1851. SHANNONDALE. BY EMMA D.E. NEVITT SOUTHWORTH, AUTHOR OF "RETRIBUTION, OR THE VALE OF
SHADOWS," "DESERTED WIFE," ETC. NEW YORK: D. APPLETON & COMPANY, 200 BROADWAY. PHILADELPHIA:
GEORGE S. APPLETON, 164 CHESTNUT STREET MDCCCLI.
CHAPTER IV. THE LEGEND OF THE LOVER'S LEAP
Thus lived -- thus died she; never more on her
Shall sorrow light, or shame. She was not made
Through years, or moons, the inner weight to bear.
Which older hearts endure till they are laid
By age in earth; her days and pleasures were
Brief, but delightful; such as had not stayed
Long with her destiny; but she sleeps well
Beneath the stream where she loved to dwell.
-- Byron.
"Many, very many years ago, when this property was in the hands of Bushrod Summerfield, the grandson of Lord Summerfield, the
first settler, there came to this aprtpart of the country a young Englishman of high rank, and of great wealth. He was a colonel in the
Hussars, from inclination to a martial life rather than from the necessity of entering a profession. He is said to have been a very
handsome man, of tall and commanding figure, with high Roman features, fired by the light of a falcon eye, and softened by an
abundance of raven ringlets. His manner, his gestures -- the tones of his voice possessed that marvelous fascination that compelled
love, the adoration of all who knew hem. Colonel Clinton had come out only to see the country, at the invitation of Bushrod
Summerfield, who, having been sent to England for education, had formed an acquaintance with Clinton at Oxford.
"Of course Colonel Clinton became the guest of Squire Summerfield. At this period a remnant of the tribe of ShehandoahShenandoah
Indians dwelt on the other side of the mountains, with their wandering mode of life. They had a reserved [page 12] privilege of
fishing at a certain place in their own ancestral river. The head of this tribe was a woman -- Lulu, the daughter of the great chief,
Worneo-at-akuk."
"But I did not know that a woman ever reigned over an Indian tribe -- I thought their woman are generally degraded," said Sina
Hinton.
"They are generally, but not universally, and not so much formerly as now. We see by the chronicles of the early settlement of the
country, that the custom prevailed to some extent. Lulu was a grand, wild forest girl, of that dark, rich, luxurious style of beauty never
seen in the most beautiful of the Caucasian race. Her form was tall and majestic, but beautifully proportioned; a small but regal head,
an arched and undulating neck, a fine high breast, rounded limbs, tapering toward the delicate wrists and ankles, and small and
elegantly shaped feet and hands -- such her form. Her features were of the Jewish style; her complexion was dark but singularly clear,
and deepened into a rich crimson in the rounded cheeks and full and arched lips. Her eyes were large and dark, full of liquid fire --
fierce and soft, as anger or tenderness possessed her; her eyebrows were very black and heavy, her eyelashes long, thick and black,
and her hair rolled in shining waves of purplish black nearly to her feet. She usually wore a superb dress of fine scarlet cloth, richly
and beautifully embroidered with various colored beads, silks, gold and silver threads, and fringed with varigatedvariegated feathers.
Her dress was short, and confined to her waist by a belt, in which were stuck one or two elegantly-wrought poinardsponiards,
purchased from the white settlers. Her neck, arms, and legs were bare; three or four rows of bright beads decked her throat, and heavy
gold and silver bracelets encircled her wrists and ankles. Her purplish locks, twined with many a gem. hung far below her waist. The
fame of the wondrous beauty of the queen of the Shenandoah had gone all over the settlement; and by the braves of her own tribe, the
beautiful Lulu was loved, adored, worshippedworshiped as a goddess, with all the wild enthusiasm of savage idolatry. Her hand had
been sought in marriage by the chiefs of other tribes, but Lulu had never felt a throb of love. She seemed something set apart and
sacred; the vestal queen rejected all these offers, with proud and high disdain.
"One day there was a great hunt upon the mountains; Squire Summerfield and Colonel Clinton joined in it. The fox, after running a
circuit of thirty miles, closely pursued by the hounds and hunters, of whom the gallant Colonel Clinton was the foremost, fled toward
the river, took this direction through the thicket straight to this precipice, madly followed by Colonel Clinton on his spirited horse.The fox sprang to the edge of the precipice, paused, took breath, gave one fearful look around, when Colonel Clinton on his fiery
horse came thundering on; and took the leap. The fierce horse of the hunter, in the deleriumdelirium of the chase, sped madly on, and
sprang over after the quarry! The hounds had started, and stopped short at the bank of the precipice, and now they set up a fearful
wail. Other hunters rode up, but seeing no signs of a catastrophe, suspected none; supposing that Colonel Clinton had, upon losing the
quarry, taken another road.
"Colonel CLintonClinton's brain had reeled, and he had lost his senses at the moment the fearful leap was taken. When he recovered
them he found himself lying on a pallet of delicate furs, in a tent hung on the inside with fine yellow cloth richly embroidered with
silver thread. The setting sun was pouring a flood of golden light through the opening into the tent, which bathed the dark, bright,
glorious form of the Indian queen, who stood in its full blaze. Colonel Clinton strove to collect his thoughts. It was some time before
he could recollect what had happened. At last he did; and then beckoning to the dark beauty, who immediately approached him,
hesaidhe said --
"'I know what has occurred. I guess where I am -- but by what miracle was I saved?"
"The queen of the Shenandoah replied in broken English -- 'broken music' -- that her braves were out upon the river in their canoes
fishing; that they had seen the fatal leap, that the horse was dashed to pieces at the foot of the precipice, but that he had been caught
between the strong forks of a projecting tree a few feet from the summit; that her braves had climbed the rock, rescued him, and
brought him to their encampment. Clinton found that both his arms had been broken by the fall, but that were set, splintered and
bound up with great skill, also, that his body was severely bruised. But Clinton thought not of his wounds and bruises -- his whole
soul was flooded with an excess of glory and of beauty that he could scarcely bear and live. Languid, prostrate and helpless as he was,
the approach of the dark, bright luxusiousluxurious Indian beauty threw all his senses in a deleriumdelirium of excitement that
threatened the stability of his reason. He recovered rapidly, but he had no wish to quit his quarters. Heedless of the anxieties of his
friends, he avoided informing them of his whereabouts, lest they shoudshould disturb him in his delicious life of blended
ectasyecstasy and anquishanguish. You will anticipate the reultresult. He, with his glorious beauty, grace, and [page 13] eloquence,
wooed and won the fierce and beautiful forest queen. "
Ah, the tigress grew as gentle as the doe -- the queen became the slave! Her warriors saw with a fierce and bitter jealousy the
growing weakness of their queen -- the discrowining of their goddess. They assembled round their council-fires and talked -- they
went to her and expostulated. In vain! in vain! She did not heed or even hear them! her soul was absorbed in one idea -- one life;
her senses bound up in one ecstatic trance. They met again in council, and, after a deliberate, long talk, they decided that the white
intruder should leave their encampment within twenty-four hours at the peril of his life. This decision was conveyed to Clinton the
same evening. He assented very calmly. And she! she left her Indian crown -- she left her glorious heritage of independence, of love,
of worship, and of power, and followed like a slave the footsteps of her chosen master where he bade her follow! A hut in the depths
of the forest received the English officer and his Indian mistress. He supplied his wants and hers by hunting and fishing. She cooked
his meals and served him fondly. This, you know, could not last long. The highly-educated, highly-accomplished, elegant and
fastidious Reginald Clinton, the flower of the English aristocracy, could not long content himself with a savage, however attractive
she might be. After the first ecstatic shock sent to his heart by her dark electric beauty had subsided, his passioned waned. And, after
he had ceased to love her, her very tenderness, humility, and submission only disgusted and revolted him; he determined to leave her.Reginald Clinton had all a fine gentleman's ahorrenceabhorrence of 'a scene.' He resolved to evade one: so, one day, he took leave of
Lulu as if for a day of hunting and he never saw her but once more. He turned his steps towards Shannondale, where he arrived late in
the afternoon. Squire Summerfield received him with great surprise and joy, as one from the dead. He told them the story of his
rescue by the Indians and his sojourn among them -- but he said nothing of Lulu. Squire Summerfield introduced him to his young
sister, Rose Summerfield, for her exceeding beauty called the 'Rose of Shannondale." She had just returned from France, where she
had been educated, and had arrived at Red-Stone Hall during the absence of Colonel Clinton. Very lovely was the Rose of
Shannondale -- with her Hebe style of beauty, her exquisite form, her fair complexion, with its sudden blushes -- her deep blue eyes,
with their meek droop, and the clustering of auburn tendrils that contrasted so brightly with her snowy forehead and roseate cheeks. Clinton was thrown constantly in her society, and he found her mind and heart richly cultivated and beautiful as her person. He loved
her -- not with that passionate deleriumdelirium of attraction that had bound him to Lulu, but with a profound and tender affection,
founded upon deep esteem; and an affection that might have possessed redeeming power for him but for his sins against Lulu. A few
weeks passed and Reginald Clinton was the accepted lover of Rose Summerfield; and their marriage day was fixed. Splendid
preparations were made. The fame of the magnificence of the approaching bridal spread all over the country. A vast number of
relatives and friends were invited. The marriage day came. Evening drew on. The guests assembled. Night was turned to day with
the splendor of the illuminations. The marriage ceremony was over, and the companions were all on the saloon. Many cotillions were
up upon the floor, and the music pealed forth, drowning the roar of the waters around the vale. Suddenly, in the pauses of the music,
arose a wild, unearthly wail! It was so fierce in its despairing woe, that it might well be taken for the death-cry of a soul condemned
to eternal perdition. The guests paused and looked at each other. "It is a blast of wind among the pines," said one. "It is the howl of a
pack of wolves," said another -- and the music pealed forth again, and the dance went on. But again it arose, that fearful wail --
piercing the air, and echoed back by the rocks and caverns. It came from the opposite side of the river. The music ceased -- the
dancers, the whole company poured out into the piazza. There, in the full light of the harvest moon -- there upon the highest summit
of the opposite tower-like rock, sat Lulu, Queen of the Shenandoah, singing her death song. As the bridegroom reached the spot, she
ceased -- cleared the air with a sudden bound, and plunged into the waters beneath! Such was the end of the beautiful Queen of the
Shenandoah. Such the Legend of the Lover's Leap."