"If I can do anything for you without too much
trouble to myself, say so. But recollect, if you please, that you
are not speaking to an acquaintance, much less a friend!"
"Upon my word, I believe not!" retorted he, looking at me with
some curiosity; and, lifting his hat, he made me a salute which had
enough of sarcasm to be offensive, and just enough of doubtful
courtesy to render any resentment of it absurd. "But I ask your
pardon! I recognize a little mistake. If I may take the liberty to
suppose it, you, sir, are probably one of the aesthetic—or shall I
rather say ecstatic?—laborers, who have planted themselves
hereabouts. This is your forest of Arden; and you are either the
banished Duke in person, or one of the chief nobles in his train.
The melancholy Jacques, perhaps? Be it so. In that case, you can
probably do me a favor."
I never, in my life, felt less inclined to confer a favor on any
man.
"I am busy," said I.
So unexpectedly had the stranger made me sensible of his
presence, that he had almost the effect of an apparition; and
certainly a less appropriate one (taking into view the dim woodland
solitude about us) than if the salvage man of antiquity, hirsute
and cinctured with a leafy girdle, had started out of a thicket. He
was still young, seemingly a little under thirty, of a tall and
well-developed figure, and as handsome a man as ever I beheld. The
style of his beauty, however, though a masculine style, did not at
all commend itself to my taste. His countenance—I hardly know how
to describe the peculiarity—had an indecorum in it, a kind of
rudeness, a hard, coarse, forth-putting freedom of expression,
which no degree of external polish could have abated one single
jot. Not that it was vulgar. But he had no fineness of nature;
there was in his eyes (although they might have artifice enough of
another sort) the naked exposure of something that ought not to be
left prominent. With these vague allusions to what I have seen in
other faces as well as his, I leave the quality to be comprehended
best—because with an intuitive repugnance—by those who possess
least of it.
His hair, as well as his beard and mustache, was coal-black; his
eyes, too, were black and sparkling, and his teeth remarkably
brilliant. He was rather carelessly but well and fashionably
dressed, in a summer-morning costume. There was a gold chain,
exquisitely wrought, across his vest. I never saw a smoother or
whiter gloss than that upon his shirt-bosom, which had a pin in it,
set with a gem that glimmered, in the leafy shadow where he stood,
like a living tip of fire. He carried a stick with a wooden head,
carved in vivid imitation of that of a serpent. I hated him,
partly, I do believe, from a comparison of my own homely garb with
his well-ordered foppishness.
"Well, sir," said I, a little ashamed of my first irritation,
but still with no waste of civility, "be pleased to speak at once,
as I have my own business in hand."
"I regret that my mode of addressing you was a little
unfortunate," said the stranger, smiling; for he seemed a very
acute sort of person, and saw, in some degree, how I stood affected
towards him. "I intended no offence, and shall certainly comport
myself with due ceremony hereafter. I merely wish to make a few
inquiries respecting a lady, formerly of my acquaintance, who is
now resident in your Community, and, I believe, largely concerned
in your social enterprise. You call her, I think, Zenobia."
"That is her name in literature," observed I; "a name, too,
which possibly she may permit her private friends to know and
address her by,—but not one which they feel at liberty to recognize
when used of her personally by a stranger or casual
acquaintance."
"Indeed!" answered this disagreeable person; and he turned aside
his face for an instant with a brief laugh, which struck me as a
noteworthy expression of his character. "Perhaps I might put
forward a claim, on your own grounds, to call the lady by a name so
appropriate to her splendid qualities. But I am willing to know her
by any cognomen that you may suggest."
Heartily wishing that he would be either a little more
offensive, or a good deal less so, or break off our intercourse
altogether, I mentioned Zenobia's real name.
"True," said he; "and in general society I have never heard her
called otherwise. And, after all, our discussion of the point has
been gratuitous. My object is only to inquire when, where, and how
this lady may most conveniently be seen."
"At her present residence, of course," I replied. "You have but
to go thither and ask for her. This very path will lead you within
sight of the house; so I wish you good-morning."
"One moment, if you please," said the stranger. "The course you
indicate would certainly be the proper one, in an ordinary morning
call. But my business is private, personal, and somewhat peculiar.
Now, in a community like this, I should judge that any little
occurrence is likely to be discussed rather more minutely than
would quite suit my views. I refer solely to myself, you
understand, and without intimating that it would be other than a
matter of entire indifference to the lady. In short, I especially
desire to see her in private.
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