In a Letter from MR. CANDY

Frizinghall, Wednesday, September 26th, 1849.--Dear Mr. Franklin Blake,

you will anticipate the sad news I have to tell you, on finding your

letter to Ezra Jennings returned to you, unopened, in this enclosure. He

died in my arms, at sunrise, on Wednesday last.

I am not to blame for having failed to warn you that his end was at

hand. He expressly forbade me to write to you. "I am indebted to Mr.

Franklin Blake," he said, "for having seen some happy days. Don't

distress him, Mr. Candy--don't distress him."

His sufferings, up to the last six hours of his life, were terrible to

see. In the intervals of remission, when his mind was clear, I entreated

him to tell me of any relatives of his to whom I might write. He asked

to be forgiven for refusing anything to me. And then he said--not

bitterly--that he would die as he had lived, forgotten and unknown. He

maintained that resolution to the last. There is no hope now of making

any discoveries concerning him. His story is a blank.

The day before he died, he told me where to find all his papers. I

brought them to him on his bed. There was a little bundle of old

letters which he put aside. There was his unfinished book. There was his

Diary--in many locked volumes. He opened the volume for this year, and

tore out, one by one, the pages relating to the time when you and he

were together. "Give those," he said, "to Mr. Franklin Blake. In years

to come, he may feel an interest in looking back at what is written

there." Then he clasped his hands, and prayed God fervently to bless

you, and those dear to you. He said he should like to see you again. But

the next moment he altered his mind. "No," he answered when I offered to

write. "I won't distress him! I won't distress him!"

At his request I next collected the other papers--that is to say, the

bundle of letters, the unfinished book and the volumes of the Diary--and

enclosed them all in one wrapper, sealed with my own seal. "Promise,"

he said, "that you will put this into my coffin with your own hand; and

that you will see that no other hand touches it afterwards."

I gave him my promise. And the promise has been performed.

He asked me to do one other thing for him--which it cost me a hard

struggle to comply with. He said, "Let my grave be forgotten. Give me

your word of honour that you will allow no monument of any sort--not

even the commonest tombstone--to mark the place of my burial. Let me

sleep, nameless. Let me rest, unknown." When I tried to plead with

him to alter his resolution, he became for the first, and only time,

violently agitated. I could not bear to see it; and I gave way. Nothing

but a little grass mound marks the place of his rest. In time, the

tombstones will rise round it. And the people who come after us will

look and wonder at the nameless grave.




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