Myths and Legends of Our Own Land, vol 2 | Page 3

Charles M. Sheldon
of the curious had assembled in the edifice; a rattle of
wheels was heard, and a bevy of bridesmaids and friends in hoop, patch,
velvet, silk, powder, swords, and buckles walked down the aisle; but
just as the bride had come within the door, out of the sunlight that
streamed so brilliantly on the mounded turf and tombstones in the
churchyard, the bell in the steeple gave a single boom.
The bride walked to the altar, and as she took her place before it
another clang resounded from the belfry. The bridegroom was not there.
Again and again the brazen throat and iron tongue sent out a doleful
knell, and faces grew pale and anxious, for the meaning of it could not
be guessed. With eyes fixed on the marble tomb of her first husband,
the woman tremblingly awaited the solution of the mystery, until the
door was darkened by something that made her catch her breath-- a

funeral. The organ began a solemn dirge as a black-cloaked cortege
came through the aisle, and it was with amazement that the bride
discovered it to be formed of her oldest friends,--bent, withered; paired,
man and woman, as in mockery--while behind, with white face,
gleaming eyes, disordered hair, and halting step, came the bridegroom,
in his shroud.
"Come," he said,--let us be married. The coffins are ready. Then, home
to the tomb."
"Cruel!" murmured the woman.
"Now, Heaven judge which of us has been cruel. Forty years ago you
took away my faith, destroyed my hopes, and gave to others your youth
and beauty. Our lives have nearly run their course, so I am come to wed
you as with funeral rites." Then, in a softer manner, he took her hand,
and said, "All is forgiven. If we cannot live together we will at least be
wedded in death. Time is almost at its end. We will marry for eternity.
Come." And tenderly embracing her, he led her forward. Hard as was
the ordeal, confusing, frightening, humiliating, the bride came through
it a better woman.
"It is true," she said, "I have been vain and worldly, but now, in my age,
the truest love I ever knew has come back to me. It is a holy love. I will
cherish it forever." Their eyes met, and they saw each other through
tears. Solemnly the clergyman read the marriage service, and when it
was concluded the low threnody that had come from the organ in key
with the measured clang of the bell, merged into a nobler motive, until
at last the funeral measures were lost in a burst of exultant harmony.
Sobs of pent feeling and sighs of relief were heard as the bridal party
moved away, and when the newmade wife and husband reached the
portal the bell was silent and the sun was shining.

ROISTERING DIRCK VAN DARA
In the days when most of New York stood below Grand Street, a
roistering fellow used to make the rounds of the taverns nightly,
accompanied by a friend named Rooney. This brave drinker was Dirck
Van Dara, one of the last of those swag-bellied topers that made merry
with such solemnity before the English seized their unoffending town.
It chanced that Dirck and his chum were out later than usual one night,
and by eleven o'clock, when all good people were abed, a drizzle set in

that drove the watch to sleep in doorways and left Broadway tenantless.
As the two choice spirits reeled out of a hostelry near Wall Street and
saw the lights go out in the tap-room windows they started up town to
their homes in Leonard Street, but hardly had they come abreast of old
St. Paul's when a strange thing stayed them: crying was heard in the
churchyard and a phosphorescent light shone among the tombs. Rooney
was sober in a moment, but not so Dirck Van Dara, who shouted, "Here
is sport, friend Rooney. Let's climb the wall. If the dead are for a dance,
we will take partners and show them how pigeons' wings are cut
nowadays."
"No," exclaimed the other; "those must perish who go among the dead
when they come out of their graves. I've heard that if you get into their
clutches, you must stay in purgatory for a hundred years, and no priest
can pray you out."
"Bah! old wives' tales! Come on!" And pulling his friend with him,
they were over the fence. "Hello! what have we here?" As he spoke a
haggard thing arose from behind a tombstone, a witchlike creature,
with rags falling about her wasted form and hair that almost hid her
face. The twain were set a-sneezing by the fumes of sulphur, and
Rooney swore afterwards that there were little things at the end of the
yard
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