He did not insist on their marriage
taking place at once, although in her mood of dull
indifference she would not have objected to anything
he might have proposed. It was his hope that
after a while she might become calmer, and more cheerful.
He hoped to take in his at the altar a hand a little
less like that of a dead person.
Introducing her as his betrothed wife,
he found her very pleasant lodgings with an excellent
family, where he was acquainted, provided her with
books and a piano, took her constantly out to places
of amusement, and, in every way which his ingenuity
could suggest, endeavoured to distract and divert
her. To all this she offered neither objection
nor suggestion, nor did she, beyond the usual conventional
responses, show the slightest gratitude. It was
as if she took it for granted that he understood,
as she did, that all this was being done for himself,
and not for her, she being quite past having anything
done for her. Her only recognition of the reverential
and considerate tenderness which he showed her was
an occasional air of wonder that cut him to the quick.
Shame, sorrow, and despair had incrusted her heart
with a hard shell, impenetrable to genial emotions.
Nor would all his love help him to get over the impression
that she was no longer an acquaintance and familiar
friend, but somehow a stranger.
So far as he could find out, she did
absolutely nothing all day except to sit brooding.
He could not discover that she so much as opened the
books and magazines he sent her, and, to the best
of his knowledge, she made little more use of her
piano. His calls were sadly dreary affairs.
He would ask perhaps half a dozen questions, which
he had spent much care in framing with a view to interesting
her. She would reply in monosyllables, with sometimes
a constrained smile or two, and then, after sitting
a while in silence, he would take his hat and bid
her good-evening.
She always sat nowadays in an attitude
which he had never seen her adopt in former times,
her hands lying in her lap before her, and an absent
expression on her face. As he looked at her sitting
thus, and recalled her former vivacious self-assertion
and ever-new caprices, he was overcome with the
sadness of the contrast.
Whenever he asked her about her health,
she replied that she was well; and, indeed, she had
that appearance. Grief is slow to sap the basis
of a healthy physical constitution. She retained
all the contour of cheek and rounded fulness of figure
which had first captivated his fancy in the days,
as it seemed, so long ago.
He took her often to the theatre,
because in the action of the play she seemed at times
momentarily carried out of herself. Once, when
they were coming home from a play, she called attention
to some feature of it. It was the first independent
remark she had made since he had brought her to her
lodgings. In itself it was of no importance at
all, but he was overcome with delight, as people are
delighted with the first words that show returning
interest in earthly matters on the part of a convalescing
friend whose soul has long been hovering on the borders
of death. It would sound laughable to explain
how much he made of that little remark, how he spun
it out, and turned it in and out, and returned to it
for days afterward. But it remained isolated.
She did not make another.
Nevertheless, her mind was not so
entirely torpid as it appeared, nor was she so absolutely
self-absorbed. One idea was rising day by day
out of the dark confusion of her thoughts, and that
was the goodness and generosity of her lover.
In this appreciation there was not the faintest glows
of gratitude. She left herself wholly out of the
account as only one could do with whom wretchedness
has abolished for the time all interest in self.
She was personally past being benefited. Her sense
of his love and generosity was as disinterested as
if some other person had been their object. Her
admiration was such as one feels for a hero of history
or fiction.
Often, when all within her seemed
growing hard and still and dead, she felt that crying
would make her feel better. At such times, to
help her to cry, for the tears did not flow easily,
she would sit down to the piano, the only times she
ever touched it, and play over some of the simple
airs associated with her life at home. Sometimes,
after playing and crying a while, she would lapse
into sweetly mournful day-dreams of how happy she
might have been if she had returned Henry’s love
in those old days. She wondered in a puzzled
way why it was that she had not. It seemed so
strange to her now that she could have failed in doing
so. But all this time it was only as a might-have-been
that she thought of loving him, as one who feels himself
mortally sick thinks of what he might have done when
he was well, as a life-convict thinks of what he might
have done when free, as a disembodied spirit might
think of what it might have done when living.
The consciousness of her disgrace, ever with her, had,
in the past month or two, built up an impassable wall
between her past life and her present state of existence.
She no longer thought of herself in the present tense,
still less the future.
He had not kissed her since that kiss
at their first interview, which threw her into such
a paroxysm of weeping. But one evening, when she
had been more silent and dull than usual, and more
unresponsive to his efforts to interest her, as he
rose to go he drew her a moment to his side and pressed
his lips to hers, as if constrained to find some expression
for the tenderness so cruelly balked of any outflow
in words. He went quickly out, but she continued
to stand motionless, in the attitude of one startled
by a sudden discovery. There was a frightened
look in her dilated eyes. Her face was flooded
to the roots of her hair with a deep flush. It
was a crimson most unlike the tint of blissful shame
with which the cheeks announce love’s dawn in
happy hearts. She threw herself upon the sofa,
and buried her scorched face in the pillow while her
form shook with dry sobs.
Love had, in a moment, stripped the
protecting cicatrice of a hard indifference from
her smarting shame, and it was as if for the first
time she were made fully conscious of the desperation
of her condition.
The maiden who finds her stainless
purity all too lustreless a gift for him she loves,
may fancy what were the feelings of Madeline, as love,
with its royal longing to give, was born in her heart.
With what lilies of virgin innocence would she fain
have rewarded her lover! but her lilies were yellow,
their fragrance was stale. With what an unworn
crown would she have crowned him! but she had rifled
her maiden regalia to adorn an impostor. And
love came to her now, not as to others, but whetting
the fangs of remorse and blowing the fires of shame.
But one thing it opened her eyes to,
and made certain from the first instant of her new
consciousness, namely, that since she loved him she
could not keep her promise to marry him. In her
previous mood of dead indifference to all things,
it had not mattered to her one way or the other.
Reckless what became of her, she had only a feeling
that seeing he had been so good he ought to have any
satisfaction he could find in marrying her. But
what her indifference would have abandoned to him her
love could not endure the thought of giving. The
worthlessness of the gift, which before had not concerned
her, now made its giving impossible. While before
she had thought with indifference of submitting to
a love she did not return, now that she returned it
the idea of being happy in it seemed to her guilty
and shameless. Thus to gather the honey of happiness
from her own abasement was a further degradation, compared
with which she could now almost respect herself.
The consciousness that she had taken pleasure in that
kiss made her seem to herself a brazen thing.
Her heart ached with a helpless yearning
over him for the disappointment she knew he must now
suffer at her hands. She tried, but in vain, to
feel that she might, after all, marry him, might do
this crowning violence to her nature, and accept a
shameful happiness for his sake.
One morning a bitter thing happened
to her. She had slept unusually well, and her
dreams had been sweet and serene, untinged by any shadow
of her waking thoughts, as if, indeed, the visions
intended for the sleeping brain of some fortunate
woman had by mistake strayed into hers. For a
while she had lain, half dozing, half awake, pleasantly
conscious of the soft, warm bed, and only half emerged
from the atmosphere of dreamland. As at last
she opened her eyes, the newly risen sun, bright from
his ocean bath, was shining into the room, and the
birds were singing. A lilac bush before the window
was moving in the breeze, and the shadows of its twigs
were netting the sunbeams on the wall as they danced
to and fro.
The spirit of the jocund morn quite
carried her away, and all unthinkingly she bounded
out into the room and, stood there with a smile of
sheer delight upon her face. She had forgotten
all about her shame and sorrow. For an instant
they were as completely gone from her mind as if they
had never been, and for that instant nowhere did the
sun’s far-reaching eye rest on a blither or
more innocent face. Then memory laid its icy
finger on her heart and stilled its bounding pulse.
The glad smile went out, like a taper quenched in
Acheron, and she fell prone upon the floor, crying
with hard, dry sobs, “O God! O God!
O God!”
That day, and for many days afterward,
she thought again and again of that single happy instant
ere memory reclaimed its victim. It was the first
for so long a time, and it was so very sweet, like
a drop of water to one in torment. What a heaven
a life must be which had many such moments! Was
it possible that once, long ago, her life had been
such an one-that she could awake mornings
and not be afraid of remembering? Had there ever
been a time when the ravens of shame and remorse had
not perched above her bed as she slept, waiting her
waking to plunge their beaks afresh into her heart?
That instant of happiness which had been given her,
how full it had been of blithe thanks to God and sympathy
with the beautiful life of the world! Surely
it showed that she was not bad, that she could have
such a moment. It showed her heart was pure; it
was only her memory that was foul. It was in
vain that she swept and washed all within, and was
good, when all the while her memory, like a ditch
from a distant morass, emptied its vile stream of recollections
into her heart, poisoning all the issues of life.
Years before, in one of the periodical
religious revivals at Newville, she had passed through
the usual girlish experience of conversion. Now,
indeed, was a time when the heavenly compensations
to which religion invites the thoughts of the sorrowful
might surely have been a source of dome relief.
But a certain cruel clearness of vision, or so at least
it seemed to her, made all reflections on this theme
but an aggravation of her despair. Since the
shadow had fallen on her life, with every day the
sense of shame and grief had grown more insupportable.
In proportion as her loathing of the sin had grown,
her anguish on account of it had increased. It
was a poison-tree which her tears watered and caused
to shoot forth yet deeper roots, yet wider branches,
overspreading her life with ever denser, more noxious
shadows. Since, then, on earth the purification
of repentance does but deepen the soul’s anguish
over the past, how should it be otherwise in heaven,
all through eternity? The pure in heart that
see God, thought the unhappy girl, must only be those
that have always been so, for such as become pure by
repentance and tears do but see their impurity plainer
every day.
Her horror of such a heaven, where
through eternity perfect purification should keep
her shame undying, taught her unbelief, and turned
her for comfort to that other deep instinct of humanity,
which sees in death the promise of eternal sleep,
rest, and oblivion. In these days she thought
much of poor George Bayley, and his talk in the prayer-meeting
the night before he killed himself. By the mystic
kinship that had declared itself between their sorrowful
destinies, she felt a sense of nearness to him greater
than her new love had given or ever could give her
toward Henry. She recalled how she had sat listening
to George’s talk that evening, pitifully, indeed,
but only half comprehending what he meant, with no
dim, foreboding warning that she was fated to reproduce
his experience so closely. Yes, reproduce it,
perhaps, God only knew, even to the end. She
could not bear this always. She understood now-ah!
how well-his longing for the river of Lethe
whose waters give forgetfulness. She often saw
his pale face in dreams, wearing the smile he wore
as he lay in the coffin, a smile as if he had been
washed in those waters he sighed for.