That night Alan slept little.
Even at dinner his hostess, Mrs. Waterton, noticed
his preoccupation; and, on the pretext of a headache,
he retired early to his own bedroom. His mind
was full of Herminia and these strange ideas of hers;
how could he listen with a becoming show of interest
to Ethel Waterton’s aspirations on the grand
piano after a gipsy life, oh, a gipsy life
for her! when in point of fact she was
a most insipid blonde from the cover of a chocolate
box? So he went to bed betimes, and there lay
long awake, deep wondering to himself how to act about
Herminia.
He was really in love with her.
That much he acknowledged frankly. More profoundly
in love than he had ever conceived it possible he
could find himself with any one. Hitherto, he
had “considered” this girl or that, mostly
on his mother’s or sister’s recommendation;
and after observing her critically for a day or two,
as he might have observed a horse or any other intended
purchase, he had come to the conclusion “she
wouldn’t do,” and had ceased to entertain
her. But with Herminia, he was in love.
The potent god had come upon him. That imperious
inner monitor which cries aloud to a man, “You
must have this girl, because you can’t do without
her; you must strive to make her happy, because her
happiness is more to you now ten thousand fold than
your own,” that imperious inner monitor had
spoken out at last in no uncertain tone to Alan Merrick.
He knew for the first time what it is to be in love;
in love with a true and beautiful woman, not with
his own future convenience and comfort. The keen
fresh sense it quickened within him raised him for
the moment some levels above himself. For Herminia’s
sake, he felt, he could do or dare anything.
Nay, more; as Herminia herself had
said to him, it was her better, her inner self he
was in love with, not the mere statuesque face, the
full and faultless figure. He saw how pure, how
pellucid, how noble the woman was; treading her own
ideal world of high seraphic harmonies. He was
in love with her stainless soul; he could not have
loved her so well, could not have admired her so profoundly,
had she been other than she was, had she shared the
common prejudices and preconceptions of women.
It was just because she was Herminia that he felt
so irresistibly attracted towards her. She drew
him like a magnet. What he loved and admired
was not so much the fair, frank face itself, as the
lofty Cornelia-like spirit behind it.
And yet, he hesitated.
Could he accept the sacrifice this
white soul wished to make for him? Could he
aid and abet her in raising up for herself so much
undeserved obloquy? Could he help her to become
Anathema maranatha among her sister women?
Even if she felt brave enough to try the experiment
herself for humanity’s sake, was it not his duty
as a man to protect her from her own sublime and generous
impulses? Is it not for that in part that nature
makes us virile? We must shield the weaker vessel.
He was flattered not a little that this leader among
women should have picked him out for herself among
the ranks of men as her predestined companion in her
chosen task of emancipating her sex. And he
was thoroughly sympathetic (as every good man must
needs be) with her aims and her method. Yet,
still he hesitated. Never before could he have
conceived such a problem of the soul, such a moral
dilemma possible. It rent heart and brain at
once asunder. Instinctively he felt to himself
he would be doing wrong should he try in any way to
check these splendid and unselfish impulses which
led Herminia to offer herself willingly up as a living
sacrifice on behalf of her enslaved sisters everywhere.
Yet the innate feeling of the man, that ’tis
his place to protect and guard the woman, even from
her own higher and purer self, intervened to distract
him. He couldn’t bear to feel he might
be instrumental in bringing upon his pure Herminia
the tortures that must be in store for her; he couldn’t
bear to think his name might be coupled with hers
in shameful ways, too base for any man to contemplate.
And then, intermixed with these higher
motives, came others that he hardly liked to confess
to himself where Herminia was concerned, but which
nevertheless would obtrude themselves, will he, nill
he, upon him. What would other people say about
such an innocent union as Herminia contemplated?
Not indeed, “What effect would it have upon
his position and prospects?” Alan Merrick’s
place as a barrister was fairly well assured, and
the Bar is luckily one of the few professions in lie-loving
England where a man need not grovel at the mercy of
the moral judgment of the meanest and grossest among
his fellow-creatures, as is the case with the Church,
with medicine, with the politician, and with the schoolmaster.
But Alan could not help thinking all the same how
people would misinterpret and misunderstand his relations
with the woman he loved, if he modelled them strictly
upon Herminia’s wishes. It was hateful,
it was horrible to have to con the thing over, where
that faultless soul was concerned, in the vile and
vulgar terms other people would apply to it; but for
Herminia’s sake, con it over so he must; and
though he shrank from the effort with a deadly shrinking,
he nevertheless faced it. Men at the clubs would
say he had seduced Herminia. Men at the clubs
would lay the whole blame of the episode upon him;
and he couldn’t bear to be so blamed for the
sake of a woman, to save whom from the faintest shadow
of disgrace or shame he would willingly have died a
thousand times over. For since Herminia had confessed
her love to him yesterday, he had begun to feel how
much she was to him. His admiration and appreciation
of her had risen inexpressibly. And was he now
to be condemned for having dragged down to the dust
that angel whose white wings he felt himself unworthy
to touch with the hem of his garment?
And yet, once more, when he respected
her so much for the sacrifice she was willing to make
for humanity, would it be right for him to stand in
her way, to deter her from realizing her own highest
nature? She was Herminia just because she lived
in that world of high hopes, just because she had
the courage and the nobility to dare this great thing.
Would it be right of him to bring her down from that
pedestal whereon she stood so austere, and urge upon
her that she should debase herself to be as any other
woman, even as Ethel Waterton? For
the Watertons had brought him there to propose to
Ethel.
For hours he tossed and turned and
revolved these problems. Rain beat on the leaded
panes of the Waterton dormers. Day dawned, but
no light came with it to his troubled spirit.
The more he thought of this dilemma, the more profoundly
he shrank from the idea of allowing himself to be
made into the instrument for what the world would
call, after its kind, Herminia’s shame and degradation.
For even if the world could be made to admit that
Herminia had done what she did from chaste and noble
motives, which considering what we all
know of the world, was improbable, yet at
any rate it could never allow that he himself had
acted from any but the vilest and most unworthy reasons.
Base souls would see in the sacrifice he made to
Herminia’s ideals, only the common story of a
trustful woman cruelly betrayed by the man who pretended
to love her, and would proceed to treat him with the
coldness and contempt with which such a man deserves
to be treated.
As the morning wore on, this view
of the matter obtruded itself more and more forcibly
every moment on Alan. Over and over again he
said to himself, let come what come might, he must
never aid and abet that innocent soul in rushing blindfold
over a cliff to her own destruction. It is so
easy at twenty-two to ruin yourself for life; so difficult
at thirty to climb slowly back again. No, no,
holy as Herminia’s impulses were, he must save
her from herself; he must save her from her own purity;
he must refuse to be led astray by her romantic aspirations.
He must keep her to the beaten path trod by all petty
souls, and preserve her from the painful crown of
martyrdom she herself designed as her eternal diadem.
Full of these manful resolutions,
he rose up early in the morning. He would be
his Herminia’s guardian angel. He would
use her love for him, for he knew she loved
him, as a lever to egg her aside from these
slippery moral precipices.
He mistook the solid rock of ethical
resolution he was trying to disturb with so frail
an engine. The fulcrum itself would yield far
sooner to the pressure than the weight of Herminia’s
uncompromising rectitude. Passionate as she was, and
with that opulent form she could hardly be otherwise, principle
was still deeper and more imperious with her than
passion.