The Vale of Cedars eBook

Grace Aguilar
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 347 pages of information about The Vale of Cedars.

The Vale of Cedars eBook

Grace Aguilar
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 347 pages of information about The Vale of Cedars.

Stanley himself had no such hope.  All his better and higher nature had been called forth by the awful and mysterious death of Morales, dealt too by his own sword—­that sword which, in his wild passions, he had actually prayed might shed his blood.  The film of passion had dropped alike from mental and bodily vision.  He beheld his irritated feelings in their true light, and knew himself in thought a murderer.  He would have sacrificed life itself, could he but have recalled the words of insult offered to one so noble; not for the danger to himself from their threatening nature, but for the injurious injustice done to the man from whom he had received a hundred acts of little unobtrusive kindnesses, and whom he had once revered as the model of every thing virtuous and noble—­services which Morales had rendered him, felt gratefully perhaps at the time, but forgotten in the absorption of thought or press of occupation during his sojourn in Sicily, now rushed back upon him, marking him ingrate as well as dishonored.  All that had happened he regarded as Divine judgment on an unspoken, unacted, but not the less encouraged sin.  The fact that his sword had done the deed, convinced him that his destruction had been connived at, as well as that of Morales.  A suspicion as to the designer, if not the actual doer of the deed, had indeed taken possession of him; but it was an idea so wild, so unfounded, that he dared not give it words.

From the idea of death, and such a death, his whole soul indeed revolted; but to avert it seemed so utterly impossible, that he bent his proud spirit unceasingly to its anticipation; and with the spiritual aid of the good and feeling Father Francis, in some degree succeeded.  It was not the horror of his personal fate alone which bade him so shrink from death.  Marie was free once more; nay, had from the moment of her dread avowal—­made, he intuitively felt, to save him—­become, if possible, dearer, more passionately loved than before.  And, oh! how terrible is the anticipation of early death to those that love!—­the only trial which bids even the most truly spiritual, yet while on earth still human heart, forget that if earth is loved and lovely, heaven must be lovelier still.

From Don Felix d’Estaban, his friendly warder, he heard of Isabella’s humane intentions toward her; that her senses had been restored, and she was, to all appearance, the same in health as she had been since her husband’s death; only evidently suffering more, which might be easily accounted for from the changed position in which the knowledge of her unbelief had placed her with all the members of Isabella’s court; that the only agitation she had evinced was, when threatened with a visit from Father Francis—­who, finding nothing in the mansion of Don Ferdinand Morales to confirm the truth of her confession, had declared his conviction that there must be some secret chamber destined for her especial use.  As if shrinking

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The Vale of Cedars from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.