THE DENSLOW PALACE.
by James Davenport Whelpley
(1817-1872)
IT
is the privilege of authors and artists
to see and to describe; to "see clearly
and describe vividly" gives the pass on
all state occasions. It is the "cap of
darkness" and the talaria, and wafts them
whither they will. The doors of boudoirs
and senate-chambers open quickly, and
close after them, excluding the talentless
and staring rabble. I, who am one of the
humblest of the seers, a universal
admirer of all things beautiful and great,
from the commonwealths of Plato and
Solon, severally, expulsed, as poet without
music or politic, and a follower of the
great, I, from my dormitory, or nest,
of twelve feet square, can, at an hour's
notice, or less, enter palaces, and bear
away, unchecked and unquestioned, those
imagines of Des Cartes which emanate or
are thrown off from all forms, and this,
not in imagination, but in the flesh.
Whether it was the "tone of society"
which pervaded my "Florentine letters,"
or my noted description of the boudoir
of Egeria Mentale, I could not just now
determine; but these, and other humble
efforts of mine, made me known in
palaces as a painter of beauty and magnificence;
and I have been in demand, to
do for wealth what wealth cannot do for
itself, namely, make it live a little, or, at
least, spread as far, in fame, as the rings
of a stone-plash on a great pond.
I enjoy friendships and regards which
would satisfy the most fastidious. Are
not the Denslows enormously rich? Is
not Dalton a sovereign of elegance? It
was I who gave the fame of these qualities
to the world, in true colors, not
flattered. And they know it, and love me.
Honoria Denslow is the most beautiful
and truly charming woman of society. It
was I who first said it; and she is my
friend, and loves me. I defy poverty; the
wealth of all the senses is mine, without
effort. I desire not to be one of those
who mingle as principals and sufferers;
for they are less causes than effects. As
the Florentine in the Inferno saw the
souls of unfortunate lovers borne upon a
whirlwind, so have I seen all things fair
and precious, outpourings of wealth,
all the talents, all the offerings of duty
and devotion, angelic graces of person
and of soul, borne and swept violently
around on the circular gale. Wealth
is only an enlargement of the material
boundary, and leaves the spirit
free to dash to and fro, and exhaust
itself in vain efforts. But I am philosophizing, oddly enough, when I should
describe.
An exquisite little note from Honoria,
sent at the last moment, asking me to be
present that evening at a "select" party,
which was to open the "new house," the
little palace of the Denslows, lay beside
me on the table. It was within thirty
minutes of nine o'clock, the hour I had
fixed for going. A howling winter out
of doors, a clear fire glowing in my little
grate. My arm-chair, a magnificent present
from Honoria, shaming the wooden
fixtures of the poor room, invited to
meditation, and perhaps the composition
of some delicate periods. They formed
slowly. Time, it is said, devours all
things; but imagination, in turn, devours
time, and, indeed, swallowed my
half-hour at a gulp. The neighboring
church-clock tolled nine. I was belated, and
hurried away.
It was a réunion of only three hundred
invitations, selected by my friend Dalton,
the intimate and adviser of Honoria. So
happy were their combinations, scarce a
dozen were absent or declined.
At eleven, the guests began to assemble.
Introductions were almost needless.
Each person was a recognized member of
"society." One-half of the number were
women, many of them young, beautiful,
accomplished, heiresses, "charming
widows," poetesses of real celebrity, and,
rarer still, of good repute, wives of
millionnaires, flashing in satin and diamonds.
The men, on their side, were of all
professions and arts, and of every grade of
celebrity, from senator to merchant, each
distinguished by some personal attribute
or talent; and in all was the gift, so rare,
of manners and conversation. It was
a company of undoubted gentlemen, as
truly entitled to respect and admiration
as if they stood about a throne. They
were the untitled nobility of Nature,
wealth, and genius.
As I stood looking, with placid admiration,
from a recess, upon a brilliant tableau
of beautiful women and celebrated men
that had accidentally arranged itself
before me, Dalton touched my arm.
"I have seen," said he, "aristocratic
and republican réunions of the purest
mode in Paris, the court and the banker's
circle of London, conversazioni at
Rome and Florence. Every face in this
room is intelligent, and nearly all either
beautiful, remarkable, or commanding.
Observe those five women standing with
Denslow and Adonaïs, grandeur, sweetness,
grace, form, purity; each has an
attribute. It is a rare assemblage of
superior human beings. The world cannot
surpass it. And, by the by, the rooms
are superb."
They were, indeed, magnificent: two
grand suites, on either side a central hall
of Gothic structure, in white marble, with
light, aërial staircases and gilded balconies.
Each suite was a separate miracle:
the height, the breadth, the columnal
divisions; the wonderful delicacy of the
arches, upon which rested ceilings frescoed
with incomparable art. In one
compartment the arches and caryatides
were of black marble; in another, of
snowy Parian; in a third, of wood,
exquisitely carved, and joined like one
piece, as if it were a natural growth;
vines rising at the bases of the walls, and
spreading under the roof. There was no
forced consistency. Forms suitable only
for the support of heavy masses of masonry,
or for the solemn effects of church
interiors, were not here introduced. From
straight window-cornices of dark wood,
slenderly gilt, but richly carved, fell
cataracts of gleaming satin, softened in effect
with laces of rare appreciation.
The frescoes and panel-work were a
study by themselves, uniting the classic
and modern styles in allegorical subjects.
The paintings, selected by the taste of
Dalton, to overpower the darkness of the
rooms by intensity of color, were
incorporated with the walls. There were but
few mirrors. At the end of each suite,
one, of fabulous size, without frame, made
to appear, by a cunning arrangement of
dark draperies, like a transparent portion
of the wall itself, extended the
magnificence of the apartments.
Not a flame nor a jet was anywhere
visible. Tinted vases, pendent, or resting
upon pedestals, distributed harmonies
and thoughts of light rather than light
itself; and yet all was visible, effulgent.
The columns which separated the apartments
seemed to be composed of masses
of richly-colored flames, compelled, by
some ingenious alchemy, to assume the
form and office of columns.
In New York, par excellence the city
of private gorgeousness and petite
magnificence, nothing had yet been seen
equal to the rooms of the glorious Denslow
Palace. Even Dalton, the most
capricious and critical of men, whose nice
vision had absorbed the elegancies of
European taste, pronounced them
superb. The upholstery and ornamentation
were composed under the direction
of celebrated artists. Palmer was
consulted on the marbles. Page (at Rome)
advised the cartoons for the frescoes, and
gave laws for the colors and disposition
of the draperies. The paintings, panelled
in the walls, were modern, triumphs of the
art and genius of the New World.
Until the hour for dancing, prolonged
melodies of themes modulated in the
happiest moments of the great composers
floated in the perfumed air from a
company of unseen musicians, while the
guests moved through the vast apartments,
charmed or exalted by their splendor,
or conversed in groups, every voice
subdued and intelligent.
At midnight began the modish music
of the dance, and groups of beautiful
girls moved like the atoms of Chladni
on the vibrating crystal, with their
partners, to the sound of harps and
violins, in pleasing figures or inebriating
spirals.
When supper was served, the ivory
fronts of a cabinet of gems divided itself
in the centre, the two halves revolving
upon silver hinges, and discovered a
hall of great height and dimensions,
walled with crimson damask, supporting
pictures of all the masters of modern
art. The dome-like roof of this hall was
of marble variously colored, and the
floor tessellated and mosaicked in grotesque and graceful figures of Vesuvian
lavas and painted porcelain.
The tables, couches, chairs, and vis-a-vis
in this hall were of plain pattern and
neutral dead colors, not to overpower or
fade the pictures on the walls, or the gold
and Parian service of the cedar tables.
But the chief beauty of this unequalled
supper-room was an immense bronze
candelabrum, which rose in the centre from
a column of black marble. It was the
figure of an Italian elm, slender and of
thin foliage, embraced, almost enveloped,
in a vine, which reached out and
supported itself in hanging from all the
branches; the twigs bearing fruit, not of
grapes, but of a hundred little spheres of
crimson, violet, and golden light, whose
combination produced a soft atmosphere
of no certain color.
Neither Honoria, Dalton, nor myself
remained long in the gallery. We retired
with a select few, and were served in an
antechamber, separated from the grand
reception-room by an arch, through which,
by putting aside a silk curtain, Honoria
could see, at a distance, any that entered,
as they passed in from the hall.
My own position was such that I could
look over her shoulder and see as she
saw. Vis-a-vis with her, and consequently
with myself, was Adonaïs, a celebrated
author, and person of the beau monde.
On his left, Dalton, always mysteriously
elegant and dangerously witty. Denslow
and Jeffrey Lethal, the critic, completed
our circle. The conversation was easy,
animated, personal.
"You are fortunate in having a woman
of taste to manage your entertainments,"
said Lethal, in answer to a remark of
Denslow's, "but in bringing these people
together she has made a sad blunder."
"And what may that be?" inquired
Dalton, mildly.
"Your guests are too well behaved,
too fine, and on their guard; there are no
butts, no palpable fools or vulgarians;
and, worse, there are many distinguished,
but no one great man, no social or
intellectual sovereign of the occasion."
Honoria looked inquiringly at Lethal.
"Pray, Mr. Lethal, tell me who he is?
I thought there was no such person in
America," she added, with a look of
reproachful inquiry at Dalton and myself,
as if we should have found this sovereign
and suggested him.
"You are right, my dear queen;
Lethal is joking," responded Dalton; "we
are a democracy, and have only a queen
of"
"Water ices," interrupted Lethal;
"but, as for the king you seek, as
democracies finally come to that,"
"Good Heavens!" exclaimed Honoria,
raising the curtain, "it must be he that
is coming in."
Honoria frowned slightly, rose, and
advanced to meet a new-comer, who had
entered unannounced, and was advancing
alone. Dalton followed to support her.
I observed their movements, Lethal and
Adonaïs using my face as a mirror of
what was passing beyond the curtain.
The masses of level light from the
columns on the left seemed to envelope
the stranger, who came toward us from
the entrance, as if he had divined the
presence of Honoria in the alcove.
He was about the middle height, Napoleonic
in form and bearing, with features of
marble paleness, firm, and sharply
defined. His hair and magnificent Asiatic
beard were jetty black, curling, and
naturally disposed. Under his dark and
solid brows gleamed large eyes of abysmal
blackness and intensity.
"Is it Lord N?" whispered
Lethal, moved from his habitual coldness by
the astonishment which he read in my
face.
"Senator D, perhaps," suggested
Denslow, whose ideas, like his person,
aspired to the senatorial.
"Dumas," hinted Adonaïs, an admirer
of French literature. "I heard he was
expected."
"No," I answered, "but certainly in
appearance the most noticeable man living.
Let us go out and be introduced."
"Perhaps," said Lethal, "it is the
d."
All rose instantly at the idea, and we
went forward, urged by irresistible
curiosity.
As we drew near the stranger, who
was conversing with Honoria and Dalton,
a shudder went through me. It
was a thrill of the universal Boswell; I
seemed to feel the presence of "the most
aristocratic man of the age."
Honoria introduced me. "My Lord
Duke, allow me to present my friend,
Mr. De Vere; Mr. De Vere, the Duke
of Rosecouleur."
Was I, then, face to face with, nay,
touching the hand of a highness, and
that highness the monarch of the ton?
And is this a ducal hand, white as the
albescent down of the eider-duck, which
presses mine with a tender touch, so
haughty and so delicately graduated to
my standing as "friend" of the exquisite
Honoria? It was too much; I could
have wept; my senses rather failed.
Dalton fell short of himself; for, though
his head stooped to none, unless
conventionally, the sudden and unaccountable
presence of the Duke of Rosecouleur
annoyed and perplexed him. His own
sovereignty was threatened.
Lethal stiffened himself to the ordeal
of an introduction; the affair seemed to
exasperate him. Denslow alone, of the
men, was in his element. Pompous and
soft, he "cottoned" to the grandeur with
the instinct of a born satellite, and his
eyes grew brighter, his body more shining
and rotund, his back more concave.
His bon-vivant tones, jolly and conventional,
sounded a pure barytone to the
clear soprano of Honoria, in the
harmony of an obsequious welcome.
The Duke of Rosecouleur glanced
around him approvingly upon the apartments.
I believed that he had never
seen anything more beautiful than the
petite palace of Honoria, or more ravishing
than herself. He said little, in a
low voice, and always to one person at a
time. His answers and remarks were
simple and well-turned.
Dalton allowed the others to move on,
and by a slight sign drew me to him.
"It is unexpected," he said, in a
thoughtful manner, looking me full in
the eyes.
"You knew the Duke of Rosecouleur
in Europe?"
"At Paris, yes, and in Italy he was a
travel friend; but we heard lately that
he had retired upon his estates in
England; and certainly, he is the last person
we looked for here."
"Unannounced."
"That is a part of the singularity."
"His name was not in the published
list of arrivals; but he may have left
England incognito. Is a mistake possible?"
"No! there is but one such man in
Europe; a handsomer or a richer does
not live."
"An eye of wonderful depth."
"Hands exquisite."
"Feet, ditto."
"And his dress and manner."
"Unapproachable!"
"Not a shadow of pretence; the
essence of good-breeding founded upon
extensive knowledge, and a thorough
sense of position and its advantages; in
fact, the Napoleon of the parlor."
"But, Dalton," said I, nervously, "no
one attends him."
"No, I thought so at first; but do you
see that Mephistophelean figure, in black,
who follows the Duke a few paces
behind, and is introduced to no one?"
"Yes. A singular creature, truly
how thin he is!"
"That shadow that follows his Highness
is, in fact, the famous valet, Rêve de Noir,
the prince of servants. The Duke goes
nowhere without this man as a shadow.
He asserts that Rêve de Noir has no soul;
and I believe him. The face is that of a
demon. It is a separate creation, equally
wonderful with the master, but not
human. He was condensed out of the
atmosphere of the great world."
As we were speaking, we observed a
crowd of distinguished persons gathered
about and following his Highness, as he
moved. He spoke now to one, now to
another. Honoria, fascinated, her beauty
every instant becoming more radiant,
just leaned, with the lightest pressure,
upon the Duke's arm. They were
promenading through the rooms. The music,
soft and low, continued, but the groups
of dancers broke up, the loiterers in the
gallery came in, and as the sun draws
his fifty, perhaps his hundreds of planets,
circling around and near him, this noble
luminary centred in himself the attention
of all. If they could not speak with him,
they could at least speak of him. If they
could not touch his hand, they could pass
before him and give one glance at his
eyes. The less aristocratic were even
satisfied for the moment with watching
the singular being, Rêve de Noir, who
caught no one's eye, seemed to see no
one but his master, and yet was not
here nor there, nor in any place, never
in the way, a thing of air, and not tangible,
but only black.
At a signal, he would advance and
present to his master a perfume, a laced
handkerchief, a rose of rubies, a
diamond clasp; of many with whom he
spoke the liberal Duke begged the acceptance
of some little token, as an earnest
of his esteem. After interchanging a
few words with Jeffrey Lethal, who
dared not utter a sarcasm, though he
chafed visibly under the restraint, the
Duke's tasteful generosity suggested a seal
ring, with an intaglio head of Swift cut
in opal, the mineral emblem of wit, which
dulls in the sunlight of fortune, and recovers
its fiery points in the shade of
adversity; Rêve de Noir, with a movement
so slight, 'twas like the flitting of a bat,
placed the seal in the hand of the Duke,
who, with a charming and irresistible
grace, compelled Lethal to receive it.
To Denslow, Honoria, Dalton, and
myself he offered nothing. Strange? Not
at all. Was he not the guest, and had
not I been presented to him by Honoria
as her "friend?" a word of pregnant
meaning to a Duke of Rosecouleur!
To Adonaïs he gave a lock of hair of
the great novelist, Dumas, in a locket of
yellow tourmaline, a stone usually black.
Lethal smiled at this. He felt relieved.
"The Duke," thought he, "must be a
humorist."
From my coarse way of describing
this, you would suppose that it was a
farcical exhibition of vulgar extravagance,
and the Duke a madman or an impostor;
but the effect was different. It was done
with grace, and, in the midst of so much
else, it attracted only that side regard, at
intervals, which is sure to surprise and
excite awe.
Honoria had almost ceased to converse
with us. It was painful to her to talk
with any person. She followed the Duke
with her eyes. When, by some delicate
allusion or attention, he let her perceive
that she was in his thoughts, a mantling
color overspread her features, and then
gave way to paleness, and a manner
which attracted universal remark. It
was then Honoria abdicated that throne
of conventional purity which hitherto she
had held undisputed. Women who were
plain in her presence outshone Honoria,
by meeting this ducal apparition, that
called itself Rosecouleur, and which
might have been, for aught they knew,
a fume of the Infernal, shaped to deceive
us all, with calm and haughty propriety.
The sensation did not subside. The
music of the waltz invited a renewal of that
intoxicating whirl which isolates friends
and lovers, in whispering and sighing
pairs, in the midst of a great assemblage.
All the world looked on, when Honoria
Denslow placed her hand upon the shoulder
of the Duke of Rosecouleur, and the
noble and beautiful forms began silently
and smoothly turning, with a dream-like
motion. Soon she lifted her lovely eyes
and steadied their rays upon his. She
leaned wholly upon his arm, and the
gloved hands completed the magnetic
circle. At the close of the first waltz,
she rested a moment, leaning upon his
shoulder, and his hand still held hers, a
liberty often assumed and permitted, but
not to the nobles and the monarchs of
society. She fell farther, and her ideal
beauty faded into a sensuous.
Honoria was lost. Dalton saw it. We
retired together to a room apart. He
was dispirited; called for and drank
rapidly a bottle of Champagne; it was
insufficient.
"De Vere," said he, "affairs go badly."
"Explain."
"This cursed thing that people call a
duke it kills me."
"I saw."
"Of course you did; the world saw;
the servants saw. Honoria has fallen
to-night. I shall transfer my allegiance."
"And Denslow?"
"A born sycophant; he thinks it natural
that his wife should love a duke, and
a duke love his wife."
"So would you, if you were any other
than you are."
"Faugh! it is human nature."
"Not so; would you not as soon strangle
this Rosecouleur for making love to
your wife in public, as you would another
man?"
"Rather."
"Pooh! I give you up. If you had
simply said, 'Yes,' it would have satisfied
me."
Dalton seemed perplexed. He called
a servant and sent him with an order for
Nalson, the usher, to come instantly to him.
Nalson appeared, with his white gloves
and mahogany face.
"Nalson, you were a servant of the
Duke in England?"
"Yes, Sir."
"Is the person now in the rooms the
Duke of Rosecouleur?"
"I have not seen him, Sir."
"Go immediately, study the man well,
do you hear? and come to me. Let
no one know your purpose."
Nalson disappeared.
I was alarmed. If "the Duke" should
prove to be an impostor, we were indeed
ruined.
In five minutes, an hour, it seemed,
Nalson stood before us.
"Is it he?" said Dalton, looking fixedly
upon the face of the usher.
No reply.
"Speak the truth; you need not be
afraid."
"I cannot tell, Sir."
"Nonsense! go and look again."
"It is of no use, Mr. Dalton; you,
who are as well acquainted with the
personal appearance of his Highness as I am,
you have been deceived, if I have."
"Nalson, do you believe that this person
is an impostor?" said Dalton, pointing
at myself.
"Who? Mr. De Vere, Sir?"
"If, then, you know at sight that this
gentleman is my friend Mr. De Vere,
why do you hesitate about the other?"
"But the imitation is perfect. And
there is Rêve de Noir."
"Yes, did Rêve de Noir recognize
you?"
"I have not caught his eye. You
know, Sir, that this Rêve is not, and never
was, like other men; he is a devil. One
knows, and one does not know him."
"Were you at the door when the
Duke entered?"
"I think not; at least I cannot tell.
When I first saw him, he was in the room,
speaking with Madam Denslow."
"Nalson, you have done wrong; no
one should have entered unannounced.
Send the doorkeeper to me."
The doorkeeper came; a gigantic
negro, magnificently attired.
"Jupiter, you were at the door when
the Duke of Rosecouleur entered?"
"Yes, Sir."
"Did the Duke and his man come in
a carriage?"
"Yes, Sir, a hack."
"You may go. They are not devils,"
said Dalton, musingly, "or they would
not have come in a carriage."
"You seem to have studied the spiritual
mode of locomotion," said I.
Dalton frowned. "This is serious,
De Vere."
"What mean you?"
"I mean that Denslow is a bankrupt."
"Explain yourself."
"You know what an influence he
carries in political circles. The Grs,
the Ses, and their kind, have more
talent, but Denslow enjoys the secret of
popularity."
"Well, I know it."
"In the middle counties, where he
owns vast estates, and has been liberal
to debtors and tenants, he carries great
favor; both parties respect him for his
ignorance and pomposity, which they
mistake for simplicity and power, as
usual. The estates are mortgaged three
deep, and will not hold out a year. The
shares of the Millionnaire's Hotel and the
Poor Man's Bank in the By are
worthless. Denslow's railroad schemes
have absorbed the capital of those
concerns."
"But he had three millions."
"Nominally. This palace has actually
sunk his income."
"Madness!"
"Wisdom, if you will listen."
"I am all attention."
"The use of money is to create and
hold power. Denslow was certain of the
popular and county votes; he needed
only the aristocratic support, and the
A people would have made him
Senator."
"Fool, why was he not satisfied with
his money?"
"Do you call the farmer fool, because
he is not satisfied with the soil, but wishes
to grow wheat thereon? Money is the
soil of power. For much less than a
million one may gratify the senses; great
fortunes are not for sensual luxuries, but
for those of the soul. To the facts, then.
The advent of this mysterious duke,
whom I doubt, hailed by Denslow and
Honoria as a piece of wonderful
good-fortune, has already shaken him and
ruined the prestige of his wife. They
are mad and blind."
"Tell me, in plain prose, the how and
the why."
"De Vere, you are dull. There are
three hundred people in the rooms of the
Denslow Palace; these people are the
'aristocracy.' They control the sentiments
of the 'better class.' Opinion,
like dress, descends from them. They no
longer respect Denslow, and their women
have seen the weakness of Honoria."
"Yes, but Denslow still has the
people."
"That is not enough. I have
calculated the chances, and mustered all our
available force. We shall have no
support among the 'better class,' since we
are disgraced with the 'millionnaires.'"
At this moment Denslow came in.
"Ah! Dalton, like you! I have
been looking for you to show the
pictures. Devil a thing I know about them.
The Duke wondered at your absence."
"Where is Honoria?"
"Ill, ill, fainted. The house is new;
smell of new wood and mortar; deused
disagreeable in Honoria. If it had not
been for the Duke, she would have
fallen. That's a monstrous clever
fellow, that Rosecouleur. Admires Honoria
vastly. Come, the pictures."
"Mr. John Vanbrugen Denslow, you
are an ass!"
The large, smooth, florid millionnaire,
dreaming only of senatorial honors, the
shouts of the multitude, and the adoration
of a party press, cowered like a dog
under the lash of the "man of society."
"Rather rough, ha, De Vere? What
have I done? Am I an ass because I
know nothing of pictures. Come,
Dalton, you are harsh with your old friend."
"Denslow, I have told you a thousand
times never to concede position."
"Yes, but this is a duke, man, a
prince!"
"This from you? By Jove, De Vere, I
wish you and I could live a hundred
years, to see a republican aristocrat.
We are still mere provincials," added
Dalton, with a sigh.
Denslow perspired with mortification.
"You use me badly, I tell you,
Dalton, this Rosecouleur is a devil.
Condescend to him! be haughty and what do
you call it? urbane to him! I defy you
to do it, with all your impudence. Why,
his valet, that shadow that glides after
him, is too much for me. Try him yourself,
man."
"Who, the valet?"
"No, the master, though I might have
said the valet."
"Did I yield in Paris?"
"No, but you were of the embassy,
and and no one really knew us, you
know."
Dalton pressed his lips hard together.
"Come," said he, "De Vere, let us try
a fall with this Titan of the carpet."
Denslow hastened back to the Duke.
I followed Dalton; but as for me, bah!
I am a cipher.
The room in which we were adjoined
Honoria's boudoir, from which a secret
passage led down by a spiral to a panel
behind hangings; raising these, one could
enter the drawing-room unobserved.
Dalton paused midway in the secret
passage, and through a loop or narrow
window concealed by architectural
ornaments, and which overlooked the great
drawing-rooms, made a reconnoissance of
the field.
Nights of Venice! what a scene was
there! The vine-branch chandeliers,
crystal-fruited, which depended from the
slender ribs of the ceiling, cast a rosy
dawn of light, deepening the green and
crimson of draperies and carpets, making
an air like sunrise in the bowers of a
forest. Form and order were everywhere
visible, though unobtrusive. Arch
beyond arch, to fourth apartments,
lessening in dimension, with increase of
wealth; groups of beautiful women, on
either hand, seated or half reclined; the
pure or rich hues of their robes blending
imperceptibly, or in gorgeous contrasts,
with the soft outlines and colors of their
supports; a banquet for the eyes and the
mind; the perfect work of art and
culture; gliding about and among these,
or, with others, springing and revolving
in that monarch of all measures, which
blends luxury and purity, until it is either
the one or the other, moved the men.
"That is my work," exclaimed Dalton,
unconsciously.
"Not all, I think."
"I mean the combinations, the effect.
But see! Honoria will again accept the
Duke's invitation. He is coming to her.
Let us prevent it."
He slipped away; and I, remaining at
my post of observation, saw him, an
instant later, passing quickly across the
floor among the dancers, toward Honoria.
The Duke of Rosecouleur arrived at the
same instant before her. She smiled
sorrowfully upon Dalton, and held out her
hand in a languid manner toward the
Duke, and again they floated away upon
the eddies of the music. I followed them
with eyes fixed in admiration. It was a
vision of the orgies of Olympus, Zeus
and Aphrodite circling to a theme of
Chronos.
Had Honoria tasted of the Indian drug,
the weed of paradise? Her eyes, fixed
upon the Duke's, shone like molten sapphires.
A tress of chestnut hair, escaping from
the diamond coronet, sprang lovingly
forward and twined itself over her white
shoulder and still fairer bosom. Tints
like flitting clouds, Titianic, the mystery
and despair of art, disclosed to the intelligent
eye the feeling that mastered her
spirit and her sense. Admirable beauty!
Unrivalled, unhappy! The Phidian idol.
of gold and ivory, into which a demon
had entered, overthrown, and the
worshippers gazing on it with a scorn unmixed
with pity!
The sullen animal rage of battle is
nothing to the livor, the burning hatred
of the drawing-room. Dalton, defeated,
cast a glance of deadly hostility on
the Duke. Nor was it lost. While the
waltz continued, for ten minutes, he stood
motionless. Fearing some untoward
event, I came down and took my place
near him.
The Duke led Honoria to a sofa. But
for his arm she would again have fallen.
Dalton had recovered his courage and
natural haughtiness. The tone of his
voice, rich, tender, and delicately
expressive, did not change.
"Honoria, you sent for me; and the
Duke wishes to see the pictures. The air
of the gallery will relieve your faintness."
He offered his arm, which she, rising
mechanically, accepted. A deep blush
crimsoned her features, at the allusion to
her weakness. Several of the guests
moved after us, as we passed into the
gallery. The Duke's shadow, Rêve de
Noir, following last, closed the ivory
doors. We passed through the gallery,
where pyramids of sunny fruits, in
baskets of fine porcelain, stood relieved by
gold and silver services for wine and
coffee, disposed on the tables, and
thence entered another and smaller
room, devoid of ornament, but the crimson
tapestried walls were covered with
works or copies of the great masters of
Italy.
Opposite the entrance there was a
picture of a woman seated on a throne,
behind which stood a demon whispering in
her ear and pointing to a handsome youth
in the circle of the courtiers. The
design and color were in the style of Correggio.
Denslow stood close behind me.
In advance were Honoria, Dalton, and
the Duke, whose conversation was
addressed alternately to her and Dalton.
The lights of the gallery burst forth in
their full refulgence as we approached
the picture.
The glorious harmony of its colors, the
force of the shadows, which seemed to be
converging in the rays of a single unseen
source of light, the unity of sentiment,
which drew all the groups. together, in
the idea; I had seen all this before, but
with the eyes of supercilious criticism.
Now the picture smote us with awe.
"I have the original of this excellent
work," said the Duke, "in my house at
A, but your copy is nearly as good."
The remark, intended for Honoria,
reached the pride of her companion, who
blandly replied,
"Your Highness's exquisite judgment
is for once at fault. The piece is original.
It was purchased from a well-known
collection in Italy, where there are none
others of the school."
Honoria was gazing upon the picture,
as I was, in silent astonishment.
"If this," said she, "is a copy, what
must have been the genuine work? Did
you never before notice the likeness
between the queen, in that picture, and
myself?" she asked, addressing Dalton.
The remark excited general attention.
Every one murmured, "The likeness is
perfect."
"And the demon behind the queen,"
said Denslow, insipidly, "resembles your
Highness's valet."
There was another exclamation. No
sooner was it observed, than the likeness
to Rêve de Noir seemed to be even more
perfect.
The Duke made a sign.
Rêve de Noir placed himself near the
canvas. His profile was the counterpart
of that in the painting. He seemed to
have stepped out of it.
"It was I," said the Duke, in a gentle
voice, and with a smile which just
disclosed the ivory line under the black
moustache, "who caused this picture to
be copied and altered. The beauty of
the Hon. Mrs. Denslow, whom it was my
highest pleasure to know, seemed to me
to surpass that of the queen of my original.
I first, with great secrecy, unknown to
your wife," continued the Duke, turning
to Denslow, "procured a portrait from
the life by memory, which was afterwards
transferred to this canvas. The
resemblance to my attendant is, I confess,
remarkable and inexplicable."
"But will you tell us by what accident
this copy happened to be in Italy?" asked
Dalton.
"You will remember," replied the Duke,
coldly, "that at Paris, noticing your
expressions of admiration for the picture,
which you had seen in my English
gallery, I gave you a history of its purchase
at Bologna by myself. I sent my artist
to Bologna, with orders to place the copy
in the gallery and to introduce the
portrait of the lady; it was a freak of fancy;
I meant it for a surprise; as I felt sure,
that, if you saw the picture, you would
secure it."
"It seems to me," replied Dalton, "that
the onus of proof rests with your Highness.
The Duke made a signal to Rêve de
Noir, who again stepped up to the
canvas, and, with a short knife or stiletto,
removed a small portion of the outer
layer of paint, disclosing a very ancient
ground of some other and inferior work,
over which the copy seemed to have
been painted. The proof was unanswerable.
"Good copies," remarked the Duke,
"are often better than originals."
He offered his arm to Honoria, and
they walked through the gallery, he
entertaining her, and those near him, with
comments upon other works. The crowd
followed them, as they moved on or
returned, as a cloud of gnats follow up and
down, and to and fro, a branch tossing in
the wind.
"Beaten at every point," I said,
mentally, looking on the pale features of the
defeated Dalton.
"Yes," he replied, seeing the remark
in my face; "but there is yet time. I am
satisfied this is the man with whom we
travelled; none other could have
devised such a plan, or carried it out. He
must have fallen in love with Honoria at
that time; and simply to see her is the
object of his visit to America. He is a
connoisseur in pictures as in women; but
he must not be allowed to ruin us by his
arrogant assumptions."
"Excepting his manner and extraordinary
personal advantages, I find nothing
in him to awe or astonish."
"His wealth is incalculable; he is used
to victories; and that manner which you
affect to slight, that is everything. 'Tis
power, success, victory. This man of
millions, this prince, does not talk; he has
but little use for words. It is manner,
and not words, that achieves social and
amatory conquests."
"Bah! You are like the politicians,
who mistake accidents for principles. But
even you are talking, while this pernicious
foreigner is acting. See! they have
left the gallery, and the crowd of fools is
following them. You cannot stem such
a tide of folly."
"I deny that they are fools. Why does
that sallow wretch, Lethal, follow them?
or that enamelled person, Adonaïs?
They are at a serpent-charming, and
Honoria is the bird-of-paradise. They
watch with delight, and sketch as they
observe, the struggles of the poor bird.
The others are indifferent or curious, envious or amused. It is only Denslow who
is capped and antlered, and the shafts
aimed at his foolish brow glance and
wound us."
We were left alone in the gallery.
Dalton paced back and forth, in his slow,
erect, and graceful manner; there was
no hurry or agitation.
"How quickly," said he, as his moist
eyes met mine, "how like a dream, this
glorious vision, this beautiful work, will
fade and be forgotten! Nevertheless, I
made it," he added, musingly. "It was
I who moulded and expanded the sluggish
millions."
"You will still be what you are,
Dalton, an artist, more than a man of
society. You work with a soft and perishable
material."
"A distinction without a difference.
Every man is a politician, but only
every artist is a gentleman."
"Denslow, then, is ruined."
"Yes and no; there is nothing in him
to ruin. It is I who am the sufferer."
"And Honoria?"
"It was I who formed her manners,
and guided her perceptions of the
beautiful. It was I who married her to a mass
of money, De Vere."
"Did you never love Honoria?"
He laughed.
"Loved? Yes; as Praxiteles may
have loved the clay he moulded, for
its smoothness and ductility under the
hand."
"The day has not come for such men
as you, Dalton."
"Come, and gone, and coming. It has
come in dream-land. Let us follow your
fools."
The larger gallery was crowded. The
pyramids of glowing fruit had disappeared;
there was a confused murmur of
pairs and parties, chatting and taking
wine. The master of the house, his wife,
and guest were nowhere to be seen.
Lethal and Adonaïs stood apart,
conversing. As we approached them
unobserved, Dalton checked me. "Hear what
these people are saying," said he.
"My opinion is," said Lethal, holding
out his crooked forefinger like a claw,
"that this soi-disant duke what the
deuse is his name?"
"Rosecouleur," interposed Adonaïs, in
a tone of society.
"Right, Couleur de Rose is an impostor,
an impostor, a sharper. Everything
tends that way. What an utter sell it
would be!"
"You were with us at the picture
scene?" murmured Adonaïs.
"Yes. Dalton looked wretchedly cut
up, when that devil of a valet, who must
be an accomplice, scraped the new paint
off. The picture must have been got
up in New York by Dalton and the
Denslows."
"Perhaps the Duke, too, was got up in
New York, on the same principle,"
suggested Adonaïs. "Such things are
possible. Society is intrinsically rotten, you
know, and Dalton"
"Is a fellow of considerable talent,"
sneered Lethal, "but has enemies, who
may have planned a duke."
Adonaïs coughed in his cravat, and
hinted, "How would it do to call him
'Barnum Dalton'?"
Adonaïs appeared shocked at
himself, and swallowed a minim of wine to
cleanse his vocal apparatus from the stain
of so coarse an illustration.
"Do you hear those creatures?"
whispered Dalton. "They are arranging
scandalous paragraphs for the
'Illustration.'"
A moment after, he was gone. I spoke
to Lethal and Adonaïs.
"Gentlemen, you are in error about
the picture and the Duke; they are as
they now appear; the one, an excellent
copy, purchased as an original, no
uncommon mistake; the other, a genuine
highness. How does he strike you?"
Lethal cast his eyes around to see who
listened.
"The person," said he, "who is
announced here to-night as an English
duke seemed to me, of all men I could
select, least like one."
"Pray, what is your ideal of an
English duke, Mr. Lethal?" asked Adonaïs,
with the air of a connoisseur, sure of
himself, but hating to offend.
"A plain, solid person, well dressed,
but simple; mutton-chop whiskers; and
the manners of a a
"Bear!" said a soft female voice.
Precisely, the manners of a bear;
a kind of gentlemanly bear, perhaps,
but still, ursine and heavy; while this
person, who seems to have walked out
of or a novel, affects me, by his
ways and appearance, like a a
h'm"
"Gambler!" said the same female
voice, in a conclusive tone.
There was a general soft laugh.
Everybody was pleased. All admired, hated,
and envied the Duke. It was settled
beyond a doubt that he was an impostor,
and that the Denslows were either grossly
taken in, or were "selling" their friends.
In either case, it was shocking and
delightful.
"The fun of the thing," continued
Lethal, raising his voice a little, "is, that
the painter who got up the old picture
must have been as much an admirer
of the Hon. Mrs. Denslow as his
Highness; for, in touching in the queen,
he has unconsciously made it a
portrait."
The blow was final. I moved away,
grieved and mortified to the soul, cursing
the intrusion of the mysterious personage
whose insolent superiority had overthrown
the hopes of my friends.
At the door of the gallery I met G,
the painter, just returned from London.
I drew him with me into the inner
gallery, to make a thorough examination of
the picture. I called his attention to the
wonderful resemblance of the queen to
Honoria. He did not see it; we looked
together, and I began to think that it
might have been a delusion. I told the
Duke's story of the picture to G
He examined the canvas, tested the layers
of color, and pronounced the work
genuine and of immense value. We looked
again and again at the queen's head,
viewing it in every light. The
resemblance to Honoria had disappeared; nor
was the demon any longer a figure of the
Duke's valet.
"One would think," said G, laughing,
"that you had been mesmerized. If
you have been so deceived in a picture,
may you not be equally cheated in a
man? I am loath to offend; but, indeed,
the person whom you call Rosecouleur
cannot be the Duke of that title, whom
I saw in England. I had leave to copy
a picture in his gallery. He was often
present. His manners were mild and
unassuming, not at all like those of this
man, to whom, I acknowledge, the personal
resemblance is surprising. I am afraid
our good friends, the Denslows, and Mr.
Dalton, whom I esteem for their
patronage of art, have been taken in by
an adventurer."
"But the valet, Rêve de Noir?"
"The Duke had a valet of that name
who attended him, and who may, for aught
I know, have resembled this one; but
probability is against concurrent
resemblances. There is also an original of the
picture in the Duke's gallery; in fact, the
artist, as was not unusual in those days,
painted two pictures of the same subject.
Both, then, are genuine."
Returning my cordial thanks to the
good painter for his timely explanation,
I hastened to find Dalton. Drawing
him from the midst of a group whom he
was entertaining, I communicated G's
account of the two pictures, and his
suspicions in regard to the Duke.
His perplexity was great. "Worse
and worse, De Vere! To be ruined by
a common adventurer is more disgraceful
even than the other misfortune. Besides,
our guests are leaving us. At least a
hundred of them have gone away with
the first impression, and the whole city
will have it. The journal reporters have
been here. Denslow's principal creditors
were among the guests to-night; they went
away soon, just after the affair with the
picture; to-morrow will be our dark day.
If it had not been for this demon of a duke
and his familiar, whoever they are, all
would have gone well. Now we are
distrusted, and they will crush us. Let us
fall facing the enemy. Within an hour
I will have the truth about the Duke.
Did I ever tell you what a price Denslow
paid for that picture?"
"No, I do not wish to hear."
"You are right. Come with me."
The novel disrespect excited by the
scandal of Honoria and the picture
seemed to have inspired the two hundred
people who remained with a cheerful
ease. Eating, drinking excessively of
Denslow's costly wines, dancing to music
which grew livelier and more boisterous
as the musicians imbibed more of the
inspiriting juice, and, catching scraps of the
scandal, threw out significant airs, the
company of young persons, deserted by
their scandalized seniors, had converted
the magnificent suite of drawing-rooms
into a carnival theatre. Parties of three
and four were junketing in corners;
laughing servants rushed to and fro as in
a café; the lounges were occupied by
reclining beauties or languid fops
overpowered with wine, about whom lovely
young women, flushed with Champagne
and mischief, were coquetting and
frolicking.
"I warrant you, these people know it
is our last night," said Dalton; "and see
what a use they make of us! Denslow's
rich wines poured away like water;
everything soiled, smeared, and
overturned; our entertainment, at first stately
and gracious as a queen's drawing-room,
ending, with the loss of prestige, in the
riot of a bal masqué. So fades ambition!
But to this duke."
Denslow, who had passed into the polite
stage of inebriation, evident to close
observers, had arranged a little exclusive
circle, which included three women of
fashionable reputation, his wife, the Duke,
Jeffrey Lethal, and Adonaïs. Rêve de Noir
officiated as attendant. The fauteuils and
couches were disposed around a pearl
table, on which were liquors, coffee, wines,
and a few delicacies for Honoria, who
had not supped. They were in the
purple recess adjoining the third drawing-room.
Adonaïs talked with the Duke
about Italy; Lethal criticized; while Honoria, in the full splendor of her beauty,
outshining and overpowering, dropped
here and there a few musical words, like
service-notes, to harmonize.
There is no beauty like the
newly-enamored. Dalton seemed to forget
himself, as he contemplated her, for a
moment. Spaces had been left for us;
the valet placed chairs.
"Dalton," cried Lethal, "you are in
time to decide a question of deep interest;
your friend, De Vere, will assist you.
His Highness has given preference to the
women of America over those of Italy.
Adonaïs, the exquisite and mild, settles
his neck-tie against the Duke, and objects
in that bland but firm manner which is
his. I am the Duke's bottle-holder;
Denslow and wife accept that function
for the chivalrous Adonaïs."
"I am of the Duke's party," replied
Dalton, in his most agreeable manner.
"To be in the daily converse and view
of the most beautiful women in America,
as I have been for years, is a privilege
in the cultivation of a pure taste. I saw
nothing in Italy, except on canvas,
comparable with what I see at this moment.
The Duke is right; but in commending
his judgment, I attribute to him also
sagacity. Beauty is like language; its use
is to conceal. One may, under
rose-colored commendations, a fine manner,
and a flowing style, conceal, as Nature
does with personal advantages in men,
the gross tastes and vulgar cunning of a
charlatan."
Dalton, in saying this, with a manner
free from suspicion or excitement, fixed
his eyes upon the Duke's.
"You seem to have no faith in either
men or women," responded the rich barytone
voice of his Highness, the dark
upper lip disclosing, as before, the row of
square, sharp, ivory teeth.
"Little, very little," responded Dalton,
with a sigh. "Your Highness will understand
me, or if not now, presently."
Lethal trod upon Adonaïs's foot; I
saw him do it. Adonaïs exchanged
glances with a brilliant hawk-faced lady
who sat opposite. The lady smiled and
touched her companion. Honoria, who
saw everything, opened her magnificent
eyes to their full extent. Denslow was
oblivious.
"In fact," continued Dalton, perceiving
the electric flash he had excited,
"skepticism is a disease of my intellect. Perhaps
the most noticeable and palpable fact of
the moment is the presence and identity
of the Duke who is opposite to me; and
yet, doubting as I sometimes do my own
existence, is it not natural, that,
philosophically speaking, the presence and
identity of your Highness are at moments
a subject of philosophical doubt?"
"In cases of this kind," replied the
Duke, "we rest upon circumstantial
evidence."
So saying, he drew from his finger a
ring and handed it to Dalton, who went
to the light and examined it closely, and
passed it to me. It was a minute cameo,
no larger than a grain of wheat, in a ring
of plain gold; a rare and beautiful work
of microscopic art.
"I seem to remember presenting the
Duke of Rosecouleur with a similar ring,
in Italy," said Dalton, resuming his seat;
"but the coincidence does not resolve my
philosophic doubt. excited by the affair
of the picture. We all supposed that we
saw a portrait of the Hon. Mrs. Denslow
in yon picture; and we seemed to
discover, under the management of your
valet, that Denslow's picture, a genuine
duplicate of the original by the author,
was a modern copy. Since your Highness
quitted the gallery, those delusions
have ceased. The picture appears now
to be genuine. The likeness to Mrs.
Denslow has vanished."
An exclamation of surprise from all
present, except the Duke, followed this
announcement.
"And so," continued Dalton, "it may
be with this ring, which now seems to be
the one I gave the Duke at Rome, but
to-morrow may be different."
As he spoke, Dalton gave back the
ring to the Duke, who received it with
his usual grace.
"Who knows," said Lethal, with a deceptive innocence of manner, "whether
aristocracy itself be not founded in
mesmerical deceptions?"
"I think, Lethal," observed Adonaïs,
"you push the matter. It would be
impossible, for instance, even for his
Highness, to make Honoria Denslow appear
ugly."
We all looked at Honoria, to whom
the Duke leaned over and said,
"Would you be willing for a moment
to lose that exquisite beauty?"
"For my sake, Honoria," said Dalton,
"refuse him."
The request, so simply made, was
rewarded by a ravishing smile.
"Edward, do you know that you have
not spoken a kind word to me to-night,
until now?"
Their eyes met, and I saw that Dalton
trembled with a deep emotion. "I will
save you yet," he murmured.
A tall, black hound, of the slender
breed, rose up near Honoria, and, placing
his fore-paws upon the edge of the pearl
table, turned and licked her face and eyes.
It was the vision of a moment. The
dog sprang upon the sofa by the Duke's
side, growling and snapping.
"Rêve de Noir," cried Lethal and
Adonaïs, "drive the dog away!"
The valet had disappeared.
"I have no fear of him, gentlemen,"
said the Duke, patting the head of the
hound; "he is a faithful servant, and has
a faculty of reading thoughts. Go bring
my servant, Demon," said the Duke.
The hound sprang away with a great
bound, and in an instant Rêve de Noir
was standing behind us. The dog did
not appear again.
Honoria looked bewildered. "Of what
dog were you speaking, Edward?"
"The hound that licked your face."
"You are joking. I saw no hound."
"See, gentlemen," exclaimed Lethal,
"his Highness shows us tricks. He is a
wizard."
The three women gave little shrieks,
half pleasure, half terror.
Denslow, who had fallen back in his
chair asleep, awoke and rubbed his eyes.
"What is all this, Honoria?"
"That his Highness is a wizard," she
said, with a forced laugh, glancing at
Dalton.
"Will his Highness do us the honor to
lay aside the mask, and appear in his
true colors?" said Dalton, returning
Honoria's glance with an encouraging
look.
"Gentlemen," said the Duke, haughtily,
"I am your guest, and by hospitality
protected from insult."
"Insult, most noble Duke!" exclaimed
Lethal, with a sneer, "impossible, under
the roof of our friend, the Honorable
Walter Denslow, in the small hours of
the night, and in the presence of the
finest women in the world. Dalton,
pray, reassure his Highness!"
"Edward! Edward!" murmured
Honoria, "have a care, even if it be as you
think."
Dalton remained bland and collected.
Pardon, my Lord, the effect of a
little wine, and of those wonderful fantasies
you have shown us. Your dog, your
servant, and yourself interest us equally;
the picture, the ring, all are wonderful.
In supposing that you had assumed a
mask, and one so noble, I was led into
an error by these miracles, expecting no
less than a translation of yourself into the
person of some famous wonder-worker.
It is, you know, a day of miracles, and
even kings have their salaried seers,
and take counsel of the spiritual world.
More let us have more!"
The circle were amazed; the spirit of
superstitious curiosity seized upon them.
"Rêve de Noir," said the Duke, "a
carafe, and less light."
The candelabra became dim. The
Duke took the carafe of water from the
valet, and, standing up, poured it upon
the air; it broke into flames, which mounted
and floated away, singly or in little
crowds. Still the Duke poured, and dashing
up the water with his hand, by and
by the ceiling was illuminated with a
thousand miniature tongues of
violet-colored fire. We clapped our hands,
and applauded, "Beautiful! marvellous!
wonderful, Duke! your Highness is the
only magician," when, on a sudden,
the flames disappeared and the lights rose
again.
"The world is weary of skepticism,"
remarked Lethal; "there is no chemistry
for that. It is the true magic, doubtless,
recovered from antiquity by his Highness.
Are the wonders exhausted?"
The Duke smiled again. He stretched
out his hand toward Honoria, and
she slept. It was the work of an
instant.
"I have seen that before," said Dalton.
"Not as we see it," responded his Highness.
"Rêve de Noir, less light!"
The room was dark in a moment.
Over the head of Honoria appeared a
cloud, at first black, and soon in this a
nucleus of light, which expanded and shaped
itself into an image and took the form
of the sleeper, nude and spiritual, a belt
of rosy mist enveloping and concealing
all but a head and bust of ravishing
beauty. The vision gazed with languid
and beseeching eyes upon Dalton, and
a sigh seemed to heave the bosom. In
scarce a breathing-time, it was gone.
Honoria waked, unconscious of what had
passed.
Deep terror and amazement fell upon
us all.
"I have seen enough," said Dalton,
rising slowly, and drawing a small riding-whip,
"to know now that this person
is no duke, but either a charlatan or a
devil. In either case, since he has
intruded here, to desecrate and degrade,
I find it proper to apply a magic more
material."
At the word, all rose exclaiming,
"For God's sake, Dalton!" He pressed
forward and laid his hand upon the
Duke. A cry burst from Rêve de Noir
which rent our very souls; and a flash
followed, unspeakably bright, which
revealed the demoniacal features of the
Duke, who sat motionless, regarding
Dalton's uplifted arm. A darkness
followed, profound and palpable. I listened
in terror. There was no sound. Were
we transformed? Silence, darkness, still.
I closed my eyes, and opened them again.
A pale, cold light became slowly
perceptible, stealing through a crevice, and
revealing the walls and ceiling of my
narrow room. The dream still oppressed
me. I went to the window, and let in
reality with the morning light. Yet, for
days after, the images of the real Honoria
and Dalton, my friends, remained
separated from the creatures of the vision;
and the Denslow Palace of dream-land,
the pictures, the revelry, and the
magic of the Demon Duke haunted my
memory, and kept with them all their
visionary splendors and regrets.
(THE END)