The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Gray Nun, by Nataly Von Eschstruth

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Title: The Gray Nun

Author: Nataly Von Eschstruth

Translator: Lionel Strachey

Release Date: October 27, 2007 [EBook #23220]
Last Updated: November 5, 2016

Language: English

Character set encoding: UTF-8

*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GRAY NUN ***




Produced by David Widger





 










THE GRAY NUN  

By Nataly Von Eschstruth  

Translated from the German by Lionel Strachey  






When I was a young man I once made a foreign journey, betaking myself to  the royal court of X. on affairs of state. In those days politics would  take strange turns, not of unmixed delight, and so it happened that my  mission was prolonged well into the winter, and kept me at X. until the  carnival season. But at this I did not repine, for to pass a winter in a  beautiful climate and amid the fascinating society of a court seemed a  welcome change to my enthusiastic, pleasure-loving young soul.  

The reigning sovereign had a predilection for masked balls,a  traditionally favorite amusement at the palace, I was toldand  accordingly several fancy dress festivities were enacted on the royal  premises during the carnival. The first I was unable to participate in  because of an inflamed eye, and therefore awaited the second with all the  keener anticipation.  

In the becoming costume of a Prussian officer in the army of Frederick the  Great, and with the agreeable sensation of being specially well disguised  beneath my mask and safe from recognition, I mingled in the gay throng of  the dancers and enjoyed to the full the charm of the brilliant and  delicious event. An exquisitely graceful little water-nix had conquered my  heart. The champagne was bubbling in my blood, and in wild spirits I was  pursuing the fleeing Undine into an adjacent apartment.  

Suddenly I stopped as though spellbound, and found myself staring into a  pair of dark eyes, black as night, which were rigidly fixed upon me.  Standing aloof, in a corner of the room, I saw a nun. Her long gray  garment reached to the ground, and lay about her very feet in folds like a  train. Her arms hung straight down, the hands being concealed in the loose  sleeves. White linen bands covered her head and chin, and rendered even  her mouth invisible, while her forehead and the upper part of her face  were protected by a black velvet mask. And the blackness of those eyes  that penetrated me was so intense that scarcely were any whites  discernible.  

An indescribable emotion ran over me as I stood under the ban of an evil  power, as it were, returning the look of that strange figure. I had  forgotten Undine. Drawn by some invisible force, I approached the nun with  mechanical footstep.  

Why, fair mask, I accosted her with a bold laugh, are you alone? Surely  you know that for dancing and love two are needed!  

Briefly, like a Chinese idol, she nodded her head in assent; a thrill  seemed to pass over her wonderfully slender shape; yet she did not budge.  

I became more venturesome from a sudden feeling as of fire rushing through  my veins.  

You may be vowed to seclusion, beautiful bride of Heaven, but to-day the  convent walls have released you, to-day you are of the world and the  flesh, to-day you are mine!  

Thus I cried aloud, forgetting in my excitement that I was in a country  where my mother tongue was only spoken and understood at the German  legation.  

In a moment it occurred to me: Did the mask know German?  

To my astonishment, she gave an immediate sign of intelligence by gliding,  silently as a shadow, another step in my direction, and her biasing eyes  appeared to kindle with merriment. Had she a veil over her eyes? It almost  looked so and this extraordinary measure of precaution challenged me the  more strongly to overcome her reluctance to being known.  

Do you understand me? I asked.  

She nodded in the same brief, jerky manner as before.  

Do you know me?  

Similarly she answered by negative motions of the head. I stepped up close  to her with the question:  

But will you not know me and love me? Come into my arms, and let us  dance!  

Then something happened that at the moment I found surprising and  extremely startling, yet which I took for a mere carnival freak, while  later on I could scarce review the occurrence with any degree of  clearness.  

The nun threw her arms about me abruptly and almost desperately, and  whirled me into a frenzied dance. I felt no body between my arms, and did  not hear the rustle of her dress; I only saw those enigmatic dark eyes,  which glowed near, very near, my own. And in mad career, regardless of the  musical time or of the tune played, my curious partner tore around the  room with me faster and faster, and with ever increasing fury. Her arms  gripped me tighter and tighter and I was threatened with complete loss of  breath in the wild race. Of a sudden I received a violent blow, resembling  an electric shock, from each of her hands on my shoulders, felt myself all  at once liberated, and staggered faint against a pyramid of plants.  Boisterous laughter sounded on my ear; some other masks had surrounded and  seized me, exclaiming:  

Look at the fine gentleman! He is out of his mind, dancing about the room  like a madman, quite alone!  

I opened my eyes and looked all around. What had become of my partner?  

Not a sign of her was to be seen, although this other room was likewise  very large, just then not well filled with people.  

Have I been dancing alone? I gasped, tearing the mask off my burning  face.  

Quite alone! Did you imagine it was with your sweetheart? was the  mocking, noisy reply.  

I was deeply annoyed. Nonsense! I cried. You are all in the conspiracy!  Where has the nun gone? It was no lady at all, it was a man in disguise!  

They laughed still more, and some whispered behind fans that I must be  drunk.  

Strange sensations invaded me. Had a joke been played at my expense? Had a  member of the German legation dressed in female clothes, and in the height  of his whimsical caprice danced with me in that insane fashion? Were the  guests in the secret, and were they amusing themselvesas the  freedom of the carnival permittedwith teasing a foreigner? Yet  surely the mysterious nun must be discoverable. My knees were trembling  from a weakness I was unable to account for, but I collected myself, and  while various thoughts coursed through my brain for a solution of this  carnival prank, I hastened with feverish speed through rooms and galleries  in quest of the nun. But in vain. I espied neither herself, nor met anyone  who had seen her. The lackeys and doorkeepers assured me in perfect good  faith that they had seen no nun of any sort.  

The costume is one of which His Majesty does not approve, I was informed  in the cloak-room. It is considered irreverent to appear at balls here in  the spiritual garb of a nun or a monk, and therefore it is not done. It  would certainly have been observed by us had any lady or gentleman  transgressed against the prevailing usage.  

Then perhaps I may have mistaken for a nun some other mask, who intended  in her gray suit to represent Twilight or Care, I excused myself  hesitatingly, though I had an accurate eye for dresses, and could have  registered a solemn oath that the mysterious unknown was even wearing  especially authentic claustral attire. No one, however, could by any  effort remember having noticed a costume anything like that described by  me.  

Are there any secret passages to any of the rooms and galleries which are  the scene of tonights festivities? I asked a doorkeeper. He looked at me  in surprise, and answered:  

All ways of communication were opened today because of the crowd of  guests, but for safetys sake guarded and watched more carefully than  usual. Only the tapestried corridor running the length of the great  colonnade to the royal apartments was left unguarded, since in that place  there is no possibility of improper intrusion.  

A new idea flashed across me. The spot on which I had first set eyes on my  nun was at the entrance to that corridor. Might not a member of the royal  family have elected to make me, as a novice in this foreign court society,  the subject of a merry jest? No doubt the nun was a man in disguise, and  the young princes and dukes were probably capable of pouncing on the  victim and dancing him to death.  

My confusion was perhaps very diverting, and the secrecy of the few  spectators of the joke, who were, of course, initiated, was quite  praiseworthy.  

They asserted not having seen a nun at all, and laughed at me for having  rushed round the room alone, like a lunatic, Obviously there was no  further room for doubt, this explanation and no other was valid. Why had I  not thought of this before!  

So I joined in the hilarity of the others and made the best of my  discomfiture. In any case, the manner in which my partner had dismissed me  betrayed a pair of powerful masculine fists! My shoulders, on which she  had come down so vigorously ached as if they were broken, and I was still  unable to conquer entirely a peculiar sensation of uneasiness. But while I  was pursuing my investigations the clock struck twelve, the company  unmasked, and gaily flocked toward the Supper rooms. I felt particularly  entitled to refreshments, and in the course of my indulgence in the good  things of my selection, my faintnesswhich was more astonishing to  my robust, muscular young self than any carnival joke in the world could  have beenpassed off completely. I was as happy and lively as  before, and enjoyed the remainder of the ball as much as I had the  beginning. I tried to dismiss the episode from my mind. For a few days I  felt a dull pain in my shoulders, which annoyed me at night also, and  disturbed my sleep. The image of the nun haunted me, and the sombre,  penetrating eyes were present to me in my very dreams. This vexed me, and  I mentally abused the royal gentleman in every key who had pushed his joke  rather too far.  

A week passed, and the court chamberlain issued invitations for the third  masked ball at the palace. I purchased a sailors dress, and on the  evening of the ball tripped up the marble stairs in the best of spirits.  It had in the meanwhile occurred to me that I had perhaps imbibed too  much, and that the prince in nuns clothing had perhaps observed my  condition, and made me his victim for that reason. But I rejected that  proposition. In the first place, I had not taken much to drink; certainly  two or three glasses of champagne and lemonade were not worth mentioning  when I remembered what quantities of alcohol I had frequently absorbed in  my university days in Germany. I was a brave boon companion, and capable  of consuming a great deal. So how should a few paltry little glasses make  me so unsteady on my feet as to collapse in dancing a fast gallop? Absurd!  I was sure enough of myself, and sufficiently well brought up in social  customs, to know how much one may drink at a court ball. NoI was  convinced that I had not been intoxicated, but on this occasion I resolved  to exercise special caution, and to be strictly temperate, in the event of  the disguised perpetrator of pranks again attempting to make the German  stranger the butt of his impudence. This time he should meet his match; I  would keep my head clear and my feet steady enough to venture a dance with  him. The constantly suspicious attitude of my mind, to be sure, interfered  with my pleasure very considerably. I was in a too observant mood to float  on the topmost wave of enjoyment, and besides an extraordinary disquietude  had seized upon me, a contraction about the heart that was quite new to  me, such as sensitive people undergo before a storm or in anticipation of  momentous changes of fortune. I wandered about restlessly. Numerous though  the merry masks that flitted around me, that nuns indescribable black  eyes did not appear, and no effort was made to involve me again as the  hero of another frolic. Time was dragging heavily. I glanced at my watch,  and wished the supper hour might be near. The finger only pointed to half  past eleven, so that I must still possess my soul in patience for half an  hour. It was a lovely, mild, moonlight night; the doors to the tapestried  passage and the colonnade had been thrown open, and I concluded to take a  breath of the fragrant air and a rapid view of the illuminated town in its  festive brilliancy of a carnival night.  

A female pierrot dances past me with Don Juan, and, with a laugh, throws a  handful of confetti in my face. I retaliatea few phrases are  exchangedI look after her for a momentand then turn to the  entrance of the corridor, to get out into the colonnade.  

I am rooted to the ground!  

Standing aside in a corner, on the very same spot as before, is my nun,  staring at me with the same unfathomable eyes as a week ago!  

Where had she come from?  

Out of the ground? Or had she slipped in through the door during my banter  with the pierrot?  

She had come through the door, of course.  

I am utterly amazed. The same costume. The same joke. How clumsy of the  prince to repeat himself, I am inclined to ignore the impertinent young  gentleman, and pass him proudly byyetstrangeagain I  am attracted irresistibly, as by a supernatural power, held by those black  orbs. I am quite certain of my wits this time: the dress is really the  forbidden costume of a nun, and, so far as I can judge, exact in every  particular. On her breast hangs a large cross, which is especially  conspicuous. It is of dull gold, with emeralds and pearls inlaid, of  peculiar shape, and certainly antique. The pious nun seems to have regaled  herself with excessive haste at some sideboard, since the white collar and  the front of the gray bodice show oblong dark stains, as though some  beverage had been spilt.  

Well, fair mask, finally remark in a mocking tone, although my heart is  beating furiously, you have been waiting for me here, I presume?  

She nods slowly and solemnly.  

Do you imagine, by chance, that I wish to dance another hurricane with  you?  

Again she assents, but more emphatically.  

Then, say I, ironically, see where you can find a new blockhead, my  muscular fairy! My shoulders are not well yet!  

Her arms movehands there are none visible in the long, roomy  sleevesthey are stretched out to me as if in mute appeal. A cold  shiver runs down my back, I know not why.  

If I dance with you again, I angrily exclaim, you will not fare quite  so well as last time! I am firmer on my feet to-night than I was last  week!  

She presses her arms to her breast, something like a tremor agitates the  gray shape, and her head is slightly raised. Her position and demeanor,  though she utters not a word, denote intense longing.  

The blood rushes to my headI must go a step nearer to herI  must!  

If I dance with you, it will be only on one condition!  

With a profound sigh her bosom heaves, her arms fall to her side, her body  is humbly bent forward as if in complete surrender, and as if to say: Ask  what you will!  

My condition is that you afterward reveal yourself.  

She nods stiffly, like a marionette.  

Swear to it!  

She raises her arm for the oath, but the gray folds still conceal her  hand.  

Woe betide you if you deceive me!  

She shakes her head, and repeats the passionate gesture of entreaty. Her  slender form trembles with feverish impatience, and the wonderful eyes  seem to plead, in extreme urgency: Come quickly!  

I put out my arms  

Once more does the terrible woman rush at me, once more am I held in that  mad embrace, once moreon the wings of the winddo we dash  round the room! And once more are all my senses lost in the fiendish  whirl!  

I attempt to struggle, would pit the abounding strength of my youth  against the woman and subdue her. In vain! I can think, I can act, no  longer. My whole being is in a swoon, and I am conscious of nothing but  two icy lips pressed upon mine with a vehemence calculated to draw my very  life out of me.  

A shudder seizes me, and the fear of death, and thenagain that blow  on my shoulders  

I feel as if a pair of iron clamps had been taken off me and I had been  freed, and I sink down upon a sofa.  

A laughing, jeering crowd surrounds me, shouting:  

The sailor is crazy! He has gone out of his mind!  

Have I again been dancing alone in public?  

I jump up in a rage, and exclaim, as I toss back my dishevelled hair from  my burning brow:  

Abominable trickery! Let me pass! Let me get my hands on her, and unmask  her!  

Something rings on the floor. It has fallen from my hand, hitherto  clenched and just now opened. Triumphantly I snatch it up, exulting:  

Her cross! Ha! that shall be my clue!  

On this occasion, too, no trace of the mysterious nun was to be found. It  was at first superciliously assumed, as before, that I must be drunk or  insane, but my serious mood and energetic investigations soon altered that  notion. I might myself have doubted my mental soundness had it not been  for the cross in my hand, which I at once recognized as being that worn by  the nun, and had not a lackey finally confessed to having beheld the  strange figure. He was coming from the colonnade with a tray of  refreshments when he saw me in conversation with her. The mask had  something familiar about her, he said, but he could not remember where he  had seen her before. He had been a servant in the palace for forty years.  

Nobody thought of a spectre; on the other hand extravagant speculations  became rife of a conspirator being at work. It was rumored the king had  originally intended to wear a sailor costume.  

Of course, it was him the uncanny visitor had designs upon. In view of the  fact that the political horizon was very dark and clouded at that time,  the conjecture was perhaps not altogether phantastical, and for this  reason the report quickly reached the ears of the king and the royal  family. I was promptly summoned before His Majesty, and it gave me a sort  of revengeful pleasure to relate the incident to that august person. For I  was still fully persuaded that some young member of his family had played  this obnoxious trick upon me.  

The king nodded thoughtfully upon my frank declaration that, according to  my researches, the enigmatical female could only have come from the royal  apartments.  

Said his Majesty:  

May I ask you, my dear Baron, to show me the cross you found?  

I put it into his hand.  

For a moment the king stared upon it speechless. Then he turned it over,  and ejaculated, roughly almost under the emotion of his violent surprise:  

Great Godwhyit is!  

And he pointed to the small, delicately engraved initials, surmounted by a  crown, in the middle of the cross. Very pale and with heaving breast he  went on:  

A nun, a gray nun, you say? What would the object of such a joke be? and  howhow should this cross come back among the living? Baron, come  with me, I must request your confidence and secrecy!  

We passed through several rooms, and then arrived at a narrow gallery  whose walls were hung with portraits of royal personages. The king came  abruptly to a halt, and without himself looking up indicated a certain  picture:  

Observe that painting! Do you see the same Cross there that you have in  your hand?  

Involuntarily I uttered the loud cry:  

Why, that is she! Holy Heavens! It is my nun!  

The crosscompare the cross! urged the king, his slender, white  hand trembling with agitation.  

A frosty current ran through my veins as I compared the pictured cross  with that in my companions hand. It was the samenot a doubt of itand  the eyes, too, were the same, as also the dress and the whole figure were  unmistakably those of the gray nun I had danced with. Yet in those  conspicuously large, deep black eyes lay not an expression of peacefulness  and mild resignation, but a world of passionate feeling. Having assured  the king of the identity of the cross, and he having informed me that it  was an ancient heirloom of which no duplicate existed, he bade me  accompany him further.  

Arrived in the antechamber to his apartments, the king gave an order to  one of the attendants on duty there. He walked up and down the room for a  few moments in visible excitement, and then, stopping before me, and  looking at me searchingly, he asked:  

Have you ever, in the course of your life, met with a manifestation of  the supernatural?  

I was so bewildered and nervous that I scarcely could remember enough  French to reply:  

May it please your Majesty, I have not.  

Do you believe in the possibility of the dead returning?  

Not in the sense of their coming as apparitions. I always was, still am,  a skeptic on the point of ghost stories in general, nevertheless I am a  Christian, and I believe and know that we continue to live after death.  

The king stared at me mechanically:  

You are a Protestant, and you say you are a skeptic. Curiousonly  you saw the apparitionit was revealed to no one else?  

Then your Majesty is of the opinion that this is actually a case of a  spectral apparition?  

Certainly. It seems much more plausible than open theft. This very cross  I myself  

He interrupted his sentence as he turned to the door, through which, with  profound obeisances, entered two ladies in waitingprobably the  queens. His Majesty addressed one of them in French, no doubt to enable  me to participate in the conversation:  

You were present, Madame M., when Princess A. was laid in her coffin  seventeen years ago?  

A low curtsey was the affirmative reply.  

And you also, Madame U.?  

I had the honor, your Majesty, of rendering her royal highness the last  earthly services.  

You remember perfectly what dress the deceased was buried in?  

Quite well, your Majesty. It was the regular dress of the Order of Gray  Sisters, of which her royal highness was a member.  

Do you recollect whether she took any ornaments to her last resting  place?  

Excepting the golden cross which your Majesty hung round her neck on the  day she took the vow, no jewelry was put on the princess. The duchess even  drew the little sapphire ring from her royal highness finger, to keep it  as a remembrance and wear it herself.  

You are absolutely certain that the cross went into the coffin? You could  swear to it?  

I could do so with fullest conviction, your Majesty.  

Would you recognize the cross?  

To be sure I should.  

Is this it?  

Good Heavensit is! On the back there ought to be the initials of  her royal highness!  

Here they are, said the king, reversing the cross. The old woman shrank  back appalled.  

Then, your Majesty, the vault has been broken into!  

Possibly it has. The matter shall be investigated. I am much obliged to  you, ladies, and earnestly request you will both preserve unconditional  silence as to our present interview.  

Well, said the king to me, after the ladies in waiting had withdrawn,  how do you account for this cross being here in my hand, considering it  was put into the coffin? You think the vault may have been pillaged? That,  I believe, is out of the question. The object of a carnival freak, which  could have been perpetrated just as easily in any other dress, is far too  slight to make such a horrible offense as the violation of the dead worth  while! But I intend to have the vault examined, and beg, my dear baron,  that you will attend. For the present, good night.  

I spent a dreadful night, torturing my sleepless brain for a solution of  the riddle, and being forever haunted by the nuns dark eyes. It was late  when I woke.  

Some hours after, the coffin was opened in the presence of the king, whose  surmise proved correct. The bolts on the coffin were intact. The gold  chain was there, safe round the princess neck. But the cross was gone.  There was not the remotest sign of violence.  

How I got out of that vault, I do not know. I remember feeling faint, and  being supported by two court officials. I am unaware of what happened  next. It was the only instance in my life in which my system had so  entirely given way. A serious illness was apprehended, but my strong  constitution won the day. For a long time my mind was in a precarious  state.  

When I had recovered, the king sent for me.  

Are you still a skeptic? he asked in a grave voice.  

No, your Majesty, I am convinced now.  

Whereupon the king himself deigned to communicate to me the particulars  relating to the golden cross.  

Princess A. was a daughter of one of his cousins, and she was their fifth  child. The duchess, a very pious woman, made a vow before the birth of her  sixth child, that if it was a boy, her youngest daughter should be  dedicated to the service of the church and take the veil. A son was born,  and Princess A. henceforth was educated for the profession of a nun in  becoming retirement and seclusion. Unfortunately, however, the natural  traits of the girl seemed to be entirely in opposition to that reverend  calling. An irrepressible vivacity of spirit, an intense coveting of  worldly joys and pleasures characterized her, and the more she was  separated from the world the more ardent grew her desire to live in it.  Heartrending scenes of resistance and tears were enacted, and the reigning  sovereign felt so much pity for the spirited young creature that he  attempted to save her from her fate of being immured in convent walls by  offering to apply to the pope for a dispensation releasing the mother from  her promise. But the duchess desperately combated this idea. Her wild  laments, that to break her vow would entail her forfeiture of eternal  salvation, her protestations, her tears, her entreaties, at last prevailed  upon the princess to join the Order of the Gray Sisters. For a short space  all seemed to go well. The fervid heart of the royal nun was apparently  beating placidly, in the quiet claustral surroundings. But during the  winter the duchess fell sick, and the young bride of the church was called  to her bedside. Princess A. had remained with her mother for several  weeks, and about that time the carnival season began. Masked balls were  given in the palace, and while the horns and violins were sounding in the  ballroom Princess A. lay on her knees in the throes of dreadful despair,  tearing her hair in furious longing for that lost paradise. She at last  succeeded in bribing a chambermaid to secretly procure her a fancy dress.  If it was to cost her immortal soul, once she would dance and be young and  happy! The plot was betrayed, and the angriest reproaches were poured out  by her parents upon the perjured, rebellious nun! Princess A. was locked  up, and was to be removed to the convent the next day. However, as the  festivities in the palace were reaching their height that night, the  unhappy young nun lay expiring in her room. She had taken poison, although  the report was spread in the capital that failure of the heart had caused  her death. How she came into possession of the poison no one ever  discovered. While she was writhing in terrible agony her half-crazed  mother put a cup of milk to her lips as an antidote. She dashed it  passionately aside and the spilt milk left stains on her dress.  

How hard it was to die! Again and again she tore her black hair. Again and  again she uttered the bitterest imprecations and the fiercest cries for a  taste of youth and happiness. At length she stood up, straining her ears  for the music in the ballroom.  

And then she screamed aloud:  

Oh, I must dance once! I must kiss once! Let me be happy once! I cannot  die before I dance! Let me golet me dancelet me  

She drew herself up to her full height, her eyes glowed like live coals,  she took a few steps towards the door  

I must dancelet me dance! she gasped, and fell stiffly forward on  the floordead.  













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