mine, and I was overlooking the service that evening - I say, when the old Marchesa starts up at the card-table, white through her rouge, and tries, âMy sister in Spain is dead! I felt her cold touch on my back!â â and when that sister is dead at the moment- what do you call that?â
âOr when the blood of San Gennaro liquefies at the request of the clergy - as all the world knows that it does regularly once a-year, in my native city,â said the Neapolitan courier after a pause, with a comical look, âwhat do you call that?â
âThat!â cried the German.â Well! I think I know a name for that.â
âMiracle?â said the Neapolitan, with the same sly face.
The German merely smoked and laughed; and they all smoked and laughed.
âBah!â said the German, presently. âI speak of things that really do happen. When I want to see the conjurer, I pay to see a professed one, and have my moneyâs worth. Very strange things do happen without ghosts. Ghosts! Giovanni Baptista, tell your story of the English bride. Thereâs no ghost in that, but something full as strange. Will any man tell me what?â
As there was a silence among them, I glanced around. He whom I took to be Baptista was lighting a fresh cigar. He presently went on to speak. He was a Genoese, as I judged.
âThe story of the English bride?â said he. âBasta! one ought not to call so slight a thing a story. Well, itâs all one. But itâs true. Observe me well, gentlemen, itâs true. That which glitters is not always gold; but what I am going to tell, is true.â
He repeated this more than once.
Â
Ten years ago, I took my credentials to an English gentleman at Longâs Hotel, in Bond Street, London, who was about to travel-it might be for one year, it might be for two. He approved of them; likewise of me. He was pleased to make inquiry. The testimony that he received was favourable. He engaged me by the six months, and my entertainment was generous.
He was young, handsome, very happy. He was enamoured of a fair young English lady, with a sufficient fortune, and they were going to be married. It was the wedding trip, in short, that we were going to take. For three monthsâ rest in the hot weather (it was early summer then) he had hired an old palace on the Riviera, at an easy distance from my city, Genoa, on the road to Nice. Did I know that palace? Yes; I told him I knew it well. It was an old palace, with great gardens. It was a little bare, and it was a little dark and gloomy, being close surrounded by trees; but it was spacious, ancient, grand, and on the sea shore. He said it had been so described to him exactly, and he was well pleased that I knew it. For its being a little bare of furniture, all such places were. For its being a little gloomy, he had hired it principally for the gardens, and he and my mistress would pass the summer weather in their shade.
âSo all goes well, Baptista?â said he.
âIndubitably, signor; very well.â
We had a travelling chariot for our journey, newly built for us, and in all respects complete. All we had was complete; we wanted for nothing. The marriage took place. They were happy. I was happy, seeing all so bright, being so well situated, going to my own city, teaching my language in the rumble to the maid, la bella Carolina, whose heart was gay with laughter: who was young and rosy.
The time flew. But I observed - listen to this, I pray! (and here the courier dropped his voice) - I observed my mistress sometimes brooding in a manner very strange; in a frightened manner; in an unhappy manner; with a cloudy, uncertain alarm upon her. I think that I began to notice this when I was walking up hills by the carriage side, and master had gone on in front. At any rate, I remember that it impressed itself upon my mind one evening in the South of France, when she called to me to call master back; and when
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