Delphi Complete Works of George Washington Cable Illustrated
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About this ebook
George Washington Cable was an American author and reformer, noted for his stories dealing with Creole life in his native New Orleans. His early novels sought to recapture the picturesque times of the old French-Spanish city, while employing a realism that was new to Southern fiction. His works are characterised by freshness and charm, with a force of moral conviction. Although Cable was the son of slaveholders and fought in the Confederate cavalry, he saw slavery and attempts to deny freedmen full public rights as moral wrongs. He produced powerful essays and lectures, urging the cause of black rights in the face of violent abuse in the Southern press. Now regarded as the most important Southern writer of the late nineteenth century, Cable and his work would pave the way for the achievements of William Faulkner. For the first time in publishing history, this eBook presents Cable’s complete works, with numerous illustrations, rare texts, informative introductions and the usual Delphi bonus material. (Version 1)
* Beautifully illustrated with images relating to Cable’s life and works
* Concise introductions to the major works
* All 11 novels, with individual contents tables
* Features rare books appearing for the first time in digital publishing
* Images of how the books were first published, giving your eReader a taste of the original texts
* Excellent formatting of the texts
* Famous works are illustrated with their original artwork
* Rare short fiction available in no other collection
* Cable’s complete non-fiction, including the seminal essay ‘The Silent South’, first time in digital print
* Features a bonus biography
* Ordering of texts into chronological order and genres
CONTENTS:
The Novels
The Grandissimes (1880)
Madame Delphine (1881)
Dr. Sevier (1882)
Bonaventure (1888)
John March, Southerner (1894)
The Cavalier (1901)
Bylow Hill (1902)
Kincaid’s Battery (1908)
Gideon’s Band (1914)
The Flower of the Chapdelaines (1917)
Lovers of Louisiana (1918)
The Shorter Fiction
Old Creole Days (1879)
Strange True Stories of Louisiana (1890)
Strong Hearts (1899)
Père Raphaël (1909)
The Non-Fiction
The Creoles of Louisiana (1884)
The Silent South (1885)
New Orleans (1889)
The Negro Question (1890)
The Busy Man’s Bible and How to Study and Teach It (1891)
A Memory of Roswell Smith (1892)
William Cullen Bryant (1911)
The Amateur Garden (1914)
The Dance in Place Congo (1917)
The Poem
A New Arrival (1882)
The Biography
George W. Cable (1901) by E. F. Harkins
George Washington Cable
George Washington Cable (1844–1925) was an American writer born in New Orleans, Louisiana. Cable’s family was initially wealthy due to their position as slaveholders. Yet, after his father’s untimely death they lost most of their fortune. The young Cable enrolled in the military and fought as a Confederate soldier during the American Civil War. It proved to be a lifechanging experience that would influence his future endeavors. In 1870, he became a journalist and spent years honing his skills before publishing his first novel, The Grandissimes: A Story of Creole Life. Cable’s work is best known for its exploration of Southern politics, culture and race relations.
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Delphi Complete Works of George Washington Cable Illustrated - George Washington Cable
The Complete Works of
GEORGE WASHINGTON CABLE
(1844-1925)
img1.jpgContents
The Novels
The Grandissimes (1880)
Madame Delphine (1881)
Dr. Sevier (1882)
Bonaventure (1888)
John March, Southerner (1894)
The Cavalier (1901)
Bylow Hill (1902)
Kincaid’s Battery (1908)
Gideon’s Band (1914)
The Flower of the Chapdelaines (1917)
Lovers of Louisiana (1918)
The Shorter Fiction
Old Creole Days (1879)
Strange True Stories of Louisiana (1890)
Strong Hearts (1899)
Père Raphaël (1909)
The Non-Fiction
The Creoles of Louisiana (1884)
The Silent South (1885)
New Orleans (1889)
The Negro Question (1890)
The Busy Man’s Bible and How to Study and Teach It (1891)
A Memory of Roswell Smith (1892)
William Cullen Bryant (1911)
The Amateur Garden (1914)
The Dance in Place Congo (1917)
The Poem
A New Arrival (1882)
The Biography
George W. Cable (1901) by E. F. Harkins
The Delphi Classics Catalogue
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Version 1
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img10.pngThe Complete Works of
GEORGE WASHINGTON CABLE
img11.jpgBy Delphi Classics, 2024
COPYRIGHT
Complete Works of George Washington Cable
img12.jpgFirst published in the United Kingdom in 2024 by Delphi Classics.
© Delphi Classics, 2024.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, without the prior permission in writing of the publisher, nor be otherwise circulated in any form other than that in which it is published.
ISBN: 978 1 80170 178 5
Delphi Classics
is an imprint of
Delphi Publishing Ltd
Hastings, East Sussex
United Kingdom
Contact: [email protected]
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img15.pngThe Novels
img16.jpgMississippi River steamboats at New Orleans, 1853 — George Washington Cable was born in New Orleans, Louisiana, in 1844.
img17.jpgPlan of the city and suburbs of New Orleans, 1815
The Grandissimes (1880)
img18.jpgA STORY OF CREOLE LIFE
George Washington Cable was born in 1844. His parents were wealthy slaveholders, members of the Presbyterian Church and of New Orleans society, whose families had moved there after the Louisiana Purchase. First educated in private schools, Cable had to work hard after his father’s early death. The family had lost investments and struggled financially. Despite this turn of events, Cable remained a lifelong learner, teaching himself French and cultivating his fascination with the intricacies of multicultural Louisiana life. Supporting the South during the American Civil War, he served in the Confederate States Army, enlisting in the 4th Mississippi Cavalry Regiment in October 1863 at the age of nineteen. Cable’s experiences in the conflict altered his ideas about Southern and Louisianan society. He began writing during a two-year bout with malaria. By 1870 he was working as a journalist, writing for the New Orleans Picayune. He was employed by the newspaper until 1879, by which time he had become an established writer.
His first novel, The Grandissimes: A Story of Creole Life, was published as a book in 1880 by Charles Scribner’s Sons, after appearing as a serial in Scribner’s. The historical romance depicts race and class relations in New Orleans at the start of the nineteenth century, immediately following the Louisiana Purchase. The narrative examines the lives and loves of the extended Grandissime family, which includes members from different races and classes of Creole society. It juxtaposes a romanticised version of French Creole culture with the atrocities committed under the European-American system of slavery in America.
The plot opens with Honoré Grandissime, the head of the French Creole family, taking in Joseph Frowenfeld, whose family has died of yellow fever. He describes the New Orleans caste system, comprising three racial groups, to Frowenfeld, who is an abolitionist. Frowenfeld and Grandissime’s uncle Agricola Fusilier, are soon in open disagreement. Fusilier seeks to preserve the Grandissime way of life, which means continuing slavery, while Frowenfeld’s desire to end the practice would destroy the labour base of the plantations, the revenues of which support city life.
The novel is noted for its descriptions of local dialects and the practice of plaçage, a recognised extralegal system in which ethnic European men entered into the equivalent of common-law marriages with African and mixed-race women (primarily of African and European descent). Generally, the young woman’s mother would negotiate a dowry, freedom for the woman and her children if she were a slave, and possibly education for future offspring. Typically, young men would have a plaçage arrangement before getting formally married to a wife of European descent; others kept their mixed-race mistresses after marriage. The mixed-race children of such arrangements became the Creoles of colour, free people of colour that spoke a French-based Creole language, practiced Catholicism and established a social class between those of the ethnic Europeans and the predominantly-African slaves. Many became artisans and property owners.
img19.jpgEngraving of Cable as a young man, c. 1880
img20.pngThe first edition
CONTENTS
CHAPTER I. MASKED BATTERIES
CHAPTER II. THE FATE OF THE IMMIGRANT
CHAPTER III. AND WHO IS MY NEIGHBOR?
CHAPTER IV. FAMILY TREES
CHAPTER V. A MAIDEN WHO WILL NOT MARRY
CHAPTER VI. LOST OPPORTUNITIES
CHAPTER VII. WAS IT HONORÉ GRANDISSIME?
CHAPTER VIII. SIGNED — HONORÉ GRANDISSIME
CHAPTER IX. ILLUSTRATING THE TRACTIVE POWER OF BASIL
CHAPTER X. OO DAD IS, ‘SIEUR FROWENFEL’?
CHAPTER XI. SUDDEN FLASHES OF LIGHT
CHAPTER XII. THE PHILOSOPHE
CHAPTER XIII. A CALL FROM THE RENT-SPECTRE
CHAPTER XIV. BEFORE SUNSET
CHAPTER XV. ROLLED IN THE DUST
CHAPTER XVI. STARLIGHT IN THE RUE CHARTRES
CHAPTER XVII. THAT NIGHT
CHAPTER XVIII. NEW LIGHT UPON DARK PLACES
CHAPTER XIX. ART AND COMMERCE
CHAPTER XX. A VERY NATURAL MISTAKE
CHAPTER XXI. DOCTOR KEENE RECOVERS HIS BULLET
CHAPTER XXII. WARS WITHIN THE BREAST
CHAPTER XXIII. FROWENFELD KEEPS HIS APPOINTMENT
CHAPTER XXIV. FROWENFELD MAKES AN ARGUMENT
CHAPTER XXV. AURORA AS A HISTORIAN
CHAPTER XXVI. A RIDE AND A RESCUE
CHAPTER XXVII. THE FÊTE DE GRANDPÈRE
CHAPTER XXVIII. THE STORY OF BRAS-COUPÉ
CHAPTER XXIX. THE STORY OF BRAS-COUPÉ, CONTINUED
CHAPTER XXX. PARALYSIS
CHAPTER XXXI. ANOTHER WOUND IN A NEW PLACE
CHAPTER XXXII. INTERRUPTED PRELIMINARIES
CHAPTER XXXIII. UNKINDEST CUT OF ALL
CHAPTER XXXIV. CLOTILDE AS A SURGEON
CHAPTER XXXV. FO’ WAD YOU CRYNE?
CHAPTER XXXVI. AURORA’S LAST PICAYUNE
CHAPTER XXXVII. HONORÉ MAKES SOME CONFESSIONS
CHAPTER XXXVIII. TESTS OF FRIENDSHIP
CHAPTER XXXIX. LOUISIANA STATES HER WANTS
CHAPTER XL. FROWENFELD FINDS SYLVESTRE
CHAPTER XLI. TO COME TO THE POINT
CHAPTER XLII. AN INHERITANCE OF WRONG
CHAPTER XLIII. THE EAGLE VISITS THE DOVES IN THEIR NEST
CHAPTER XLIV. BAD FOR CHARLIE KEENE
CHAPTER XLV. MORE REPARATION
CHAPTER XLVI. THE PIQUE-EN-TERRE LOSES ONE OF HER CREW
CHAPTER XLVII. THE NEWS
CHAPTER XLVIII. AN INDIGNANT FAMILY AND A SMASHED SHOP
CHAPTER XLIX. OVER THE NEW STORE
CHAPTER L. A PROPOSAL OF MARRIAGE
CHAPTER LI. BUSINESS CHANGES
CHAPTER LII. LOVE LIES A-BLEEDING
CHAPTER LIII. FROWENFELD AT THE GRANDISSIME MANSION
CHAPTER LIV. CAULDRON BUBBLE
CHAPTER LV. CAUGHT
CHAPTER LVI. BLOOD FOR A BLOW
CHAPTER LVII. VOUDOU CURED
CHAPTER LVIII. DYING WORDS
CHAPTER LIX. WHERE SOME CREOLE MONEY GOES
CHAPTER LX. ALL RIGHT
CHAPTER LXI. NO!
The first edition’s title page
img22.jpgThe original frontispiece: They paused a little within the obscurity of the corridor, and just to reassure themselves that everything was ‘all right’
.
CHAPTER I. MASKED BATTERIES
img23.jpgIT WAS IN the Théatre St. Philippe (they had laid a temporary floor over the parquette seats) in the city we now call New Orleans, in the month of September, and in the year 1803. Under the twinkle of numberless candles, and in a perfumed air thrilled with the wailing ecstasy of violins, the little Creole capital’s proudest and best were offering up the first cool night of the languidly departing summer to the divine Terpsichore. For summer there, bear in mind, is a loitering gossip, that only begins to talk of leaving when September rises to go. It was like hustling her out, it is true, to give a select bal masqué at such a very early — such an amusingly early date; but it was fitting that something should be done for the sick and the destitute; and why not this? Everybody knows the Lord loveth a cheerful giver.
And so, to repeat, it was in the Théatre St. Philippe (the oldest, the first one), and, as may have been noticed, in the year in which the First Consul of France gave away Louisiana. Some might call it sold.
Old Agricola Fusilier in the rumbling pomp of his natural voice — for he had an hour ago forgotten that he was in mask and domino — called it gave away.
Not that he believed it had been done; for, look you, how could it be? The pretended treaty contained, for instance, no provision relative to the great family of Brahmin Mandarin Fusilier de Grandissime. It was evidently spurious.
Being bumped against, he moved a step or two aside, and was going on to denounce further the detestable rumor, when a masker — one of four who had just finished the contra-dance and were moving away in the column of promenaders — brought him smartly around with the salutation:
"Comment to yé, Citoyen Agricola!"
H-you young kitten!
said the old man in a growling voice, and with the teased, half laugh of aged vanity as he bent a baffled scrutiny at the back-turned face of an ideal Indian Queen. It was not merely the tutoiement that struck him as saucy, but the further familiarity of using the slave dialect. His French was unprovincial.
H-the cool rascal!
he added laughingly, and, only half to himself; get into the garb of your true sex, sir, h-and I will guess who you are!
But the Queen, in the same feigned voice as before, retorted:
"Ah! mo piti fils, to pas connais to zancestres? Don’t you know your ancestors, my little son!"
H-the g-hods preserve us!
said Agricola, with a pompous laugh muffled under his mask, the queen of the Tchoupitoulas I proudly acknowledge, and my great-grandfather, Epaminondas Fusilier, lieutenant of dragoons under Bienville; but,
— he laid his hand upon his heart, and bowed to the other two figures, whose smaller stature betrayed the gentler sex— "pardon me, ladies, neither Monks nor Filles à la Cassette grow on our family tree."
The four maskers at once turned their glance upon the old man in the domino; but if any retort was intended it gave way as the violins burst into an agony of laughter. The floor was immediately filled with waltzers and the four figures disappeared.
I wonder,
murmured Agricola to himself, if that Dragoon can possibly be Honoré Grandissime.
Wherever those four maskers went there were cries of delight: Ho, ho, ho! see there! here! there! a group of first colonists! One of Iberville’s Dragoons! don’t you remember great-great grandfather Fusilier’s portrait — the gilded casque and heron plumes? And that one behind in the fawn-skin leggings and shirt of birds’ skins is an Indian Queen. As sure as sure can be, they are intended for Epaminondas and his wife, Lufki-Humma!
All, of course, in Louisiana French.
But why, then, does he not walk with her?
Why, because, Simplicity, both of them are men, while the little Monk on his arm is a lady, as you can see, and so is the masque that has the arm of the Indian Queen; look at their little hands.
In another part of the room the four were greeted with, "Ha, ha, ha! well, that is magnificent! But see that Huguenotte Girl on the Indian Queen’s arm! Isn’t that fine! Ha, ha! she carries a little trunk. She is a Fille à la Cassette!"
Two partners in a cotillion were speaking in an undertone, behind a fan.
And you think you know who it is?
asked one.
Know?
replied the other. Do I know I have a head on my shoulders? If that Dragoon is not our cousin Honoré Grandissime — well—
Honoré in mask? he is too sober-sided to do such a thing.
I tell you it is he! Listen. Yesterday I heard Doctor Charlie Keene begging him to go, and telling him there were two ladies, strangers, newly arrived in the city, who would be there, and whom he wished him to meet. Depend upon it the Dragoon is Honoré, Lufki-Humma is Charlie Keene, and the Monk and the Huguenotte are those two ladies.
But all this is an outside view; let us draw nearer and see what chance may discover to us behind those four masks.
An hour has passed by. The dance goes on; hearts are beating, wit is flashing, eyes encounter eyes with the leveled lances of their beams, merriment and joy and sudden bright surprises thrill the breast, voices are throwing off disguise, and beauty’s coy ear is bending with a venturesome docility; here love is baffled, there deceived, yonder takes prisoners and here surrenders. The very air seems to breathe, to sigh, to laugh, while the musicians, with disheveled locks, streaming brows and furious bows, strike, draw, drive, scatter from the anguished violins a never-ending rout of screaming harmonies. But the Monk and the Huguenotte are not on the floor. They are sitting where they have been left by their two companions, in one of the boxes of the theater, looking out upon the unwearied whirl and flash of gauze and light and color.
"Oh, chérie, chérie! murmured the little lady in the Monk’s disguise to her quieter companion, and speaking in the soft dialect of old Louisiana,
now you get a good idea of heaven!"
The Fille à la Cassette replied with a sudden turn of her masked face and a murmur of surprise and protest against this impiety. A low, merry laugh came out of the Monk’s cowl, and the Huguenotte let her form sink a little in her chair with a gentle sigh.
Ah, for shame, tired!
softly laughed the other; then suddenly, with her eyes fixed across the room, she seized her companion’s hand and pressed it tightly. Do you not see it?
she whispered eagerly, "just by the door — the casque with the heron feathers. Ah, Clotilde, I cannot believe he is one of those Grandissimes!"
Well,
replied the Huguenotte, Doctor Keene says he is not.
Doctor Charlie Keene, speaking from under the disguise of the Indian Queen, had indeed so said; but the Recording Angel, whom we understand to be particular about those things, had immediately made a memorandum of it to the debit of Doctor Keene’s account.
If I had believed that it was he,
continued the whisperer, I would have turned about and left him in the midst of the contra-dance!
Behind them sat unmasked a well-aged pair, "bredouillé," as they used to say of the wall-flowers, with that look of blissful repose which marks the married and established Creole. The lady in monk’s attire turned about in her chair and leaned back to laugh with these. The passing maskers looked that way, with a certain instinct that there was beauty under those two costumes. As they did so, they saw the Fille à la Cassette join in this over-shoulder conversation. A moment later, they saw the old gentleman protector and the Fille à la Cassette rising to the dance. And when presently the distant passers took a final backward glance, that same Lieutenant of Dragoons had returned and he and the little Monk were once more upon the floor, waiting for the music.
But your late companion?
said the voice in the cowl.
My Indian Queen?
asked the Creole Epaminondas.
Say, rather, your Medicine-Man,
archly replied the Monk.
In these times,
responded the Cavalier, a medicine-man cannot dance long without professional interruption, even when he dances for a charitable object. He has been called to two relapsed patients.
The music struck up; the speaker addressed himself to the dance; but the lady did not respond.
Do dragoons ever moralize?
she asked.
They do more,
replied her partner; sometimes, when beauty’s enjoyment of the ball is drawing toward its twilight, they catch its pleasant melancholy, and confess; will the good father sit in the confessional?
The pair turned slowly about and moved toward the box from which they had come, the lady remaining silent; but just as they were entering she half withdrew her arm from his, and, confronting him with a rich sparkle of the eyes within the immobile mask of the monk, said:
Why should the conscience of one poor little monk carry all the frivolity of this ball? I have a right to dance, if I wish. I give you my word, Monsieur Dragoon, I dance only for the benefit of the sick and the destitute. It is you men — you dragoons and others — who will not help them without a compensation in this sort of nonsense. Why should we shrive you when you ought to burn?
Then lead us to the altar,
said the Dragoon.
Pardon, sir,
she retorted, her words entangled with a musical, open-hearted laugh, I am not going in that direction.
She cast her glance around the ball-room. As you say, it is the twilight of the ball; I am looking for the evening star, — that is, my little Huguenotte.
Then you are well mated.
How?
For you are Aurora.
The lady gave a displeased start.
Sir!
Pardon,
said the Cavalier, if by accident I have hit upon your real name—
She laughed again — a laugh which was as exultantly joyous as it was high-bred.
Ah, my name? Oh no, indeed!
(More work for the Recording Angel.)
She turned to her protectress.
Madame, I know you think we should be going home.
The senior lady replied in amiable speech, but with sleepy eyes, and the Monk began to lift and unfold a wrapping. As the Cavalier’ drew it into his own possession, and, agreeably to his gesture, the Monk and he sat down side by side, he said, in a low tone:
One more laugh before we part.
A monk cannot laugh for nothing.
I will pay for it.
But with nothing to laugh at?
The thought of laughing at nothing made her laugh a little on the spot.
We will make something to laugh at,
said the Cavalier; we will unmask to each other, and when we find each other first cousins, the laugh will come of itself.
Ah! we will unmask? — no! I have no cousins. I am certain we are strangers.
Then we will laugh to think that I paid for the disappointment.
Much more of this childlike badinage followed, and by and by they came around again to the same last statement. Another little laugh escaped from the cowl.
You will pay? Let us see; how much will you give to the sick and destitute?
To see who it is I am laughing with, I will give whatever you ask.
Two hundred and fifty dollars, cash, into the hands of the managers!
A bargain!
The Monk laughed, and her chaperon opened her eyes and smiled apologetically. The Cavalier laughed, too, and said:
Good! That was the laugh; now the unmasking.
And you positively will give the money to the managers not later than to-morrow evening?
She looked upon an unmasked, noble countenance, lifted her own mask a little, and then a little more; and then shut it quickly
.
Not later. It shall be done without fail.
Well, wait till I put on my wrappings; I must be ready to run.
This delightful nonsense was interrupted by the return of the Fille à la Cassette and her aged, but sprightly, escort, from a circuit of the floor. Madame again opened her eyes, and the four prepared to depart. The Dragoon helped the Monk to fortify herself against the outer air. She was ready before the others. There was a pause, a low laugh, a whispered Now!
She looked upon an unmasked, noble countenance, lifted her own mask a little, and then a little more; and then shut it quickly down again upon a face whose beauty was more than even those fascinating graces had promised which Honoré Grandissime had fitly named the Morning; but it was a face he had never seen before.
Hush!
she said, the enemies of religion are watching us; the Huguenotte saw me. Adieu
— and they were gone.
M. Honoré Grandissime turned on his heel and very soon left the ball.
Now, sir,
thought he to himself, we’ll return to our senses.
Now I’ll put my feathers on again,
says the plucked bird.
CHAPTER II. THE FATE OF THE IMMIGRANT
img25.jpgIT WAS JUST a fortnight after the ball, that one Joseph Frowenfeld opened his eyes upon Louisiana. He was an American by birth, rearing and sentiment, yet German enough through his parents, and the only son in a family consisting of father, mother, self, and two sisters, new-blown flowers of womanhood. It was an October dawn, when, long wearied of the ocean, and with bright anticipations of verdure, and fragrance, and tropical gorgeousness, this simple-hearted family awoke to find the bark that had borne them from their far northern home already entering upon the ascent of the Mississippi.
We may easily imagine the grave group, as they came up one by one from below, that morning of first disappointment, and stood (with a whirligig of jubilant mosquitoes spinning about each head) looking out across the waste, seeing the sky and the marsh meet in the east, the north, and the west, and receiving with patient silence the father’s suggestion that the hills would, no doubt, rise into view after a while.
My children, we may turn this disappointment into a lesson; if the good people of this country could speak to us now, they might well ask us not to judge them or their land upon one or two hasty glances, or by the experiences of a few short days or weeks.
But no hills rose. However, by and by they found solace in the appearance of distant forest, and in the afternoon they entered a land — but such a land! A land hung in mourning, darkened by gigantic cypresses, submerged; a land of reptiles, silence, shadow, decay.
The captain told father, when we went to engage passage, that New Orleans was on high land,
said the younger daughter, with a tremor in the voice, and ignoring the remonstrative touch of her sister.
On high land?
said the captain, turning from the pilot; well, so it is — higher than the swamp, but not higher than the river,
and he checked a broadening smile.
But the Frowenfelds were not a family to complain. It was characteristic of them to recognize the bright as well as the solemn virtues, and to keep each other reminded of the duty of cheerfulness. A smile, starting from the quiet elder sister, went around the group, directed against the abstracted and somewhat rueful countenance of Joseph, whereat he turned with a better face and said that what the Creator had pronounced very good they could hardly feel free to condemn. The old father was still more stout of heart.
These mosquitoes, children, are thought by some to keep the air pure,
he said.
Better keep out of it after sunset,
put in the captain.
After that day and night, the prospect grew less repellent. A gradually matured conviction that New Orleans would not be found standing on stilts in the quagmire enabled the eye to become educated to a better appreciation of the solemn landscape. Nor was the landscape always solemn. There were long openings, now and then, to right and left, of emerald-green savannah, with the dazzling blue of the Gulf far beyond, waving a thousand white-handed good-byes as the funereal swamps slowly shut out again the horizon. How sweet the soft breezes off the moist prairies! How weird, how very near, the crimson and green and black and yellow sunsets! How dream-like the land and the great, whispering river! The profound stillness and breath reminded the old German, so he said, of that early time when the evenings and mornings were the first days of the half-built world. The barking of a dog in Fort Plaquemines seemed to come before its turn in the panorama of creation — before the earth was ready for the dog’s master.
But he was assured that to live in those swamps was not entirely impossible to man— if one may call a negro a man.
Runaway slaves were not so rare in them as one — a lost hunter, for example — might wish. His informant was a new passenger, taken aboard at the fort. He spoke English.
Yes, sir! Didn’ I had to run from Bras-Coupé in de haidge of de swamp be’ine de ‘abitation of my cousin Honoré, one time? You can hask ‘oo you like!
(A Creole always provides against incredulity.) At this point he digressed a moment: You know my cousin, Honoré Grandissime, w’at give two hund’ fifty dolla’ to de ‘ospill laz mont’? An’ juz because my cousin Honoré give it, somebody helse give de semm. Fo’ w’y don’t he give his nemm?
The reason (which this person did not know) was that the second donor was the first one over again, resolved that the little unknown Monk should not know whom she had baffled.
Who was Bras-Coupé?
the good German asked in French.
The stranger sat upon the capstan, and, in the shadow of the cypress forest, where the vessel lay moored for a change of wind, told in a patois difficult, but not impossible, to understand, the story of a man who chose rather to be hunted like a wild beast among those awful labyrinths, than to be yoked and beaten like a tame one. Joseph, drawing near as the story was coming to a close, overheard the following English:
Friend, if you dislike heated discussion, do not tell that to my son.
The nights were strangely beautiful. The immigrants almost consumed them on deck, the mother and daughters attending in silent delight while the father and son, facing south, rejoiced in learned recognition of stars and constellations hitherto known to them only on globes and charts.
Yes, my dear son,
said the father, in a moment of ecstatic admiration, wherever man may go, around this globe — however uninviting his lateral surroundings may be, the heavens are ever over his head, and I am glad to find the stars your favorite objects of study.
So passed the time as the vessel, hour by hour, now slowly pushed by the wind against the turbid current, now warping along the fragrant precincts of orange or magnolia groves or fields of sugar-cane, or moored by night in the deep shade of mighty willow-jungles, patiently crept toward the end of their pilgrimage; and in the length of time which would at present be consumed in making the whole journey from their Northern home to their Southern goal, accomplished the distance of ninety-eight miles, and found themselves before the little, hybrid city of Nouvelle Orléans.
There was the cathedral, and standing beside it, like Sancho beside Don Quixote, the squat hall of the Cabildo with the calabozo in the rear. There were the forts, the military bakery, the hospitals, the plaza, the Almonaster stores, and the busy rue Toulouse; and, for the rest of the town, a pleasant confusion of green tree-tops, red and gray roofs, and glimpses of white or yellow wall, spreading back a few hundred yards behind the cathedral, and tapering into a single rank of gardened and belvedered villas, that studded either horn of the river’s crescent with a style of home than which there is probably nothing in the world more maternally homelike.
And now,
said the captain,
bidding the immigrants good-by, keep out of the sun and stay in after dark; you’re not ‘acclimated,’ as they call it, you know, and the city is full of the fever.
Such were the Frowenfelds. Out of such a mold and into such a place came the young Américain, whom even Agricola Fusilier, as we shall see, by and by thought worthy to be made an exception of, and honored with his recognition.
The family rented a two-story brick house in the rue Bienville, No. 17, it seems. The third day after, at daybreak, Joseph called his father to his bedside to say that he had had a chill, and was suffering such pains in his head and back that he would like to lie quiet until they passed off. The gentle father replied that it was undoubtedly best to do so, and preserved an outward calm. He looked at his son’s eyes; their pupils were contracted to tiny beads. He felt his pulse and his brow; there was no room for doubt; it was the dreaded scourge — the fever. We say, sometimes, of hearts that they sink like lead; it does not express the agony.
On the second day, while the unsated fever was running through every vein and artery, like soldiery through the streets of a burning city, and far down in the caverns of the body the poison was ransacking every palpitating corner, the poor immigrant fell into a moment’s sleep. But what of that? The enemy that moment had mounted to the brain. And then there happened to Joseph an experience rare to the sufferer by this disease, but not entirely unknown, — a delirium of mingled pleasures and distresses. He seemed to awake somewhere between heaven and earth, reclining in a gorgeous barge, which was draped in curtains of interwoven silver and silk, cushioned with rich stuffs of every beautiful dye, and perfumed ad nauseam with orange-leaf tea. The crew was a single old negress, whose head was wound about with a blue Madras handkerchief, and who stood at the prow, and by a singular rotary motion, rowed the barge with a teaspoon. He could not get his head out of the hot sun; and the barge went continually round and round with a heavy, throbbing motion, in the regular beat of which certain spirits of the air — one of whom appeared to be a beautiful girl and another a small, red-haired man, — confronted each other with the continual call and response:
Keep the bedclothes on him and the room shut tight, keep the bedclothes on him and the room shut tight,
— An’ don’ give ’im some watta, an’ don’ give ’im some watta.
During what lapse of time — whether moments or days — this lasted, Joseph could not then know; but at last these things faded away, and there came to him a positive knowledge that he was on a sick-bed, where unless something could be done for him he should be dead in an hour. Then a spoon touched his lips, and a taste of brandy and water went all through him; and when he fell into sweet slumber and awoke, and found the teaspoon ready at his lips again, he had to lift a little the two hands lying before him on the coverlet to know that they were his — they were so wasted and yellow. He turned his eyes, and through the white gauze of the mosquito-bar saw, for an instant, a strange and beautiful young face; but the lids fell over his eyes, and when he raised them again the blue-turbaned black nurse was tucking the covering about his feet.
Sister!
No answer.
Where is my mother?
The negress shook her head.
He was too weak to speak again, but asked with his eyes so persistently, and so pleadingly, that by and by she gave him an audible answer. He tried hard to understand it, but could not, it being in these words:
"Li pa’ oulé vini ‘ci — li pas capabe."
Thrice a day, for three days more, came a little man with a large head surrounded by short, red curls and with small freckles in a fine skin, and sat down by the bed with a word of good cheer and the air of a commander. At length they had something like an extended conversation.
So you concluded not to die, eh? Yes, I’m the doctor — Doctor Keene. A young lady? What young lady? No, sir, there has been no young lady here. You’re mistaken. Vagary of your fever. There has been no one here but this black girl and me. No, my dear fellow, your father and mother can’t see you yet; you don’t want them to catch the fever, do you? Good-bye. Do as your nurse tells you, and next week you may raise your head and shoulders a little; but if you don’t mind her you’ll have a backset, and the devil himself wouldn’t engage to cure you.
The patient had been sitting up a little at a time for several days, when at length the doctor came to pay a final call, as a matter of form;
but, after a few pleasantries, he drew his chair up gravely, and, in a tender tone — need we say it? He had come to tell Joseph that his father, mother, sisters, all, were gone on a second — a longer — voyage, to shores where there could be no disappointments and no fevers, forever.
And, Frowenfeld,
he said, at the end of their long and painful talk, if there is any blame attached to not letting you go with them, I think I can take part of it; but if you ever want a friend, — one who is courteous to strangers and ill-mannered only to those he likes, — you can call for Charlie Keene. I’ll drop in to see you, anyhow, from time to time, till you get stronger. I have taken a heap of trouble to keep you alive, and if you should relapse now and give us the slip, it would be a deal of good physic wasted; so keep in the house.
The polite neighbors who lifted their cocked hats to Joseph, as he spent a slow convalescence just within his open door, were not bound to know how or when he might have suffered. There were no Howards
or Y.M.C.A.’s
in those days; no Peabody Reliefs.
Even had the neighbors chosen to take cognizance of those bereavements, they were not so unusual as to fix upon him any extraordinary interests an object of sight; and he was beginning most distressfully to realize that great solitude
which the philosopher attributes to towns, when matters took a decided turn.
CHAPTER III. AND WHO IS MY NEIGHBOR?
img25.jpgWE SAY MATTERS took a turn; or, better, that Frowenfeld’s interest in affairs received a new life. This had its beginning in Doctor Keene’s making himself specially entertaining in an old-family-history way, with a view to keeping his patient within doors for a safe period. He had conceived a great liking for Frowenfeld, and often, of an afternoon, would drift in to challenge him to a game of chess — a game, by the way, for which neither of them cared a farthing. The immigrant had learned its moves to gratify his father, and the doctor — the truth is, the doctor had never quite learned them; but he was one of those men who cannot easily consent to acknowledge a mere affection for one, least of all one of their own sex. It may safely be supposed, then, that the board often displayed an arrangement of pieces that would have bewildered Morphy himself.
By the by, Frowenfeld,
he said one evening, after the one preliminary move with which he invariably opened his game, you haven’t made the acquaintance of your pretty neighbors next door.
Frowenfeld knew of no specially pretty neighbors next door on either side — had noticed no ladies.
Well, I will take you in to see them some time.
The doctor laughed a little, rubbing his face and his thin, red curls with one hand, as he laughed.
The convalescent wondered what there could be to laugh at.
Who are they?
he inquired.
Their name is De Grapion — oh, De Grapion, says I! their name is Nancanou. They are, without exception, the finest women — the brightest, the best, and the bravest — that I know in New Orleans.
The doctor resumed a cigar which lay against the edge of the chess-board, found it extinguished, and proceeded to relight it. Best blood of the province; good as the Grandissimes. Blood is a great thing here, in certain odd ways,
he went on. Very curious sometimes.
He stooped to the floor where his coat had fallen, and took his handkerchief from a breast-pocket. At a grand mask ball about two months ago, where I had a bewilderingly fine time with those ladies, the proudest old turkey in the theater was an old fellow whose Indian blood shows in his very behavior, and yet — ha, ha! I saw that same old man, at a quadroon ball a few years ago, walk up to the handsomest, best dressed man in the house, a man with a skin whiter than his own, — a perfect gentleman as to looks and manners, — and without a word slap him in the face.
You laugh?
asked Frowenfeld.
"Laugh? Why shouldn’t I? The fellow had no business there. Those balls are not given to quadroon males, my friend. He was lucky to get out alive, and that was about all he did.
They are right!
the doctor persisted, in response to Frowenfeld’s puzzled look. The people here have got to be particular. However, that is not what we were talking about. Quadroon balls are not to be mentioned in connection. Those ladies—
He addressed himself to the resuscitation of his cigar. Singular people in this country,
he resumed; but his cigar would not revive. He was a poor story-teller. To Frowenfeld — as it would have been to any one, except a Creole or the most thoroughly Creoleized Américain — his narrative, when it was done, was little more than a thick mist of strange names, places and events; yet there shone a light of romance upon it that filled it with color and populated it with phantoms. Frowenfeld’s interest rose — was allured into this mist — and there was left befogged. As a physician, Doctor Keene thus accomplished his end, — the mental diversion of his late patient, — for in the midst of the mist Frowenfeld encountered and grappled a problem of human life in Creole type, the possible correlations of whose quantities we shall presently find him revolving in a studious and sympathetic mind, as the poet of to-day ponders the
Flower in the crannied wall.
The quantities in that problem were the ancestral — the maternal — roots of those two rival and hostile families whose descendants — some brave, others fair — we find unwittingly thrown together at the ball, and with whom we are shortly to have the honor of an unmasked acquaintance.
CHAPTER IV. FAMILY TREES
img25.jpgIN THE YEAR 1673, and in the royal hovel of a Tchoupitoulas village not far removed from that Buffalo’s Grazing-ground,
now better known as New Orleans, was born Lufki-Humma, otherwise Red Clay. The mother of Red Clay was a princess by birth as well as by marriage. For the father, with that devotion to his people’s interests presumably common to rulers, had ten moons before ventured northward into the territory of the proud and exclusive Natchez nation, and had so prevailed with — so outsmoked — their Great Sun,
as to find himself, as he finally knocked the ashes from his successful calumet, possessor of a wife whose pedigree included a long line of royal mothers — fathers being of little account in Natchez heraldry — extending back beyond the Mexican origin of her nation, and disappearing only in the effulgence of her great original, the orb of day himself. As to Red Clay’s paternal ancestry, we must content ourselves with the fact that the father was not only the diplomate we have already found him, but a chief of considerable eminence; that is to say, of seven feet stature.
It scarce need be said that when Lufki-Humma was born, the mother arose at once from her couch of skins, herself bore the infant to the neighboring bayou and bathed it — not for singularity, nor for independence, nor for vainglory, but only as one of the heart-curdling conventionalities which made up the experience of that most pitiful of holy things, an Indian mother.
Outside the lodge door sat and continued to sit, as she passed out, her master or husband. His interest in the trivialities of the moment may be summed up in this, that he was as fully prepared as some men are in more civilized times and places to hold his queen to strict account for the sex of her offspring. Girls for the Natchez, if they preferred them, but the chief of the Tchoupitoulas wanted a son. She returned from the water, came near, sank upon her knees, laid the infant at his feet, and lo! a daughter.
Then she fell forward heavily upon her face. It may have been muscular exhaustion, it may have been the mere wind of her hasty-tempered matrimonial master’s stone hatchet as it whiffed by her skull; an inquest now would be too great an irony; but something blew out her vile candle.
Among the squaws who came to offer the accustomed funeral howlings, and seize mementoes from the deceased lady’s scant leavings, was one who had in her own palmetto hut an empty cradle scarcely cold, and therefore a necessity at her breast, if not a place in her heart, for the unfortunate Lufki-Humma; and thus it was that this little waif came to be tossed, a droll hypothesis of flesh, blood, nerve and brain, into the hands of wild nature with carte blanche as to the disposal of it. And now, since this was Agricola’s most boasted ancestor — since it appears the darkness of her cheek had no effect to make him less white, or qualify his right to smite the fairest and most distant descendant of an African on the face, and since this proud station and right could not have sprung from the squalid surroundings of her birth, let us for a moment contemplate these crude materials.
As for the flesh, it was indeed only some of that one flesh
of which we all are made; but the blood — to go into finer distinctions — the blood, as distinguished from the milk of her Alibamon foster-mother, was the blood of the royal caste of the great Toltec mother-race, which, before it yielded its Mexican splendors to the conquering Aztec, throned the jeweled and gold-laden Inca in the South, and sent the sacred fire of its temples into the North by the hand of the Natchez. For it is a short way of expressing the truth concerning Red Clay’s tissues to say she had the blood of her mother and the nerve of her father, the nerve of the true North American Indian, and had it in its finest strength.
The daughter of the Natchez sitting in majesty, clothed in many-colored robes of shining feathers crossed and recrossed with girdles of serpent-skins and of wampum
.
As to her infantine bones, they were such as needed not to fail of straightness in the limbs, compactness in the body, smallness in hands and feet, and exceeding symmetry and comeliness throughout. Possibly between the two sides of the occipital profile there may have been an Incaean tendency to inequality; but if by any good fortune her impressible little cranium should escape the cradle-straps, the shapeliness that nature loves would soon appear. And this very fortune befell her. Her father’s detestation of an infant that had not consulted his wishes as to sex prompted a verbal decree which, among other prohibitions, forbade her skull the distortions that ambitious and fashionable Indian mothers delighted to produce upon their offspring.
And as to her brain: what can we say? The casket in which Nature sealed that brain, and in which Nature’s great step-sister, Death, finally laid it away, has never fallen into the delighted fingers — and the remarkable fineness of its texture will never kindle admiration in the triumphant eyes — of those whose scientific hunger drives them to dig for crania Americana; nor yet will all their learned excavatings ever draw forth one of those pale souvenirs of mortality with walls of shapelier contour or more delicate fineness, or an interior of more admirable spaciousness, than the fair council-chamber under whose dome the mind of Lufki-Humma used, about two centuries ago, to sit in frequent conclave with high thoughts.
I have these facts,
it was Agricola Fusilier’s habit to say, by family tradition; but you know, sir, h-tradition is much more authentic than history!
Listening Crane, the tribal medicine-man, one day stepped softly into the lodge of the giant chief, sat down opposite him on a mat of plaited rushes, accepted a lighted calumet, and, after the silence of a decent hour, broken at length by the warrior’s intimation that the ear of Raging Buffalo listened for the voice of his brother,
said, in effect, that if that ear would turn toward the village play-ground, it would catch a murmur like the pleasing sound of bees among the blossoms of the catalpa, albeit the catalpa was now dropping her leaves, for it was the moon of turkeys. No, it was the repressed laughter of squaws, wallowing with their young ones about the village pole, wondering at the Natchez-Tchoupitoulas child, whose eye was the eye of the panther, and whose words were the words of an aged chief in council.
There was more added; we record only enough to indicate the direction of Listening Crane’s aim. The eye of Raging Buffalo was opened to see a vision: the daughter of the Natchez sitting in majesty, clothed in many-colored robes of shining feathers crossed and recrossed with girdles of serpent-skins and of wampum, her feet in quilled and painted moccasins, her head under a glory of plumes, the carpet of buffalo-robes about her throne covered with the trophies of conquest, and the atmosphere of her lodge blue with the smoke of embassadors’ calumets; and this extravagant dream the capricious chief at once resolved should eventually become reality. Let her be taken to the village temple,
he said to his prime-minister, and be fed by warriors on the flesh of wolves.
The Listening Crane was a patient man; he was the man that waits
of the old French proverb; all things came to him. He had waited for an opportunity to change his brother’s mind, and it had come. Again, he waited for him to die; and, like Methuselah and others, he died. He had heard of a race more powerful than the Natchez — a white race; he waited for them; and when the year 1682 saw a humble black gown
dragging and splashing his way, with La Salle and Tonti, through the swamps of Louisiana, holding forth the crucifix and backed by French carbines and Mohican tomahawks, among the marvels of that wilderness was found this: a child of nine sitting, and — with some unostentatious aid from her medicine-man — ruling; queen of her tribe and high-priestess of their temple. Fortified by the acumen and self-collected ambition of Listening Crane, confirmed in her regal title by the white man’s Manitou through the medium of the black gown,
and inheriting her father’s fear-compelling frown, she ruled with majesty and wisdom, sometimes a decreer of bloody justice, sometimes an Amazonian counselor of warriors, and at all times — year after year, until she had reached the perfect womanhood of twenty-six — a virgin queen.
On the 11th of March, 1699, two overbold young Frenchmen of M. D’Iberville’s little exploring party tossed guns on shoulder, and ventured away from their canoes on the bank of the Mississippi into the wilderness. Two men they were whom an explorer would have been justified in hoarding up, rather than in letting out at such risks; a pair to lean on, noble and strong. They hunted, killed nothing, were overtaken by rain, then by night, hunger, alarm, despair.
And when they had lain down to die, and had only succeeded in falling asleep, the Diana of the Tchoupitoulas, ranging the magnolia groves with bow and quiver, came upon them in all the poetry of their hope-forsaken strength and beauty, and fell sick of love. We say not whether with Zephyr Grandissime or Epaminondas Fusilier; that, for the time being, was her secret.
The two captives were made guests. Listening Crane rejoiced in them as representatives of the great gift-making race, and indulged himself in a dream of pipe-smoking, orations, treaties, presents and alliances, finding its climax in the marriage of his virgin queen to the king of France, and unvaryingly tending to the swiftly increasing aggrandizement of Listening Crane. They sat down to bear’s meat, sagamite and beans. The queen sat down with them, clothed in her entire wardrobe: vest of swan’s skin, with facings of purple and green from the neck of the mallard; petticoat of plaited hair, with embroideries of quills; leggings of fawn-skin; garters of wampum; black and green serpent-skin moccasins, that rested on pelts of tiger-cat and buffalo; armlets of gars’ scales, necklaces of bears’ claws and alligators’ teeth, plaited tresses, plumes of raven and flamingo, wing of the pink curlew, and odors of bay and sassafras. Young men danced before them, blowing upon reeds, hooting, yelling, rattling beans in gourds and touching hands and feet. One day was like another, and the nights were made brilliant with flambeau dances and processions.
Some days later M. D’Iberville’s canoe fleet, returning down the river, found and took from the shore the two men, whom they had given up for dead, and with them, by her own request, the abdicating queen, who left behind her a crowd of weeping and howling squaws and warriors. Three canoes that put off in their wake, at a word from her, turned back; but one old man leaped into the water, swam after them a little way, and then unexpectedly sank. It was that cautious wader but inexperienced swimmer, the Listening Crane.
When the expedition reached Biloxi, there were two suitors for the hand of Agricola’s great ancestress. Neither of them was Zephyr Grandissime. (Ah! the strong heads of those Grandissimes.)
They threw dice for her. Demosthenes De Grapion — he who, tradition says, first hoisted the flag of France over the little fort — seemed to think he ought to have a chance, and being accorded it, cast an astonishingly high number; but Epaminondas cast a number higher by one (which Demosthenes never could quite understand), and got a wife who had loved him from first sight.
Thus, while the pilgrim fathers of the Mississippi Delta with Gallic recklessness were taking wives and moot-wives from the ill specimens of three races, arose, with the church’s benediction, the royal house of the Fusiliers in Louisiana. But the true, main Grandissime stock, on which the Fusiliers did early, ever, and yet do, love to marry, has kept itself lily-white ever since France has loved lilies — as to marriage, that is; as to less responsible entanglements, why, of course —
After a little, the disappointed Demosthenes, with due ecclesiastical sanction, also took a most excellent wife, from the first cargo of House of Correction girls. Her biography, too, is as short as Methuselah’s, or shorter; she died. Zephyr Grandissime married, still later, a lady of rank, a widow without children, sent from France to Biloxi under a lettre de cachet. Demosthenes De Grapion, himself an only son, left but one son, who also left but one. Yet they were prone to early marriages.
So also were the Grandissimes, or, as the name is signed in all the old notarial papers, the Brahmin Mandarin de Grandissimes. That was one thing that kept their many-stranded family line so free from knots and kinks. Once the leisurely Zephyr gave them a start, generation followed generation with a rapidity that kept the competing De Grapions incessantly exasperated, and new-made Grandissime fathers continually throwing themselves into the fond arms and upon the proud necks of congratulatory grandsires. Verily it seemed as though their family tree was a fig-tree; you could not look for blossoms on it, but there, instead, was the fruit full of seed. And with all their speed they were for the most part fine of stature, strong of limb and fair of face. The old nobility of their stock, including particularly the unnamed blood of her of the lettre de cachet, showed forth in a gracefulness of carriage, that almost identified a De Grandissime wherever you saw him, and in a transparency of flesh and classic beauty of feature, that made their daughters extra-marriageable in a land and day which was bearing a wide reproach for a male celibacy not of the pious sort.
In a flock of Grandissimes might always be seen a Fusilier or two; fierce-eyed, strong-beaked, dark, heavy-taloned birds, who, if they could not sing, were of rich plumage, and could talk, and bite, and strike, and keep up a ruffled crest and a self-exalting bad humor. They early learned one favorite cry, with which they greeted all strangers, crying the louder the more the endeavor was made to appease them: Invaders! Invaders!
There was a real pathos in the contrast offered to this family line by that other which sprang up, as slenderly as a stalk of wild oats, from the loins of Demosthenes De Grapion. A lone son following a lone son, and he another — it was sad to contemplate, in that colonial beginning of days, three generations of good, Gallic blood tripping jocundly along in attenuated Indian file. It made it no less pathetic to see that they were brilliant, gallant, much-loved, early epauletted fellows, who did not let twenty-one catch them without wives sealed with the authentic wedding kiss, nor allow twenty-two to find them without an heir. But they had a sad aptness for dying young. It was altogether supposable that they would have spread out broadly in the land; but they were such inveterate duelists, such brave Indian-fighters, such adventurous swamp-rangers, and such lively free-livers, that, however numerously their half-kin may have been scattered about in an unacknowledged way, the avowed name of De Grapion had become less and less frequent in lists where leading citizens subscribed their signatures, and was not to be seen in the list of managers of the late ball.
It is not at all certain that so hot a blood would not have boiled away entirely before the night of the bal masqué, but for an event which led to the union of that blood with a stream equally clear and ruddy, but of a milder vintage. This event fell out some fifty-two years after that cast of the dice which made the princess Lufki-Humma the mother of all the Fusiliers and of none of the De Grapions. Clotilde, the Casket-Girl, the little maid who would not marry, was one of an heroic sort, worth — the De Grapions maintained — whole swampfuls of Indian queens. And yet the portrait of this great ancestress, which served as a pattern to one who, at the ball, personated the long-deceased heroine en masque, is hopelessly lost in some garret. Those Creoles have such a shocking way of filing their family relics and records in rat-holes.
One fact alone remains to be stated: that the De Grapions, try to spurn it as they would, never could quite suppress a hard feeling in the face of the record, that from the two young men, who, when lost in the horrors of Louisiana’s swamps, had been esteemed as good as dead, and particularly from him who married at his leisure, — from Zephyr de Grandissime, — sprang there so many as the sands of the Mississippi innumerable.
CHAPTER V. A MAIDEN WHO WILL NOT MARRY
img27.jpgMIDWAY BETWEEN THE times of Lufki-Humma and those of her proud descendant, Agricola Fusilier, fifty-two years lying on either side, were the days of Pierre Rigaut, the magnificent, the Grand Marquis,
the Governor, De Vaudreuil. He was the Solomon of Louisiana. For splendor, however, not for wisdom. Those were the gala days of license, extravagance and pomp. He made paper money to be as the leaves of the forest for multitude; it was nothing accounted of in the days of the Grand Marquis. For Louis Quinze was king.
Clotilde, orphan of a murdered Huguenot, was one of sixty, the last royal allotment to Louisiana, of imported wives. The king’s agents had inveigled her away from France with fair stories: "They will give you a quiet home with some lady of the colony. Have to marry? — not unless it pleases you. The king himself pays your passage and gives you a casket of clothes. Think of that these times, fillette; and passage free, withal, to — the garden of Eden, as you may call it — what more, say you, can a poor girl want? Without doubt, too, like a model colonist, you will accept a good husband and have a great many beautiful children, who will say with pride, ‘Me, I am no House-of-Correction-girl stock; my mother’ — or ‘grandmother,’ as the case may be— ‘was a fille à la cassette!’"
The sixty were landed in New Orleans and given into the care of the Ursuline nuns; and, before many days had elapsed, fifty-nine soldiers of the king were well wived and ready to settle upon their riparian land-grants. The residuum in the nuns’ hands was one stiff-necked little heretic, named, in part, Clotilde. They bore with her for sixty days, and then complained to the Grand Marquis. But the Grand Marquis, with all his pomp, was gracious and kind-hearted, and loved his ease almost as much as his marchioness loved money. He bade them try her another month. They did so, and then returned with her; she would neither marry nor pray to Mary.
Here is the way they talked in