"Man!" exclaimed the Rabbi, fixing his keen black eye upon Burrell,

"away from before me! Guilt and falsehood are on your lip. Your eye, the

eye of the proud Christian, quails before the gaze of the despoiled and

despised Jew; were you innocent, you would stand firm as I do now, erect

in your Maker's image. Do you not tremble lest God's own lightnings

blast you? Did you ever read, and reading believe, the Christian story

of Ananias and Sapphira!"

If Burrell had possessed an atom of human feeling, he would have sunk

abashed to the earth, and entreated the forgiveness of the Rabbi, whose

flashing eyes and extended features glared and swelled with indignation;

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but the only two emotions that at the time contended within him were

cowardice and pride. Had he the power, gladly would he have struck the

Jew to death, as a punishment for what he deemed his insolence; but he

feared the protecting and avenging hand of Cromwell, who never resigned

a cherished purpose or a cherished person, and whose esteem for the

learned Rabbi was perfectly known, and much talked of about the court.

"You cannot avoid crediting me for meekness, Ben Israel," he said,

without, however, raising his eyes from the ground (for his blood boiled

in his veins, though he spoke in a gentle tone); "you have come into my

house, rated me upon a foul charge, and will not permit me to speak in

my own defence. Take a cup of this wine, and then I will hear, if you

can adduce it, further proof than that false portrait."

The Rabbi touched not the proffered beverage, but withdrew from his vest

sundry letters, which he unfolded with a trembling hand: they were the

communications he had received from the Polish Jew, with whose family at

Paris his daughter had remained. He stated Burrell's extraordinary

attention to Zillah, during his residence abroad--the frequent letters

that passed between them under pretence of a correspondence with her

father--her having received others from England since Burrell's

return--her total change of manner--and, finally, her having quitted his

house, and his being unable to discover where she had gone. Strong

suspicions were added that she had followed Burrell to, and was now in,

England; and there was a long and formal expression of regret from the

Polish Jew that he had ever admitted the Christian beyond the threshold

of his door.

The villain breathed more freely when he ascertained that the fugitive

had not been traced from St. Vallery; and he felt he could have braved

the affair with perfect ease and indifference, but for the information

conveyed by Dalton's letter, and the consequent dread of Zillah's

appearing before him, perhaps at the very moment that the

often-asserted, and sworn to, lie passed his lips. It was now more

difficult to dissemble than he had ever yet found it; he saw clearly

that his oaths and protestations made but little impression upon the

mind of Ben Israel, who filled up every pause either by lamentations for

his daughter, execrations on her seducer, or touching appeals to one

whose feelings were centred in self, and who therefore had little

sympathy for sorrow that would have moved a heart of stone. Burrell was

so thoroughly overpowered by the events of the evening, that the only

point of exertion on which his mind rallied was a strong wish to rid

himself of the Jew as speedily as possible, so that he might find

opportunity to collect and arrange his thoughts--it therefore occurred

to him to assume the bearing of injured innocence, as protestations had

been of no avail; he accordingly said, in a tone and with a manner so

earnest, that at the moment it almost destroyed the suspicions of the

Rabbi:-"Sir, I have over and over again asserted enough to convince any

rational person that I know nothing of the crime you impute to me;

having, in my own estimation, performed all that could be required, I

must now withdraw. If you please to lay your statement before his

Highness, I will defend myself, as I have now done, and let him judge

between thee and me."




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