After the one hopeful excitement of
my prison-life, my spirit drooped deplorably for a
season, and all occupation became distasteful to me.
My diary even was abandoned, the writing of which
had so well assisted to fill my time, and, although
destroyed daily, to impress upon my memory a faithful
and sequent record of the monotonous hours, else remembered
merely as a homogeneous whole. Had it not been
for poor Ernie and his requirements, I should have
sunk under this fresh phase of suffering, I am convinced.
My health, too, was giving way. My strength, my
energy were failing. I kept my bed, as I had
never been willing to do before if able to arise from
it, until noon sometimes, for want of nervous impulse,
and my food was tasteless and innutritious, even when
I forced myself to eat a portion of what was placed
regularly before me. It seemed to me that, long
ere this, Wardour Wentworth must have ascertained
my fate, and the thought that he might be passive when
my very soul was at stake, thrilled me with agony
unspeakable.
This mood endured so long that even
Mrs. Clayton grew alarmed. She insisted on Dr.
Englehart again, and, when I shook my head drearily
for all reply, begged that I would permit her to state
my case to Mrs. Raymond, who might in turn see some
able physician about me and procure remedies.
To this, at last, I consented.
The consequence was what I had hoped
it might be: Mrs. Raymond came in person, and
I had at last the opportunity I had long desired of
seeing her alone. If thoughtless, if unrefined
according to my views of good breeding, she was still
young, and vivacious, and perhaps kind-hearted; besides
this, sufficiently well pleased with herself to be
generous to one who could no longer be her rival.
Her approach was heralded by a note
from Mr. Bainrothe, full of his characteristic, guileful
sophistry and cool impertinence. It ran as follows
(I still possess this billet with others of his inditing along
with a snake’s rattle):
“MIRIAM: I am glad to hear
through Mrs. Clayton that reaction has occurred, and
that you manifest repentance for your recent violence
toward one who always means you well. A little
jesting on the part of your guardian, my dear girl,
should meet with a very different reception, and handsome
women must submit to compliments with a good grace,
or run the risk of being called prudes or viragos.
Not that I mean to apply either term to you by any
means. Your father’s daughter could not
be other than a lady, even if she tried, but I must
confess your manners have deteriorated somewhat since
you went into voluntary banishment among those outlandish
people. I have heard no very good account of
this old La Vigne who died in debt, it seems, and left
his children beggars. I have some curiosity to
know whether he paid your salary. ‘Straws
show,’ you know, etc.
“It is now October; by the end
of this month I hope you will have made up that stubborn
mind of yours (truly indomitable, as I often say to
Evelyn) to leave seclusion, and enter your family once
more in the only way you can do so respectably after
what has occurred as a married woman.
“You remember the French song
which I was always fond of humming, ’Ou
est on si bien qu’au sein
de sa famille?’ How appropriate
it seems to your condition!
“You will be surprised to hear
that your step-mother’s brother has appeared
on the tapis, and that he has had the audacity to propose
to adopt Mabel, whom he claims as his niece.
“He seems a gentlemanly person
enough, but may be an impostor for aught I know.
The young lady he was engaged to, Gregory tells me,
perished in the Kosciusko, which proves a relief,
after all, as it is rumored he has a wife in Europe.
But such gossip can hardly interest you very vividly.
The man has gone to California, and will probably return
no more.
“Did you, or did you not, meet
this person at Colonel La Vigne’s? Favraud
hinted something of the kind when he was here; but
I can get no satisfaction from Gregory.
“They all believe you were drowned
in Georgia, and I thought it best for the present
not to undeceive Favraud, who laments your fate.
“The surprise will be all the
more pleasant; and, of course, every thing will be
explained to the satisfaction of friends when you appear
publicly as the wife of Luke Gregory ’long
secretly married!’ You see, it will be necessary
to go back a little to save appearances, on account
of Ernie!”
The miscreant! I understood him
now oh, my God, for strength to tear his
cowardly heart from his truculent body! But no;
let there be no further unavailing anger. In
God’s good time all should recoil on his own
head. For the present, I must bear, and make myself
insensible, if possible; and yet, I would not willingly
have had the living greenness of my spirit turned
to stone, as we are told branches are in some strange,
foreign rivers crystal-cold!
Another extract, the closing one,
and then forever away with Basil Bainrothe and his
flimsy letters:
“Again, I must congratulate
you on the subdued and humbled temper you manifest.
Claude, and Evelyn, and I, had just been discussing
a plan for removing you to another asylum, where stricter
discipline and less luxurious externals are employed
to conquer the otherwise unmanageable inmates.
Dr. Englehart, you know, holds up the theory of indulgence
to his patients, and I am rejoiced to find his measures
have at last prevailed over your frenzy. Mabel,
like your other friends, believes you dead, and is
at home with Evelyn and Claude, and is growing in beauty
and intelligence every day.
“She was quite shocked at her
uncle’s wild behavior, and positively refused
to go with him, is fond of Mr. Gregory, and remembers
you with affection.
“Owing to my knowledge of your
condition for the last year, my dear child, I don’t
blame you for any thing that is past, not even for
those delusions with regard to my own acts and intentions
which formed your mania, nor for the misfortune and
sense of shame which, no doubt, caused your hasty
flight, and whose evidences you brought with you from
the raft, in the shape of a nearly year-old child.
“I remain, faithfully yours,
“B.B.”
The shameful accusations which brought
the blood to my brow ought to have been easier to
bear than all the rest, because so easily confuted,
and because I knew not really believed; but they were
not. The very idea of shame humiliated me more
than positive ill-treatment could have done; and,
spotless though I knew myself to be (as others knew
me too all I loved and cared for), still
my purity was shocked by such injustice.
I felt like one who had gone out to
walk in fresh attire, and been mud-pelted by rude
urchins, so that the outward robes, at least, were
soiled, and a sense of degradation and uncleanness
became the consequence in spite of reason. But,
after all, the dress could be easily changed when
opportunity should occur, and all be made clean again,
and the mud-pelting forgotten or overlooked, and the
urchins punished or dismissed in scorn.
Surely, God would not much longer
permit this fiend to subjugate me. Had I not
suffered sufficiently? Alas I who but our Creator
can judge of our deserts, or measure our power to
bear?
In my adversity and lonely trouble
I had drawn near to Him and his blessed Son our
Mediator, and example, and only strength. Dear
as was still the memory of that earthly love, the
only real passion I had ever known, could ever know,
it came no longer to my spirit as a substitute for
religion. I had learned to separate my worship
of God from my fealty to man, yet was this last not
weakened, but strengthened, by such discrimination.
If only for the gift of grace it brought
to me, let me bless my sad captivity!