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THE CABARET IN THE PYRENEES.

THE TRAVELLER'S TALE.

Of what shall travellers talk on rainy days?
Of rain and snow? the sunshine and the storm?
Of Politics? Religion? Scandal? Shop?
Or personal anecdote? The weather? No;-
The topic is full stale. Of politics?

'Tis dangerous ground. Of creed? More dangerous still.

Of scandal? Heaven forefend! Or of the shop?

I prithee let us leave the shop alone!

Of personal anecdote? Why, what is that

But the old scandal in a new disguise!

What shall we talk of then? I know not well,

Unless you'll hear a mournful thing that chanced
Here in the Pyrenees, two years ago.

I parted from the heroes of the tale,

Two friends and comrades, in this very room,
And little thought, amid their merriment,
Their lusty health and joyous hopefulness,
How soon the end would come. This cabaret

Resounding now with laughter, jest and talk,
Seems no fit scene to lodge a tragedy.

Yet so it was:

but let me tell the tale.

'Twas in September, just two years ago,

That Vere and Huntley, youths scarce twenty-one,
And fresh from Cambridge, on their way to Spain
Stopped in the Pyrenees. They did not hunt,
Or shoot, or angle, or delight in sport,
But seemed to glory in ascending hills,
Scaling high rocks and tracking waterfalls.
They loved the rude and dizzy mountain-top,
And all the splendor of its wildest scenes.
Vere had a poet's eye and painter's hand,
And Huntley, though no poet, stored his mind
With images of beauty: - both would walk
Three leagues ere breakfast to a precipice,
To see the sunrise in its majesty;
Ever on foot, and ever full of joy.

Their cheeks were tanned in the healthy open air;
Their limbs were vigorous, their hearts were light,
Their talk was cheerful as the song of birds,
And when they laughed the clear loud volleys rang
With such contagious music, that I've laughed
For very sympathy, yet knew not why.

It was a lovely morning, crisp and fresh,
When they invited me to share their walk,
And trace a mountain-torrent to its source.
They had no object but the exercise,
And search for natural beauty, ever new.
But I had promised Jean Baptiste, the guide,

THE CABARET IN THE PYRENEES.

To hunt the chamois with him, and I longed

For my own sport, more hazardous than theirs,
And more congenial to my ruder tastes.

And so we parted.

We'll be back,' said Vere,

'At six, to dinner in the Cabaret:

Wilt thou dine with us, Nimrod of the hills ? ' —
—'With all my heart!' and so we went our ways,
And far adown the valley I could hear
Their jocund voices singing English songs,
And catch amid the pauses of the tune
The echoes of their laughter on the wind.

I had good sport upon the hills that day.
When I returned, I noticed as I came
A crowd of peasants standing at the door;
Here was a group of women,—there of men;
And all discussing something that had chanced,
With quick gesticulation, and confused

155

And broken sentences: -some raised their hands, Looked up to heaven, and shook their heads and sighed. While twenty voices speaking all at once,

Told the same story twenty different ways.
'Here comes the other Englishman,' said one:
'There's a sad sight within!' 'Aye! sad indeed!'
Replied another. Quickly passing through,

I forced my way into the inner room,
And there beheld poor Huntley on the bed
With Vere beside him, kneeling on the ground,
Clasping his hands, and burying his face
Between them, and the body of his friend.
In all the beauty and the pride of youth,
Huntley went forth at morning, and ere night

He lay a corpse :—an awful loveliness

Sat on his clay-cold form; so calm he lay
Amid the hurry and anxiety

And deep distress and pitying words and groans

Of those around — it seemed as he alone

Of all that crowd were happy. He was dead,
But how he died, 't was long ere I could learn
From the survivor, who with senseless words
And sobs, and groans, and prayers to Heaven for help,
Broke off continually what he began.

I learned it afterwards when he grew calm,

And loved him ever since. They'd track'd the stream
From morn till noon, discovering as they went,
New beauties, grandeurs and sublimities

At every step. Right well in all her moods,

Those friends congenial loved dear Nature's face.

'T was now the torrent with its burst and fall,

That charmed their sight; now, 't was th' umbrageous

arch

Of trees, high-perched on the o'erhanging rock;
Then 't was the rock itself, with lichens grown,

And pine, and larch; —and then it was a glimpse
Betwixt the crags into a world beneath,

Stretching in loveliness of cultured plains,
Studded with farms and clustering villages
That filled them with delight;

and so they clomb

From crag to crag, and conquered as they went
More perils than they knew: lured ever on

By novelty of beauty and the heat

Of young

adventure; but they clomb too well. Vere took an upward track, and scaled the crag,

While Huntley, travelling lower, reached a ledge,

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With scarcely room enough to lodge his heel,

He could not stand with safety

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or descend

Without the risk of falling from the height,

An hundred feet into a chasm below,

Where boiled the angry flood o'er jutting rocks.
Ten feet above him in security

Stood Vere-alarmed, — but how to reach his friend
Seemed to defy all knowledge to discern,
Or known, his utmost daring to attempt.

To mount seemed easier than to clamber down;
And he was growing dizzy where he stood.
Vere stretched himself upon the beetling edge
Of the tall precipice, and held his hand
Toward his friend, in hope, if hands could meet,
He might, by help of some projecting root,
Some angle of the rock, a tufted herb,

Hoist him in safety; but the attempt was vain.
Their hands, by utmost stress of yearning grasp
Could reach no nearer than a long arm's length;
So Vere bethought him of his walking-stick,
An old companion of his mountain walks,
And stretched the handle to his eager friend,
That he might grasp it with his strong right hand,
And with the left spring upward to the root,
Twisted and sinuous, of a mountain ash
That nodded o'er the stream; and by this aid
Attain the safe high platform of the rock.

He caught the friendly aid; but as he grasped,
He felt it lengthening - lengthening-in his hand;
And his eyes swam in horror, as he saw
The handle separating from the stick,

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