We are far amidst the snow-clad mountains of Transylvania.
The scenery is magnificent. In clear weather, the plains of Hungary as far as the Rez promontory
may be seen from the summit of the mountains. Groups of hills rise one above the other, covered with thick forest, which,
at the period when our tale commences, had just begun to assume the first light green of spring.
Toward sunset, a slight purple mist overspread the farther pinnacles, leaving their ridges
still tinged with gold. On the side of one of these hills the white turrets of an ancient family mansion gleamed from amid
the trees.
Its situation was peculiarly romantic. A steep rock descended on one side, on whose pinnacle
rose a simple cross. In the depth of the valley beneath lay a scattered village, whose evening bells melodiously broke the
stillness of nature.
Farther off, some broken roofs arose among the trees, from whence the sound of the mill,
and the yellow-tinted stream, betrayed the miners' dwellings.
Through the meadows in the valley beneath a serpentine rivulet wound its silvery way, interrupted
by numerous falls and huge blocks of stone, which had been carried down in bygone ages from the mountains during the melting
of the snows.
A little path, cut in the side of the rock, ascended to the castle; while higher up, a
broad road, somewhat broken by the mountain streams, conducted across the hills to more distant regions.
The castle itself was an old family mansion, which had received many additions at different
periods, as the wealth or necessities of the family suggested.
It was surrounded by groups of ancient chestnut trees, and the terrace before the court
was laid out in gardens, which were now filled with anemones, hyacinths, and other early flowers. Now and then the head of
a joyous child appeared at the windows, which were opened to admit the evening breeze; while various members of the household
retinue were seen hastening through the corridors, or standing at the doors in their embroidered liveries.
The castle was completely surrounded by a strong rail-work of iron, the stone pillars were
overgrown by the evergreen leaves of the gobea and epomoea.
It was the early spring of 1848.
A party, consisting of thirteen persons, had assembled in the dining-room. They were all
members of one family, and all bore the name of Bardy.
At the head of the board sat the grandmother, an old lady of eighty years of age, whose
snow-white hair was dressed according to the fashion of her times beneath her high white cap. Her face was pale and much wrinkled,
and the eyes turned constantly upwards, as is the case with persons who have lost their sight. Her hand and voice trembled
with age, and there was something peculiarly striking in the thick snow-white eyebrows.
On her right hand sat her eldest son, Thomas Bardy, a man of between fifty and sixty. With
a haughty and commanding countenance, penetrating glance, lofty figure, and noble mien, he was a true type of that ancient
aristocracy which is now beginning to die out.
Opposite to him, at the old lady's left hand, sat the darling of the family--a lovely girl
of about fifteen. Her golden hair fell in luxuriant tresses round a countenance of singular beauty and sweetness. The large
and lustrous deep-blue eyes were shaded by long dark lashes, and her complexion was pale as the lily, excepting when she smiled
or spoke, and a slight flush like the dawn of morning overspread her cheeks.
Jolanka was the orphan child of a distant relative, whom the Bardys had adopted. They could
not allow one who bore their name to suffer want; and it seemed as if each member of the family had united to heap affection
and endearment on the orphan girl, and thus prevented her from feeling herself a stranger among them.
There were still two other female members of the family: Katalin, the old lady's daughter,
who had been for many years a widow; and the wife of one of her sons, a pretty young woman, who was trying to teach a little
prattler at her side to use the golden spoon which she had placed in his small, fat hand, while he laughed and crowed, and
the family did their best to guess what he said, or what he most preferred.
Opposite to them there sat two gentlemen. One of them was the husband of the young mother.
Jozsef Bardy--a handsome man of about thirty-five, with regular features, and black hair and beard; a constant smile beamed
on his gay countenance, while he playfully addressed his little son and gentle wife across the table. The other was his brother,
Barnabas--a man of herculean form and strength. His face was marked by smallpox; he wore neither beard or mustache, and his
hair was combed smoothly back, like a peasant's. His disposition was melancholy and taciturn; but he seemed constantly striving
to atone, by the amiability of his manners, for an unprepossessing exterior.
Next to him sat a little cripple, whose pale countenance bore that expression of suffering
sweetness so peculiar to the deformed, while his lank hair, bony hands, and misshapen shoulders awakened the beholder's pity.
He, too, was an orphan--a grandchild of the old lady's; his parents had died some years before.
Two little boys of about five years old sat opposite to him. They were dressed alike, and
the resemblance between them was so striking that they were constantly mistaken. They were twin- children of the young couple.
At the lower end of the table sat Imre Bardy, a young man of twenty, whose handsome countenance
was full of life and intelligence, his figure manly and graceful, and his manner courteous and agreeable. A slight moustache
was beginning to shade his upper lip, and his dark hair fell in natural ringlets around his head. He was the only son of the
majoresco, Tamas Bardy, and resembled him much in form and feature.
Beside him sat an old gentleman, with white hair and ruddy complexion. This was Simon Bardy,
an ancient relative, who had grown old with the grandmother of the family.
The same peculiarity characterized every countenance in the Bardy family--namely the lofty
forehead and marked brows, and the large deep-blue eyes, shaded by their heavy dark lashes.
"How singular!" exclaimed one of the party; "we are thirteen at table to-day."
"One of us will surely die," said the old lady; and there was a mournful conviction in
the faint, trembling tones.
"Oh, no, grandmother, we are only twelve and a half!" exclaimed the young mother, taking
the little one on her knee.
"This little fellow only counts half on the railroad."
All the party laughed at this remark, even the little cripple's countenance relaxed into
a sickly smile.
"Ay, ay," continued the old lady, "the trees are now putting forth their verdure, but at
the fall of the leaf who knows if all of us, or any of us, may still be sitting here?"
Several months had passed since this slight incident.
In one of the apartments of the castle, the eldest Bardy and his son were engaged in earnest
conversation.
The father paced hastily up and down the apartment, now and then stopping short to address
his son, who stood in the embrasure of one of the windows. The latter wore the dress of the Matyas Hussars — a gray dolmany, with crimson cord; he held a crimson esako, with a tricolored cockade, in his hand.
"Go," said the father, speaking in broken accents; "the sooner the better; let me not see
you! Do not think I speak in anger, but I cannot bear to look at you, and think where you are going. You are my only son,
and you know how I have loved you--how all my hopes have been concentrated in you. But do not think that these tears, which
you see me shed for the first time, are on your account; for if I knew I should lose you,--if your blood were to flow at the
next battle,--I should only bow my head in dust and say, 'The Lord gave, and the Lord takes away, blessed be His holy name!'
Yes, if I heard that you and your infatuated companions were cut to pieces, I could stifle the burning tears; but to know
that your blood, when it flows, will be a curse upon the earth, and your death will be the death of two kingdoms--"
"They may die now; but they will regenerate--"
"This is not true; you only deceive yourselves with the idea that you can build up a new
edifice when you have overthrown the old one. Great God, what sacrilege! Who had intrusted you with the fate of our country,
to tempt the Almighty? Who authorized you to lose all there is for the hope of what may be? For centuries past have so many
honorable men fought in vain to uphold the old tottering constitution, as you call it? Or were they not true patriots and
heroes? Your companions have hissed their persecuted countrymen in the Diet; but do they love their country better than we
do, who have shed our blood and sacrificed our interests for her from generation to generation, and even suffered disgrace,
if necessary, to keep her in life?--for though that life has been gradually weakened, still it is life. You promise her glory;
but the name of glory is death!"
"It may be so, father; we may lose our country as regards ourselves, but we give one instead
of ten millions, who were hitherto our own people, and yet strangers in their native land."
"Chimera! The people will not understand you. They never even dreamt of what you wish to
give them. The true way to seek the people's welfare is to give them what they need.
"Ask my dependents! Is there one among them whom I have allowed to suffer want or ruin,
whom I have not assisted in times of need?--or have I ever treated them unjustly? You will not hear a murmur. Tell them that
I am unjust notwithstanding, because I do not call the peasant from his plow to give his opinions on forming the laws and
constitution,--and what will be the consequence? They will stare at you in astonishment; and yet, in their mistaken wrath,
they will come down some night and burn this house over my head."
"That is the unnatural state of the times. It is all the fault of the past bad management,
if the people have no better idea. But let the peasant once be free, let him be a man, and he will understand all that is
now strange to him."
"But that freedom will cost the lives of thousands!"
"I do not deny it. Indeed, I believe that neither I nor any of the present generation will
reap the fruits of this movement. I think it probable that in a few years not one of those whose names we now hear spoken
of may still be living; and what is more, disgrace and curses may be heaped upon their dust. But a time will come when the
great institutions of which they have laid the foundation will arise and render justice to the memory of those who sacrificed
themselves for the happiness of future generations. To die for our country is a glorious death, but to carry with us the curses
of thousands, to die despised and hated for the salvation of future millions, oh! that is sublime--it is Messiah-like!"
"My son--my only son!" cried his father, throwing himself passionately on the young man's
neck and sobbing bitterly. "Do you see these tears?"
"For the first time in my life I see them, father--I see you weep; my heart can scarcely
bear the weight of these tears--and yet I go! You have reason to weep, for I bring neither joy nor glory on your head--and
yet I go! A feeling stronger than the desire of glory, stronger than the love of my country, inspires my soul; and it is a
proof of the strength of my faith that I see your tears, my father-- and yet I go!"
"Go!" murmured his father, in a voice of despair. "You may never return again, or, when
you do, you may find neither your father's house nor the grave in which he is laid! But know, even then, in the hour of your
death, or in the hour of mine, I do not curse you-- and now, leave me." With these words he turned away and motioned to his
son to depart.
Imre silently left the apartment, and as soon as he had closed the door the tears streamed
from his eyes; but before his sword had struck the last step his countenance had regained its former determination, and the
fire of enthusiasm had kindled in his eye.
He then went to take leave of his Uncle Jozsef, whom he found surrounded by his family.
The twins were sitting at his feet, while his wife was playing bo-peep with the little one, who laughed and shouted, while
his mother hid herself behind his father's armchair.
Imre's entrance interrupted the general mirth. The little boy ran over to examine the sword
and golden tassels, while the little one began to cry in alarm at the sight of the strange dress.
"Csitt, baba!" said his mother, taking him from his father's arms; "your cousin is going
to wars, and will bring you a golden horse."
Jozsef wrung his nephew's hand. "God be with you!" he exclaimed, and added in a lower voice,
"You are the noblest of us all--you have done well!"
They then all embraced him in turns, and Imre left them, amidst clamors of the little ones,
and proceeded to his grandmother's apartments.
On the way, he met his Uncle Barnabas, who embraced him again and again in silence, and
then tore himself away without saying a word.
The old lady sat in her great armchair, which she seldom quitted, and as she heard the
clash of Imre's sword, she looked up and asked who was coming.
"It is Imre!" said the fair-haired maiden, blushing, and her heart beat quickly as she
pronounced his name.
Jolanka felt that Imre was more than a brother to her, and the feeling with which she had
learnt to return his affection was warmer than even a sister's love.
The widow lady and the cripple were also in the grandmother's apartment; the child sat
on a stool at the old lady's feet, and smiled sadly as the young man entered.
"Why that sword at your side, Imre?" asked the old lady in a feeble voice. "Ah, this is
no good world--no good world! But if God is against us, who can resist His hand? I have spoken with the dead again in dreams.
I thought they all came around me and beckoned me to follow them; but I am ready to go, and place my life with gratitude and
confidence in the hands of the Lord. Last night I saw the year 1848 written in the skies in letters of fire. Who knows what
may come over us yet? This is no good world--no good world!"
Imre bent silently over the old lady's hand and kissed it.
"And so you are going? Well, God bless and speed you, if you go beneath the cross, and
never forget in life or in death to raise your heart to the Lord;" and the old lady placed her withered hand upon her grandson's
head, and murmured, "God Almighty bless you!"
"My husband was just such a handsome youth when I lost him," sighed the widow lady as she
embraced her nephew. "God bless you!"
The little cripple threw his arms around his cousin's knees and, sobbing, entreated him
not to stay long away.
The last who bade farewell was Jolanka. She approached with downcast eyes, holding in her
small white hands an embroidered cockade, which she placed on his breast. It was composed of five colors--blue and gold, red,
white, and green.
"I understand," said the young man, in a tone of joyful surprise, as he pressed the sweet
girl to his heart, "Erdely and Hungary united! I shall win glory for your colors!"
The maiden yielded to his warm embrace, murmuring, as he released her, "Remember me!"
"When I cease to remember you, I shall be no more," replied the youth fervently.
And then he kissed the young girl's brow, and once more bidding farewell, he hurried from
the apartment.
Old Simon Bardy lived on the first floor: Imre did not forget him.
"Well, nephew," said the old man cheerfully, "God speed you, and give you strength to cut
down many Turks!"
"It is not with the Turks that we shall have to do," replied the young man, smiling.
"Well, with the French," said the old soldier of the past century, correcting himself.
A page waited at the gate with two horses saddled and bridled.
"I shall not require you--you may remain at home," said Imre, as, taking the bridle of
one of the horses, vaulting lightly into the saddle, he pressed his csako over his brow and galloped from the castle.
As he rode under the cross, he checked his horse and looked back. Was it of his grandmother's
words, or of the golden-haired Jolanka that he thought?
A white handkerchief waved from the window. "Farewell, light of my soul!" murmured the
youth; and kissing his hand, he once more dashed his spurs into his horse's flank, and turned down the steep hill.
Those were strange times. All at once the villages began to be depopulated; the inhabitants
disappeared, none knew whither. The doors of the houses were closed.
The bells were no longer heard in the evening, nor the maiden's song as she returned from
her work. The barking of dogs which had lost their masters alone interrupted the silence of the streets, where the grass began
to grow.
Imre Bardy rode through the streets of the village without meeting a soul; few of the chimneys
had smoke, and no fires gleamed through the kitchen windows.