A Sicilian Romance - Page 128/139

aving taken what provision the marquis had brought, they quitted the

cell, and entered upon the dark passage, along which they passed with

cautious steps. Julia came first to the door of the cavern, but who

can paint her distress when she found it was fastened! All her efforts

to open it were ineffectual.--The door which had closed after her, was

held by a spring lock, and could be opened on this side only with a

key.

When she understood this circumstance, the marchioness, with a

placid resignation which seemed to exalt her above humanity, addressed

herself again to heaven, and turned back to her cell. Here Julia

indulged without reserve, and without scruple, the excess of her

grief. The marchioness wept over her. 'Not for myself,' said she, 'do

I grieve. I have too long been inured to misfortune to sink under its

pressure. This disappointment is intrinsically, perhaps, little--for I

had no certain refuge from calamity--and had it even been otherwise, a

few years only of suffering would have been spared me. It is for you,

Julia, who so much lament my fate; and who in being thus delivered to

the power of your father, are sacrificed to the Duke de Luovo--that my

heart swells.' Julia could make no reply, but by pressing to her lips the hand which

was held forth to her, she saw all the wretchedness of her situation;

and her fearful uncertainty concerning Hippolitus and Ferdinand,

formed no inferior part of her affliction.

'If,' resumed the marchioness, 'you prefer imprisonment with your

mother, to a marriage with the duke, you may still secret yourself in

the passage we have just quitted, and partake of the provision which

is brought me.' 'O! talk not, madam, of a marriage with the duke,' said Julia; 'surely

any fate is preferable to that. But when I consider that in remaining

here, I am condemned only to the sufferings which my mother has so

long endured, and that this confinement will enable me to soften, by

tender sympathy, the asperity of her misfortunes, I ought to submit to

my present situation with complacency, even did a marriage with the

duke appear less hateful to me.'

'Excellent girl!' exclaimed the marchioness, clasping Julia to her

bosom; 'the sufferings you lament are almost repaid by this proof of

your goodness and affection! Alas! that I should have been so long

deprived of such a daughter!'

Julia now endeavoured to imitate the fortitude of her mother, and

tenderly concealed her anxiety for Ferdinand and Hippolitus, the idea

of whom incessantly haunted her imagination. When the marquis brought

food to the cell, she retired to the avenue leading to the cavern, and

escaped discovery.