“I pity the man who
can travel from Dan to Beersheba, and say, ’Tis
all barren’: and
so it is: and so is all the world to him who will
not
cultivate the fruits it offers.” STERNE:
Sentimental Journey.
To say that Deronda was romantic would
be to misrepresent him; but under his calm and somewhat
self-repressed exterior there was a fervor which made
him easily find poetry and romance among the events
of every-day life. And perhaps poetry and romance
are as plentiful as ever in the world except for those
phlegmatic natures who I suspect would in any age
have regarded them as a dull form of erroneous thinking.
They exist very easily in the same room with the microscope
and even in railway carriages: what banishes
them in the vacuum in gentlemen and lady passengers.
How should all the apparatus of heaven and earth, from
the farthest firmament to the tender bosom of the mother
who nourished us, make poetry for a mind that had
no movements of awe and tenderness, no sense of fellowship
which thrills from the near to the distant, and back
again from the distant to the near?
To Deronda this event of finding Mirah
was as heart-stirring as anything that befell Orestes
or Rinaldo. He sat up half the night, living
again through the moments since he had first discerned
Mirah on the river-brink, with the fresh and fresh
vividness which belongs to emotive memory. When
he took up a book to try and dull this urgency of
inward vision, the printed words were no more than
a network through which he saw and heard everything
as clearly as before saw not only the actual
events of two hours, but possibilities of what had
been and what might be which those events were enough
to feed with the warm blood of passionate hope and
fear. Something in his own experience caused
Mirah’s search after her mother to lay hold with
peculiar force on his imagination. The first
prompting of sympathy was to aid her in her search:
if given persons were extant in London there were ways
of finding them, as subtle as scientific experiment,
the right machinery being set at work. But here
the mixed feelings which belonged to Deronda’s
kindred experience naturally transfused themselves
into his anxiety on behalf of Mirah.
The desire to know his own mother,
or to know about her, was constantly haunted with
dread; and in imagining what might befall Mirah it
quickly occurred to him that finding the mother and
brother from whom she had been parted when she was
a little one might turn out to be a calamity.
When she was in the boat she said that her mother and
brother were good; but the goodness might have been
chiefly in her own ignorant innocence and yearning
memory, and the ten or twelve years since the parting
had been time enough for much worsening. Spite
of his strong tendency to side with the objects of
prejudice, and in general with those who got the worst
of it, his interest had never been practically drawn
toward existing Jews, and the facts he knew about them,
whether they walked conspicuous in fine apparel or
lurked in by-streets, were chiefly of a sort most
repugnant to him. Of learned and accomplished
Jews he took it for granted that they had dropped their
religion, and wished to be merged in the people of
their native lands. Scorn flung at a Jew as such
would have roused all his sympathy in griefs of inheritance;
but the indiscriminate scorn of a race will often strike
a specimen who has well earned it on his own account,
and might fairly be gibbeted as a rascally son of
Adam. It appears that the Caribs, who know little
of theology, regard thieving as a practice peculiarly
connected with Christian tenets, and probably they
could allege experimental grounds for this opinion.
Deronda could not escape (who can?) knowing ugly stories
of Jewish characteristics and occupations; and though
one of his favorite protests was against the severance
of past and present history, he was like others who
shared his protest, in never having cared to reach
any more special conclusions about actual Jews than
that they retained the virtues and vices of a long-oppressed
race. But now that Mirah’s longing roused
his mind to a closer survey of details, very disagreeable
images urged themselves of what it might be to find
out this middle-aged Jewess and her son. To be
sure, there was the exquisite refinement and charm
of the creature herself to make a presumption in favor
of her immediate kindred, but he must wait
to know more: perhaps through Mrs. Meyrick he
might gather some guiding hints from Mirah’s
own lips. Her voice, her accent, her looks all
the sweet purity that clothed her as with a consecrating
garment made him shrink the more from giving her,
either ideally or practically, an association with
what was hateful or contaminating. But these fine
words with which we fumigate and becloud unpleasant
facts are not the language in which we think.
Deronda’s thinking went on in rapid images of
what might be: he saw himself guided by some official
scout into a dingy street; he entered through a dim
doorway, and saw a hawk-eyed woman, rough-headed,
and unwashed, cheapening a hungry girl’s last
bit of finery; or in some quarter only the more hideous
for being smarter, he found himself under the breath
of a young Jew talkative and familiar, willing to
show his acquaintance with gentlemen’s tastes,
and not fastidious in any transactions with which
they would favor him and so on through
the brief chapter of his experience in this kind.
Excuse him: his mind was not apt to run spontaneously
into insulting ideas, or to practice a form of wit
which identifies Moses with the advertisement sheet;
but he was just now governed by dread, and if Mirah’s
parents had been Christian, the chief difference would
have been that his forebodings would have been fed
with wider knowledge. It was the habit of his
mind to connect dread with unknown parentage, and in
this case as well as his own there was enough to make
the connection reasonable.
But what was to be done with Mirah?
She needed shelter and protection in the fullest sense,
and all his chivalrous sentiment roused itself to
insist that the sooner and the more fully he could
engage for her the interest of others besides himself,
the better he should fulfill her claims on him.
He had no right to provide for her entirely, though
he might be able to do so; the very depth of the impression
she had produced made him desire that she should understand
herself to be entirely independent of him; and vague
visions of the future which he tried to dispel as
fantastic left their influence in an anxiety stronger
than any motive he could give for it, that those who
saw his actions closely should be acquainted from
the first with the history of his relation to Mirah.
He had learned to hate secrecy about the grand ties
and obligations of his life to hate it the
more because a strong spell of interwoven sensibilities
hindered him from breaking such secrecy. Deronda
had made a vow to himself that since the
truths which disgrace mortals are not all of their
own making the truth should never be made
a disgrace to another by his act. He was not without
terror lest he should break this vow, and fall into
the apologetic philosophy which explains the world
into containing nothing better than one’s own
conduct.
At one moment he resolved to tell
the whole of his adventure to Sir Hugo and Lady Mallinger
the next morning at breakfast, but the possibility
that something quite new might reveal itself on his
next visit to Mrs. Meyrick’s checked this impulse,
and he finally went to sleep on the conclusion that
he would wait until that visit had been made.