never a pause in its
mighty murmur. But all this, and much more,
Julien had
learned in seven
merciless days--seven
successive and
terrible shocks of experience. The
enormous world had not missed
him; and his place
therein was not void--society had simply
forgotten him. So long as he had moved among them, all he knew
for friends had performed their petty altruistic roles,--had
discharged their small human obligations,--had kept turned toward
him the least
selfish side of their natures,--had made with him a
tolerably equitable exchange of ideas and of favors; and after
his
disappearance from their midst, they had duly mourned for his
loss--to themselves! They had played out the final act in the
unimportant drama of his life: it was really asking too much to
demand a
repetition ... Impossible to
deceive himself as to the
feeling his unanticipated return had aroused:--feigned pity where
he had looked for
sympatheticwelcome;
dismay where he had
expected surprised delight; and, oftener, airs of
resignation, or
disappointment ill disguised,--always insincerity, politely
masked or
coldly bare. He had come back to find strangers in his
home, relatives at law
concerning his
estate, and himself
regarded as an
intruder among the living,--an
unlucky guest, a
revenant ... How hollow and
selfish a world it seemed! And yet
there was love in it; he had been loved in it, un
selfishly,
passionately, with the love of father and of mother, of wife and
child ... All buried!--all lost forever! ... Oh! would to God the
story of that stone were not a lie!--would to kind God he also
were dead! ...
Evening shadowed: the
violet deepened and prickled itself with