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The Wandering Jew (Vol.1-11)


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by the deep purple of the damask covering of the arm-chair. His beautiful countenance expressed a profound melancholy, either caused by the influence of some painful dream, or else that he was in the habit of keeping down, when awake, some sad regrets, which revealed themselves without his knowledge when he was sleeping. Notwithstanding this appearance of bitter grief, his features preserved their character of angelic sweetness, and seemed endowed with an inexpressible charm, for nothing is more touching than suffering goodness. The two young girls cast down their eyes, blushed simultaneously, and exchanged anxious glances, as if to point out to each other the slumbering missionary.

      "He sleeps, sister," said Rose in a low voice.

      "So much the better," replied Blanche, also in a whisper, making a sign of caution; "we shall now be able to observe him well."

      "Yes, for we durst not do so, in coming from the sea hither."

      "Look! what a sweet countenance!"

      "He is just the same as we saw him in our dreams."

      "When he promised he would protect us."

      "And he has not failed us."

      "But here, at least, he is visible."

      "Not as it was in the prison at Leipsic, during that dark night."

      "And so—he has again rescued us."

      "Without him, we should have perished this morning."

      "And yet, sister, it seems to me, that in our dreams his countenance shone with light."

      "Yes, you know it dazzled us to look at him."

      "And then he had not so sad a mien."

      "That was because he came then from heaven; now he is upon earth."

      "But, sister, had he then that bright red scar round his forehead?"

      "Oh, no! we should have certainly perceived it."

      "And these other marks on his hands?"

      "If he has been wounded, how can he be an archangel?"

      "Why not, sister? If he received those wounds in preventing evil, or in helping the unfortunate, who, like us, were about to perish?"

      "You are right. If he did not run any danger for those he protects, it would be less noble."

      "What a pity that he does not open his eye!"

      "Their expression is so good, so tender!"

      "Why did he not speak of our mother, by the way?"

      "We were not alone with him; he did not like to do so."

      "But now we are alone."

      "If we were to pray to him to speak to us?"

      The orphans looked doubtingly at each other, with charming simplicity; a bright glow suffused their cheeks, and their young bosoms heaved gently beneath their black dresses.

      "You are right. Let us kneel down to him."

      "Oh, sister! our hearts beat so!" said Blanche, believing rightly, that Rose felt exactly as she did. "And yet it seems to do us good. It is as if some happiness were going to befall us."

      The sisters, having approached the arm-chair on tip-toe, knelt down with clasped hands, one to the right the other to the left of the young priest. It was a charming picture. Turning their lovely faces towards him, they said in a low whisper, with a soft, sweet voice, well suited to their youthful appearance: "Gabriel! speak to us of our mother!"

      On this appeal, the missionary gave a slight start, half-opened his eyes, and, still in a state of semi-consciousness, between sleep and waking, beheld those two beauteous faces turned towards him, and heard two gentle voices repeat his name.

      "Who calls me?" said he, rousing himself, and raising his head.

      "It is Blanche and Rose."

      It was now Gabriel's turn to blush, for he recognized the young girls he had saved. "Rise, my sisters!" said he to them; "you should kneel only unto God."

      The orphans obeyed, and were soon beside him, holding each other by the hand. "You know my name, it seems," said the missionary with a smile.

      "Oh, we have not forgotten it!"

      "Who told it you?"

      "Yourself."

       "I?"

      "Yes—when you came from our mother."

      "I, my sisters?" said the missionary, unable to comprehend the words of the orphans. "You are mistaken. I saw you to-day for the first time."

      "But in our dreams?"

      "Yes—do you not remember?—in our dreams."

      "In Germany—three months ago, for the first time. Look at us well."

      Gabriel could not help smiling at the simplicity of Rose and Blanche, who expected him to remember a dream of theirs; growing more and more perplexed, he repeated: "In your dreams?"

      "Certainly; when you gave us such good advice."

      "And when we were so sorrowful in prison, your words, which we remembered, consoled us, and gave us courage."

      "Was it not you, who delivered us from the prison at Leipsic, in that dark night, when we were not able to see you?"

      "I!"

      "What other but you would thus have come to our help, and to that of our old friend?"

      "We told him, that you would love him, because he loved us, although he would not believe in angels."

      "And this morning, during the tempest, we had hardly any fear."

      "Because we expected you."

      "This morning—yes, my sisters—it pleased heaven to send me to your assistance. I was coming from America, but I have never been in Leipsic. I could not, therefore, have let you out of prison. Tell me, my sisters," added he, with a benevolent smile, "for whom do you take me?"

      "For a good angel whom we have seen already in dreams, sent by our mother from heaven to protect us."

      "My dear sisters, I am only a poor priest. It is by mere chance, no doubt, that I bear some resemblance to the angel you have seen in your dreams, and whom you could not see in any other manner—for angels are not visible to mortal eye.

      "Angels are not visible?" said the orphans, looking sorrowfully at each other.

      "No matter, my dear sisters," said Gabriel, taking them affectionately by the hand; "dreams, like everything else, come from above. Since the remembrance of your mother was mixed up with this dream, it is twice blessed."

      At this moment a door opened, and Dagobert made his appearance. Up to this time, the orphans, in their innocent ambition to be protected by an archangel, had quite forgotten the circumstance that Dagobert's wife had adopted a forsaken child, who was called Gabriel, and who was now a priest and missionary.

      The soldier, though obstinate in maintaining that his hurt was only a blank wound (to use a term of General Simon's), had allowed it to be carefully dressed by the surgeon of the village, and now wore a black bandage, which concealed one half of his forehead, and added to the natural grimness of his features. On entering the room, he was not a little surprised to see a stranger holding the hands of Rose and Blanche familiarly in his own. This surprise was natural, for Dagobert did not know that the missionary had saved the lives of the orphans, and had attempted to save his also.

      In the midst of the storm, tossed about by the waves, and vainly striving to cling to the rocks, the soldier had only seen Gabriel very imperfectly, at the moment when, having snatched the sisters from certain death, the young priest had fruitlessly endeavored to come to his aid. And when, after the shipwreck, Dagobert had found the orphans in safety beneath the