Give me no light, great Heaven,
but such as turns
To energy of human fellowship;
No powers beyond the growing heritage
That makes completer manhood.
CHAPTER I
The time of my end approaches.
I have lately been subject to attacks of angina
pectoris; and in the ordinary course of things,
my physician tells me, I may fairly hope that my life
will not be protracted many months. Unless,
then, I am cursed with an exceptional physical constitution,
as I am cursed with an exceptional mental character,
I shall not much longer groan under the wearisome
burthen of this earthly existence. If it were
to be otherwise if I were to live on to
the age most men desire and provide for I
should for once have known whether the miseries of
delusive expectation can outweigh the miseries of true
provision. For I foresee when I shall die, and
everything that will happen in my last moments.
Just a month from this day, on September
20, 1850, I shall be sitting in this chair, in this
study, at ten o’clock at night, longing to die,
weary of incessant insight and foresight, without
delusions and without hope. Just as I am watching
a tongue of blue flame rising in the fire, and my
lamp is burning low, the horrible contraction will
begin at my chest. I shall only have time to
reach the bell, and pull it violently, before the
sense of suffocation will come. No one will answer
my bell. I know why. My two servants are
lovers, and will have quarrelled. My housekeeper
will have rushed out of the house in a fury, two hours
before, hoping that Perry will believe she has gone
to drown herself. Perry is alarmed at last,
and is gone out after her. The little scullery-maid
is asleep on a bench: she never answers the bell;
it does not wake her. The sense of suffocation
increases: my lamp goes out with a horrible stench:
I make a great effort, and snatch at the bell again.
I long for life, and there is no help. I thirsted
for the unknown: the thirst is gone. O God,
let me stay with the known, and be weary of it:
I am content. Agony of pain and suffocation and
all the while the earth, the fields, the pebbly brook
at the bottom of the rookery, the fresh scent after
the rain, the light of the morning through my chamber-window,
the warmth of the hearth after the frosty air will
darkness close over them for ever?
Darkness darkness no
pain nothing but darkness: but I am
passing on and on through the darkness: my thought
stays in the darkness, but always with a sense of
moving onward . . .
Before that time comes, I wish to
use my last hours of ease and strength in telling
the strange story of my experience. I have never
fully unbosomed myself to any human being; I have
never been encouraged to trust much in the sympathy
of my fellow-men. But we have all a chance of
meeting with some pity, some tenderness, some charity,
when we are dead: it is the living only who cannot
be forgiven the living only from whom men’s
indulgence and reverence are held off, like the rain
by the hard east wind. While the heart beats,
bruise it it is your only opportunity;
while the eye can still turn towards you with moist,
timid entreaty, freeze it with an icy unanswering
gaze; while the ear, that delicate messenger to the
inmost sanctuary of the soul, can still take in the
tones of kindness, put it off with hard civility, or
sneering compliment, or envious affectation of indifference;
while the creative brain can still throb with the
sense of injustice, with the yearning for brotherly
recognition make haste oppress
it with your ill-considered judgements, your trivial
comparisons, your careless misrepresentations.
The heart will by and by be still “ubi
saeva indignatio ulterius cor
lacerare nequit”; the eye will cease to
entreat; the ear will be deaf; the brain will have
ceased from all wants as well as from all work.
Then your charitable speeches may find vent; then
you may remember and pity the toil and the struggle
and the failure; then you may give due honour to the
work achieved; then you may find extenuation for errors,
and may consent to bury them.
That is a trivial schoolboy text;
why do I dwell on it? It has little reference
to me, for I shall leave no works behind me for men
to honour. I have no near relatives who will
make up, by weeping over my grave, for the wounds
they inflicted on me when I was among them. It
is only the story of my life that will perhaps win
a little more sympathy from strangers when I am dead,
than I ever believed it would obtain from my friends
while I was living.
My childhood perhaps seems happier
to me than it really was, by contrast with all the
after-years. For then the curtain of the future
was as impenetrable to me as to other children:
I had all their delight in the present hour, their
sweet indefinite hopes for the morrow; and I had a
tender mother: even now, after the dreary lapse
of long years, a slight trace of sensation accompanies
the remembrance of her caress as she held me on her
knee her arms round my little body, her
cheek pressed on mine. I had a complaint of the
eyes that made me blind for a little while, and she
kept me on her knee from morning till night.
That unequalled love soon vanished out of my life,
and even to my childish consciousness it was as if
that life had become more chill I rode my little white
pony with the groom by my side as before, but there
were no loving eyes looking at me as I mounted, no
glad arms opened to me when I came back. Perhaps
I missed my mother’s love more than most children
of seven or eight would have done, to whom the other
pleasures of life remained as before; for I was certainly
a very sensitive child. I remember still the
mingled trepidation and delicious excitement with which
I was affected by the tramping of the horses on the
pavement in the echoing stables, by the loud resonance
of the groom’s voices, by the booming bark of
the dogs as my father’s carriage thundered under
the archway of the courtyard, by the din of the gong
as it gave notice of luncheon and dinner. The
measured tramp of soldiery which I sometimes heard for
my father’s house lay near a county town where
there were large barracks made me sob and
tremble; and yet when they were gone past, I longed
for them to come back again.
I fancy my father thought me an odd
child, and had little fondness for me; though he was
very careful in fulfilling what he regarded as a parent’s
duties. But he was already past the middle of
life, and I was not his only son. My mother
had been his second wife, and he was five-and-forty
when he married her. He was a firm, unbending,
intensely orderly man, in root and stem a banker,
but with a flourishing graft of the active landholder,
aspiring to county influence: one of those people
who are always like themselves from day to day, who
are uninfluenced by the weather, and neither know
melancholy nor high spirits. I held him in great
awe, and appeared more timid and sensitive in his presence
than at other times; a circumstance which, perhaps,
helped to confirm him in the intention to educate
me on a different plan from the prescriptive one with
which he had complied in the case of my elder brother,
already a tall youth at Eton. My brother was
to be his representative and successor; he must go
to Eton and Oxford, for the sake of making connexions,
of course: my father was not a man to underrate
the bearing of Latin satirists or Greek dramatists
on the attainment of an aristocratic position.
But, intrinsically, he had slight esteem for “those
dead but sceptred spirits”; having qualified
himself for forming an independent opinion by reading
Potter’s AEschylus, and dipping into
Francis’s Horace. To this negative
view he added a positive one, derived from a recent
connexion with mining speculations; namely, that a
scientific education was the really useful training
for a younger son. Moreover, it was clear that
a shy, sensitive boy like me was not fit to encounter
the rough experience of a public school. Mr.
Letherall had said so very decidedly. Mr. Letherall
was a large man in spectacles, who one day took my
small head between his large hands, and pressed it
here and there in an exploratory, auspicious manner then
placed each of his great thumbs on my temples, and
pushed me a little way from him, and stared at me
with glittering spectacles. The contemplation
appeared to displease him, for he frowned sternly,
and said to my father, drawing his thumbs across my
eyebrows
“The deficiency is there, sir there;
and here,” he added, touching the upper sides
of my head, “here is the excess. That must
be brought out, sir, and this must be laid to sleep.”
I was in a state of tremor, partly
at the vague idea that I was the object of reprobation,
partly in the agitation of my first hatred hatred
of this big, spectacled man, who pulled my head about
as if he wanted to buy and cheapen it.
I am not aware how much Mr. Letherall
had to do with the system afterwards adopted towards
me, but it was presently clear that private tutors,
natural history, science, and the modern languages,
were the appliances by which the defects of my organization
were to be remedied. I was very stupid about
machines, so I was to be greatly occupied with them;
I had no memory for classification, so it was particularly
necessary that I should study systematic zoology and
botany; I was hungry for human deeds and humane motions,
so I was to be plentifully crammed with the mechanical
powers, the elementary bodies, and the phenomena of
electricity and magnetism. A better-constituted
boy would certainly have profited under my intelligent
tutors, with their scientific apparatus; and would,
doubtless, have found the phenomena of electricity
and magnetism as fascinating as I was, every Thursday,
assured they were. As it was, I could have paired
off, for ignorance of whatever was taught me, with
the worst Latin scholar that was ever turned out of
a classical academy. I read Plutarch, and Shakespeare,
and Don Quixote by the sly, and supplied myself in
that way with wandering thoughts, while my tutor was
assuring me that “an improved man, as distinguished
from an ignorant one, was a man who knew the reason
why water ran downhill.” I had no desire
to be this improved man; I was glad of the running
water; I could watch it and listen to it gurgling
among the pebbles, and bathing the bright green water-plants,
by the hour together. I did not want to know
why it ran; I had perfect confidence that there
were good reasons for what was so very beautiful.
There is no need to dwell on this
part of my life. I have said enough to indicate
that my nature was of the sensitive, unpractical order,
and that it grew up in an uncongenial medium, which
could never foster it into happy, healthy development.
When I was sixteen I was sent to Geneva to complete
my course of education; and the change was a very happy
one to me, for the first sight of the Alps, with the
setting sun on them, as we descended the Jura, seemed
to me like an entrance into heaven; and the three
years of my life there were spent in a perpetual sense
of exaltation, as if from a draught of delicious wine,
at the presence of Nature in all her awful loveliness.
You will think, perhaps, that I must have been a
poet, from this early sensibility to Nature.
But my lot was not so happy as that. A poet
pours forth his song and believes in the listening
ear and answering soul, to which his song will be floated
sooner or later. But the poet’s sensibility
without his voice the poet’s sensibility
that finds no vent but in silent tears on the sunny
bank, when the noonday light sparkles on the water,
or in an inward shudder at the sound of harsh human
tones, the sight of a cold human eye this
dumb passion brings with it a fatal solitude of soul
in the society of one’s fellow-men. My
least solitary moments were those in which I pushed
off in my boat, at evening, towards the centre of the
lake; it seemed to me that the sky, and the glowing
mountain-tops, and the wide blue water, surrounded
me with a cherishing love such as no human face had
shed on me since my mother’s love had vanished
out of my life. I used to do as Jean Jacques
did lie down in my boat and let it glide
where it would, while I looked up at the departing
glow leaving one mountain-top after the other, as
if the prophet’s chariot of fire were passing
over them on its way to the home of light. Then,
when the white summits were all sad and corpse-like,
I had to push homeward, for I was under careful surveillance,
and was allowed no late wanderings. This disposition
of mine was not favourable to the formation of intimate
friendships among the numerous youths of my own age
who are always to be found studying at Geneva.
Yet I made one such friendship; and, singularly
enough, it was with a youth whose intellectual tendencies
were the very reverse of my own. I shall call
him Charles Meunier; his real surname an
English one, for he was of English extraction having
since become celebrated. He was an orphan, who
lived on a miserable pittance while he pursued the
medical studies for which he had a special genius.
Strange! that with my vague mind, susceptible and unobservant,
hating inquiry and given up to contemplation, I should
have been drawn towards a youth whose strongest passion
was science. But the bond was not an intellectual
one; it came from a source that can happily blend the
stupid with the brilliant, the dreamy with the practical:
it came from community of feeling. Charles was
poor and ugly, derided by Genevese gamins, and
not acceptable in drawing-rooms. I saw that he
was isolated, as I was, though from a different cause,
and, stimulated by a sympathetic resentment, I made
timid advances towards him. It is enough to say
that there sprang up as much comradeship between us
as our different habits would allow; and in Charles’s
rare holidays we went up the Saleve together, or took
the boat to Vevay, while I listened dreamily to the
monologues in which he unfolded his bold conceptions
of future experiment and discovery. I mingled
them confusedly in my thought with glimpses of blue
water and delicate floating cloud, with the notes of
birds and the distant glitter of the glacier.
He knew quite well that my mind was half absent,
yet he liked to talk to me in this way; for don’t
we talk of our hopes and our projects even to dogs
and birds, when they love us? I have mentioned
this one friendship because of its connexion with a
strange and terrible scene which I shall have to narrate
in my subsequent life.
This happier life at Geneva was put
an end to by a severe illness, which is partly a blank
to me, partly a time of dimly-remembered suffering,
with the presence of my father by my bed from time
to time. Then came the languid monotony of convalescence,
the days gradually breaking into variety and distinctness
as my strength enabled me to take longer and longer
drives. On one of these more vividly remembered
days, my father said to me, as he sat beside my sofa
“When you are quite well enough
to travel, Latimer, I shall take you home with me.
The journey will amuse you and do you good, for I
shall go through the Tyrol and Austria, and you will
see many new places. Our neighbours, the Filmores,
are come; Alfred will join us at Basle, and we shall
all go together to Vienna, and back by Prague”
. . .
My father was called away before he
had finished his sentence, and he left my mind resting
on the word Prague, with a strange sense that
a new and wondrous scene was breaking upon me:
a city under the broad sunshine, that seemed to me
as if it were the summer sunshine of a long-past
century arrested in its course unrefreshed
for ages by dews of night, or the rushing rain-cloud;
scorching the dusty, weary, time-eaten grandeur of
a people doomed to live on in the stale repetition
of memories, like deposed and superannuated kings
in their regal gold-inwoven tatters. The city
looked so thirsty that the broad river seemed to me
a sheet of metal; and the blackened statues, as I passed
under their blank gaze, along the unending bridge,
with their ancient garments and their saintly crowns,
seemed to me the real inhabitants and owners of this
place, while the busy, trivial men and women, hurrying
to and fro, were a swarm of ephemeral visitants infesting
it for a day. It is such grim, stony beings
as these, I thought, who are the fathers of ancient
faded children, in those tanned time-fretted dwellings
that crowd the steep before me; who pay their court
in the worn and crumbling pomp of the palace which
stretches its monotonous length on the height; who
worship wearily in the stifling air of the churches,
urged by no fear or hope, but compelled by their doom
to be ever old and undying, to live on in the rigidity
of habit, as they live on in perpetual midday, without
the repose of night or the new birth of morning.
A stunning clang of metal suddenly
thrilled through me, and I became conscious of the
objects in my room again: one of the fire-irons
had fallen as Pierre opened the door to bring me my
draught. My heart was palpitating violently,
and I begged Pierre to leave my draught beside me;
I would take it presently.
As soon as I was alone again, I began
to ask myself whether I had been sleeping. Was
this a dream this wonderfully distinct vision minute
in its distinctness down to a patch of rainbow light
on the pavement, transmitted through a coloured lamp
in the shape of a star of a strange city,
quite unfamiliar to my imagination? I had seen
no picture of Prague: it lay in my mind as a
mere name, with vaguely-remembered historical associations ill-defined
memories of imperial grandeur and religious wars.
Nothing of this sort had ever occurred
in my dreaming experience before, for I had often
been humiliated because my dreams were only saved from
being utterly disjointed and commonplace by the frequent
terrors of nightmare. But I could not believe
that I had been asleep, for I remembered distinctly
the gradual breaking-in of the vision upon me, like
the new images in a dissolving view, or the growing
distinctness of the landscape as the sun lifts up
the veil of the morning mist. And while I was
conscious of this incipient vision, I was also conscious
that Pierre came to tell my father Mr. Filmore was
waiting for him, and that my father hurried out of
the room. No, it was not a dream; was it the
thought was full of tremulous exultation was
it the poet’s nature in me, hitherto only a
troubled yearning sensibility, now manifesting itself
suddenly as spontaneous creation? Surely it was
in this way that Homer saw the plain of Troy, that
Dante saw the abodes of the departed, that Milton
saw the earthward flight of the Tempter. Was
it that my illness had wrought some happy change in
my organization given a firmer tension
to my nerves carried off some dull obstruction?
I had often read of such effects in works
of fiction at least. Nay; in genuine biographies
I had read of the subtilizing or exalting influence
of some diseases on the mental powers. Did not
Novalis feel his inspiration intensified under the
progress of consumption?
When my mind had dwelt for some time
on this blissful idea, it seemed to me that I might
perhaps test it by an exertion of my will. The
vision had begun when my father was speaking of our
going to Prague. I did not for a moment believe
it was really a representation of that city; I believed I
hoped it was a picture that my newly liberated genius
had painted in fiery haste, with the colours snatched
from lazy memory. Suppose I were to fix my mind
on some other place Venice, for example,
which was far more familiar to my imagination than
Prague: perhaps the same sort of result would
follow. I concentrated my thoughts on Venice;
I stimulated my imagination with poetic memories, and
strove to feel myself present in Venice, as I had
felt myself present in Prague. But in vain.
I was only colouring the Canaletto engravings that
hung in my old bedroom at home; the picture was a
shifting one, my mind wandering uncertainly in search
of more vivid images; I could see no accident of form
or shadow without conscious labour after the necessary
conditions. It was all prosaic effort, not rapt
passivity, such as I had experienced half an hour
before. I was discouraged; but I remembered that
inspiration was fitful.
For several days I was in a state
of excited expectation, watching for a recurrence
of my new gift. I sent my thoughts ranging over
my world of knowledge, in the hope that they would
find some object which would send a reawakening vibration
through my slumbering genius. But no; my world
remained as dim as ever, and that flash of strange
light refused to come again, though I watched for
it with palpitating eagerness.
My father accompanied me every day
in a drive, and a gradually lengthening walk as my
powers of walking increased; and one evening he had
agreed to come and fetch me at twelve the next day,
that we might go together to select a musical box,
and other purchases rigorously demanded of a rich
Englishman visiting Geneva. He was one of the
most punctual of men and bankers, and I was always
nervously anxious to be quite ready for him at the
appointed time. But, to my surprise, at a quarter
past twelve he had not appeared. I felt all
the impatience of a convalescent who has nothing particular
to do, and who has just taken a tonic in the prospect
of immediate exercise that would carry off the stimulus.
Unable to sit still and reserve my
strength, I walked up and down the room, looking out
on the current of the Rhone, just where it leaves the
dark-blue lake; but thinking all the while of the possible
causes that could detain my father.
Suddenly I was conscious that my father
was in the room, but not alone: there were two
persons with him. Strange! I had heard
no footstep, I had not seen the door open; but I saw
my father, and at his right hand our neighbour Mrs.
Filmore, whom I remembered very well, though I had
not seen her for five years. She was a commonplace
middle-aged woman, in silk and cashmere; but the lady
on the left of my father was not more than twenty,
a tall, slim, willowy figure, with luxuriant blond
hair, arranged in cunning braids and folds that looked
almost too massive for the slight figure and the small-featured,
thin-lipped face they crowned. But the face had
not a girlish expression: the features were sharp,
the pale grey eyes at once acute, restless, and sarcastic.
They were fixed on me in half-smiling curiosity,
and I felt a painful sensation as if a sharp wind
were cutting me. The pale-green dress, and the
green leaves that seemed to form a border about her
pale blond hair, made me think of a Water-Nixie for
my mind was full of German lyrics, and this pale,
fatal-eyed woman, with the green weeds, looked like
a birth from some cold sedgy stream, the daughter
of an aged river.
“Well, Latimer, you thought me long,”
my father said . . .
But while the last word was in my
ears, the whole group vanished, and there was nothing
between me and the Chinese printed folding-screen that
stood before the door. I was cold and trembling;
I could only totter forward and throw myself on the
sofa. This strange new power had manifested
itself again . . . But was it a power?
Might it not rather be a disease a sort
of intermittent delirium, concentrating my energy of
brain into moments of unhealthy activity, and leaving
my saner hours all the more barren? I felt a
dizzy sense of unreality in what my eye rested on;
I grasped the bell convulsively, like one trying to
free himself from nightmare, and rang it twice.
Pierre came with a look of alarm in his face.
“Monsieur ne se trouve pas
bien?” he said anxiously.
“I’m tired of waiting,
Pierre,” I said, as distinctly and emphatically
as I could, like a man determined to be sober in spite
of wine; “I’m afraid something has happened
to my father he’s usually so punctual.
Run to the Hotel des Bergues and see if
he is there.”
Pierre left the room at once, with
a soothing “Bien, Monsieur”; and I felt
the better for this scene of simple, waking prose.
Seeking to calm myself still further, I went into
my bedroom, adjoining the salon, and opened
a case of eau-de-Cologne; took out a bottle;
went through the process of taking out the cork very
neatly, and then rubbed the reviving spirit over my
hands and forehead, and under my nostrils, drawing
a new delight from the scent because I had procured
it by slow details of labour, and by no strange sudden
madness. Already I had begun to taste something
of the horror that belongs to the lot of a human being
whose nature is not adjusted to simple human conditions.
Still enjoying the scent, I returned
to the salon, but it was not unoccupied, as it had
been before I left it. In front of the Chinese
folding-screen there was my father, with Mrs. Filmore
on his right hand, and on his left the
slim, blond-haired girl, with the keen face and the
keen eyes fixed on me in half-smiling curiosity.
“Well, Latimer, you thought me long,”
my father said . . .
I heard no more, felt no more, till
I became conscious that I was lying with my head low
on the sofa, Pierre, and my father by my side.
As soon as I was thoroughly revived, my father left
the room, and presently returned, saying
“I’ve been to tell the
ladies how you are, Latimer. They were waiting
in the next room. We shall put off our shopping
expedition to-day.”
Presently he said, “That young
lady is Bertha Grant, Mrs. Filmore’s orphan
niece. Filmore has adopted her, and she lives
with them, so you will have her for a neighbour when
we go home perhaps for a near relation;
for there is a tenderness between her and Alfred, I
suspect, and I should be gratified by the match, since
Filmore means to provide for her in every way as if
she were his daughter. It had not occurred to
me that you knew nothing about her living with the
Filmores.”
He made no further allusion to the
fact of my having fainted at the moment of seeing
her, and I would not for the world have told him the
reason: I shrank from the idea of disclosing to
any one what might be regarded as a pitiable peculiarity,
most of all from betraying it to my father, who would
have suspected my sanity ever after.
I do not mean to dwell with particularity
on the details of my experience. I have described
these two cases at length, because they had definite,
clearly traceable results in my after-lot.
Shortly after this last occurrence I
think the very next day I began to be aware
of a phase in my abnormal sensibility, to which, from
the languid and slight nature of my intercourse with
others since my illness, I had not been alive before.
This was the obtrusion on my mind of the mental process
going forward in first one person, and then another,
with whom I happened to be in contact: the vagrant,
frivolous ideas and emotions of some uninteresting
acquaintance Mrs. Filmore, for example would
force themselves on my consciousness like an importunate,
ill-played musical instrument, or the loud activity
of an imprisoned insect. But this unpleasant
sensibility was fitful, and left me moments of rest,
when the souls of my companions were once more shut
out from me, and I felt a relief such as silence brings
to wearied nerves. I might have believed this
importunate insight to be merely a diseased activity
of the imagination, but that my prevision of incalculable
words and actions proved it to have a fixed relation
to the mental process in other minds. But this
superadded consciousness, wearying and annoying enough
when it urged on me the trivial experience of indifferent
people, became an intense pain and grief when it seemed
to be opening to me the souls of those who were in
a close relation to me when the rational
talk, the graceful attentions, the wittily-turned
phrases, and the kindly deeds, which used to make
the web of their characters, were seen as if thrust
asunder by a microscopic vision, that showed all the
intermediate frivolities, all the suppressed egoism,
all the struggling chaos of puerilities, meanness,
vague capricious memories, and indolent make-shift
thoughts, from which human words and deeds emerge like
leaflets covering a fermenting heap.
At Basle we were joined by my brother
Alfred, now a handsome, self-confident man of six-and-twenty a
thorough contrast to my fragile, nervous, ineffectual
self. I believe I was held to have a sort of
half-womanish, half-ghostly beauty; for the portrait-painters,
who are thick as weeds at Geneva, had often asked
me to sit to them, and I had been the model of a dying
minstrel in a fancy picture. But I thoroughly
disliked my own physique and nothing but the belief
that it was a condition of poetic genius would have
reconciled me to it. That brief hope was quite
fled, and I saw in my face now nothing but the stamp
of a morbid organization, framed for passive suffering too
feeble for the sublime resistance of poetic production.
Alfred, from whom I had been almost constantly separated,
and who, in his present stage of character and appearance,
came before me as a perfect stranger, was bent on being
extremely friendly and brother-like to me. He
had the superficial kindness of a good-humoured, self-satisfied
nature, that fears no rivalry, and has encountered
no contrarieties. I am not sure that my disposition
was good enough for me to have been quite free from
envy towards him, even if our desires had not clashed,
and if I had been in the healthy human condition which
admits of generous confidence and charitable construction.
There must always have been an antipathy between
our natures. As it was, he became in a few weeks
an object of intense hatred to me; and when he entered
the room, still more when he spoke, it was as if a
sensation of grating metal had set my teeth on edge.
My diseased consciousness was more intensely and continually
occupied with his thoughts and emotions, than with
those of any other person who came in my way.
I was perpetually exasperated with the petty promptings
of his conceit and his love of patronage, with his
self-complacent belief in Bertha Grant’s passion
for him, with his half-pitying contempt for me seen
not in the ordinary indications of intonation and
phrase and slight action, which an acute and suspicious
mind is on the watch for, but in all their naked skinless
complication.
For we were rivals, and our desires
clashed, though he was not aware of it. I have
said nothing yet of the effect Bertha Grant produced
in me on a nearer acquaintance. That effect
was chiefly determined by the fact that she made the
only exception, among all the human beings about me,
to my unhappy gift of insight. About Bertha
I was always in a state of uncertainty: I could
watch the expression of her face, and speculate on
its meaning; I could ask for her opinion with the real
interest of ignorance; I could listen for her words
and watch for her smile with hope and fear: she
had for me the fascination of an unravelled destiny.
I say it was this fact that chiefly determined the
strong effect she produced on me: for, in the
abstract, no womanly character could seem to have less
affinity for that of a shrinking, romantic, passionate
youth than Bertha’s. She was keen, sarcastic,
unimaginative, prematurely cynical, remaining critical
and unmoved in the most impressive scenes, inclined
to dissect all my favourite poems, and especially
contemptous towards the German lyrics which were my
pet literature at that time. To this moment
I am unable to define my feeling towards her:
it was not ordinary boyish admiration, for she was
the very opposite, even to the colour of her hair,
of the ideal woman who still remained to me the type
of loveliness; and she was without that enthusiasm
for the great and good, which, even at the moment
of her strongest dominion over me, I should have declared
to be the highest element of character. But there
is no tyranny more complete than that which a self-centred
negative nature exercises over a morbidly sensitive
nature perpetually craving sympathy and support.
The most independent people feel the effect of a
man’s silence in heightening their value for
his opinion feel an additional triumph in
conquering the reverence of a critic habitually captious
and satirical: no wonder, then, that an enthusiastic
self-distrusting youth should watch and wait before
the closed secret of a sarcastic woman’s face,
as if it were the shrine of the doubtfully benignant
deity who ruled his destiny. For a young enthusiast
is unable to imagine the total negation in another
mind of the emotions which are stirring his own:
they may be feeble, latent, inactive, he thinks, but
they are there they may be called forth;
sometimes, in moments of happy hallucination, he believes
they may be there in all the greater strength because
he sees no outward sign of them. And this effect,
as I have intimated, was heightened to its utmost
intensity in me, because Bertha was the only being
who remained for me in the mysterious seclusion of
soul that renders such youthful delusion possible.
Doubtless there was another sort of fascination at
work that subtle physical attraction which
delights in cheating our psychological predictions,
and in compelling the men who paint sylphs, to fall
in love with some bonne et brave femme, heavy-heeled
and freckled.
Bertha’s behaviour towards me
was such as to encourage all my illusions, to heighten
my boyish passion, and make me more and more dependent
on her smiles. Looking back with my present
wretched knowledge, I conclude that her vanity and
love of power were intensely gratified by the belief
that I had fainted on first seeing her purely from
the strong impression her person had produced on me.
The most prosaic woman likes to believe herself the
object of a violent, a poetic passion; and without
a grain of romance in her, Bertha had that spirit
of intrigue which gave piquancy to the idea that the
brother of the man she meant to marry was dying with
love and jealousy for her sake. That she meant
to marry my brother, was what at that time I did not
believe; for though he was assiduous in his attentions
to her, and I knew well enough that both he and my
father had made up their minds to this result, there
was not yet an understood engagement there
had been no explicit declaration; and Bertha habitually,
while she flirted with my brother, and accepted his
homage in a way that implied to him a thorough recognition
of its intention, made me believe, by the subtlest
looks and phrases feminine nothings which
could never be quoted against her that he
was really the object of her secret ridicule; that
she thought him, as I did, a coxcomb, whom she would
have pleasure in disappointing. Me she openly
petted in my brother’s presence, as if I were
too young and sickly ever to be thought of as a lover;
and that was the view he took of me. But I believe
she must inwardly have delighted in the tremors into
which she threw me by the coaxing way in which she
patted my curls, while she laughed at my quotations.
Such caresses were always given in the presence of
our friends; for when we were alone together, she
affected a much greater distance towards me, and now
and then took the opportunity, by words or slight
actions, to stimulate my foolish timid hope that she
really preferred me. And why should she not
follow her inclination? I was not in so advantageous
a position as my brother, but I had fortune, I was
not a year younger than she was, and she was an heiress,
who would soon be of age to decide for herself.
The fluctuations of hope and fear,
confined to this one channel, made each day in her
presence a delicious torment. There was one deliberate
act of hers which especially helped to intoxicate me.
When we were at Vienna her twentieth birthday occurred,
and as she was very fond of ornaments, we all took
the opportunity of the splendid jewellers’ shops
in that Teutonic Paris to purchase her a birthday present
of jewellery. Mine, naturally, was the least
expensive; it was an opal ring the opal
was my favourite stone, because it seems to blush and
turn pale as if it had a soul. I told Bertha
so when I gave it her, and said that it was an emblem
of the poetic nature, changing with the changing light
of heaven and of woman’s eyes. In the
evening she appeared elegantly dressed, and wearing
conspicuously all the birthday presents except mine.
I looked eagerly at her fingers, but saw no opal.
I had no opportunity of noticing this to her during
the evening; but the next day, when I found her seated
near the window alone, after breakfast, I said, “You
scorn to wear my poor opal. I should have remembered
that you despised poetic natures, and should have
given you coral, or turquoise, or some other opaque
unresponsive stone.” “Do I despise
it?” she answered, taking hold of a delicate
gold chain which she always wore round her neck and
drawing out the end from her bosom with my ring hanging
to it; “it hurts me a little, I can tell you,”
she said, with her usual dubious smile, “to wear
it in that secret place; and since your poetical nature
is so stupid as to prefer a more public position,
I shall not endure the pain any longer.”
She took off the ring from the chain
and put it on her finger, smiling still, while the
blood rushed to my cheeks, and I could not trust myself
to say a word of entreaty that she would keep the ring
where it was before.
I was completely fooled by this, and
for two days shut myself up in my own room whenever
Bertha was absent, that I might intoxicate myself
afresh with the thought of this scene and all it implied.
I should mention that during these
two months which seemed a long life to
me from the novelty and intensity of the pleasures
and pains I underwent my diseased anticipation
in other people’s consciousness continued to
torment me; now it was my father, and now my brother,
now Mrs. Filmore or her husband, and now our German
courier, whose stream of thought rushed upon me like
a ringing in the ears not to be got rid of, though
it allowed my own impulses and ideas to continue their
uninterrupted course. It was like a preternaturally
heightened sense of hearing, making audible to one
a roar of sound where others find perfect stillness.
The weariness and disgust of this involuntary intrusion
into other souls was counteracted only by my ignorance
of Bertha, and my growing passion for her; a passion
enormously stimulated, if not produced, by that ignorance.
She was my oasis of mystery in the dreary desert
of knowledge. I had never allowed my diseased
condition to betray itself, or to drive me into any
unusual speech or action, except once, when, in a
moment of peculiar bitterness against my brother, I
had forestalled some words which I knew he was going
to utter a clever observation, which he
had prepared beforehand. He had occasionally
a slightly affected hesitation in his speech, and
when he paused an instant after the second word, my
impatience and jealousy impelled me to continue the
speech for him, as if it were something we had both
learned by rote. He coloured and looked astonished,
as well as annoyed; and the words had no sooner escaped
my lips than I felt a shock of alarm lest such an
anticipation of words very far from being
words of course, easy to divine should
have betrayed me as an exceptional being, a sort of
quiet energumen, whom every one, Bertha above all,
would shudder at and avoid. But I magnified,
as usual, the impression any word or deed of mine could
produce on others; for no one gave any sign of having
noticed my interruption as more than a rudeness, to
be forgiven me on the score of my feeble nervous condition.
While this superadded consciousness
of the actual was almost constant with me, I had never
had a recurrence of that distinct prevision which I
have described in relation to my first interview with
Bertha; and I was waiting with eager curiosity to
know whether or not my vision of Prague would prove
to have been an instance of the same kind. A
few days after the incident of the opal ring, we were
paying one of our frequent visits to the Lichtenberg
Palace. I could never look at many pictures in
succession; for pictures, when they are at all powerful,
affect me so strongly that one or two exhaust all
my capability of contemplation. This morning
I had been looking at Giorgione’s picture of
the cruel-eyed woman, said to be a likeness of Lucrezia
Borgia. I had stood long alone before it, fascinated
by the terrible reality of that cunning, relentless
face, till I felt a strange poisoned sensation, as
if I had long been inhaling a fatal odour, and was
just beginning to be conscious of its effects.
Perhaps even then I should not have moved away, if
the rest of the party had not returned to this room,
and announced that they were going to the Belvedere
Gallery to settle a bet which had arisen between my
brother and Mr. Filmore about a portrait. I followed
them dreamily, and was hardly alive to what occurred
till they had all gone up to the gallery, leaving
me below; for I refused to come within sight of another
picture that day. I made my way to the Grand
Terrace, since it was agreed that we should saunter
in the gardens when the dispute had been decided.
I had been sitting here a short space, vaguely conscious
of trim gardens, with a city and green hills in the
distance, when, wishing to avoid the proximity of
the sentinel, I rose and walked down the broad stone
steps, intending to seat myself farther on in the gardens.
Just as I reached the gravel-walk, I felt an arm
slipped within mine, and a light hand gently pressing
my wrist. In the same instant a strange intoxicating
numbness passed over me, like the continuance or climax
of the sensation I was still feeling from the gaze
of Lucrezia Borgia. The gardens, the summer
sky, the consciousness of Bertha’s arm being
within mine, all vanished, and I seemed to be suddenly
in darkness, out of which there gradually broke a
dim firelight, and I felt myself sitting in my father’s
leather chair in the library at home. I knew
the fireplace the dogs for the wood-fire the
black marble chimney-piece with the white marble medallion
of the dying Cleopatra in the centre. Intense
and hopeless misery was pressing on my soul; the light
became stronger, for Bertha was entering with a candle
in her hand Bertha, my wife with
cruel eyes, with green jewels and green leaves on her
white ball-dress; every hateful thought within her
present to me . . . “Madman, idiot! why
don’t you kill yourself, then?” It was
a moment of hell. I saw into her pitiless soul saw
its barren worldliness, its scorching hate and
felt it clothe me round like an air I was obliged
to breathe. She came with her candle and stood
over me with a bitter smile of contempt; I saw the
great emerald brooch on her bosom, a studded serpent
with diamond eyes. I shuddered I
despised this woman with the barren soul and mean thoughts;
but I felt helpless before her, as if she clutched
my bleeding heart, and would clutch it till the last
drop of life-blood ebbed away. She was my wife,
and we hated each other. Gradually the hearth,
the dim library, the candle-light disappeared seemed
to melt away into a background of light, the green
serpent with the diamond eyes remaining a dark image
on the retina. Then I had a sense of my eyelids
quivering, and the living daylight broke in upon me;
I saw gardens, and heard voices; I was seated on the
steps of the Belvedere Terrace, and my friends were
round me.
The tumult of mind into which I was
thrown by this hideous vision made me ill for several
days, and prolonged our stay at Vienna. I shuddered
with horror as the scene recurred to me; and it recurred
constantly, with all its minutiae, as if they had
been burnt into my memory; and yet, such is the madness
of the human heart under the influence of its immediate
desires, I felt a wild hell-braving joy that Bertha
was to be mine; for the fulfilment of my former prevision
concerning her first appearance before me, left me
little hope that this last hideous glimpse of the
future was the mere diseased play of my own mind, and
had no relation to external realities. One thing
alone I looked towards as a possible means of casting
doubt on my terrible conviction the discovery
that my vision of Prague had been false and
Prague was the next city on our route.
Meanwhile, I was no sooner in Bertha’s
society again than I was as completely under her sway
as before. What if I saw into the heart of Bertha,
the matured woman Bertha, my wife?
Bertha, the girl, was a fascinating secret
to me still: I trembled under her touch; I felt
the witchery of her presence; I yearned to be assured
of her love. The fear of poison is feeble against
the sense of thirst. Nay, I was just as jealous
of my brother as before just as much irritated
by his small patronizing ways; for my pride, my diseased
sensibility, were there as they had always been, and
winced as inevitably under every offence as my eye
winced from an intruding mote. The future, even
when brought within the compass of feeling by a vision
that made me shudder, had still no more than the force
of an idea, compared with the force of present emotion of
my love for Bertha, of my dislike and jealousy towards
my brother.
It is an old story, that men sell
themselves to the tempter, and sign a bond with their
blood, because it is only to take effect at a distant
day; then rush on to snatch the cup their souls thirst
after with an impulse not the less savage because
there is a dark shadow beside them for evermore.
There is no short cut, no patent tram-road, to wisdom:
after all the centuries of invention, the soul’s
path lies through the thorny wilderness which must
be still trodden in solitude, with bleeding feet,
with sobs for help, as it was trodden by them of old
time.
My mind speculated eagerly on the
means by which I should become my brother’s
successful rival, for I was still too timid, in my
ignorance of Bertha’s actual feeling, to venture
on any step that would urge from her an avowal of
it. I thought I should gain confidence even for
this, if my vision of Prague proved to have been veracious;
and yet, the horror of that certitude! Behind
the slim girl Bertha, whose words and looks I watched
for, whose touch was bliss, there stood continually
that Bertha with the fuller form, the harder eyes,
the more rigid mouth with the barren, selfish
soul laid bare; no longer a fascinating secret, but
a measured fact, urging itself perpetually on my unwilling
sight. Are you unable to give me your sympathy you
who react this? Are you unable to imagine this
double consciousness at work within me, flowing on
like two parallel streams which never mingle their
waters and blend into a common hue? Yet you
must have known something of the presentiments that
spring from an insight at war with passion; and my
visions were only like presentiments intensified to
horror. You have known the powerlessness of
ideas before the might of impulse; and my visions,
when once they had passed into memory, were mere ideas pale
shadows that beckoned in vain, while my hand was grasped
by the living and the loved.
In after-days I thought with bitter
regret that if I had foreseen something more or something
different if instead of that hideous vision
which poisoned the passion it could not destroy, or
if even along with it I could have had a foreshadowing
of that moment when I looked on my brother’s
face for the last time, some softening influence would
have been shed over my feeling towards him: pride
and hatred would surely have been subdued into pity,
and the record of those hidden sins would have been
shortened. But this is one of the vain thoughts
with which we men flatter ourselves. We try
to believe that the egoism within us would have easily
been melted, and that it was only the narrowness of
our knowledge which hemmed in our generosity, our
awe, our human piety, and hindered them from submerging
our hard indifference to the sensations and emotions
of our fellows. Our tenderness and self-renunciation
seem strong when our egoism has had its day when,
after our mean striving for a triumph that is to be
another’s loss, the triumph comes suddenly, and
we shudder at it, because it is held out by the chill
hand of death.
Our arrival in Prague happened at
night, and I was glad of this, for it seemed like
a deferring of a terribly decisive moment, to be in
the city for hours without seeing it. As we
were not to remain long in Prague, but to go on speedily
to Dresden, it was proposed that we should drive out
the next morning and take a general view of the place,
as well as visit some of its specially interesting
spots, before the heat became oppressive for
we were in August, and the season was hot and dry.
But it happened that the ladies were rather late
at their morning toilet, and to my father’s
politely-repressed but perceptible annoyance, we were
not in the carriage till the morning was far advanced.
I thought with a sense of relief, as we entered the
Jews’ quarter, where we were to visit the old
synagogue, that we should be kept in this flat, shut-up
part of the city, until we should all be too tired
and too warm to go farther, and so we should return
without seeing more than the streets through which
we had already passed. That would give me another
day’s suspense suspense, the only
form in which a fearful spirit knows the solace of
hope. But, as I stood under the blackened, groined
arches of that old synagogue, made dimly visible by
the seven thin candles in the sacred lamp, while our
Jewish cicerone reached down the Book of the Law,
and read to us in its ancient tongue I felt
a shuddering impression that this strange building,
with its shrunken lights, this surviving withered
remnant of medieval Judaism, was of a piece with my
vision. Those darkened dusty Christian saints,
with their loftier arches and their larger candles,
needed the consolatory scorn with which they might
point to a more shrivelled death-in-life than their
own.
As I expected, when we left the Jews’
quarter the elders of our party wished to return to
the hotel. But now, instead of rejoicing in this,
as I had done beforehand, I felt a sudden overpowering
impulse to go on at once to the bridge, and put an
end to the suspense I had been wishing to protract.
I declared, with unusual decision, that I would get
out of the carriage and walk on alone; they might
return without me. My father, thinking this
merely a sample of my usual “poetic nonsense,”
objected that I should only do myself harm by walking
in the heat; but when I persisted, he said angrily
that I might follow my own absurd devices, but that
Schmidt (our courier) must go with me. I assented
to this, and set off with Schmidt towards the bridge.
I had no sooner passed from under the archway of
the grand old gate leading an to the bridge, than a
trembling seized me, and I turned cold under the midday
sun; yet I went on; I was in search of something a
small detail which I remembered with special intensity
as part of my vision. There it was the
patch of rainbow light on the pavement transmitted
through a lamp in the shape of a star.
CHAPTER II
Before the autumn was at an end, and
while the brown leaves still stood thick on the beeches
in our park, my brother and Bertha were engaged to
each other, and it was understood that their marriage
was to take place early in the next spring.
In spite of the certainty I had felt from that moment
on the bridge at Prague, that Bertha would one day
be my wife, my constitutional timidity and distrust
had continued to benumb me, and the words in which
I had sometimes premeditated a confession of my love,
had died away unuttered. The same conflict had
gone on within me as before the longing
for an assurance of love from Bertha’s lips,
the dread lest a word of contempt and denial should
fall upon me like a corrosive acid. What was
the conviction of a distant necessity to me?
I trembled under a present glance, I hungered after
a present joy, I was clogged and chilled by a present
fear. And so the days passed on: I witnessed
Bertha’s engagement and heard her marriage discussed
as if I were under a conscious nightmare knowing
it was a dream that would vanish, but feeling stifled
under the grasp of hard-clutching fingers.
When I was not in Bertha’s presence and
I was with her very often, for she continued to treat
me with a playful patronage that wakened no jealousy
in my brother I spent my time chiefly in
wandering, in strolling, or taking long rides while
the daylight lasted, and then shutting myself up with
my unread books; for books had lost the power of chaining
my attention. My self-consciousness was heightened
to that pitch of intensity in which our own emotions
take the form of a drama which urges itself imperatively
on our contemplation, and we begin to weep, less under
the sense of our suffering than at the thought of it.
I felt a sort of pitying anguish over the pathos
of my own lot: the lot of a being finely organized
for pain, but with hardly any fibres that responded
to pleasure to whom the idea of future evil
robbed the present of its joy, and for whom the idea
of future good did not still the uneasiness of a present
yearning or a present dread. I went dumbly through
that stage of the poet’s suffering, in which
he feels the delicious pang of utterance, and makes
an image of his sorrows.
I was left entirely without remonstrance
concerning this dreamy wayward life: I knew my
father’s thought about me: “That lad
will never be good for anything in life: he may
waste his years in an insignificant way on the income
that falls to him: I shall not trouble myself
about a career for him.”
One mild morning in the beginning
of November, it happened that I was standing outside
the portico patting lazy old Cæsar, a Newfoundland
almost blind with age, the only dog that ever took
any notice of me for the very dogs shunned
me, and fawned on the happier people about me when
the groom brought up my brother’s horse which
was to carry him to the hunt, and my brother himself
appeared at the door, florid, broad-chested, and self-complacent,
feeling what a good-natured fellow he was not to behave
insolently to us all on the strength of his great advantages.
“Latimer, old boy,” he
said to me in a tone of compassionate cordiality,
“what a pity it is you don’t have a run
with the hounds now and then! The finest thing
in the world for low spirits!”
“Low spirits!” I thought
bitterly, as he rode away; “that is the sort
of phrase with which coarse, narrow natures like yours
think to describe experience of which you can know
no more than your horse knows. It is to such
as you that the good of this world falls: ready
dulness, healthy selfishness, good-tempered conceit these
are the keys to happiness.”
The quick thought came, that my selfishness
was even stronger than his it was only
a suffering selfishness instead of an enjoying one.
But then, again, my exasperating insight into Alfred’s
self-complacent soul, his freedom from all the doubts
and fears, the unsatisfied yearnings, the exquisite
tortures of sensitiveness, that had made the web of
my life, seemed to absolve me from all bonds towards
him. This man needed no pity, no love; those
fine influences would have been as little felt by
him as the delicate white mist is felt by the rock
it caresses. There was no evil in store for
him: if he was not to marry Bertha, it
would be because he had found a lot pleasanter to
himself.
Mr. Filmore’s house lay not
more than half a mile beyond our own gates, and whenever
I knew my brother was gone in another direction, I
went there for the chance of finding Bertha at home.
Later on in the day I walked thither. By a
rare accident she was alone, and we walked out in
the grounds together, for she seldom went on foot beyond
the trimly-swept gravel-walks. I remember what
a beautiful sylph she looked to me as the low November
sun shone on her blond hair, and she tripped along
teasing me with her usual light banter, to which I
listened half fondly, half moodily; it was all the
sign Bertha’s mysterious inner self ever made
to me. To-day perhaps, the moodiness predominated,
for I had not yet shaken off the access of jealous
hate which my brother had raised in me by his parting
patronage. Suddenly I interrupted and startled
her by saying, almost fiercely, “Bertha, how
can you love Alfred?”
She looked at me with surprise for
a moment, but soon her light smile came again, and
she answered sarcastically, “Why do you suppose
I love him?”
“How can you ask that, Bertha?”
“What! your wisdom thinks I
must love the man I’m going to marry? The
most unpleasant thing in the world. I should
quarrel with him; I should be jealous of him; our
ménage would be conducted in a very ill-bred
manner. A little quiet contempt contributes greatly
to the elegance of life.”
“Bertha, that is not your real
feeling. Why do you delight in trying to deceive
me by inventing such cynical speeches?”
“I need never take the trouble
of invention in order to deceive you, my small Tasso” (that
was the mocking name she usually gave me). “The
easiest way to deceive a poet is to tell him the truth.”
She was testing the validity of her
epigram in a daring way, and for a moment the shadow
of my vision the Bertha whose soul was no
secret to me passed between me and the
radiant girl, the playful sylph whose feelings were
a fascinating mystery. I suppose I must have
shuddered, or betrayed in some other way my momentary
chill of horror.
“Tasso!” she said, seizing
my wrist, and peeping round into my face, “are
you really beginning to discern what a heartless girl
I am? Why, you are not half the poet I thought
you were; you are actually capable of believing the
truth about me.”
The shadow passed from between us,
and was no longer the object nearest to me.
The girl whose light fingers grasped me, whose elfish
charming face looked into mine who, I thought,
was betraying an interest in my feelings that she
would not have directly avowed, this warm
breathing presence again possessed my senses and imagination
like a returning siren melody which had been overpowered
for an instant by the roar of threatening waves.
It was a moment as delicious to me as the waking up
to a consciousness of youth after a dream of middle
age. I forgot everything but my passion, and
said with swimming eyes
“Bertha, shall you love me when
we are first married? I wouldn’t mind if
you really loved me only for a little while.”
Her look of astonishment, as she loosed
my hand and started away from me, recalled me to a
sense of my strange, my criminal indiscretion.
“Forgive me,” I said,
hurriedly, as soon as I could speak again; “I
did not know what I was saying.”
“Ah, Tasso’s mad fit has
come on, I see,” she answered quietly, for she
had recovered herself sooner than I had. “Let
him go home and keep his head cool. I must go
in, for the sun is setting.”
I left her full of indignation
against myself. I had let slip words which,
if she reflected on them, might rouse in her a suspicion
of my abnormal mental condition a suspicion
which of all things I dreaded. And besides that,
I was ashamed of the apparent baseness I had committed
in uttering them to my brother’s betrothed wife.
I wandered home slowly, entering our park through
a private gate instead of by the lodges. As I
approached the house, I saw a man dashing off at full
speed from the stable-yard across the park.
Had any accident happened at home? No; perhaps
it was only one of my father’s peremptory business
errands that required this headlong haste.
Nevertheless I quickened my pace without
any distinct motive, and was soon at the house.
I will not dwell on the scene I found there.
My brother was dead had been pitched from
his horse, and killed on the spot by a concussion
of the brain.
I went up to the room where he lay,
and where my father was seated beside him with a look
of rigid despair. I had shunned my father more
than any one since our return home, for the radical
antipathy between our natures made my insight into
his inner self a constant affliction to me. But
now, as I went up to him, and stood beside him in sad
silence, I felt the presence of a new element that
blended us as we had never been blent before.
My father had been one of the most successful men
in the money-getting world: he had had no sentimental
sufferings, no illness. The heaviest trouble
that had befallen him was the death of his first wife.
But he married my mother soon after; and I remember
he seemed exactly the same, to my keen childish observation,
the week after her death as before. But now,
at last, a sorrow had come the sorrow of
old age, which suffers the more from the crushing
of its pride and its hopes, in proportion as the pride
and hope are narrow and prosaic. His son was
to have been married soon would probably
have stood for the borough at the next election.
That son’s existence was the best motive that
could be alleged for making new purchases of land
every year to round off the estate. It is a
dreary thing onto live on doing the same things year
after year, without knowing why we do them. Perhaps
the tragedy of disappointed youth and passion is less
piteous than the tragedy of disappointed age and worldliness.
As I saw into the desolation of my
father’s heart, I felt a movement of deep pity
towards him, which was the beginning of a new affection an
affection that grew and strengthened in spite of the
strange bitterness with which he regarded me in the
first month or two after my brother’s death.
If it had not been for the softening influence of
my compassion for him the first deep compassion
I had ever felt I should have been stung
by the perception that my father transferred the inheritance
of an eldest son to me with a mortified sense that
fate had compelled him to the unwelcome course of
caring for me as an important being. It was only
in spite of himself that he began to think of me with
anxious regard. There is hardly any neglected
child for whom death has made vacant a more favoured
place, who will not understand what I mean.
Gradually, however, my new deference
to his wishes, the effect of that patience which was
born of my pity for him, won upon his affection, and
he began to please himself with the endeavour to make
me fill any brother’s place as fully as my feebler
personality would admit. I saw that the prospect
which by and by presented itself of my becoming Bertha’s
husband was welcome to him, and he even contemplated
in my case what he had not intended in my brother’s that
his son and daughter-in-law should make one household
with him. My softened feelings towards my father
made this the happiest time I had known since childhood; these
last months in which I retained the delicious illusion
of loving Bertha, of longing and doubting and hoping
that she might love me. She behaved with a certain
new consciousness and distance towards me after my
brother’s death; and I too was under a double
constraint that of delicacy towards my
brother’s memory and of anxiety as to the impression
my abrupt words had left on her mind. But the
additional screen this mutual reserve erected between
us only brought me more completely under her power:
no matter how empty the adytum, so that the veil be
thick enough. So absolute is our soul’s
need of something hidden and uncertain for the maintenance
of that doubt and hope and effort which are the breath
of its life, that if the whole future were laid bare
to us beyond to-day, the interest of all mankind would
be bent on the hours that lie between; we should pant
after the uncertainties of our one morning and our
one afternoon; we should rush fiercely to the Exchange
for our last possibility of speculation, of success,
of disappointment: we should have a glut of political
prophets foretelling a crisis or a no-crisis within
the only twenty-four hours left open to prophecy.
Conceive the condition of the human mind if all propositions
whatsoever were self-evident except one, which was
to become self-evident at the close of a summer’s
day, but in the meantime might be the subject of question,
of hypothesis, of debate. Art and philosophy,
literature and science, would fasten like bees on
that one proposition which had the honey of probability
in it, and be the more eager because their enjoyment
would end with sunset. Our impulses, our spiritual
activities, no more adjust themselves to the idea
of their future nullity, than the beating of our heart,
or the irritability of our muscles.
Bertha, the slim, fair-haired girl,
whose present thoughts and emotions were an enigma
to me amidst the fatiguing obviousness of the other
minds around me, was as absorbing to me as a single
unknown to-day as a single hypothetic proposition
to remain problematic till sunset; and all the cramped,
hemmed-in belief and disbelief, trust and distrust,
of my nature, welled out in this one narrow channel.
And she made me believe that she loved
me. Without ever quitting her tone of badinage
and playful superiority, she intoxicated me with the
sense that I was necessary to her, that she was never
at ease, unless I was near her, submitting to her
playful tyranny. It costs a woman so little
effort to beset us in this way! A half-repressed
word, a moment’s unexpected silence, even an
easy fit of petulance on our account, will serve us
as hashish for a long while. Out of the
subtlest web of scarcely perceptible signs, she set
me weaving the fancy that she had always unconsciously
loved me better than Alfred, but that, with the ignorant
fluttered sensibility of a young girl, she had been
imposed on by the charm that lay for her in the distinction
of being admired and chosen by a man who made so brilliant
a figure in the world as my brother. She satirized
herself in a very graceful way for her vanity and
ambition. What was it to me that I had the light
of my wretched provision on the fact that now it was
I who possessed at least all but the personal part
of my brother’s advantages? Our sweet illusions
are half of them conscious illusions, like effects
of colour that we know to be made up of tinsel, broken
glass, and rags.
We were married eighteen months after
Alfred’s death, one cold, clear morning in April,
when there came hail and sunshine both together; and
Bertha, in her white silk and pale-green leaves, and
the pale hues of her hair and face, looked like the
spirit of the morning. My father was happier
than he had thought of being again: my marriage,
he felt sure, would complete the desirable modification
of my character, and make me practical and worldly
enough to take my place in society among sane men.
For he delighted in Bertha’s tact and acuteness,
and felt sure she would be mistress of me, and make
me what she chose: I was only twenty-one, and
madly in love with her. Poor father! He
kept that hope a little while after our first year
of marriage, and it was not quite extinct when paralysis
came and saved him from utter disappointment.
I shall hurry through the rest of
my story, not dwelling so much as I have hitherto
done on my inward experience. When people are
well known to each other, they talk rather of what
befalls them externally, leaving their feelings and
sentiments to be inferred.
We lived in a round of visits for
some time after our return home, giving splendid dinner-parties,
and making a sensation in our neighbourhood by the
new lustre of our equipage, for my father had reserved
this display of his increased wealth for the period
of his son’s marriage; and we gave our acquaintances
liberal opportunity for remarking that it was a pity
I made so poor a figure as an heir and a bridegroom.
The nervous fatigue of this existence, the insincerities
and platitudes which I had to live through twice over through
my inner and outward sense would have been
maddening to me, if I had not had that sort of intoxicated
callousness which came from the delights of a first
passion. A bride and bridegroom, surrounded
by all the appliances of wealth, hurried through the
day by the whirl of society, filling their solitary
moments with hastily-snatched caresses, are prepared
for their future life together as the novice is prepared
for the cloister by experiencing its utmost
contrast.
Through all these crowded excited
months, Bertha’s inward self remained shrouded
from me, and I still read her thoughts only through
the language of her lips and demeanour: I had
still the human interest of wondering whether what
I did and said pleased her, of longing to hear a word
of affection, of giving a delicious exaggeration of
meaning to her smile. But I was conscious of
a growing difference in her manner towards me; sometimes
strong enough to be called haughty coldness, cutting
and chilling me as the hail had done that came across
the sunshine on our marriage morning; sometimes only
perceptible in the dexterous avoidance of a tete-a-tete
walk or dinner to which I had been looking forward.
I had been deeply pained by this had even
felt a sort of crushing of the heart, from the sense
that my brief day of happiness was near its setting;
but still I remained dependent on Bertha, eager for
the last rays of a bliss that would soon be gone for
ever, hoping and watching for some after-glow more
beautiful from the impending night.
I remember how should I
not remember? the time when that dependence
and hope utterly left me, when the sadness I had felt
in Bertha’s growing estrangement became a joy
that I looked back upon with longing as a man might
look back on the last pains in a paralysed limb.
It was just after the close of my father’s
last illness, which had necessarily withdrawn us from
society and thrown us more on each other. It
was the evening of father’s death. On
that evening the veil which had shrouded Bertha’s
soul from me had made me find in her alone
among my fellow-beings the blessed possibility of
mystery, and doubt, and expectation was
first withdrawn. Perhaps it was the first day
since the beginning of my passion for her, in which
that passion was completely neutralized by the presence
of an absorbing feeling of another kind. I had
been watching by my father’s deathbed:
I had been witnessing the last fitful yearning glance
his soul had cast back on the spent inheritance of
life the last faint consciousness of love
he had gathered from the pressure of my hand.
What are all our personal loves when we have been sharing
in that supreme agony? In the first moments
when we come away from the presence of death, every
other relation to the living is merged, to our feeling,
in the great relation of a common nature and a common
destiny.
In that state of mind I joined Bertha
in her private sitting-room. She was seated
in a leaning posture on a settee, with her back towards
the door; the great rich coils of her pale blond hair
surmounting her small neck, visible above the back
of the settee. I remember, as I closed the door
behind me, a cold tremulousness seizing me, and a vague
sense of being hated and lonely vague and
strong, like a presentiment. I know how I looked
at that moment, for I saw myself in Bertha’s
thought as she lifted her cutting grey eyes, and looked
at me: a miserable ghost-seer, surrounded by
phantoms in the noonday, trembling under a breeze when
the leaves were still, without appetite for the common
objects of human desires, but pining after the moon-beams.
We were front to front with each other, and judged
each other. The terrible moment of complete
illumination had come to me, and I saw that the darkness
had hidden no landscape from me, but only a blank
prosaic wall: from that evening forth, through
the sickening years which followed, I saw all round
the narrow room of this woman’s soul saw
petty artifice and mere negation where I had delighted
to believe in coy sensibilities and in wit at war
with latent feeling saw the light floating
vanities of the girl defining themselves into the
systematic coquetry, the scheming selfishness, of the
woman saw repulsion and antipathy harden
into cruel hatred, giving pain only for the sake of
wreaking itself.
For Bertha too, after her kind, felt
the bitterness of disillusion. She had believed
that my wild poet’s passion for her would make
me her slave; and that, being her slave, I should
execute her will in all things. With the essential
shallowness of a negative, unimaginative nature, she
was unable to conceive the fact that sensibilities
were anything else than weaknesses. She had
thought my weaknesses would put me in her power, and
she found them unmanageable forces. Our positions
were reversed. Before marriage she had completely
mastered my imagination, for she was a secret to me;
and I created the unknown thought before which I trembled
as if it were hers. But now that her soul was
laid open to me, now that I was compelled to share
the privacy of her motives, to follow all the petty
devices that preceded her words and acts, she found
herself powerless with me, except to produce in me
the chill shudder of repulsion powerless,
because I could be acted on by no lever within her
reach. I was dead to worldly ambitions, to social
vanities, to all the incentives within the compass
of her narrow imagination, and I lived under influences
utterly invisible to her.
She was really pitiable to have such
a husband, and so all the world thought. A graceful,
brilliant woman, like Bertha, who smiled on morning
callers, made a figure in ball-rooms, and was capable
of that light repartee which, from such a woman, is
accepted as wit, was secure of carrying off all sympathy
from a husband who was sickly, abstracted, and, as
some suspected, crack-brained. Even the servants
in our house gave her the balance of their regard
and pity. For there were no audible quarrels
between us; our alienation, our repulsion from each
other, lay within the silence of our own hearts; and
if the mistress went out a great deal, and seemed
to dislike the master’s society, was it not
natural, poor thing? The master was odd.
I was kind and just to my dependants, but I excited
in them a shrinking, half-contemptuous pity; for this
class of men and women are but slightly determined
in their estimate of others by general considerations,
or even experience, of character. They judge
of persons as they judge of coins, and value those
who pass current at a high rate.
After a time I interfered so little
with Bertha’s habits that it might seem wonderful
how her hatred towards me could grow so intense and
active as it did. But she had begun to suspect,
by some involuntary betrayal of mine, that there was
an abnormal power of penetration in me that
fitfully, at least, I was strangely cognizant of her
thoughts and intentions, and she began to be haunted
by a terror of me, which alternated every now and
then with defiance. She meditated continually
how the incubus could be shaken off her life how
she could be freed from this hateful bond to a being
whom she at once despised as an imbecile, and dreaded
as an inquisitor. For a long while she lived
in the hope that my evident wretchedness would drive
me to the commission of suicide; but suicide was not
in my nature. I was too completely swayed by
the sense that I was in the grasp of unknown forces,
to believe in my power of self-release. Towards
my own destiny I had become entirely passive; for
my one ardent desire had spent itself, and impulse
no longer predominated over knowledge. For this
reason I never thought of taking any steps towards
a complete separation, which would have made our alienation
evident to the world. Why should I rush for help
to a new course, when I was only suffering from the
consequences of a deed which had been the act of my
intensest will? That would have been the logic
of one who had desires to gratify, and I had no desires.
But Bertha and I lived more and more aloof from each
other. The rich find it easy to live married
and apart.
That course of our life which I have
indicated in a few sentences filled the space of years.
So much misery so slow and hideous a growth
of hatred and sin, may be compressed into a sentence!
And men judge of each other’s lives through
this summary medium. They epitomize the experience
of their fellow-mortal, and pronounce judgment on him
in neat syntax, and feel themselves wise and virtuous conquerors
over the temptations they define in well-selected
predicates. Seven years of wretchedness glide
glibly over the lips of the man who has never counted
them out in moments of chill disappointment, of head
and heart throbbings, of dread and vain wrestling,
of remorse and despair. We learn words
by rote, but not their meaning; that must be
paid for with our life-blood, and printed in the subtle
fibres of our nerves.
But I will hasten to finish my story.
Brevity is justified at once to those who readily
understand, and to those who will never understand.
Some years after my father’s
death, I was sitting by the dim firelight in my library
one January evening sitting in the leather
chair that used to be my father’s when
Bertha appeared at the door, with a candle in her
hand, and advanced towards me. I knew the ball-dress
she had on the white ball-dress, with the
green jewels, shone upon by the light of the wax candle
which lit up the medallion of the dying Cleopatra on
the mantelpiece. Why did she come to me before
going out? I had not seen her in the library,
which was my habitual place for months. Why did
she stand before me with the candle in her hand, with
her cruel contemptuous eyes fixed on me, and the glittering
serpent, like a familiar demon, on her breast?
For a moment I thought this fulfilment of my vision
at Vienna marked some dreadful crisis in my fate,
but I saw nothing in Bertha’s mind, as she stood
before me, except scorn for the look of overwhelming
misery with which I sat before her . . . “Fool,
idiot, why don’t you kill yourself, then?” that
was her thought. But at length her thoughts
reverted to her errand, and she spoke aloud.
The apparently indifferent nature of the errand seemed
to make a ridiculous anticlimax to my prevision and
my agitation.
“I have had to hire a new maid.
Fletcher is going to be married, and she wants me
to ask you to let her husband have the public-house
and farm at Molton. I wish him to have it.
You must give the promise now, because Fletcher is
going to-morrow morning and quickly, because
I’m in a hurry.”
“Very well; you may promise
her,” I said, indifferently, and Bertha swept
out of the library again.
I always shrank from the sight of
a new person, and all the more when it was a person
whose mental life was likely to weary my reluctant
insight with worldly ignorant trivialities.
But I shrank especially from the sight of this new
maid, because her advent had been announced to me at
a moment to which I could not cease to attach some
fatality: I had a vague dread that I should find
her mixed up with the dreary drama of my life that
some new sickening vision would reveal her to me as
an evil genius. When at last I did unavoidably
meet her, the vague dread was changed into definite
disgust. She was a tall, wiry, dark-eyed woman,
this Mrs. Archer, with a face handsome enough to give
her coarse hard nature the odious finish of bold,
self-confident coquetry. That was enough to
make me avoid her, quite apart from the contemptuous
feeling with which she contemplated me. I seldom
saw her; but I perceived that she rapidly became a
favourite with her mistress, and, after the lapse of
eight or nine months, I began to be aware that there
had arisen in Bertha’s mind towards this woman
a mingled feeling of fear and dependence, and that
this feeling was associated with ill-defined images
of candle-light scenes in her dressing-room, and the
locking-up of something in Bertha’s cabinet.
My interviews with my wife had become so brief and
so rarely solitary, that I had no opportunity of perceiving
these images in her mind with more definiteness.
The recollections of the past become contracted in
the rapidity of thought till they sometimes bear hardly
a more distinct resemblance to the external reality
than the forms of an oriental alphabet to the objects
that suggested them.
Besides, for the last year or more
a modification had been going forward in my mental
condition, and was growing more and more marked.
My insight into the minds of those around me was
becoming dimmer and more fitful, and the ideas that
crowded my double consciousness became less and less
dependent on any personal contact. All that was
personal in me seemed to be suffering a gradual death,
so that I was losing the organ through which the personal
agitations and projects of others could affect me.
But along with this relief from wearisome insight,
there was a new development of what I concluded as
I have since found rightly to be a provision
of external scenes. It was as if the relation
between me and my fellow-men was more and more deadened,
and my relation to what we call the inanimate was
quickened into new life. The more I lived apart
from society, and in proportion as my wretchedness
subsided from the violent throb of agonized passion
into the dulness of habitual pain, the more frequent
and vivid became such visions as that I had had of
Prague of strange cities, of sandy plains,
of gigantic ruins, of midnight skies with strange
bright constellations, of mountain-passes, of grassy
nooks flecked with the afternoon sunshine through
the boughs: I was in the midst of such scenes,
and in all of them one presence seemed to weigh on
me in all these mighty shapes the presence
of something unknown and pitiless. For continual
suffering had annihilated religious faith within me:
to the utterly miserable the unloving and
the unloved there is no religion possible,
no worship but a worship of devils. And beyond
all these, and continually recurring, was the vision
of my death the pangs, the suffocation,
the last struggle, when life would be grasped at in
vain.
Things were in this state near the
end of the seventh year. I had become entirely
free from insight, from my abnormal cognizance of any
other consciousness than my own, and instead of intruding
involuntarily into the world of other minds, was living
continually in my own solitary future. Bertha
was aware that I was greatly changed. To my surprise
she had of late seemed to seek opportunities of remaining
in my society, and had cultivated that kind of distant
yet familiar talk which is customary between a husband
and wife who live in polite and irrevocable alienation.
I bore this with languid submission, and without feeling
enough interest in her motives to be roused into keen
observation; yet I could not help perceiving something
triumphant and excited in her carriage and the expression
of her face something too subtle to express
itself in words or tones, but giving one the idea
that she lived in a state of expectation or hopeful
suspense. My chief feeling was satisfaction that
her inner self was once more shut out from me; and
I almost revelled for the moment in the absent melancholy
that made me answer her at cross purposes, and betray
utter ignorance of what she had been saying.
I remember well the look and the smile with which
she one day said, after a mistake of this kind on
my part: “I used to think you were a clairvoyant,
and that was the reason why you were so bitter against
other clairvoyants, wanting to keep your monopoly;
but I see now you have become rather duller than the
rest of the world.”
I said nothing in reply. It
occurred to me that her recent obtrusion of herself
upon me might have been prompted by the wish to test
my power of detecting some of her secrets; but I let
the thought drop again at once: her motives and
her deeds had no interest for me, and whatever pleasures
she might be seeking, I had no wish to baulk her.
There was still pity in my soul for every living
thing, and Bertha was living was surrounded
with possibilities of misery.
Just at this time there occurred an
event which roused me somewhat from my inertia, and
gave me an interest in the passing moment that I had
thought impossible for me. It was a visit from
Charles Meunier, who had written me word that he was
coming to England for relaxation from too strenuous
labour, and would like too see me. Meunier had
now a European reputation; but his letter to me expressed
that keen remembrance of an early regard, an early
debt of sympathy, which is inseparable from nobility
of character: and I too felt as if his presence
would be to me like a transient resurrection into
a happier pre-existence.
He came, and as far as possible, I
renewed our old pleasure of making tete-a-tete
excursions, though, instead of mountains and glacers
and the wide blue lake, we had to content ourselves
with mere slopes and ponds and artificial plantations.
The years had changed us both, but with what different
result! Meunier was now a brilliant figure in
society, to whom elegant women pretended to listen,
and whose acquaintance was boasted of by noblemen
ambitious of brains. He repressed with the utmost
delicacy all betrayal of the shock which I am sure
he must have received from our meeting, or of a desire
to penetrate into my condition and circumstances,
and sought by the utmost exertion of his charming
social powers to make our reunion agreeable.
Bertha was much struck by the unexpected fascinations
of a visitor whom she had expected to find presentable
only on the score of his celebrity, and put forth
all her coquetries and accomplishments. Apparently
she succeeded in attracting his admiration, for his
manner towards her was attentive and flattering.
The effect of his presence on me was so benignant,
especially in those renewals of our old tete-a-tete
wanderings, when he poured forth to me wonderful narratives
of his professional experience, that more than once,
when his talk turned on the psychological relations
of disease, the thought crossed my mind that, if his
stay with me were long enough, I might possibly bring
myself to tell this man the secrets of my lot.
Might there not lie some remedy for me, too, in his
science? Might there not at least lie some comprehension
and sympathy ready for me in his large and susceptible
mind? But the thought only flickered feebly
now and then, and died out before it could become a
wish. The horror I had of again breaking in
on the privacy of another soul, made me, by an irrational
instinct, draw the shroud of concealment more closely
around my own, as we automatically perform the gesture
we feel to be wanting in another.
When Meunier’s visit was approaching
its conclusion, there happened an event which caused
some excitement in our household, owing to the surprisingly
strong effect it appeared to produce on Bertha on
Bertha, the self-possessed, who usually seemed inaccessible
to feminine agitations, and did even her hate in a
self-restrained hygienic manner. This event was
the sudden severe illness of her maid, Mrs. Archer.
I have reserved to this moment the mention of a circumstance
which had forced itself on my notice shortly before
Meunier’s arrival, namely, that there had been
some quarrel between Bertha and this maid, apparently
during a visit to a distant family, in which she had
accompanied her mistress. I had overheard Archer
speaking in a tone of bitter insolence, which I should
have thought an adequate reason for immediate dismissal.
No dismissal followed; on the contrary, Bertha seemed
to be silently putting up with personal inconveniences
from the exhibitions of this woman’s temper.
I was the more astonished to observe that her illness
seemed a cause of strong solicitude to Bertha; that
she was at the bedside night and day, and would allow
no one else to officiate as head-nurse. It
happened that our family doctor was out on a holiday,
an accident which made Meunier’s presence in
the house doubly welcome, and he apparently entered
into the case with an interest which seemed so much
stronger than the ordinary professional feeling, that
one day when he had fallen into a long fit of silence
after visiting her, I said to him
“Is this a very peculiar case of disease, Meunier?”
“No,” he answered, “it
is an attack of peritonitis, which will be fatal,
but which does not differ physically from many other
cases that have come under my observation. But
I’ll tell you what I have on my mind. I
want to make an experiment on this woman, if you will
give me permission. It can do her no harm will
give her no pain for I shall not make it
until life is extinct to all purposes of sensation.
I want to try the effect of transfusing blood into
her arteries after the heart has ceased to beat for
some minutes. I have tried the experiment again
and again with animals that have died of this disease,
with astounding results, and I want to try it on a
human subject. I have the small tubes necessary,
in a case I have with me, and the rest of the apparatus
could be prepared readily. I should use my own
blood take it from my own arm. This
woman won’t live through the night, I’m
convinced, and I want you to promise me your assistance
in making the experiment. I can’t do without
another hand, but it would perhaps not be well to
call in a medical assistant from among your provincial
doctors. A disagreeable foolish version of the
thing might get abroad.”
“Have you spoken to my wife
on the subject?” I said, “because she appears
to be peculiarly sensitive about this woman: she
has been a favourite maid.”
“To tell you the truth,”
said Meunier, “I don’t want her to know
about it. There are always insuperable difficulties
with women in these matters, and the effect on the
supposed dead body may be startling. You and
I will sit up together, and be in readiness.
When certain symptoms appear I shall take you in,
and at the right moment we must manage to get every
one else out of the room.”
I need not give our farther conversation
on the subject. He entered very fully into the
details, and overcame my repulsion from them, by exciting
in me a mingled awe and curiosity concerning the possible
results of his experiment.
We prepared everything, and he instructed
me in my part as assistant. He had not told
Bertha of his absolute conviction that Archer would
not survive through the night, and endeavoured to
persuade her to leave the patient and take a night’s
rest. But she was obstinate, suspecting the
fact that death was at hand, and supposing that he
wished merely to save her nerves. She refused
to leave the sick-room. Meunier and I sat up
together in the library, he making frequent visits
to the sick-room, and returning with the information
that the case was taking precisely the course he expected.
Once he said to me, “Can you imagine any cause
of ill-feeling this woman has against her mistress,
who is so devoted to her?”
“I think there was some misunderstanding
between them before her illness. Why do you ask?”
“Because I have observed for
the last five or six hours since, I fancy,
she has lost all hope of recovery there
seems a strange prompting in her to say something
which pain and failing strength forbid her to utter;
and there is a look of hideous meaning in her eyes,
which she turns continually towards her mistress.
In this disease the mind often remains singularly
clear to the last.”
“I am not surprised at an indication
of malevolent feeling in her,” I said.
“She is a woman who has always inspired me with
distrust and dislike, but she managed to insinuate
herself into her mistress’s favour.”
He was silent after this, looking at the fire with
an air of absorption, till he went upstairs again.
He stayed away longer than usual, and on returning,
said to me quietly, “Come now.”
I followed him to the chamber where
death was hovering. The dark hangings of the
large bed made a background that gave a strong relief
to Bertha’s pale face as I entered. She
started forward as she saw me enter, and then looked
at Meunier with an expression of angry inquiry; but
he lifted up his hand as it to impose silence, while
he fixed his glance on the dying woman and felt her
pulse. The face was pinched and ghastly, a cold
perspiration was on the forehead, and the eyelids were
lowered so as to conceal the large dark eyes.
After a minute or two, Meunier walked round to the
other side of the bed where Bertha stood, and with
his usual air of gentle politeness towards her begged
her to leave the patient under our care everything
should be done for her she was no longer
in a state to be conscious of an affectionate presence.
Bertha was hesitating, apparently almost willing
to believe his assurance and to comply. She
looked round at the ghastly dying face, as if to read
the confirmation of that assurance, when for a moment
the lowered eyelids were raised again, and it seemed
as if the eyes were looking towards Bertha, but blankly.
A shudder passed through Bertha’s frame, and
she returned to her station near the pillow, tacitly
implying that she would not leave the room.
The eyelids were lifted no more.
Once I looked at Bertha as she watched the face of
the dying one. She wore a rich peignoir,
and her blond hair was half covered by a lace cap:
in her attire she was, as always, an elegant woman,
fit to figure in a picture of modern aristocratic life:
but I asked myself how that face of hers could ever
have seemed to me the face of a woman born of woman,
with memories of childhood, capable of pain, needing
to be fondled? The features at that moment seemed
so preternaturally sharp, the eyes were so hard and
eager she looked like a cruel immortal,
finding her spiritual feast in the agonies of a dying
race. For across those hard features there came
something like a flash when the last hour had been
breathed out, and we all felt that the dark veil had
completely fallen. What secret was there between
Bertha and this woman? I turned my eyes from
her with a horrible dread lest my insight should return,
and I should be obliged to see what had been breeding
about two unloving women’s hearts. I felt
that Bertha had been watching for the moment of death
as the sealing of her secret: I thanked Heaven
it could remain sealed for me.
Meunier said quietly, “She is
gone.” He then gave his arm to Bertha,
and she submitted to be led out of the room.
I suppose it was at her order that
two female attendants came into the room, and dismissed
the younger one who had been present before.
When they entered, Meunier had already opened the
artery in the long thin neck that lay rigid on the
pillow, and I dismissed them, ordering them to remain
at a distance till we rang: the doctor, I said,
had an operation to perform he was not
sure about the death. For the next twenty minutes
I forgot everything but Meunier and the experiment
in which he was so absorbed, that I think his senses
would have been closed against all sounds or sights
which had no relation to it. It was my task at
first to keep up the artificial respiration in the
body after the transfusion had been effected, but
presently Meunier relieved me, and I could see the
wondrous slow return of life; the breast began to heave,
the inspirations became stronger, the eyelids quivered,
and the soul seemed to have returned beneath them.
The artificial respiration was withdrawn: still
the breathing continued, and there was a movement of
the lips.
Just then I heard the handle of the
door moving: I suppose Bertha had heard from
the women that they had been dismissed: probably
a vague fear had arisen in her mind, for she entered
with a look of alarm. She came to the foot of
the bed and gave a stifled cry.
The dead woman’s eyes were wide
open, and met hers in full recognition
the recognition of hate. With a sudden strong
effort, the hand that Bertha had thought for ever
still was pointed towards her, and the haggard face
moved. The gasping eager voice said
“You mean to poison your husband
. . . the poison is in the black cabinet . . .
I got it for you . . . you laughed at me, and told
lies about me behind my back, to make me disgusting
. . . because you were jealous . . . are you sorry
. . . now?”
The lips continued to murmur, but
the sounds were no longer distinct. Soon there
was no sound only a slight movement:
the flame had leaped out, and was being extinguished
the faster. The wretched woman’s heart-strings
had been set to hatred and vengeance; the spirit of
life had swept the chords for an instant, and was
gone again for ever. Great God! Is this
what it is to live again . . . to wake up with our
unstilled thirst upon us, with our unuttered curses
rising to our lips, with our muscles ready to act
out their half-committed sins?
Bertha stood pale at the foot of the
bed, quivering and helpless, despairing of devices,
like a cunning animal whose hiding-places are surrounded
by swift-advancing flame. Even Meunier looked
paralysed; life for that moment ceased to be a scientific
problem to him. As for me, this scene seemed
of one texture with the rest of my existence:
horror was my familiar, and this new revelation was
only like an old pain recurring with new circumstances.
Since then Bertha and I have lived
apart she in her own neighbourhood, the
mistress of half our wealth, I as a wanderer in foreign
countries, until I came to this Devonshire nest to
die. Bertha lives pitied and admired; for what
had I against that charming woman, whom every one but
myself could have been happy with? There had
been no witness of the scene in the dying room except
Meunier, and while Meunier lived his lips were sealed
by a promise to me.
Once or twice, weary of wandering,
I rested in a favourite spot, and my heart went out
towards the men and women and children whose faces
were becoming familiar to me; but I was driven away
again in terror at the approach of my old insight driven
away to live continually with the one Unknown Presence
revealed and yet hidden by the moving curtain of the
earth and sky. Till at last disease took hold
of me and forced me to rest here forced
me to live in dependence on my servants. And
then the curse of insight of my double
consciousness, came again, and has never left me.
I know all their narrow thoughts, their feeble regard,
their half-wearied pity.
It is the 20th of September, 1850.
I know these figures I have just written, as if they
were a long familiar inscription. I have seen
them on this pace in my desk unnumbered times, when
the scene of my dying struggle has opened upon me
. . .
(1859)