Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 9 March 1889 — Page 3

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iij-tco,

Though cruel darts by Cupid's bow impelled Had wounded us severely, Heart, mid bio.

I loved a certain lady, all too well. Perhaps—no matter now. Heart loved on« too. You ask her name? Excuse mo, I'll not tell

Nor llenrt's sweetheart, for that would novel do.

And they were not the same, as you will sco. S2/ girl was tall and handsome, with blueli eyes, And oh! so bright, and quiclc at repartee,

And just as good and true as she was wisa.

I thought of her a hundred times a day If 1 (lid once, and that joes without saying I thought of her when I kneeled down to pray.

And almost always spoke her name when praying.

My Heart's true-love was lovely as a rose Not tall, but very pretty and petite: Indeed, her face, when it was in repose.

Was just about the sweetest ol the sweet.

She had a pleasing voice, too, high soprano, Well trained by masters of the vooul art And when she sang for us at the piano,

I did not wonder that she charmed my Heart.

I could not but admire the winsome creature, Her pretty manners and bewitching smile But for some reason—hope this may not reacb her—

I loved the other better all the while.

How deeply grieved were we, then, to discovei Tljat while we let the precious moments fly, Each lady found a new friend and a lover,

And so we lost them both, mv Heart and I. —Harper's Wtekly.

A JUNE HAT OF FISH.

A Spanish Tale of Aragon by Don Pedro de Alarcon.

Covered with glory ind with wounds in the War of the Succession and without a penny in his purse, as in those days was the case with most warriors and heroes, the noble scion of Mequinenza returned'one day to his dismantled castle, to rest from the harsh fatigues of Ihe camp and eat in peace the lentils that came with hia title. 'J wo words let us give to the soldier and other two to his birth-place. Don Jamie de Mequinenza. Haron of that, name, who had fought as a Captain for tlie interests of Louis the Fourteenth, was at that day a man of live-aud-thirty years, tall, handsomo, rough, brave and energetic little lettered. but jovial and gallant to the last degree with women—particularly fond, indeed, of pretty peasants. Add to this that lie was an orphan, tin only child, a bachelor, and you have the picture of tho Aragonese hidalgo. As to his castle, it was the same .as its master, barring in strength. But as lo solitariness, pride and poverty it was not. behind him. It

Perched on an almost inaccessible flank of the mountain, separated by this channel from, the castle, and, like it, hanging above the Ebro, there was another rocky spur, crowned by a cabin and a little garden, which in that spot suggested the hanging gardens of Babylon. A heavy beam of walnut, wood spanned the foaming current between the castle and the cabin, connecting these, as the drawbridge tillorded communication between the castle and the hamlet.

On the lordly crag, then, dwelt Don Jaime do Mequinenza, and on tho feudal rock an eel-fisher, who had won a rich revenue from the daring thought of building his hut in that lonely and menacing spot. Jt had occurred to Daiman, for such was the name of the fisherman, to swing from tho little bridge two vast nets, through whose meshes swept the torrent, so^that the teeming eels that rushed through the cutting, toward the mother waters of tho Ebro, were caught here on their course back to their birth-place, and held for the hand of the fisherman, who, although he sold them at a low enough price, yet devived from his shppery source a very respectable income.

Yet for all his labor and enterprise tho poor fellow could never save a cuarto. He was not a drinker, for all the cold and wet character of his business he was not a player—indeed, ho knew not the terms of brisca, con quien, or malilla his

funciou,

was not,

At the foot of this rock was a dozen cots and hovels, tenanted by tho vassals of tho Haron, or it might rather be said by the husbandmen who tilled the few lields left to his possession. From Iho hamlet to the castle the road climbed by fourteen or fifteen sleep terraces, above which was a moat, with its d'-awbridge the moat filled by a canal or wide ditch that tapped the Ebro a league to the northward, and then fell, below the fortress, in a noisy torrent back into the swelling river.

cirjarrox

were of

tho commonest sort, and cost, him tho merest trille and for womankind, he had not so much as a passing glanco, save only for Carmen.

Save only! But Ihcn,

corny, hoinbre!

that was suflicient exception. For— oil,Carmen,Carmcla, Carmelita! Here was enough to squander the revenues of an alcalde, a regidor, a prince—let alone a fisherman, l'or Carmen was a beauty—a Spanish blonde, think of that, ye connoisseurs!—who would I have tempted Saint Anthony himself, I if tho grace of God should liavo been withdrawn from him for a moment,

Such a waist! such a neck! such ankles! And Carmen knew her own good points—none better!—and women of such merit as hers fall in lovo with themselves when they have not lovers —or when they have, for that matter ,—and so Carmen spent tho price of all the eels in the Ebro on aprons, ker

ly, o'doi lOHis L.-1S and Vital]?...! the oels in the it-hro on aprons, ker-

ier a.limuislere.l and (.'oeaine used. Chiefs, O.ar-fltlgS, ribbons and fallalB in

THE CRAWFORDSVILLE WEEKLY REVIEW

general, though there was not a soul to se" tlieui out lier own dear self. Damian, lior husband? oh, but ho counted for nothing, less than nothing! for if luis-bands in general are ciphers, what was this wretched iisher of eelsP —a lout, a clown, a clod. Oh! that is_ ^uite apparent convinced, no doubt, of her high mission in this poor world of sorrows. Carmen every day dressed herself as if she were going to a ball or a

and sat herself down at

the door of the cabin, where she was seen of the birds, the rock-thyme, and tho skies—and of naught else. Still, she awaited tranquillyTlie moment of her destiny.

In the days when Carmelita first took up her station at the door thus dressed with parsley," the castle of Mequinenza was still without Don Jaime, its master, and no human eye beheld her from closer range than that of the sands below, whence she looked like some great blossom set on the edge of the precipice. Her husband had forbidden her to go down to the village in his absence, and she obeyed him implicity, because it is the will of God that wives obey their husbands,and because—well, because there was nothing pleasing to lior in the rustic youths of the village. IIow should they please her any more than her husband?—they, liko him. rough, badly clad, and dirty, with thorny, calloused hands, burned by the sun, tanned by wind and rain, and smelling of fish from it rod away? And she so soft, so smooth, so dainty, dressed and perfumed like a Madrilena.

It isetruo that if the poor fisherman was ill-dressed this was to give finer, better raiment to Carmen tliaj, if the husband should labor less, to the end of sparing his hands, the wife would have worked far harder, with the result of spoiling her white ones true, also, that those eels, which were indeed ill-smelling, paid for the sweetscented soaps in which Carmen delighted. But ho makes such observations to a woman? above all, if that woman is nineteen years old and pretty, airy, and graceful its the rainbow with its seven"colors. Ah, yes! gratitude may well bo si sentiment too sober for a young woman, and justice —fairness—an uncomfortable idea for a joyous imagination. These virtues are born of suffering, and Carmen was almost quite happy.

Given those conditions, it was not at all inconsistent that the thoughts and interest of the fisherman's wife should turn to Don Jaime de Mequinenza, from the day that the news of his return to his baronial halls came to the village at the cliff's foot. And in effect, when she set eyes upon his worship, Carmen's butterfly brain and her unloyal heart alike sung to her that this was a lord, a fine gentleman, and a hero—here was a man worthy of beauty and charm like hers.

for

it has crumblccl to decay generations since. Figure it, half-built, half-cut from a solid rock, lapped on one side by the waves of the Ebro, and on the other leaning against a mountain that towered sky ward.

As for tho lord of the manor he was already in love with her species, and as the greater includes the less, ho was undoubtedly smitten with Carmen. It was not long before they told each other, by the telegraphic code of looks and signals, their mutual and respective sentiments, but this platonic system became to both alike insupportable.

In the meantime Damian went on fishing. Now, whether it camo to pass that the people of the hamlet, failing to realize and appreciate their abject contcmptibility, came to criticise the doings of their feudal master, or whether the fisherman chanced to remember that his wife was a pretty woman and Don Jaime a hot-blooded gallant, and that the castle and the cabin were not so widely separated— there came a time when this worthy husband displayed less than his usual eagerness to make his frequent rounds of his eel-traps. He developed, also, certain rheumatic twinges in his left knee, that impaired his agility in walking, and so he hired a strapping lad whom ho made his substitute in conveying the eel-baskets among the purchasers of the vicinity. This procedure of the fisherman was far from meeting with the approval of Carmen and Don Jaime.

One beautiful May evening the two spouses sat at tho door of their cabin and watched the sinking sun—the same sun in those days of a century and a half since that we see now above us. That evening it was sinking as slowly and majestically as if it expected never to rise agaiu. It was one of those splendid and solemn moments in which it seems that the world has reached for tho first time its apogee of beauty a melancholy hour in which the soul appears to assist at the tragedy of the day's death as at a new-, occurrence, which will not be repeated.

Carmen and Damian, regarding that sun, whose rays dyed the horizon with a strange prophetic light, felt their very souls stirred within them. Unculture^ and rude of nature as they were, they could but feel that this was a critical hour, full of doom, of mystery, of fatality.

When tho sun had set entirely both breathed heavily, as those who have completed a"longand severe task. Tho tacit compact was signed between them, each to his own crime, not to bo renounced, but irrevocable, as the death of the day that was expiring. They looked tit each other full and unreserved. Damian lifted his eyes to the castle, on whose topmost terrace stood the Baron of Mequinenza, whom ho saluted. The lord had his eyes fixed on Carmen, who saluted him easily. Damian stretched his rheumatic leg. and, turning to his wife, said, dryly: "1 think my leg is well again. I feel the pangs no longer. 1

lhinlc

and stay the night there. There ia a fellow owes me some money he will be in with his pay near midnight, and I will catch him before ho spends it. 1 will come up in the morning in time to take out tho fish of to-night's catch.

Ea,

Carmelita, God be with tlioe." "Good-bye, Damian," said Carmelita, mechanically.

They had never before parted in this way, but to both it seemed quito natural. Damian took his hat and staff ind crossed the walnut-wood bridgeway and the fosses of the castle. The sun was still gilding the peak of a distant mountain.

Twelve hours later the sun once more shone over the cabin. All the sadness and foreboding of the day before had been pure farce. There was the sun again, red and joyous as ever, climbing up the heavens as blithely as if this was his first journey there, and shedding life and movement wherever his rays reached. This was the sun that, in those hours of absence, had crossed the ocean, had called the noonday in the Americas, had served as a god fdr the idolators of the Pacific, had lighted the way for mariners in China, had gilded the spices of Hindostan, had kissed the stones of the Holy Sepulchre, and had marked the hour of death for some modern Greeks and now that sun was returning, full of curiosity to know what had become of two fisher people of Upper Aragon, whom he had left the night before seated at the door of their hut.

As to Damian, he, liko the sun, seemed in better humor than on the preceding evening, if he might be judged by the lively and frolicsome manner with which he ascended the terraces of the castle, followed by some other fishers, all singing the most villainous join that had been produced in their country. They reached the drawbridge, crossed the courts of the castle, still lying in silence, and reached the plane fronting Datnian's cabin. "How loud tho cascade roars!" said one of the men. "But what has become of the bridge?" cried another. "True for you! Look! look! it has slipped from ea,ch end! it has sunken into the cutting—it has broken!" "But how can that be? Such a beam —so long, so well supported by its length! so heavy! and of walnut—a wood as strong as iron!" "I shall have to buy another," said Damian, shrugging his shoulders "but como, boys, let the bridge be, and help me with tho seines before it grows later." And, taking up the thread of his interrupted song, he began with the others to draw up the eel-nets.

The devil! how it weighs then!" cried ono of his comrades "thou hast done well with this haul, Damiancito!" "At least it is ten arrobas," said another, "oh, a fine catch! unheard of!" "I believe you!" shouted a third "it is more likely he has caught, not eels, but the bridge of walnut wood!"

Damian only smiled without speaking. Do you say that net is heavy?" cried one of tho men, pulling on the second seine "well, this one is not behind it. This weight is not less than twelve arrobas—all of three hundred weight." "Oh! it's a couple of big rocks that have fallen in!" said an envious-minded fellow.

Damian was gloomy, trembling, covered with a cold sweat. "So one seine weighs as heavy as the other," ho muttered, "oh! but it can not be!" Ho stepped up out of the water and slowly t^ok his way to the cabin.

By this time the first seine was coming up to the bank, and in it appeared, truly enough, the bridge of walnut wood. Not all of it, but the half. It was not to be doubted that during the night the bridge had been sawed across tho middle. The men who dragged it out were staring with surprise and terror they started back with horrorstricken faces, shrieking.

At tho same moment, Damian appeared in the door of his cabin, with his hair tn end, his eves fixed and starting, and a look of utter stupidity, yet screaming with laughter— a laughter like a voice from Bedlam. Ho had found his homo deserted and the couch of Carmelita untouched by her since tho day before. And the fishermen had seen in the net with the walnut timber the pallid face of Don Jaime.

A moment after, their frightened mates drew out the second seine, with tho other half of the bridge and the body of Carmelita. "She, also?" Damian shouted "oh! I did not look for that, though! I thought she would wait for him in the house! 1 never dreamed she would run to meet him! But she did, you see! She was impatient to meet her lover, and she went on tho bridge to meet him. But I had been there before them. 1 sawed it! sawed it! sawed it! Oh! what a line haul we have made to-day, boys! a good catch of fish is this we have made, boys!" And, shrieking, he ran .and shut .himself,in. tho cabin

When the officers of the law came to arrest him they found him still grasping a saw, and the cabin drenched with I blood. The eel-fisher had sawed off his left hand, and svith tho right he still drew his weapon across a gaping wound in his throat, while ho gasped, with dying voice "A grand catch of fish we have made to-day, boys!"—

Translated by T. II. Addis for Argo­

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