CHAPTER I. SERAPHITUS
CHAPTER II. SERAPHITA
CHAPTER III. SERAPHITA-SERAPHITUS
CHAPTER IV. THE CLOUDS OF THE SANCTUARY
CHAPTER V. FAREWELL
CHAPTER VI. THE PATH TO HEAVEN
CHAPTER VII. THE ASSUMPTION
CHAPTER I. SERAPHITUS
As the eye glances over a map of
the coasts of Norway, can the imagination fail to marvel at their
fantastic indentations and serrated edges, like a granite lace,
against which the surges of the North Sea roar incessantly? Who has
not dreamed of the majestic sights to be seen on those beachless
shores, of that multitude of creeks and inlets and little bays, no
two of them alike, yet all trackless abysses? We may almost fancy
that Nature took pleasure in recording by ineffaceable
hieroglyphics the symbol of Norwegian life, bestowing on these
coasts the conformation of a fish’s spine, fishery being the staple
commerce of the country, and well-nigh the only means of living of
the hardy men who cling like tufts of lichen to the arid cliffs.
Here, through fourteen degrees of longitude, barely seven hundred
thousand souls maintain existence. Thanks to perils devoid of
glory, to year-long snows which clothe the Norway peaks and guard
them from profaning foot of traveller, these sublime beauties are
virgin still; they will be seen to harmonize with human phenomena,
also virgin—at least to poetry—which here took place, the history
of which it is our purpose to relate.If one of these inlets, mere fissures to the eyes of the
eider-ducks, is wide enough for the sea not to freeze between the
prison-walls of rock against which it surges, the country-people
call the little bay a “fiord,”—a word which geographers of every
nation have adopted into their respective languages. Though a
certain resemblance exists among all these fiords, each has its own
characteristics. The sea has everywhere forced its way as through a
breach, yet the rocks about each fissure are diversely rent, and
their tumultuous precipices defy the rules of geometric law. Here
the scarp is dentelled like a saw; there the narrow ledges barely
allow the snow to lodge or the noble crests of the Northern pines
to spread themselves; farther on, some convulsion of Nature may
have rounded a coquettish curve into a lovely valley flanked in
rising terraces with black-plumed pines. Truly we are tempted to
call this land the Switzerland of Ocean.Midway between Trondhjem and Christiansand lies an inlet
called the Strom-fiord. If the Strom-fiord is not the loveliest of
these rocky landscapes, it has the merit of displaying the
terrestrial grandeurs of Norway, and of enshrining the scenes of a
history that is indeed celestial.The general outline of the Strom-fiord seems at first sight
to be that of a funnel washed out by the sea. The passage which the
waves have forced present to the eye an image of the eternal
struggle between old Ocean and the granite rock,—two creations of
equal power, one through inertia, the other by ceaseless motion.
Reefs of fantastic shape run out on either side, and bar the way of
ships and forbid their entrance. The intrepid sons of Norway cross
these reefs on foot, springing from rock to rock, undismayed at the
abyss—a hundred fathoms deep and only six feet wide—which yawns
beneath them. Here a tottering block of gneiss falling athwart two
rocks gives an uncertain footway; there the hunters or the
fishermen, carrying their loads, have flung the stems of fir-trees
in guise of bridges, to join the projecting reefs, around and
beneath which the surges roar incessantly. This dangerous entrance
to the little bay bears obliquely to the right with a serpentine
movement, and there encounters a mountain rising some twenty-five
hundred feet above sea-level, the base of which is a vertical
palisade of solid rock more than a mile and a half long, the
inflexible granite nowhere yielding to clefts or undulations until
it reaches a height of two hundred feet above the water. Rushing
violently in, the sea is driven back with equal violence by the
inert force of the mountain to the opposite shore, gently curved by
the spent force of the retreating waves.The fiord is closed at the upper end by a vast gneiss
formation crowned with forests, down which a river plunges in
cascades, becomes a torrent when the snows are melting, spreads
into a sheet of waters, and then falls with a roar into the
bay,—vomiting as it does so the hoary pines and the aged larches
washed down from the forests and scarce seen amid the foam. These
trees plunge headlong into the fiord and reappear after a time on
the surface, clinging together and forming islets which float
ashore on the beaches, where the inhabitants of a village on the
left bank of the Strom-fiord gather them up, split, broken (though
sometimes whole), and always stripped of bark and branches. The
mountain which receives at its base the assaults of Ocean, and at
its summit the buffeting of the wild North wind, is called the
Falberg. Its crest, wrapped at all seasons in a mantle of snow and
ice, is the sharpest peak of Norway; its proximity to the pole
produces, at the height of eighteen hundred feet, a degree of cold
equal to that of the highest mountains of the globe. The summit of
this rocky mass, rising sheer from the fiord on one side, slopes
gradually downward to the east, where it joins the declivities of
the Sieg and forms a series of terraced valleys, the chilly
temperature of which allows no growth but that of shrubs and
stunted trees.The upper end of the fiord, where the waters enter it as they
come down from the forest, is called the Siegdahlen,—a word which
may be held to mean “the shedding of the Sieg,”—the river itself
receiving that name. The curving shore opposite to the face of the
Falberg is the valley of Jarvis,—a smiling scene overlooked by
hills clothed with firs, birch-trees, and larches, mingled with a
few oaks and beeches, the richest coloring of all the varied
tapestries which Nature in these northern regions spreads upon the
surface of her rugged rocks. The eye can readily mark the line
where the soil, warmed by the rays of the sun, bears cultivation
and shows the native growth of the Norwegian flora. Here the
expanse of the fiord is broad enough to allow the sea, dashed back
by the Falberg, to spend its expiring force in gentle murmurs upon
the lower slope of these hills,—a shore bordered with finest sand,
strewn with mica and sparkling pebbles, porphyry, and marbles of a
thousand tints, brought from Sweden by the river floods, together
with ocean waifs, shells, and flowers of the sea driven in by
tempests, whether of the Pole or Tropics.At the foot of the hills of Jarvis lies a village of some two
hundred wooden houses, where an isolated population lives like a
swarm of bees in a forest, without increasing or diminishing;
vegetating happily, while wringing their means of living from the
breast of a stern Nature. The almost unknown existence of the
little hamlet is readily accounted for. Few of its inhabitants were
bold enough to risk their lives among the reefs to reach the
deep-sea fishing,—the staple industry of Norwegians on the least
dangerous portions of their coast. The fish of the fiord were
numerous enough to suffice, in part at least, for the sustenance of
the inhabitants; the valley pastures provided milk and butter; a
certain amount of fruitful, well-tilled soil yielded rye and hemp
and vegetables, which necessity taught the people to protect
against the severity of the cold and the fleeting but terrible heat
of the sun with the shrewd ability which Norwegians display in the
two-fold struggle. The difficulty of communication with the outer
world, either by land where the roads are impassable, or by sea
where none but tiny boats can thread their way through the maritime
defiles that guard the entrance to the bay, hinder these people
from growing rich by the sale of their timber. It would cost
enormous sums to either blast a channel out to sea or construct a
way to the interior. The roads from Christiana to Trondhjem all
turn toward the Strom-fiord, and cross the Sieg by a bridge some
score of miles above its fall into the bay. The country to the
north, between Jarvis and Trondhjem, is covered with impenetrable
forests, while to the south the Falberg is nearly as much separated
from Christiana by inaccessible precipices. The village of Jarvis
might perhaps have communicated with the interior of Norway and
Sweden by the river Sieg; but to do this and to be thus brought
into contact with civilization, the Strom-fiord needed the presence
of a man of genius. Such a man did actually appear there,—a poet, a
Swede of great religious fervor, who died admiring, even
reverencing this region as one of the noblest works of the
Creator.Minds endowed by study with an inward sight, and whose quick
perceptions bring before the soul, as though painted on a canvas,
the contrasting scenery of this universe, will now apprehend the
general features of the Strom-fiord. They alone, perhaps, can
thread their way through the tortuous channels of the reef, or flee
with the battling waves to the everlasting rebuff of the Falberg
whose white peaks mingle with the vaporous clouds of the pearl-gray
sky, or watch with delight the curving sheet of waters, or hear the
rushing of the Sieg as it hangs for an instant in long fillets and
then falls over a picturesque abatis of noble trees toppled
confusedly together, sometimes upright, sometimes half-sunken
beneath the rocks. It may be that such minds alone can dwell upon
the smiling scenes nestling among the lower hills of Jarvis; where
the luscious Northern vegetables spring up in families, in myriads,
where the white birches bend, graceful as maidens, where colonnades
of beeches rear their boles mossy with the growth of centuries,
where shades of green contrast, and white clouds float amid the
blackness of the distant pines, and tracts of many-tinted crimson
and purple shrubs are shaded endlessly; in short, where blend all
colors, all perfumes of a flora whose wonders are still ignored.
Widen the boundaries of this limited ampitheatre, spring upward to
the clouds, lose yourself among the rocks where the seals are lying
and even then your thought cannot compass the wealth of beauty nor
the poetry of this Norwegian coast. Can your thought be as vast as
the ocean that bounds it? as weird as the fantastic forms drawn by
these forests, these clouds, these shadows, these changeful
lights?Do you see above the meadows on that lowest slope which
undulates around the higher hills of Jarvis two or three hundred
houses roofed with “noever,” a sort of thatch made of
birch-bark,—frail houses, long and low, looking like silk-worms on
a mulberry-leaf tossed hither by the winds? Above these humble,
peaceful dwellings stands the church, built with a simplicity in
keeping with the poverty of the villagers. A graveyard surrounds
the chancel, and a little farther on you see the parsonage. Higher
up, on a projection of the mountain is a dwelling-house, the only
one of stone; for which reason the inhabitants of the village call
it “the Swedish Castle.” In fact, a wealthy Swede settled in Jarvis
about thirty years before this history begins, and did his best to
ameliorate its condition. This little house, certainly not a
castle, built with the intention of leading the inhabitants to
build others like it, was noticeable for its solidity and for the
wall that inclosed it, a rare thing in Norway where,
notwithstanding the abundance of stone, wood alone is used for all
fences, even those of fields. This Swedish house, thus protected
against the climate, stood on rising ground in the centre of an
immense courtyard. The windows were sheltered by those projecting
pent-house roofs supported by squared trunks of trees which give so
patriarchal an air to Northern dwellings. From beneath them the eye
could see the savage nudity of the Falberg, or compare the
infinitude of the open sea with the tiny drop of water in the
foaming fiord; the ear could hear the flowing of the Sieg, whose
white sheet far away looked motionless as it fell into its granite
cup edged for miles around with glaciers,—in short, from this
vantage ground the whole landscape whereon our simple yet
superhuman drama was about to be enacted could be seen and
noted.The winter of 1799-1800 was one of the most severe ever known
to Europeans. The Norwegian sea was frozen in all the fiords,
where, as a usual thing, the violence of the surf kept the ice from
forming. A wind, whose effects were like those of the Spanish
levanter, swept the ice of the Strom-fiord, driving the snow to the
upper end of the gulf. Seldom indeed could the people of Jarvis see
the mirror of frozen waters reflecting the colors of the sky; a
wondrous site in the bosom of these mountains when all other
aspects of nature are levelled beneath successive sheets of snow,
and crests and valleys are alike mere folds of the vast mantle
flung by winter across a landscape at once so mournfully dazzling
and so monotonous. The falling volume of the Sieg, suddenly frozen,
formed an immense arcade beneath which the inhabitants might have
crossed under shelter from the blast had any dared to risk
themselves inland. But the dangers of every step away from their
own surroundings kept even the boldest hunters in their homes,
afraid lest the narrow paths along the precipices, the clefts and
fissures among the rocks, might be unrecognizable beneath the
snow.Thus it was that no human creature gave life to the white
desert where Boreas reigned, his voice alone resounding at distant
intervals. The sky, nearly always gray, gave tones of polished
steel to the ice of the fiord. Perchance some ancient eider-duck
crossed the expanse, trusting to the warm down beneath which dream,
in other lands, the luxurious rich, little knowing of the dangers
through which their luxury has come to them. Like the Bedouin of
the desert who darts alone across the sands of Africa, the bird is
neither seen nor heard; the torpid atmosphere, deprived of its
electrical conditions, echoes neither the whirr of its wings nor
its joyous notes. Besides, what human eye was strong enough to bear
the glitter of those pinnacles adorned with sparkling crystals, or
the sharp reflections of the snow, iridescent on the summits in the
rays of a pallid sun which infrequently appeared, like a dying man
seeking to make known that he still lives. Often, when the flocks
of gray clouds, driven in squadrons athwart the mountains and among
the tree-tops, hid the sky with their triple veils Earth, lacking
the celestial lights, lit herself by herself.Here, then, we meet the majesty of Cold, seated eternally at
the pole in that regal silence which is the attribute of all
absolute monarchy. Every extreme principle carries with it an
appearance of negation and the symptoms of death; for is not life
the struggle of two forces? Here in this Northern nature nothing
lived. One sole power—the unproductive power of ice—reigned
unchallenged. The roar of the open sea no longer reached the deaf,
dumb inlet, where during one short season of the year Nature made
haste to produce the slender harvests necessary for the food of the
patient people. A few tall pine-trees lifted their black pyramids
garlanded with snow, and the form of their long branches and
depending shoots completed the mourning garments of those solemn
heights.Each household gathered in its chimney-corner, in houses
carefully closed from the outer air, and well supplied with
biscuit, melted butter, dried fish, and other provisions laid in
for the seven-months winter. The very smoke of these dwellings was
hardly seen, half-hidden as they were beneath the snow, against the
weight of which they were protected by long planks reaching from
the roof and fastened at some distance to solid blocks on the
ground, forming a covered way around each building.During these terrible winter months the women spun and dyed
the woollen stuffs and the linen fabrics with which they clothed
their families, while the men read, or fell into those endless
meditations which have given birth to so many profound theories, to
the mystic dreams of the North, to its beliefs, to its studies (so
full and so complete in one science, at least, sounded as with a
plummet), to its manners and its morals, half-monastic, which force
the soul to react and feed upon itself and make the Norwegian
peasant a being apart among the peoples of Europe.Such was the condition of the Strom-fiord in the first year
of the nineteenth century and about the middle of the month of
May.On a morning when the sun burst forth upon this landscape,
lighting the fires of the ephemeral diamonds produced by
crystallizations of the snow and ice, two beings crossed the fiord
and flew along the base of the Falberg, rising thence from ledge to
ledge toward the summit. What were they? human creatures, or two
arrows? They might have been taken for eider-ducks sailing in
consort before the wind. Not the boldest hunter nor the most
superstitious fisherman would have attributed to human beings the
power to move safely along the slender lines traced beneath the
snow by the granite ledges, where yet this couple glided with the
terrifying dexterity of somnambulists who, forgetting their own
weight and the dangers of the slightest deviation, hurry along a
ridge-pole and keep their equilibrium by the power of some
mysterious force.
“ Stop me, Seraphitus,” said a pale young girl, “and let me
breathe. I look at you, you only, while scaling these walls of the
gulf; otherwise, what would become of me? I am such a feeble
creature. Do I tire you?”
“ No,” said the being on whose arm she leaned. “But let us go
on, Minna; the place where we are is not firm enough to stand
on.”Once more the snow creaked sharply beneath the long boards
fastened to their feet, and soon they reached the upper terrace of
the first ledge, clearly defined upon the flank of the precipice.
The person whom Minna had addressed as Seraphitus threw his weight
upon his right heel, arresting the plank—six and a half feet long
and narrow as the foot of a child—which was fastened to his boot by
a double thong of leather. This plank, two inches thick, was
covered with reindeer skin, which bristled against the snow when
the foot was raised, and served to stop the wearer. Seraphitus drew
in his left foot, furnished with another “skee,” which was only two
feet long, turned swiftly where he stood, caught his timid
companion in his arms, lifted her in spite of the long boards on
her feet, and placed her on a projecting rock from which he brushed
the snow with his pelisse.
“ You are safe there, Minna; you can tremble at your
ease.”
“ We are a third of the way up the Ice-Cap,” she said,
looking at the peak to which she gave the popular name by which it
is known in Norway; “I can hardly believe it.”Too much out of breath to say more, she smiled at Seraphitus,
who, without answering, laid his hand upon her heart and listened
to its sounding throbs, rapid as those of a frightened
bird.
“ It often beats as fast when I run,” she said.Seraphitus inclined his head with a gesture that was neither
coldness nor indifference, and yet, despite the grace which made
the movement almost tender, it none the less bespoke a certain
negation, which in a woman would have seemed an exquisite coquetry.
Seraphitus clasped the young girl in his arms. Minna accepted the
caress as an answer to her words, continuing to gaze at him. As he
raised his head, and threw back with impatient gesture the golden
masses of his hair to free his brow, he saw an expression of joy in
the eyes of his companion.
“ Yes, Minna,” he said in a voice whose paternal accents were
charming from the lips of a being who was still adolescent, “Keep
your eyes on me; do not look below you.”
“ Why not?” she asked.
“ You wish to know why? then look!”Minna glanced quickly at her feet and cried out suddenly like
a child who sees a tiger. The awful sensation of abysses seized
her; one glance sufficed to communicate its contagion. The fiord,
eager for food, bewildered her with its loud voice ringing in her
ears, interposing between herself and life as though to devour her
more surely. From the crown of her head to her feet and along her
spine an icy shudder ran; then suddenly intolerable heat suffused
her nerves, beat in her veins and overpowered her extremities with
electric shocks like those of the torpedo. Too feeble to resist,
she felt herself drawn by a mysterious power to the depths below,
wherein she fancied that she saw some monster belching its venom, a
monster whose magnetic eyes were charming her, whose open jaws
appeared to craunch their prey before they seized it.
“ I die, my Seraphitus, loving none but thee,” she said,
making a mechanical movement to fling herself into the
abyss.Seraphitus breathed softly on her forehead and eyes.
Suddenly, like a traveller relaxed after a bath, Minna forgot these
keen emotions, already dissipated by that caressing breath which
penetrated her body and filled it with balsamic essences as quickly
as the breath itself had crossed the air.
“ Who art thou?” she said, with a feeling of gentle terror.
“Ah, but I know! thou art my life. How canst thou look into that
gulf and not die?” she added presently.Seraphitus left her clinging to the granite rock and placed
himself at the edge of the narrow platform on which they stood,
whence his eyes plunged to the depths of the fiord, defying its
dazzling invitation. His body did not tremble, his brow was white
and calm as that of a marble statue,—an abyss facing an
abyss.
“ Seraphitus! dost thou not love me? come back!” she cried.
“Thy danger renews my terror. Who art thou to have such superhuman
power at thy age?” she asked as she felt his arms inclosing her
once more.
“ But, Minna,” answered Seraphitus, “you look fearlessly at
greater spaces far than that.”Then with raised finger, this strange being pointed upward to
the blue dome, which parting clouds left clear above their heads,
where stars could be seen in open day by virtue of atmospheric laws
as yet unstudied.
“ But what a difference!” she answered smiling.
“ You are right,” he said; “we are born to stretch upward to
the skies. Our native land, like the face of a mother, cannot
terrify her children.”His voice vibrated through the being of his companion, who
made no reply.
“ Come! let us go on,” he said.The pair darted forward along the narrow paths traced back
and forth upon the mountain, skimming from terrace to terrace, from
line to line, with the rapidity of a barb, that bird of the desert.
Presently they reached an open space, carpeted with turf and moss
and flowers, where no foot had ever trod.
“ Oh, the pretty saeter!” cried Minna, giving to the upland
meadow its Norwegian name. “But how comes it here, at such a
height?”
“ Vegetation ceases here, it is true,” said Seraphitus.
“These few plants and flowers are due to that sheltering rock which
protects the meadow from the polar winds. Put that tuft in your
bosom, Minna,” he added, gathering a flower,—“that balmy creation
which no eye has ever seen; keep the solitary matchless flower in
memory of this one matchless morning of your life. You will find no
other guide to lead you again to this saeter.”So saying, he gave her the hybrid plant his falcon eye had
seen amid the tufts of gentian acaulis and saxifrages,—a marvel,
brought to bloom by the breath of angels. With girlish eagerness
Minna seized the tufted plant of transparent green, vivid as
emerald, which was formed of little leaves rolled trumpet-wise,
brown at the smaller end but changing tint by tint to their
delicately notched edges, which were green. These leaves were so
tightly pressed together that they seemed to blend and form a mat
or cluster of rosettes. Here and there from this green ground rose
pure white stars edged with a line of gold, and from their throats
came crimson anthers but no pistils. A fragrance, blended of roses
and of orange blossoms, yet ethereal and fugitive, gave something
as it were celestial to that mysterious flower, which Seraphitus
sadly contemplated, as though it uttered plaintive thoughts which
he alone could understand. But to Minna this mysterious phenomenon
seemed a mere caprice of nature giving to stone the freshness,
softness, and perfume of plants.
“ Why do you call it matchless? can it not reproduce itself?”
she asked, looking at Seraphitus, who colored and turned
away.
“ Let us sit down,” he said presently; “look below you,
Minna. See! At this height you will have no fear. The abyss is so
far beneath us that we no longer have a sense of its depths; it
acquires the perspective uniformity of ocean, the vagueness of
clouds, the soft coloring of the sky. See, the ice of the fiord is
a turquoise, the dark pine forests are mere threads of brown; for
us all abysses should be thus adorned.”Seraphitus said the words with that fervor of tone and
gesture seen and known only by those who have ascended the highest
mountains of the globe,—a fervor so involuntarily acquired that the
haughtiest of men is forced to regard his guide as a brother,
forgetting his own superior station till he descends to the valleys
and the abodes of his kind. Seraphitus unfastened the skees from
Minna’s feet, kneeling before her. The girl did not notice him, so
absorbed was she in the marvellous view now offered of her native
land, whose rocky outlines could here be seen at a glance. She
felt, with deep emotion, the solemn permanence of those frozen
summits, to which words could give no adequate
utterance.
“ We have not come here by human power alone,” she said,
clasping her hands. “But perhaps I dream.”
“ You think that facts the causes of which you cannot
perceive are supernatural,” replied her companion.
“ Your replies,” she said, “always bear the stamp of some
deep thought. When I am near you I understand all things without an
effort. Ah, I am free!”
“ If so, you will not need your skees,” he
answered.
“ Oh!” she said; “I who would fain unfasten yours and kiss
your feet!”
“ Keep such words for Wilfrid,” said Seraphitus,
gently.
“ Wilfrid!” cried Minna angrily; then, softening as she
glanced at her companion’s face and trying, but in vain, to take
his hand, she added, “You are never angry, never; you are so
hopelessly perfect in all things.”
“ From which you conclude that I am unfeeling.”Minna was startled at this lucid interpretation of her
thought.
“ You prove to me, at any rate, that we understand each
other,” she said, with the grace of a loving woman.Seraphitus softly shook his head and looked sadly and gently
at her.
“ You, who know all things,” said Minna, “tell me why it is
that the timidity I felt below is over now that I have mounted
higher. Why do I dare to look at you for the first time face to
face, while lower down I scarcely dared to give a furtive
glance?”
“ Perhaps because we are withdrawn from the pettiness of
earth,” he answered, unfastening his pelisse.
“ Never, never have I seen you so beautiful!” cried Minna,
sitting down on a mossy rock and losing herself in contemplation of
the being who had now guided her to a part of the peak hitherto
supposed to be inaccessible.Never, in truth, had Seraphitus shone with so bright a
radiance,—the only word which can render the illumination of his
face and the aspect of his whole person. Was this splendor due to
the lustre which the pure air of mountains and the reflections of
the snow give to the complexion? Was it produced by the inward
impulse which excites the body at the instant when exertion is
arrested? Did it come from the sudden contrast between the glory of
the sun and the darkness of the clouds, from whose shadow the
charming couple had just emerged? Perhaps to all these causes we
may add the effect of a phenomenon, one of the noblest which human
nature has to offer. If some able physiologist had studied this
being (who, judging by the pride on his brow and the lightning in
his eyes seemed a youth of about seventeen years of age), and if
the student had sought for the springs of that beaming life beneath
the whitest skin that ever the North bestowed upon her offspring,
he would undoubtedly have believed either in some phosphoric fluid
of the nerves shining beneath the cuticle, or in the constant
presence of an inward luminary, whose rays issued through the being
of Seraphitus like a light through an alabaster vase. Soft and
slender as were his hands, ungloved to remove his companion’s
snow-boots, they seemed possessed of a strength equal to that which
the Creator gave to the diaphanous tentacles of the crab. The fire
darting from his vivid glance seemed to struggle with the beams of
the sun, not to take but to give them light. His body, slim and
delicate as that of a woman, gave evidence of one of those natures
which are feeble apparently, but whose strength equals their will,
rendering them at times powerful. Of medium height, Seraphitus
appeared to grow in stature as he turned fully round and seemed
about to spring upward. His hair, curled by a fairy’s hand and
waving to the breeze, increased the illusion produced by this
aerial attitude; yet his bearing, wholly without conscious effort,
was the result far more of a moral phenomenon than of a corporal
habit.Minna’s imagination seconded this illusion, under the
dominion of which all persons would assuredly have fallen,—an
illusion which gave to Seraphitus the appearance of a vision
dreamed of in happy sleep. No known type conveys an image of that
form so majestically made to Minna, but which to the eyes of a man
would have eclipsed in womanly grace the fairest of Raphael’s
creations. That painter of heaven has ever put a tranquil joy, a
loving sweetness, into the lines of his angelic conceptions; but
what soul, unless it contemplated Seraphitus himself, could have
conceived the ineffable emotions imprinted on his face? Who would
have divined, even in the dreams of artists, where all things
become possible, the shadow cast by some mysterious awe upon that
brow, shining with intellect, which seemed to question Heaven and
to pity Earth? The head hovered awhile disdainfully, as some
majestic bird whose cries reverberate on the atmosphere, then bowed
itself resignedly, like the turtledove uttering soft notes of
tenderness in the depths of the silent woods. His complexion was of
marvellous whiteness, which brought out vividly the coral lips, the
brown eyebrows, and the silken lashes, the only colors that
trenched upon the paleness of that face, whose perfect regularity
did not detract from the grandeur of the sentiments expressed in
it; n [...]