of prudence compelled me to receive in private, even
although my heart abhorred and loathed the relationship
between us. He treated my explanation with deriding
contempt, bidding me either produce that father within
twenty-four hours, or find some easier fool to persuade—that
one, wearing the hue and features of the black could,
by human possibility, be the parent of a white woman.
Again I explained the seeming incongruity, by urging
that the hasty and imperfect view he had taken was
of a mask, imitating the features of a negro, which
my father had brought with him as a disguise, and
which he had hastily resumed on hearing the noise
of the key in the door. I even admitted, as an
excuse for seeing him thus clandestinely, the lowly
origin of my father, and the base occupation he followed
of a treacherous spy who, residing in the Canadas,
came, for the mere consideration of gold, to sell
political information to the enemies of the country
that gave him asylum and protection. I added
that his visit to me was to extort money, under a threat
of publishing our consanguinity, and that dread of
his (my lover’s) partiality being decreased
by the disclosure, had induced me to throw my arms,
in the earnestness of entreaty upon his neck, and
implore his secrecy; promising to reward him generously
for his silence. I moreover urged him, if he
still doubted, to make inquiry of Major Montgomerie,
and ascertain from him whether I was not indeed the
niece of his adoption, and not of his blood.
Finally I humbled myself in the dust and, like a fawning
reptile, clasped his knees in my arms, entreating mercy
and justice. But no,” and the voice of Matilda
grew deeper, and her form became more erect; “neither
mercy nor justice dwelt in that hard heart, and he
spurned me rudely from him. Nothing short of
the production of him he persisted in calling my vile
paramour, would satisfy him; but my ignoble parent
had received from me the reward of his secrecy, and
he had departed once more to the Canadas. And
thus,” pursued Matilda, her voice trembling
with emotion, “was, I made the victim of the
most diabolical suspicion that ever haunted the breast
of man.”
Gerald was greatly affected. His passion for
Matilda seemed to increase in proportion with his
sympathy for her wrongs, and he clasped her energetically
to his heart.
“Finding him resolute in attaching to me the
debasing imputation,” pursued the American,
“it suddenly flashed upon my mind, that this
was but a pretext to free himself from his engagement,
and that he was glad to accomplish his object through
the first means that offered. Oh, Gerald, I cannot
paint the extraordinary change that came over my feelings
at this thought; much less give, you an idea of the
rapidity with which that change was effected.
One moment before and, although degraded and unjustly
accused, I had loved him with all the ardour of which
a woman’s heart is capable: Now I
hated, loathed, detested him; and had he sunk at my