1
The Black Tulip
By
Alexandre Dumas pere
2
Chapter 1
A Grateful People
On the 20th of August, 1672, the city of the Hague, always so lively, so neat,
and so trim that one might believe every day to be Sunday, with its shady
park, with its tall trees, spreading over its Gothic houses, with its canals like
large mirrors, in which its steeples and its almost Eastern cupolas are
reflected, -- the city of the Hague, the capital of the Seven United Provinces,
was swelling in all its arteries with a black and red stream of hurried,
panting, and restless citizens, who, with their knives in their girdles,
muskets on their shoulders, or sticks in their hands, were pushing on to the
Buytenhof, a terrible prison, the grated windows of which are still shown,
where, on the charge of attempted murder preferred against him by the
surgeon Tyckelaer, Cornelius de Witt, the brother of the Grand Pensionary
of Holland was confined.
If the history of that time, and especially that of the year in the middle of
which our narrative commences, were not indissolubly connected with the
two names just mentioned, the few explanatory pages which we are about to
add might appear quite supererogatory; but we will, from the very first,
apprise the reader -- our old friend, to whom we are wont on the first page to
promise amusement, and with whom we always try to keep our word as well
as is in our power -- that this explanation is as indispensable to the right
understanding of our story as to that of the great event itself on which it is
based.
Cornelius de Witt, Ruart de Pulten, that is to say, warden of the dikes, ex-
burgomaster of Dort, his native town, and member of the Assembly of the
States of Holland, was forty-nine years of age, when the Dutch people, tired
of the Republic such as John de Witt, the Grand Pensionary of Holland,
understood it, at once conceived a most violent affection for the
Stadtholderate, which had been abolished for ever in Holland by the
"Perpetual Edict" forced by John de Witt upon the United Provinces.
As it rarely happens that public opinion, in its whimsical flights, does not
identify a principle with a man, thus the people saw the personification of
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the Republic in the two stern figures of the brothers De Witt, those Romans
of Holland, spurning to pander to the fancies of the mob, and wedding
themselves with unbending fidelity to liberty without licentiousness, and
prosperity without the waste of superfluity; on the other hand, the
Stadtholderate recalled to the popular mind the grave and thoughtful image
of the young Prince William of Orange.
The brothers De Witt humoured Louis XIV., whose moral influence was felt
by the whole of Europe, and the pressure of whose material power Holland
had been made to feel in that marvellous campaign on the Rhine, which, in
the space of three months, had laid the power of the United Provinces
prostrate.
Louis XIV. had long been the enemy of the Dutch, who insulted or ridiculed
him to their hearts' content, although it must be said that they generally
used French refugees for the mouthpiece of their spite. Their national pride
held him up as the Mithridates of the Republic. The brothers De Witt,
therefore, had to strive against a double difficulty, -- against the force of
national antipathy, and, besides, against the feeling of weariness which is
natural to all vanquished people, when they hope that a new chief will be
able to save them from ruin and shame.
This new chief, quite ready to appear on the political stage, and to measure
himself against Louis XIV., however gigantic the fortunes of the Grand
Monarch loomed in the future, was William, Prince of Orange, son of William
II., and grandson, by his mother Henrietta Stuart, of Charles I. of England.
We have mentioned him before as the person by whom the people expected
to see the office of Stadtholder restored.
This young man was, in 1672, twenty-two years of age. John de Witt, who
was his tutor, had brought him up with the view of making him a good
citizen. Loving his country better than he did his disciple, the master had,
by the Perpetual Edict, extinguished the hope which the young Prince might
have entertained of one day becoming Stadtholder. But God laughs at the
presumption of man, who wants to raise and prostrate the powers on earth
without consulting the King above; and the fickleness and caprice of the
Dutch combined with the terror inspired by Louis XIV., in repealing the
Perpetual Edict, and re-establishing the office of Stadtholder in favour of
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William of Orange, for whom the hand of Providence had traced out ulterior
destinies on the hidden map of the future.
The Grand Pensionary bowed before the will of his fellow citizens; Cornelius
de Witt, however, was more obstinate, and notwithstanding all the threats of
death from the Orangist rabble, who besieged him in his house at Dort, he
stoutly refused to sign the act by which the office of Stadtholder was
restored. Moved by the tears and entreaties of his wife, he at last complied,
only adding to his signature the two letters V. C. (Vi Coactus), notifying
thereby that he only yielded to force.
It was a real miracle that on that day he escaped from the doom intended for
him.
John de Witt derived no advantage from his ready compliance with the
wishes of his fellow citizens. Only a few days after, an attempt was made to
stab him, in which he was severely although not mortally wounded.
This by no means suited the views of the Orange faction. The life of the two
brothers being a constant obstacle to their plans, they changed their tactics,
and tried to obtain by calumny what they had not been able to effect by the
aid of the poniard.
How rarely does it happen that, in the right moment, a great man is found
to head the execution of vast and noble designs; and for that reason, when
such a providential concurrence of circumstances does occur, history is
prompt to record the name of the chosen one, and to hold him up to the
admiration of posterity. But when Satan interposes in human affairs to cast
a shadow upon some happy existence, or to overthrow a kingdom, it seldom
happens that he does not find at his side some miserable tool, in whose ear
he has but to whisper a word to set him at once about his task.
The wretched tool who was at hand to be the agent of this dastardly plot was
one Tyckelaer whom we have already mentioned, a surgeon by profession.
5
He lodged an information against Cornelius de Witt, setting forth that the
warden -- who, as he had shown by the letters added to his signature, was
fuming at the repeal of the Perpetual Edict -- had, from hatred against
William of Orange, hired an assassin to deliver the new Republic of its new
Stadtholder; and he, Tyckelaer was the person thus chosen; but that,
horrified at the bare idea of the act which he was asked to perpetrate, he
had preferred rather to reveal the crime than to commit it.
This disclosure was, indeed, well calculated to call forth a furious outbreak
among the Orange faction. The Attorney General caused, on the 16th of
August, 1672, Cornelius de Witt to be arrested; and the noble brother of
John de Witt had, like the vilest criminal, to undergo, in one of the
apartments of the town prison, the preparatory degrees of torture, by means
of which his judges expected to force from him the confession of his alleged
plot against William of Orange.
But Cornelius was not only possessed of a great mind, but also of a great
heart. He belonged to that race of martyrs who, indissolubly wedded to their
political convictions as their ancestors were to their faith, are able to smile
on pain: while being stretched on the rack, he recited with a firm voice, and
scanning the lines according to measure, the first strophe of the "Justum ac
tenacem" of Horace, and, making no confession, tired not only the strength,
but even the fanaticism, of his executioners.
The judges, notwithstanding, acquitted Tyckelaer from every charge; at the
same time sentencing Cornelius to be deposed from all his offices and
dignities; to pay all the costs of the trial; and to be banished from the soil of
the Republic for ever.
This judgment against not only an innocent, but also a great man, was
indeed some gratification to the passions of the people, to whose interests
Cornelius de Witt had always devoted himself: but, as we shall soon see, it
was not enough.
The Athenians, who indeed have left behind them a pretty tolerable
reputation for ingratitude, have in this respect to yield precedence to the
6
Dutch. They, at least in the case of Aristides, contented themselves with
banishing him.
John de Witt, at the first intimation of the charge brought against his
brother, had resigned his office of Grand Pensionary. He too received a noble
recompense for his devotedness to the best interests of his country, taking
with him into the retirement of private life the hatred of a host of enemies,
and the fresh scars of wounds inflicted by assassins, only too often the sole
guerdon obtained by honest people, who are guilty of having worked for their
country, and of having forgotten their own private interests.
In the meanwhile William of Orange urged on the course of events by every
means in his power, eagerly waiting for the time when the people, by whom
he was idolised, should have made of the bodies of the brothers the two
steps over which he might ascend to the chair of Stadtholder.
Thus, then, on the 20th of August, 1672, as we have already stated in the
beginning of this chapter, the whole town was crowding towards the
Buytenhof, to witness the departure of Cornelius de Witt from prison, as he
was going to exile; and to see what traces the torture of the rack had left on
the noble frame of the man who knew his Horace so well.
Yet all this multitude was not crowding to the Buytenhof with the innocent
view of merely feasting their eyes with the spectacle; there were many who
went there to play an active part in it, and to take upon themselves an office
which they conceived had been badly filled, -- that of the executioner.
There were, indeed, others with less hostile intentions. All that they cared
for was the spectacle, always so attractive to the mob, whose instinctive
pride is flattered by it, -- the sight of greatness hurled down into the dust.
"Has not," they would say, "this Cornelius de Witt been locked up and
broken by the rack? Shall we not see him pale, streaming with blood,
covered with shame?" And was not this a sweet triumph for the burghers of
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the Hague, whose envy even beat that of the common rabble; a triumph in
which every honest citizen and townsman might be expected to share?
"Moreover," hinted the Orange agitators interspersed through the crowd,
whom they hoped to manage like a sharp-edged and at the same time
crushing instrument, -- "moreover, will there not, from the Buytenhof to the
gate of the town, a nice little opportunity present itself to throw some
handfuls of dirt, or a few stones, at this Cornelius de Witt, who not only
conferred the dignity of Stadtholder on the Prince of Orange merely vi
coactus, but who also intended to have him assassinated?"
"Besides which," the fierce enemies of France chimed in, "if the work were
done well and bravely at the Hague, Cornelius would certainly not be
allowed to go into exile, where he will renew his intrigues with France, and
live with his big scoundrel of a brother, John, on the gold of the Marquis de
Louvois."
Being in such a temper, people generally will run rather than walk; which
was the reason why the inhabitants of the Hague were hurrying so fast
towards the Buytenhof.
Honest Tyckelaer, with a heart full of spite and malice, and with no
particular plan settled in his mind, was one of the foremost, being paraded
about by the Orange party like a hero of probity, national honour, and
Christian charity.
This daring miscreant detailed, with all the embellishments and flourishes
suggested by his base mind and his ruffianly imagination, the attempts
which he pretended Cornelius de Witt had made to corrupt him; the sums of
money which were promised, and all the diabolical stratagems planned
beforehand to smooth for him, Tyckelaer, all the difficulties in the path of
murder.
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And every phase of his speech, eagerly listened to by the populace, called
forth enthusiastic cheers for the Prince of Orange, and groans and
imprecations of blind fury against the brothers De Witt.
The mob even began to vent its rage by inveighing against the iniquitous
judges, who had allowed such a detestable criminal as the villain Cornelius
to get off so cheaply.
Some of the agitators whispered, "He will be off, he will escape from us!"
Others replied, "A vessel is waiting for him at Schevening, a French craft.
Tyckelaer has seen her."
"Honest Tyckelaer! Hurrah for Tyckelaer!" the mob cried in chorus.
"And let us not forget," a voice exclaimed from the crowd, "that at the same
time with Cornelius his brother John, who is as rascally a traitor as himself,
will likewise make his escape."
"And the two rogues will in France make merry with our money, with the
money for our vessels, our arsenals, and our dockyards, which they have
sold to Louis XIV."
"Well, then, don't let us allow them to depart!" advised one of the patriots
who had gained the start of the others.
"Forward to the prison, to the prison!" echoed the crowd.
Amid these cries, the citizens ran along faster and faster, cocking their
muskets, brandishing their hatchets, and looking death and defiance in all
directions.
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No violence, however, had as yet been committed; and the file of horsemen
who were guarding the approaches of the Buytenhof remained cool,
unmoved, silent, much more threatening in their impassibility than all this
crowd of burghers, with their cries, their agitation, and their threats. The
men on their horses, indeed, stood like so many statues, under the eye of
their chief, Count Tilly, the captain of the mounted troops of the Hague, who
had his sword drawn, but held it with its point downwards, in a line with
the straps of his stirrup.
This troop, the only defence of the prison, overawed by its firm attitude not
only the disorderly riotous mass of the populace, but also the detachment of
the burgher guard, which, being placed opposite the Buytenhof to support
the soldiers in keeping order, gave to the rioters the example of seditious
cries, shouting, --
"Hurrah for Orange! Down with the traitors!"
The presence of Tilly and his horsemen, indeed, exercised a salutary check
on these civic warriors; but by degrees they waxed more and more angry by
their own shouts, and as they were not able to understand how any one
could have courage without showing it by cries, they attributed the silence
of the dragoons to pusillanimity, and advanced one step towards the prison,
with all the turbulent mob following in their wake.
In this moment, Count Tilly rode forth towards them single-handed, merely
lifting his sword and contracting his brow whilst he addressed them: --
"Well, gentlemen of the burgher guard, what are you advancing for, and
what do you wish?"
The burghers shook their muskets, repeating their cry, --
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"Hurrah for Orange! Death to the traitors!"
"'Hurrah for Orange!' all well and good!" replied Tilly, "although I certainly
am more partial to happy faces than to gloomy ones. 'Death to the traitors!'
as much of it as you like, as long as you show your wishes only by cries.
But, as to putting them to death in good earnest, I am here to prevent that,
and I shall prevent it."
Then, turning round to his men, he gave the word of command, --
"Soldiers, ready!"
The troopers obeyed orders with a precision which immediately caused the
burgher guard and the people to fall back, in a degree of confusion which
excited the smile of the cavalry officer.
"Holloa!" he exclaimed, with that bantering tone which is peculiar to men of
his profession; "be easy, gentlemen, my soldiers will not fire a shot; but, on
the other hand, you will not advance by one step towards the prison."
"And do you know, sir, that we have muskets?" roared the commandant of
the burghers.
"I must know it, by Jove, you have made them glitter enough before my eyes;
but I beg you to observe also that we on our side have pistols, that the pistol
carries admirably to a distance of fifty yards, and that you are only twenty-
five from us."
"Death to the traitors!" cried the exasperated burghers.
"Go along with you," growled the officer, "you always cry the same thing over
again. It is very tiresome."
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With this, he took his post at the head of his troops, whilst the tumult grew
fiercer and fiercer about the Buytenhof.
And yet the fuming crowd did not know that, at that very moment when they
were tracking the scent of one of their victims, the other, as if hurrying to
meet his fate, passed, at a distance of not more than a hundred yards,
behind the groups of people and the dragoons, to betake himself to the
Buytenhof.
John de Witt, indeed, had alighted from his coach with his servant, and
quietly walked across the courtyard of the prison.
Mentioning his name to the turnkey, who however knew him, he said, --
"Good morning, Gryphus; I am coming to take away my brother, who, as you
know, is condemned to exile, and to carry him out of the town."
Whereupon the jailer, a sort of bear, trained to lock and unlock the gates of
the prison, had greeted him and admitted him into the building, the doors of
which were immediately closed again.
Ten yards farther on, John de Witt met a lovely young girl, of about
seventeen or eighteen, dressed in the national costume of the Frisian
women, who, with pretty demureness, dropped a curtesy to him. Chucking
her under the chin, he said to her, --
"Good morning, my good and fair Rosa; how is my brother?"
"Oh, Mynheer John!" the young girl replied, "I am not afraid of the harm
which has been done to him. That's all over now."
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"But what is it you are afraid of?"
"I am afraid of the harm which they are going to do to him."
"Oh, yes," said De Witt, "you mean to speak of the people down below, don't
you?"
"Do you hear them?"
"They are indeed in a state of great excitement; but when they see us
perhaps they will grow calmer, as we have never done them anything but
good."
"That's unfortunately no reason, except for the contrary," muttered the girl,
as, on an imperative sign from her father, she withdrew.
"Indeed, child, what you say is only too true."
Then, in pursuing his way, he said to himself, --
"Here is a damsel who very likely does not know how to read, who
consequently has never read anything, and yet with one word she has just
told the whole history of the world."
And with the same calm mien, but more melancholy than he had been on
entering the prison, the Grand Pensionary proceeded towards the cell of his
brother.
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Chapter 2
The Two Brothers
As the fair Rosa, with foreboding doubt, had foretold, so it happened. Whilst
John de Witt was climbing the narrow winding stairs which led to the prison
of his brother Cornelius, the burghers did their best to have the troop of
Tilly, which was in their way, removed.
Seeing this disposition, King Mob, who fully appreciated the laudable
intentions of his own beloved militia, shouted most lustily, --
"Hurrah for the burghers!"
As to Count Tilly, who was as prudent as he was firm, he began to parley
with the burghers, under the protection of the cocked pistols of his
dragoons, explaining to the valiant townsmen, that his order from the States
commanded him to guard the prison and its approaches with three
companies.
"Wherefore such an order? Why guard the prison?" cried the Orangists.
"Stop," replied the Count, "there you at once ask me more than I can tell
you. I was told, 'Guard the prison,' and I guard it. You, gentlemen, who are
almost military men yourselves, you are aware that an order must never be
gainsaid."
"But this order has been given to you that the traitors may be enabled to
leave the town."
"Very possibly, as the traitors are condemned to exile," replied Tilly.
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"But who has given this order?"
"The States, to be sure!"
"The States are traitors."
"I don't know anything about that!"
"And you are a traitor yourself!"
"I?"
"Yes, you."
"Well, as to that, let us understand each other gentlemen. Whom should I
betray? The States? Why, I cannot betray them, whilst, being in their pay, I
faithfully obey their orders."
As the Count was so indisputably in the right that it was impossible to
argue against him, the mob answered only by redoubled clamour and
horrible threats, to which the Count opposed the most perfect urbanity.
"Gentlemen," he said, "uncock your muskets, one of them may go off by
accident; and if the shot chanced to wound one of my men, we should knock
over a couple of hundreds of yours, for which we should, indeed, be very
sorry, but you even more so; especially as such a thing is neither
contemplated by you nor by myself."
"If you did that," cried the burghers, "we should have a pop at you, too."
15
"Of course you would; but suppose you killed every man Jack of us, those
whom we should have killed would not, for all that, be less dead."
"Then leave the place to us, and you will perform the part of a good citizen."
"First of all," said the Count, "I am not a citizen, but an officer, which is a
very different thing; and secondly, I am not a Hollander, but a Frenchman,
which is more different still. I have to do with no one but the States, by
whom I am paid; let me see an order from them to leave the place to you,
and I shall only be too glad to wheel off in an instant, as I am confoundedly
bored here."
"Yes, yes!" cried a hundred voices; the din of which was immediately swelled
by five hundred others; "let us march to the Town-hall; let us go and see the
deputies! Come along! come along!"
"That's it," Tilly muttered between his teeth, as he saw the most violent
among the crowd turning away; "go and ask for a meanness at the Town-
hall, and you will see whether they will grant it; go, my fine fellows, go!"
The worthy officer relied on the honour of the magistrates, who, on their
side, relied on his honour as a soldier.
"I say, Captain," the first lieutenant whispered into the ear of the Count, "I
hope the deputies will give these madmen a flat refusal; but, after all, it
would do no harm if they would send us some reinforcement."
In the meanwhile, John de Witt, whom we left climbing the stairs, after the
conversation with the jailer Gryphus and his daughter Rosa, had reached
the door of the cell, where on a mattress his brother Cornelius was resting,
after having undergone the preparatory degrees of the torture. The sentence
16
of banishment having been pronounced, there was no occasion for inflicting
the torture extraordinary.
Cornelius was stretched on his couch, with broken wrists and crushed
fingers. He had not confessed a crime of which he was not guilty; and now,
after three days of agony, he once more breathed freely, on being informed
that the judges, from whom he had expected death, were only condemning
him to exile.
Endowed with an iron frame and a stout heart, how would he have
disappointed his enemies if they could only have seen, in the dark cell of the
Buytenhof, his pale face lit up by the smile of the martyr, who forgets the
dross of this earth after having obtained a glimpse of the bright glory of
heaven.
The warden, indeed, had already recovered his full strength, much more
owing to the force of his own strong will than to actual aid; and he was
calculating how long the formalities of the law would still detain him in
prison.
This was just at the very moment when the mingled shouts of the burgher
guard and of the mob were raging against the two brothers, and threatening
Captain Tilly, who served as a rampart to them. This noise, which roared
outside of the walls of the prison, as the surf dashing against the rocks, now
reached the ears of the prisoner.
But, threatening as it sounded, Cornelius appeared not to deem it worth his
while to inquire after its cause; nor did he get up to look out of the narrow
grated window, which gave access to the light and to the noise of the world
without.
He was so absorbed in his never-ceasing pain that it had almost become a
habit with him. He felt with such delight the bonds which connected his
immortal being with his perishable frame gradually loosening, that it seemed
to him as if his spirit, freed from the trammels of the body, were hovering
17
above it, like the expiring flame which rises from the half-extinguished
embers.
He also thought of his brother; and whilst the latter was thus vividly present
to his mind the door opened, and John entered, hurrying to the bedside of
the prisoner, who stretched out his broken limbs and his hands tied up in
bandages towards that glorious brother, whom he now excelled, not in
services rendered to the country, but in the hatred which the Dutch bore
him.
John tenderly kissed his brother on the forehead, and put his sore hands
gently back on the mattress.
"Cornelius, my poor brother, you are suffering great pain, are you not?"
"I am suffering no longer, since I see you, my brother."
"Oh, my poor dear Cornelius! I feel most wretched to see you in such a
state."
"And, indeed, I have thought more of you than of myself; and whilst they
were torturing me, I never thought of uttering a complaint, except once, to
say, 'Poor brother!' But now that you are here, let us forget all. You are
coming to take me away, are you not?"
"I am."
"I am quite healed; help me to get up, and you shall see how I can walk."
"You will not have to walk far, as I have my coach near the pond, behind
Tilly's dragoons."
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"Tilly's dragoons! What are they near the pond for?"
"Well," said the Grand Pensionary with a melancholy smile which was
habitual to him, "the gentlemen at the Town-hall expect that the people at
the Hague would like to see you depart, and there is some apprehension of a
tumult."
"Of a tumult?" replied Cornelius, fixing his eyes on his perplexed brother; "a
tumult?"
"Yes, Cornelius."
"Oh! that's what I heard just now," said the prisoner, as if speaking to
himself. Then, turning to his brother, he continued, --
"Are there many persons down before the prison."
"Yes, my brother, there are."
"But then, to come here to me ---- "
"Well?"
"How is it that they have allowed you to pass?"
"You know well that we are not very popular, Cornelius," said the Grand
Pensionary, with gloomy bitterness. "I have made my way through all sorts
of bystreets and alleys."
19
"You hid yourself, John?"
"I wished to reach you without loss of time, and I did what people will do in
politics, or on the sea when the wind is against them, -- I tacked."
At this moment the noise in the square below was heard to roar with
increasing fury. Tilly was parleying with the burghers.
"Well, well," said Cornelius, "you are a very skilful pilot, John; but I doubt
whether you will as safely guide your brother out of the Buytenhof in the
midst of this gale, and through the raging surf of popular hatred, as you did
the fleet of Van Tromp past the shoals of the Scheldt to Antwerp."
"With the help of God, Cornelius, we'll at least try," answered John; "but,
first of all, a word with you."
"Speak!"
The shouts began anew.
"Hark, hark!" continued Cornelius, "how angry those people are! Is it against
you, or against me?"
"I should say it is against us both, Cornelius. I told you, my dear brother,
that the Orange party, while assailing us with their absurd calumnies, have
also made it a reproach against us that we have negotiated with France."
"What blockheads they are!"
20
"But, indeed, they reproach us with it."
"And yet, if these negotiations had been successful, they would have
prevented the defeats of Rees, Orsay, Wesel, and Rheinberg; the Rhine
would not have been crossed, and Holland might still consider herself
invincible in the midst of her marshes and canals."
"All this is quite true, my dear Cornelius, but still more certain it is, that if
at this moment our correspondence with the Marquis de Louvois were
discovered, skilful pilot as I am, I should not be able to save the frail barque
which is to carry the brothers De Witt and their fortunes out of Holland.
That correspondence, which might prove to honest people how dearly I love
my country, and what sacrifices I have offered to make for its liberty and
glory, would be ruin to us if it fell into the hands of the Orange party. I hope
you have burned the letters before you left Dort to join me at the Hague."
"My dear brother," Cornelius answered, "your correspondence with M. de
Louvois affords ample proof of your having been of late the greatest, most
generous, and most able citizen of the Seven United Provinces. I rejoice in
the glory of my country; and particularly do I rejoice in your glory, John. I
have taken good care not to burn that correspondence."
"Then we are lost, as far as this life is concerned," quietly said the Grand
Pensionary, approaching the window.
"No, on the contrary, John, we shall at the same time save our lives and
regain our popularity."
"But what have you done with these letters?"
"I have intrusted them to the care of Cornelius van Baerle, my godson,
whom you know, and who lives at Dort."
21
"Poor honest Van Baerle! who knows so much, and yet thinks of nothing but
of flowers and of God who made them. You have intrusted him with this
fatal secret; it will be his ruin, poor soul!"
"His ruin?"
"Yes, for he will either be strong or he will be weak. If he is strong, he will,
when he hears of what has happened to us, boast of our acquaintance; if he
is weak, he will be afraid on account of his connection with us: if he is
strong, he will betray the secret by his boldness; if he is weak, he will allow
it to be forced from him. In either case he is lost, and so are we. Let us,
therefore, fly, fly, as long as there is still time."
Cornelius de Witt, raising himself on his couch, and grasping the hand of
his brother, who shuddered at the touch of his linen bandages, replied, --
"Do not I know my godson? have not I been enabled to read every thought in
Van Baerle's mind, and every sentiment in his heart? You ask whether he is
strong or weak. He is neither the one nor the other; but that is not now the
question. The principal point is, that he is sure not to divulge the secret, for
the very good reason that he does not know it himself."
John turned round in surprise.
"You must know, my dear brother, that I have been trained in the school of
that distinguished politician John de Witt; and I repeat to you, that Van
Baerle is not aware of the nature and importance of the deposit which I have
intrusted to him."
"Quick then," cried John, "as there is still time, let us convey to him
directions to burn the parcel."
"Through whom?"
22
"Through my servant Craeke, who was to have accompanied us on
horseback, and who has entered the prison with me, to assist you
downstairs."
"Consider well before having those precious documents burnt, John!"
"I consider, above all things, that the brothers De Witt must necessarily save
their lives, to be able to save their character. If we are dead, who will defend
us? Who will have fully understood our intentions?"
"You expect, then, that they would kill us if those papers were found?"
John, without answering, pointed with his hand to the square, whence, at
that very moment, fierce shouts and savage yells made themselves heard.
"Yes, yes," said Cornelius, "I hear these shouts very plainly, but what is their
meaning?"
John opened the window.
"Death to the traitors!" howled the populace.
"Do you hear now, Cornelius?"
"To the traitors! that means us!" said the prisoner, raising his eyes to heaven
and shrugging his shoulders.
"Yes, it means us," repeated John.
23
"Where is Craeke?"
"At the door of your cell, I suppose."
"Let him enter then."
John opened the door; the faithful servant was waiting on the threshold.
"Come in, Craeke, and mind well what my brother will tell you."
"No, John; it will not suffice to send a verbal message; unfortunately, I shall
be obliged to write."
"And why that?"
"Because Van Baerle will neither give up the parcel nor burn it without a
special command to do so."
"But will you be able to write, poor old fellow?" John asked, with a look on
the scorched and bruised hands of the unfortunate sufferer.
"If I had pen and ink you would soon see," said Cornelius.
"Here is a pencil, at any rate."
"Have you any paper? for they have left me nothing."
24
"Here, take this Bible, and tear out the fly-leaf."
"Very well, that will do."
"But your writing will be illegible."
"Just leave me alone for that," said Cornelius. "The executioners have indeed
pinched me badly enough, but my hand will not tremble once in tracing the
few lines which are requisite."
And really Cornelius took the pencil and began to write, when through the
white linen bandages drops of blood oozed out which the pressure of the
fingers against the pencil squeezed from the raw flesh.
A cold sweat stood on the brow of the Grand Pensionary.
Cornelius wrote: --
"My dear Godson, --
"Burn the parcel which I have intrusted to you. Burn it without looking at it,
and without opening it, so that its contents may for ever remain unknown to
yourself. Secrets of this description are death to those with whom they are
deposited. Burn it, and you will have saved John and Cornelius de Witt.
"Farewell, and love me.
"Cornelius de Witt
25
"August 20th, 1672."
John, with tears in his eyes, wiped off a drop of the noble blood which had
soiled the leaf, and, after having handed the despatch to Craeke with a last
direction, returned to Cornelius, who seemed overcome by intense pain, and
near fainting.
"Now," said he, "when honest Craeke sounds his coxswain's whistle, it will
be a signal of his being clear of the crowd, and of his having reached the
other side of the pond. And then it will be our turn to depart."
Five minutes had not elapsed, before a long and shrill whistle was heard
through the din and noise of the square of the Buytenhof.
John gratefully raised his eyes to heaven.
"And now," said he, "let us off, Cornelius."
26
Chapter 3
The Pupil of John de Witt
Whilst the clamour of the crowd in the square of Buytenhof, which grew
more and more menacing against the two brothers, determined John de Witt
to hasten the departure of his brother Cornelius, a deputation of burghers
had gone to the Town-hall to demand the withdrawal of Tilly's horse.
It was not far from the Buytenhof to Hoogstraet (High Street); and a
stranger, who since the beginning of this scene had watched all its incidents
with intense interest, was seen to wend his way with, or rather in the wake
of, the others towards the Town-hall, to hear as soon as possible the current
news of the hour.
This stranger was a very young man, of scarcely twenty-two or three, with
nothing about him that bespoke any great energy. He evidently had his good
reasons for not making himself known, as he hid his face in a handkerchief
of fine Frisian linen, with which he incessantly wiped his brow or his
burning lips.
With an eye keen as that of a bird of prey, -- with a long aquiline nose, a
finely cut mouth, which he generally kept open, or rather which was gaping
like the edges of a wound, -- this man would have presented to Lavater, if
Lavater had lived at that time, a subject for physiognomical observations
which at the first blush would not have been very favourable to the person
in question.
"What difference is there between the figure of the conqueror and that of the
pirate?" said the ancients. The difference only between the eagle and the
vulture, -- serenity or restlessness.
And indeed the sallow physiognomy, the thin and sickly body, and the
prowling ways of the stranger, were the very type of a suspecting master, or
27
an unquiet thief; and a police officer would certainly have decided in favour
of the latter supposition, on account of the great care which the mysterious
person evidently took to hide himself.
He was plainly dressed, and apparently unarmed; his arm was lean but
wiry, and his hands dry, but of an aristocratic whiteness and delicacy, and
he leaned on the shoulder of an officer, who, with his hand on his sword,
had watched the scenes in the Buytenhof with eager curiosity, very natural
in a military man, until his companion drew him away with him.
On arriving at the square of the Hoogstraet, the man with the sallow face
pushed the other behind an open shutter, from which corner he himself
began to survey the balcony of the Town-hall.
At the savage yells of the mob, the window of the Town-hall opened, and a
man came forth to address the people.
"Who is that on the balcony?" asked the young man, glancing at the orator.
"It is the Deputy Bowelt," replied the officer.
"What sort of a man is he? Do you know anything of him?"
"An honest man; at least I believe so, Monseigneur."
Hearing this character given of Bowelt, the young man showed signs of such
a strange disappointment and evident dissatisfaction that the officer could
not but remark it, and therefore added, --
"At least people say so, Monseigneur. I cannot say anything about it myself,
as I have no personal acquaintance with Mynheer Bowelt."
28
"An honest man," repeated he who was addressed as Monseigneur; "do you
mean to say that he is an honest man (brave homme), or a brave one
(homme brave)?"
"Ah, Monseigneur must excuse me; I would not presume to draw such a fine
distinction in the case of a man whom, I assure your Highness once more, I
know only by sight."
"If this Bowelt is an honest man," his Highness continued, "he will give to
the demand of these furibund petitioners a very queer reception."
The nervous quiver of his hand, which moved on the shoulder of his
companion as the fingers of a player on the keys of a harpsichord, betrayed
his burning impatience, so ill concealed at certain times, and particularly at
that moment, under the icy and sombre expression of his face.
The chief of the deputation of the burghers was then heard addressing an
interpellation to Mynheer Bowelt, whom he requested to let them know
where the other deputies, his colleagues, were.
"Gentlemen," Bowelt repeated for the second time, "I assure you that in this
moment I am here alone with Mynheer d'Asperen, and I cannot take any
resolution on my own responsibility."
"The order! we want the order!" cried several thousand voices.
Mynheer Bowelt wished to speak, but his words were not heard, and he was
only seen moving his arms in all sorts of gestures, which plainly showed
that he felt his position to be desperate. When, at last, he saw that he could
not make himself heard, he turned round towards the open window, and
called Mynheer d'Asperen.
29
The latter gentleman now made his appearance on the balcony, where he
was saluted with shouts even more energetic than those with which, ten
minutes before, his colleague had been received.
This did not prevent him from undertaking the difficult task of haranguing
the mob; but the mob preferred forcing the guard of the States -- which,
however, offered no resistance to the sovereign people -- to listening to the
speech of Mynheer d'Asperen.
"Now, then," the young man coolly remarked, whilst the crowd was rushing
into the principal gate of the Town-hall, "it seems the question will be
discussed indoors, Captain. Come along, and let us hear the debate."
"Oh, Monseigneur! Monseigneur! take care!"
"Of what?"
"Among these deputies there are many who have had dealings with you, and
it would be sufficient, that one of them should recognize your Highness."
"Yes, that I might be charged with having been the instigator of all this work,
indeed, you are right," said the young man, blushing for a moment from
regret of having betrayed so much eagerness. "From this place we shall see
them return with or without the order for the withdrawal of the dragoons,
then we may judge which is greater, Mynheer Bowelt's honesty or his
courage."
"But," replied the officer, looking with astonishment at the personage whom
he addressed as Monseigneur, "but your Highness surely does not suppose
for one instant that the deputies will order Tilly's horse to quit their post?"
"Why not?" the young man quietly retorted.
30
"Because doing so would simply be signing the death warrant of Cornelius
and John de Witt."
"We shall see," his Highness replied, with the most perfect coolness; "God
alone knows what is going on within the hearts of men."
The officer looked askance at the impassible figure of his companion, and
grew pale: he was an honest man as well as a brave one.
From the spot where they stood, his Highness and his attendant heard the
tumult and the heavy tramp of the crowd on the staircase of the Town-hall.
The noise thereupon sounded through the windows of the hall, on the
balcony of which Mynheers Bowelt and D'Asperen had presented
themselves. These two gentlemen had retired into the building, very likely
from fear of being forced over the balustrade by the pressure of the crowd.
After this, fluctuating shadows in tumultuous confusion were seen flitting to
and fro across the windows: the council hall was filling.
Suddenly the noise subsided, and as suddenly again it rose with redoubled
intensity, and at last reached such a pitch that the old building shook to the
very roof.
At length, the living stream poured back through the galleries and stairs to
the arched gateway, from which it was seen issuing like waters from a
spout.
At the head of the first group, man was flying rather than running, his face
hideously distorted with satanic glee: this man was the surgeon Tyckelaer.
"We have it! we have it!" he cried, brandishing a paper in the air.
31
"They have got the order!" muttered the officer in amazement.
"Well, then," his Highness quietly remarked, "now I know what to believe
with regard to Mynheer Bowelt's honesty and courage: he has neither the
one nor the other."
Then, looking with a steady glance after the crowd which was rushing along
before him, he continued, --
"Let us now go to the Buytenhof, Captain; I expect we shall see a very
strange sight there."
The officer bowed, and, without making any reply, followed in the steps of
his master.
There was an immense crowd in the square and about the neighbourhood of
the prison. But the dragoons of Tilly still kept it in check with the same
success and with the same firmness.
It was not long before the Count heard the increasing din of the approaching
multitude, the first ranks of which rushed on with the rapidity of a cataract.
At the same time he observed the paper, which was waving above the
surface of clenched fists and glittering arms.
"Halloa!" he said, rising in his stirrups, and touching his lieutenant with the
knob of his sword; "I really believe those rascals have got the order."
"Dastardly ruffians they are," cried the lieutenant.
32
It was indeed the order, which the burgher guard received with a roar of
triumph. They immediately sallied forth, with lowered arms and fierce
shouts, to meet Count Tilly's dragoons.
But the Count was not the man to allow them to approach within an
inconvenient distance.
"Stop!" he cried, "stop, and keep off from my horse, or I shall give the word of
command to advance."
"Here is the order!" a hundred insolent voices answered at once.
He took it in amazement, cast a rapid glance on it, and said quite aloud, --
"Those who have signed this order are the real murderers of Cornelius de
Witt. I would rather have my two hands cut off than have written one single
letter of this infamous order."
And, pushing back with the hilt of his sword the man who wanted to take it
from him, he added, --
"Wait a minute, papers like this are of importance, and are to be kept."
Saying this, he folded up the document, and carefully put it in the pocket of
his coat.
Then, turning round towards his troop, he gave the word of command, --
"Tilly's dragoons, wheel to the right!"
33
After this, he added, in an undertone, yet loud enough for his words to be
not altogether lost to those about him, --
"And now, ye butchers, do your work!"
A savage yell, in which all the keen hatred and ferocious triumph rife in the
precincts of the prison simultaneously burst forth, and accompanied the
departure of the dragoons, as they were quietly filing off.
The Count tarried behind, facing to the last the infuriated populace, which
advanced at the same rate as the Count retired.
John de Witt, therefore, had by no means exaggerated the danger, when,
assisting his brother in getting up, he hurried his departure. Cornelius,
leaning on the arm of the Ex-Grand Pensionary, descended the stairs which
led to the courtyard. At the bottom of the staircase he found little Rosa,
trembling all over.
"Oh, Mynheer John," she said, "what a misfortune!"
"What is it, my child?" asked De Witt.
"They say that they are gone to the Town-hall to fetch the order for Tilly's
horse to withdraw."
"You do not say so!" replied John. "Indeed, my dear child, if the dragoons are
off, we shall be in a very sad plight."
"I have some advice to give you," Rosa said, trembling even more violently
than before.
34
"Well, let us hear what you have to say, my child. Why should not God
speak by your mouth?"
"Now, then, Mynheer John, if I were in your place, I should not go out
through the main street."
"And why so, as the dragoons of Tilly are still at their post?"
"Yes, but their order, as long as it is not revoked, enjoins them to stop before
the prison."
"Undoubtedly."
"Have you got an order for them to accompany you out of the town?"
"We have not?"
"Well, then, in the very moment when you have passed the ranks of the
dragoons you will fall into the hands of the people."
"But the burgher guard?"
"Alas! the burgher guard are the most enraged of all."
"What are we to do, then?"
"If I were in your place, Mynheer John," the young girl timidly continued, "I
should leave by the postern, which leads into a deserted by-lane, whilst all
35
the people are waiting in the High Street to see you come out by the
principal entrance. From there I should try to reach the gate by which you
intend to leave the town."
"But my brother is not able to walk," said John.
"I shall try," Cornelius said, with an expression of most sublime fortitude.
"But have you not got your carriage?" asked the girl.
"The carriage is down near the great entrance."
"Not so," she replied. "I considered your coachman to be a faithful man, and
I told him to wait for you at the postern."
The two brothers looked first at each other, and then at Rosa, with a glance
full of the most tender gratitude.
"The question is now," said the Grand Pensionary, "whether Gryphus will
open this door for us."
"Indeed, he will do no such thing," said Rosa.
"Well, and how then?"
"I have foreseen his refusal, and just now whilst he was talking from the
window of the porter's lodge with a dragoon, I took away the key from his
bunch."
36
"And you have got it?"
"Here it is, Mynheer John."
"My child," said Cornelius, "I have nothing to give you in exchange for the
service you are rendering us but the Bible which you will find in my room; it
is the last gift of an honest man; I hope it will bring you good luck."
"I thank you, Master Cornelius, it shall never leave me," replied Rosa.
And then, with a sigh, she said to herself, "What a pity that I do not know
how to read!"
"The shouts and cries are growing louder and louder," said John; "there is
not a moment to be lost."
"Come along, gentlemen," said the girl, who now led the two brothers
through an inner lobby to the back of the prison. Guided by her, they
descended a staircase of about a dozen steps; traversed a small courtyard,
which was surrounded by castellated walls; and, the arched door having
been opened for them by Rosa, they emerged into a lonely street where their
carriage was ready to receive them.
"Quick, quick, my masters! do you hear them?" cried the coachman, in a
deadly fright.
Yet, after having made Cornelius get into the carriage first, the Grand
Pensionary turned round towards the girl, to whom he said, --
"Good-bye, my child! words could never express our gratitude. God will
reward you for having saved the lives of two men."
37
Rosa took the hand which John de Witt proffered to her, and kissed it with
every show of respect.
"Go! for Heaven's sake, go!" she said; "it seems they are going to force the
gate."
John de Witt hastily got in, sat himself down by the side of his brother, and,
fastening the apron of the carriage, called out to the coachman, --
"To the Tol-Hek!"
The Tol-Hek was the iron gate leading to the harbor of Schevening, in which
a small vessel was waiting for the two brothers.
The carriage drove off with the fugitives at the full speed of a pair of spirited
Flemish horses. Rosa followed them with her eyes until they turned the
corner of the street, upon which, closing the door after her, she went back
and threw the key into a cell.
The noise which had made Rosa suppose that the people were forcing the
prison door was indeed owing to the mob battering against it after the
square had been left by the military.
Solid as the gate was, and although Gryphus, to do him justice, stoutly
enough refused to open it, yet evidently it could not resist much longer, and
the jailer, growing very pale, put to himself the question whether it would
not be better to open the door than to allow it to be forced, when he felt
some one gently pulling his coat.
He turned round and saw Rosa.
38
"Do you hear these madmen?" he said.
"I hear them so well, my father, that in your place ---- "
"You would open the door?"
"No, I should allow it to be forced."
"But they will kill me!"
"Yes, if they see you."
"How shall they not see me?"
"Hide yourself."
"Where?"
"In the secret dungeon."
"But you, my child?"
"I shall get into it with you. We shall lock the door and when they have left
the prison, we shall again come forth from our hiding place."
"Zounds, you are right, there!" cried Gryphus; "it's surprising how much
sense there is in such a little head!"
39
Then, as the gate began to give way amidst the triumphant shouts of the
mob, she opened a little trap-door, and said, --
"Come along, come along, father."
"But our prisoners?"
"God will watch over them, and I shall watch over you."
Gryphus followed his daughter, and the trap-door closed over his head, just
as the broken gate gave admittance to the populace.
The dungeon where Rosa had induced her father to hide himself, and where
for the present we must leave the two, offered to them a perfectly safe
retreat, being known only to those in power, who used to place there
important prisoners of state, to guard against a rescue or a revolt.
The people rushed into the prison, with the cry --
"Death to the traitors! To the gallows with Cornelius de Witt! Death! death!"
40
Chapter 4
The Murderers
The young man with his hat slouched over his eyes, still leaning on the arm
of the officer, and still wiping from time to time his brow with his
handkerchief, was watching in a corner of the Buytenhof, in the shade of the
overhanging weather-board of a closed shop, the doings of the infuriated
mob, a spectacle which seemed to draw near its catastrophe.
"Indeed," said he to the officer, "indeed, I think you were right, Van Deken;
the order which the deputies have signed is truly the death-warrant of
Master Cornelius. Do you hear these people? They certainly bear a sad
grudge to the two De Witts."
"In truth," replied the officer, "I never heard such shouts."
"They seem to have found out the cell of the man. Look, look! is not that the
window of the cell where Cornelius was locked up?"
A man had seized with both hands and was shaking the iron bars of the
window in the room which Cornelius had left only ten minutes before.
"Halloa, halloa!" the man called out, "he is gone."
"How is that? gone?" asked those of the mob who had not been able to get
into the prison, crowded as it was with the mass of intruders.
"Gone, gone," repeated the man in a rage, "the bird has flown."
41
"What does this man say?" asked his Highness, growing quite pale.
"Oh, Monseigneur, he says a thing which would be very fortunate if it should
turn out true!"
"Certainly it would be fortunate if it were true," said the young man;
"unfortunately it cannot be true."
"However, look!" said the officer.
And indeed, some more faces, furious and contorted with rage, showed
themselves at the windows, crying, --
"Escaped, gone, they have helped them off!"
And the people in the street repeated, with fearful imprecations, --
"Escaped gone! After them, and catch them!"
"Monseigneur, it seems that Mynheer Cornelius has really escaped," said the
officer.
"Yes, from prison, perhaps, but not from the town; you will see, Van Deken,
that the poor fellow will find the gate closed against him which he hoped to
find open."
"Has an order been given to close the town gates, Monseigneur?"
"No, -- at least I do not think so; who could have given such an order?"
42
"Indeed, but what makes your Highness suppose?"
"There are fatalities," Monseigneur replied, in an offhand manner; "and the
greatest men have sometimes fallen victims to such fatalities."
At these words the officer felt his blood run cold, as somehow or other he
was convinced that the prisoner was lost.
At this moment the roar of the multitude broke forth like thunder, for it was
now quite certain that Cornelius de Witt was no longer in the prison.
Cornelius and John, after driving along the pond, had taken the main street,
which leads to the Tol-Hek, giving directions to the coachman to slacken his
pace, in order not to excite any suspicion.
But when, on having proceeded half-way down that street, the man felt that
he had left the prison and death behind, and before him there was life and
liberty, he neglected every precaution, and set his horses off at a gallop.
All at once he stopped.
"What is the matter?" asked John, putting his head out of the coach
window.
"Oh, my masters!" cried the coachman, "it is ---- "
Terror choked the voice of the honest fellow.
"Well, say what you have to say!" urged the Grand Pensionary.
43
"The gate is closed, that's what it is."
"How is this? It is not usual to close the gate by day."
"Just look!"
John de Witt leaned out of the window, and indeed saw that the man was
right.
"Never mind, but drive on," said John, "I have with me the order for the
commutation of the punishment, the gate-keeper will let us through."
The carriage moved along, but it was evident that the driver was no longer
urging his horses with the same degree of confidence.
Moreover, as John de Witt put his head out of the carriage window, he was
seen and recognized by a brewer, who, being behind his companions, was
just shutting his door in all haste to join them at the Buytenhof. He uttered
a cry of surprise, and ran after two other men before him, whom he overtook
about a hundred yards farther on, and told them what he had seen. The
three men then stopped, looking after the carriage, being however not yet
quite sure as to whom it contained.
The carriage in the meanwhile arrived at the Tol-Hek.
"Open!" cried the coachman.
"Open!" echoed the gatekeeper, from the threshold of his lodge; "it's all very
well to say 'Open!' but what am I to do it with?"
44
"With the key, to be sure!" said the coachman.
"With the key! Oh, yes! but if you have not got it?"
"How is that? Have not you got the key?" asked the coachman.
"No, I haven't."
"What has become of it?"
"Well, they have taken it from me."
"Who?"
"Some one, I dare say, who had a mind that no one should leave the town."
"My good man," said the Grand Pensionary, putting out his head from the
window, and risking all for gaining all; "my good man, it is for me, John de
Witt, and for my brother Cornelius, who I am taking away into exile."
"Oh, Mynheer de Witt! I am indeed very much grieved," said the gatekeeper,
rushing towards the carriage; "but, upon my sacred word, the key has been
taken from me."
"When?"
"This morning."
45
"By whom?"
"By a pale and thin young man, of about twenty-two."
"And wherefore did you give it up to him?"
"Because he showed me an order, signed and sealed."
"By whom?"
"By the gentlemen of the Town-hall."
"Well, then," said Cornelius calmly, "our doom seems to be fixed."
"Do you know whether the same precaution has been taken at the other
gates?"
"I do not."
"Now then," said John to the coachman, "God commands man to do all that
is in his power to preserve his life; go, and drive to another gate."
And whilst the servant was turning round the vehicle the Grand Pensionary
said to the gatekeeper, --
"Take our thanks for your good intentions; the will must count for the deed;
you had the will to save us, and that, in the eyes of the Lord, is as if you had
succeeded in doing so."
46
"Alas!" said the gatekeeper, "do you see down there?"
"Drive at a gallop through that group," John called out to the coachman,
"and take the street on the left; it is our only chance."
The group which John alluded to had, for its nucleus, those three men
whom we left looking after the carriage, and who, in the meanwhile, had
been joined by seven or eight others.
These new-comers evidently meant mischief with regard to the carriage.
When they saw the horses galloping down upon them, they placed
themselves across the street, brandishing cudgels in their hands, and
calling out, --
"Stop! stop!"
The coachman, on his side, lashed his horses into increased speed, until the
coach and the men encountered.
The brothers De Witt, enclosed within the body of the carriage, were not able
to see anything; but they felt a severe shock, occasioned by the rearing of
the horses. The whole vehicle for a moment shook and stopped; but
immediately after, passing over something round and elastic, which seemed
to be the body of a prostrate man set off again amidst a volley of the fiercest
oaths.
"Alas!" said Cornelius, "I am afraid we have hurt some one."
"Gallop! gallop!" called John.
47
But, notwithstanding this order, the coachman suddenly came to a stop.
"Now, then, what is the matter again?" asked John.
"Look there!" said the coachman.
John looked. The whole mass of the populace from the Buytenhof appeared
at the extremity of the street along which the carriage was to proceed, and
its stream moved roaring and rapid, as if lashed on by a hurricane.
"Stop and get off," said John to the coachman; "it is useless to go any
farther; we are lost!"
"Here they are! here they are!" five hundred voices were crying at the same
time.
"Yes, here they are, the traitors, the murderers, the assassins!" answered
the men who were running after the carriage to the people who were coming
to meet it. The former carried in their arms the bruised body of one of their
companions, who, trying to seize the reins of the horses, had been trodden
down by them.
This was the object over which the two brothers had felt their carriage pass.
The coachman stopped, but, however strongly his master urged him, he
refused to get off and save himself.
In an instant the carriage was hemmed in between those who followed and
those who met it. It rose above the mass of moving heads like a floating
48
island. But in another instant it came to a dead stop. A blacksmith had with
his hammer struck down one of the horses, which fell in the traces.
At this moment, the shutter of a window opened, and disclosed the sallow
face and the dark eyes of the young man, who with intense interest watched
the scene which was preparing. Behind him appeared the head of the officer,
almost as pale as himself.
"Good heavens, Monseigneur, what is going on there?" whispered the officer.
"Something very terrible, to a certainty," replied the other.
"Don't you see, Monseigneur, they are dragging the Grand Pensionary from
the carriage, they strike him, they tear him to pieces!"
"Indeed, these people must certainly be prompted by a most violent
indignation," said the young marl, with the same impassible tone which he
had preserved all along.
"And here is Cornelius, whom they now likewise drag out of the carriage, --
Cornelius, who is already quite broken and mangled by the torture. Only
look, look!"
"Indeed, it is Cornelius, and no mistake."
The officer uttered a feeble cry, and turned his head away; the brother of the
Grand Pensionary, before having set foot on the ground, whilst still on the
bottom step of the carriage, was struck down with an iron bar which broke
his skull. He rose once more, but immediately fell again.
49
Some fellows then seized him by the feet, and dragged him into the crowd,
into the middle of which one might have followed his bloody track, and he
was soon closed in among the savage yells of malignant exultation.
The young man -- a thing which would have been thought impossible --
grew even paler than before, and his eyes were for a moment veiled behind
the lids.
The officer saw this sign of compassion, and, wishing to avail himself of this
softened tone of his feelings, continued, --
"Come, come, Monseigneur, for here they are also going to murder the
Grand Pensionary."
But the young man had already opened his eyes again.
"To be sure," he said. "These people are really implacable. It does no one
good to offend them."
"Monseigneur," said the officer, "may not one save this poor man, who has
been your Highness's instructor? If there be any means, name it, and if I
should perish in the attempt ---- "
William of Orange -- for he it was -- knit his brows in a very forbidding
manner, restrained the glance of gloomy malice which glistened in his half-
closed eye, and answered, --
"Captain Van Deken, I request you to go and look after my troops, that they
may be armed for any emergency."
"But am I to leave your Highness here, alone, in the presence of all these
murderers?"
50
"Go, and don't you trouble yourself about me more than I do myself," the
Prince gruffly replied.
The officer started off with a speed which was much less owing to his sense
of military obedience than to his pleasure at being relieved from the
necessity of witnessing the shocking spectacle of the murder of the other
brother.
He had scarcely left the room, when John -- who, with an almost
superhuman effort, had reached the stone steps of a house nearly opposite
that where his former pupil concealed himself -- began to stagger under the
blows which were inflicted on him from all sides, calling out, --
"My brother! where is my brother?"
One of the ruffians knocked off his hat with a blow of his clenched fist.
Another showed to him his bloody hands; for this fellow had ripped open
Cornelius and disembowelled him, and was now hastening to the spot in
order not to lose the opportunity of serving the Grand Pensionary in the
same manner, whilst they were dragging the dead body of Cornelius to the
gibbet.
John uttered a cry of agony and grief, and put one of his hands before his
eyes.
"Oh, you close your eyes, do you?" said one of the soldiers of the burgher
guard; "well, I shall open them for you."
And saying this he stabbed him with his pike in the face, and the blood
spurted forth.
51
"My brother!" cried John de Witt, trying to see through the stream of blood
which blinded him, what had become of Cornelius; "my brother, my
brother!"
"Go and run after him!" bellowed another murderer, putting his musket to
his temples and pulling the trigger.
But the gun did not go off.
The fellow then turned his musket round, and, taking it by the barrel with
both hands, struck John de Witt down with the butt-end. John staggered
and fell down at his feet, but, raising himself with a last effort, he once more
called out, --
"My brother!" with a voice so full of anguish that the young man opposite
closed the shutter.
There remained little more to see; a third murderer fired a pistol with the
muzzle to his face; and this time the shot took effect, blowing out his brains.
John de Witt fell to rise no more.
On this, every one of the miscreants, emboldened by his fall, wanted to fire
his gun at him, or strike him with blows of the sledge-hammer, or stab him
with a knife or swords, every one wanted to draw a drop of blood from the
fallen hero, and tear off a shred from his garments.
And after having mangled, and torn, and completely stripped the two
brothers, the mob dragged their naked and bloody bodies to an
extemporised gibbet, where amateur executioners hung them up by the feet.
52
Then came the most dastardly scoundrels of all, who not having dared to
strike the living flesh, cut the dead in pieces, and then went about the town
selling small slices of the bodies of John and Cornelius at ten sous a piece.
We cannot take upon ourselves to say whether, through the almost
imperceptible chink of the shutter, the young man witnessed the conclusion
of this shocking scene; but at the very moment when they were hanging the
two martyrs on the gibbet he passed through the terrible mob, which was
too much absorbed in the task, so grateful to its taste, to take any notice of
him, and thus he reached unobserved the Tol-Hek, which was still closed.
"Ah! sir," said the gatekeeper, "do you bring me the key?"
"Yes, my man, here it is."
"It is most unfortunate that you did not bring me that key only one quarter
of an hour sooner," said the gatekeeper, with a sigh.
"And why that?" asked the other.
"Because I might have opened the gate to Mynheers de Witt; whereas,
finding the gate locked, they were obliged to retrace their steps."
"Gate! gate!" cried a voice which seemed to be that of a man in a hurry.
The Prince, turning round, observed Captain Van Deken.
"Is that you, Captain?" he said. "You are not yet out of the Hague? This is
executing my orders very slowly."
53
"Monseigneur," replied the Captain, "this is the third gate at which I have
presented myself; the other two were closed."
"Well, this good man will open this one for you; do it, my friend."
The last words were addressed to the gatekeeper, who stood quite
thunderstruck on hearing Captain Van Deken addressing by the title of
Monseigneur this pale young man, to whom he himself had spoken in such
a familiar way.
As it were to make up for his fault, he hastened to open the gate, which
swung creaking on its hinges.
"Will Monseigneur avail himself of my horse?" asked the Captain.
"I thank you, Captain, I shall use my own steed, which is waiting for me
close at hand."
And taking from his pocket a golden whistle, such as was generally used at
that time for summoning the servants, he sounded it with a shrill and
prolonged call, on which an equerry on horseback speedily made his
appearance, leading another horse by the bridle.
William, without touching the stirrup, vaulted into the saddle of the led
horse, and, setting his spurs into its flanks, started off for the Leyden road.
Having reached it, he turned round and beckoned to the Captain who was
far behind, to ride by his side.
"Do you know," he then said, without stopping, "that those rascals have
killed John de Witt as well as his brother?"
54
"Alas! Monseigneur," the Captain answered sadly, "I should like it much
better if these two difficulties were still in your Highness's way of becoming
de facto Stadtholder of Holland."
"Certainly, it would have been better," said William, "if what did happen had
not happened. But it cannot be helped now, and we have had nothing to do
with it. Let us push on, Captain, that we may arrive at Alphen before the
message which the States-General are sure to send to me to the camp."
The Captain bowed, allowed the Prince to ride ahead and, for the remainder
of the journey, kept at the same respectful distance as he had done before
his Highness called him to his side.
"How I should wish," William of Orange malignantly muttered to himself,
with a dark frown and setting the spurs to his horse, "to see the figure
which Louis will cut when he is apprised of the manner in which his dear
friends De Witt have been served! Oh thou Sun! thou Sun! as truly as I am
called William the Silent, thou Sun, thou hadst best look to thy rays!"
And the young Prince, the relentless rival of the Great King, sped away upon
his fiery steed, -- this future Stadtholder who had been but the day before
very uncertainly established in his new power, but for whom the burghers of
the Hague had built a staircase with the bodies of John and Cornelius, two
princes as noble as he in the eyes of God and man.
55
Chapter 5
The Tulip-fancier and his Neighbour
Whilst the burghers of the Hague were tearing in pieces the bodies of John
and Cornelius de Witt, and whilst William of Orange, after having made sure
that his two antagonists were really dead, was galloping over the Leyden
road, followed by Captain van Deken, whom he found a little too
compassionate to honour him any longer with his confidence, Craeke, the
faithful servant, mounted on a good horse, and little suspecting what
terrible events had taken place since his departure, proceeded along the
high road lined with trees, until he was clear of the town and the
neighbouring villages.
Being once safe, he left his horse at a livery stable in order not to arouse
suspicion, and tranquilly continued his journey on the canal-boats, which
conveyed him by easy stages to Dort, pursuing their way under skilful
guidance by the shortest possible routes through the windings of the river,
which held in its watery embrace so many enchanting little islands, edged
with willows and rushes, and abounding in luxurious vegetation, whereon
flocks of fat sheep browsed in peaceful sleepiness. Craeke from afar off
recognised Dort, the smiling city, at the foot of a hill dotted with windmills.
He saw the fine red brick houses, mortared in white lines, standing on the
edge of the water, and their balconies, open towards the river, decked out
with silk tapestry embroidered with gold flowers, the wonderful manufacture
of India and China; and near these brilliant stuffs, large lines set to catch
the voracious eels, which are attracted towards the houses by the garbage
thrown every day from the kitchens into the river.
Craeke, standing on the deck of the boat, saw, across the moving sails of the
windmills, on the slope of the hill, the red and pink house which was the
goal of his errand. The outlines of its roof were merging in the yellow foliage
of a curtain of poplar trees, the whole habitation having for background a
dark grove of gigantic elms. The mansion was situated in such a way that
the sun, falling on it as into a funnel, dried up, warmed, and fertilised the
mist which the verdant screen could not prevent the river wind from
carrying there every morning and evening.
56
Having disembarked unobserved amid the usual bustle of the city, Craeke at
once directed his steps towards the house which we have just described,
and which -- white, trim, and tidy, even more cleanly scoured and more
carefully waxed in the hidden corners than in the places which were
exposed to view -- enclosed a truly happy mortal.
This happy mortal, rara avis, was Dr. van Baerle, the godson of Cornelius de
Witt. He had inhabited the same house ever since his childhood, for it was
the house in which his father and grandfather, old established princely
merchants of the princely city of Dort, were born.
Mynheer van Baerle the father had amassed in the Indian trade three or
four hundred thousand guilders, which Mynheer van Baerle the son, at the
death of his dear and worthy parents, found still quite new, although one set
of them bore the date of coinage of 1640, and the other that of 1610, a fact
which proved that they were guilders of Van Baerle the father and of Van
Baerle the grandfather; but we will inform the reader at once that these
three or four hundred thousand guilders were only the pocket money, or
sort of purse, for Cornelius van Baerle, the hero of this story, as his landed
property in the province yielded him an income of about ten thousand
guilders a year.
When the worthy citizen, the father of Cornelius, passed from time into
eternity, three months after having buried his wife, who seemed to have
departed first to smooth for him the path of death as she had smoothed for
him the path of life, he said to his son, as he embraced him for the last time,
--
"Eat, drink, and spend your money, if you wish to know what life really is,
for as to toiling from morn to evening on a wooden stool, or a leathern chair,
in a counting-house or a laboratory, that certainly is not living. Your time to
die will also come; and if you are not then so fortunate as to have a son, you
will let my name grow extinct, and my guilders, which no one has ever
fingered but my father, myself, and the coiner, will have the surprise of
passing to an unknown master. And least of all, imitate the example of your
57
godfather, Cornelius de Witt, who has plunged into politics, the most
ungrateful of all careers, and who will certainly come to an untimely end."
Having given utterance to this paternal advice, the worthy Mynheer van
Baerle died, to the intense grief of his son Cornelius, who cared very little for
the guilders, and very much for his father.
Cornelius then remained alone in his large house. In vain his godfather
offered to him a place in the public service, -- in vain did he try to give him a
taste for glory, -- although Cornelius, to gratify his godfather, did embark
with De Ruyter upon "The Seven Provinces," the flagship of a fleet of one
hundred and thirty-nine sail, with which the famous admiral set out to
contend singlehanded against the combined forces of France and England.
When, guided by the pilot Leger, he had come within musket-shot of the
"Prince," with the Duke of York (the English king's brother) aboard, upon
which De Ruyter, his mentor, made so sharp and well directed an attack
that the Duke, perceiving that his vessel would soon have to strike, made
the best of his way aboard the "Saint Michael"; when he had seen the "Saint
Michael," riddled and shattered by the Dutch broadside, drift out of the line;
when he had witnessed the sinking of the "Earl of Sandwich," and the death
by fire or drowning of four hundred sailors; when he realized that the result
of all this destruction -- after twenty ships had been blown to pieces, three
thousand men killed and five thousand injured -- was that nothing was
decided, that both sides claimed the victory, that the fighting would soon
begin again, and that just one more name, that of Southwold Bay, had been
added to the list of battles; when he had estimated how much time is lost
simply in shutting his eyes and ears by a man who likes to use his reflective
powers even while his fellow creatures are cannonading one another; --
Cornelius bade farewell to De Ruyter, to the Ruart de Pulten, and to glory,
kissed the knees of the Grand Pensionary, for whom he entertained the
deepest veneration, and retired to his house at Dort, rich in his well-earned
repose, his twenty-eight years, an iron constitution and keen perceptions,
and his capital of more than four hundred thousands of florins and income
of ten thousand, convinced that a man is always endowed by Heaven with
too much for his own happiness, and just enough to make him miserable.
Consequently, and to indulge his own idea of happiness, Cornelius began to
be interested in the study of plants and insects, collected and classified the
Flora of all the Dutch islands, arranged the whole entomology of the
58
province, on which he wrote a treatise, with plates drawn by his own hands;
and at last, being at a loss what to do with his time, and especially with his
money, which went on accumulating at a most alarming rate, he took it into
his head to select for himself, from all the follies of his country and of his
age, one of the most elegant and expensive, -- he became a tulip-fancier.
It was the time when the Dutch and the Portuguese, rivalling each other in
this branch of horticulture, had begun to worship that flower, and to make
more of a cult of it than ever naturalists dared to make of the human race
for fear of arousing the jealousy of God.
Soon people from Dort to Mons began to talk of Mynheer van Baerle's tulips;
and his beds, pits, drying-rooms, and drawers of bulbs were visited, as the
galleries and libraries of Alexandria were by illustrious Roman travellers.
Van Baerle began by expending his yearly revenue in laying the groundwork
of his collection, after which he broke in upon his new guilders to bring it to
perfection. His exertions, indeed, were crowned with a most magnificent
result: he produced three new tulips, which he called the "Jane," after his
mother; the "Van Baerle," after his father; and the "Cornelius," after his
godfather; the other names have escaped us, but the fanciers will be sure to
find them in the catalogues of the times.
In the beginning of the year 1672, Cornelius de Witt came to Dort for three
months, to live at his old family mansion; for not only was he born in that
city, but his family had been resident there for centuries.
Cornelius, at that period, as William of Orange said, began to enjoy the most
perfect unpopularity. To his fellow citizens, the good burghers of Dort,
however, he did not appear in the light of a criminal who deserved to be
hung. It is true, they did not particularly like his somewhat austere
republicanism, but they were proud of his valour; and when he made his
entrance into their town, the cup of honour was offered to him, readily
enough, in the name of the city.
59
After having thanked his fellow citizens, Cornelius proceeded to his old
paternal house, and gave directions for some repairs, which he wished to
have executed before the arrival of his wife and children; and thence he
wended his way to the house of his godson, who perhaps was the only
person in Dort as yet unacquainted with the presence of Cornelius in the
town.
In the same degree as Cornelius de Witt had excited the hatred of the people
by sowing those evil seeds which are called political passions, Van Baerle
had gained the affections of his fellow citizens by completely shunning the
pursuit of politics, absorbed as he was in the peaceful pursuit of cultivating
tulips.
Van Baerle was truly beloved by his servants and labourers; nor had he any
conception that there was in this world a man who wished ill to another.
And yet it must be said, to the disgrace of mankind, that Cornelius van
Baerle, without being aware of the fact, had a much more ferocious, fierce,
and implacable enemy than the Grand Pensionary and his brother had
among the Orange party, who were most hostile to the devoted brothers,
who had never been sundered by the least misunderstanding during their
lives, and by their mutual devotion in the face of death made sure the
existence of their brotherly affection beyond the grave.
At the time when Cornelius van Baerle began to devote himself to tulip-
growing, expending on this hobby his yearly revenue and the guilders of his
father, there was at Dort, living next door to him, a citizen of the name of
Isaac Boxtel who from the age when he was able to think for himself had
indulged the same fancy, and who was in ecstasies at the mere mention of
the word "tulban," which (as we are assured by the "Floriste Francaise," the
most highly considered authority in matters relating to this flower) is the
first word in the Cingalese tongue which was ever used to designate that
masterpiece of floriculture which is now called the tulip.
Boxtel had not the good fortune of being rich, like Van Baerle. He had
therefore, with great care and patience, and by dint of strenuous exertions,
laid out near his house at Dort a garden fit for the culture of his cherished
60
flower; he had mixed the soil according to the most approved prescriptions,
and given to his hotbeds just as much heat and fresh air as the strictest
rules of horticulture exact.
Isaac knew the temperature of his frames to the twentieth part of a degree.
He knew the strength of the current of air, and tempered it so as to adapt it
to the wave of the stems of his flowers. His productions also began to meet
with the favour of the public. They were beautiful, nay, distinguished.
Several fanciers had come to see Boxtel's tulips. At last he had even started
amongst all the Linnaeuses and Tourneforts a tulip which bore his name,
and which, after having travelled all through France, had found its way into
Spain, and penetrated as far as Portugal; and the King, Don Alfonso VI. --
who, being expelled from Lisbon, had retired to the island of Terceira, where
he amused himself, not, like the great Conde, with watering his carnations,
but with growing tulips -- had, on seeing the Boxtel tulip, exclaimed, "Not so
bad, by any means!"
All at once, Cornelius van Baerle, who, after all his learned pursuits, had
been seized with the tulipomania, made some changes in his house at Dort,
which, as we have stated, was next door to that of Boxtel. He raised a
certain building in his court-yard by a story, which shutting out the sun,
took half a degree of warmth from Boxtel's garden, and, on the other hand,
added half a degree of cold in winter; not to mention that it cut the wind,
and disturbed all the horticultural calculations and arrangements of his
neighbour.
After all, this mishap appeared to Boxtel of no great consequence. Van
Baerle was but a painter, a sort of fool who tried to reproduce and disfigure
on canvas the wonders of nature. The painter, he thought, had raised his
studio by a story to get better light, and thus far he had only been in the
right. Mynheer van Baerle was a painter, as Mynheer Boxtel was a tulip-
grower; he wanted somewhat more sun for his paintings, and he took half a
degree from his neighbour's tulips.
The law was for Van Baerle, and Boxtel had to abide by it.
61
Besides, Isaac had made the discovery that too much sun was injurious to
tulips, and that this flower grew quicker, and had a better colouring, with
the temperate warmth of morning, than with the powerful heat of the
midday sun. He therefore felt almost grateful to Cornelius van Baerle for
having given him a screen gratis.
Maybe this was not quite in accordance with the true state of things in
general, and of Isaac Boxtel's feelings in particular. It is certainly
astonishing what rich comfort great minds, in the midst of momentous
catastrophes, will derive from the consolations of philosophy.
But alas! What was the agony of the unfortunate Boxtel on seeing the
windows of the new story set out with bulbs and seedlings of tulips for the
border, and tulips in pots; in short, with everything pertaining to the
pursuits of a tulip-monomaniac!
There were bundles of labels, cupboards, and drawers with compartments,
and wire guards for the cupboards, to allow free access to the air whilst
keeping out slugs, mice, dormice, and rats, all of them very curious fanciers
of tulips at two thousand francs a bulb.
Boxtel was quite amazed when he saw all this apparatus, but he was not as
yet aware of the full extent of his misfortune. Van Baerle was known to be
fond of everything that pleases the eye. He studied Nature in all her aspects
for the benefit of his paintings, which were as minutely finished as those of
Gerard Dow, his master, and of Mieris, his friend. Was it not possible, that,
having to paint the interior of a tulip-grower's, he had collected in his new
studio all the accessories of decoration?
Yet, although thus consoling himself with illusory suppositions, Boxtel was
not able to resist the burning curiosity which was devouring him. In the
evening, therefore, he placed a ladder against the partition wall between
their gardens, and, looking into that of his neighbour Van Baerle, he
convinced himself that the soil of a large square bed, which had formerly
been occupied by different plants, was removed, and the ground disposed in
beds of loam mixed with river mud (a combination which is particularly
favourable to the tulip), and the whole surrounded by a border of turf to
62
keep the soil in its place. Besides this, sufficient shade to temper the
noonday heat; aspect south-southwest; water in abundant supply, and at
hand; in short, every requirement to insure not only success but also
progress. There could not be a doubt that Van Baerle had become a tulip-
grower.
Boxtel at once pictured to himself this learned man, with a capital of four
hundred thousand and a yearly income of ten thousand guilders, devoting
all his intellectual and financial resources to the cultivation of the tulip. He
foresaw his neighbour's success, and he felt such a pang at the mere idea of
this success that his hands dropped powerless, his knees trembled, and he
fell in despair from the ladder.
And thus it was not for the sake of painted tulips, but for real ones, that
Van Baerle took from him half a degree of warmth. And thus Van Baerle was
to have the most admirably fitted aspect, and, besides, a large, airy, and well
ventilated chamber where to preserve his bulbs and seedlings; while he,
Boxtel, had been obliged to give up for this purpose his bedroom, and, lest
his sleeping in the same apartment might injure his bulbs and seedlings,
had taken up his abode in a miserable garret.
Boxtel, then, was to have next door to him a rival and successful competitor;
and his rival, instead of being some unknown, obscure gardener, was the
godson of Mynheer Cornelius de Witt, that is to say, a celebrity.
Boxtel, as the reader may see, was not possessed of the spirit of Porus, who,
on being conquered by Alexander, consoled himself with the celebrity of his
conqueror.
And now if Van Baerle produced a new tulip, and named it the John de Witt,
after having named one the Cornelius? It was indeed enough to choke one
with rage.
63
Thus Boxtel, with jealous foreboding, became the prophet of his own
misfortune. And, after having made this melancholy discovery, he passed
the most wretched night imaginable.
64
Chapter 6
The Hatred of a Tulip-fancier
From that moment Boxtel's interest in tulips was no longer a stimulus to his
exertions, but a deadening anxiety. Henceforth all his thoughts ran only
upon the injury which his neighbour would cause him, and thus his
favourite occupation was changed into a constant source of misery to him.
Van Baerle, as may easily be imagined, had no sooner begun to apply his
natural ingenuity to his new fancy, than he succeeded in growing the finest
tulips. Indeed; he knew better than any one else at Haarlem or Leyden -- the
two towns which boast the best soil and the most congenial climate -- how
to vary the colours, to modify the shape, and to produce new species.
He belonged to that natural, humorous school who took for their motto in
the seventeenth century the aphorism uttered by one of their number in
1653, -- "To despise flowers is to offend God."
From that premise the school of tulip-fanciers, the most exclusive of all
schools, worked out the following syllogism in the same year: --
"To despise flowers is to offend God.
"The more beautiful the flower is, the more does one offend God in despising
it.
"The tulip is the most beautiful of all flowers.
"Therefore, he who despises the tulip offends God beyond measure."
65
By reasoning of this kind, it can be seen that the four or five thousand tulip-
growers of Holland, France, and Portugal, leaving out those of Ceylon and
China and the Indies, might, if so disposed, put the whole world under the
ban, and condemn as schismatics and heretics and deserving of death the
several hundred millions of mankind whose hopes of salvation were not
centred upon the tulip.
We cannot doubt that in such a cause Boxtel, though he was Van Baerle's
deadly foe, would have marched under the same banner with him.
Mynheer van Baerle and his tulips, therefore, were in the mouth of
everybody; so much so, that Boxtel's name disappeared for ever from the list
of the notable tulip-growers in Holland, and those of Dort were now
represented by Cornelius van Baerle, the modest and inoffensive savant.
Engaging, heart and soul, in his pursuits of sowing, planting, and gathering,
Van Baerle, caressed by the whole fraternity of tulip-growers in Europe,
entertained nor the least suspicion that there was at his very door a
pretender whose throne he had usurped.
He went on in his career, and consequently in his triumphs; and in the
course of two years he covered his borders with such marvellous
productions as no mortal man, following in the tracks of the Creator, except
perhaps Shakespeare and Rubens, have equalled in point of numbers.
And also, if Dante had wished for a new type to be added to his characters of
the Inferno, he might have chosen Boxtel during the period of Van Baerle's
successes. Whilst Cornelius was weeding, manuring, watering his beds,
whilst, kneeling on the turf border, he analysed every vein of the flowering
tulips, and meditated on the modifications which might be effected by
crosses of colour or otherwise, Boxtel, concealed behind a small sycamore
which he had trained at the top of the partition wall in the shape of a fan,
watched, with his eyes starting from their sockets and with foaming mouth,
every step and every gesture of his neighbour; and whenever he thought he
saw him look happy, or descried a smile on his lips, or a flash of
contentment glistening in his eyes, he poured out towards him such a volley
of maledictions and furious threats as to make it indeed a matter of wonder
66
that this venomous breath of envy and hatred did not carry a blight on the
innocent flowers which had excited it.
When the evil spirit has once taken hold of the heart of man, it urges him
on, without letting him stop. Thus Boxtel soon was no longer content with
seeing Van Baerle. He wanted to see his flowers, too; he had the feelings of
an artist, the master-piece of a rival engrossed his interest.
He therefore bought a telescope, which enabled him to watch as accurately
as did the owner himself every progressive development of the flower, from
the moment when, in the first year, its pale seed-leaf begins to peep from the
ground, to that glorious one, when, after five years, its petals at last reveal
the hidden treasures of its chalice. How often had the miserable, jealous
man to observe in Van Baerle's beds tulips which dazzled him by their
beauty, and almost choked him by their perfection!
And then, after the first blush of the admiration which he could not help
feeling, he began to be tortured by the pangs of envy, by that slow fever
which creeps over the heart and changes it into a nest of vipers, each
devouring the other and ever born anew. How often did Boxtel, in the midst
of tortures which no pen is able fully to describe, -- how often did he feel an
inclination to jump down into the garden during the night, to destroy the
plants, to tear the bulbs with his teeth, and to sacrifice to his wrath the
owner himself, if he should venture to stand up for the defence of his tulips!
But to kill a tulip was a horrible crime in the eyes of a genuine tulip-fancier;
as to killing a man, it would not have mattered so very much.
Yet Van Baerle made such progress in the noble science of growing tulips,
which he seemed to master with the true instinct of genius, that Boxtel at
last was maddened to such a degree as to think of throwing stones and
sticks into the flower-stands of his neighbour. But, remembering that he
would be sure to be found out, and that he would not only be punished by
law, but also dishonoured for ever in the face of all the tulip-growers of
Europe, he had recourse to stratagem, and, to gratify his hatred, tried to
devise a plan by means of which he might gain his ends without being
compromised himself.
67
He considered a long time, and at last his meditations were crowned with
success.
One evening he tied two cats together by their hind legs with a string about
six feet in length, and threw them from the wall into the midst of that noble,
that princely, that royal bed, which contained not only the "Cornelius de
Witt," but also the "Beauty of Brabant," milk-white, edged with purple and
pink, the "Marble of Rotterdam," colour of flax, blossoms feathered red and
flesh colour, the "Wonder of Haarlem," the "Colombin obscur," and the
"Columbin clair terni."
The frightened cats, having alighted on the ground, first tried to fly each in a
different direction, until the string by which they were tied together was
tightly stretched across the bed; then, however, feeling that they were not
able to get off, they began to pull to and fro, and to wheel about with
hideous caterwaulings, mowing down with their string the flowers among
which they were struggling, until, after a furious strife of about a quarter of
an hour, the string broke and the combatants vanished.
Boxtel, hidden behind his sycamore, could not see anything, as it was pitch-
dark; but the piercing cries of the cats told the whole tale, and his heart
overflowing with gall now throbbed with triumphant joy.
Boxtel was so eager to ascertain the extent of the injury, that he remained at
his post until morning to feast his eyes on the sad state in which the two
cats had left the flower-beds of his neighbour. The mists of the morning
chilled his frame, but he did not feel the cold, the hope of revenge keeping
his blood at fever heat. The chagrin of his rival was to pay for all the
inconvenience which he incurred himself.
At the earliest dawn the door of the white house opened, and Van Baerle
made his appearance, approaching the flower-beds with the smile of a man
who has passed the night comfortably in his bed, and has had happy
dreams.
68
All at once he perceived furrows and little mounds of earth on the beds
which only the evening before had been as smooth as a mirror, all at once
he perceived the symmetrical rows of his tulips to be completely disordered,
like the pikes of a battalion in the midst of which a shell has fallen.
He ran up to them with blanched cheek.
Boxtel trembled with joy. Fifteen or twenty tulips, torn and crushed, were
lying about, some of them bent, others completely broken and already
withering, the sap oozing from their bleeding bulbs: how gladly would Van
Baerle have redeemed that precious sap with his own blood!
But what were his surprise and his delight! what was the disappointment of
his rival! Not one of the four tulips which the latter had meant to destroy
was injured at all. They raised proudly their noble heads above the corpses
of their slain companions. This was enough to console Van Baerle, and
enough to fan the rage of the horticultural murderer, who tore his hair at
the sight of the effects of the crime which he had committed in vain.
Van Baerle could not imagine the cause of the mishap, which, fortunately,
was of far less consequence than it might have been. On making inquiries,
he learned that the whole night had been disturbed by terrible
caterwaulings. He besides found traces of the cats, their footmarks and
hairs left behind on the battle-field; to guard, therefore, in future against a
similar outrage, he gave orders that henceforth one of the under gardeners
should sleep in the garden in a sentry-box near the flower-beds.
Boxtel heard him give the order, and saw the sentry-box put up that very
day; but he deemed himself lucky in not having been suspected, and, being
more than ever incensed against the successful horticulturist, he resolved to
bide his time.
Just then the Tulip Society of Haarlem offered a prize for the discovery (we
dare not say the manufacture) of a large black tulip without a spot of colour,
69
a thing which had not yet been accomplished, and was considered
impossible, as at that time there did not exist a flower of that species
approaching even to a dark nut brown. It was, therefore, generally said that
the founders of the prize might just as well have offered two millions as a
hundred thousand guilders, since no one would be able to gain it.
The tulip-growing world, however, was thrown by it into a state of most
active commotion. Some fanciers caught at the idea without believing it
practicable, but such is the power of imagination among florists, that
although considering the undertaking as certain to fail, all their thoughts
were engrossed by that great black tulip, which was looked upon to be as
chimerical as the black swan of Horace or the white raven of French
tradition.
Van Baerle was one of the tulip-growers who were struck with the idea;
Boxtel thought of it in the light of a speculation. Van Baerle, as soon as the
idea had once taken root in his clear and ingenious mind, began slowly the
necessary planting and cross-breeding to reduce the tulips which he had
grown already from red to brown, and from brown to dark brown.
By the next year he had obtained flowers of a perfect nut-brown, and Boxtel
espied them in the border, whereas he had himself as yet only succeeded in
producing the light brown.
It might perhaps be interesting to explain to the gentle reader the beautiful
chain of theories which go to prove that the tulip borrows its colors from the
elements; perhaps we should give him pleasure if we were to maintain and
establish that nothing is impossible for a florist who avails himself with
judgment and discretion and patience of the sun's heat; the clear water, the
juices of the earth, and the cool breezes. But this is not a treatise upon
tulips in general; it is the story of one particular tulip which we have
undertaken to write, and to that we limit ourselves, however alluring the
subject which is so closely allied to ours.
70
Boxtel, once more worsted by the superiority of his hated rival, was now
completely disgusted with tulip-growing, and, being driven half mad,
devoted himself entirely to observation.
The house of his rival was quite open to view; a garden exposed to the sun;
cabinets with glass walls, shelves, cupboards, boxes, and ticketed pigeon-
holes, which could easily be surveyed by the telescope. Boxtel allowed his
bulbs to rot in the pits, his seedlings to dry up in their cases, and his tulips
to wither in the borders and henceforward occupied himself with nothing
else but the doings at Van Baerle's. He breathed through the stalks of Van
Baerle's tulips, quenched his thirst with the water he sprinkled upon them,
and feasted on the fine soft earth which his neighbour scattered upon his
cherished bulbs.
But the most curious part of the operations was not performed in the
garden.
It might be one o'clock in the morning when Van Baerle went up to his
laboratory, into the glazed cabinet whither Boxtel's telescope had such an
easy access; and here, as soon as the lamp illuminated the walls and
windows, Boxtel saw the inventive genius of his rival at work.
He beheld him sifting his seeds, and soaking them in liquids which were
destined to modify or to deepen their colours. He knew what Cornelius
meant when heating certain grains, then moistening them, then combining
them with others by a sort of grafting, -- a minute and marvellously delicate
manipulation, -- and when he shut up in darkness those which were
expected to furnish the black colour, exposed to the sun or to the lamp
those which were to produce red, and placed between the endless reflections
of two water-mirrors those intended for white, the pure representation of the
limpid element.
This innocent magic, the fruit at the same time of child-like musings and of
manly genius -- this patient untiring labour, of which Boxtel knew himself to
be incapable -- made him, gnawed as he was with envy, centre all his life, all
his thoughts, and all his hopes in his telescope.
71
For, strange to say, the love and interest of horticulture had not deadened in
Isaac his fierce envy and thirst of revenge. Sometimes, whilst covering Van
Baerle with his telescope, he deluded himself into a belief that he was
levelling a never-failing musket at him; and then he would seek with his
finger for the trigger to fire the shot which was to have killed his neighbour.
But it is time that we should connect with this epoch of the operations of the
one, and the espionage of the other, the visit which Cornelius de Witt came
to pay to his native town.
72
Chapter 7
The Happy Man makes Acquaintance with Misfortune
Cornelius de Witt, after having attended to his family affairs, reached the
house of his godson, Cornelius van Baerle, one evening in the month of
January, 1672.
De Witt, although being very little of a horticulturist or of an artist, went
over the whole mansion, from the studio to the green-house, inspecting
everything, from the pictures down to the tulips. He thanked his godson for
having joined him on the deck of the admiral's ship "The Seven Provinces,"
during the battle of Southwold Bay, and for having given his name to a
magnificent tulip; and whilst he thus, with the kindness and affability of a
father to a son, visited Van Baerle's treasures, the crowd gathered with
curiosity, and even respect, before the door of the happy man.
All this hubbub excited the attention of Boxtel, who was just taking his meal
by his fireside. He inquired what it meant, and, on being informed of the
cause of all this stir, climbed up to his post of observation, where in spite of
the cold, he took his stand, with the telescope to his eye.
This telescope had not been of great service to him since the autumn of
1671. The tulips, like true daughters of the East, averse to cold, do not
abide in the open ground in winter. They need the shelter of the house, the
soft bed on the shelves, and the congenial warmth of the stove. Van Baerle,
therefore, passed the whole winter in his laboratory, in the midst of his
books and pictures. He went only rarely to the room where he kept his
bulbs, unless it were to allow some occasional rays of the sun to enter, by
opening one of the movable sashes of the glass front.
On the evening of which we are speaking, after the two Corneliuses had
visited together all the apartments of the house, whilst a train of domestics
followed their steps, De Witt said in a low voice to Van Baerle, --
73
"My dear son, send these people away, and let us be alone for some
minutes."
The younger Cornelius, bowing assent, said aloud, --
"Would you now, sir, please to see my dry-room?"
The dry-room, this pantheon, this sanctum sanctorum of the tulip-fancier,
was, as Delphi of old, interdicted to the profane uninitiated.
Never had any of his servants been bold enough to set his foot there.
Cornelius admitted only the inoffensive broom of an old Frisian
housekeeper, who had been his nurse, and who from the time when he had
devoted himself to the culture of tulips ventured no longer to put onions in
his stews, for fear of pulling to pieces and mincing the idol of her foster
child.
At the mere mention of the dry-room, therefore, the servants who were
carrying the lights respectfully fell back. Cornelius, taking the candlestick
from the hands of the foremost, conducted his godfather into that room,
which was no other than that very cabinet with a glass front into which
Boxtel was continually prying with his telescope.
The envious spy was watching more intently than ever.
First of all he saw the walls and windows lit up.
Then two dark figures appeared.
One of them, tall, majestic, stern, sat down near the table on which Van
Baerle had placed the taper.
74
In this figure, Boxtel recognised the pale features of Cornelius de Witt,
whose long hair, parted in front, fell over his shoulders.
De Witt, after having said some few words to Cornelius, the meaning of
which the prying neighbour could not read in the movement of his lips, took
from his breast pocket a white parcel, carefully sealed, which Boxtel, judging
from the manner in which Cornelius received it, and placed it in one of the
presses, supposed to contain papers of the greatest importance.
His first thought was that this precious deposit enclosed some newly
imported bulbs from Bengal or Ceylon; but he soon reflected that Cornelius
de Witt was very little addicted to tulip-growing, and that he only occupied
himself with the affairs of man, a pursuit by far less peaceful and agreeable
than that of the florist. He therefore came to the conclusion that the parcel
contained simply some papers, and that these papers were relating to
politics.
But why should papers of political import be intrusted to Van Baerle, who
not only was, but also boasted of being, an entire stranger to the science of
government, which, in his opinion, was more occult than alchemy itself?
It was undoubtedly a deposit which Cornelius de Witt, already threatened by
the unpopularity with which his countrymen were going to honour him, was
placing in the hands of his godson; a contrivance so much the more cleverly
devised, as it certainly was not at all likely that it should be searched for at
the house of one who had always stood aloof from every sort of intrigue.
And, besides, if the parcel had been made up of bulbs, Boxtel knew his
neighbour too well not to expect that Van Baerle would not have lost one
moment in satisfying his curiosity and feasting his eyes on the present
which he had received.
But, on the contrary, Cornelius had received the parcel from the hands of
his godfather with every mark of respect, and put it by with the same
75
respectful manner in a drawer, stowing it away so that it should not take up
too much of the room which was reserved to his bulbs.
The parcel thus being secreted, Cornelius de Witt got up, pressed the hand
of his godson, and turned towards the door, Van Baerle seizing the
candlestick, and lighting him on his way down to the street, which was still
crowded with people who wished to see their great fellow citizen getting into
his coach.
Boxtel had not been mistaken in his supposition. The deposit intrusted to
Van Baerle, and carefully locked up by him, was nothing more nor less than
John de Witt's correspondence with the Marquis de Louvois, the war
minister of the King of France; only the godfather forbore giving to his
godson the least intimation concerning the political importance of the secret,
merely desiring him not to deliver the parcel to any one but to himself, or to
whomsoever he should send to claim it in his name.
And Van Baerle, as we have seen, locked it up with his most precious bulbs,
to think no more of it, after his godfather had left him; very unlike Boxtel,
who looked upon this parcel as a clever pilot does on the distant and
scarcely perceptible cloud which is increasing on its way and which is
fraught with a storm.
Little dreaming of the jealous hatred of his neighbour, Van Baerle had
proceeded step by step towards gaining the prize offered by the Horticultural
Society of Haarlem. He had progressed from hazel-nut shade to that of
roasted coffee, and on the very day when the frightful events took place at
the Hague which we have related in the preceding chapters, we find him,
about one o'clock in the day, gathering from the border the young suckers
raised from tulips of the colour of roasted coffee; and which, being expected
to flower for the first time in the spring of 1675, would undoubtedly produce
the large black tulip required by the Haarlem Society.
On the 20th of August, 1672, at one o'clock, Cornelius was therefore in his
dry-room, with his feet resting on the foot-bar of the table, and his elbows
on the cover, looking with intense delight on three suckers which he had
just detached from the mother bulb, pure, perfect, and entire, and from
76
which was to grow that wonderful produce of horticulture which would
render the name of Cornelius van Baerle for ever illustrious.
"I shall find the black tulip," said Cornelius to himself, whilst detaching the
suckers. "I shall obtain the hundred thousand guilders offered by the
Society. I shall distribute them among the poor of Dort; and thus the hatred
which every rich man has to encounter in times of civil wars will be soothed
down, and I shall be able, without fearing any harm either from Republicans
or Orangists, to keep as heretofore my borders in splendid condition. I need
no more be afraid lest on the day of a riot the shopkeepers of the town and
the sailors of the port should come and tear out my bulbs, to boil them as
onions for their families, as they have sometimes quietly threatened when
they happened to remember my having paid two or three hundred guilders
for one bulb. It is therefore settled I shall give the hundred thousand
guilders of the Haarlem prize to-the poor. And yet ---- "
Here Cornelius stopped and heaved a sigh. "And yet," he continued, "it
would have been so very delightful to spend the hundred thousand guilders
on the enlargement of my tulip-bed or even on a journey to the East, the
country of beautiful flowers. But, alas! these are no thoughts for the present
times, when muskets, standards, proclamations, and beating of drums are
the order of the day."
Van Baerle raised his eyes to heaven and sighed again. Then turning his
glance towards his bulbs, -- objects of much greater importance to him than
all those muskets, standards, drums, and proclamations, which he
conceived only to be fit to disturb the minds of honest people, -- he said: --
"These are, indeed, beautiful bulbs; how smooth they are, how well formed;
there is that air of melancholy about them which promises to produce a
flower of the colour of ebony. On their skin you cannot even distinguish the
circulating veins with the naked eye. Certainly, certainly, not a light spot
will disfigure the tulip which I have called into existence. And by what name
shall we call this offspring of my sleepless nights, of my labour and my
thought? Tulipa nigra Barlaensis?
77
"Yes Barlaensis: a fine name. All the tulip-fanciers -- that is to say, all the
intelligent people of Europe -- will feel a thrill of excitement when the
rumour spreads to the four quarters of the globe: The grand black tulip is
found! 'How is it called?' the fanciers will ask. -- 'Tulipa nigra Barlaensis!' --
'Why Barlaensis?' -- 'After its grower, Van Baerle,' will be the answer. -- 'And
who is this Van Baerle?' -- 'It is the same who has already produced five new
tulips: the Jane, the John de Witt, the Cornelius de Witt, etc.' Well, that is
what I call my ambition. It will cause tears to no one. And people will talk of
my Tulipa nigra Barlaensis when perhaps my godfather, this sublime
politician, is only known from the tulip to which I have given his name.
"Oh! these darling bulbs!
"When my tulip has flowered," Baerle continued in his soliloquy, "and when
tranquillity is restored in Holland, I shall give to the poor only fifty thousand
guilders, which, after all, is a goodly sum for a man who is under no
obligation whatever. Then, with the remaining fifty thousand guilders, I shall
make experiments. With them I shall succeed in imparting scent to the
tulip. Ah! if I succeed in giving it the odour of the rose or the carnation, or,
what would be still better, a completely new scent; if I restored to this queen
of flowers its natural distinctive perfume, which she has lost in passing from
her Eastern to her European throne, and which she must have in the Indian
peninsula at Goa, Bombay, and Madras, and especially in that island which
in olden times, as is asserted, was the terrestrial paradise, and which is
called Ceylon, -- oh, what glory! I must say, I would then rather be Cornelius
van Baerle than Alexander, Caesar, or Maximilian.
"Oh the admirable bulbs!"
Thus Cornelius indulged in the delights of contemplation, and was carried
away by the sweetest dreams.
Suddenly the bell of his cabinet was rung much more violently than usual.
Cornelius, startled, laid his hands on his bulbs, and turned round.
78
"Who is here?" he asked.
"Sir," answered the servant, "it is a messenger from the Hague."
"A messenger from the Hague! What does he want?"
"Sir, it is Craeke."
"Craeke! the confidential servant of Mynheer John de Witt? Good, let him
wait."
"I cannot wait," said a voice in the lobby.
And at the same time forcing his way in, Craeke rushed into the dry-room.
This abrupt entrance was such an infringement on the established rules of
the household of Cornelius van Baerle, that the latter, at the sight of Craeke,
almost convulsively moved his hand which covered the bulbs, so that two of
them fell on the floor, one of them rolling under a small table, and the other
into the fireplace.
"Zounds!" said Cornelius, eagerly picking up his precious bulbs, "what's the
matter?"
"The matter, sir!" said Craeke, laying a paper on the large table, on which
the third bulb was lying, -- "the matter is, that you are requested to read
this paper without losing one moment."
79
And Craeke, who thought he had remarked in the streets of Dort symptoms
of a tumult similar to that which he had witnessed before his departure from
the Hague, ran off without even looking behind him.
"All right! all right! my dear Craeke," said Cornelius, stretching his arm
under the table for the bulb; "your paper shall be read, indeed it shall."
Then, examining the bulb which he held in the hollow of his hand, he said:
"Well, here is one of them uninjured. That confounded Craeke! thus to rush
into my dry-room; let us now look after the other."
And without laying down the bulb which he already held, Baerle went to the
fireplace, knelt down and stirred with the tip of his finger the ashes, which
fortunately were quite cold.
He at once felt the other bulb.
"Well, here it is," he said; and, looking at it with almost fatherly affection, he
exclaimed, "Uninjured as the first!"
At this very instant, and whilst Cornelius, still on his knees, was examining
his pets, the door of the dry-room was so violently shaken, and opened in
such a brusque manner, that Cornelius felt rising in his cheeks and his ears
the glow of that evil counsellor which is called wrath.
"Now, what is it again," he demanded; "are people going mad here?"
"Oh, sir! sir!" cried the servant, rushing into the dry-room with a much paler
face and with a much more frightened mien than Craeke had shown.
"Well!" asked Cornelius, foreboding some mischief from the double breach of
the strict rule of his house.
80
"Oh, sir, fly! fly quick!" cried the servant.
"Fly! and what for?"
"Sir, the house is full of the guards of the States."
"What do they want?"
"They want you."
"What for?"
"To arrest you."
"Arrest me? arrest me, do you say?"
"Yes, sir, and they are headed by a magistrate."
"What's the meaning of all this?" said Van Baerle, grasping in his hands the
two bulbs, and directing his terrified glance towards the staircase.
"They are coming up! they are coming up!" cried the servant.
"Oh, my dear child, my worthy master!" cried the old housekeeper, who now
likewise made her appearance in the dry-room, "take your gold, your
jewelry, and fly, fly!"
81
"But how shall I make my escape, nurse?" said Van Baerle.
"Jump out of the window."
"Twenty-five feet from the ground!"
"But you will fall on six feet of soft soil!"
"Yes, but I should fall on my tulips."
"Never mind, jump out."
Cornelius took the third bulb, approached the window and opened it, but
seeing what havoc he would necessarily cause in his borders, and, more
than this, what a height he would have to jump, he called out, "Never!" and
fell back a step.
At this moment they saw across the banister of the staircase the points of
the halberds of the soldiers rising.
The housekeeper raised her hands to heaven.
As to Cornelius van Baerle, it must be stated to his honour, not as a man,
but as a tulip-fancier, his only thought was for his inestimable bulbs.
Looking about for a paper in which to wrap them up, he noticed the fly-leaf
from the Bible, which Craeke had laid upon the table, took it without in his
confusion remembering whence it came, folded in it the three bulbs,
secreted them in his bosom, and waited.
82
At this very moment the soldiers, preceded by a magistrate, entered the
room.
"Are you Dr. Cornelius van Baerle?" demanded the magistrate (who,
although knowing the young man very well, put his question according to
the forms of justice, which gave his proceedings a much more dignified air).
"I am that person, Master van Spennen," answered Cornelius, politely, to his
judge, "and you know it very well."
"Then give up to us the seditious papers which you secrete in your house."
"The seditious papers!" repeated Cornelius, quite dumfounded at the
imputation.
"Now don't look astonished, if you please."
"I vow to you, Master van Spennen, "Cornelius replied, "that I am completely
at a loss to understand what you want."
"Then I shall put you in the way, Doctor," said the judge; "give up to us the
papers which the traitor Cornelius de Witt deposited with you in the month
of January last."
A sudden light came into the mind of Cornelius.
"Halloa!" said Van Spennen, "you begin now to remember, don't you?"
"Indeed I do, but you spoke of seditious papers, and I have none of that
sort."
83
"You deny it then?"
"Certainly I do."
The magistrate turned round and took a rapid survey of the whole cabinet.
"Where is the apartment you call your dry-room?" he asked.
"The very same where you now are, Master van Spennen."
The magistrate cast a glance at a small note at the top of his papers.
"All right," he said, like a man who is sure of his ground.
Then, turning round towards Cornelius, he continued, "Will you give up
those papers to me?"
"But I cannot, Master van Spennen; those papers do not belong to me; they
have been deposited with me as a trust, and a trust is sacred."
"Dr. Cornelius," said the judge, "in the name of the States, I order you to
open this drawer, and to give up to me the papers which it contains."
Saying this, the judge pointed with his finger to the third drawer of the
press, near the fireplace.
84
In this very drawer, indeed the papers deposited by the Warden of the Dikes
with his godson were lying; a proof that the police had received very exact
information.
"Ah! you will not," said Van Spennen, when he saw Cornelius standing
immovable and bewildered, "then I shall open the drawer myself."
And, pulling out the drawer to its full length, the magistrate at first alighted
on about twenty bulbs, carefully arranged and ticketed, and then on the
paper parcel, which had remained in exactly the same state as it was when
delivered by the unfortunate Cornelius de Witt to his godson.
The magistrate broke the seals, tore off the envelope, cast an eager glance on
the first leaves which met his eye and then exclaimed, in a terrible voice, --
"Well, justice has been rightly informed after all!"
"How," said Cornelius, "how is this?"
"Don't pretend to be ignorant, Mynheer van Baerle," answered the
magistrate. "Follow me."
"How's that! follow you?" cried the Doctor.
"Yes, sir, for in the name of the States I arrest you."
Arrests were not as yet made in the name of William of Orange; he had not
been Stadtholder long enough for that.
"Arrest me!" cried Cornelius; "but what have I done?"
85
"That's no affair of mine, Doctor; you will explain all that before your
judges."
"Where?"
"At the Hague."
Cornelius, in mute stupefaction, embraced his old nurse, who was in a
swoon; shook hands with his servants, who were bathed in tears, and
followed the magistrate, who put him in a coach as a prisoner of state and
had him driven at full gallop to the Hague.
86
Chapter 8
An Invasion
The incident just related was, as the reader has guessed before this, the
diabolical work of Mynheer Isaac Boxtel.
It will be remembered that, with the help of his telescope, not even the least
detail of the private meeting between Cornelius de Witt and Van Baerle had
escaped him. He had, indeed, heard nothing, but he had seen everything,
and had rightly concluded that the papers intrusted by the Warden to the
Doctor must have been of great importance, as he saw Van Baerle so
carefully secreting the parcel in the drawer where he used to keep his most
precious bulbs.
The upshot of all this was that when Boxtel, who watched the course of
political events much more attentively than his neighbour Cornelius was
used to do, heard the news of the brothers De Witt being arrested on a
charge of high treason against the States, he thought within his heart that
very likely he needed only to say one word, and the godson would be
arrested as well as the godfather.
Yet, full of happiness as was Boxtel's heart at the chance, he at first shrank
with horror from the idea of informing against a man whom this information
might lead to the scaffold.
But there is this terrible thing in evil thoughts, that evil minds soon grow
familiar with them.
Besides this, Mynheer Isaac Boxtel encouraged himself with the following
sophism: --
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"Cornelius de Witt is a bad citizen, as he is charged with high treason, and
arrested.
"I, on the contrary, am a good citizen, as I am not charged with anything in
the world, as I am as free as the air of heaven."
"If, therefore, Cornelius de Witt is a bad citizen, -- of which there can be no
doubt, as he is charged with high treason, and arrested, -- his accomplice,
Cornelius van Baerle, is no less a bad citizen than himself.
"And, as I am a good citizen, and as it is the duty of every good citizen to
inform against the bad ones, it is my duty to inform against Cornelius van
Baerle."
Specious as this mode of reasoning might sound, it would not perhaps have
taken so complete a hold of Boxtel, nor would he perhaps have yielded to the
mere desire of vengeance which was gnawing at his heart, had not the
demon of envy been joined with that of cupidity.
Boxtel was quite aware of the progress which Van Baerle had made towards
producing the grand black tulip.
Dr. Cornelius, notwithstanding all his modesty, had not been able to hide
from his most intimate friends that he was all but certain to win, in the year
of grace 1673, the prize of a hundred thousand guilders offered by the
Horticultural Society of Haarlem.
It was just this certainty of Cornelius van Baerle that caused the fever which
raged in the heart of Isaac Boxtel.
If Cornelius should be arrested there would necessarily be a great upset in
his house, and during the night after his arrest no one would think of
keeping watch over the tulips in his garden.
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Now in that night Boxtel would climb over the wall and, as he knew the
position of the bulb which was to produce the grand black tulip, he would
filch it; and instead of flowering for Cornelius, it would flower for him, Isaac;
he also, instead of Van Baerle, would have the prize of a hundred thousand
guilders, not to speak of the sublime honour of calling the new flower Tulipa
nigra Boxtellensis, -- a result which would satisfy not only his vengeance,
but also his cupidity and his ambition.
Awake, he thought of nothing but the grand black tulip; asleep, he dreamed
of it.
At last, on the 19th of August, about two o'clock in the afternoon, the
temptation grew so strong, that Mynheer Isaac was no longer able to resist
it.
Accordingly, he wrote an anonymous information, the minute exactness of
which made up for its want of authenticity, and posted his letter.
Never did a venomous paper, slipped into the jaws of the bronze lions at
Venice, produce a more prompt and terrible effect.
On the same evening the letter reached the principal magistrate, who
without a moment's delay convoked his colleagues early for the next
morning. On the following morning, therefore, they assembled, and decided
on Van Baerle's arrest, placing the order for its execution in the hands of
Master van Spennen, who, as we have seen, performed his duty like a true
Hollander, and who arrested the Doctor at the very hour when the Orange
party at the Hague were roasting the bleeding shreds of flesh torn from the
corpses of Cornelius and John de Witt.
But, whether from a feeling of shame or from craven weakness, Isaac Boxtel
did not venture that day to point his telescope either at the garden, or at the
laboratory, or at the dry-room.
89
He knew too well what was about to happen in the house of the poor doctor
to feel any desire to look into it. He did not even get up when his only
servant -- who envied the lot of the servants of Cornelius just as bitterly as
Boxtel did that of their master -- entered his bedroom. He said to the man, -
-
"I shall not get up to-day, I am ill."
About nine o'clock he heard a great noise in the street which made him
tremble, at this moment he was paler than a real invalid, and shook more
violently than a man in the height of fever.
His servant entered the room; Boxtel hid himself under the counterpane.
"Oh, sir!" cried the servant, not without some inkling that, whilst deploring
the mishap which had befallen Van Baerle, he was announcing agreeable
news to his master, -- "oh, sir! you do not know, then, what is happening at
this moment?"
"How can I know it?" answered Boxtel, with an almost unintelligible voice.
"Well, Mynheer Boxtel, at this moment your neighbour Cornelius van Baerle
is arrested for high treason."
"Nonsense!" Boxtel muttered, with a faltering voice; "the thing is impossible."
"Faith, sir, at any rate that's what people say; and, besides, I have seen
Judge van Spennen with the archers entering the house."
90
"Well, if you have seen it with your own eyes, that's a different case
altogether."
"At all events," said the servant, "I shall go and inquire once more. Be you
quiet, sir, I shall let you know all about it."
Boxtel contented himself with signifying his approval of the zeal of his
servant by dumb show.
The man went out, and returned in half an hour.
"Oh, sir, all that I told you is indeed quite true."
"How so?"
"Mynheer van Baerle is arrested, and has been put into a carriage, and they
are driving him to the Hague."
"To the Hague!"
"Yes, to the Hague, and if what people say is true, it won't do him much
good."
"And what do they say?" Boxtel asked.
"Faith, sir, they say -- but it is not quite sure -- that by this hour the
burghers must be murdering Mynheer Cornelius and Mynheer John de
Witt."
91
"Oh," muttered, or rather growled Boxtel, closing his eyes from the dreadful
picture which presented itself to his imagination.
"Why, to be sure," said the servant to himself, whilst leaving the room,
"Mynheer Isaac Boxtel must be very sick not to have jumped from his bed on
hearing such good news."
And, in reality, Isaac Boxtel was very sick, like a man who has murdered
another.
But he had murdered his man with a double object; the first was attained,
the second was still to be attained.
Night closed in. It was the night which Boxtel had looked forward to.
As soon as it was dark he got up.
He then climbed into his sycamore.
He had calculated correctly; no one thought of keeping watch over the
garden; the house and the servants were all in the utmost confusion.
He heard the clock strike -- ten, eleven, twelve.
At midnight, with a beating heart, trembling hands, and a livid
countenance, he descended from the tree, took a ladder, leaned it against
the wall, mounted it to the last step but one, and listened.
All was perfectly quiet, not a sound broke the silence of the night; one
solitary light, that of the housekeeper, was burning in the house.
92
This silence and this darkness emboldened Boxtel; he got astride the wall,
stopped for an instant, and, after having ascertained that there was nothing
to fear, he put his ladder from his own garden into that of Cornelius, and
descended.
Then, knowing to an inch where the bulbs which were to produce the black
tulip were planted, he ran towards the spot, following, however, the
gravelled walks in order not to be betrayed by his footprints, and, on
arriving at the precise spot, he proceeded, with the eagerness of a tiger, to
plunge his hand into the soft ground.
He found nothing, and thought he was mistaken.
In the meanwhile, the cold sweat stood on his brow.
He felt about close by it, -- nothing.
He felt about on the right, and on the left, -- nothing.
He felt about in front and at the back, -- nothing.
He was nearly mad, when at last he satisfied himself that on that very
morning the earth had been disturbed.
In fact, whilst Boxtel was lying in bed, Cornelius had gone down to his
garden, had taken up the mother bulb, and, as we have seen, divided it into
three.
Boxtel could not bring himself to leave the place. He dug up with his hands
more than ten square feet of ground.
93
At last no doubt remained of his misfortune. Mad with rage, he returned to
his ladder, mounted the wall, drew up the ladder, flung it into his own
garden, and jumped after it.
All at once, a last ray of hope presented itself to his mind: the seedling bulbs
might be in the dry-room; it was therefore only requisite to make his entry
there as he had done into the garden.
There he would find them, and, moreover, it was not at all difficult, as the
sashes of the dry-room might be raised like those of a greenhouse. Cornelius
had opened them on that morning, and no one had thought of closing them
again.
Everything, therefore, depended upon whether he could procure a ladder of
sufficient length, -- one of twenty-five feet instead of ten.
Boxtel had noticed in the street where he lived a house which was being
repaired, and against which a very tall ladder was placed.
This ladder would do admirably, unless the workmen had taken it away.
He ran to the house: the ladder was there. Boxtel took it, carried it with
great exertion to his garden, and with even greater difficulty raised it against
the wall of Van Baerle's house, where it just reached to the window.
Boxtel put a lighted dark lantern into his pocket, mounted the ladder, and
slipped into the dry-room.
On reaching this sanctuary of the florist he stopped, supporting himself
against the table; his legs failed him, his heart beat as if it would choke him.
94
Here it was even worse than in the garden; there Boxtel was only a
trespasser, here he was a thief.
However, he took courage again: he had not gone so far to turn back with
empty hands.
But in vain did he search the whole room, open and shut all the drawers,
even that privileged one where the parcel which had been so fatal to
Cornelius had been deposited; he found ticketed, as in a botanical garden,
the "Jane," the "John de Witt," the hazel-nut, and the roasted-coffee
coloured tulip; but of the black tulip, or rather the seedling bulbs within
which it was still sleeping, not a trace was found.
And yet, on looking over the register of seeds and bulbs, which Van Baerle
kept in duplicate, if possible even with greater exactitude and care than the
first commercial houses of Amsterdam their ledgers, Boxtel read these lines:
--
"To-day, 20th of August, 1672, I have taken up the mother bulb of the grand
black tulip, which I have divided into three perfect suckers."
"Oh these bulbs, these bulbs!" howled Boxtel, turning over everything in the
dry-room, "where could he have concealed them?"
Then, suddenly striking his forehead in his frenzy, he called out, "Oh wretch
that I am! Oh thrice fool Boxtel! Would any one be separated from his bulbs?
Would any one leave them at Dort, when one goes to the Hague? Could one
live far from one's bulbs, when they enclose the grand black tulip? He had
time to get hold of them, the scoundrel, he has them about him, he has
taken them to the Hague!"
It was like a flash of lightning which showed to Boxtel the abyss of a
uselessly committed crime.
95
Boxtel sank quite paralyzed on that very table, and on that very spot where,
some hours before, the unfortunate Van Baerle had so leisurely, and with
such intense delight, contemplated his darling bulbs.
"Well, then, after all," said the envious Boxtel, -- raising his livid face from
his hands in which it had been buried -- "if he has them, he can keep them
only as long as he lives, and ---- "
The rest of this detestable thought was expressed by a hideous smile.
"The bulbs are at the Hague," he said, "therefore, I can no longer live at
Dort: away, then, for them, to the Hague! to the Hague!"
And Boxtel, without taking any notice of the treasures about him, so entirely
were his thoughts absorbed by another inestimable treasure, let himself out
by the window, glided down the ladder, carried it back to the place whence
he had taken it, and, like a beast of prey, returned growling to his house.
96
Chapter 9
The Family Cell
It was about midnight when poor Van Baerle was locked up in the prison of
the Buytenhof.
What Rosa foresaw had come to pass. On finding the cell of Cornelius de
Witt empty, the wrath of the people ran very high, and had Gryphus fallen
into the hands of those madmen he would certainly have had to pay with his
life for the prisoner.
But this fury had vented itself most fully on the two brothers when they
were overtaken by the murderers, thanks to the precaution which William --
the man of precautions -- had taken in having the gates of the city closed.
A momentary lull had therefore set in whilst the prison was empty, and
Rosa availed herself of this favourable moment to come forth from her hiding
place, which she also induced her father to leave.
The prison was therefore completely deserted. Why should people remain in
the jail whilst murder was going on at the Tol-Hek?
Gryphus came forth trembling behind the courageous Rosa. They went to
close the great gate, at least as well as it would close, considering that it was
half demolished. It was easy to see that a hurricane of mighty fury had
vented itself upon it.
About four o'clock a return of the noise was heard, but of no threatening
character to Gryphus and his daughter. The people were only dragging in
the two corpses, which they came back to gibbet at the usual place of
execution.
97
Rosa hid herself this time also, but only that she might not see the ghastly
spectacle.
At midnight, people again knocked at the gate of the jail, or rather at the
barricade which served in its stead: it was Cornelius van Baerle whom they
were bringing.
When the jailer received this new inmate, and saw from the warrant the
name and station of his prisoner, he muttered with his turnkey smile, --
"Godson of Cornelius de Witt! Well, young man, we have the family cell here,
and we will give it to you."
And quite enchanted with his joke, the ferocious Orangeman took his
cresset and his keys to conduct Cornelius to the cell, which on that very
morning Cornelius de Witt had left to go into exile, or what in revolutionary
times is meant instead by those sublime philosophers who lay it down as an
axiom of high policy, "It is the dead only who do not return."
On the way which the despairing florist had to traverse to reach that cell he
heard nothing but the barking of a dog, and saw nothing but the face of a
young girl.
The dog rushed forth from a niche in the wall, shaking his heavy chain, and
sniffing all round Cornelius in order so much the better to recognise him in
case he should be ordered to pounce upon him.
The young girl, whilst the prisoner was mounting the staircase, appeared at
the narrow door of her chamber, which opened on that very flight of steps;
and, holding the lamp in her right hand, she at the same time lit up her
pretty blooming face, surrounded by a profusion of rich wavy golden locks,
whilst with her left she held her white night-dress closely over her breast,
98
having been roused from her first slumber by the unexpected arrival of Van
Baerle.
It would have made a fine picture, worthy of Rembrandt, the gloomy winding
stairs illuminated by the reddish glare of the cresset of Gryphus, with his
scowling jailer's countenance at the top, the melancholy figure of Cornelius
bending over the banister to look down upon the sweet face of Rosa,
standing, as it were, in the bright frame of the door of her chamber, with
embarrassed mien at being thus seen by a stranger.
And at the bottom, quite in the shade, where the details are absorbed in the
obscurity, the mastiff, with his eyes glistening like carbuncles, and shaking
his chain, on which the double light from the lamp of Rosa and the lantern
of Gryphus threw a brilliant glitter.
The sublime master would, however, have been altogether unable to render
the sorrow expressed in the face of Rosa, when she saw this pale, handsome
young man slowly climbing the stairs, and thought of the full import of the
words, which her father had just spoken, "You will have the family cell."
This vision lasted but a moment, -- much less time than we have taken to
describe it. Gryphus then proceeded on his way, Cornelius was forced to
follow him, and five minutes afterwards he entered his prison, of which it is
unnecessary to say more, as the reader is already acquainted with it.
Gryphus pointed with his finger to the bed on which the martyr had suffered
so much, who on that day had rendered his soul to God. Then, taking up his
cresset, he quitted the cell.
Thus left alone, Cornelius threw himself on his bed, but he slept not, he
kept his eye fixed on the narrow window, barred with iron, which looked on
the Buytenhof; and in this way saw from behind the trees that first pale
beam of light which morning sheds on the earth as a white mantle.
99
Now and then during the night horses had galloped at a smart pace over the
Buytenhof, the heavy tramp of the patrols had resounded from the
pavement, and the slow matches of the arquebuses, flaring in the east wind,
had thrown up at intervals a sudden glare as far as to the panes of his
window.
But when the rising sun began to gild the coping stones at the gable ends of
the houses, Cornelius, eager to know whether there was any living creature
about him, approached the window, and cast a sad look round the circular
yard before him
At the end of the yard a dark mass, tinted with a dingy blue by the morning
dawn, rose before him, its dark outlines standing out in contrast to the
houses already illuminated by the pale light of early morning.
Cornelius recognised the gibbet.
On it were suspended two shapeless trunks, which indeed were no more
than bleeding skeletons.
The good people of the Hague had chopped off the flesh of its victims, but
faithfully carried the remainder to the gibbet, to have a pretext for a double
inscription written on a huge placard, on which Cornelius; with the keen
sight of a young man of twenty-eight, was able to read the following lines,
daubed by the coarse brush of a sign-painter: --
"Here are hanging the great rogue of the name of John de Witt, and the little
rogue Cornelius de Witt, his brother, two enemies of the people, but great
friends of the king of France."
Cornelius uttered a cry of horror, and in the agony of his frantic terror
knocked with his hands and feet at the door so violently and continuously,
that Gryphus, with his huge bunch of keys in his hand, ran furiously up.
100
The jailer opened the door, with terrible imprecations against the prisoner
who disturbed him at an hour which Master Gryphus was not accustomed
to be aroused.
"Well, now, by my soul, he is mad, this new De Witt," he cried, "but all those
De Witts have the devil in them."
"Master, master," cried Cornelius, seizing the jailer by the arm and dragging
him towards the window, -- "master, what have I read down there?"
"Where down there?"
"On that placard."
And, trembling, pale, and gasping for breath, he pointed to the gibbet at the
other side of the yard, with the cynical inscription surmounting it.
Gryphus broke out into a laugh.
"Eh! eh!" he answered, "so, you have read it. Well, my good sir, that's what
people will get for corresponding with the enemies of his Highness the Prince
of Orange."
"The brothers De Witt are murdered!" Cornelius muttered, with the cold
sweat on his brow, and sank on his bed, his arms hanging by his side, and
his eyes closed.
"The brothers De Witt have been judged by the people," said Gryphus; "you
call that murdered, do you? well, I call it executed."
101
And seeing that the prisoner was not only quiet, but entirely prostrate and
senseless, he rushed from the cell, violently slamming the door, and noisily
drawing the bolts.
Recovering his consciousness, Cornelius found himself alone, and
recognised the room where he was, -- "the family cell," as Gryphus had
called it, -- as the fatal passage leading to ignominious death.
And as he was a philosopher, and, more than that, as he was a Christian,
he began to pray for the soul of his godfather, then for that of the Grand
Pensionary, and at last submitted with resignation to all the sufferings
which God might ordain for him.
Then turning again to the concerns of earth, and having satisfied himself
that he was alone in his dungeon, he drew from his breast the three bulbs of
the black tulip, and concealed them behind a block of stone, on which the
traditional water-jug of the prison was standing, in the darkest corner of his
cell.
Useless labour of so many years! such sweet hopes crushed; his discovery
was, after all, to lead to naught, just as his own career was to be cut short.
Here, in his prison, there was not a trace of vegetation, not an atom of soil,
not a ray of sunshine.
At this thought Cornelius fell into a gloomy despair, from which he was only
aroused by an extraordinary circumstance.
What was this circumstance?
We shall inform the reader in our next chapter.
102
Chapter 10
The Jailer's Daughter
On the same evening Gryphus, as he brought the prisoner his mess, slipped
on the damp flags whilst opening the door of the cell, and fell, in the attempt
to steady himself, on his hand; but as it was turned the wrong way, he
broke his arm just above the wrist.
Cornelius rushed forward towards the jailer, but Gryphus, who was not yet
aware of the serious nature of his injury, called out to him, --
"It is nothing: don't you stir."
He then tried to support himself on his arm, but the bone gave way; then
only he felt the pain, and uttered a cry.
When he became aware that his arm was broken, this man, so harsh to
others, fell swooning on the threshold, where he remained motionless and
cold, as if dead.
During all this time the door of the cell stood open and Cornelius found
himself almost free. But the thought never entered his mind of profiting by
this accident; he had seen from the manner in which the arm was bent, and
from the noise it made in bending, that the bone was fractured, and that the
patient must be in great pain; and now he thought of nothing else but of
administering relief to the sufferer, however little benevolent the man had
shown himself during their short interview.
At the noise of Gryphus's fall, and at the cry which escaped him, a hasty
step was heard on the staircase, and immediately after a lovely apparition
presented itself to the eyes of Cornelius.
103
It was the beautiful young Frisian, who, seeing her father stretched on the
ground, and the prisoner bending over him, uttered a faint cry, as in the
first fright she thought Gryphus, whose brutality she well knew, had fallen
in consequence of a struggle between him and the prisoner.
Cornelius understood what was passing in the mind of the girl, at the very
moment when the suspicion arose in her heart.
But one moment told her the true state of the case and, ashamed of her first
thoughts, she cast her beautiful eyes, wet with tears, on the young man,
and said to him, --
"I beg your pardon, and thank you, sir; the first for what I have thought, and
the second for what you are doing."
Cornelius blushed, and said, "I am but doing my duty as a Christian in
helping my neighbour."
"Yes, and affording him your help this evening, you have forgotten the abuse
which he heaped on you this morning. Oh, sir! this is more than humanity, -
- this is indeed Christian charity."
Cornelius cast his eyes on the beautiful girl, quite astonished to hear from
the mouth of one so humble such a noble and feeling speech.
But he had no time to express his surprise. Gryphus recovered from his
swoon, opened his eyes, and as his brutality was returning with his senses,
he growled "That's it, a fellow is in a hurry to bring to a prisoner his supper,
and falls and breaks his arm, and is left lying on the ground."
"Hush, my father," said Rosa, "you are unjust to this gentleman, whom I
found endeavouring to give you his aid."
104
"His aid?" Gryphus replied, with a doubtful air.
"It is quite true, master! I am quite ready to help you still more."
"You!" said Gryphus, "are you a medical man?"
"It was formerly my profession."
"And so you would be able to set my arm?"
"Perfectly."
"And what would you need to do it? let us hear."
"Two splinters of wood, and some linen for a bandage."
"Do you hear, Rosa?" said Gryphus, "the prisoner is going to set my arm,
that's a saving; come, assist me to get up, I feel as heavy as lead."
Rosa lent the sufferer her shoulder; he put his unhurt arm around her neck,
and making an effort, got on his legs, whilst Cornelius, to save him a walk,
pushed a chair towards him.
Gryphus sat down; then, turning towards his daughter, he said, --
"Well, didn't you hear? go and fetch what is wanted."
105
Rosa went down, and immediately after returned with two staves of a small
barrel and a large roll of linen bandage.
Cornelius had made use of the intervening moments to take off the man's
coat, and to tuck up his shirt sleeve.
"Is this what you require, sir?" asked Rosa.
"Yes, mademoiselle," answered Cornelius, looking at the things she had
brought, -- "yes, that's right. Now push this table, whilst I support the arm
of your father."
Rosa pushed the table, Cornelius placed the broken arm on it so as to make
it flat, and with perfect skill set the bone, adjusted the splinters, and
fastened the bandages.
At the last touch, the jailer fainted a second time.
"Go and fetch vinegar, mademoiselle," said Cornelius; "we will bathe his
temples, and he will recover."
But, instead of acting up to the doctor's prescription, Rosa, after having
satisfied herself that her father was still unconscious, approached Cornelius
and said, --
"Service for service, sir."
"What do you mean, my pretty child?" said Cornelius.
106
"I mean to say, sir, that the judge who is to examine you to-morrow has
inquired to-day for the room in which you are confined, and, on being told
that you are occupying the cell of Mynheer Cornelius de Witt, laughed in a
very strange and very disagreeable manner, which makes me fear that no
good awaits you."
"But," asked Cornelius, "what harm can they do to me?"
"Look at that gibbet."
"But I am not guilty," said Cornelius.
"Were they guilty whom you see down there gibbeted, mangled, and torn to
pieces?"
"That's true," said Cornelius, gravely.
"And besides," continued Rosa, "the people want to find you guilty. But
whether innocent or guilty, your trial begins to-morrow, and the day after
you will be condemned. Matters are settled very quickly in these times."
"Well, and what do you conclude from all this?"
"I conclude that I am alone, that I am weak, that my father is lying in a
swoon, that the dog is muzzled, and that consequently there is nothing to
prevent your making your escape. Fly, then; that's what I mean."
"What do you say?"
107
"I say that I was not able to save Mynheer Cornelius or Mynheer John de
Witt, and that I should like to save you. Only be quick; there, my father is
regaining his breath, one minute more, and he will open his eyes, and it will
be too late. Do you hesitate?"
In fact, Cornelius stood immovable, looking at Rosa, yet looking at her as if
he did not hear her.
"Don't you understand me?" said the young girl, with some impatience.
"Yes, I do," said Cornelius, "but ---- "
"But?"
"I will not, they would accuse you."
"Never mind," said Rosa, blushing, "never mind that."
"You are very good, my dear child," replied Cornelius, "but I stay."
"You stay, oh, sir! oh, sir! don't you understand that you will be condemned
to death, executed on the scaffold, perhaps assassinated and torn to pieces,
just like Mynheer John and Mynheer Cornelius. For heaven's sake, don't
think of me, but fly from this place, Take care, it bears ill luck to the De
Witts!"
"Halloa!" cried the jailer, recovering his senses, "who is talking of those
rogues, those wretches, those villains, the De Witts?"
108
"Don't be angry, my good man," said Cornelius, with his good-tempered
smile, "the worst thing for a fracture is excitement, by which the blood is
heated."
Thereupon, he said in an undertone to Rosa --
"My child, I am innocent, and I shall await my trial with tranquillity and an
easy mind."
"Hush," said Rosa.
"Why hush?"
"My father must not suppose that we have been talking to each other."
"What harm would that do?"
"What harm? He would never allow me to come here any more," said Rosa.
Cornelius received this innocent confidence with a smile; he felt as if a ray of
good fortune were shining on his path.
"Now, then, what are you chattering there together about?" said Gryphus,
rising and supporting his right arm with his left.
"Nothing," said Rosa; "the doctor is explaining to me what diet you are to
keep."
"Diet, diet for me? Well, my fine girl, I shall put you on diet too."
109
"On what diet, my father?"
"Never to go to the cells of the prisoners, and, if ever you should happen to
go, to leave them as soon as possible. Come, off with me, lead the way, and
be quick."
Rosa and Cornelius exchanged glances.
That of Rosa tried to express, --
"There, you see?"
That of Cornelius said, --
"Let it be as the Lord wills."
110
Chapter 11
Cornelius van Baerle's Will
Rosa had not been mistaken; the judges came on the following day to the
Buytenhof, and proceeded with the trial of Cornelius van Baerle. The
examination, however, did not last long, it having appeared on evidence that
Cornelius had kept at his house that fatal correspondence of the brothers
De Witt with France.
He did not deny it.
The only point about which there seemed any difficulty was whether this
correspondence had been intrusted to him by his godfather, Cornelius de
Witt.
But as, since the death of those two martyrs, Van Baerle had no longer any
reason for withholding the truth, he not only did not deny that the parcel
had been delivered to him by Cornelius de Witt himself, but he also stated
all the circumstances under which it was done.
This confession involved the godson in the crime of the godfather; manifest
complicity being considered to exist between Cornelius de Witt and
Cornelius van Baerle.
The honest doctor did not confine himself to this avowal, but told the whole
truth with regard to his own tastes, habits, and daily life. He described his
indifference to politics, his love of study, of the fine arts, of science, and of
flowers. He explained that, since the day when Cornelius de Witt handed to
him the parcel at Dort, he himself had never touched, nor even noticed it.
111
To this it was objected, that in this respect he could not possibly be
speaking the truth, since the papers had been deposited in a press in which
both his hands and his eyes must have been engaged every day.
Cornelius answered that it was indeed so; that, however, he never put his
hand into the press but to ascertain whether his bulbs were dry, and that he
never looked into it but to see if they were beginning to sprout.
To this again it was objected, that his pretended indifference respecting this
deposit was not to be reasonably entertained, as he could not have received
such papers from the hand of his godfather without being made acquainted
with their important character.
He replied that his godfather Cornelius loved him too well, and, above all,
that he was too considerate a man to have communicated to him anything of
the contents of the parcel, well knowing that such a confidence would only
have caused anxiety to him who received it.
To this it was objected that, if De Witt had wished to act in such a way, he
would have added to the parcel, in case of accidents, a certificate setting
forth that his godson was an entire stranger to the nature of this
correspondence, or at least he would during his trial have written a letter to
him, which might be produced as his justification.
Cornelius replied that undoubtedly his godfather could not have thought
that there was any risk for the safety of his deposit, hidden as it was in a
press which was looked upon as sacred as the tabernacle by the whole
household of Van Baerle; and that consequently he had considered the
certificate as useless. As to a letter, he certainly had some remembrance
that some moments previous to his arrest, whilst he was absorbed in the
contemplation of one of the rarest of his bulbs, John de Witt's servant
entered his dry-room, and handed to him a paper, but the whole was to him
only like a vague dream; the servant had disappeared, and as to the paper,
perhaps it might be found if a proper search were made.
112
As far as Craeke was concerned, it was impossible to find him, as he had left
Holland.
The paper also was not very likely to be found, and no one gave himself the
trouble to look for it.
Cornelius himself did not much press this point, since, even supposing that
the paper should turn up, it could not have any direct connection with the
correspondence which constituted the crime.
The judges wished to make it appear as though they wanted to urge
Cornelius to make a better defence; they displayed that benevolent patience
which is generally a sign of the magistrate's being interested for the
prisoner, or of a man's having so completely got the better of his adversary
that he needs no longer any oppressive means to ruin him.
Cornelius did not accept of this hypocritical protection, and in a last answer,
which he set forth with the noble bearing of a martyr and the calm serenity
of a righteous man, he said, --
"You ask me things, gentlemen, to which I can answer only the exact truth.
Hear it. The parcel was put into my hands in the way I have described; I vow
before God that I was, and am still, ignorant of its contents, and that it was
not until my arrest that I learned that this deposit was the correspondence
of the Grand Pensionary with the Marquis de Louvois. And lastly, I vow and
protest that I do not understand how any one should have known that this
parcel was in my house; and, above all, how I can be deemed criminal for
having received what my illustrious and unfortunate godfather brought to
my house."
This was Van Baerle's whole defence; after which the judges began to
deliberate on the verdict.
113
They considered that every offshoot of civil discord is mischievous, because
it revives the contest which it is the interest of all to put down.
One of them, who bore the character of a profound observer, laid down as
his opinion that this young man, so phlegmatic in appearance, must in
reality be very dangerous, as under this icy exterior he was sure to conceal
an ardent desire to avenge his friends, the De Witts.
Another observed that the love of tulips agreed perfectly well with that of
politics, and that it was proved in history that many very dangerous men
were engaged in gardening, just as if it had been their profession, whilst
really they occupied themselves with perfectly different concerns; witness
Tarquin the Elder, who grew poppies at Gabii, and the Great Conde, who
watered his carnations at the dungeon of Vincennes at the very moment
when the former meditated his return to Rome, and the latter his escape
from prison.
The judge summed up with the following dilemma: --
"Either Cornelius van Baerle is a great lover of tulips, or a great lover of
politics; in either case, he has told us a falsehood; first, because his having
occupied himself with politics is proved by the letters which were found at
his house; and secondly, because his having occupied himself with tulips is
proved by the bulbs which leave no doubt of the fact. And herein lies the
enormity of the case. As Cornelius van Baerle was concerned in the growing
of tulips and in the pursuit of politics at one and the same time, the
prisoner is of hybrid character, of an amphibious organisation, working with
equal ardour at politics and at tulips, which proves him to belong to the
class of men most dangerous to public tranquillity, and shows a certain, or
rather a complete, analogy between his character and that of those master
minds of which Tarquin the Elder and the Great Conde have been
felicitously quoted as examples."
The upshot of all these reasonings was, that his Highness the Prince
Stadtholder of Holland would feel infinitely obliged to the magistracy of the
Hague if they simplified for him the government of the Seven Provinces by
destroying even the least germ of conspiracy against his authority.
114
This argument capped all the others, and, in order so much the more
effectually to destroy the germ of conspiracy, sentence of death was
unanimously pronounced against Cornelius van Baerle, as being arraigned,
and convicted, for having, under the innocent appearance of a tulip-fancier,
participated in the detestable intrigues and abominable plots of the brothers
De Witt against Dutch nationality and in their secret relations with their
French enemy.
A supplementary clause was tacked to the sentence, to the effect that "the
aforesaid Cornelius van Baerle should be led from the prison of the
Buytenhof to the scaffold in the yard of the same name, where the public
executioner would cut off his head."
As this deliberation was a most serious affair, it lasted a full half-hour,
during which the prisoner was remanded to his cell.
There the Recorder of the States came to read the sentence to him.
Master Gryphus was detained in bed by the fever caused by the fracture of
his arm. His keys passed into the hands of one of his assistants. Behind this
turnkey, who introduced the Recorder, Rosa, the fair Frisian maid, had
slipped into the recess of the door, with a handkerchief to her mouth to stifle
her sobs.
Cornelius listened to the sentence with an expression rather of surprise
than sadness.
After the sentence was read, the Recorder asked him whether he had
anything to answer.
115
"Indeed, I have not," he replied. "Only I confess that, among all the causes of
death against which a cautious man may guard, I should never have
supposed this to be comprised."
On this answer, the Recorder saluted Van Baerle with all that consideration
which such functionaries generally bestow upon great criminals of every
sort.
But whilst he was about to withdraw, Cornelius asked, "By the bye, Mr.
Recorder, what day is the thing -- you know what I mean -- to take place?"
"Why, to-day," answered the Recorder, a little surprised by the self-
possession of the condemned man.
A sob was heard behind the door, and Cornelius turned round to look from
whom it came; but Rosa, who had foreseen this movement, had fallen back.
"And," continued Cornelius, "what hour is appointed?"
"Twelve o'clock, sir."
"Indeed," said Cornelius, "I think I heard the clock strike ten about twenty
minutes ago; I have not much time to spare."
"Indeed you have not, if you wish to make your peace with God," said the
Recorder, bowing to the ground. "You may ask for any clergyman you
please."
Saying these words he went out backwards, and the assistant turnkey was
going to follow him, and to lock the door of Cornelius's cell, when a white
and trembling arm interposed between him and the heavy door.
116
Cornelius saw nothing but the golden brocade cap, tipped with lace, such as
the Frisian girls wore; he heard nothing but some one whispering into the
ear of the turnkey. But the latter put his heavy keys into the white hand
which was stretched out to receive them, and, descending some steps, sat
down on the staircase which was thus guarded above by himself, and below
by the dog. The head-dress turned round, and Cornelius beheld the face of
Rosa, blanched with grief, and her beautiful eyes streaming with tears.
She went up to Cornelius, crossing her arms on her heaving breast.
"Oh, sir, sir!" she said, but sobs choked her utterance.
"My good girl," Cornelius replied with emotion, "what do you wish? I may tell
you that my time on earth is short."
"I come to ask a favour of you," said Rosa, extending her arms partly
towards him and partly towards heaven.
"Don't weep so, Rosa," said the prisoner, "for your tears go much more to my
heart than my approaching fate, and you know, the less guilty a prisoner is,
the more it is his duty to die calmly, and even joyfully, as he dies a martyr.
Come, there's a dear, don't cry any more, and tell me what you want, my
pretty Rosa."
She fell on her knees. "Forgive my father," she said.
"Your father, your father!" said Cornelius, astonished.
"Yes, he has been so harsh to you; but it is his nature, he is so to every one,
and you are not the only one whom he has bullied."
117
"He is punished, my dear Rosa, more than punished, by the accident that
has befallen him, and I forgive him."
"I thank you, sir," said Rosa. "And now tell me -- oh, tell me -- can I do
anything for you?"
"You can dry your beautiful eyes, my dear child," answered Cornelius, with a
good-tempered smile.
"But what can I do for you, -- for you I mean?"
"A man who has only one hour longer to live must be a great Sybarite still to
want anything, my dear Rosa."
"The clergyman whom they have proposed to you?"
"I have worshipped God all my life, I have worshipped Him in His works, and
praised Him in His decrees. I am at peace with Him and do not wish for a
clergyman. The last thought which occupies my mind, however has
reference to the glory of the Almighty, and, indeed, my dear, I should ask
you to help me in carrying out this last thought."
"Oh, Mynheer Cornelius, speak, speak!" exclaimed Rosa, still bathed in
tears.
"Give me your hand, and promise me not to laugh, my dear child."
"Laugh," exclaimed Rosa, frantic with grief, "laugh at this moment! do you
not see my tears?"
118
"Rosa, you are no stranger to me. I have not seen much of you, but that
little is enough to make me appreciate your character. I have never seen a
woman more fair or more pure than you are, and if from this moment I take
no more notice of you, forgive me; it is only because, on leaving this world, I
do not wish to have any further regret."
Rosa felt a shudder creeping over her frame, for, whilst the prisoner
pronounced these words, the belfry clock of the Buytenhof struck eleven.
Cornelius understood her. "Yes, yes, let us make haste," he said, "you are
right, Rosa."
Then, taking the paper with the three suckers from his breast, where he had
again put it, since he had no longer any fear of being searched, he said: "My
dear girl, I have been very fond of flowers. That was at a time when I did not
know that there was anything else to be loved. Don't blush, Rosa, nor turn
away; and even if I were making you a declaration of love, alas! poor dear, it
would be of no more consequence. Down there in the yard, there is an
instrument of steel, which in sixty minutes will put an end to my boldness.
Well, Rosa, I loved flowers dearly, and I have found, or at least I believe so,
the secret of the great black tulip, which it has been considered impossible
to grow, and for which, as you know, or may not know, a prize of a hundred
thousand guilders has been offered by the Horticultural Society of Haarlem.
These hundred thousand guilders -- and Heaven knows I do not regret them
-- these hundred thousand guilders I have here in this paper, for they are
won by the three bulbs wrapped up in it, which you may take, Rosa, as I
make you a present of them."
"Mynheer Cornelius!"
"Yes, yes, Rosa, you may take them; you are not wronging any one, my
child. I am alone in this world; my parents are dead; I never had a sister or a
brother. I have never had a thought of loving any one with what is called
love, and if any one has loved me, I have not known it. However, you see
well, Rosa, that I am abandoned by everybody, as in this sad hour you alone
are with me in my prison, consoling and assisting me."
119
"But, sir, a hundred thousand guilders!"
"Well, let us talk seriously, my dear child: those hundred thousand guilders
will be a nice marriage portion, with your pretty face; you shall have them,
Rosa, dear Rosa, and I ask nothing in return but your promise that you will
marry a fine young man, whom you love, and who will love you, as dearly as
I loved my flowers. Don't interrupt me, Rosa dear, I have only a few minutes
more."
The poor girl was nearly choking with her sobs.
Cornelius took her by the hand.
"Listen to me," he continued: "I'll tell you how to manage it. Go to Dort and
ask Butruysheim, my gardener, for soil from my border number six, fill a
deep box with it, and plant in it these three bulbs. They will flower next May,
that is to say, in seven months; and, when you see the flower forming on the
stem, be careful at night to protect them from the wind, and by day to
screen them from the sun. They will flower black, I am quite sure of it. You
are then to apprise the President of the Haarlem Society. He will cause the
color of the flower to be proved before a committee and these hundred
thousand guilders will be paid to you."
Rosa heaved a deep sigh.
"And now," continued Cornelius, -- wiping away a tear which was glistening
in his eye, and which was shed much more for that marvellous black tulip
which he was not to see than for the life which he was about to lose, -- "I
have no wish left, except that the tulip should be called Rosa Barlaensis,
that is to say, that its name should combine yours and mine; and as, of
course, you do not understand Latin, and might therefore forget this name,
try to get for me pencil and paper, that I may write it down for you."
120
Rosa sobbed afresh, and handed to him a book, bound in shagreen, which
bore the initials C. W.
"What is this?" asked the prisoner.
"Alas!" replied Rosa, "it is the Bible of your poor godfather, Cornelius de
Witt. From it he derived strength to endure the torture, and to bear his
sentence without flinching. I found it in this cell, after the death of the
martyr, and have preserved it as a relic. To-day I brought it to you, for it
seemed to me that this book must possess in itself a divine power. Write in
it what you have to write, Mynheer Cornelius; and though, unfortunately, I
am not able to read, I will take care that what you write shall be
accomplished."
Cornelius took the Bible, and kissed it reverently.
"With what shall I write?" asked Cornelius.
"There is a pencil in the Bible," said Rosa.
This was the pencil which John de Witt had lent to his brother, and which
he had forgotten to take away with him.
Cornelius took it, and on the second fly leaf (for it will be remembered that
the first was torn out), drawing near his end like his godfather, he wrote
with a no less firm hand: --
"On this day, the 23d of August, 1672, being on the point of rendering,
although innocent, my soul to God on the scaffold, I bequeath to Rosa
Gryphus the only worldly goods which remain to me of all that I have
possessed in this world, the rest having been confiscated; I bequeath, I say,
to Rosa Gryphus three bulbs, which I am convinced must produce, in the
next May, the Grand Black Tulip for which a prize of a hundred thousand
121
guilders has been offered by the Haarlem Society, requesting that she may
be paid the same sum in my stead, as my sole heiress, under the only
condition of her marrying a respectable young man of about my age, who
loves her, and whom she loves, and of her giving the black tulip, which will
constitute a new species, the name of Rosa Barlaensis, that is to say, hers
and mine combined.
"So may God grant me mercy, and to her health and long life!
"Cornelius van Baerle."
The prisoner then, giving the Bible to Rosa, said, --
"Read."
"Alas!" she answered, "I have already told you I cannot read."
Cornelius then read to Rosa the testament that he had just made.
The agony of the poor girl almost overpowered her.
"Do you accept my conditions?" asked the prisoner, with a melancholy
smile, kissing the trembling hands of the afflicted girl.
"Oh, I don't know, sir," she stammered.
"You don't know, child, and why not?"
"Because there is one condition which I am afraid I cannot keep."
122
"Which? I should have thought that all was settled between us."
"You give me the hundred thousand guilders as a marriage portion, don't
you?
"And under the condition of my marrying a man whom I love?"
"Certainly."
"Well, then, sir, this money cannot belong to me. I shall never love any one;
neither shall I marry."
And, after having with difficulty uttered these words, Rosa almost swooned
away in the violence of her grief.
Cornelius, frightened at seeing her so pale and sinking, was going to take
her in his arms, when a heavy step, followed by other dismal sounds, was
heard on the staircase, amidst the continued barking of the dog.
"They are coming to fetch you. Oh God! Oh God!" cried Rosa, wringing her
hands. "And have you nothing more to tell me?"
She fell on her knees with her face buried in her hands and became almost
senseless.
"I have only to say, that I wish you to preserve these bulbs as a most
precious treasure, and carefully to treat them according to the directions I
have given you. Do it for my sake, and now farewell, Rosa."
123
"Yes, yes," she said, without raising her head, "I will do anything you bid me,
except marrying," she added, in a low voice, "for that, oh! that is impossible
for me."
She then put the cherished treasure next her beating heart.
The noise on the staircase which Cornelius and Rosa had heard was caused
by the Recorder, who was coming for the prisoner. He was followed by the
executioner, by the soldiers who were to form the guard round the scaffold,
and by some curious hangers-on of the prison.
Cornelius, without showing any weakness, but likewise without any
bravado, received them rather as friends than as persecutors, and quietly
submitted to all those preparations which these men were obliged to make
in performance of their duty.
Then, casting a glance into the yard through the narrow iron-barred window
of his cell, he perceived the scaffold, and, at twenty paces distant from it, the
gibbet, from which, by order of the Stadtholder, the outraged remains of the
two brothers De Witt had been taken down.
When the moment came to descend in order to follow the guards, Cornelius
sought with his eyes the angelic look of Rosa, but he saw, behind the swords
and halberds, only a form lying outstretched near a wooden bench, and a
deathlike face half covered with long golden locks.
But Rosa, whilst falling down senseless, still obeying her friend, had pressed
her hand on her velvet bodice and, forgetting everything in the world
besides, instinctively grasped the precious deposit which Cornelius had
intrusted to her care.
Leaving the cell, the young man could still see in the convulsively clinched
fingers of Rosa the yellowish leaf from that Bible on which Cornelius de Witt
had with such difficulty and pain written these few lines, which, if Van
124
Baerle had read them, would undoubtedly have been the saving of a man
and a tulip.
125
Chapter 12
The Execution
Cornelius had not three hundred paces to walk outside the prison to reach
the foot of the scaffold. At the bottom of the staircase, the dog quietly looked
at him whilst he was passing; Cornelius even fancied he saw in the eyes of
the monster a certain expression as it were of compassion.
The dog perhaps knew the condemned prisoners, and only bit those who left
as free men.
The shorter the way from the door of the prison to the foot of the scaffold,
the more fully, of course, it was crowded with curious people.
These were the same who, not satisfied with the blood which they had shed
three days before, were now craving for a new victim.
And scarcely had Cornelius made his appearance than a fierce groan ran
through the whole street, spreading all over the yard, and re-echoing from
the streets which led to the scaffold, and which were likewise crowded with
spectators.
The scaffold indeed looked like an islet at the confluence of several rivers.
In the midst of these threats, groans, and yells, Cornelius, very likely in
order not to hear them, had buried himself in his own thoughts.
And what did he think of in his last melancholy journey?
126
Neither of his enemies, nor of his judges, nor of his executioners.
He thought of the beautiful tulips which he would see from heaven above, at
Ceylon, or Bengal, or elsewhere, when he would be able to look with pity on
this earth, where John and Cornelius de Witt had been murdered for having
thought too much of politics, and where Cornelius van Baerle was about to
be murdered for having thought too much of tulips.
"It is only one stroke of the axe," said the philosopher to himself, "and my
beautiful dream will begin to be realised."
Only there was still a chance, just as it had happened before to M. de
Chalais, to M. de Thou, and other slovenly executed people, that the
headsman might inflict more than one stroke, that is to say, more than one
martyrdom, on the poor tulip-fancier.
Yet, notwithstanding all this, Van Baerle mounted the scaffold not the less
resolutely, proud of having been the friend of that illustrious John, and
godson of that noble Cornelius de Witt, whom the ruffians, who were now
crowding to witness his own doom, had torn to pieces and burnt three days
before.
He knelt down, said his prayers, and observed, not without a feeling of
sincere joy, that, laying his head on the block, and keeping his eyes open, he
would be able to his last moment to see the grated window of the Buytenhof.
At length the fatal moment arrived, and Cornelius placed his chin on the
cold damp block. But at this moment his eyes closed involuntarily, to receive
more resolutely the terrible avalanche which was about to fall on his head,
and to engulf his life.
A gleam like that of lightning passed across the scaffold: it was the
executioner raising his sword.
127
Van Baerle bade farewell to the great black tulip, certain of awaking in
another world full of light and glorious tints.
Three times he felt, with a shudder, the cold current of air from the knife
near his neck, but what a surprise! he felt neither pain nor shock.
He saw no change in the colour of the sky, or of the world around him.
Then suddenly Van Baerle felt gentle hands raising him, and soon stood on
his feet again, although trembling a little.
He looked around him. There was some one by his side, reading a large
parchment, sealed with a huge seal of red wax.
And the same sun, yellow and pale, as it behooves a Dutch sun to be, was
shining in the skies; and the same grated window looked down upon him
from the Buytenhof; and the same rabble, no longer yelling, but completely
thunderstruck, were staring at him from the streets below.
Van Baerle began to be sensible to what was going on around him.
His Highness, William, Prince of Orange, very likely afraid that Van Baerle's
blood would turn the scale of judgment against him, had compassionately
taken into consideration his good character, and the apparent proofs of his
innocence.
His Highness, accordingly, had granted him his life.
Cornelius at first hoped that the pardon would be complete, and that he
would be restored to his full liberty and to his flower borders at Dort.
128
But Cornelius was mistaken. To use an expression of Madame de Sevigne,
who wrote about the same time, "there was a postscript to the letter;" and
the most important part of the letter was contained in the postscript.
In this postscript, William of Orange, Stadtholder of Holland, condemned
Cornelius van Baerle to imprisonment for life. He was not sufficiently guilty
to suffer death, but he was too much so to be set at liberty.
Cornelius heard this clause, but, the first feeling of vexation and
disappointment over, he said to himself, --
"Never mind, all this is not lost yet; there is some good in this perpetual
imprisonment; Rosa will be there, and also my three bulbs of the black tulip
are there."
But Cornelius forgot that the Seven Provinces had seven prisons, one for
each, and that the board of the prisoner is anywhere else less expensive
than at the Hague, which is a capital.
His Highness, who, as it seems, did not possess the means to feed Van
Baerle at the Hague, sent him to undergo his perpetual imprisonment at the
fortress of Loewestein, very near Dort, but, alas! also very far from it; for
Loewestein, as the geographers tell us, is situated at the point of the islet
which is formed by the confluence of the Waal and the Meuse, opposite
Gorcum.
Van Baerle was sufficiently versed in the history of his country to know that
the celebrated Grotius was confined in that castle after the death of
Barneveldt; and that the States, in their generosity to the illustrious
publicist, jurist, historian, poet, and divine, had granted to him for his daily
maintenance the sum of twenty-four stivers.
129
"I," said Van Baerle to himself, "I am worth much less than Grotius. They
will hardly give me twelve stivers, and I shall live miserably; but never mind,
at all events I shall live."
Then suddenly a terrible thought struck him.
"Ah!" he exclaimed, "how damp and misty that part of the country is, and
the soil so bad for the tulips! And then Rosa will not be at Loewestein!.
130
Chapter 13
What was going on all this Time in the Mind of one of the Spectators
Whilst Cornelius was engaged with his own thoughts, a coach had driven up
to the scaffold. This vehicle was for the prisoner. He was invited to enter it,
and he obeyed.
His last look was towards the Buytenhof. He hoped to see at the window the
face of Rosa, brightening up again.
But the coach was drawn by good horses, who soon carried Van Baerle away
from among the shouts which the rabble roared in honour of the most
magnanimous Stadtholder, mixing with it a spice of abuse against the
brothers De Witt and the godson of Cornelius, who had just now been saved
from death.
This reprieve suggested to the worthy spectators remarks such as the
following: --
"It's very fortunate that we used such speed in having justice done to that
great villain John, and to that little rogue Cornelius, otherwise his Highness
might have snatched them from us, just as he has done this fellow."
Among all the spectators whom Van Baerle's execution had attracted to the
Buytenhof, and whom the sudden turn of affairs had disagreeably surprised,
undoubtedly the one most disappointed was a certain respectably dressed
burgher, who from early morning had made such a good use of his feet and
elbows that he at last was separated from the scaffold only by the file of
soldiers which surrounded it.
131
Many had shown themselves eager to see the perfidious blood of the guilty
Cornelius flow, but not one had shown such a keen anxiety as the individual
just alluded to.
The most furious had come to the Buytenhof at daybreak, to secure a better
place; but he, outdoing even them, had passed the night at the threshold of
the prison, from whence, as we have already said, he had advanced to the
very foremost rank, unguibus et rostro, -- that is to say, coaxing some, and
kicking the others.
And when the executioner had conducted the prisoner to the scaffold, the
burgher, who had mounted on the stone of the pump the better to see and
be seen, made to the executioner a sign which meant, --
"It's a bargain, isn't it?"
The executioner answered by another sign, which was meant to say, --
"Be quiet, it's all right."
This burgher was no other than Mynheer Isaac Boxtel, who since the arrest
of Cornelius had come to the Hague to try if he could not get hold of the
three bulbs of the black tulip.
Boxtel had at first tried to gain over Gryphus to his interest, but the jailer
had not only the snarling fierceness, but likewise the fidelity, of a dog. He
had therefore bristled up at Boxtel's hatred, whom he had suspected to be a
warm friend of the prisoner, making trifling inquiries to contrive with the
more certainty some means of escape for him.
Thus to the very first proposals which Boxtel made to Gryphus to filch the
bulbs which Cornelius van Baerle must be supposed to conceal, if not in his
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breast, at least in some corner of his cell, the surly jailer had only answered
by kicking Mynheer Isaac out, and setting the dog at him.
The piece which the mastiff had torn from his hose did not discourage
Boxtel. He came back to the charge, but this time Gryphus was in bed,
feverish, and with a broken arm. He therefore was not able to admit the
petitioner, who then addressed himself to Rosa, offering to buy her a head-
dress of pure gold if she would get the bulbs for him. On this, the generous
girl, although not yet knowing the value of the object of the robbery, which
was to be so well remunerated, had directed the tempter to the executioner,
as the heir of the prisoner.
In the meanwhile the sentence had been pronounced. Thus Isaac had no
more time to bribe any one. He therefore clung to the idea which Rosa had
suggested: he went to the executioner.
Isaac had not the least doubt that Cornelius would die with the bulbs on his
heart.
But there were two things which Boxtel did not calculate upon: --
Rosa, that is to say, love;
William of Orange, that is to say, clemency.
But for Rosa and William, the calculations of the envious neighbour would
have been correct.
But for William, Cornelius would have died.
But for Rosa, Cornelius would have died with his bulbs on his heart.
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Mynheer Boxtel went to the headsman, to whom he gave himself out as a
great friend of the condemned man; and from whom he bought all the
clothes of the dead man that was to be, for one hundred guilders; rather an
exorbitant sum, as he engaged to leave all the trinkets of gold and silver to
the executioner.
But what was the sum of a hundred guilders to a man who was all but sure
to buy with it the prize of the Haarlem Society?
It was money lent at a thousand per cent., which, as nobody will deny, was
a very handsome investment.
The headsman, on the other hand, had scarcely anything to do to earn his
hundred guilders. He needed only, as soon as the execution was over, to
allow Mynheer Boxtel to ascend the scaffold with his servants, to remove the
inanimate remains of his friend.
The thing was, moreover, quite customary among the "faithful brethren,"
when one of their masters died a public death in the yard of the Buytenhof.
A fanatic like Cornelius might very easily have found another fanatic who
would give a hundred guilders for his remains.
The executioner also readily acquiesced in the proposal, making only one
condition, -- that of being paid in advance.
Boxtel, like the people who enter a show at a fair, might be disappointed,
and refuse to pay on going out.
Boxtel paid in advance, and waited.
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After this, the reader may imagine how excited Boxtel was; with what
anxiety he watched the guards, the Recorder, and the executioner; and with
what intense interest he surveyed the movements of Van Baerle. How would
he place himself on the block? how would he fall? and would he not, in
falling, crush those inestimable bulbs? had not he at least taken care to
enclose them in a golden box, -- as gold is the hardest of all metals?
Every trifling delay irritated him. Why did that stupid executioner thus lose
time in brandishing his sword over the head of Cornelius, instead of cutting
that head off?
But when he saw the Recorder take the hand of the condemned, and raise
him, whilst drawing forth the parchment from his pocket, -- when he heard
the pardon of the Stadtholder publicly read out, -- then Boxtel was no more
like a human being; the rage and malice of the tiger, of the hyena, and of the
serpent glistened in his eyes, and vented itself in his yell and his
movements. Had he been able to get at Van Baerle, he would have pounced
upon him and strangled him.
And so, then, Cornelius was to live, and was to go with him to Loewestein,
and thither to his prison he would take with him his bulbs; and perhaps he
would even find a garden where the black tulip would flower for him.
Boxtel, quite overcome by his frenzy, fell from the stone upon some
Orangemen, who, like him, were sorely vexed at the turn which affairs had
taken. They, mistaking the frantic cries of Mynheer Isaac for demonstrations
of joy, began to belabour him with kicks and cuffs, such as could not have
been administered in better style by any prize-fighter on the other side of the
Channel.
Blows were, however, nothing to him. He wanted to run after the coach
which was carrying away Cornelius with his bulbs. But in his hurry he
overlooked a paving-stone in his way, stumbled, lost his centre of gravity,
rolled over to a distance of some yards, and only rose again, bruised and
begrimed, after the whole rabble of the Hague, with their muddy feet, had
passed over him.
135
One would think that this was enough for one day, but Mynheer Boxtel did
not seem to think so, as, in addition to having his clothes torn, his back
bruised, and his hands scratched, he inflicted upon himself the further
punishment of tearing out his hair by handfuls, as an offering to that
goddess of envy who, as mythology teaches us, wears a head-dress of
serpents.
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Chapter 14
The Pigeons of Dort
It was indeed in itself a great honour for Cornelius van Baerle to be confined
in the same prison which had once received the learned master Grotius.
But on arriving at the prison he met with an honour even greater. As chance
would have it, the cell formerly inhabited by the illustrious Barneveldt
happened to be vacant, when the clemency of the Prince of Orange sent the
tulip-fancier Van Baerle there.
The cell had a very bad character at the castle since the time when Grotius,
by means of the device of his wife, made escape from it in that famous book-
chest which the jailers forgot to examine.
On the other hand, it seemed to Van Baerle an auspicious omen that this
very cell was assigned to him, for according to his ideas, a jailer ought never
to have given to a second pigeon the cage from which the first had so easily
flown.
The cell had an historical character. We will only state here that, with the
exception of an alcove which was contrived there for the use of Madame
Grotius, it differed in no respect from the other cells of the prison; only,
perhaps, it was a little higher, and had a splendid view from the grated
window.
Cornelius felt himself perfectly indifferent as to the place where he had to
lead an existence which was little more than vegetation. There were only two
things now for which he cared, and the possession of which was a
happiness enjoyed only in imagination.
A flower, and a woman; both of them, as he conceived, lost to him for ever.
137
Fortunately the good doctor was mistaken. In his prison cell the most
adventurous life which ever fell to the lot of any tulip-fancier was reserved
for him.
One morning, whilst at his window inhaling the fresh air which came from
the river, and casting a longing look to the windmills of his dear old city
Dort, which were looming in the distance behind a forest of chimneys, he
saw flocks of pigeons coming from that quarter to perch fluttering on the
pointed gables of Loewestein.
These pigeons, Van Baerle said to himself, are coming from Dort, and
consequently may return there. By fastening a little note to the wing of one
of these pigeons, one might have a chance to send a message there. Then,
after a few moments' consideration, he exclaimed, --
"I will do it."
A man grows very patient who is twenty-eight years of age, and condemned
to a prison for life, -- that is to say, to something like twenty-two or twenty-
three thousand days of captivity.
Van Baerle, from whose thoughts the three bulbs were never absent, made a
snare for catching the pigeons, baiting the birds with all the resources of his
kitchen, such as it was for eight slivers (sixpence English) a day; and, after a
month of unsuccessful attempts, he at last caught a female bird.
It cost him two more months to catch a male bird; he then shut them up
together, and having about the beginning of the year 1673 obtained some
eggs from them, he released the female, which, leaving the male behind to
hatch the eggs in her stead, flew joyously to Dort, with the note under her
wing.
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She returned in the evening. She had preserved the note.
Thus it went on for fifteen days, at first to the disappointment, and then to
the great grief, of Van Baerle.
On the sixteenth day, at last, she came back without it.
Van Baerle had addressed it to his nurse, the old Frisian woman; and
implored any charitable soul who might find it to convey it to her as safely
and as speedily as possible.
In this letter there was a little note enclosed for Rosa.
Van Baerle's nurse had received the letter in the following way.
Leaving Dort, Mynheer Isaac Boxtel had abandoned, not only his house, his
servants, his observatory, and his telescope, but also his pigeons.
The servant, having been left without wages, first lived on his little savings,
and then on his master's pigeons.
Seeing this, the pigeons emigrated from the roof of Isaac Boxtel to that of
Cornelius van Baerle.
The nurse was a kind-hearted woman, who could not live without something
to love. She conceived an affection for the pigeons which had thrown
themselves on her hospitality; and when Boxtel's servant reclaimed them
with culinary intentions, having eaten the first fifteen already, and now
wishing to eat the other fifteen, she offered to buy them from him for a
consideration of six stivers per head.
139
This being just double their value, the man was very glad to close the
bargain, and the nurse found herself in undisputed possession of the
pigeons of her master's envious neighbour.
In the course of their wanderings, these pigeons with others visited the
Hague, Loewestein, and Rotterdam, seeking variety, doubtless, in the flavour
of their wheat or hempseed.
Chance, or rather God, for we can see the hand of God in everything, had
willed that Cornelius van Baerle should happen to hit upon one of these very
pigeons.
Therefore, if the envious wretch had not left Dort to follow his rival to the
Hague in the first place, and then to Gorcum or to Loewestein, -- for the two
places are separated only by the confluence of the Waal and the Meuse, --
Van Baerle's letter would have fallen into his hands and not the nurse's: in
which event the poor prisoner, like the raven of the Roman cobbler, would
have thrown away his time, his trouble, and, instead of having to relate the
series of exciting events which are about to flow from beneath our pen like
the varied hues of a many coloured tapestry, we should have naught to
describe but a weary waste of days, dull and melancholy and gloomy as
night's dark mantle.
The note, as we have said, had reached Van Baerle's nurse.
And also it came to pass, that one evening in the beginning of February, just
when the stars were beginning to twinkle, Cornelius heard on the staircase
of the little turret a voice which thrilled through him.
He put his hand on his heart, and listened.
It was the sweet harmonious voice of Rosa.
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Let us confess it, Cornelius was not so stupefied with surprise, or so beyond
himself with joy, as he would have been but for the pigeon, which, in answer
to his letter, had brought back hope to him under her empty wing; and,
knowing Rosa, he expected, if the note had ever reached her, to hear of her
whom he loved, and also of his three darling bulbs.
He rose, listened once more, and bent forward towards the door.
Yes, they were indeed the accents which had fallen so sweetly on his heart
at the Hague.
The question now was, whether Rosa, who had made the journey from the
Hague to Loewestein, and who -- Cornelius did not understand how -- had
succeeded even in penetrating into the prison, would also be fortunate
enough in penetrating to the prisoner himself.
Whilst Cornelius, debating this point within himself, was building all sorts
of castles in the air, and was struggling between hope and fear, the shutter
of the grating in the door opened, and Rosa, beaming with joy, and beautiful
in her pretty national costume -- but still more beautiful from the grief
which for the last five months had blanched her cheeks -- pressed her little
face against the wire grating of the window, saying to him, --
"Oh, sir, sir! here I am!"
Cornelius stretched out his arms, and, looking to heaven, uttered a cry of
joy, --
"Oh, Rosa, Rosa!"
"Hush! let us speak low: my father follows on my heels," said the girl.
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"Your father?"
"Yes, he is in the courtyard at the bottom of the staircase, receiving the
instructions of the Governor; he will presently come up."
"The instructions of the Governor?"
"Listen to me, I'll try to tell you all in a few words. The Stadtholder has a
country-house, one league distant from Leyden, properly speaking a kind of
large dairy, and my aunt, who was his nurse, has the management of it. As
soon as I received your letter, which, alas! I could not read myself, but
which your housekeeper read to me, I hastened to my aunt; there I
remained until the Prince should come to the dairy; and when he came, I
asked him as a favour to allow my father to exchange his post at the prison
of the Hague with the jailer of the fortress of Loewestein. The Prince could
not have suspected my object; had he known it, he would have refused my
request, but as it is he granted it."
"And so you are here?"
"As you see."
"And thus I shall see you every day?"
"As often as I can manage it."
"Oh, Rosa, my beautiful Rosa, do you love me a little?"
"A little?" she said, "you make no great pretensions, Mynheer Cornelius."
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Cornelius tenderly stretched out his hands towards her, but they were only
able to touch each other with the tips of their fingers through the wire
grating.
"Here is my father," said she.
Rosa then abruptly drew back from the door, and ran to meet old Gryphus,
who made his appearance at the top of the staircase.
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Chapter 15
The Little Grated Window
Gryphus was followed by the mastiff.
The turnkey took the animal round the jail, so that, if needs be, he might
recognize the prisoners.
"Father," said Rosa, "here is the famous prison from which Mynheer Grotius
escaped. You know Mynheer Grotius?"
"Oh, yes, that rogue Grotius, a friend of that villain Barneveldt, whom I saw
executed when I was a child. Ah! so Grotius; and that's the chamber from
which he escaped. Well, I'll answer for it that no one shall escape after him
in my time."
And thus opening the door, he began in the dark to talk to the prisoner.
The dog, on his part, went up to the prisoner, and, growling, smelled about
his legs just as though to ask him what right he had still to be alive, after
having left the prison in the company of the Recorder and the executioner.
But the fair Rosa called him to her side.
"Well, my master," said Gryphus, holding up his lantern to throw a little
light around, "you see in me your new jailer. I am head turnkey, and have
all the cells under my care. I am not vicious, but I'm not to be trifled with, as
far as discipline goes."
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"My good Master Gryphus, I know you perfectly well," said the prisoner,
approaching within the circle of light cast around by the lantern.
"Halloa! that's you, Mynheer van Baerle," said Gryphus. "That's you; well, I
declare, it's astonishing how people do meet."
"Oh, yes; and it's really a great pleasure to me, good Master Gryphus, to see
that your arm is doing well, as you are able to hold your lantern with it."
Gryphus knitted his brow. "Now, that's just it," he said, "people always make
blunders in politics. His Highness has granted you your life; I'm sure I
should never have done so."
"Don't say so," replied Cornelius; "why not?"
"Because you are the very man to conspire again. You learned people have
dealings with the devil."
"Nonsense, Master Gryphus. Are you dissatisfied with the manner in which I
have set your arm, or with the price that I asked you?" said Cornelius,
laughing.
"On the contrary," growled the jailer, "you have set it only too well. There is
some witchcraft in this. After six weeks, I was able to use it as if nothing had
happened, so much so, that the doctor of the Buytenhof, who knows his
trade well, wanted to break it again, to set it in the regular way, and
promised me that I should have my blessed three months for my money
before I should be able to move it."
"And you did not want that?"
145
"I said, 'Nay, as long as I can make the sign of the cross with that arm'
(Gryphus was a Roman Catholic), 'I laugh at the devil.'"
"But if you laugh at the devil, Master Gryphus, you ought with so much
more reason to laugh at learned people."
"Ah, learned people, learned people! Why, I would rather have to guard ten
soldiers than one scholar. The soldiers smoke, guzzle, and get drunk; they
are gentle as lambs if you only give them brandy or Moselle, but scholars,
and drink, smoke, and fuddle -- ah, yes, that's altogether different. They
keep sober, spend nothing, and have their heads always clear to make
conspiracies. But I tell you, at the very outset, it won't be such an easy
matter for you to conspire. First of all, you will have no books, no paper, and
no conjuring book. It's books that helped Mynheer Grotius to get off."
"I assure you, Master Gryphus," replied Van Baerle, "that if I have
entertained the idea of escaping, I most decidedly have it no longer."
"Well, well," said Gryphus, "just look sharp: that's what I shall do also. But,
for all that, I say his Highness has made a great mistake."
"Not to have cut off my head? thank you, Master Gryphus."
"Just so, look whether the Mynheer de Witt don't keep very quiet now."
"That's very shocking what you say now, Master Gryphus," cried Van Baerle,
turning away his head to conceal his disgust. "You forget that one of those
unfortunate gentlemen was my friend, and the other my second father."
"Yes, but I also remember that the one, as well as the other, was a
conspirator. And, moreover, I am speaking from Christian charity."
146
"Oh, indeed! explain that a little to me, my good Master Gryphus. I do not
quite understand it."
"Well, then, if you had remained on the block of Master Harbruck ---- "
"What?"
"You would not suffer any longer; whereas, I will not disguise it from you, I
shall lead you a sad life of it."
"Thank you for the promise, Master Gryphus."
And whilst the prisoner smiled ironically at the old jailer, Rosa, from the
outside, answered by a bright smile, which carried sweet consolation to the
heart of Van Baerle.
Gryphus stepped towards the window.
It was still light enough to see, although indistinctly, through the gray haze
of the evening, the vast expanse of the horizon.
"What view has one from here?" asked Gryphus.
"Why, a very fine and pleasant one," said Cornelius, looking at Rosa.
"Yes, yes, too much of a view, too much."
147
And at this moment the two pigeons, scared by the sight and especially by
the voice of the stranger, left their nest, and disappeared, quite frightened in
the evening mist.
"Halloa! what's this?" cried Gryphus.
"My pigeons," answered Cornelius.
"Your pigeons," cried the jailer, "your pigeons! has a prisoner anything of his
own?"
"Why, then," said Cornelius, "the pigeons which a merciful Father in Heaven
has lent to me."
"So, here we have a breach of the rules already," replied Gryphus. "Pigeons!
ah, young man, young man! I'll tell you one thing, that before to-morrow is
over, your pigeons will boil in my pot."
"First of all you should catch them, Master Gryphus. You won't allow these
pigeons to be mine! Well, I vow they are even less yours than mine."
"Omittance is no acquittance," growled the jailer, "and I shall certainly wring
their necks before twenty-four hours are over: you may be sure of that."
Whilst giving utterance to this ill-natured promise, Gryphus put his head
out of the window to examine the nest. This gave Van Baerle time to run to
the door, and squeeze the hand of Rosa, who whispered to him, --
"At nine o'clock this evening."
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Gryphus, quite taken up with the desire of catching the pigeons next day, as
he had promised he would do, saw and heard nothing of this short
interlude; and, after having closed the window, he took the arm of his
daughter, left the cell, turned the key twice, drew the bolts, and went off to
make the same kind promise to the other prisoners.
He had scarcely withdrawn, when Cornelius went to the door to listen to the
sound of his footsteps, and, as soon as they had died away, he ran to the
window, and completely demolished the nest of the pigeons.
Rather than expose them to the tender mercies of his bullying jailer, he
drove away for ever those gentle messengers to whom he owed the
happiness of having seen Rosa again.
This visit of the jailer, his brutal threats, and the gloomy prospect of the
harshness with which, as he had before experienced, Gryphus watched his
prisoners, -- all this was unable to extinguish in Cornelius the sweet
thoughts, and especially the sweet hope, which the presence of Rosa had
reawakened in his heart.
He waited eagerly to hear the clock of the tower of Loewestein strike nine.
The last chime was still vibrating through the air, when Cornelius heard on
the staircase the light step and the rustle of the flowing dress of the fair
Frisian maid, and soon after a light appeared at the little grated window in
the door, on which the prisoner fixed his earnest gaze.
The shutter opened on the outside.
"Here I am," said Rosa, out of breath from running up the stairs, "here I
am."
"Oh, my good Rosa."
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"You are then glad to see me?"
"Can you ask? But how did you contrive to get here? tell me."
"Now listen to me. My father falls asleep every evening almost immediately
after his supper; I then make him lie down, a little stupefied with his gin.
Don't say anything about it, because, thanks to this nap, I shall be able to
come every evening and chat for an hour with you."
"Oh, I thank you, Rosa, dear Rosa."
Saying these words, Cornelius put his face so near the little window that
Rosa withdrew hers.
"I have brought back to you your bulbs."
Cornelius's heart leaped with joy. He had not yet dared to ask Rosa what
she had done with the precious treasure which he had intrusted to her.
"Oh, you have preserved them, then?"
"Did you not give them to me as a thing which was dear to you?"
"Yes, but as I have given them to you, it seems to me that they belong to
you."
"They would have belonged to me after your death, but, fortunately, you are
alive now. Oh how I blessed his Highness in my heart! If God grants to him
all the happiness that I have wished him, certainly Prince William will be the
150
happiest man on earth. When I looked at the Bible of your godfather
Cornelius, I was resolved to bring back to you your bulbs, only I did not
know how to accomplish it. I had, however, already formed the plan of going
to the Stadtholder, to ask from him for my father the appointment of jailer of
Loewestein, when your housekeeper brought me your letter. Oh, how we
wept together! But your letter only confirmed me the more in my resolution.
I then left for Leyden, and the rest you know."
"What, my dear Rosa, you thought, even before receiving my letter, of
coming to meet me again?"
"If I thought of it," said Rosa, allowing her love to get the better of her
bashfulness, "I thought of nothing else."
And, saying these words, Rosa looked so exceedingly pretty, that for the
second time Cornelius placed his forehead and lips against the wire grating;
of course, we must presume with the laudable desire to thank the young
lady.
Rosa, however, drew back as before.
"In truth," she said, with that coquetry which somehow or other is in the
heart of every young girl, "I have often been sorry that I am not able to read,
but never so much so as when your housekeeper brought me your letter. I
kept the paper in my hands, which spoke to other people, and which was
dumb to poor stupid me."
"So you have often regretted not being able to read," said Cornelius. "I
should just like to know on what occasions."
"Troth," she said, laughing, "to read all the letters which were written to me."
"Oh, you received letters, Rosa?"
151
"By hundreds."
"But who wrote to you?"
"Who! why, in the first place, all the students who passed over the
Buytenhof, all the officers who went to parade, all the clerks, and even the
merchants who saw me at my little window."
"And what did you do with all these notes, my dear Rosa?"
"Formerly," she answered, "I got some friend to read them to me, which was
capital fun, but since a certain time -- well, what use is it to attend to all
this nonsense? -- since a certain time I have burnt them."
"Since a certain time!" exclaimed Cornelius, with a look beaming with love
and joy.
Rosa cast down her eyes, blushing. In her sweet confusion, she did not
observe the lips of Cornelius, which, alas! only met the cold wire-grating.
Yet, in spite of this obstacle, they communicated to the lips of the young girl
the glowing breath of the most tender kiss.
At this sudden outburst of tenderness, Rosa grew very pale, -- perhaps paler
than she had been on the day of the execution. She uttered a plaintive sob,
closed her fine eyes, and fled, trying in vain to still the beating of her heart.
And thus Cornelius was again alone.
Rosa had fled so precipitately, that she completely forgot to return to
Cornelius the three bulbs of the Black Tulip.
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Chapter 16
Master and Pupil
The worthy Master Gryphus, as the reader may have seen, was far from
sharing the kindly feeling of his daughter for the godson of Cornelius de
Witt.
There being only five prisoners at Loewestein, the post of turnkey was not a
very onerous one, but rather a sort of sinecure, given after a long period of
service.
But the worthy jailer, in his zeal, had magnified with all the power of his
imagination the importance of his office. To him Cornelius had swelled to
the gigantic proportions of a criminal of the first order. He looked upon him,
therefore, as the most dangerous of all his prisoners. He watched all his
steps, and always spoke to him with an angry countenance; punishing him
for what he called his dreadful rebellion against such a clement prince as
the Stadtholder.
Three times a day he entered Van Baerle's cell, expecting to find him
trespassing; but Cornelius had ceased to correspond, since his
correspondent was at hand. It is even probable that, if Cornelius had
obtained his full liberty, with permission to go wherever he liked, the prison,
with Rosa and his bulbs, would have appeared to him preferable to any
other habitation in the world without Rosa and his bulbs.
Rosa, in fact, had promised to come and see him every evening, and from
the first evening she had kept her word.
On the following evening she went up as before, with the same
mysteriousness and the same precaution. Only she had this time resolved
within herself not to approach too near the grating. In order, however, to
engage Van Baerle in a conversation from the very first which would
153
seriously occupy his attention, she tendered to him through the grating the
three bulbs, which were still wrapped up in the same paper.
But to the great astonishment of Rosa, Van Baerle pushed back her white
hand with the tips of his fingers.
The young man had been considering about the matter.
"Listen to me," he said. "I think we should risk too much by embarking our
whole fortune in one ship. Only think, my dear Rosa, that the question is to
carry out an enterprise which until now has been considered impossible,
namely, that of making the great black tulip flower. Let us, therefore, take
every possible precaution, so that in case of a failure we may not have
anything to reproach ourselves with. I will now tell you the way I have traced
out for us."
Rosa was all attention to what he would say, much more on account of the
importance which the unfortunate tulip-fancier attached to it, than that she
felt interested in the matter herself.
"I will explain to you, Rosa," he said. "I dare say you have in this fortress a
small garden, or some courtyard, or, if not that, at least some terrace."
"We have a very fine garden," said Rosa, "it runs along the edge of the Waal,
and is full of fine old trees."
"Could you bring me some soil from the garden, that I may judge?"
"I will do so to-morrow."
"Take some from a sunny spot, and some from a shady, so that I may judge
of its properties in a dry and in a moist state."
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"Be assured I shall."
"After having chosen the soil, and, if it be necessary, modified it, we will
divide our three bulbs; you will take one and plant it, on the day that I will
tell you, in the soil chosen by me. It is sure to flower, if you tend it according
to my directions."
"I will not lose sight of it for a minute."
"You will give me another, which I will try to grow here in my cell, and which
will help me to beguile those long weary hours when I cannot see you. I
confess to you I have very little hope for the latter one, and I look beforehand
on this unfortunate bulb as sacrificed to my selfishness. However, the sun
sometimes visits me. I will, besides, try to convert everything into an
artificial help, even the heat and the ashes of my pipe, and lastly, we, or
rather you, will keep in reserve the third sucker as our last resource, in case
our first two experiments should prove a failure. In this manner, my dear
Rosa, it is impossible that we should not succeed in gaining the hundred
thousand guilders for your marriage portion; and how dearly shall we enjoy
that supreme happiness of seeing our work brought to a successful issue!"
"I know it all now," said Rosa. "I will bring you the soil to-morrow, and you
will choose it for your bulb and for mine. As to that in which yours is to
grow, I shall have several journeys to convey it to you, as I cannot bring
much at a time."
"There is no hurry for it, dear Rosa; our tulips need not be put into the
ground for a month at least. So you see we have plenty of time before us.
Only I hope that, in planting your bulb, you will strictly follow all my
instructions."
"I promise you I will."
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"And when you have once planted it, you will communicate to me all the
circumstances which may interest our nursling; such as change of weather,
footprints on the walks, or footprints in the borders. You will listen at night
whether our garden is not resorted to by cats. A couple of those untoward
animals laid waste two of my borders at Dort."
"I will listen."
"On moonlight nights have you ever looked at your garden, my dear child?"
"The window of my sleeping-room overlooks it."
"Well, on moonlight nights you will observe whether any rats come out from
the holes in the wall. The rats are most mischievous by their gnawing
everything; and I have heard unfortunate tulip-growers complain most
bitterly of Noah for having put a couple of rats in the ark."
"I will observe, and if there are cats or rats ---- "
"You will apprise me of it, -- that's right. And, moreover," Van Baerle, having
become mistrustful in his captivity, continued, "there is an animal much
more to be feared than even the cat or the rat."
"What animal?"
"Man. You comprehend, my dear Rosa, a man may steal a guilder, and risk
the prison for such a trifle, and, consequently, it is much more likely that
some one might steal a hundred thousand guilders."
"No one ever enters the garden but myself."
156
"Thank you, thank you, my dear Rosa. All the joy of my life has still to come
from you."
And as the lips of Van Baerle approached the grating with the same ardor as
the day before, and as, moreover, the hour for retiring had struck, Rosa
drew back her head, and stretched out her hand.
In this pretty little hand, of which the coquettish damsel was particularly
proud, was the bulb.
Cornelius kissed most tenderly the tips of her fingers. Did he do so because
the hand kept one of the bulbs of the great black tulip, or because this hand
was Rosa's? We shall leave this point to the decision of wiser heads than
ours.
Rosa withdrew with the other two suckers, pressing them to her heart.
Did she press them to her heart because they were the bulbs of the great
black tulip, or because she had them from Cornelius?
This point, we believe, might be more readily decided than the other.
However that may have been, from that moment life became sweet, and
again full of interest to the prisoner.
Rosa, as we have seen, had returned to him one of the suckers.
Every evening she brought to him, handful by handful, a quantity of soil
from that part of the garden which he had found to be the best, and which,
indeed, was excellent.
157
A large jug, which Cornelius had skilfully broken, did service as a flower-
pot. He half filled it, and mixed the earth of the garden with a small portion
of dried river mud, a mixture which formed an excellent soil.
Then, at the beginning of April, he planted his first sucker in that jug.
Not a day passed on which Rosa did not come to have her chat with
Cornelius.
The tulips, concerning whose cultivation Rosa was taught all the mysteries
of the art, formed the principal topic of the conversation; but, interesting as
the subject was, people cannot always talk about tulips.
They therefore began to chat also about other things, and the tulip-fancier
found out to his great astonishment what a vast range of subjects a
conversation may comprise.
Only Rosa had made it a habit to keep her pretty face invariably six inches
distant from the grating, having perhaps become distrustful of herself.
There was one thing especially which gave Cornelius almost as much
anxiety as his bulbs -- a subject to which he always returned -- the
dependence of Rosa on her father.
Indeed, Van Baerle's happiness depended on the whim of this man. He
might one day find Loewestein dull, or the air of the place unhealthy, or the
gin bad, and leave the fortress, and take his daughter with him, when
Cornelius and Rosa would again be separated.
"Of what use would the carrier pigeons then be?" said Cornelius to Rosa, "as
you, my dear girl, would not be able to read what I should write to you, nor
to write to me your thoughts in return."
158
"Well," answered Rosa, who in her heart was as much afraid of a separation
as Cornelius himself, "we have one hour every evening, let us make good use
of it."
"I don't think we make such a bad use of it as it is."
"Let us employ it even better," said Rosa, smiling. "Teach me to read and
write. I shall make the best of your lessons, believe me; and, in this way, we
shall never be separated any more, except by our own will."
"Oh, then, we have an eternity before us," said Cornelius.
Rosa smiled, and quietly shrugged her shoulders.
"Will you remain for ever in prison?" she said, "and after having granted you
your life, will not his Highness also grant you your liberty? And will you not
then recover your fortune, and be a rich man, and then, when you are
driving in your own coach, riding your own horse, will you still look at poor
Rosa, the daughter of a jailer, scarcely better than a hangman?"
Cornelius tried to contradict her, and certainly he would have done so with
all his heart, and with all the sincerity of a soul full of love.
She, however, smilingly interrupted him, saying, "How is your tulip going
on?"
To speak to Cornelius of his tulip was an expedient resorted to by her to
make him forget everything, even Rosa herself.
159
"Very well, indeed," he said, "the coat is growing black, the sprouting has
commenced, the veins of the bulb are swelling, in eight days hence, and
perhaps sooner, we may distinguish the first buds of the leaves protruding.
And yours Rosa?"
"Oh, I have done things on a large scale, and according to your directions."
"Now, let me hear, Rosa, what you have done," said Cornelius, with as
tender an anxiety as he had lately shown to herself.
"Well," she said, smiling, for in her own heart she could not help studying
this double love of the prisoner for herself and for the black tulip, "I have
done things on a large scale; I have prepared a bed as you described it to
me, on a clear spot, far from trees and walls, in a soil slightly mixed with
sand, rather moist than dry without a fragment of stone or pebble."
"Well done, Rosa, well done."
"I am now only waiting for your further orders to put in the bulb, you know
that I must be behindhand with you, as I have in my favour all the chances
of good air, of the sun, and abundance of moisture."
"All true, all true," exclaimed Cornelius, clapping his hands with joy, "you
are a good pupil, Rosa, and you are sure to gain your hundred thousand
guilders."
"Don't forget," said Rosa, smiling, "that your pupil, as you call me, has still
other things to learn besides the cultivation of tulips."
"Yes, yes, and I am as anxious as you are, Rosa, that you should learn to
read."
160
"When shall we begin?"
"At once."
"No, to-morrow."
"Why to-morrow?"
"Because to-day our hour is expired, and I must leave you."
"Already? But what shall we read?"
"Oh," said Rosa, "I have a book, -- a book which I hope will bring us luck."
"To-morrow, then."
"Yes, to-morrow."
On the following evening Rosa returned with the Bible of Cornelius de Witt.
161
Chapter 17
The First Bulb
On the following evening, as we have said, Rosa returned with the Bible of
Cornelius de Witt.
Then began between the master and the pupil one of those charming scenes
which are the delight of the novelist who has to describe them.
The grated window, the only opening through which the two lovers were able
to communicate, was too high for conveniently reading a book, although it
had been quite convenient for them to read each other's faces.
Rosa therefore had to press the open book against the grating edgewise,
holding above it in her right hand the lamp, but Cornelius hit upon the
lucky idea of fixing it to the bars, so as to afford her a little rest. Rosa was
then enabled to follow with her finger the letters and syllables, which she
was to spell for Cornelius, who with a straw pointed out the letters to his
attentive pupil through the holes of the grating.
The light of the lamp illuminated the rich complexion of Rosa, her blue
liquid eyes, and her golden hair under her head-dress of gold brocade, with
her fingers held up, and showing in the blood, as it flowed downwards in the
veins that pale pink hue which shines before the light owing to the living
transparency of the flesh tint.
Rosa's intellect rapidly developed itself under the animating influence of
Cornelius, and when the difficulties seemed too arduous, the sympathy of
two loving hearts seemed to smooth them away.
162
And Rosa, after having returned to her room, repeated in her solitude the
reading lessons, and at the same time recalled all the delight which she had
felt whilst receiving them.
One evening she came half an hour later than usual. This was too
extraordinary an instance not to call forth at once Cornelius's inquiries after
its cause.
"Oh! do not be angry with me," she said, "it is not my fault. My father has
renewed an acquaintance with an old crony who used to visit him at the
Hague, and to ask him to let him see the prison. He is a good sort of fellow,
fond of his bottle, tells funny stories, and moreover is very free with his
money, so as always to be ready to stand a treat."
"You don't know anything further of him?" asked Cornelius, surprised.
"No," she answered; "it's only for about a fortnight that my father has taken
such a fancy to this friend who is so assiduous in visiting him."
"Ah, so," said Cornelius, shaking his head uneasily as every new incident
seemed to him to forebode some catastrophe; "very likely some spy, one of
those who are sent into jails to watch both prisoners and their keepers."
"I don't believe that," said Rosa, smiling; "if that worthy person is spying
after any one, it is certainly not after my father."
"After whom, then?"
"Me, for instance."
"You?"
163
"Why not?" said Rosa, smiling.
"Ah, that's true," Cornelius observed, with a sigh. "You will not always have
suitors in vain; this man may become your husband."
"I don't say anything to the contrary."
"What cause have you to entertain such a happy prospect?"
"Rather say, this fear, Mynheer Cornelius."
"Thank you, Rosa, you are right; well, I will say then, this fear?"
"I have only this reason ---- "
"Tell me, I am anxious to hear."
"This man came several times before to the Buytenhof, at the Hague. I
remember now, it was just about the time when you were confined there.
When I left, he left too; when I came here, he came after me. At the Hague
his pretext was that he wanted to see you."
"See me?"
"Yes, it must have undoubtedly been only a pretext for now, when he could
plead the same reason, as you are my father's prisoner again, he does not
care any longer for you; quite the contrary, -- I heard him say to my father
only yesterday that he did not know you."
164
"Go on, Rosa, pray do, that I may guess who that man is, and what he
wants."
"Are you quite sure, Mynheer Cornelius, that none of your friends can
interest himself for you?"
"I have no friends, Rosa; I have only my old nurse, whom you know, and
who knows you. Alas, poor Sue! she would come herself, and use no
roundabout ways. She would at once say to your father, or to you, 'My good
sir, or my good miss, my child is here; see how grieved I am; let me see him
only for one hour, and I'll pray for you as long as I live.' No, no," continued
Cornelius; "with the exception of my poor old Sue, I have no friends in this
world."
"Then I come back to what I thought before; and the more so as last evening
at sunset, whilst I was arranging the border where I am to plant your bulb, I
saw a shadow gliding between the alder trees and the aspens. I did not
appear to see him, but it was this man. He concealed himself and saw me
digging the ground, and certainly it was me whom he followed, and me
whom he was spying after. I could not move my rake, or touch one atom of
soil, without his noticing it."
"Oh, yes, yes, he is in love with you," said Cornelius. "Is he young? Is he
handsome?"
Saying this he looked anxiously at Rosa, eagerly waiting for her answer.
"Young? handsome?" cried Rosa, bursting into a laugh. "He is hideous to
look at; crooked, nearly fifty years of age, and never dares to look me in the
face, or to speak, except in an undertone."
"And his name?"
165
"Jacob Gisels."
"I don't know him."
"Then you see that, at all events, he does not come after you."
"At any rate, if he loves you, Rosa, which is very likely, as to see you is to
love you, at least you don't love him."
"To be sure I don't."
"Then you wish me to keep my mind easy?"
"I should certainly ask you to do so."
"Well, then, now as you begin to know how to read you will read all that I
write to you of the pangs of jealousy and of absence, won't you, Rosa?"
"I shall read it, if you write with good big letters."
Then, as the turn which the conversation took began to make Rosa uneasy,
she asked, --
"By the bye, how is your tulip going on?"
"Oh, Rosa, only imagine my joy, this morning I looked at it in the sun, and
after having moved the soil aside which covers the bulb, I saw the first
sprouting of the leaves. This small germ has caused me a much greater
166
emotion than the order of his Highness which turned aside the sword
already raised at the Buytenhof."
"You hope, then?" said Rosa, smiling.
"Yes, yes, I hope."
"And I, in my turn, when shall I plant my bulb?"
"Oh, the first favourable day I will tell you; but, whatever you do, let nobody
help you, and don't confide your secret to any one in the world; do you see,
a connoisseur by merely looking at the bulb would be able to distinguish its
value; and so, my dearest Rosa, be careful in locking up the third sucker
which remains to you."
"It is still wrapped up in the same paper in which you put it, and just as you
gave it me. I have laid it at the bottom of my chest under my point lace,
which keeps it dry, without pressing upon it. But good night, my poor
captive gentleman."
"How? already?"
"It must be, it must be."
"Coming so late and going so soon."
"My father might grow impatient not seeing me return, and that precious
lover might suspect a rival."
Here she listened uneasily.
167
"What is it?" asked Van Baerle. "I thought I heard something."
"What, then?"
"Something like a step, creaking on the staircase."
"Surely," said the prisoner, "that cannot be Master Gryphus, he is always
heard at a distance"
"No, it is not my father, I am quite sure, but ---- "
"But?"
"But it might be Mynheer Jacob."
Rosa rushed toward the staircase, and a door was really heard rapidly to
close before the young damsel had got down the first ten steps.
Cornelius was very uneasy about it, but it was after all only a prelude to
greater anxieties.
The flowing day passed without any remarkable incident. Gryphus made his
three visits, and discovered nothing. He never came at the same hours as he
hoped thus to discover the secrets of the prisoner. Van Baerle, therefore,
had devised a contrivance, a sort of pulley, by means of which he was able
to lower or to raise his jug below the ledge of tiles and stone before his
window. The strings by which this was effected he had found means to cover
with that moss which generally grows on tiles, or in the crannies of the
walls.
168
Gryphus suspected nothing, and the device succeeded for eight days. One
morning, however, when Cornelius, absorbed in the contemplation of his
bulb, from which a germ of vegetation was already peeping forth, had not
heard old Gryphus coming upstairs as a gale of wind was blowing which
shook the whole tower, the door suddenly opened.
Gryphus, perceiving an unknown and consequently a forbidden object in the
hands of his prisoner, pounced upon it with the same rapidity as the hawk
on its prey.
As ill luck would have it, his coarse, hard hand, the same which he had
broken, and which Cornelius van Baerle had set so well, grasped at once in
the midst of the jug, on the spot where the bulb was lying in the soil.
"What have you got here?" he roared. "Ah! have I caught you?" and with this
he grabbed in the soil.
"I? nothing, nothing," cried Cornelius, trembling.
"Ah! have I caught you? a jug and earth in it There is some criminal secret
at the bottom of all this."
"Oh, my good Master Gryphus," said Van Baerle, imploringly, and anxious
as the partridge robbed of her young by the reaper.
In fact, Gryphus was beginning to dig the soil with his crooked fingers.
"Take care, sir, take care," said Cornelius, growing quite pale.
"Care of what? Zounds! of what?" roared the jailer.
169
"Take care, I say, you will crush it, Master Gryphus."
And with a rapid and almost frantic movement he snatched the jug from the
hands of Gryphus, and hid it like a treasure under his arms.
But Gryphus, obstinate, like an old man, and more and more convinced that
he was discovering here a conspiracy against the Prince of Orange, rushed
up to his prisoner, raising his stick; seeing, however, the impassible
resolution of the captive to protect his flower-pot he was convinced that
Cornelius trembled much less for his head than for his jug.
He therefore tried to wrest it from him by force.
"Halloa!" said the jailer, furious, "here, you see, you are rebelling."
"Leave me my tulip," cried Van Baerle.
"Ah, yes, tulip," replied the old man, "we know well the shifts of prisoners."
"But I vow to you ---- "
"Let go," repeated Gryphus, stamping his foot, "let go, or I shall call the
guard."
"Call whoever you like, but you shall not have this flower except with my
life."
Gryphus, exasperated, plunged his finger a second time into the soil, and
now he drew out the bulb, which certainly looked quite black; and whilst
170
Van Baerle, quite happy to have saved the vessel, did not suspect that the
adversary had possessed himself of its precious contents, Gryphus hurled
the softened bulb with all his force on the flags, where almost immediately
after it was crushed to atoms under his heavy shoe.
Van Baerle saw the work of destruction, got a glimpse of the juicy remains of
his darling bulb, and, guessing the cause of the ferocious joy of Gryphus,
uttered a cry of agony, which would have melted the heart even of that
ruthless jailer who some years before killed Pelisson's spider.
The idea of striking down this spiteful bully passed like lightning through
the brain of the tulip-fancier. The blood rushed to his brow, and seemed like
fire in his eyes, which blinded him, and he raised in his two hands the
heavy jug with all the now useless earth which remained in it. One instant
more, and he would have flung it on the bald head of old Gryphus.
But a cry stopped him; a cry of agony, uttered by poor Rosa, who, trembling
and pale, with her arms raised to heaven, made her appearance behind the
grated window, and thus interposed between her father and her friend.
Gryphus then understood the danger with which he had been threatened,
and he broke out in a volley of the most terrible abuse.
"Indeed," said Cornelius to him, "you must be a very mean and spiteful
fellow to rob a poor prisoner of his only consolation, a tulip bulb."
"For shame, my father," Rosa chimed in, "it is indeed a crime you have
committed here."
"Ah, is that you, my little chatter-box?" the old man cried, boiling with rage
and turning towards her; "don't you meddle with what don't concern you,
but go down as quickly as possible."
171
"Unfortunate me," continued Cornelius, overwhelmed with grief.
"After all, it is but a tulip," Gryphus resumed, as he began to be a little
ashamed of himself. "You may have as many tulips as you like: I have three
hundred of them in my loft."
"To the devil with your tulips!" cried Cornelius; "you are worthy of each
other: had I a hundred thousand millions of them, I would gladly give them
for the one which you have just destroyed."
"Oh, so!" Gryphus said, in a tone of triumph; "now there we have it. It was
not your tulip you cared for. There was in that false bulb some witchcraft,
perhaps some means of correspondence with conspirators against his
Highness who has granted you your life. I always said they were wrong in
not cutting your head off."
"Father, father!" cried Rosa.
"Yes, yes! it is better as it is now," repeated Gryphus, growing warm; "I have
destroyed it, and I'll do the same again, as often as you repeat the trick.
Didn't I tell you, my fine fellow, that I would make your life a hard one?"
"A curse on you!" Cornelius exclaimed, quite beyond himself with despair, as
he gathered, with his trembling fingers, the remnants of that bulb on which
he had rested so many joys and so many hopes.
"We shall plant the other to-morrow, my dear Mynheer Cornelius," said
Rosa, in a low voice, who understood the intense grief of the unfortunate
tulip-fancier, and who, with the pure sacred love of her innocent heart,
poured these kind words, like a drop of balm, on the bleeding wounds of
Cornelius.
172
Chapter 18
Rosa's Lover
Rosa had scarcely pronounced these consolatory words when a voice was
heard from the staircase asking Gryphus how matters were going on.
"Do you hear, father?" said Rosa.
"What?"
"Master Jacob calls you, he is uneasy."
"There was such a noise," said Gryphus; "wouldn't you have thought he
would murder me, this doctor? They are always very troublesome fellows,
these scholars."
Then, pointing with his finger towards the staircase, he said to Rosa: "Just
lead the way, Miss."
After this he locked the door and called out: "I shall be with you directly,
friend Jacob."
Poor Cornelius, thus left alone with his bitter grief, muttered to himself, --
"Ah, you old hangman! it is me you have trodden under foot; you have
murdered me; I shall not survive it."
173
And certainly the unfortunate prisoner would have fallen ill but for the
counterpoise which Providence had granted to his grief, and which was
called Rosa.
In the evening she came back. Her first words announced to Cornelius that
henceforth her father would make no objection to his cultivating flowers.
"And how do you know that?" the prisoner asked, with a doleful look.
"I know it because he has said so."
"To deceive me, perhaps."
"No, he repents."
"Ah yes! but too late."
"This repentance is not of himself."
"And who put it into him?"
"If you only knew how his friend scolded him!"
"Ah, Master Jacob; he does not leave you, then, that Master Jacob?"
"At any rate, he leaves us as little as he can help."
174
Saying this, she smiled in such a way that the little cloud of jealousy which
had darkened the brow of Cornelius speedily vanished.
"How was it?" asked the prisoner.
"Well, being asked by his friend, my father told at supper the whole story of
the tulip, or rather of the bulb, and of his own fine exploit of crushing it."
Cornelius heaved a sigh, which might have been called a groan.
"Had you only seen Master Jacob at that moment!" continued Rosa. "I really
thought he would set fire to the castle; his eyes were like two flaming
torches, his hair stood on end, and he clinched his fist for a moment; I
thought he would have strangled my father."
"'You have done that,' he cried, 'you have crushed the bulb?'
"'Indeed I have.'
"'It is infamous,' said Master Jacob, 'it is odious! You have committed a great
crime!'
"My father was quite dumbfounded.
"'Are you mad, too?' he asked his friend."
"Oh, what a worthy man is this Master Jacob!" muttered Cornelius, -- "an
honest soul, an excellent heart that he is."
175
"The truth is, that it is impossible to treat a man more rudely than he did
my father; he was really quite in despair, repeating over and over again, --
"'Crushed, crushed the bulb! my God, my God! crushed!'
"Then, turning toward me, he asked, 'But it was not the only one that he
had?'"
"Did he ask that?" inquired Cornelius, with some anxiety.
"'You think it was not the only one?' said my father. 'Very well, we shall
search for the others.'
"'You will search for the others?' cried Jacob, taking my father by the collar;
but he immediately loosed him. Then, turning towards me, he continued,
asking 'And what did that poor young man say?'
"I did not know what to answer, as you had so strictly enjoined me never to
allow any one to guess the interest which you are taking in the bulb.
Fortunately, my father saved me from the difficulty by chiming in, --
"'What did he say? Didn't he fume and fret?'
"I interrupted him, saying, 'Was it not natural that be should be furious, you
were so unjust and brutal, father?'
"'Well, now, are you mad?' cried my father; 'what immense misfortune is it to
crush a tulip bulb? You may buy a hundred of them in the market of
Gorcum.'
176
"'Perhaps some less precious one than that was!' I quite incautiously
replied."
"And what did Jacob say or do at these words?" asked Cornelius.
"At these words, if I must say it, his eyes seemed to flash like lightning."
"But," said Cornelius, "that was not all; I am sure he said something in his
turn."
"'So, then, my pretty Rosa,' he said, with a voice as sweet a honey, -- 'so you
think that bulb to have been a precious one?'
"I saw that I had made a blunder.
"'What do I know?' I said, negligently; 'do I understand anything of tulips? I
only know -- as unfortunately it is our lot to live with prisoners -- that for
them any pastime is of value. This poor Mynheer van Baerle amused himself
with this bulb. Well, I think it very cruel to take from him the only thing that
he could have amused himself with.'
"'But, first of all,' said my father, 'we ought to know how he has contrived to
procure this bulb.'
"I turned my eyes away to avoid my father's look; but I met those of Jacob.
"It was as if he had tried to read my thoughts at the bottom of my heart.
"Some little show of anger sometimes saves an answer. I shrugged my
shoulders, turned my back, and advanced towards the door.
177
"But I was kept by something which I heard, although it was uttered in a
very low voice only.
"Jacob said to my father, --
"'It would not be so difficult to ascertain that.'
"'How so?'
"'You need only search his person: and if he has the other bulbs, we shall
find them, as there usually are three suckers!'"
"Three suckers!" cried Cornelius. "Did you say that I have three?"
"The word certainly struck me just as much as it does you. I turned round.
They were both of them so deeply engaged in their conversation that they
did not observe my movement.
"'But,' said my father, 'perhaps he has not got his bulbs about him?'
"'Then take him down, under some pretext or other and I will search his cell
in the meanwhile.'"
"Halloa, halloa!" said Cornelius. "But this Mr. Jacob of yours is a villain, it
seems."
"I am afraid he is."
178
"Tell me, Rosa," continued Cornelius, with a pensive air.
"What?"
"Did you not tell me that on the day when you prepared your borders this
man followed you?"
"So he did."
"That he glided like a shadow behind the elder trees?"
"Certainly."
"That not one of your movements escaped him?"
"Not one, indeed."
"Rosa," said Cornelius, growing quite pale.
"Well?"
"It was not you he was after."
"Who else, then?"
"It is not you that he was in love with!"
179
"But with whom else?"
"He was after my bulb, and is in love with my tulip!"
"You don't say so! And yet it is very possible," said Rosa.
"Will you make sure of it?"
"In what manner?"
"Oh, it would be very easy!"
"Tell me."
"Go to-morrow into the garden; manage matters so that Jacob may know, as
he did the first time, that you are going there, and that he may follow you.
Feign to put the bulb into the ground; leave the garden, but look through
the keyhole of the door and watch him."
"Well, and what then?"
"What then? We shall do as he does."
"Oh!" said Rosa, with a sigh, "you are very fond of your bulbs."
"To tell the truth," said the prisoner, sighing likewise, "since your father
crushed that unfortunate bulb, I feel as if part of my own self had been
paralyzed."
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"Now just hear me," said Rosa; "will you try something else?"
"What?"
"Will you accept the proposition of my father?"
"Which proposition?"
"Did not he offer to you tulip bulbs by hundreds?"
"Indeed he did."
"Accept two or three, and, along with them, you may grow the third sucker."
"Yes, that would do very well," said Cornelius, knitting his brow; "if your
father were alone, but there is that Master Jacob, who watches all our
ways."
"Well, that is true; but only think! you are depriving yourself, as I can easily
see, of a very great pleasure."
She pronounced these words with a smile, which was not altogether without
a tinge of irony.
Cornelius reflected for a moment; he evidently was struggling against some
vehement desire.
"No!" he cried at last, with the stoicism of a Roman of old, "it would be a
weakness, it would be a folly, it would be a meanness! If I thus give up the
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only and last resource which we possess to the uncertain chances of the bad
passions of anger and envy, I should never deserve to be forgiven. No, Rosa,
no; to-morrow we shall come to a conclusion as to the spot to be chosen for
your tulip; you will plant it according to my instructions; and as to the third
sucker," -- Cornelius here heaved a deep sigh, -- "watch over it as a miser
over his first or last piece of gold; as the mother over her child; as the
wounded over the last drop of blood in his veins; watch over it, Rosa! Some
voice within me tells me that it will be our saving, that it will be a source of
good to us."
"Be easy, Mynheer Cornelius," said Rosa, with a sweet mixture of
melancholy and gravity, "be easy; your wishes are commands to me."
"And even," continued Van Baerle, warming more and more with his subject,
"if you should perceive that your steps are watched, and that your speech
has excited the suspicion of your father and of that detestable Master Jacob,
-- well, Rosa, don't hesitate for one moment to sacrifice me, who am only
still living through you, -- me, who have no one in the world but you;
sacrifice me, -- don't come to see me any more."
Rosa felt her heart sink within her, and her eyes were filling with tears.
"Alas!" she said.
"What is it?" asked Cornelius.
"I see one thing."
"What do you see?"
"I see," said she, bursting out in sobs, "I see that you love your tulips with
such love as to have no more room in your heart left for other affections."
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Saying this, she fled.
Cornelius, after this, passed one of the worst nights he ever had in his life.
Rosa was vexed with him, and with good reason. Perhaps she would never
return to see the prisoner, and then he would have no more news, either of
Rosa or of his tulips.
We have to confess, to the disgrace of our hero and of floriculture, that of his
two affections he felt most strongly inclined to regret the loss of Rosa; and
when, at about three in the morning, he fell asleep overcome with fatigue,
and harassed with remorse, the grand black tulip yielded precedence in his
dreams to the sweet blue eyes of the fair maid of Friesland.
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Chapter 19
The Maid and the Flower
But poor Rosa, in her secluded chamber, could not have known of whom or
of what Cornelius was dreaming.
From what he had said she was more ready to believe that he dreamed of
the black tulip than of her; and yet Rosa was mistaken.
But as there was no one to tell her so, and as the words of Cornelius's
thoughtless speech had fallen upon her heart like drops of poison, she did
not dream, but she wept.
The fact was, that, as Rosa was a high-spirited creature, of no mean
perception and a noble heart, she took a very clear and judicious view of her
own social position, if not of her moral and physical qualities.
Cornelius was a scholar, and was wealthy, -- at least he had been before the
confiscation of his property; Cornelius belonged to the merchant-
bourgeoisie, who were prouder of their richly emblazoned shop signs than
the hereditary nobility of their heraldic bearings. Therefore, although he
might find Rosa a pleasant companion for the dreary hours of his captivity,
when it came to a question of bestowing his heart it was almost certain that
he would bestow it upon a tulip, -- that is to say, upon the proudest and
noblest of flowers, rather than upon poor Rosa, the jailer's lowly child.
Thus Rosa understood Cornelius's preference of the tulip to herself, but was
only so much the more unhappy therefor.
During the whole of this terrible night the poor girl did not close an eye, and
before she rose in the morning she had come to the resolution of making her
appearance at the grated window no more.
184
But as she knew with what ardent desire Cornelius looked forward to the
news about his tulip; and as, notwithstanding her determination not to see
any more a man her pity for whose fate was fast growing into love, she did
not, on the other hand, wish to drive him to despair, she resolved to
continue by herself the reading and writing lessons; and, fortunately, she
had made sufficient progress to dispense with the help of a master when the
master was not to be Cornelius.
Rosa therefore applied herself most diligently to reading poor Cornelius de
Witt's Bible, on the second fly leaf of which the last will of Cornelius van
Baerle was written.
"Alas!" she muttered, when perusing again this document, which she never
finished without a tear, the pearl of love, rolling from her limpid eyes on her
pale cheeks -- "alas! at that time I thought for one moment he loved me."
Poor Rosa! she was mistaken. Never had the love of the prisoner been more
sincere than at the time at which we are now arrived, when in the contest
between the black tulip and Rosa the tulip had had to yield to her the first
and foremost place in Cornelius's heart.
But Rosa was not aware of it.
Having finished reading, she took her pen, and began with as laudable
diligence the by far more difficult task of writing.
As, however, Rosa was already able to write a legible hand when Cornelius
so uncautiously opened his heart, she did not despair of progressing quickly
enough to write, after eight days at the latest, to the prisoner an account of
his tulip.
185
She had not forgotten one word of the directions given to her by Cornelius,
whose speeches she treasured in her heart, even when they did not take the
shape of directions.
He, on his part, awoke deeper in love than ever. The tulip, indeed, was still a
luminous and prominent object in his mind; but he no longer looked upon it
as a treasure to which he ought to sacrifice everything, and even Rosa, but
as a marvellous combination of nature and art with which he would have
been happy to adorn the bosom of his beloved one.
Yet during the whole of that day he was haunted with a vague uneasiness,
at the bottom of which was the fear lest Rosa should not come in the
evening to pay him her usual visit. This thought took more and more hold of
him, until at the approach of evening his whole mind was absorbed in it.
How his heart beat when darkness closed in! The words which he had said
to Rosa on the evening before and which had so deeply afflicted her, now
came back to his mind more vividly than ever, and he asked himself how he
could have told his gentle comforter to sacrifice him to his tulip, -- that is to
say, to give up seeing him, if need be, -- whereas to him the sight of Rosa
had become a condition of life.
In Cornelius's cell one heard the chimes of the clock of the fortress. It struck
seven, it struck eight, it struck nine. Never did the metal voice vibrate more
forcibly through the heart of any man than did the last stroke, marking the
ninth hour, through the heart of Cornelius.
All was then silent again. Cornelius put his hand on his heart, to repress as
it were its violent palpitation, and listened.
The noise of her footstep, the rustling of her gown on the staircase, were so
familiar to his ear, that she had no sooner mounted one step than he used
to say to himself, --
186
"Here comes Rosa."
This evening none of those little noises broke the silence of the lobby, the
clock struck nine, and a quarter; the half-hour, then a quarter to ten, and at
last its deep tone announced, not only to the inmates of the fortress, but
also to all the inhabitants of Loewestein, that it was ten.
This was the hour at which Rosa generally used to leave Cornelius. The hour
had struck, but Rosa had not come.
Thus then his foreboding had not deceived him; Rosa, being vexed, shut
herself up in her room and left him to himself.
"Alas!" he thought, "I have deserved all this. She will come no more, and she
is right in staying away; in her place I should do just the same."
Yet notwithstanding all this, Cornelius listened, waited, and hoped until
midnight, then he threw himself upon the bed, with his clothes on.
It was a long and sad night for him, and the day brought no hope to the
prisoner.
At eight in the morning, the door of his cell opened; but Cornelius did not
even turn his head; he had heard the heavy step of Gryphus in the lobby,
but this step had perfectly satisfied the prisoner that his jailer was coming
alone.
Thus Cornelius did not even look at Gryphus.
And yet he would have been so glad to draw him out, and to inquire about
Rosa. He even very nearly made this inquiry, strange as it would needs have
187
appeared to her father. To tell the truth, there was in all this some selfish
hope to hear from Gryphus that his daughter was ill.
Except on extraordinary occasions, Rosa never came during the day.
Cornelius therefore did not really expect her as long as the day lasted. Yet
his sudden starts, his listening at the door, his rapid glances at every little
noise towards the grated window, showed clearly that the prisoner
entertained some latent hope that Rosa would, somehow or other, break her
rule.
At the second visit of Gryphus, Cornelius, contrary to all his former habits,
asked the old jailer, with the most winning voice, about her health; but
Gryphus contented himself with giving the laconical answer, --
"All's well."
At the third visit of the day, Cornelius changed his former inquiry: --
"I hope nobody is ill at Loewestein?"
"Nobody," replied, even more laconically, the jailer, shutting the door before
the nose of the prisoner.
Gryphus, being little used to this sort of civility on the part of Cornelius,
began to suspect that his prisoner was about to try and bribe him.
Cornelius was now alone once more; it was seven o'clock in the evening, and
the anxiety of yesterday returned with increased intensity.
But another time the hours passed away without bringing the sweet vision
which lighted up, through the grated window, the cell of poor Cornelius, and
188
which, in retiring, left light enough in his heart to last until it came back
again.
Van Baerle passed the night in an agony of despair. On the following day
Gryphus appeared to him even more hideous, brutal, and hateful than
usual; in his mind, or rather in his heart, there had been some hope that it
was the old man who prevented his daughter from coming.
In his wrath he would have strangled Gryphus, but would not this have
separated him for ever from Rosa?
The evening closing in, his despair changed into melancholy, which was the
more gloomy as, involuntarily, Van Baerle mixed up with it the thought of
his poor tulip. It was now just that week in April which the most
experienced gardeners point out as the precise time when tulips ought to be
planted. He had said to Rosa, --
"I shall tell you the day when you are to put the bulb in the ground."
He had intended to fix, at the vainly hoped for interview, the following day as
the time for that momentous operation. The weather was propitious; the air,
though still damp, began to be tempered by those pale rays of the April sun
which, being the first, appear so congenial, although so pale. How if Rosa
allowed the right moment for planting the bulb to pass by, -- if, in addition
to the grief of seeing her no more, he should have to deplore the misfortune
of seeing his tulip fail on account of its having been planted too late, or of its
not having been planted at all!
These two vexations combined might well make him leave off eating and
drinking.
This was the case on the fourth day.
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It was pitiful to see Cornelius, dumb with grief, and pale from utter
prostration, stretch out his head through the iron bars of his window, at the
risk of not being able to draw it back again, to try and get a glimpse of the
garden on the left spoken of by Rosa, who had told him that its parapet
overlooked the river. He hoped that perhaps he might see, in the light of the
April sun, Rosa or the tulip, the two lost objects of his love.
In the evening, Gryphus took away the breakfast and dinner of Cornelius,
who had scarcely touched them.
On the following day he did not touch them at all, and Gryphus carried the
dishes away just as he had brought them.
Cornelius had remained in bed the whole day.
"Well," said Gryphus, coming down from the last visit, "I think we shall soon
get rid of our scholar."
Rosa was startled.
"Nonsense!" said Jacob. "What do you mean?"
"He doesn't drink, he doesn't eat, he doesn't leave his bed. He will get out of
it, like Mynheer Grotius, in a chest, only the chest will be a coffin."
Rosa grew pale as death.
"Ah!" she said to herself, "he is uneasy about his tulip."
190
And, rising with a heavy heart, she returned to her chamber, where she took
a pen and paper, and during the whole of that night busied herself with
tracing letters.
On the following morning, when Cornelius got up to drag himself to the
window, he perceived a paper which had been slipped under the door.
He pounced upon it, opened it, and read the following words, in a
handwriting which he could scarcely have recognized as that of Rosa, so
much had she improved during her short absence of seven days, --
"Be easy; your tulip is going on well."
Although these few words of Rosa's somewhat soothed the grief of Cornelius,
yet he felt not the less the irony which was at the bottom of them. Rosa,
then, was not ill, she was offended; she had not been forcibly prevented from
coming, but had voluntarily stayed away. Thus Rosa, being at liberty, found
in her own will the force not to come and see him, who was dying with grief
at not having seen her.
Cornelius had paper and a pencil which Rosa had brought to him. He
guessed that she expected an answer, but that she would not come before
the evening to fetch it. He therefore wrote on a piece of paper, similar to that
which he had received, --
"It was not my anxiety about the tulip that has made me ill, but the grief at
not seeing you."
After Gryphus had made his last visit of the day, and darkness had set in,
he slipped the paper under the door, and listened with the most intense
attention, but he neither heard Rosa's footsteps nor the rustling of her
gown.
191
He only heard a voice as feeble as a breath, and gentle like a caress, which
whispered through the grated little window in the door the word, --
"To-morrow!"
Now to-morrow was the eighth day. For eight days Cornelius and Rosa had
not seen each other.
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Chapter 20
The Events which took place during those Eight Days
On the following evening, at the usual hour, Van Baerle heard some one
scratch at the grated little window, just as Rosa had been in the habit of
doing in the heyday of their friendship.
Cornelius being, as may easily be imagined, not far off from the door,
perceived Rosa, who at last was waiting again for him with her lamp in her
hand.
Seeing him so sad and pale, she was startled, and said, --
"You are ill, Mynheer Cornelius?"
"Yes, I am," he answered, as indeed he was suffering in mind and in body.
"I saw that you did not eat," said Rosa; "my father told me that you
remained in bed all day. I then wrote to calm your uneasiness concerning
the fate of the most precious object of your anxiety."
"And I," said Cornelius, "I have answered. Seeing your return, my dear Rosa,
I thought you had received my letter."
"It is true; I have received it."
"You cannot this time excuse yourself with not being able to read. Not only
do you read very fluently, but also you have made marvellous progress in
writing."
193
"Indeed, I have not only received, but also read your note. Accordingly I am
come to see whether there might not be some remedy to restore you to
health."
"Restore me to health?" cried Cornelius; "but have you any good news to
communicate to me?"
Saying this, the poor prisoner looked at Rosa, his eyes sparkling with hope.
Whether she did not, or would not, understand this look, Rosa answered
gravely, --
"I have only to speak to you about your tulip, which, as I well know, is the
object uppermost in your mind."
Rosa pronounced those few words in a freezing tone, which cut deeply into
the heart of Cornelius. He did not suspect what lay hidden under this
appearance of indifference with which the poor girl affected to speak of her
rival, the black tulip.
"Oh!" muttered Cornelius, "again! again! Have I not told you, Rosa, that I
thought but of you? that it was you alone whom I regretted, you whom I
missed, you whose absence I felt more than the loss of liberty and of life
itself?"
Rosa smiled with a melancholy air.
"Ah!" she said, "your tulip has been in such danger."
194
Cornelius trembled involuntarily, and showed himself clearly to be caught in
the trap, if ever the remark was meant as such.
"Danger!" he cried, quite alarmed; "what danger?"
Rosa looked at him with gentle compassion; she felt that what she wished
was beyond the power of this man, and that he must be taken as he was,
with his little foible.
"Yes," she said, "you have guessed the truth; that suitor and amorous swain,
Jacob, did not come on my account."
"And what did he come for?" Cornelius anxiously asked.
"He came for the sake of the tulip."
"Alas!" said Cornelius, growing even paler at this piece of information than
he had been when Rosa, a fortnight before, had told him that Jacob was
coming for her sake.
Rosa saw this alarm, and Cornelius guessed, from the expression of her
face, in what direction her thoughts were running.
"Oh, pardon me, Rosa!" he said, "I know you, and I am well aware of the
kindness and sincerity of your heart. To you God has given the thought and
strength for defending yourself; but to my poor tulip, when it is in danger,
God has given nothing of the sort."
Rosa, without replying to this excuse of the prisoner, continued, --
195
"From the moment when I first knew that you were uneasy on account of the
man who followed me, and in whom I had recognized Jacob, I was even
more uneasy myself. On the day, therefore, after that on which I saw you
last, and on which you said -- "
Cornelius interrupted her.
"Once more, pardon me, Rosa!" he cried. "I was wrong in saying to you what
I said. I have asked your pardon for that unfortunate speech before. I ask it
again: shall I always ask it in vain?"
"On the following day," Rosa continued, "remembering what you had told me
about the stratagem which I was to employ to ascertain whether that odious
man was after the tulip, or after me ---- "
"Yes, yes, odious. Tell me," he said, "do you hate that man?"
"I do hate him," said Rosa, "as he is the cause of all the unhappiness I have
suffered these eight days."
"You, too, have been unhappy, Rosa? I thank you a thousand times for this
kind confession."
"Well, on the day after that unfortunate one, I went down into the garden
and proceeded towards the border where I was to plant your tulip, looking
round all the while to see whether I was again followed as I was last time."
"And then?" Cornelius asked.
"And then the same shadow glided between the gate and the wall, and once
more disappeared behind the elder-trees."
196
"You feigned not to see him, didn't you?" Cornelius asked, remembering all
the details of the advice which he had given to Rosa.
"Yes, and I stooped over the border, in which I dug with a spade, as if I was
going to put the bulb in."
"And he, -- what did he do during all this time?"
"I saw his eyes glisten through the branches of the tree like those of a tiger."
"There you see, there you see!" cried Cornelius.
"Then, after having finished my make-believe work, I retired."
"But only behind the garden door, I dare say, so that you might see through
the keyhole what he was going to do when you had left?"
"He waited for a moment, very likely to make sure of my not coming back,
after which he sneaked forth from his hiding-place, and approached the
border by a long round-about; at last, having reached his goal, that is to
say, the spot where the ground was newly turned, he stopped with a
careless air, looking about in all directions, and scanning every corner of the
garden, every window of the neighbouring houses, and even the sky; after
which, thinking himself quite alone, quite isolated, and out of everybody's
sight, he pounced upon the border, plunged both his hands into the soft
soil, took a handful of the mould, which he gently frittered between his
fingers to see whether the bulb was in it, and repeated the same thing twice
or three times, until at last he perceived that he was outwitted. Then,
keeping down the agitation which was raging in his breast, he took up the
rake, smoothed the ground, so as to leave it on his retiring in the same state
as he had found it, and, quite abashed and rueful, walked back to the door,
affecting the unconcerned air of an ordinary visitor of the garden."
197
"Oh, the wretch!" muttered Cornelius, wiping the cold sweat from his brow.
"Oh, the wretch! I guessed his intentions. But the bulb, Rosa; what have you
done with it? It is already rather late to plant it."
"The bulb? It has been in the ground for these six days."
"Where? and how?" cried Cornelius. "Good Heaven, what imprudence! What
is it? In what sort of soil is it? It what aspect? Good or bad? Is there no risk
of having it filched by that detestable Jacob?"
"There is no danger of its being stolen," said Rosa, "unless Jacob will force
the door of my chamber."
"Oh! then it is with you in your bedroom?" said Cornelius, somewhat
relieved. "But in what soil? in what vessel? You don't let it grow, I hope, in
water like those good ladies of Haarlem and Dort, who imagine that water
could replace the earth?"
"You may make yourself comfortable on that score," said Rosa, smiling;
"your bulb is not growing in water."
"I breathe again."
"It is in a good, sound stone pot, just about the size of the jug in which you
had planted yours. The soil is composed of three parts of common mould,
taken from the best spot of the garden, and one of the sweepings of the road.
I have heard you and that detestable Jacob, as you call him, so often talk
about what is the soil best fitted for growing tulips, that I know it as well as
the first gardener of Haarlem."
"And now what is the aspect, Rosa?"
198
"At present it has the sun all day long, -- that is to say when the sun shines.
But when it once peeps out of the ground, I shall do as you have done here,
dear Mynheer Cornelius: I shall put it out of my window on the eastern side
from eight in the morning until eleven and in my window towards the west
from three to five in the afternoon."
"That's it! that's it!" cried Cornelius; "and you are a perfect gardener, my
pretty Rosa. But I am afraid the nursing of my tulip will take up all your
time."
"Yes, it will," said Rosa; "but never mind. Your tulip is my daughter. I shall
devote to it the same time as I should to a child of mine, if I were a mother.
Only by becoming its mother," Rosa added, smilingly, "can I cease to be its
rival."
"My kind and pretty Rosa!" muttered Cornelius casting on her a glance in
which there was much more of the lover than of the gardener, and which
afforded Rosa some consolation.
Then, after a silence of some moments, during which Cornelius had grasped
through the openings of the grating for the receding hand of Rosa, he said, -
-
"Do you mean to say that the bulb has now been in the ground for six
days?"
"Yes, six days, Mynheer Cornelius," she answered.
"And it does not yet show leaf"
"No, but I think it will to-morrow."
199
"Well, then, to-morrow you will bring me news about it, and about yourself,
won't you, Rosa? I care very much for the daughter, as you called it just
now, but I care even much more for the mother."
"To-morrow?" said Rosa, looking at Cornelius askance. "I don't know
whether I shall be able to come to-morrow."
"Good heavens!" said Cornelius, "why can't you come to-morrow?"
"Mynheer Cornelius, I have lots of things to do."
"And I have only one," muttered Cornelius.
"Yes," said Rosa, "to love your tulip."
"To love you, Rosa."
Rosa shook her head, after which followed a pause.
"Well," -- Cornelius at last broke the silence, -- "well, Rosa, everything
changes in the realm of nature; the flowers of spring are succeeded by other
flowers; and the bees, which so tenderly caressed the violets and the wall-
flowers, will flutter with just as much love about the honey-suckles, the
rose, the jessamine, and the carnation."
"What does all this mean?" asked Rosa.
"You have abandoned me, Miss Rosa, to seek your pleasure elsewhere. You
have done well, and I will not complain. What claim have I to your fidelity?"
200
"My fidelity!" Rosa exclaimed, with her eyes full of tears, and without caring
any longer to hide from Cornelius this dew of pearls dropping on her cheeks,
"my fidelity! have I not been faithful to you?"
"Do you call it faithful to desert me, and to leave me here to die?"
"But, Mynheer Cornelius," said Rosa, "am I not doing everything for you that
could give you pleasure? have I not devoted myself to your tulip?"
"You are bitter, Rosa, you reproach me with the only unalloyed pleasure
which I have had in this world."
"I reproach you with nothing, Mynheer Cornelius, except, perhaps, with the
intense grief which I felt when people came to tell me at the Buytenhof that
you were about to be put to death."
"You are displeased, Rosa, my sweet girl, with my loving flowers."
"I am not displeased with your loving them, Mynheer Cornelius, only it
makes me sad to think that you love them better than you do me."
"Oh, my dear, dear Rosa! look how my hands tremble; look at my pale
cheek, hear how my heart beats. It is for you, my love, not for the black
tulip. Destroy the bulb, destroy the germ of that flower, extinguish the gentle
light of that innocent and delightful dream, to which I have accustomed
myself; but love me, Rosa, love me; for I feel deeply that I love but you."
"Yes, after the black tulip," sighed Rosa, who at last no longer coyly
withdrew her warm hands from the grating, as Cornelius most affectionately
kissed them.
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"Above and before everything in this world, Rosa."
"May I believe you?"
"As you believe in your own existence."
"Well, then, be it so; but loving me does not bind you too much."
"Unfortunately, it does not bind me more than I am bound; but it binds you,
Rosa, you."
"To what?"
"First of all, not to marry."
She smiled.
"That's your way," she said; "you are tyrants all of you. You worship a
certain beauty, you think of nothing but her. Then you are condemned to
death, and whilst walking to the scaffold, you devote to her your last sigh;
and now you expect poor me to sacrifice to you all my dreams and my
happiness."
"But who is the beauty you are talking of, Rosa?" said Cornelius, trying in
vain to remember a woman to whom Rosa might possibly be alluding.
"The dark beauty with a slender waist, small feet, and a noble head; in
short, I am speaking of your flower."
202
Cornelius smiled.
"That is an imaginary lady love, at all events; whereas, without counting
that amorous Jacob, you by your own account are surrounded with all sorts
of swains eager to make love to you. Do you remember Rosa, what you told
me of the students, officers, and clerks of the Hague? Are there no clerks,
officers, or students at Loewestein?"
"Indeed there are, and lots of them."
"Who write letters?"
"They do write."
"And now, as you know how to read ---- "
Here Cornelius heaved a sigh at the thought, that, poor captive as he was, to
him alone Rosa owed the faculty of reading the love-letters which she
received.
"As to that," said Rosa, "I think that in reading the notes addressed to me,
and passing the different swains in review who send them to me, I am only
following your instructions."
"How so? My instructions?"
"Indeed, your instructions, sir," said Rosa, sighing in her turn; "have you
forgotten the will written by your hand on the Bible of Cornelius de Witt? I
have not forgotten it; for now, as I know how to read, I read it every day over
and over again. In that will you bid me to love and marry a handsome young
man of twenty-six or eight years. I am on the look-out for that young man,
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and as the whole of my day is taken up with your tulip, you must needs
leave me the evenings to find him."
"But, Rosa, the will was made in the expectation of death, and, thanks to
Heaven, I am still alive."
"Well, then, I shall not be after the handsome young man, and I shall come
to see you."
"That's it, Rosa, come! come!"
"Under one condition."
"Granted beforehand!"
"That the black tulip shall not be mentioned for the next three days."
"It shall never be mentioned any more, if you wish it, Rosa."
"No, no," the damsel said, laughing, "I will not ask for impossibilities."
And, saying this, she brought her fresh cheek, as if unconsciously, so near
the iron grating, that Cornelius was able to touch it with his lips.
Rosa uttered a little scream, which, however, was full of love, and
disappeared.
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Chapter 21
The Second Bulb
The night was a happy one, and the whole of the next day happier still.
During the last few days, the prison had been heavy, dark, and lowering, as
it were, with all its weight on the unfortunate captive. Its walls were black,
its air chilling, the iron bars seemed to exclude every ray of light.
But when Cornelius awoke next morning, a beam of the morning sun was
playing about those iron bars; pigeons were hovering about with outspread
wings, whilst others were lovingly cooing on the roof or near the still closed
window.
Cornelius ran to that window and opened it; it seemed to him as if new life,
and joy, and liberty itself were entering with this sunbeam into his cell,
which, so dreary of late, was now cheered and irradiated by the light of love.
When Gryphus, therefore, came to see his prisoner in the morning, he no
longer found him morose and lying in bed, but standing at the window, and
singing a little ditty.
"Halloa!" exclaimed the jailer.
"How are you this morning?" asked Cornelius.
Gryphus looked at him with a scowl.
"And how is the dog, and Master Jacob, and our pretty Rosa?"
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Gryphus ground his teeth, saying. --
"Here is your breakfast."
"Thank you, friend Cerberus," said the prisoner; "you are just in time; I am
very hungry."
"Oh! you are hungry, are you?" said Gryphus.
"And why not?" asked Van Baerle.
"The conspiracy seems to thrive," remarked Gryphus.
"What conspiracy?"
"Very well, I know what I know, Master Scholar; just be quiet, we shall be on
our guard."
"Be on your guard, friend Gryphus; be on your guard as long as you please;
my conspiracy, as well as my person, is entirely at your service."
"We'll see that at noon."
Saying this, Gryphus went out.
"At noon?" repeated Cornelius; "what does that mean? Well, let us wait until
the clock strikes twelve, and we shall see."
206
It was very easy for Cornelius to wait for twelve at midday, as he was already
waiting for nine at night.
It struck twelve, and there were heard on the staircase not only the steps of
Gryphus, but also those of three or four soldiers, who were coming up with
him.
The door opened. Gryphus entered, led his men in, and shut the door after
them.
"There, now search!"
They searched not only the pockets of Cornelius, but even his person; yet
they found nothing.
They then searched the sheets, the mattress, and the straw mattress of his
bed; and again they found nothing.
Now, Cornelius rejoiced that he had not taken the third sucker under his
own care. Gryphus would have been sure to ferret it out in the search, and
would then have treated it as he did the first.
And certainly never did prisoner look with greater complacency at a search
made in his cell than Cornelius.
Gryphus retired with the pencil and the two or three leaves of white paper
which Rosa had given to Van Baerle, this was the only trophy brought back
from the expedition.
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At six Gryphus came back again, but alone; Cornelius tried to propitiate
him, but Gryphus growled, showed a large tooth like a tusk, which he had
in the corner of his mouth, and went out backwards, like a man who is
afraid of being attacked from behind.
Cornelius burst out laughing, to which Gryphus answered through the
grating, --
"Let him laugh that wins."
The winner that day was Cornelius; Rosa came at nine.
She was without a lantern. She needed no longer a light, as she could now
read. Moreover, the light might betray her, as Jacob was dogging her steps
more than ever. And lastly, the light would have shown her blushes.
Of what did the young people speak that evening? Of those matters of which
lovers speak at the house doors in France, or from a balcony into the street
in Spain, or down from a terrace into a garden in the East.
They spoke of those things which give wings to the hours; they spoke of
everything except the black tulip.
At last, when the clock struck ten, they parted as usual.
Cornelius was happy, as thoroughly happy as a tulip-fancier would be to
whom one has not spoken of his tulip.
He found Rosa pretty, good, graceful, and charming.
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But why did Rosa object to the tulip being spoken of?
This was indeed a great defect in Rosa.
Cornelius confessed to himself, sighing, that woman was not perfect.
Part of the night he thought of this imperfection; that is to say, so long as he
was awake he thought of Rosa.
After having fallen asleep, he dreamed of her.
But the Rosa of his dreams was by far more perfect than the Rosa of real
life. Not only did the Rosa of his dreams speak of the tulip, but also brought
to him a black one in a china vase.
Cornelius then awoke, trembling with joy, and muttering, --
"Rosa, Rosa, I love you."
And as it was already day, he thought it right not to fall asleep again, and he
continued following up the line of thought in which his mind was engaged
when he awoke.
Ah! if Rosa had only conversed about the tulip, Cornelius would have
preferred her to Queen Semiramis, to Queen Cleopatra, to Queen Elizabeth,
to Queen Anne of Austria; that is to say, to the greatest or most beautiful
queens whom the world has seen.
But Rosa had forbidden it under pain of not returning; Rosa had forbidden
the least mention of the tulip for three days. That meant seventy-two hours
209
given to the lover to be sure; but it was seventy-two hours stolen from the
horticulturist.
There was one consolation: of the seventy-two hours during which Rosa
would not allow the tulip to be mentioned, thirty-six had passed already;
and the remaining thirty-six would pass quickly enough: eighteen with
waiting for the evening's interview, and eighteen with rejoicing in its
remembrance.
Rosa came at the same hour, and Cornelius submitted most heroically to
the pangs which the compulsory silence concerning the tulip gave him.
His fair visitor, however, was well aware that, to command on the one point,
people must yield on another; she therefore no longer drew back her hands
from the grating, and even allowed Cornelius tenderly to kiss her beautiful
golden tresses.
Poor girl! she had no idea that these playful little lovers' tricks were much
more dangerous than speaking of the tulip was; but she became aware of
the fact as she returned with a beating heart, with glowing cheeks, dry lips,
and moist eyes.
And on the following evening, after the first exchange of salutations, she
retired a step, looking at him with a glance, the expression of which would
have rejoiced his heart could he but have seen it.
"Well," she said, "she is up."
"She is up! Who? What?" asked Cornelius, who did not venture on a belief
that Rosa would, of her own accord, have abridged the term of his
probation.
"She? Well, my daughter, the tulip," said Rosa.
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"What!" cried Cornelius, "you give me permission, then?"
"I do," said Rosa, with the tone of an affectionate mother who grants a
pleasure to her child.
"Ah, Rosa!" said Cornelius, putting his lips to the grating with the hope of
touching a cheek, a hand, a forehead, -- anything, in short.
He touched something much better, -- two warm and half open lips.
Rosa uttered a slight scream.
Cornelius understood that he must make haste to continue the
conversation. He guessed that this unexpected kiss had frightened Rosa.
"Is it growing up straight?"
"Straight as a rocket," said Rosa.
"How high?"
"At least two inches."
"Oh, Rosa, take good care of it, and we shall soon see it grow quickly."
"Can I take more care of it?" said she. "Indeed, I think of nothing else but
the tulip."
211
"Of nothing else, Rosa? Why, now I shall grow jealous in my turn."
"Oh, you know that to think of the tulip is to think of you; I never lose sight
of it. I see it from my bed, on awaking it is the first object that meets my
eyes, and on falling asleep the last on which they rest. During the day I sit
and work by its side, for I have never left my chamber since I put it there."
"You are right Rosa, it is your dowry, you know."
"Yes, and with it I may marry a young man of twenty-six or twenty-eight
years, whom I shall be in love with."
"Don't talk in that way, you naughty girl."
That evening Cornelius was one of the happiest of men. Rosa allowed him to
press her hand in his, and to keep it as long as he would, besides which he
might talk of his tulip as much as he liked.
From that hour every day marked some progress in the growth of the tulip
and in the affection of the two young people.
At one time it was that the leaves had expanded, and at another that the
flower itself had formed.
Great was the joy of Cornelius at this news, and his questions succeeded
one another with a rapidity which gave proof of their importance.
"Formed!" exclaimed Cornelius, "is it really formed?"
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"It is," repeated Rosa.
Cornelius trembled with joy, so much so that he was obliged to hold by the
grating.
"Good heavens!" he exclaimed.
Then, turning again to Rosa, he continued his questions.
"Is the oval regular? the cylinder full? and are the points very green?"
"The oval is almost one inch long, and tapers like a needle, the cylinder
swells at the sides, and the points are ready to open."
Two days after Rosa announced that they were open.
"Open, Rosa!" cried Cornelius. "Is the involucrum open? but then one may
see and already distinguish ---- "
Here the prisoner paused, anxiously taking breath.
"Yes," answered Rosa, "one may already distinguish a thread of different
colour, as thin as a hair."
"And its colour?" asked Cornelius, trembling.
"Oh," answered Rosa, "it is very dark!"
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"Brown?"
"Darker than that."
"Darker, my good Rosa, darker? Thank you. Dark as ---- "
"Dark as the ink with which I wrote to you."
Cornelius uttered a cry of mad joy.
Then, suddenly stopping and clasping his hands, he said, --
"Oh, there is not an angel in heaven that may be compared to you, Rosa!"
"Indeed!" said Rosa, smiling at his enthusiasm.
"Rosa, you have worked with such ardour, -- you have done so much for me!
Rosa, my tulip is about to flower, and it will flower black! Rosa, Rosa, you
are the most perfect being on earth!"
"After the tulip, though."
"Ah! be quiet, you malicious little creature, be quiet! For shame! Do not spoil
my pleasure. But tell me, Rosa, -- as the tulip is so far advanced, it will
flower in two or three days, at the latest?"
"To-morrow, or the day after."
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"Ah! and I shall not see it," cried Cornelius, starting back, "I shall not kiss it,
as a wonderful work of the Almighty, as I kiss your hand and your cheek,
Rosa, when by chance they are near the grating."
Rosa drew near, not by accident, but intentionally, and Cornelius kissed her
tenderly.
"Faith, I shall cull it, if you wish it."
"Oh, no, no, Rosa! when it is open, place it carefully in the shade, and
immediately send a message to Haarlem, to the President of the
Horticultural Society, that the grand black tulip is in flower. I know well it is
far to Haarlem, but with money you will find a messenger. Have you any
money, Rosa?"
Rosa smiled.
"Oh, yes!" she said.
"Enough?" said Cornelius.
"I have three hundred guilders."
"Oh, if you have three hundred guilders, you must not send a messenger,
Rosa, but you must go to Haarlem yourself."
"But what in the meantime is to become of the flower?"
"Oh, the flower! you must take it with you. You understand that you must
not separate from it for an instant."
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"But whilst I am not separating from it, I am separating from you, Mynheer
Cornelius."
"Ah! that's true, my sweet Rosa. Oh, my God! how wicked men are! What
have I done to offend them, and why have they deprived me of my liberty?
You are right, Rosa, I cannot live without you. Well, you will send some one
to Haarlem, -- that's settled; really, the matter is wonderful enough for the
President to put himself to some trouble. He will come himself to Loewestein
to see the tulip."
Then, suddenly checking himself, he said, with a faltering voice, --
"Rosa, Rosa, if after all it should not flower black!"
"Oh, surely, surely, you will know to-morrow, or the day after."
"And to wait until evening to know it, Rosa! I shall die with impatience.
Could we not agree about a signal?"
"I shall do better than that."
"What will you do?"
"If it opens at night, I shall come and tell you myself. If it is day, I shall pass
your door, and slip you a note either under the door, or through the grating,
during the time between my father's first and second inspection."
"Yes, Rosa, let it be so. One word of yours, announcing this news to me, will
be a double happiness."
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"There, ten o'clock strikes," said Rosa, "I must now leave you."
"Yes, yes," said Cornelius, "go, Rosa, go!"
Rosa withdrew, almost melancholy, for Cornelius had all but sent her away.
It is true that he did so in order that she might watch over his black tulip.
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Chapter 22
The Opening of the Flower
The night passed away very sweetly for Cornelius, although in great
agitation. Every instant he fancied he heard the gentle voice of Rosa calling
him. He then started up, went to the door, and looked through the grating,
but no one was behind it, and the lobby was empty.
Rosa, no doubt, would be watching too, but, happier than he, she watched
over the tulip; she had before her eyes that noble flower, that wonder of
wonders. which not only was unknown, but was not even thought possible
until then.
What would the world say when it heard that the black tulip was found, that
it existed and that it was the prisoner Van Baerle who had found it?
How Cornelius would have spurned the offer of his liberty in exchange for
his tulip!
Day came, without any news; the tulip was not yet in flower.
The day passed as the night. Night came, and with it Rosa, joyous and
cheerful as a bird.
"Well?" asked Cornelius.
"Well, all is going on prosperously. This night, without any doubt, our tulip
will be in flower."
218
"And will it flower black?"
"Black as jet."
"Without a speck of any other colour."
"Without one speck."
"Good Heavens! my dear Rosa, I have been dreaming all night, in the first
place of you," (Rosa made a sign of incredulity,) "and then of what we must
do."
"Well?"
"Well, and I will tell you now what I have decided on. The tulip once being in
flower, and it being quite certain that it is perfectly black, you must find a
messenger."
"If it is no more than that, I have a messenger quite ready."
"Is he safe?"
"One for whom I will answer, -- he is one of my lovers."
"I hope not Jacob."
"No, be quiet, it is the ferryman of Loewestein, a smart young man of twenty-
five."
219
"By Jove!"
"Be quiet," said Rosa, smiling, "he is still under age, as you have yourself
fixed it from twenty-six to twenty-eight."
"In fine, do you think you may rely on this young man?"
"As on myself; he would throw himself into the Waal or the Meuse if I bade
him."
"Well, Rosa, this lad may be at Haarlem in ten hours; you will give me paper
and pencil, and, perhaps better still, pen and ink, and I will write, or rather,
on second thoughts, you will, for if I did, being a poor prisoner, people
might, like your father, see a conspiracy in it. You will write to the President
of the Horticultural Society, and I am sure he will come."
"But if he tarries?"
"Well, let us suppose that he tarries one day, or even two; but it is
impossible. A tulip-fancier like him will not tarry one hour, not one minute,
not one second, to set out to see the eighth wonder of the world. But, as I
said, if he tarried one or even two days, the tulip will still be in its full
splendour. The flower once being seen by the President, and the protocol
being drawn up, all is in order; you will only keep a duplicate of the protocol,
and intrust the tulip to him. Ah! if we had been able to carry it ourselves,
Rosa, it would never have left my hands but to pass into yours; but this is a
dream, which we must not entertain," continued Cornelius with a sigh, "the
eyes of strangers will see it flower to the last. And above all, Rosa, before the
President has seen it, let it not be seen by any one. Alas! if any one saw the
black tulip, it would be stolen."
"Oh!"
220
"Did you not tell me yourself of what you apprehended from your lover
Jacob? People will steal one guilder, why not a hundred thousand?"
"I shall watch; be quiet."
"But if it opened whilst you were here?"
"The whimsical little thing would indeed be quite capable of playing such a
trick," said Rosa.
"And if on your return you find it open?"
"Well?"
"Oh, Rosa, whenever it opens, remember that not a moment must be lost in
apprising the President."
"And in apprising you. Yes, I understand."
Rosa sighed, yet without any bitter feeling, but rather like a woman who
begins to understand a foible, and to accustom herself to it.
"I return to your tulip, Mynheer van Baerle, and as soon as it opens I will
give you news, which being done the messenger will set out immediately."
"Rosa, Rosa, I don't know to what wonder under the sun I shall compare
you."
221
"Compare me to the black tulip, and I promise you I shall feel very much
flattered. Good night, then, till we meet again, Mynheer Cornelius."
"Oh, say 'Good night, my friend.'"
"Good night, my friend," said Rosa, a little consoled.
"Say, 'My very dear friend.'"
"Oh, my friend -- "
"Very dear friend, I entreat you, say 'very dear,' Rosa, very dear."
"Very dear, yes, very dear," said Rosa, with a beating heart, beyond herself
with happiness.
"And now that you have said 'very dear,' dear Rosa, say also 'most happy':
say 'happier and more blessed than ever man was under the sun.' I only
lack one thing, Rosa."
"And that is?"
"Your cheek, -- your fresh cheek, your soft, rosy cheek. Oh, Rosa, give it me
of your own free will, and not by chance. Ah!"
The prisoner's prayer ended in a sigh of ecstasy; his lips met those of the
maiden, -- not by chance, nor by stratagem, but as Saint-Preux's was to
meet the lips of Julie a hundred years later.
222
Rosa made her escape.
Cornelius stood with his heart upon his lips, and his face glued to the
wicket in the door.
He was fairly choking with happiness and joy. He opened his window, and
gazed long, with swelling heart, at the cloudless vault of heaven, and the
moon, which shone like silver upon the two-fold stream flowing from far
beyond the hills. He filled his lungs with the pure, sweet air, while his brain
dwelt upon thoughts of happiness, and his heart overflowed with gratitude
and religious fervour.
"Oh Thou art always watching from on high, my God," he cried, half
prostrate, his glowing eyes fixed upon the stars: "forgive me that I almost
doubted Thy existence during these latter days, for Thou didst hide Thy face
behind the clouds, and wert for a moment lost to my sight, O Thou merciful
God, Thou pitying Father everlasting! But to-day, this evening, and to-night,
again I see Thee in all Thy wondrous glory in the mirror of Thy heavenly
abode, and more clearly still in the mirror of my grateful heart."
He was well again, the poor invalid; the wretched captive was free once
more.
During part of the night Cornelius, with his heart full of joy and delight,
remained at his window, gazing at the stars, and listening for every sound.
Then casting a glance from time to time towards the lobby, --
"Down there," he said, "is Rosa, watching like myself, and waiting from
minute to minute; down there, under Rosa's eyes, is the mysterious flower,
which lives, which expands, which opens, perhaps Rosa holds in this
moment the stem of the tulip between her delicate fingers. Touch it gently,
Rosa. Perhaps she touches with her lips its expanding chalice. Touch it
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cautiously, Rosa, your lips are burning. Yes, perhaps at this moment the
two objects of my dearest love caress each other under the eye of Heaven."
At this moment, a star blazed in the southern sky, and shot through the
whole horizon, falling down, as it were, on the fortress of Loewestein.
Cornelius felt a thrill run through his frame.
"Ah!" he said, "here is Heaven sending a soul to my flower."
And as if he had guessed correctly, nearly at that very moment the prisoner
heard in the lobby a step light as that of a sylph, and the rustling of a gown,
and a well-known voice, which said to him, --
"Cornelius, my friend, my very dear friend, and very happy friend, come,
come quickly."
Cornelius darted with one spring from the window to the door, his lips met
those of Rosa, who told him, with a kiss, --
"It is open, it is black, here it is."
"How! here it is?" exclaimed Cornelius.
"Yes, yes, we ought indeed to run some little risk to give a great joy; here it
is, take it."
And with one hand she raised to the level of the grating a dark lantern,
which she had lit in the meanwhile, whilst with the other she held to the
same height the miraculous tulip.
224
Cornelius uttered a cry, and was nearly fainting.
"Oh!" muttered he, "my God, my God, Thou dost reward me for my
innocence and my captivity, as Thou hast allowed two such flowers to grow
at the grated window of my prison!"
The tulip was beautiful, splendid, magnificent; its stem was more than
eighteen inches high; it rose from out of four green leaves, which were as
smooth and straight as iron lance-heads; the whole of the flower was as
black and shining as jet.
"Rosa," said Cornelius, almost gasping, "Rosa, there is not one moment to
lose in writing the letter."
"It is written, my dearest Cornelius," said Rosa.
"Is it, indeed?"
"Whilst the tulip opened I wrote it myself, for I did not wish to lose a
moment. Here is the letter, and tell me whether you approve of it."
Cornelius took the letter, and read, in a handwriting which was much
improved even since the last little note he had received from Rosa, as
follows: --
"Mynheer President, -- The black tulip is about to open, perhaps in ten
minutes. As soon as it is open, I shall send a messenger to you, with the
request that you will come and fetch it in person from the fortress at
Loewestein. I am the daughter of the jailer, Gryphus, almost as much of a
captive as the prisoners of my father. I cannot, therefore, bring to you this
225
wonderful flower. This is the reason why I beg you to come and fetch it
yourself.
"It is my wish that it should be called Rosa Barlaensis.
"It has opened; it is perfectly black; come, Mynheer President, come.
"I have the honour to be your humble servant,
"Rosa Gryphus.
"That's it, dear Rosa, that's it. Your letter is admirable! I could not have
written it with such beautiful simplicity. You will give to the committee all
the information that will be required of you. They will then know how the
tulip has been grown, how much care and anxiety, and how many sleepless
nights, it has cost. But for the present not a minute must be lost. The
messenger! the messenger!"
"What's the name of the President?"
"Give me the letter, I will direct it. Oh, he is very well known: it is Mynheer
van Systens, the burgomaster of Haarlem; give it to me, Rosa, give it to me."
And with a trembling hand Cornelius wrote the address, --
"To Mynheer Peter van Systens, Burgomaster, and President of the
Horticultural Society of Haarlem."
"And now, Rosa, go, go," said Cornelius, "and let us implore the protection of
God, who has so kindly watched over us until now."
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Chapter 23
The Rival
And in fact the poor young people were in great need of protection.
They had never been so near the destruction of their hopes as at this
moment, when they thought themselves certain of their fulfilment.
The reader cannot but have recognized in Jacob our old friend, or rather
enemy, Isaac Boxtel, and has guessed, no doubt, that this worthy had
followed from the Buytenhof to Loewestein the object of his love and the
object of his hatred, -- the black tulip and Cornelius van Baerle.
What no one but a tulip-fancier, and an envious tulip-fancier, could have
discovered, -- the existence of the bulbs and the endeavours of the prisoner,
-- jealousy had enabled Boxtel, if not to discover, at least to guess.
We have seen him, more successful under the name of Jacob than under
that of Isaac, gain the friendship of Gryphus, which for several months he
cultivated by means of the best Genievre ever distilled from the Texel to
Antwerp, and he lulled the suspicion of the jealous turnkey by holding out
to him the flattering prospect of his designing to marry Rosa.
Besides thus offering a bait to the ambition of the father, he managed, at the
same time, to interest his zeal as a jailer, picturing to him in the blackest
colours the learned prisoner whom Gryphus had in his keeping, and who, as
the sham Jacob had it, was in league with Satan, to the detriment of his
Highness the Prince of Orange.
At first he had also made some way with Rosa; not, indeed, in her affections,
but inasmuch as, by talking to her of marriage and of love, he had evaded
all the suspicions which he might otherwise have excited.
227
We have seen how his imprudence in following Rosa into the garden had
unmasked him in the eyes of the young damsel, and how the instinctive
fears of Cornelius had put the two lovers on their guard against him.
The reader will remember that the first cause of uneasiness was given to the
prisoner by the rage of Jacob when Gryphus crushed the first bulb. In that
moment Boxtel's exasperation was the more fierce, as, though suspecting
that Cornelius possessed a second bulb, he by no means felt sure of it.
From that moment he began to dodge the steps of Rosa, not only following
her to the garden, but also to the lobbies.
Only as this time he followed her in the night, and bare-footed, he was
neither seen nor heard except once, when Rosa thought she saw something
like a shadow on the staircase.
Her discovery, however, was made too late, as Boxtel had heard from the
mouth of the prisoner himself that a second bulb existed.
Taken in by the stratagem of Rosa, who had feigned to put it in the ground,
and entertaining no doubt that this little farce had been played in order to
force him to betray himself, he redoubled his precaution, and employed
every means suggested by his crafty nature to watch the others without
being watched himself.
He saw Rosa conveying a large flower-pot of white earthenware from her
father's kitchen to her bedroom. He saw Rosa washing in pails of water her
pretty little hands, begrimed as they were with the mould which she had
handled, to give her tulip the best soil possible.
And at last he hired, just opposite Rosa's window, a little attic, distant
enough not to allow him to be recognized with the naked eye, but sufficiently
228
near to enable him, with the help of his telescope, to watch everything that
was going on at the Loewestein in Rosa's room, just as at Dort he had
watched the dry-room of Cornelius.
He had not been installed more than three days in his attic before all his
doubts were removed.
From morning to sunset the flower-pot was in the window, and, like those
charming female figures of Mieris and Metzys, Rosa appeared at that
window as in a frame, formed by the first budding sprays of the wild vine
and the honeysuckle encircling her window.
Rosa watched the flower-pot with an interest which betrayed to Boxtel the
real value of the object enclosed in it.
This object could not be anything else but the second bulb, that is to say,
the quintessence of all the hopes of the prisoner.
When the nights threatened to be too cold, Rosa took in the flower-pot.
Well, it was then quite evident she was following the instructions of
Cornelius, who was afraid of the bulb being killed by frost.
When the sun became too hot, Rosa likewise took in the pot from eleven in
the morning until two in the afternoon.
Another proof: Cornelius was afraid lest the soil should become too dry.
But when the first leaves peeped out of the earth Boxtel was fully convinced;
and his telescope left him no longer in any uncertainty before they had
grown one inch in height.
229
Cornelius possessed two bulbs, and the second was intrusted to the love
and care of Rosa.
For it may well be imagined that the tender secret of the two lovers had not
escaped the prying curiosity of Boxtel.
The question, therefore, was how to wrest the second bulb from the care of
Rosa.
Certainly this was no easy task.
Rosa watched over her tulip as a mother over her child, or a dove over her
eggs.
Rosa never left her room during the day, and, more than that, strange to
say, she never left it in the evening.
For seven days Boxtel in vain watched Rosa; she was always at her post.
This happened during those seven days which made Cornelius so unhappy,
depriving him at the same time of all news of Rosa and of his tulip.
Would the coolness between Rosa and Cornelius last for ever?
This would have made the theft much more difficult than Mynheer Isaac had
at first expected.
We say the theft, for Isaac had simply made up his mind to steal the tulip;
and as it grew in the most profound secrecy, and as, moreover, his word,
230
being that of a renowned tulip-grower, would any day be taken against that
of an unknown girl without any knowledge of horticulture, or against that of
a prisoner convicted of high treason, he confidently hoped that, having once
got possession of the bulb, he would be certain to obtain the prize; and then
the tulip, instead of being called Tulipa nigra Barlaensis, would go down to
posterity under the name of Tulipa nigra Boxtellensis or Boxtellea.
Mynheer Isaac had not yet quite decided which of these two names he would
give to the tulip, but, as both meant the same thing, this was, after all, not
the important point.
The point was to steal the tulip. But in order that Boxtel might steal the
tulip, it was necessary that Rosa should leave her room.
Great therefore was his joy when he saw the usual evening meetings of the
lovers resumed.
He first of all took advantage of Rosa's absence to make himself fully
acquainted with all the peculiarities of the door of her chamber. The lock
was a double one and in good order, but Rosa always took the key with her.
Boxtel at first entertained an idea of stealing the key, but it soon occurred to
him, not only that it would be exceedingly difficult to abstract it from her
pocket, but also that, when she perceived her loss, she would not leave her
room until the lock was changed, and then Boxtel's first theft would be
useless.
He thought it, therefore, better to employ a different expedient. He collected
as many keys as he could, and tried all of them during one of those
delightful hours which Rosa and Cornelius passed together at the grating of
the cell.
Two of the keys entered the lock, and one of them turned round once, but
not the second time.
231
There was, therefore, only a little to be done to this key.
Boxtel covered it with a slight coat of wax, and when he thus renewed the
experiment, the obstacle which prevented the key from being turned a
second time left its impression on the wax.
It cost Boxtel two days more to bring his key to perfection, with the aid of a
small file.
Rosa's door thus opened without noise and without difficulty, and Boxtel
found himself in her room alone with the tulip.
The first guilty act of Boxtel had been to climb over a wall in order to dig up
the tulip; the second, to introduce himself into the dry-room of Cornelius,
through an open window; and the third, to enter Rosa's room by means of a
false key.
Thus envy urged Boxtel on with rapid steps in the career of crime.
Boxtel, as we have said, was alone with the tulip.
A common thief would have taken the pot under his arm, and carried it off.
But Boxtel was not a common thief, and he reflected.
It was not yet certain, although very probable, that the tulip would flower
black; if, therefore, he stole it now, he not only might be committing a
useless crime, but also the theft might be discovered in the time which must
elapse until the flower should open.
232
He therefore -- as being in possession of the key, he might enter Rosa's
chamber whenever he liked -- thought it better to wait and to take it either
an hour before or after opening, and to start on the instant to Haarlem,
where the tulip would be before the judges of the committee before any one
else could put in a reclamation.
Should any one then reclaim it, Boxtel would in his turn charge him or her
with theft.
This was a deep-laid scheme, and quite worthy of its author.
Thus, every evening during that delightful hour which the two lovers passed
together at the grated window, Boxtel entered Rosa's chamber to watch the
progress which the black tulip had made towards flowering.
On the evening at which we have arrived he was going to enter according to
custom; but the two lovers, as we have seen, only exchanged a few words
before Cornelius sent Rosa back to watch over the tulip.
Seeing Rosa enter her room ten minutes after she had left it, Boxtel guessed
that the tulip had opened, or was about to open.
During that night, therefore, the great blow was to be struck. Boxtel
presented himself before Gryphus with a double supply of Genievre, that is
to say, with a bottle in each pocket.
Gryphus being once fuddled, Boxtel was very nearly master of the house.
At eleven o'clock Gryphus was dead drunk. At two in the morning Boxtel
saw Rosa leaving the chamber; but evidently she held in her arms
something which she carried with great care.
233
He did not doubt that this was the black tulip which was in flower.
But what was she going to do with it? Would she set out that instant to
Haarlem with it?
It was not possible that a young girl should undertake such a journey alone
during the night.
Was she only going to show the tulip to Cornelius? This was more likely.
He followed Rosa in his stocking feet, walking on tiptoe.
He saw her approach the grated window. He heard her calling Cornelius. By
the light of the dark lantern he saw the tulip open, and black as the night in
which he was hidden.
He heard the plan concerted between Cornelius and Rosa to send a
messenger to Haarlem. He saw the lips of the lovers meet, and then heard
Cornelius send Rosa away.
He saw Rosa extinguish the light and return to her chamber. Ten minutes
after, he saw her leave the room again, and lock it twice.
Boxtel, who saw all this whilst hiding himself on the landing-place of the
staircase above, descended step by step from his story as Rosa descended
from hers; so that, when she touched with her light foot the lowest step of
the staircase, Boxtel touched with a still lighter hand the lock of Rosa's
chamber.
234
And in that hand, it must be understood, he held the false key which
opened Rosa's door as easily as did the real one.
And this is why, in the beginning of the chapter, we said that the poor young
people were in great need of the protection of God.
235
Chapter 24
The Black Tulip changes Masters
Cornelius remained standing on the spot where Rosa had left him. He was
quite overpowered with the weight of his twofold happiness.
Half an hour passed away. Already did the first rays of the sun enter
through the iron grating of the prison, when Cornelius was suddenly
startled at the noise of steps which came up the staircase, and of cries
which approached nearer and nearer.
Almost at the same instant he saw before him the pale and distracted face of
Rosa.
He started, and turned pale with fright.
"Cornelius, Cornelius!" she screamed, gasping for breath.
"Good Heaven! what is it?" asked the prisoner.
"Cornelius! the tulip ---- "
"Well?"
"How shall I tell you?"
"Speak, speak, Rosa!"
236
"Some one has taken -- stolen it from us."
"Stolen -- taken?" said Cornelius.
"Yes," said Rosa, leaning against the door to support herself; "yes, taken,
stolen!"
And saying this, she felt her limbs failing her, and she fell on her knees.
"But how? Tell me, explain to me."
"Oh, it is not my fault, my friend."
Poor Rosa! she no longer dared to call him "My beloved one."
"You have then left it alone," said Cornelius, ruefully.
"One minute only, to instruct our messenger, who lives scarcely fifty yards
off, on the banks of the Waal."
"And during that time, notwithstanding all my injunctions, you left the key
behind, unfortunate child!"
"No, no, no! this is what I cannot understand. The key was never out of my
hands; I clinched it as if I were afraid it would take wings."
"But how did it happen, then?"
237
"That's what I cannot make out. I had given the letter to my messenger; he
started before I left his house; I came home, and my door was locked,
everything in my room was as I had left it, except the tulip, -- that was gone.
Some one must have had a key for my room, or have got a false one made on
purpose."
She was nearly choking with sobs, and was unable to continue.
Cornelius, immovable and full of consternation, heard almost without
understanding, and only muttered, --
"Stolen, stolen, and I am lost!"
"O Cornelius, forgive me, forgive me, it will kill me!"
Seeing Rosa's distress, Cornelius seized the iron bars of the grating, and
furiously shaking them, called out, --
"Rosa, Rosa, we have been robbed, it is true, but shall we allow ourselves to
be dejected for all that? No, no; the misfortune is great, but it may perhaps
be remedied. Rosa, we know the thief!"
"Alas! what can I say about it?"
"But I say that it is no one else but that infamous Jacob. Shall we allow him
to carry to Haarlem the fruit of our labour, the fruit of our sleepless nights,
the child of our love? Rosa, we must pursue, we must overtake him!"
"But how can we do all this, my friend, without letting my father know we
were in communication with each other? How should I, a poor girl, with so
little knowledge of the world and its ways, be able to attain this end, which
perhaps you could not attain yourself?"
238
"Rosa, Rosa, open this door to me, and you will see whether I will not find
the thief, -- whether I will not make him confess his crime and beg for
mercy."
"Alas!" cried Rosa, sobbing, "can I open the door for you? have I the keys? If
I had had them, would not you have been free long ago?"
"Your father has them, -- your wicked father, who has already crushed the
first bulb of my tulip. Oh, the wretch! he is an accomplice of Jacob!"
"Don't speak so loud, for Heaven's sake!"
"Oh, Rosa, if you don't open the door to me," Cornelius cried in his rage, "I
shall force these bars, and kill everything I find in the prison."
"Be merciful, be merciful, my friend!"
"I tell you, Rosa, that I shall demolish this prison, stone for stone!" and the
unfortunate man, whose strength was increased tenfold by his rage, began
to shake the door with a great noise, little heeding that the thunder of his
voice was re-echoing through the spiral staircase.
Rosa, in her fright, made vain attempts to check this furious outbreak.
"I tell you that I shall kill that infamous Gryphus?" roared Cornelius. "I tell
you I shall shed his blood as he did that of my black tulip."
The wretched prisoner began really to rave.
239
"Well, then, yes," said Rosa, all in a tremble. "Yes, yes, only be quiet. Yes,
yes, I will take his keys, I will open the door for you! Yes, only be quiet, my
own dear Cornelius."
She did not finish her speech, as a growl by her side interrupted her.
"My father!" cried Rosa.
"Gryphus!" roared Van Baerle. "Oh, you villain!"
Old Gryphus, in the midst of all the noise, had ascended the staircase
without being heard.
He rudely seized his daughter by the wrist.
"So you will take my keys?" he said, in a voice choked with rage. "Ah! this
dastardly fellow, this monster, this gallows-bird of a conspirator, is your
own dear Cornelius, is he? Ah! Missy has communications with prisoners of
state. Ah! won't I teach you -- won't I?"
Rosa clasped her hands in despair.
"Ah!" Gryphus continued, passing from the madness of anger to the cool
irony of a man who has got the better of his enemy, -- "Ah, you innocent
tulip-fancier, you gentle scholar; you will kill me, and drink my blood! Very
well! very well! And you have my daughter for an accomplice. Am I, forsooth,
in a den of thieves, -- in a cave of brigands? Yes, but the Governor shall
know all to-morrow, and his Highness the Stadtholder the day after. We
know the law, -- we shall give a second edition of the Buytenhof, Master
Scholar, and a good one this time. Yes, yes, just gnaw your paws like a bear
in his cage, and you, my fine little lady, devour your dear Cornelius with
your eyes. I tell you, my lambkins, you shall not much longer have the
felicity of conspiring together. Away with you, unnatural daughter! And as to
240
you, Master Scholar, we shall see each other again. Just be quiet, -- we
shall."
Rosa, beyond herself with terror and despair, kissed her hands to her friend;
then, suddenly struck with a bright thought, she rushed toward the
staircase, saying, --
"All is not yet lost, Cornelius. Rely on me, my Cornelius."
Her father followed her, growling.
As to poor Cornelius, he gradually loosened his hold of the bars, which his
fingers still grasped convulsively. His head was heavy, his eyes almost
started from their sockets, and he fell heavily on the floor of his cell,
muttering, --
"Stolen! it has been stolen from me!"
During this time Boxtel had left the fortress by the door which Rosa herself
had opened. He carried the black tulip wrapped up in a cloak, and, throwing
himself into a coach, which was waiting for him at Gorcum, he drove off,
without, as may well be imagined, having informed his friend Gryphus of his
sudden departure.
And now, as we have seen him enter his coach, we shall with the consent of
the reader, follow him to the end of his journey.
He proceeded but slowly, as the black tulip could not bear travelling post-
haste.
But Boxtel, fearing that he might not arrive early enough, procured at Delft
a box, lined all round with fresh moss, in which he packed the tulip. The
241
flower was so lightly pressed upon all sides, with a supply of air from above,
that the coach could now travel full speed without any possibility of injury to
the tulip.
He arrived next morning at Haarlem, fatigued but triumphant; and, to do
away with every trace of the theft, he transplanted the tulip, and, breaking
the original flower-pot, threw the pieces into the canal. After which he wrote
the President of the Horticultural Society a letter, in which he announced to
him that he had just arrived at Haarlem with a perfectly black tulip; and,
with his flower all safe, took up his quarters at a good hotel in the town, and
there he waited.
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Chapter 25
The President van Systens
Rosa, on leaving Cornelius, had fixed on her plan, which was no other than
to restore to Cornelius the stolen tulip, or never to see him again.
She had seen the despair of the prisoner, and she knew that it was derived
from a double source, and that it was incurable.
On the one hand, separation became inevitable, -- Gryphus having at the
same time surprised the secret of their love and of their secret meetings.
On the other hand, all the hopes on the fulfilment of which Cornelius van
Baerle had rested his ambition for the last seven years were now crushed.
Rosa was one of those women who are dejected by trifles, but who in great
emergencies are supplied by the misfortune itself with the energy for
combating or with the resources for remedying it.
She went to her room, and cast a last glance about her to see whether she
had not been mistaken, and whether the tulip was not stowed away in some
corner where it had escaped her notice. But she sought in vain, the tulip
was still missing; the tulip was indeed stolen.
Rosa made up a little parcel of things indispensable for a journey; took her
three hundred guilders, -- that is to say, all her fortune, -- fetched the third
bulb from among her lace, where she had laid it up, and carefully hid it in
her bosom; after which she locked her door twice to disguise her flight as
long as possible, and, leaving the prison by the same door which an hour
before had let out Boxtel, she went to a stable-keeper to hire a carriage.
243
The man had only a two-wheel chaise, and this was the vehicle which Boxtel
had hired since last evening, and in which he was now driving along the
road to Delft; for the road from Loewestein to Haarlem, owing to the many
canals, rivers, and rivulets intersecting the country, is exceedingly
circuitous.
Not being able to procure a vehicle, Rosa was obliged to take a horse, with
which the stable-keeper readily intrusted her, knowing her to be the
daughter of the jailer of the fortress.
Rosa hoped to overtake her messenger, a kind-hearted and honest lad,
whom she would take with her, and who might at the same time serve her
as a guide and a protector.
And in fact she had not proceeded more than a league before she saw him
hastening along one of the side paths of a very pretty road by the river.
Setting her horse off at a canter, she soon came up with him.
The honest lad was not aware of the important character of his message;
nevertheless, he used as much speed as if he had known it; and in less than
an hour he had already gone a league and a half.
Rosa took from him the note, which had now become useless, and explained
to him what she wanted him to do for her. The boatman placed himself
entirely at her disposal, promising to keep pace with the horse if Rosa would
allow him to take hold of either the croup or the bridle of her horse. The two
travellers had been on their way for five hours, and made more than eight
leagues, and yet Gryphus had not the least suspicion of his daughter having
left the fortress.
The jailer, who was of a very spiteful and cruel disposition, chuckled within
himself at the idea of having struck such terror into his daughter's heart.
244
But whilst he was congratulating himself on having such a nice story to tell
to his boon companion, Jacob, that worthy was on his road to Delft; and,
thanks to the swiftness of the horse, had already the start of Rosa and her
companion by four leagues.
And whilst the affectionate father was rejoicing at the thought of his
daughter weeping in her room, Rosa was making the best of her way
towards Haarlem.
Thus the prisoner alone was where Gryphus thought him to be.
Rosa was so little with her father since she took care of the tulip, that at his
dinner hour, that is to say, at twelve o'clock, he was reminded for the first
time by his appetite that his daughter was fretting rather too long.
He sent one of the under-turnkeys to call her; and, when the man came
back to tell him that he had called and sought her in vain, he resolved to go
and call her himself.
He first went to her room, but, loud as he knocked, Rosa answered not.
The locksmith of the fortress was sent for; he opened the door, but Gryphus
no more found Rosa than she had found the tulip.
At that very moment she entered Rotterdam.
Gryphus therefore had just as little chance of finding her in the kitchen as
in her room, and just as little in the garden as in the kitchen.
The reader may imagine the anger of the jailer when, after having made
inquiries about the neighbourhood, he heard that his daughter had hired a
245
horse, and, like an adventuress, set out on a journey without saying where
she was going.
Gryphus again went up in his fury to Van Baerle, abused him, threatened
him, knocked all the miserable furniture of his cell about, and promised him
all sorts of misery, even starvation and flogging.
Cornelius, without even hearing what his jailer said, allowed himself to be
ill-treated, abused, and threatened, remaining all the while sullen,
immovable, dead to every emotion and fear.
After having sought for Rosa in every direction, Gryphus looked out for
Jacob, and, as he could not find him either, he began to suspect from that
moment that Jacob had run away with her.
The damsel, meanwhile, after having stopped for two hours at Rotterdam,
had started again on her journey. On that evening she slept at Delft, and on
the following morning she reached Haarlem, four hours after Boxtel had
arrived there.
Rosa, first of all, caused herself to be led before Mynheer van Systens, the
President of the Horticultural Society of Haarlem.
She found that worthy gentleman in a situation which, to do justice to our
story, we must not pass over in our description.
The President was drawing up a report to the committee of the society.
This report was written on large-sized paper, in the finest handwriting of the
President.
246
Rosa was announced simply as Rosa Gryphus; but as her name, well as it
might sound, was unknown to the President, she was refused admittance.
Rosa, however, was by no means abashed, having vowed in her heart, in
pursuing her cause, not to allow herself to be put down either by refusal, or
abuse, or even brutality.
"Announce to the President," she said to the servant, "that I want to speak to
him about the black tulip."
These words seemed to be an "Open Sesame," for she soon found herself in
the office of the President, Van Systens, who gallantly rose from his chair to
meet her.
He was a spare little man, resembling the stem of a flower, his head forming
its chalice, and his two limp arms representing the double leaf of the tulip;
the resemblance was rendered complete by his waddling gait which made
him even more like that flower when it bends under a breeze.
"Well, miss," he said, "you are coming, I am told, about the affair of the
black tulip."
To the President of the Horticultural Society the Tulipa nigra was a first-rate
power, which, in its character as queen of the tulips, might send
ambassadors.
"Yes, sir," answered Rosa; "I come at least to speak of it."
"Is it doing well, then?" asked Van Systens, with a smile of tender
veneration.
"Alas! sir, I don't know," said Rosa.
247
"How is that? could any misfortune have happened to it?"
"A very great one, sir; yet not to it, but to me."
"What?"
"It has been stolen from me."
"Stolen! the black tulip?"
"Yes, sir."
"Do you know the thief?"
"I have my suspicions, but I must not yet accuse any one."
"But the matter may very easily be ascertained."
"How is that?"
"As it has been stolen from you, the thief cannot be far off."
"Why not?"
"Because I have seen the black tulip only two hours ago."
248
"You have seen the black tulip!" cried Rosa, rushing up to Mynheer van
Systens.
"As I see you, miss."
"But where?"
"Well, with your master, of course."
"With my master?"
"Yes, are you not in the service of Master Isaac Boxtel?"
"I?"
"Yes, you."
"But for whom do you take me, sir?"
"And for whom do you take me?"
"I hope, sir, I take you for what you are, -- that is to say, for the honorable
Mynheer van Systens, Burgomaster of Haarlem, and President of the
Horticultural Society."
"And what is it you told me just now?"
"I told you, sir, that my tulip has been stolen."
249
"Then your tulip is that of Mynheer Boxtel. Well, my child, you express
yourself very badly. The tulip has been stolen, not from you, but from
Mynheer Boxtel."
"I repeat to you, sir, that I do not know who this Mynheer Boxtel is, and that
I have now heard his name pronounced for the first time."
"You do not know who Mynheer Boxtel is, and you also had a black tulip?"
"But is there any other besides mine?" asked Rosa, trembling.
"Yes, -- that of Mynheer Boxtel."
"How is it?"
"Black, of course."
"Without speck?"
"Without a single speck, or even point."
"And you have this tulip, -- you have it deposited here?"
"No, but it will be, as it has to be exhibited before the committee previous to
the prize being awarded."
"Oh, sir!" cried Rosa, "this Boxtel -- this Isaac Boxtel -- who calls himself the
owner of the black tulip ---- "
250
"And who is its owner?"
"Is he not a very thin man?"
"Bald?"
"Yes."
"With sunken eyes?"
"I think he has."
"Restless, stooping, and bowlegged?"
"In truth, you draw Master Boxtel's portrait feature by feature."
"And the tulip, sir? Is it not in a pot of white and blue earthenware, with
yellowish flowers in a basket on three sides?"
"Oh, as to that I am not quite sure; I looked more at the flower than at the
pot."
"Oh, sir! that's my tulip, which has been stolen from me. I came here to
reclaim it before you and from you."
"Oh! oh!" said Van Systens, looking at Rosa. "What! you are here to claim
the tulip of Master Boxtel? Well, I must say, you are cool enough."
251
"Honoured sir," a little put out by this apostrophe, "I do not say that I am
coming to claim the tulip of Master Boxtel, but to reclaim my own."
"Yours?"
"Yes, the one which I have myself planted and nursed."
"Well, then, go and find out Master Boxtel, at the White Swan Inn, and you
can then settle matters with him; as for me, considering that the cause
seems to me as difficult to judge as that which was brought before King
Solomon, and that I do not pretend to be as wise as he was, I shall content
myself with making my report, establishing the existence of the black tulip,
and ordering the hundred thousand guilders to be paid to its grower. Good-
bye, my child."
"Oh, sir, sir!" said Rosa, imploringly.
"Only, my child," continued Van Systens, "as you are young and pretty, and
as there may be still some good in you, I'll give you some good advice. Be
prudent in this matter, for we have a court of justice and a prison here at
Haarlem, and, moreover, we are exceedingly ticklish as far as the honour of
our tulips is concerned. Go, my child, go, remember, Master Isaac Boxtel at
the White Swan Inn."
And Mynheer van Systens, taking up his fine pen, resumed his report,
which had been interrupted by Rosa's visit.
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Chapter 26
A Member of the Horticultural Society
Rosa, beyond herself and nearly mad with joy and fear at the idea of the
black tulip being found again, started for the White Swan, followed by the
boatman, a stout lad from Frisia, who was strong enough to knock down a
dozen Boxtels single-handed.
He had been made acquainted in the course of the journey with the state of
affairs, and was not afraid of any encounter; only he had orders, in such a
case, to spare the tulip.
But on arriving in the great market-place Rosa at once stopped, a sudden
thought had struck her, just as Homer's Minerva seizes Achilles by the hair
at the moment when he is about to be carried away by his anger.
"Good Heaven!" she muttered to herself, "I have made a grievous blunder; it
may be I have ruined Cornelius, the tulip, and myself. I have given the
alarm, and perhaps awakened suspicion. I am but a woman; these men may
league themselves against me, and then I shall be lost. If I am lost that
matters nothing, -- but Cornelius and the tulip!"
She reflected for a moment.
"If I go to that Boxtel, and do not know him; if that Boxtel is not my Jacob,
but another fancier, who has also discovered the black tulip; or if my tulip
has been stolen by some one else, or has already passed into the hands of a
third person; -- if I do not recognize the man, only the tulip, how shall I
prove that it belongs to me? On the other hand, if I recognise this Boxtel as
253
Jacob, who knows what will come out of it? whilst we are contesting with
each other, the tulip will die."
In the meanwhile, a great noise was heard, like the distant roar of the sea,
at the other extremity of the market-place. People were running about, doors
opening and shutting, Rosa alone was unconscious of all this hubbub
among the multitude.
"We must return to the President," she muttered.
"Well, then, let us return," said the boatman.
They took a small street, which led them straight to the mansion of Mynheer
van Systens, who with his best pen in his finest hand continued to draw up
his report.
Everywhere on her way Rosa heard people speaking only of the black tulip,
and the prize of a hundred thousand guilders. The news had spread like
wildfire through the town.
Rosa had not a little difficulty is penetrating a second time into the office of
Mynheer van Systens, who, however, was again moved by the magic name of
the black tulip.
But when he recognised Rosa, whom in his own mind he had set down as
mad, or even worse, he grew angry, and wanted to send her away.
Rosa, however, clasped her hands, and said with that tone of honest truth
which generally finds its way to the hearts of men, --
"For Heaven's sake, sir, do not turn me away; listen to what I have to tell
you, and if it be not possible for you to do me justice, at least you will not
254
one day have to reproach yourself before God for having made yourself the
accomplice of a bad action."
Van Systens stamped his foot with impatience; it was the second time that
Rosa interrupted him in the midst of a composition which stimulated his
vanity, both as a burgomaster and as President of the Horticultural Society.
"But my report!" he cried, -- "my report on the black tulip!"
"Mynheer van Systens," Rosa continued, with the firmness of innocence and
truth, "your report on the black tulip will, if you don't hear me, be based on
crime or on falsehood. I implore you, sir, let this Master Boxtel, whom I
assert to be Master Jacob, be brought here before you and me, and I swear
that I will leave him in undisturbed possession of the tulip if I do not
recognise the flower and its holder."
"Well, I declare, here is a proposal," said Van Systens.
"What do you mean?"
"I ask you what can be proved by your recognising them?"
"After all," said Rosa, in her despair, "you are an honest man, sir; how would
you feel if one day you found out that you had given the prize to a man for
something which he not only had not produced, but which he had even
stolen?"
Rosa's speech seemed to have brought a certain conviction into the heart of
Van Systens, and he was going to answer her in a gentler tone, when at
once a great noise was heard in the street, and loud cheers shook the house.
255
"What is this?" cried the burgomaster; "what is this? Is it possible? have I
heard aright?"
And he rushed towards his anteroom, without any longer heeding Rosa,
whom he left in his cabinet.
Scarcely had he reached his anteroom when he cried out aloud on seeing his
staircase invaded, up to the very landing-place, by the multitude, which was
accompanying, or rather following, a young man, simply clad in a violet-
coloured velvet, embroidered with silver; who, with a certain aristocratic
slowness, ascended the white stone steps of the house.
In his wake followed two officers, one of the navy, and the other of the
cavalry.
Van Systens, having found his way through the frightened domestics, began
to bow, almost to prostrate himself before his visitor, who had been the
cause of all this stir.
"Monseigneur," he called out, "Monseigneur! What distinguished honour is
your Highness bestowing for ever on my humble house by your visit?"
"Dear Mynheer van Systens," said William of Orange, with a serenity which,
with him, took the place of a smile, "I am a true Hollander, I am fond of the
water, of beer, and of flowers, sometimes even of that cheese the flavour of
which seems so grateful to the French; the flower which I prefer to all others
is, of course, the tulip. I heard at Leyden that the city of Haarlem at last
possessed the black tulip; and, after having satisfied myself of the truth of
news which seemed so incredible, I have come to know all about it from the
President of the Horticultural Society."
"Oh, Monseigneur, Monseigneur!" said Van Systens, "what glory to the
society if its endeavours are pleasing to your Highness!"
256
"Have you got the flower here?" said the Prince, who, very likely, already
regretted having made such a long speech.
"I am sorry to say we have not."
"And where is it?"
"With its owner."
"Who is he?"
"An honest tulip-grower of Dort."
"His name?"
"Boxtel."
"His quarters?"
"At the White Swan; I shall send for him, and if in the meanwhile your
Highness will do me the honour of stepping into my drawing-room, he will
be sure -- knowing that your Highness is here -- to lose no time in bringing
his tulip."
"Very well, send for him."
"Yes, your Highness, but ----
257
"What is it?"
"Oh, nothing of any consequence, Monseigneur."
"Everything is of consequence, Mynheer van Systens."
"Well, then, Monseigneur, if it must be said, a little difficulty has presented
itself."
"What difficulty?"
"This tulip has already been claimed by usurpers. It's true that it is worth a
hundred thousand guilders."
"Indeed!"
"Yes, Monseigneur, by usurpers, by forgers."
"This is a crime, Mynheer van Systens."
"So it is, your Highness."
"And have you any proofs of their guilt? '
"No, Monseigneur, the guilty woman ---- "
258
"The guilty woman, Sir?"
"I ought to say, the woman who claims the tulip, Monseigneur, is here in the
room close by."
"And what do you think of her?"
"I think, Monseigneur, that the bait of a hundred thousand guilders may
have tempted her."
"And so she claims the tulip?"
"Yes Monseigneur."
"And what proof does she offer?"
"I was just going to question her when your Highness came in."
"Question her, Mynheer van Systens, question her. I am the first magistrate
of the country; I will hear the case and administer justice."
"I have found my King Solomon," said Van Systens, bowing, and showing
the way to the Prince.
His Highness was just going to walk ahead, but, suddenly recollecting
himself he said --
"Go before me, and call me plain Mynheer."
259
The two then entered the cabinet.
Rosa was still standing at the same place, leaning on the window, and
looking through the panes into the garden.
"Ah! a Frisian girl," said the Prince, as he observed Rosa's gold brocade
headdress and red petticoat.
At the noise of their footsteps she turned round, but scarcely saw the
Prince, who seated himself in the darkest corner of the apartment.
All her attention, as may be easily imagined, was fixed on that important
person who was called Van Systens, so that she had no time to notice the
humble stranger who was following the master of the house, and who, for
aught she knew, might be somebody or nobody.
The humble stranger took a book down from the shelf, and made Van
Systens a sign to commence the examination forthwith.
Van Systens, likewise at the invitation of the young man in the violet coat,
sat down in his turn, and, quite happy and proud of the importance thus
cast upon him, began, --
"My child, you promise to tell me the truth and the entire truth concerning
this tulip?"
"I promise."
"Well, then, speak before this gentleman; this gentleman is one of the
members of the Horticultural Society."
260
"What am I to tell you, sir," said Rosa, "beside that which I have told you
already."
"Well, then, what is it?"
"I repeat the question I have addressed to you before."
"Which?"
"That you will order Mynheer Boxtel to come here with his tulip. If I do not
recognise it as mine I will frankly tell it; but if I do recognise it I will reclaim
it, even if I go before his Highness the Stadtholder himself, with my proofs in
my hands."
"You have, then, some proofs, my child?"
"God, who knows my good right, will assist me to some."
Van Systens exchanged a look with the Prince, who, since the first words of
Rosa, seemed to try to remember her, as if it were not for the first time that
this sweet voice rang in his ears.
An officer went off to fetch Boxtel, and Van Systens in the meanwhile
continued his examination.
"And with what do you support your assertion that you are the real owner of
the black tulip?"
"With the very simple fact of my having planted and grown it in my own
chamber."
261
"In your chamber? Where was your chamber?"
"At Loewestein."
"You are from Loewestein?"
"I am the daughter of the jailer of the fortress."
The Prince made a little movement, as much as to say, "Well, that's it, I
remember now."
And, all the while feigning to be engaged with his book, he watched Rosa
with even more attention than he had before.
"And you are fond of flowers?" continued Mynheer van Systens.
"Yes, sir."
"Then you are an experienced florist, I dare say?"
Rosa hesitated a moment; then with a tone which came from the depth of
her heart, she said, --
"Gentlemen, I am speaking to men of honor."
There was such an expression of truth in the tone of her voice, that Van
Systens and the Prince answered simultaneously by an affirmative
movement of their heads.
262
"Well, then, I am not an experienced florist; I am only a poor girl, one of the
people, who, three months ago, knew neither how to read nor how to write.
No, the black tulip has not been found by myself."
"But by whom else?"
"By a poor prisoner of Loewestein."
"By a prisoner of Loewestein?" repeated the Prince.
The tone of his voice startled Rosa, who was sure she had heard it before.
"By a prisoner of state, then," continued the Prince, "as there are none else
there."
Having said this he began to read again, at least in appearance.
"Yes," said Rosa, with a faltering voice, "yes, by a prisoner of state."
Van Systens trembled as he heard such a confession made in the presence
of such a witness.
"Continue," said William dryly, to the President of the Horticultural Society.
"Ah, sir," said Rosa, addressing the person whom she thought to be her real
judge, "I am going to incriminate myself very seriously."
263
"Certainly," said Van Systens, "the prisoner of state ought to be kept in close
confinement at Loewestein."
"Alas! sir."
"And from what you tell me you took advantage of your position, as
daughter of the jailer, to communicate with a prisoner of state about the
cultivation of flowers."
"So it is, sir," Rosa murmured in dismay; "yes, I am bound to confess, I saw
him every day."
"Unfortunate girl!" exclaimed Van Systens.
The Prince, observing the fright of Rosa and the pallor of the President,
raised his head, and said, in his clear and decided tone, --
"This cannot signify anything to the members of the Horticultural Society;
they have to judge on the black tulip, and have no cognizance to take of
political offences. Go on, young woman, go on."
Van Systens, by means of an eloquent glance, offered, in the name of the
tulip, his thanks to the new member of the Horticultural Society.
Rosa, reassured by this sort of encouragement which the stranger was
giving her, related all that had happened for the last three months, all that
she had done, and all that she had suffered. She described the cruelty of
Gryphus; the destruction of the first bulb; the grief of the prisoner; the
precautions taken to insure the success of the second bulb; the patience of
the prisoner and his anxiety during their separation; how he was about to
starve himself because he had no longer any news of his tulip; his joy when
she went to see him again; and, lastly, their despair when they found that
264
the tulip which had come into flower was stolen just one hour after it had
opened.
All this was detailed with an accent of truth which, although producing no
change in the impassible mien of the Prince, did not fail to take effect on
Van Systens.
"But," said the Prince, "it cannot be long since you knew the prisoner."
Rosa opened her large eyes and looked at the stranger, who drew back into
the dark corner, as if he wished to escape her observation.
"Why, sir?" she asked him.
"Because it is not yet four months since the jailer Gryphus and his daughter
were removed to Loewestein."
"That is true, sir."
"Otherwise, you must have solicited the transfer of your father, in order to
be able to follow some prisoner who may have been transported from the
Hague to Loewestein."
"Sir," said Rosa, blushing.
"Finish what you have to say," said William.
"I confess I knew the prisoner at the Hague."
265
"Happy prisoner!" said William, smiling.
At this moment the officer who had been sent for Boxtel returned, and
announced to the Prince that the person whom he had been to fetch was
following on his heels with his tulip.
266
Chapter 27
The Third Bulb
Boxtel's return was scarcely announced, when he entered in person the
drawing-room of Mynheer van Systens, followed by two men, who carried in
a box their precious burden and deposited it on a table.
The Prince, on being informed, left the cabinet, passed into the drawing-
room, admired the flower, and silently resumed his seat in the dark corner,
where he had himself placed his chair.
Rosa, trembling, pale and terrified, expected to be invited in her turn to see
the tulip.
She now heard the voice of Boxtel.
"It is he!" she exclaimed.
The Prince made her a sign to go and look through the open door into the
drawing-room.
"It is my tulip," cried Rosa, "I recognise it. Oh, my poor Cornelius!"
And saying this she burst into tears.
The Prince rose from his seat, went to the door, where he stood for some
time with the full light falling upon his figure.
267
As Rosa's eyes now rested upon him, she felt more than ever convinced that
this was not the first time she had seen the stranger.
"Master Boxtel," said the Prince, "come in here, if you please."
Boxtel eagerly approached, and, finding himself face to face with William of
Orange, started back.
"His Highness!" he called out.
"His Highness!" Rosa repeated in dismay.
Hearing this exclamation on his left, Boxtel turned round, and perceived
Rosa.
At this sight the whole frame of the thief shook as if under the influence of a
galvanic shock.
"Ah!" muttered the Prince to himself, "he is confused."
But Boxtel, making a violent effort to control his feelings, was already
himself again.
"Master Boxtel," said William, "you seem to have discovered the secret of
growing the black tulip?"
"Yes, your Highness," answered Boxtel, in a voice which still betrayed some
confusion.
268
It is true his agitation might have been attributable to the emotion which the
man must have felt on suddenly recognising the Prince.
"But," continued the Stadtholder, "here is a young damsel who also pretends
to have found it."
Boxtel, with a disdainful smile, shrugged his shoulders.
William watched all his movements with evident interest and curiosity.
"Then you don't know this young girl?" said the Prince.
"No, your Highness!"
"And you, child, do you know Master Boxtel?"
"No, I don't know Master Boxtel, but I know Master Jacob."
"What do you mean?"
"I mean to say that at Loewestein the man who here calls himself Isaac
Boxtel went by the name of Master Jacob."
"What do you say to that, Master Boxtel?"
"I say that this damsel lies, your Highness."
"You deny, therefore, having ever been at Loewestein?"
269
Boxtel hesitated; the fixed and searching glance of the proud eye of the
Prince prevented him from lying.
"I cannot deny having been at Loewestein, your Highness, but I deny having
stolen the tulip."
"You have stolen it, and that from my room," cried Rosa, with indignation.
"I deny it."
"Now listen to me. Do you deny having followed me into the garden, on the
day when I prepared the border where I was to plant it? Do you deny having
followed me into the garden when I pretended to plant it? Do you deny that,
on that evening, you rushed after my departure to the spot where you hoped
to find the bulb? Do you deny having dug in the ground with your hands --
but, thank God! in vain, as it was a stratagem to discover your intentions.
Say, do you deny all this?"
Boxtel did not deem it fit to answer these several charges, but, turning to
the Prince, continued, --
"I have now for twenty years grown tulips at Dort. I have even acquired some
reputation in this art; one of my hybrids is entered in the catalogue under
the name of an illustrious personage. I have dedicated it to the King of
Portugal. The truth in the matter is as I shall now tell your Highness. This
damsel knew that I had produced the black tulip, and, in concert with a
lover of hers in the fortress of Loewestein, she formed the plan of ruining me
by appropriating to herself the prize of a hundred thousand guilders, which,
with the help of your Highness's justice, I hope to gain."
"Yah!" cried Rosa, beyond herself with anger.
270
"Silence!" said the Prince.
Then, turning to Boxtel, he said, --
"And who is that prisoner to whom you allude as the lover of this young
woman?"
Rosa nearly swooned, for Cornelius was designated as a dangerous prisoner,
and recommended by the Prince to the especial surveillance of the jailer.
Nothing could have been more agreeable to Boxtel than this question.
"This prisoner," he said, "is a man whose name in itself will prove to your
Highness what trust you may place in his probity. He is a prisoner of state,
who was once condemned to death."
"And his name?"
Rosa hid her face in her hands with a movement of despair.
"His name is Cornelius van Baerle," said Boxtel, "and he is godson of that
villain Cornelius de Witt."
The Prince gave a start, his generally quiet eye flashed, and a death-like
paleness spread over his impassible features.
He went up to Rosa, and with his finger, gave her a sign to remove her
hands from her face.
271
Rosa obeyed, as if under mesmeric influence, without having seen the sign.
"It was, then to follow this man that you came to me at Leyden to solicit for
the transfer of your father?"
Rosa hung down her head, and, nearly choking, said, --
"Yes, your Highness."
"Go on," said the Prince to Boxtel.
"I have nothing more to say," Isaac continued. "Your Highness knows all.
But there is one thing which I did not intend to say, because I did not wish
to make this girl blush for her ingratitude. I came to Loewestein because I
had business there. On this occasion I made the acquaintance of old
Gryphus, and, falling in love with his daughter, made an offer of marriage to
her; and, not being rich, I committed the imprudence of mentioning to them
my prospect of gaining a hundred thousand guilders, in proof of which I
showed to them the black tulip. Her lover having himself made a show at
Dort of cultivating tulips to hide his political intrigues, they now plotted
together for my ruin. On the eve of the day when the flower was expected to
open, the tulip was taken away by this young woman. She carried it to her
room, from which I had the good luck to recover it at the very moment when
she had the impudence to despatch a messenger to announce to the
members of the Horticultural Society that she had produced the grand black
tulip. But she did not stop there. There is no doubt that, during the few
hours which she kept the flower in her room, she showed it to some persons
whom she may now call as witnesses. But, fortunately, your Highness has
now been warned against this impostor and her witnesses."
"Oh, my God, my God! what infamous falsehoods!" said Rosa, bursting into
tears, and throwing herself at the feet of the Stadtholder, who, although
thinking her guilty, felt pity for her dreadful agony.
272
"You have done very wrong, my child," he said, "and your lover shall be
punished for having thus badly advised you. For you are so young, and have
such an honest look, that I am inclined to believe the mischief to have been
his doing, and not yours."
"Monseigneur! Monseigneur!" cried Rosa, "Cornelius is not guilty."
William started.
"Not guilty of having advised you? that's what you want to say, is it not?"
"What I wish to say, your Highness, is that Cornelius is as little guilty of the
second crime imputed to him as he was of the first."
"Of the first? And do you know what was his first crime? Do you know of
what he was accused and convicted? Of having, as an accomplice of
Cornelius de Witt, concealed the correspondence of the Grand Pensionary
and the Marquis de Louvois."
"Well, sir, he was ignorant of this correspondence being deposited with him;
completely ignorant. I am as certain as of my life, that, if it were not so, he
would have told me; for how could that pure mind have harboured a secret
without revealing it to me? No, no, your Highness, I repeat it, and even at
the risk of incurring your displeasure, Cornelius is no more guilty of the first
crime than of the second; and of the second no more than of the first. Oh,
would to Heaven that you knew my Cornelius; Monseigneur!"
"He is a De Witt!" cried Boxtel. "His Highness knows only too much of him,
having once granted him his life."
"Silence!" said the Prince; "all these affairs of state, as I have already said,
are completely out of the province of the Horticultural Society of Haarlem."
273
Then, knitting his brow, he added, --
"As to the tulip, make yourself easy, Master Boxtel, you shall have justice
done to you."
Boxtel bowed with a heart full of joy, and received the congratulations of the
President.
"You, my child," William of Orange continued, "you were going to commit a
crime. I will not punish you; but the real evil-doer shall pay the penalty for
both. A man of his name may be a conspirator, and even a traitor, but he
ought not to be a thief."
"A thief!" cried Rosa. "Cornelius a thief? Pray, your Highness, do not say
such a word, it would kill him, if he knew it. If theft there has been, I swear
to you, Sir, no one else but this man has committed it."
"Prove it," Boxtel coolly remarked.
"I shall prove it. With God's help I shall."
Then, turning towards Boxtel, she asked, --
"The tulip is yours?"
"It is."
"How many bulbs were there of it?"
274
Boxtel hesitated for a moment, but after a short consideration he came to
the conclusion that she would not ask this question if there were none
besides the two bulbs of which he had known already. He therefore
answered, --
"Three."
"What has become of these bulbs?"
"Oh! what has become of them? Well, one has failed; the second has
produced the black tulip."
"And the third?
"The third!"
"The third, -- where is it?"
"I have it at home," said Boxtel, quite confused.
"At home? Where? At Loewestein, or at Dort?"
"At Dort," said Boxtel.
"You lie!" cried Rosa. "Monseigneur," she continued, whilst turning round to
the Prince, "I will tell you the true story of these three bulbs. The first was
crushed by my father in the prisoner's cell, and this man is quite aware of it,
for he himself wanted to get hold of it, and, being balked in his hope, he very
nearly fell out with my father, who had been the cause of his
275
disappointment. The second bulb, planted by me, has produced the black
tulip, and the third and last" -- saying this, she drew it from her bosom --
"here it is, in the very same paper in which it was wrapped up together with
the two others. When about to be led to the scaffold, Cornelius van Baerle
gave me all the three. Take it, Monseigneur, take it."
And Rosa, unfolding the paper, offered the bulb to the Prince, who took it
from her hands and examined it.
"But, Monseigneur, this young woman may have stolen the bulb, as she did
the tulip," Boxtel said, with a faltering voice, and evidently alarmed at the
attention with which the Prince examined the bulb; and even more at the
movements of Rosa, who was reading some lines written on the paper which
remained in her hands.
Her eyes suddenly lighted up; she read, with breathless anxiety, the
mysterious paper over and over again; and at last, uttering a cry, held it out
to the Prince and said, "Read, Monseigneur, for Heaven's sake, read!"
William handed the third bulb to Van Systens, took the paper, and read.
No sooner had he looked at it than he began to stagger; his hand trembled,
and very nearly let the paper fall to the ground; and the expression of pain
and compassion in his features was really frightful to see.
It was that fly-leaf, taken from the Bible, which Cornelius de Witt had sent
to Dort by Craeke, the servant of his brother John, to request Van Baerle to
burn the correspondence of the Grand Pensionary with the Marquis de
Louvois.
This request, as the reader may remember, was couched in the following
terms: --
276
"My Dear Godson, --
"Burn the parcel which I have intrusted to you. Burn it without looking at it,
and without opening it, so that its contents may for ever remain unknown to
yourself. Secrets of this description are death to those with whom they are
deposited. Burn it, and you will have saved John and Cornelius de Witt.
"Farewell, and love me.
Cornelius de Witt.
"August 20, 1672."
This slip of paper offered the proofs both of Van Baerle's innocence and of
his claim to the property of the tulip.
Rosa and the Stadtholder exchanged one look only.
That of Rosa was meant to express, "Here, you see yourself."
That of the Stadtholder signified, "Be quiet, and wait."
The Prince wiped the cold sweat from his forehead, and slowly folded up the
paper, whilst his thoughts were wandering in that labyrinth without a goal
and without a guide, which is called remorse and shame for the past.
Soon, however, raising his head with an effort, he said, in his usual voice, --
"Go, Mr. Boxtel; justice shall be done, I promise you."
277
Then, turning to the President, he added, --
"You, my dear Mynheer van Systens, take charge of this young woman and
of the tulip. Good-bye."
All bowed, and the Prince left, among the deafening cheers of the crowd
outside.
Boxtel returned to his inn, rather puzzled and uneasy, tormented by
misgivings about that paper which William had received from the hand of
Rosa, and which his Highness had read, folded up, and so carefully put in
his pocket. What was the meaning of all this?
Rosa went up to the tulip, tenderly kissed its leaves and, with a heart full of
happiness and confidence in the ways of God, broke out in the words, --
"Thou knowest best for what end Thou madest my good Cornelius teach me
to read."
278
Chapter 28
The Hymn of the Flowers
Whilst the events we have described in our last chapter were taking place,
the unfortunate Van Baerle, forgotten in his cell in the fortress of
Loewestein, suffered at the hands of Gryphus all that a prisoner can suffer
when his jailer has formed the determination of playing the part of
hangman.
Gryphus, not having received any tidings of Rosa or of Jacob, persuaded
himself that all that had happened was the devil's work, and that Dr.
Cornelius van Baerle had been sent on earth by Satan.
The result of it was, that, one fine morning, the third after the
disappearance of Jacob and Rosa, he went up to the cell of Cornelius in
even a greater rage than usual.
The latter, leaning with his elbows on the window-sill and supporting his
head with his two hands, whilst his eyes wandered over the distant hazy
horizon where the windmills of Dort were turning their sails, was breathing
the fresh air, in order to be able to keep down his tears and to fortify himself
in his philosophy.
The pigeons were still there, but hope was not there; there was no future to
look forward to.
Alas! Rosa, being watched, was no longer able to come. Could she not write?
and if so, could she convey her letters to him?
No, no. He had seen during the two preceding days too much fury and
malignity in the eyes of old Gryphus to expect that his vigilance would relax,
even for one moment. Moreover, had not she to suffer even worse torments
279
than those of seclusion and separation? Did this brutal, blaspheming,
drunken bully take revenge on his daughter, like the ruthless fathers of the
Greek drama? And when the Genievre had heated his brain, would it not
give to his arm, which had been only too well set by Cornelius, even double
force?
The idea that Rosa might perhaps be ill-treated nearly drove Cornelius mad.
He then felt his own powerlessness. He asked himself whether God was just
in inflicting so much tribulation on two innocent creatures. And certainly in
these moments he began to doubt the wisdom of Providence. It is one of the
curses of misfortune that it thus begets doubt.
Van Baerle had proposed to write to Rosa, but where was she?
He also would have wished to write to the Hague to be beforehand with
Gryphus, who, he had no doubt, would by denouncing him do his best to
bring new storms on his head.
But how should he write? Gryphus had taken the paper and pencil from
him, and even if he had both, he could hardly expect Gryphus to despatch
his letter.
Then Cornelius revolved in his mind all those stratagems resorted to by
unfortunate prisoners.
He had thought of an attempt to escape, a thing which never entered his
head whilst he could see Rosa every day; but the more he thought of it, the
more clearly he saw the impracticability of such an attempt. He was one of
those choice spirits who abhor everything that is common, and who often
lose a good chance through not taking the way of the vulgar, that high road
of mediocrity which leads to everything.
280
"How is it possible," said Cornelius to himself, "that I should escape from
Loewestein, as Grotius has done the same thing before me? Has not every
precaution been taken since? Are not the windows barred? Are not the doors
of double and even of treble strength, and the sentinels ten times more
watchful? And have not I, besides all this, an Argus so much the more
dangerous as he has the keen eyes of hatred? Finally, is there not one fact
which takes away all my spirit, I mean Rosa's absence? But suppose I
should waste ten years of my life in making a file to file off my bars, or in
braiding cords to let myself down from the window, or in sticking wings on
my shoulders to fly, like Daedalus? But luck is against me now. The file
would get dull, the rope would break, or my wings would melt in the sun; I
should surely kill myself, I should be picked up maimed and crippled; I
should be labelled, and put on exhibition in the museum at the Hague
between the blood-stained doublet of William the Taciturn and the female
walrus captured at Stavesen, and the only result of my enterprise will have
been to procure me a place among the curiosities of Holland.
"But no; and it is much better so. Some fine day Gryphus will commit some
atrocity. I am losing my patience, since I have lost the joy and company of
Rosa, and especially since I have lost my tulip. Undoubtedly, some day or
other Gryphus will attack me in a manner painful to my self-respect, or to
my love, or even threaten my personal safety. I don't know how it is, but
since my imprisonment I feel a strange and almost irresistible pugnacity.
Well, I shall get at the throat of that old villain, and strangle him."
Cornelius at these words stopped for a moment, biting his lips and staring
out before him; then, eagerly returning to an idea which seemed to possess
a strange fascination for him, he continued, --
"Well, and once having strangled him, why should I not take his keys from
him, why not go down the stairs as if I had done the most virtuous action,
why not go and fetch Rosa from her room, why not tell her all, and jump
from her window into the Waal? I am expert enough as a swimmer to save
both of us. Rosa, -- but, oh Heaven, Gryphus is her father! Whatever may be
her affection for me, she will never approve of my having strangled her
father, brutal and malicious as he has been.
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"I shall have to enter into an argument with her; and in the midst of my
speech some wretched turnkey who has found Gryphus with the death-
rattle in his throat, or perhaps actually dead, will come along and put his
hand on my shoulder. Then I shall see the Buytenhof again, and the gleam
of that infernal sword, -- which will not stop half-way a second time, but will
make acquaintance with the nape of my neck.
"It will not do, Cornelius, my fine fellow, -- it is a bad plan. But, then, what
is to become of me, and how shall I find Rosa again?"
Such were the cogitations of Cornelius three days after the sad scene of
separation from Rosa, at the moment when we find him standing at the
window.
And at that very moment Gryphus entered.
He held in his hand a huge stick, his eyes glistening with spiteful thoughts,
a malignant smile played round his lips, and the whole of his carriage, and
even all his movements, betokened bad and malicious intentions.
Cornelius heard him enter, and guessed that it was he, but did not turn
round, as he knew well that Rosa was not coming after him.
There is nothing more galling to angry people than the coolness of those on
whom they wish to vent their spleen.
The expense being once incurred, one does not like to lose it; one's passion
is roused, and one's blood boiling, so it would be labour lost not to have at
least a nice little row.
Gryphus, therefore, on seeing that Cornelius did not stir, tried to attract his
attention by a loud --
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"Umph, umph!"
Cornelius was humming between his teeth the "Hymn of Flowers," -- a sad
but very charming song, --
"We are the daughters of the secret fire
Of the fire which runs through the veins of the earth;
We are the daughters of Aurora and of the dew;
We are the daughters of the air;
We are the daughters of the water;
But we are, above all, the daughters of heaven."
This song, the placid melancholy of which was still heightened by its calm
and sweet melody, exasperated Gryphus.
He struck his stick on the stone pavement of the cell, and called out, --
"Halloa! my warbling gentleman, don't you hear me?"
Cornelius turned round, merely saying, "Good morning," and then began his
song again: --
"Men defile us and kill us while loving us,
We hang to the earth by a thread;
This thread is our root, that is to say, our life,
But we raise on high our arms towards heaven."
283
"Ah, you accursed sorcerer! you are making game of me, I believe," roared
Gryphus.
Cornelius continued: --
"For heaven is our home,
Our true home, as from thence comes our soul,
As thither our soul returns, --
Our soul, that is to say, our perfume."
Gryphus went up to the prisoner and said, --
"But you don't see that I have taken means to get you under, and to force
you to confess your crimes."
"Are you mad, my dear Master Gryphus?" asked Cornelius.
And, as he now for the first time observed the frenzied features, the flashing
eyes, and foaming mouth of the old jailer, he said, --
"Bless the man, he is more than mad, he is furious."
Gryphus flourished his stick above his head, but Van Baerle moved not, and
remained standing with his arms akimbo.
"It seems your intention to threaten me, Master Gryphus."
"Yes, indeed, I threaten you," cried the jailer.
284
"And with what?"
"First of all, look at what I have in my hand."
"I think that's a stick," said Cornelius calmly, "but I don't suppose you will
threaten me with that."
"Oh, you don't suppose! why not?"
"Because any jailer who strikes a prisoner is liable to two penalties, -- the
first laid down in Article 9 of the regulations at Loewestein: --
"'Any jailer, inspector, or turnkey who lays hands upon any prisoner of State
will be dismissed.'"
"Yes, who lays hands," said Gryphus, mad with rage, "but there is not a
word about a stick in the regulation."
"And the second," continued Cornelius, "which is not written in the
regulation, but which is to be found elsewhere: --
"'Whosoever takes up the stick will be thrashed by the stick.'"
Gryphus, growing more and more exasperated by the calm and sententious
tone of Cornelius, brandished his cudgel, but at the moment when he raised
it Cornelius rushed at him, snatched it from his hands, and put it under his
own arm.
Gryphus fairly bellowed with rage.
285
"Hush, hush, my good man," said Cornelius, "don't do anything to lose your
place."
"Ah, you sorcerer! I'll pinch you worse," roared Gryphus.
"I wish you may."
"Don't you see my hand is empty?"
"Yes, I see it, and I am glad of it."
"You know that it is not generally so when I come upstairs in the morning."
"It's true, you generally bring me the worst soup, and the most miserable
rations one can imagine. But that's not a punishment to me; I eat only
bread, and the worse the bread is to your taste, the better it is to mine."
"How so?"
"Oh, it's a very simple thing."
"Well, tell it me," said Gryphus.
"Very willingly. I know that in giving me bad bread you think you do me
harm."
"Certainly; I don't give it you to please you, you brigand."
286
"Well, then, I, who am a sorcerer, as you know, change your bad into
excellent bread, which I relish more than the best cake; and then I have the
double pleasure of eating something that gratifies my palate, and of doing
something that puts you in a rage.
Gryphus answered with a growl.
"Oh! you confess, then, that you are a sorcerer."
"Indeed, I am one. I don't say it before all the world, because they might
burn me for it, but as we are alone, I don't mind telling you."
"Well, well, well," answered Gryphus. "But if a sorcerer can change black
bread into white, won't he die of hunger if he has no bread at all?"
"What's that?" said Cornelius.
"Consequently, I shall not bring you any bread at all, and we shall see how it
will be after eight days."
Cornelius grew pale.
"And," continued Gryphus, "we'll begin this very day. As you are such a
clever sorcerer, why, you had better change the furniture of your room into
bread; as to myself, I shall pocket the eighteen sous which are paid to me for
your board."
"But that's murder," cried Cornelius, carried away by the first impulse of the
very natural terror with which this horrible mode of death inspired him.
287
"Well," Gryphus went on, in his jeering way, "as you are a sorcerer, you will
live, notwithstanding."
Cornelius put on a smiling face again, and said, --
"Have you not seen me make the pigeons come here from Dort?"
"Well?" said Gryphus.
"Well, a pigeon is a very dainty morsel, and a man who eats one every day
would not starve, I think."
"And how about the fire?" said Gryphus.
"Fire! but you know that I'm in league with the devil. Do you think the devil
will leave me without fire? Why, fire is his proper element."
"A man, however healthy his appetite may be, would not eat a pigeon every
day. Wagers have been laid to do so, and those who made them gave them
up."
"Well, but when I am tired of pigeons, I shall make the fish of the Waal and
of the Meuse come up to me."
Gryphus opened his large eyes, quite bewildered.
"I am rather fond of fish," continued Cornelius; "you never let me have any.
Well, I shall turn your starving me to advantage, and regale myself with
fish."
288
Gryphus nearly fainted with anger and with fright, but he soon rallied, and
said, putting his hand in his pocket, --
"Well, as you force me to it," and with these words he drew forth a clasp-
knife and opened it.
"Halloa! a knife?" said Cornelius, preparing to defend himself with his stick.
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Chapter 29
In which Van Baerle, before leaving Loewestein, settles Accounts with
Gryphus
The two remained silent for some minutes, Gryphus on the offensive, and
Van Baerle on the defensive.
Then, as the situation might be prolonged to an indefinite length, Cornelius,
anxious to know something more of the causes which had so fiercely
exasperated his jailer, spoke first by putting the question, --
"Well, what do you want, after all?"
"I'll tell you what I want," answered Gryphus; "I want you to restore to me
my daughter Rosa."
"Your daughter?" cried Van Baerle.
"Yes, my daughter Rosa, whom you have taken from me by your devilish
magic. Now, will you tell me where she is?"
And the attitude of Gryphus became more and more threatening.
"Rosa is not at Loewestein?" cried Cornelius.
"You know well she is not. Once more, will you restore her to me?"
"I see," said Cornelius, "this is a trap you are laying for me."
290
"Now, for the last time, will you tell me where my daughter is?"
"Guess it, you rogue, if you don't know it."
"Only wait, only wait," growled Gryphus, white with rage, and with quivering
lips, as his brain began to turn. "Ah, you will not tell me anything? Well, I'll
unlock your teeth!"
He advanced a step towards Cornelius, and said, showing him the weapon
which he held in his hands, --
"Do you see this knife? Well, I have killed more than fifty black cocks with it,
and I vow I'll kill their master, the devil, as well as them."
"But, you blockhead," said Cornelius, "will you really kill me?"
"I shall open your heart to see in it the place where you hide my daughter."
Saying this, Gryphus in his frenzy rushed towards Cornelius, who had
barely time to retreat behind his table to avoid the first thrust; but as
Gryphus continued, with horrid threats, to brandish his huge knife, and as,
although out of the reach of his weapon, yet, as long as it remained in the
madman's hand, the ruffian might fling it at him, Cornelius lost no time,
and availing himself of the stick, which he held tight under his arm, dealt
the jailer a vigorous blow on the wrist of that hand which held the knife.
The knife fell to the ground, and Cornelius put his foot on it.
Then, as Gryphus seemed bent upon engaging in a struggle which the pain
in his wrist, and shame for having allowed himself to be disarmed, would
291
have made desperate, Cornelius took a decisive step, belaboring his jailer
with the most heroic self-possession, and selecting the exact spot for every
blow of the terrible cudgel.
It was not long before Gryphus begged for mercy. But before begging for
mercy, he had lustily roared for help, and his cries had roused all the
functionaries of the prison. Two turnkeys, an inspector, and three or four
guards, made their appearance all at once, and found Cornelius still using
the stick, with the knife under his foot.
At the sight of these witnesses, who could not know all the circumstances
which had provoked and might justify his offence, Cornelius felt that he was
irretrievably lost.
In fact, appearances were sadly against him.
In one moment Cornelius was disarmed, and Gryphus raised and
supported; and, bellowing with rage and pain, he was able to count on his
back and shoulders the bruises which were beginning to swell like the hills
dotting the slopes of a mountain ridge.
A protocol of the violence practiced by the prisoner against his jailer was
immediately drawn up, and as it was made on the depositions of Gryphus, it
certainly could not be said to be too tame; the prisoner being charged with
neither more nor less than with an attempt to murder, for a long time
premeditated, with open rebellion.
Whilst the charge was made out against Cornelius, Gryphus, whose
presence was no longer necessary after having made his depositions, was
taken down by his turnkeys to his lodge, groaning and covered with bruises.
During this time, the guards who had seized Cornelius busied themselves in
charitably informing their prisoner of the usages and customs of Loewestein,
which however he knew as well as they did. The regulations had been read
292
to him at the moment of his entering the prison, and certain articles in them
remained fixed in his memory.
Among other things they told him that this regulation had been carried out
to its full extent in the case of a prisoner named Mathias, who in 1668, that
is to say, five years before, had committed a much less violent act of
rebellion than that of which Cornelius was guilty. He had found his soup too
hot, and thrown it at the head of the chief turnkey, who in consequence of
this ablution had been put to the inconvenience of having his skin come off
as he wiped his face.
Mathias was taken within twelve hours from his cell, then led to the jailer's
lodge, where he was registered as leaving Loewestein, then taken to the
Esplanade, from which there is a very fine prospect over a wide expanse of
country. There they fettered his hands, bandaged his eyes, and let him say
his prayers.
Hereupon he was invited to go down on his knees, and the guards of
Loewestein, twelve in number, at a sign from a sergeant, very cleverly lodged
a musket-ball each in his body.
In consequence of this proceeding, Mathias incontinently did then and there
die.
Cornelius listened with the greatest attention to this delightful recital, and
then said, --
"Ah! ah! within twelve hours, you say?"
"Yes, the twelfth hour had not even struck, if I remember right," said the
guard who had told him the story.
"Thank you," said Cornelius.
293
The guard still had the smile on his face with which he accompanied and as
it were accentuated his tale, when footsteps and a jingling of spurs were
heard ascending the stair-case.
The guards fell back to allow an officer to pass, who entered the cell of
Cornelius at the moment when the clerk of Loewestein was still making out
his report.
"Is this No. 11?" he asked.
"Yes, Captain," answered a non-commissioned officer.
"Then this is the cell of the prisoner Cornelius van Baerle?"
"Exactly, Captain."
"Where is the prisoner?"
"Here I am, sir," answered Cornelius, growing rather pale, notwithstanding
all his courage.
"You are Dr. Cornelius van Baerle?" asked he, this time addressing the
prisoner himself.
"Yes, sir."
"Then follow me."
294
"Oh! oh!" said Cornelius, whose heart felt oppressed by the first dread of
death. "What quick work they make here in the fortress of Loewestein. And
the rascal talked to me of twelve hours!"
"Ah! what did I tell you?" whispered the communicative guard in the ear of
the culprit.
"A lie."
"How so?"
"You promised me twelve hours."
"Ah, yes, but here comes to you an aide-de-camp of his Highness, even one
of his most intimate companions Van Deken. Zounds! they did not grant
such an honour to poor Mathias."
"Come, come!" said Cornelius, drawing a long breath. "Come, I'll show to
these people that an honest burgher, godson of Cornelius de Witt, can
without flinching receive as many musket-balls as that Mathias."
Saying this, he passed proudly before the clerk, who, being interrupted in
his work, ventured to say to the officer, --
"But, Captain van Deken, the protocol is not yet finished."
"It is not worth while finishing it," answered the officer.
"All right," replied the clerk, philosophically putting up his paper and pen
into a greasy and well-worn writing-case.
295
"It was written," thought poor Cornelius, "that I should not in this world give
my name either to a child to a flower, or to a book, -- the three things by
which a man's memory is perpetuated."
Repressing his melancholy thoughts, he followed the officer with a resolute
heart, and carrying his head erect.
Cornelius counted the steps which led to the Esplanade, regretting that he
had not asked the guard how many there were of them, which the man, in
his official complaisance, would not have failed to tell him.
What the poor prisoner was most afraid of during this walk, which he
considered as leading him to the end of the journey of life, was to see
Gryphus and not to see Rosa. What savage satisfaction would glisten in the
eyes of the father, and what sorrow dim those of the daughter!
How Gryphus would glory in his punishment! Punishment? Rather savage
vengeance for an eminently righteous deed, which Cornelius had the
satisfaction of having performed as a bounden duty.
But Rosa, poor girl! must he die without a glimpse of her, without an
opportunity to give her one last kiss, or even to say one last word of
farewell?
And, worst of all, must he die without any intelligence of the black tulip, and
regain his consciousness in heaven with no idea in what direction he should
look to find it?
In truth, to restrain his tears at such a crisis the poor wretch's heart must
have been encased in more of the aes triplex -- "the triple brass" -- than
Horace bestows upon the sailor who first visited the terrifying Acroceraunian
shoals.
296
In vain did Cornelius look to the right and to the left; he saw no sign either
of Rosa or Gryphus.
On reaching the Esplanade, he bravely looked about for the guards who
were to be his executioners, and in reality saw a dozen soldiers assembled.
But they were not standing in line, or carrying muskets, but talking together
so gayly that Cornelius felt almost shocked.
All at once, Gryphus, limping, staggering, and supporting himself on a
crooked stick, came forth from the jailer's lodge; his old eyes, gray as those
of a cat, were lit up by a gleam in which all his hatred was concentrated. He
then began to pour forth such a torrent of disgusting imprecations against
Cornelius, that the latter, addressing the officer, said, --
"I do not think it very becoming sir, that I should be thus insulted by this
man, especially at a moment like this."
"Well! hear me," said the officer, laughing, "it is quite natural that this
worthy fellow should bear you a grudge, -- you seem to have given it him
very soundly."
"But, sir, it was only in self-defence."
"Never mind," said the Captain, shrugging his shoulders like a true
philosopher, "let him talk; what does it matter to you now?"
The cold sweat stood on the brow of Cornelius at this answer, which he
looked upon somewhat in the light of brutal irony, especially as coming from
an officer of whom he had heard it said that he was attached to the person
of the Prince.
297
The unfortunate tulip-fancier then felt that he had no more resources, and
no more friends, and resigned himself to his fate.
"God's will be done," he muttered, bowing his head; then, turning towards
the officer, who seemed complacently to wait until he had finished his
meditations he asked, --
"Please, sir, tell me now, where am I to go?"
The officer pointed to a carriage, drawn by four horses, which reminded him
very strongly of that which, under similar circumstances, had before
attracted his attention at Buytenhof.
"Enter," said the officer.
"Ah!" muttered Cornelius to himself, "it seems they are not going to treat me
to the honours of the Esplanade."
He uttered these words loud enough for the chatty guard, who was at his
heels, to overhear him.
That kind soul very likely thought it his duty to give Cornelius some new
information; for, approaching the door of the carriage, whilst the officer, with
one foot on the step, was still giving some orders, he whispered to Van
Baerle, --
"Condemned prisoners have sometimes been taken to their own town to be
made an example of, and have then been executed before the door of their
own house. It's all according to circumstances."
Cornelius thanked him by signs, and then said to himself, --
298
"Well, here is a fellow who never misses giving consolation whenever an
opportunity presents itself. In truth, my friend, I'm very much obliged to
you. Goodbye."
The carriage drove away.
"Ah! you villain, you brigand," roared Gryphus, clinching his fists at the
victim who was escaping from his clutches, "is it not a shame that this
fellow gets off without having restored my daughter to me?"
"If they take me to Dort," thought Cornelius, "I shall see, in passing my
house, whether my poor borders have been much spoiled."
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Chapter 30
Wherein the Reader begins to guess the Kind of Execution that was awaiting
Van Baerle
The carriage rolled on during the whole day; it passed on the right of Dort,
went through Rotterdam, and reached Delft. At five o'clock in the evening, at
least twenty leagues had been travelled.
Cornelius addressed some questions to the officer, who was at the same
time his guard and his companion; but, cautious as were his inquiries, he
had the disappointment of receiving no answer.
Cornelius regretted that he had no longer by his side the chatty soldier, who
would talk without being questioned.
That obliging person would undoubtedly have given him as pleasant details
and exact explanations concerning this third strange part of his adventures
as he had done concerning the first two.
The travellers passed the night in the carriage. On the following morning at
dawn Cornelius found himself beyond Leyden, having the North Sea on his
left, and the Zuyder Zee on his right.
Three hours after, he entered Haarlem.
Cornelius was not aware of what had passed at Haarlem, and we shall leave
him in ignorance of it until the course of events enlightens him.
But the reader has a right to know all about it even before our hero, and
therefore we shall not make him wait.
300
We have seen that Rosa and the tulip, like two orphan sisters, had been left
by Prince William of Orange at the house of the President van Systens.
Rosa did not hear again from the Stadtholder until the evening of that day
on which she had seen him face to face.
Toward evening, an officer called at Van Systen's house. He came from his
Highness, with a request for Rosa to appear at the Town Hall.
There, in the large Council Room into which she was ushered, she found the
Prince writing.
He was alone, with a large Frisian greyhound at his feet, which looked at
him with a steady glance, as if the faithful animal were wishing to do what
no man could do, -- read the thoughts of his master in his face.
William continued his writing for a moment; then, raising his eyes, and
seeing Rosa standing near the door, he said, without laying down his pen, --
"Come here, my child."
Rosa advanced a few steps towards the table.
"Sit down," he said.
Rosa obeyed, for the Prince was fixing his eyes upon her, but he had
scarcely turned them again to his paper when she bashfully retired to the
door.
301
The Prince finished his letter.
During this time, the greyhound went up to Rosa, surveyed her and began
to caress her.
"Ah, ah!" said William to his dog, "it's easy to see that she is a
countrywoman of yours, and that you recognise her."
Then, turning towards Rosa, and fixing on her his scrutinising, and at the
same time impenetrable glance, he said, --
"Now, my child."
The Prince was scarcely twenty-three, and Rosa eighteen or twenty. He
might therefore perhaps better have said, My sister.
"My child," he said, with that strangely commanding accent which chilled all
those who approached him, "we are alone; let us speak together."
Rosa began to tremble, and yet there was nothing but kindness in the
expression of the Prince's face.
"Monseigneur," she stammered.
"You have a father at Loewestein?"
"Yes, your Highness."
"You do not love him?"
302
"I do not; at least, not as a daughter ought to do, Monseigneur."
"It is not right not to love one's father, but it is right not to tell a falsehood."
Rosa cast her eyes to the ground.
"What is the reason of your not loving your father?"
"He is wicked."
"In what way does he show his wickedness?"
"He ill-treats the prisoners."
"All of them?"
"All."
"But don't you bear him a grudge for ill-treating some one in particular?"
"My father ill-treats in particular Mynheer van Baerle, who ---- "
"Who is your lover?"
Rosa started back a step.
303
"Whom I love, Monseigneur," she answered proudly.
"Since when?" asked the Prince.
"Since the day when I first saw him."
"And when was that?"
"The day after that on which the Grand Pensionary John and his brother
Cornelius met with such an awful death."
The Prince compressed his lips, and knit his brow and his eyelids dropped
so as to hide his eyes for an instant. After a momentary silence, he resumed
the conversation.
"But to what can it lead to love a man who is doomed to live and die in
prison?"
"It will lead, if he lives and dies in prison, to my aiding him in life and in
death."
"And would you accept the lot of being the wife of a prisoner?"
"As the wife of Mynheer van Baerle, I should, under any circumstances, be
the proudest and happiest woman in the world; but ---- "
"But what?"
"I dare not say, Monseigneur."
304
"There is something like hope in your tone; what do you hope?"
She raised her moist and beautiful eyes, and looked at William with a glance
full of meaning, which was calculated to stir up in the recesses of his heart
the clemency which was slumbering there.
"Ah, I understand you," he said.
Rosa, with a smile, clasped her hands.
"You hope in me?" said the Prince.
"Yes, Monseigneur."
"Umph!"
The Prince sealed the letter which he had just written, and summoned one
of his officers, to whom he said, --
"Captain van Deken, carry this despatch to Loewestein; you will read the
orders which I give to the Governor, and execute them as far as they regard
you."
The officer bowed, and a few minutes afterwards the gallop of a horse was
heard resounding in the vaulted archway.
"My child," continued the Prince, "the feast of the tulip will be on Sunday
next, that is to say, the day after to-morrow. Make yourself smart with these
five hundred guilders, as I wish that day to be a great day for you."
305
"How does your Highness wish me to be dressed?" faltered Rosa.
"Take the costume of a Frisian bride." said William; "it will suit you very well
indeed."
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Chapter 31
Haarlem
Haarlem, whither, three days ago, we conducted our gentle reader, and
whither we request him to follow us once more in the footsteps of the
prisoner, is a pleasant city, which justly prides itself on being one of the
most shady in all the Netherlands.
While other towns boast of the magnificence of their arsenals and dock-
yards, and the splendour of their shops and markets, Haarlem's claims to
fame rest upon her superiority to all other provincial cities in the number
and beauty of her spreading elms, graceful poplars, and, more than all,
upon her pleasant walks, shaded by the lovely arches of magnificent oaks,
lindens, and chestnuts.
Haarlem, -- just as her neighbour, Leyden, became the centre of science,
and her queen, Amsterdam, that of commerce, -- Haarlem preferred to be
the agricultural, or, more strictly speaking, the horticultural metropolis.
In fact, girt about as she was, breezy and exposed to the sun's hot rays, she
seemed to offer to gardeners so many more guarantees of success than other
places, with their heavy sea air, and their scorching heat.
On this account all the serene souls who loved the earth and its fruits had
gradually gathered together at Haarlem, just as all the nervous, uneasy
spirits, whose ambition was for travel and commerce, had settled in
Rotterdam and Amsterdam, and all the politicians and selfish worldlings at
the Hague.
We have observed that Leyden overflowed with scholars. In like manner
Haarlem was devoted to the gentle pursuits of peace, -- to music and
painting, orchards and avenues, groves and parks. Haarlem went wild about
flowers, and tulips received their full share of worship.
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Haarlem offered prizes for tulip-growing; and this fact brings us in the most
natural manner to that celebration which the city intended to hold on May
15th, 1673 in honour of the great black tulip, immaculate and perfect,
which should gain for its discoverer one hundred thousand guilders!
Haarlem, having placed on exhibition its favourite, having advertised its love
of flowers in general and of tulips in particular, at a period when the souls of
men were filled with war and sedition, -- Haarlem, having enjoyed the
exquisite pleasure of admiring the very purest ideal of tulips in full bloom, --
Haarlem, this tiny town, full of trees and of sunshine, of light and shade,
had determined that the ceremony of bestowing the prize should be a fete
which should live for ever in the memory of men.
So much the more reason was there, too, in her determination, in that
Holland is the home of fetes; never did sluggish natures manifest more eager
energy of the singing and dancing sort than those of the good republicans of
the Seven Provinces when amusement was the order of the day.
Study the pictures of the two Teniers.
It is certain that sluggish folk are of all men the most earnest in tiring
themselves, not when they are at work, but at play.
Thus Haarlem was thrice given over to rejoicing, for a three-fold celebration
was to take place.
In the first place, the black tulip had been produced; secondly, the Prince
William of Orange, as a true Hollander, had promised to be present at the
ceremony of its inauguration; and, thirdly, it was a point of honour with the
States to show to the French, at the conclusion of such a disastrous war as
that of 1672, that the flooring of the Batavian Republic was solid enough for
its people to dance on it, with the accompaniment of the cannon of their
fleets.
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The Horticultural Society of Haarlem had shown itself worthy of its fame by
giving a hundred thousand guilders for the bulb of a tulip. The town, which
did not wish to be outdone, voted a like sum, which was placed in the hands
of that notable body to solemnise the auspicious event.
And indeed on the Sunday fixed for this ceremony there was such a stir
among the people, and such an enthusiasm among the townsfolk, that even
a Frenchman, who laughs at everything at all times, could not have helped
admiring the character of those honest Hollanders, who were equally ready
to spend their money for the construction of a man-of-war -- that is to say,
for the support of national honour -- as they were to reward the growth of a
new flower, destined to bloom for one day, and to serve during that day to
divert the ladies, the learned, and the curious.
At the head of the notables and of the Horticultural Committee shone
Mynheer van Systens, dressed in his richest habiliments.
The worthy man had done his best to imitate his favourite flower in the
sombre and stern elegance of his garments; and we are bound to record, to
his honour, that he had perfectly succeeded in his object.
Dark crimson velvet, dark purple silk, and jet-black cloth, with linen of
dazzling whiteness, composed the festive dress of the President, who
marched at the head of his Committee carrying an enormous nosegay, like
that which a hundred and twenty-one years later, Monsieur de Robespierre
displayed at the festival of "The Supreme Being."
There was, however, a little difference between the two; very different from
the French tribune, whose heart was so full of hatred and ambitious
vindictiveness, was the honest President, who carried in his bosom a heart
as innocent as the flowers which he held in his hand.
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Behind the Committee, who were as gay as a meadow, and as fragrant as a
garden in spring, marched the learned societies of the town, the magistrates,
the military, the nobles and the boors.
The people, even among the respected republicans of the Seven Provinces,
had no place assigned to them in the procession; they merely lined the
streets.
This is the place for the multitude, which with true philosophic spirit, waits
until the triumphal pageants have passed, to know what to say of them, and
sometimes also to know what to do.
This time, however, there was no question either of the triumph of Pompey
or of Caesar; neither of the defeat of Mithridates, nor of the conquest of
Gaul. The procession was as placid as the passing of a flock of lambs, and
as inoffensive as a flight of birds sweeping through the air.
Haarlem had no other triumphers, except its gardeners. Worshipping
flowers, Haarlem idolised the florist.
In the centre of this pacific and fragrant cortege the black tulip was seen,
carried on a litter, which was covered with white velvet and fringed with
gold.
The handles of the litter were supported by four men, who were from time to
time relieved by fresh relays, -- even as the bearers of Mother Cybele used to
take turn and turn about at Rome in the ancient days, when she was
brought from Etruria to the Eternal City, amid the blare of trumpets and the
worship of a whole nation.
This public exhibition of the tulip was an act of adoration rendered by an
entire nation, unlettered and unrefined, to the refinement and culture of its
illustrious and devout leaders, whose blood had stained the foul pavement
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of the Buytenhof, reserving the right at a future day to inscribe the names of
its victims upon the highest stone of the Dutch Pantheon.
It was arranged that the Prince Stadtholder himself should give the prize of
a hundred thousand guilders, which interested the people at large, and it
was thought that perhaps he would make a speech which interested more
particularly his friends and enemies.
For in the most insignificant words of men of political importance their
friends and their opponents always endeavour to detect, and hence think
they can interpret, something of their true thoughts.
As if your true politician's hat were not a bushel under which he always
hides his light!
At length the great and long-expected day -- May 15, 1673 -- arrived; and all
Haarlem, swelled by her neighbours, was gathered in the beautiful tree-lined
streets, determined on this occasion not to waste its applause upon military
heroes, or those who had won notable victories in the field of science, but to
reserve their applause for those who had overcome Nature, and had forced
the inexhaustible mother to be delivered of what had theretofore been
regarded as impossible, -- a completely black tulip.
Nothing however, is more fickle than such a resolution of the people. When
a crowd is once in the humour to cheer, it is just the same as when it begins
to hiss. It never knows when to stop.
It therefore, in the first place, cheered Van Systens and his nosegay, then
the corporation, then followed a cheer for the people; and, at last, and for
once with great justice, there was one for the excellent music with which the
gentlemen of the town councils generously treated the assemblage at every
halt.
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Every eye was looking eagerly for the heroine of the festival, -- that is to say,
the black tulip, -- and for its hero in the person of the one who had grown it.
In case this hero should make his appearance after the address we have
seen worthy Van Systens at work on so conscientiously, he would not fail to
make as much of a sensation as the Stadtholder himself.
But the interest of the day's proceedings for us is centred neither in the
learned discourse of our friend Van Systens, however eloquent it might be,
nor in the young dandies, resplendent in their Sunday clothes, and
munching their heavy cakes; nor in the poor young peasants, gnawing
smoked eels as if they were sticks of vanilla sweetmeat; neither is our
interest in the lovely Dutch girls, with red cheeks and ivory bosoms; nor in
the fat, round mynheers, who had never left their homes before; nor in the
sallow, thin travellers from Ceylon or Java; nor in the thirsty crowds, who
quenched their thirst with pickled cucumbers; -- no, so far as we are
concerned, the real interest of the situation, the fascinating, dramatic
interest, is not to be found here.
Our interest is in a smiling, sparkling face to be seen amid the members of
the Horticultural Committee; in the person with a flower in his belt, combed
and brushed, and all clad in scarlet, -- a colour which makes his black hair
and yellow skin stand out in violent contrast.
This hero, radiant with rapturous joy, who had the distinguished honour of
making the people forget the speech of Van Systens, and even the presence
of the Stadtholder, was Isaac Boxtel, who saw, carried on his right before
him, the black tulip, his pretended daughter; and on his left, in a large
purse, the hundred thousand guilders in glittering gold pieces, towards
which he was constantly squinting, fearful of losing sight of them for one
moment.
Now and then Boxtel quickened his step to rub elbows for a moment with
Van Systens. He borrowed a little importance from everybody to make a kind
of false importance for himself, as he had stolen Rosa's tulip to effect his
own glory, and thereby make his fortune.
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Another quarter of an hour and the Prince will arrive and the procession will
halt for the last time; after the tulip is placed on its throne, the Prince,
yielding precedence to this rival for the popular adoration, will take a
magnificently emblazoned parchment, on which is written the name of the
grower; and his Highness, in a loud and audible tone, will proclaim him to
be the discoverer of a wonder; that Holland, by the instrumentality of him,
Boxtel, has forced Nature to produce a black flower, which shall henceforth
be called Tulipa nigra Boxtellea.
From time to time, however, Boxtel withdrew his eyes for a moment from the
tulip and the purse, timidly looking among the crowd, for more than
anything he dreaded to descry there the pale face of the pretty Frisian girl.
She would have been a spectre spoiling the joy of the festival for him, just as
Banquo's ghost did that of Macbeth.
And yet, if the truth must be told, this wretch, who had stolen what was the
boast of man, and the dowry of a woman, did not consider himself as a thief.
He had so intently watched this tulip, followed it so eagerly from the drawer
in Cornelius's dry-room to the scaffold of the Buytenhof, and from the
scaffold to the fortress of Loewestein; he had seen it bud and grow in Rosa's
window, and so often warmed the air round it with his breath, that he felt as
if no one had a better right to call himself its producer than he had; and any
one who would now take the black tulip from him would have appeared to
him as a thief.
Yet he did not perceive Rosa; his joy therefore was not spoiled.
In the centre of a circle of magnificent trees, which were decorated with
garlands and inscriptions, the procession halted, amidst the sounds of lively
music, and the young damsels of Haarlem made their appearance to escort
the tulip to the raised seat which it was to occupy on the platform, by the
side of the gilded chair of his Highness the Stadtholder.
313
And the proud tulip, raised on its pedestal, soon overlooked the assembled
crowd of people, who clapped their hands, and made the old town of
Haarlem re-echo with their tremendous cheers.
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Chapter 32
A Last Request
At this solemn moment, and whilst the cheers still resounded, a carriage
was driving along the road on the outskirts of the green on which the scene
occurred; it pursued its way slowly, on account of the flocks of children who
were pushed out of the avenue by the crowd of men and women.
This carriage, covered with dust, and creaking on its axles, the result of a
long journey, enclosed the unfortunate Van Baerle, who was just beginning
to get a glimpse through the open window of the scene which we have tried -
- with poor success, no doubt -- to present to the eyes of the reader.
The crowd and the noise and the display of artificial and natural
magnificence were as dazzling to the prisoner as a ray of light flashing
suddenly into his dungeon.
Notwithstanding the little readiness which his companion had shown in
answering his questions concerning his fate, he ventured once more to ask
the meaning of all this bustle, which at first sight seemed to be utterly
disconnected with his own affairs.
"What is all this, pray, Mynheer Lieutenant?" he asked of his conductor.
"As you may see, sir," replied the officer, "it is a feast."
"Ah, a feast," said Cornelius, in the sad tone of indifference of a man to
whom no joy remains in this world.
Then, after some moments, silence, during which the carriage had
proceeded a few yards, he asked once more, --
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"The feast of the patron saint of Haarlem? as I see so many flowers."
"It is, indeed, a feast in which flowers play a principal part."
"Oh, the sweet scents! oh, the beautiful colours!" cried Cornelius.
"Stop, that the gentleman may see," said the officer, with that frank
kindliness which is peculiar to military men, to the soldier who was acting
as postilion.
"Oh, thank you, Sir, for your kindness," replied Van Baerle, in a melancholy
tone; "the joy of others pains me; please spare me this pang."
"Just as you wish. Drive on! I ordered the driver to stop because I thought it
would please you, as you are said to love flowers, and especially that the
feast of which is celebrated to-day."
"And what flower is that?"
"The tulip."
"The tulip!" cried Van Baerle, "is to-day the feast of tulips?"
"Yes, sir; but as this spectacle displeases you, let us drive on."
The officer was about to give the order to proceed, but Cornelius stopped
him, a painful thought having struck him. He asked, with faltering voice, --
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"Is the prize given to-day, sir?"
"Yes, the prize for the black tulip."
Cornelius's cheek flushed, his whole frame trembled, and the cold sweat
stood on his brow.
"Alas! sir," he said, "all these good people will be as unfortunate as myself,
for they will not see the solemnity which they have come to witness, or at
least they will see it incompletely."
"What is it you mean to say?"
"I mean to say." replied Cornelius, throwing himself back in the carriage,
"that the black tulip will not be found, except by one whom I know."
"In this case," said the officer, "the person whom you know has found it, for
the thing which the whole of Haarlem is looking at at this moment is neither
more nor less than the black tulip."
"The black tulip!" replied Van Baerle, thrusting half his body out of the
carriage window. "Where is it? where is it?"
"Down there on the throne, -- don't you see?"
"I do see it."
"Come along, sir," said the officer. "Now we must drive off."
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"Oh, have pity, have mercy, sir!" said Van Baerle, "don't take me away! Let
me look once more! Is what I see down there the black tulip? Quite black? Is
it possible? Oh, sir, have you seen it? It must have specks, it must be
imperfect, it must only be dyed black. Ah! if I were there, I should see it at
once. Let me alight, let me see it close, I beg of you."
"Are you mad, Sir? How could I allow such a thing?"
"I implore you."
"But you forget that you are a prisoner."
"It is true I am a prisoner, but I am a man of honour, and I promise you on
my word that I will not run away, I will not attempt to escape, -- only let me
see the flower."
"But my orders, Sir, my orders." And the officer again made the driver a sign
to proceed.
Cornelius stopped him once more.
"Oh, be forbearing, be generous! my whole life depends upon your pity. Alas!
perhaps it will not be much longer. You don't know, sir, what I suffer. You
don't know the struggle going on in my heart and mind. For after all,"
Cornelius cried in despair, "if this were my tulip, if it were the one which has
been stolen from Rosa! Oh, I must alight, sir! I must see the flower! You may
kill me afterwards if you like, but I will see it, I must see it."
"Be quiet, unfortunate man, and come quickly back into the carriage, for
here is the escort of his Highness the Stadtholder, and if the Prince observed
any disturbance, or heard any noise, it would be ruin to me, as well as to
you."
318
Van Baerle, more afraid for his companion than himself, threw himself back
into the carriage, but he could only keep quiet for half a minute, and the
first twenty horsemen had scarcely passed when he again leaned out of the
carriage window, gesticulating imploringly towards the Stadtholder at the
very moment when he passed.
William, impassible and quiet as usual, was proceeding to the green to fulfil
his duty as chairman. He held in his hand the roll of parchment, which, on
this festive day, had become his baton.
Seeing the man gesticulate with imploring mien, and perhaps also
recognising the officer who accompanied him, his Highness ordered his
carriage to stop.
In an instant his snorting steeds stood still, at a distance of about six yards
from the carriage in which Van Baerle was caged.
"What is this?" the Prince asked the officer, who at the first order of the
Stadtholder had jumped out of the carriage, and was respectfully
approaching him.
"Monseigneur," he cried, "this is the prisoner of state whom I have fetched
from Loewestein, and whom I have brought to Haarlem according to your
Highness's command."
"What does he want?"
"He entreats for permission to stop here for minute."
"To see the black tulip, Monseigneur," said Van Baerle, clasping his hands,
"and when I have seen it, when I have seen what I desire to know, I am quite
319
ready to die, if die I must; but in dying I shall bless your Highness's mercy
for having allowed me to witness the glorification of my work."
It was, indeed, a curious spectacle to see these two men at the windows of
their several carriages; the one surrounded by his guards, and all powerful,
the other a prisoner and miserable; the one going to mount a throne, the
other believing himself to be on his way to the scaffold.
William, looking with his cold glance on Cornelius, listened to his anxious
and urgent request.
Then addressing himself to the officer, he said, --
"Is this person the mutinous prisoner who has attempted to kill his jailer at
Loewestein?"
Cornelius heaved a sigh and hung his head. His good-tempered honest face
turned pale and red at the same instant. These words of the all-powerful
Prince, who by some secret messenger unavailable to other mortals had
already been apprised of his crime, seemed to him to forebode not only his
doom, but also the refusal of his last request.
He did not try to make a struggle, or to defend himself; and he presented to
the Prince the affecting spectacle of despairing innocence, like that of a
child, -- a spectacle which was fully understood and felt by the great mind
and the great heart of him who observed it.
"Allow the prisoner to alight, and let him see the black tulip; it is well worth
being seen once."
"Thank you, Monseigneur, thank you," said Cornelius, nearly swooning with
joy, and staggering on the steps of his carriage; had not the officer
320
supported him, our poor friend would have made his thanks to his Highness
prostrate on his knees with his forehead in the dust.
After having granted this permission, the Prince proceeded on his way over
the green amidst the most enthusiastic acclamations.
He soon arrived at the platform, and the thunder of cannon shook the air.
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Chapter 33
Conclusion
Van Baerle, led by four guards, who pushed their way through the crowd,
sidled up to the black tulip, towards which his gaze was attracted with
increasing interest the nearer he approached to it.
He saw it at last, that unique flower, which he was to see once and no more.
He saw it at the distance of six paces, and was delighted with its perfection
and gracefulness; he saw it surrounded by young and beautiful girls, who
formed, as it were, a guard of honour for this queen of excellence and purity.
And yet, the more he ascertained with his own eyes the perfection of the
flower, the more wretched and miserable he felt. He looked all around for
some one to whom he might address only one question, but his eyes
everywhere met strange faces, and the attention of all was directed towards
the chair of state, on which the Stadtholder had seated himself.
William rose, casting a tranquil glance over the enthusiastic crowd, and his
keen eyes rested by turns on the three extremities of a triangle formed
opposite to him by three persons of very different interests and feelings.
At one of the angles, Boxtel, trembling with impatience, and quite absorbed
in watching the Prince, the guilders, the black tulip, and the crowd.
At the other, Cornelius, panting for breath, silent, and his attention, his
eyes, his life, his heart, his love, quite concentrated on the black tulip.
And thirdly, standing on a raised step among the maidens of Haarlem, a
beautiful Frisian girl, dressed in fine scarlet woollen cloth, embroidered with
silver, and covered with a lace veil, which fell in rich folds from her head-
dress of gold brocade; in one word, Rosa, who, faint and with swimming
eyes, was leaning on the arm of one of the officers of William.
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The Prince then slowly unfolded the parchment, and said, with a calm clear
voice, which, although low, made itself perfectly heard amidst the respectful
silence, which all at once arrested the breath of fifty thousand spectators. --
"You know what has brought us here?
"A prize of one hundred thousand guilders has been promised to whosoever
should grow the black tulip.
"The black tulip has been grown; here it is before your eyes, coming up to all
the conditions required by the programme of the Horticultural Society of
Haarlem.
"The history of its production, and the name of its grower, will be inscribed
in the book of honour of the city.
"Let the person approach to whom the black tulip belongs."
In pronouncing these words, the Prince, to judge of the effect they produced,
surveyed with his eagle eye the three extremities of the triangle.
He saw Boxtel rushing forward. He saw Cornelius make an involuntary
movement; and lastly he saw the officer who was taking care of Rosa lead, or
rather push her forward towards him.
At the sight of Rosa, a double cry arose on the right and left of the Prince.
Boxtel, thunderstruck, and Cornelius, in joyful amazement, both exclaimed,
--
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"Rosa! Rosa!"
"This tulip is yours, is it not, my child?" said the Prince.
"Yes, Monseigneur," stammered Rosa, whose striking beauty excited a
general murmur of applause.
"Oh!" muttered Cornelius, "she has then belied me, when she said this
flower was stolen from her. Oh! that's why she left Loewestein. Alas! am I
then forgotten, betrayed by her whom I thought my best friend on earth?"
"Oh!" sighed Boxtel, "I am lost."
"This tulip," continued the Prince, "will therefore bear the name of its
producer, and figure in the catalogue under the title, Tulipa nigra Rosa
Barlaensis, because of the name Van Baerle, which will henceforth be the
name of this damsel."
And at the same time William took Rosa's hand, and placed it in that of a
young man, who rushed forth, pale and beyond himself with joy, to the foot
of the throne saluting alternately the Prince and his bride; and who with a
grateful look to heaven, returned his thanks to the Giver of all this
happiness.
At the same moment there fell at the feet of the President van Systens
another man, struck down by a very different emotion.
Boxtel, crushed by the failure of his hopes, lay senseless on the ground.
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When they raised him, and examined his pulse and his heart, he was quite
dead.
This incident did not much disturb the festival, as neither the Prince nor the
President seemed to mind it much.
Cornelius started back in dismay, when in the thief, in the pretended Jacob,
he recognised his neighbour, Isaac Boxtel, whom, in the innocence of his
heart, he had not for one instant suspected of such a wicked action.
Then, to the sound of trumpets, the procession marched back without any
change in its order, except that Boxtel was now dead, and that Cornelius
and Rosa were walking triumphantly side by side and hand in hand.
On their arriving at the Hotel de Ville, the Prince, pointing with his finger to
the purse with the hundred thousand guilders, said to Cornelius, --
"It is difficult to say by whom this money is gained, by you or by Rosa; for if
you have found the black tulip, she has nursed it and brought it into flower.
It would therefore be unjust to consider it as her dowry; it is the gift of the
town of Haarlem to the tulip."
Cornelius wondered what the Prince was driving at. The latter continued, --
"I give to Rosa the sum of a hundred thousand guilders, which she has fairly
earned, and which she can offer to you. They are the reward of her love, her
courage, and her honesty. As to you, Sir -- thanks to Rosa again, who has
furnished the proofs of your innocence ---- "
And, saying these words, the Prince handed to Cornelius that fly-leaf of the
Bible on which was written the letter of Cornelius de Witt, and in which the
third bulb had been wrapped, --
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"As to you, it has come to light that you were imprisoned for a crime which
you had not committed. This means, that you are not only free, but that
your property will be restored to you; as the property of an innocent man
cannot be confiscated. Cornelius van Baerle, you are the godson of
Cornelius de Witt and the friend of his brother John. Remain worthy of the
name you have received from one of them, and of the friendship you have
enjoyed with the other. The two De Witts, wrongly judged and wrongly
punished in a moment of popular error, were two great citizens, of whom
Holland is now proud."
The Prince, after these last words, which contrary to his custom, he
pronounced with a voice full of emotion, gave his hands to the lovers to kiss,
whilst they were kneeling before him.
Then heaving a sigh, he said, --
"Alas! you are very happy, who, dreaming only of what perhaps is the true
glory of Holland, and forms especially her true happiness, do not attempt to
acquire for her anything beyond new colours of tulips."
And, casting a glance towards that point of the compass where France lay,
as if he saw new clouds gathering there, he entered his carriage and drove
off.
Cornelius started on the same day for Dort with Rosa, who sent her lover's
old housekeeper as a messenger to her father, to apprise him of all that had
taken place.
Those who, thanks to our description, have learned the character of old
Gryphus, will comprehend that it was hard for him to become reconciled to
his son-in-law. He had not yet forgotten the blows which he had received in
that famous encounter. To judge from the weals which he counted, their
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number, he said, amounted to forty-one; but at last, in order, as he
declared, not to be less generous than his Highness the Stadtholder, he
consented to make his peace.
Appointed to watch over the tulips, the old man made the rudest keeper of
flowers in the whole of the Seven Provinces.
It was indeed a sight to see him watching the obnoxious moths and
butterflies, killing slugs, and driving away the hungry bees.
As he had heard Boxtel's story, and was furious at having been the dupe of
the pretended Jacob, he destroyed the sycamore behind which the envious
Isaac had spied into the garden; for the plot of ground belonging to him had
been bought by Cornelius, and taken into his own garden.
Rosa, growing not only in beauty, but in wisdom also, after two years of her
married life, could read and write so well that she was able to undertake by
herself the education of two beautiful children which she had borne in 1674
and 1675, both in May, the month of flowers.
As a matter of course, one was a boy, the other a girl, the former being
called Cornelius, the other Rosa.
Van Baerle remained faithfully attached to Rosa and to his tulips. The whole
of his life was devoted to the happiness of his wife and the culture of flowers,
in the latter of which occupations he was so successful that a great number
of his varieties found a place in the catalogue of Holland.
The two principal ornaments of his drawing-room were those two leaves
from the Bible of Cornelius de Witt, in large golden frames; one of them
containing the letter in which his godfather enjoined him to burn the
correspondence of the Marquis de Louvois, and the other his own will, in
which he bequeathed to Rosa his bulbs under condition that she should
marry a young man of from twenty-six to twenty-eight years, who loved her
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and whom she loved, a condition which was scrupulously fulfilled, although,
or rather because, Cornelius did not die.
And to ward off any envious attempts of another Isaac Boxtel, he wrote over
his door the lines which Grotius had, on the day of his flight, scratched on
the walls of his prison: --
"Sometimes one has suffered so much that he has the right never to be able
to say, 'I am too happy.'"