CHAPTER VI - WHAT HE THOUGHT OF THINGS
How grateful to the sensitive heart
of the young man would have been the knowledge that
he was an object of thoughtful interest to Julia’s
mother, who, next to his own, had his reverence and
regard! He knew he was generally disliked; his
intuitions assured him of this, and in his young arrogance
he had not cared. Indeed, he had come to feel
a morbid pleasure in avoiding and being avoided; but
now, as he sat in the little silent room in the late
night, he felt his isolation. He had been appalled
at a discovery or rather a revelation made
that afternoon. He knew that he loved Julia,
and that this love would be the one passion of manhood,
as it had been of his boyhood. He had given himself
up to it as to a delicious onflowing stream, drifting
him through enchanted lands, and had not thought or
cared whither it might bear, or on what desolate shore
it might finally strand him.
Now he felt its full strength and
power, and he knew, too, that it was a force to be
controlled, when perhaps that had become impossible.
He had never asked himself if a return of his passion
were even possible, until now, when his whole fervid
nature had gone out in a great hungry longing for
her love and sympathy. She had never stood so
lovely and so inaccessible as he had seen her that
day. How deeply through and through came the
first greeting of her eyes! It was an electric
flash never received before, and which as suddenly
disappeared. How cool and indifferent was her
manner and look as he approached, and stood near her!
No inquiry, save that mocking one! Not a word;
not a thought of where he had been, or why he had
returned, or what he would do; the shortest answer
as to his inquiry about her mother; no intimation that
he might even call at the house. Thus he went
over with it all over and over again.
What did he care? But he did, and could not deceive
himself. He did care, and must not; and then he
went back over all their intercourse since her return
home, two or three months before he left, and it was
all alike on her part a cool, indifferent
avoidance of him.
Oh, she was so glorious so
beautiful! The whole world lay in the span of
her slender waist a world not for him.
Was it something to be adventured for, fought for,
found anywhere? something that he could climb up to
and take? something to plunge down to in fathomless
ocean and carry back? No, it was her woman’s
heart. Like her father, she disliked him; and
if, like her father, she would openly let him see
and hear it but doesn’t she?
What had he to offer her? How could he overcome
her father’s dislike? He felt in his soul
what would come to him finally, but then, in the lapsing
time? And she avoided him now!
He returned to his algebraic problem,
with a desperate plunge at its solution. The
unknown quantity remained unknown; and, a moment later,
he was gratified to see how he had finally caught and
expressed, with his pencil, a look of Julia, that
had always eluded him before. But was he to be
overcome by a girl? Was life and its ambitions
to be crushed out and brought to nought by one small
hand? He would see. It would be inexpressible
luxury to tell her once but just once all
his passion and worship, and then, of course, remain
silent forever, and go out of her presence. He
wished her to know it all, so that, as she would hear
and know of him in the coming years, she would know
that he was worthy, not of her love, but worthy to
love her, whatever that may mean, or whatever of comfort
it might bring to either. What precious logic
the heart of a young man in his twenty-second year
is capable of!