MORT'S DREAM-PICTURE.
"It was a dream within a dream, I tell
you, Charlie. I was asleep in my bed in
the next room, and there I dreamed that
I was visiting the Randolphs over in Berkshire
county. I thought I had been up
pretty late, playing billiards with Cale
Randolph and some of the boys. I
remember distinctly scoring seventy-eight
on a run four-ball game. Well, I went
to bed tired out, dreamed I did; fell
asleep and dreamed this which I call a
dream within a dream."
"Well, Mort," said I, "the thing is not
so extraordinary after all. It is a common
enough psychological phenomenon."
"I beg your pardon," quoth Mort Amerman,
satirically, "would you be good
enough to reel me off a little of that last
again, please? Say a couple of fathoms
or so."
"None of your chaffing, now!" laughed
I, "but tell me, what has all this Chinese
dream-puzzle to do with the picture you
promised to show me?"
"Much, O Sahib! for on the silent yet
speaking canvas have I depicted the scene
whereof I speak, and now le voici;" and
with that he threw the cover from the
painting on his easel, and left me to
examine it at my leisure, while he went to
his bed-room. The easel was of course
in the best position in the studio for viewing
the picture, and the soft, delicate
light of the autumn afternoon lay full
upon it; mellowed, however, by an artful
arrangement of screens and shadows, to
gain the precise effect desired.
The painting was of the ordinary
cabinet-size, and appropriately painted,
being also relieved by heavy maroon
drapery, gracefully festooned behind and
around it. I am not of those who believe
that a truly master-work of art may be
described aptly in words, yet I must
essay the task for this once, and if I render
only the bald outlines of the artist's
thought, it may be, perchance, that I
shall be enabled to convey some
glimmering of his meaning.
What first fastened itself upon me was
the murky darkness of most of the scene.
There was a dense and gloomy forest
filling up the entire background and much
of the middle distance. Out from among
that, under the trees, streamed a wild
torrent, and plunged over ragged rocks, and
through and about gnarled roots, and
so down to a leaping cascade that disappeared at
the extreme right in a black and gloomful
pool. Stretching back from the right, a
broad expanse of gray moor extended in
prospective sight to the base of a range
of blue-gray hills, that towered aloft into
the clouds; a narrow path wound through
this moor into the dim distance, and was
lost, apparently, in the shades of night,
which were fast falling.
On the very edge of a bold rock that
jutted over the pool, and on the very
boundary of the water-fall, was the only
seemingly living object of the picture.
A young man prostrate on his knees,
shading his eyes with his two hands, and
gazing intently into the pool beneath.
There was that in the attitude of the
figure, so deftly and truthfully expressed
by the artist, that sense and meaning
grew upon me as I gazed. He was
agonizing distraught. His whole soul was
looking forth from his eyes, and seeking
in the dim twilight now fast fading, to
wrest from the obscurity beneath him
some terrible secret. So clearly was the
story told that my gaze instinctively
followed his, and tracked, as his must
have, the secret of the black pool.
Twining about the base of the rock,
upon whose crest the young man knelt,
a meshed and tangled warp of roots and
fibres first met the eye. But now, clinging
with a death grasp to the largest of
those, I saw the round, fair arm of a young
girl and then and as though I should
have seen it, and nothing else, from the
first, so completely did it now fill the
picture; I saw the white figure limp
white garments clinging to the body
and the fine white face, with rich golden
hair floating and tangled, on the water
and among the roots, and could almost
note the swaying to and fro of the soulless
form, as it was caught by the eddies, and
dragged hither and thither; still held,
however, by that trusty dead arm that
clung so determinedly to the slimy and
black root above.
A touch on my shoulder so startled
me that I cried out; it was only Mort,
who had entered the room unnoticed, so
intent was I in my concentration.
"Well, what do you think of it?"
was the first and most natural
question.
"You never could have dreamed that,"
said I.
"Just as you see it, dreamed I it,
doubter. Now let me cover it up;
and let us go and have some lunch."
"But don't be in a hurry!" said I,
seeking to stop him, as he again
shrouded
the painting beneath its cover. "I
have not half seen it yet."
But muttering, "Some other time," he
persisted in hiding it from me, and
presently we went to lunch together.
Now, I was in nowise satisfied with
my friend's reticence, and experienced a
very vivid curiosity to hear the particulars
of his wonderful dream, which he
had so graphically limned upon the
canvas; but no effort of mine could induce
him to say more concerning it than that
it occurred to him just as he had painted
it.
The painting was sent to the Academy
for exhibition that season, and was sold
to a particular friend of mine for a
goodly sum for so much, in fact, that
I often joked Mort on his dream-picture
and the fortune it had brought him;
for it really seemed as though its sale
was the beginning of a season of great
prosperity.
The winter and spring passed, and as
summer came and the city began to
empty itself by carloads and steamboatfuls
into the country, Mort and I, with a
party of other artists like him, or idlers
like myself, made up a trip to the
Adirondacks. It is needless for the purpose
of this story that I should detail our
sundry adventures during the weeks we
passed among the lakes and hills; nor
need I relate our experiences with fish and
flesh in our numerous hunting and fishing
excursions.
We met many acquaintances, and made
many new ones, and among the latter
were the family of Mr.
Sanfield, a
merchant from Montreal, who, with his wife
and daughter, with the affianced husband of the latter, was
passing a few weeks in the search for rest
and relaxation from customary labors.
Alice Sanfield was beautiful, a pet of
Canadian society, wealthy in her own
right as well as by prospective heirship,
and altogether a "catch." Her lover was
an officer in the British army, stationed
at Montreal, and now on leave a
fine-looking, gentlemanly young fellow,
of good family, and apparently desperately
in love with Miss Sanfield.
Captain Rowland had, however, one
peculiarity, which he displayed on
several occasions very prominently, and
which led Mort to remark to me one day,
when it had been more than usually
manifest, that he thought the captain
would lead Miss Alice rather a lively
dance when she should become Mrs.
Rowland. He had, in fact, about the
most uncontrollable temper I ever saw
displayed in a man. So violent was he
at times, that I commonly wondered why
he had not long before got himself shot
for intemperate insolence in
one of his fits
of passion. Another peculiarity of his
was evinced in frequent lonely wanderings
quite away from the hotel, from
which journeys he would not return for
days together. These disappearances
were accounted for by the captain by
various sporting excuses, and we certainly
should have felt no interest in them,
had it not been for the incident which I
now relate.
One day Mort and I started off on a
trip on our own account, ostensibly for
fishing purposes, but really for my friend
to obtain a sketch of a charming vista
which had not as yet been discovered by
his lynx-eyed associates. Our journey
led us some twenty miles from the hotel;
we traveled a portion of the way in an
open wagon, and then footed it toward
the point desired.
On our route we passed a pretty
farm-house, which we eyed with the gratification
which such rural scenes always always
afforded us, and should have thought no
more of it had we suddenly espied
Captain Rowland, accompanied by a
young lady, engaged in excited and
apparently excited conversation.
The lady was seated on a little knoll a
hundred yards or so from the house, and
the captain stood beside her, leaning
one hand on the tree beneath whose
shades she sat listening to his words.
We were out of sight of them in a
moment, and with a few remarks as to Miss
Sanfield's probable appreciation of the
scene if she had witnessed it, we
continued on our way.
Guides had preceded us with a tent
and sundry appurtenances, and on reaching
the spot selected for our encampment
we found these duly arrived and in
order, and located ourselves for the night,
Mort intending to make his sketch the
next morning.
It was a bright, starlight evening, we
were located just on the edge of a pretty
brawling brook, and as we sat, after a
delicious trout supper, smoking our pipes
and chatting lazily, we felt about as
comfortable as practicable. Twilight
had faded suddenly, and just as the stars
became rather necessary for illuminating
purposes, a shrill scream startled us from
our seats on an old log, and thrilled us
to the very marrows.
One of the guides said,
"That was a woman's scream, and near
by."
Then we dashed in the in the direction of
the sound, which led us straight down
the course of the brook. A few moments
brought us to the outlet of the little
stream, and as Mort and I turned a
projecting rock we came upon a thrilling
scene indeed.
Mort
saw it first, and crying, "My
dream! my dream!" he fell flat on his
face in a dead faint. And as I stood
over him, leaning forward, the moon
shone full upon the original of the
painting I had seen in Mort's studio in
New York.
Here was the cascade and the black
pool; there were the gray moon and the
distant mountains. The gnarled roots
and fibres twisted together far beneath
me in the clasp of a fair white arm, and
the white figure rose and fell with the
rise and fall of the running stream. And
on the bank opposite, prostrate on his
knees, shading his eyes with his hands,
while he peered into the rocky chasm,
was Captain Rowland.
Even as I looked he rose to his feet,
and throwing his hands wildly in the
air, fled from the scene. The noise of
the falling waters had prevented him from
observing our approach, and it was
impossible for us to reach him. It took
us a full quarter of an hour to get to
the bottom of the ravine, and longer
yet ere our united efforts could draw the
poor young creature to the bank. We
took her to the little farm-house, which
was about a quarter of a mile away; and
then, leaving the guides to follow with
our traps, we pushed rapidly to our
wagon. The next evening we reached
the hotel, Mort nearly crazy with excitement,
and I not in a much better condition.
Now, I had not informed the old farmer
and his wife of having seen Rowland.
Neither had I told the guides, who had
come up too late to see him.
To each and all of these I simply
related the finding
of the body of the young lady, who proved to
be from Montreal visiting the old farmer
who was a connection of hers.
I acted thus on both reason and
impulse, which worked together in this
wise:
Impulse and reason both agreed that
as no human being but Captain Rowland
knew how the young lady came to her
death, any story which he Captain
Rowland saw fit to tell must necessarily
be accepted. Impulse alone suggested
to me a possible means for discovering
the truth of the occurrence, and as Mort
had not seen the captain, but only the
body and its surroundings, which so
recalled his dream, I had only to keep my
own counsel and I did. The farmer
and his wife assumed that she must have
wandered in the woods, as was her
custom, and fallen accidentally into the
pool, and I did not attempt to change
their opinion. They knew nothing of
her having any visitor that afternoon,
and I left them mourning for the
sad accident, and the painful duty which
had fallen upon them of communicating
the awful tidings to the young lady's
friends in Montreal.
At the hotel, the first persons whom
we saw were the Sanfields, accompanied,
as usual, by Captain Rowland. He
seemed in his customary frame of mind,
and, as I started a messenger with a telegram
for New York, I ground my teeth
in rage that time must elapse before I
could expose him.
Two days later, a package came to me
by private hand, and that same evening
I invited a number of gentlemen including
Captain Rowland to come to my
room and examine a rare painting. They
came, the captain in excellent spirits,
holding his eye-glass in readiness.
The painting stood on an easel, and
was shrouded with black velvet. Candles
with reflectors, arranged in front of it,
threw a brilliant light upon the gloomy
covering. The gentlemen were
arranged in a semi-circle in front of the
easel, Captain Rowland in the centre,
and I drew aside the velvet covering.
I saw Rowland start as though he had
been stung; he gave a yell which was
positively inhuman, and sprang for the
door. There he found me with a revolver
pointed at his face, and in two minutes
he was in the custody of two detective
officers from New York.
That evening he confessed everything.
Entangled with the poor girl, he had
vainly tried to buy her silence, that he
might marry the rich Miss Sanfield.
Failing in that, he had lured the girl to
accompany him in a walk through the
woods, and had there pushed her into
the pool.
I hoped to have the pleasure of seeing
him satisfactorily executed according
to the law, but in this he defeated justice.
He bit a hole in his arm while confined
in the prison awaiting his trial, and bled
to death.
Thus Mort's dream picture turned
State's evidence, but as to the secret
power by which this silent but sufficient
witness was created, months before the
incident it depicted had occurred I give
it up.