home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Berenice
-
- Dicebant mihi sodales, si sepulchrum amicae visitarem, curas meas
- aliquantulum fore levatas. --EBN ZAIAT
-
- Misery is manifold. The wretchedness of earth is multiform.
- Overreaching the wide horizon as the rainbow, its hues are as various as
- the hues of the arch,--as distinct too, yet as intimately blended.
- Overreaching the wide horizon as the rainbow. How is it that from
- beauty I have derived a type of unloveliness?--from the covenant of
- peace a simile of sorrow? But as, in ethics, evil is a consequence of
- good, so, in fact, out of joy is sorrow born. Either the memory of past
- bliss is the anguish of to-day, or the agonies which <i are> have their
- origin in the ecstasies which <i might have been>.
-
- My baptismal name is Egaeus; that of my family I will not mention. Yet
- there are no towers in the land more time-honoured than my gloomy, grey,
- hereditary halls. Our line has been called a race of visionaries; and
- in many striking particulars--in the character of the family mansion--in
- the frescoes of the chief saloon--in the tapestries of the
- dormitories--in the chiselling of some buttresses in the armory--but
- more especially in the gallery of antique paintings--in the fashion of
- the library chamber--and, lastly, in the very peculiar nature of the
- library's contents, there is more than sufficient evidence to warrant
- the belief.
-
- The recollections of my earliest years are connected with that chamber,
- and with its volumes--of which latter I will say no more. Here died my
- mother. Herein was I born. But it is mere idleness to say that I had
- not lived before--that the soul has no previous existence. You deny
- it?--let us not argue the matter. Convinced myself, I seek not to
- convince. There is however, a remembrance of aerial forms--of spiritual
- and meaning eyes--of sounds, musical yet sad--a remembrance which will
- not be excluded; a memory like a shadow, vague, variable, indefinite,
- unsteady; and like a shadow, too, in the impossibility of my getting rid
- of it while the sunlight of my reason shall exist.
-
- In that chamber was I born. Thus awaking from the long night of what
- seemed, but was not, nonentity, at once into the very regions of
- fairy-land--into a palace of imagination--into the wild dominions of
- monastic thought and erudition--it is not singular that I gazed around
- me with a startled and ardent eye-- that I loitered away my boyhood in
- books, and dissipated my youth in reverie; but it <i is> singular that
- as years rolled away, and the noon of manhood found me still in the
- mansion of my fathers-- it is wonderful what stagnation there fell upon
- the springs of my life--wonderful how total an inversion took place in
- the character of my commonest thought. The realities of the world
- affected me as visions, and as visions only, while the wild ideas of the
- land of dreams became, in turn,--not the material of my every-day
- existence--but in very deed that existence utterly and solely in itself.
-
- *
-
- Berenice and I were cousins, and we grew up together in my paternal
- halls. Yet differently we grew--I ill of health, and buried in
- gloom--she agile, graceful, and overflowing with energy; hers the ramble
- on the hill-side--mine the studies of the cloister--I living within my
- own heart, and addicted body and soul to the most intense and painful
- meditation--she roaming carelessly through life with no thought of the
- shadows in her path, or the silent flight of the raven-winged hours.
- Berenice!- -I call upon her name--Berenice!--and from the grey ruins of
- memory a thousand tumultuous recollections are startled at the sound!
- Ah! vividly is her image before me now, as in the early days of her
- light-heartedness and joy! Oh! gorgeous yet fantastic beauty! Oh!
- sylph amid the shrubberies of Arnheim! Oh! Naiad among its
- fountains!--and then--then all is mystery and terror, and a tale which
- should not be told. Disease--a fatal disease--fell like the simoom upon
- her frame, and, even while I gazed upon her, the spirit of change swept
- over her, pervading her mind, her habits, and her character, and, in a
- manner the most subtle and terrible, disturbing even the identity of her
- person! Alas! the destroyer came and went, and the victim--where was
- she? I knew her not--or knew her no longer as Berenice.
-
- Among the numerous train of maladies superinduced by that fatal and
- primary one which effected a revolution of so horrible a kind in the
- moral and physical being of my cousin, may be mentioned as the most
- distressing and obstinate in its nature, a species of epilepsy not
- unfrequently terminating in <i trance> itself--trance very nearly
- resembling positive dissolution, and from which her manner of recovery
- was, in most instances, startlingly abrupt. In the meantime my own
- disease--for I have been told that I should call it by no other
- appellation--my own disease, then, grew rapidly upon me, and assumed
- finally a monomaniac character of a novel and extraordinary form--hourly
- and momently gaining vigour--and at length obtaining over me the most
- incomprehensible ascendancy. This monomania, if I must so term it,
- consisted in a morbid irritability of those properties of the mind in
- metaphysical science termed the <i attentive>. It is more than probable
- that I am not understood; but I fear, indeed, that it is in no manner
- possible to convey to the mind of the merely general reader, an adequate
- idea of that nervous <i intensity of interest> with which, in my case,
- the powers of meditation (not to speak technically) busied and buried
- themselves, in the contemplation of even the most ordinary objects of
- the universe.
-
- To muse for long unwearied hours with my attention riveted to some
- frivolous device on the margin, or in the typography of a book; to
- become absorbed for the better part of a summer's day, in a quaint
- shadow falling aslant upon the tapestry, or upon the door; to lose
- myself for an entire night in watching the steady flame of a lamp, or
- the embers of a fire; to dream away whole days over the perfume of a
- flower; to repeat monotonously some common word, until the sound, by
- dint of frequent repetition, ceased to convey any idea whatever to the
- mind; to lose all sense of motion or physical existence, by means of
- absolute bodily quiescence long and obstinately persevered in;--such
- were a few of the most common and least pernicious vagaries induced by a
- condition of the mental faculties, not, indeed, altogether unparalleled,
- but certainly bidding defiance to anything like analysis or explanation.
-
- Yet let me not be misapprehended.-- The undue, earnest, and morbid
- attention thus excited by objects in their own nature frivolous, must
- not be confounded in character with that ruminating propensity common to
- all mankind, and more especially indulged in by persons of ardent
- imagination. It was not even, as might at first be supposed, an extreme
- condition, or exaggeration of such propensity, but primarily and
- essentially distinct and different. In the one instance, the dreamer,
- or enthusiast, being interested by an object usually <i not> frivolous,
- imperceptibly loses sight of this object in a wilderness of deductions
- and suggestions issuing therefrom, until, at the conclusion of a
- day-dream <i often replete with luxury>, he finds the <i incitamentum>
- or first cause of his musings entirely vanished and forgotten. In my
- case the primary object was <i invariably frivolous>, although assuming,
- through the medium of my distempered vision, a refracted and unreal
- importance. Few deductions, if any, were made; and those few
- pertinaciously returning in upon the original object as a centre. The
- meditations were <i never> pleasurable; and, at the termination of the
- reverie, the first cause, so far from being out of sight, had attained
- that supernaturally exaggerated interest which was the prevailing
- feature of the disease. In a word, the powers of mind more particularly
- exercised were, with me, as I have said before, the <i attentive>, and
- are, with the day-dreamer, the <i speculative>.
-
- My books, at this epoch, if they did not actually serve to irritate the
- disorder, partook, it will be perceived, largely, in their imaginative
- and inconsequential nature, of the characteristic qualities of the
- disorder itself. I well remember, among others, the treatise of the
- noble Italian Coelius Secundus Curio, <i De Amplitudine Beati Regni
- Dei>; St Austin's great work, <i The City of God>; and Tertullian, <i De
- Carne Christi>, in which the paradoxical sentence, '<i Mortuus est Dei
- filius; credibile est quia ineptum est: et sepultus resurrexit; certum
- est quia impossibile est>', occupied my undivided time, for many weeks
- of laborious and fruitless investigation.
-
- Thus it will appear that, shaken from its balance only by trivial
- things, my reason bore resemblance to that ocean-crag spoken of by
- Ptolemy Hephestion, which, steadily resisting the attacks of human
- violence, and the fiercer fury of the waters and the winds, trembled
- only to the touch of the flower called Asphodel. And although, to a
- careless thinker, it might appear a matter beyond doubt, that the
- alteration produced by her unhappy malady, in the <i moral> condition of
- Berenice, would afford me many objects for the exercise of that intense
- and abnormal meditation whose nature I have been at some trouble in
- explaining, yet such was not in any degree the case. In the lucid
- intervals of my infirmity, her calamity, indeed, gave me pain, and,
- taking deeply to heart that total wreck of her fair and gentle life, I
- did not fail to ponder frequently and bitterly upon the wonder-working
- means by which so strange a revolution had been so suddenly brought to
- pass. But these reflections partook not of the idiosyncrasy of my
- disease, and were such as would have occurred, under similar
- circumstances, to the ordinary mass of mankind. True to its own
- character, my disorder revelled in the less important but more startling
- changes wrought in the <i physical> frame of Berenice--in the singular
- and most appalling distortion of her personal identity.
-
- During the brightest days of her unparalleled beauty, most surely I had
- never loved her. In the strange anomaly of my existence, feelings with
- me <i had never been> of the heart, and my passions <i always were> of
- the mind. Through the grey of the early morning--among the trellised
- shadows of the forest at noonday--and in the silence of my library at
- night, she had flitted by my eyes, and I had seen her--not as the living
- and breathing Berenice, but as the Berenice of a dream--not as a being
- of the earth, earthy, but as the abstraction of such a being--not as a
- thing to admire, but to analyse--not as an object of love, but as the
- theme of the most abstruse although desultory speculation. And <i
- now>--now I shuddered in her presence, and grew pale at her approach;
- yet bitterly lamenting her fallen and desolate condition, I called to
- mind that she had loved me long, and, in an evil moment, I spoke to her
- of marriage.
-
- And at length the period of our nuptials was approaching, when, upon an
- afternoon in the winter of the year,--one of those unseasonably warm,
- calm, and misty days which are the nurse of the beautiful Halcyon,<1>--I
- sat (and sat, as I thought, alone) in the
-
-
- <1> For as Jove, during the winter season, gives twice seven days of
- warmth, men have called this clement and temperate time the nurse of the
- beautiful Halcyon. --SIMONIDES.
-
- inner apartment of the library. But uplifting my eyes I saw that
- Berenice stood before me.
-
- Was it my own excited imagination--or the misty influence of the
- atmosphere--or the uncertain twilight of the chamber--or the grey
- draperies which fell around her figure--that caused in it so vacillating
- and indistinct an outline? I could not tell. She spoke no word, and
- I--not for worlds could I have uttered a syllable. An icy chill ran
- through my frame; a sense of insufferable anxiety oppressed me; a
- consuming curiosity pervaded my soul; and sinking back upon the chair, I
- remained for some time breathless and motionless, with my eyes riveted
- upon her person. Alas! its emaciation was excessive, and not one
- vestige of the former being lurked in any single line of the contour.
- My burning glances at length fell upon the face.
-
- The forehead was high, and very pale, and singularly placid; and the
- once jetty hair fell partially over it, and overshadowed the hollow
- temples with innumerable ringlets now of a vivid yellow, and jarring
- discordantly, in their fantastic character, with the reigning melancholy
- of the countenance. The eyes were lifeless, and lustreless, and
- seemingly pupil-less, and I shrank involuntarily from their glassy stare
- to the contemplation of the thin and shrunken lips. They parted; and in
- a smile of peculiar meaning, <i the teeth> of the changed Berenice
- disclosed themselves slowly to my view. Would to God that I had never
- beheld them, or that, having done so, I had died!
-
-
- *
-
- The shutting of a door disturbed me, and, looking up, I found that my
- cousin had departed from the chamber. But from the disordered chamber
- of my brain, had not, alas! departed, and would not be driven away, the
- white and ghastly <i spectrum> of the teeth. Not a speck on their
- surface--not a shade on their enamel--not an indenture in their
- edges--but what that period of her smile had sufficed to brand in upon
- my memory. I saw them <i now> even more unequivocally than I beheld
- them <i then>. The teeth!--the teeth!--they were here, and there, and
- everywhere, and visibly and palpably before me; long, narrow, and
- excessively white, with the pale lips writhing about them, as in the
- very moment of their first terrible development. Then came the full
- fury of my <i monomania>, and I struggled in vain against its strange
- and irresistible influence. In the multiplied objects of the external
- world I had no thoughts but for the teeth. For these I longed with a
- phrenzied desire. All other matters and all different interests became
- absorbed in their single contemplation. They--they alone were present
- to the mental eye, and they, in their sole individuality, became the
- essence of my mental life. I held them in every light. I turned them
- in every attitude. I surveyed their characteristics. I dwelt upon
- their peculiarities. I pondered upon their conformation. I mused upon
- the alteration in their nature. I shuddered as I assigned to them in
- imagination a sensitive and sentient power, and even when unassisted by
- the lips, a capability of moral expression. Of Mad'selle Salle it has
- been well said, '<i que tous ses pas etaient des sentiments>', and of
- Berenice I more seriously believed <i que toutes ses dents etaient des
- idees. Des idees!>- -ah here was the idiotic thought that destroyed me!
- <i Des idees!>--ah <i therefore> it was that I coveted them so madly! I
- felt that their possession could alone ever restore me to peace, in
- giving me back to reason.
-
- And the evening closed in upon me thus--and then the darkness came, and
- tarried, and went--and the day again dawned-- and the mists of a second
- night were now gathering around--and still I sat motionless in that
- solitary room; and still I sat buried in meditation, and still the <i
- phantasma> of the teeth maintained its terrible ascendancy as, with the
- most vivid and hideous distinctness, it floated about amid the changing
- lights and shadows of the chamber. At length there broke in upon my
- dreams a cry as of horror and dismay; and thereunto, after a pause,
- succeeded the sound of troubled voices, intermingled with many low
- moanings of sorrow, or of pain. I arose from my seat and, throwing open
- one of the doors of the library, saw standing out in the antechamber a
- servant maiden, all in tears, who told me that Berenice was--no more.
- She had been seized with epilepsy in the early morning, and now, at the
- closing in of the night, the grave was ready for its tenant, and all the
- preparations for the burial were completed.
-
- I found myself sitting in the library, and again sitting there alone.
- It seemed that I had newly awakened from a confused and exciting dream.
- I knew that it was now midnight, and I was well aware that since the
- setting of the sun Berenice had been interred. But of that dreary
- period which intervened I had no positive--at least no definite
- comprehension. Yet its memory was replete with horror--horror more
- horrible from being vague, and terror more terrible from ambiguity. It
- was a fearful page in the record of my existence, written all over with
- dim, and hideous, and unintelligible recollections. I strived to
- decipher them, but in vain; while ever and anon, like the spirit of a
- departed sound, the shrill and piercing shriek of a female voice seemed
- to be ringing in my ears. I had done a deed--what was it? I asked
- myself the question aloud, and the whispering echoes of the chamber
- answered me, '<i what was it>?'
-
- On the table beside me burned a lamp, and near it lay a little box. It
- was of no remarkable character, and I had seen it frequently before, for
- it was the property of the family physician; but how came it <i there>,
- upon my table, and why did I shudder in regarding it? These things were
- in no manner to be accounted for, and my eyes at length dropped to the
- open pages of a book, and to a sentence underscored therein. The words
- were the singular but simple ones of the poet Ebn Zaiat, '<i Dicebant
- mihi sodales si sepulchrum amicae visitarem, curas meas aliquantulum
- fore levatas>.' Why then, as I perused them, did the hairs of my head
- erect themselves on end, and the blood of my body become congealed
- within my veins?
-
- There came a light tap at the library door, and pale as the tenant of a
- tomb, a menial entered upon tiptoe. His looks were wild with terror,
- and he spoke to me in a voice tremulous, husky, and very low. What said
- he?--some broken sentences I heard. He told of a wild cry disturbing
- the silence of the night--of the gathering together of the household--of
- a search in the direction of the sound;--and then his tones grew
- thrillingly distinct as he whispered me of a violated grave--of a
- disfigured body enshrouded, yet still breathing, still palpitating,
- still <i alive>!
-
- He pointed to my garments;--they were muddy and clotted with gore. I
- spoke not, and he took me gently by the hand;--it was indented with the
- impress of human nails. He directed my attention to some object against
- the wall;--I looked at it for some minutes;--it was a spade. With a
- shriek I bounded to the table, and grasped the box that lay upon it.
- But I could not force it open; and in my tremor it slipped from my
- hands, and fell heavily, and burst into pieces; and from it, with a
- rattling sound, there rolled out some instruments of dental surgery,
- intermingled with thirty-two small, white and ivory-looking substances
- that were scattered to and fro about the floor.
-