RETROSPECTIVE.
I.
In their precise tracings-out and
subtile causations, the strongest and fieriest emotions
of life defy all analytical insight. We see the
cloud, and feel its bolt; but meteorology only idly
essays a critical scrutiny as to how that cloud became
charged, and how this bolt so stuns. The metaphysical
writers confess, that the most impressive, sudden,
and overwhelming event, as well as the minutest, is
but the product of an infinite series of infinitely
involved and untraceable foregoing occurrences.
Just so with every motion of the heart. Why this
cheek kindles with a noble enthusiasm; why that lip
curls in scorn; these are things not wholly imputable
to the immediate apparent cause, which is only one
link in the chain; but to a long line of dependencies
whose further part is lost in the mid-regions of the
impalpable air.
Idle then would it be to attempt by
any winding way so to penetrate into the heart, and
memory, and inmost life, and nature of Pierre, as to
show why it was that a piece of intelligence which,
in the natural course of things, many amiable gentlemen,
both young and old, have been known to receive with
a momentary feeling of surprise, and then a little
curiosity to know more, and at last an entire unconcern;
idle would it be, to attempt to show how to Pierre
it rolled down on his soul like melted lava, and left
so deep a deposit of desolation, that all his subsequent
endeavors never restored the original temples to the
soil, nor all his culture completely revived its buried
bloom.
But some random hints may suffice
to deprive a little of its strangeness, that tumultuous
mood, into which so small a note had thrown him.
There had long stood a shrine in the
fresh-foliaged heart of Pierre, up to which he ascended
by many tableted steps of remembrance; and around
which annually he had hung fresh wreaths of a sweet
and holy affection. Made one green bower of at
last, by such successive votive offerings of his being;
this shrine seemed, and was indeed, a place for the
celebration of a chastened joy, rather than for any
melancholy rites. But though thus mantled, and
tangled with garlands, this shrine was of marble a
niched pillar, deemed solid and eternal, and from whose
top radiated all those innumerable sculptured scrolls
and branches, which supported the entire one-pillared
temple of his moral life; as in some beautiful gothic
oratories, one central pillar, trunk-like, upholds
the roof. In this shrine, in this niche of this
pillar, stood the perfect marble form of his departed
father; without blemish, unclouded, snow-white, and
serene; Pierre’s fond personification of perfect
human goodness and virtue. Before this shrine,
Pierre poured out the fullness of all young life’s
most reverential thoughts and beliefs. Not to
God had Pierre ever gone in his heart, unless by ascending
the steps of that shrine, and so making it the vestibule
of his abstractest religion.
Blessed and glorified in his tomb
beyond Prince Mausolus is that mortal sire, who, after
an honorable, pure course of life, dies, and is buried,
as in a choice fountain, in the filial breast of a
tender-hearted and intellectually appreciative child.
For at that period, the Solomonic insights have not
poured their turbid tributaries into the pure-flowing
well of the childish life. Rare preservative virtue,
too, have those heavenly waters. Thrown into
that fountain, all sweet recollections become marbleized;
so that things which in themselves were evanescent,
thus became unchangeable and eternal. So, some
rare waters in Derbyshire will petrify birds’-nests.
But if fate preserves the father to a later time,
too often the filial obsequies are less profound; the
canonization less ethereal. The eye-expanded
boy perceives, or vaguely thinks he perceives, slight
specks and flaws in the character he once so wholly
reverenced.
When Pierre was twelve years old,
his father had died, leaving behind him, in the general
voice of the world, a marked reputation as a gentleman
and a Christian; in the heart of his wife, a green
memory of many healthy days of unclouded and joyful
wedded life, and in the inmost soul of Pierre, the
impression of a bodily form of rare manly beauty and
benignity, only rivaled by the supposed perfect mould
in which his virtuous heart had been cast. Of
pensive evenings, by the wide winter fire, or in summer,
in the southern piazza, when that mystical night-silence
so peculiar to the country would summon up in the minds
of Pierre and his mother, long trains of the images
of the past; leading all that spiritual procession,
majestically and holily walked the venerated form
of the departed husband and father. Then their
talk would be reminiscent and serious, but sweet;
and again, and again, still deep and deeper, was stamped
in Pierre’s soul the cherished conceit, that
his virtuous father, so beautiful on earth, was now
uncorruptibly sainted in heaven. So choicely,
and in some degree, secludedly nurtured, Pierre, though
now arrived at the age of nineteen, had never yet become
so thoroughly initiated into that darker, though truer
aspect of things, which an entire residence in the
city from the earliest period of life, almost inevitably
engraves upon the mind of any keenly observant and
reflective youth of Pierre’s present years.
So that up to this period, in his breast, all remained
as it had been; and to Pierre, his father’s
shrine seemed spotless, and still new as the marble
of the tomb of him of Arimathea.
Judge, then, how all-desolating and
withering the blast, that for Pierre, in one night,
stripped his holiest shrine of all over-laid bloom,
and buried the mild statue of the saint beneath the
prostrated ruins of the soul’s temple itself.
II.
As the vine flourishes, and the grape
empurples close up to the very walls and muzzles of
cannoned Ehrenbreitstein; so do the sweetest joys
of life grow in the very jaws of its perils.
But is life, indeed, a thing for all
infidel levities, and we, its misdeemed beneficiaries,
so utterly fools and infatuate, that what we take
to be our strongest tower of delight, only stands at
the caprice of the minutest event the falling
of a leaf, the hearing of a voice, or the receipt
of one little bit of paper scratched over with a few
small characters by a sharpened feather? Are
we so entirely insecure, that that casket, wherein
we have placed our holiest and most final joy, and
which we have secured by a lock of infinite deftness;
can that casket be picked and desecrated at the merest
stranger’s touch, when we think that we alone
hold the only and chosen key?
Pierre! thou art foolish; rebuild no,
not that, for thy shrine still stands; it stands,
Pierre, firmly stands; smellest thou not its yet undeparted,
embowering bloom? Such a note as thine can be
easily enough written, Pierre; impostors are not unknown
in this curious world; or the brisk novelist, Pierre,
will write thee fifty such notes, and so steal gushing
tears from his reader’s eyes; even as thy
note so strangely made thine own manly eyes so arid;
so glazed, and so arid, Pierre foolish
Pierre!
Oh! mock not the poniarded heart.
The stabbed man knows the steel; prate not to him
that it is only a tickling feather. Feels he not
the interior gash? What does this blood on my
vesture? and what does this pang in my soul?
And here again, not unreasonably,
might invocations go up to those Three Weird Ones,
that tend Life’s loom. Again we might ask
them, What threads were those, oh, ye Weird Ones,
that ye wove in the years foregone; that now to Pierre,
they so unerringly conduct electric presentiments,
that his woe is woe, his father no more a saint, and
Isabel a sister indeed?
Ah, fathers and mothers! all the world
round, be heedful, give heed! Thy
little one may not now comprehend the meaning of those
words and those signs, by which, in its innocent presence,
thou thinkest to disguise the sinister thing ye would
hint. Not now he knows; not very much even of
the externals he consciously remarks; but if, in after-life,
Fate puts the chemic key of the cipher into his hands;
then how swiftly and how wonderfully, he reads all
the obscurest and most obliterate inscriptions he
finds in his memory; yea, and rummages himself all
over, for still hidden writings to read. Oh, darkest
lessons of Life have thus been read; all faith in
Virtue been murdered, and youth gives itself up to
an infidel scorn.
But not thus, altogether, was it now
with Pierre; yet so like, in some points, that the
above true warning may not misplacedly stand.
His father had died of a fever; and,
as is not uncommon in such maladies, toward his end,
he at intervals lowly wandered in his mind. At
such times, by unobserved, but subtle arts, the devoted
family attendants, had restrained his wife from being
present at his side. But little Pierre, whose
fond, filial love drew him ever to that bed; they
heeded not innocent little Pierre, when his father
was delirious; and so, one evening, when the shadows
intermingled with the curtains; and all the chamber
was hushed; and Pierre but dimly saw his father’s
face; and the fire on the hearth lay in a broken temple
of wonderful coals; then a strange, plaintive, infinitely
pitiable, low voice, stole forth from the testered
bed; and Pierre heard, “My daughter!
my daughter!”
“He wanders again,” said the nurse.
“Dear, dear father!” sobbed
the child “thou hast not a daughter,
but here is thy own little Pierre.”
But again the unregardful voice in
the bed was heard; and now in a sudden, pealing wail, “My
daughter! God! God! my daughter!”
The child snatched the dying man’s
hand; it faintly grew to his grasp; but on the other
side of the bed, the other hand now also emptily lifted
itself and emptily caught, as if at some other childish
fingers. Then both hands dropped on the sheet;
and in the twinkling shadows of the evening little
Pierre seemed to see, that while the hand which he
held wore a faint, feverish flush, the other empty
one was ashy white as a leper’s.
“It is past,” whispered
the nurse, “he will wander so no more now till
midnight, that is his wont.”
And then, in her heart, she wondered how it was, that
so excellent a gentleman, and so thoroughly good a
man, should wander so ambiguously in his mind; and
trembled to think of that mysterious thing in the
soul, which seems to acknowledge no human jurisdiction,
but in spite of the individual’s own innocent
self, will still dream horrid dreams, and mutter unmentionable
thoughts; and into Pierre’s awe-stricken, childish
soul, there entered a kindred, though still more nebulous
conceit. But it belonged to the spheres of the
impalpable ether; and the child soon threw other and
sweeter remembrances over it, and covered it up; and
at last, it was blended with all other dim things,
and imaginings of dimness; and so, seemed to survive
to no real life in Pierre. But though through
many long years the henbane showed no leaves in his
soul; yet the sunken seed was there: and the
first glimpse of Isabel’s letter caused it to
spring forth, as by magic. Then, again, the long-hushed,
plaintive and infinitely pitiable voice was heard, “My
daughter! my daughter!” followed by the compunctious
“God! God!” And to Pierre, once again
the empty hand lifted itself, and once again the ashy
hand fell.
III.
In the cold courts of justice the
dull head demands oaths, and holy writ proofs; but
in the warm halls of the heart one single, untestified
memory’s spark shall suffice to enkindle such
a blaze of evidence, that all the corners of conviction
are as suddenly lighted up as a midnight city by a
burning building, which on every side whirls its reddened
brands.
In a locked, round-windowed closet
connecting with the chamber of Pierre, and whither
he had always been wont to go, in those sweetly awful
hours, when the spirit crieth to the spirit, Come into
solitude with me, twin-brother; come away: a
secret have I; let me whisper it to thee aside; in
this closet, sacred to the Tadmore privacies and repose
of the sometimes solitary Pierre, there hung, by long
cords from the cornice, a small portrait in oil, before
which Pierre had many a time trancedly stood.
Had this painting hung in any annual public exhibition,
and in its turn been described in print by the casual
glancing critics, they would probably have described
it thus, and truthfully: “An impromptu
portrait of a fine-looking, gay-hearted, youthful gentleman.
He is lightly, and, as it were, airily and but grazingly
seated in, or rather flittingly tenanting an old-fashioned
chair of Malacca. One arm confining his hat and
cane is loungingly thrown over the back of the chair,
while the fingers of the other hand play with his gold
watch-seal and key. The free-templed head is sideways
turned, with a peculiarly bright, and care-free, morning
expression. He seems as if just dropped in for
a visit upon some familiar acquaintance. Altogether,
the painting is exceedingly clever and cheerful; with
a fine, off-handed expression about it. Undoubtedly
a portrait, and no fancy-piece; and, to hazard a vague
conjecture, by an amateur.”
So bright, and so cheerful then; so
trim, and so young; so singularly healthful, and handsome;
what subtile element could so steep this whole portrait,
that, to the wife of the original, it was namelessly
unpleasant and repelling? The mother of Pierre
could never abide this picture which she had always
asserted did signally belie her husband. Her
fond memories of the departed refused to hang one single
wreath around it. It is not he, she would emphatically
and almost indignantly exclaim, when more urgently
besought to reveal the cause for so unreasonable a
dissent from the opinion of nearly all the other connections
and relatives of the deceased. But the portrait
which she held to do justice to her husband, correctly
to convey his features in detail, and more especially
their truest, and finest, and noblest combined expression;
this portrait was a much larger one, and in the great
drawing-room below occupied the most conspicuous and
honorable place on the wall.
Even to Pierre these two paintings
had always seemed strangely dissimilar. And as
the larger one had been painted many years after the
other, and therefore brought the original pretty nearly
within his own childish recollections; therefore,
he himself could not but deem it by far the more truthful
and life-like presentation of his father. So that
the mere preference of his mother, however strong,
was not at all surprising to him, but rather coincided
with his own conceit. Yet not for this, must
the other portrait be so decidedly rejected. Because,
in the first place, there was a difference in time,
and some difference of costume to be considered, and
the wide difference of the styles of the respective
artiste, and the wide difference of those respective,
semi-reflected, ideal faces, which, even in the presence
of the original, a spiritual artist will rather choose
to draw from than from the fleshy face, however brilliant
and fine. Moreover, while the larger portrait
was that of a middle-aged, married man, and seemed
to possess all the nameless and slightly portly tranquillities,
incident to that condition when a felicitous one;
the smaller portrait painted a brisk, unentangled,
young bachelor, gayly ranging up and down in the world;
light-hearted, and a very little bladish perhaps; and
charged to the lips with the first uncloying morning
fullness and freshness of life. Here, certainly,
large allowance was to be made in any careful, candid
estimation of these portraits. To Pierre this
conclusion had become well-nigh irresistible, when
he placed side by side two portraits of himself; one
taken in his early childhood, a frocked and belted
boy of four years old; and the other, a grown youth
of sixteen. Except an indestructible, all-surviving
something in the eyes and on the temples, Pierre could
hardly recognize the loud-laughing boy in the tall,
and pensively smiling youth. If a few years,
then, can have in me made all this difference, why
not in my father? thought Pierre.
Besides all this, Pierre considered
the history, and, so to speak, the family legend of
the smaller painting. In his fifteenth year, it
was made a present to him by an old maiden aunt, who
resided in the city, and who cherished the memory
of Pierre’s father, with all that wonderful
amaranthine devotion which an advanced maiden sister
ever feels for the idea of a beloved younger brother,
now dead and irrevocably gone. As the only child
of that brother, Pierre was an object of the warmest
and most extravagant attachment on the part of this
lonely aunt, who seemed to see, transformed into youth
once again, the likeness, and very soul of her brother,
in the fair, inheriting brow of Pierre. Though
the portrait we speak of was inordinately prized by
her, yet at length the strict canon of her romantic
and imaginative love asserted the portrait to be Pierre’s for
Pierre was not only his father’s only child,
but his namesake so soon as Pierre should
be old enough to value aright so holy and inestimable
a treasure. She had accordingly sent it to him,
trebly boxed, and finally covered with a water-proof
cloth; and it was delivered at Saddle Meadows, by
an express, confidential messenger, an old gentleman
of leisure, once her forlorn, because rejected gallant,
but now her contented, and chatty neighbor. Henceforth,
before a gold-framed and gold-lidded ivory miniature, a
fraternal gift aunt Dorothea now offered
up her morning and her evening rites, to the memory
of the noblest and handsomest of brothers. Yet
an annual visit to the far closet of Pierre no
slight undertaking now for one so stricken in years,
and every way infirm attested the earnestness
of that strong sense of duty, that painful renunciation
of self, which had induced her voluntarily to part
with the precious memorial.
IV.
“Tell me, aunt,” the child
Pierre had early said to her, long before the portrait
became his “tell me, aunt, how this
chair-portrait, as you call it, was painted; who
painted it? whose chair was this? have
you the chair now? I don’t see it
in your room here; what is papa looking
at so strangely? I should like to know now,
what papa was thinking of, then. Do, now, dear
aunt, tell me all about this picture, so that when
it is mine, as you promise me, I shall know its whole
history.”
“Sit down, then, and be very
still and attentive, my dear child,” said aunt
Dorothea; while she a little averted her head, and
tremulously and inaccurately sought her pocket, till
little Pierre cried “Why, aunt, the
story of the picture is not in any little book, is
it, that you are going to take out and read to me?”
“My handkerchief, my child.”
“Why, aunt, here it is, at your
elbow; here, on the table; here, aunt; take it, do;
Oh, don’t tell me any thing about the picture,
now; I won’t hear it.”
“Be still, my darling Pierre,”
said his aunt, taking the handkerchief, “draw
the curtain a little, dearest; the light hurts my eyes.
Now, go into the closet, and bring me my dark shawl; take
your time. There; thank you, Pierre; now
sit down again, and I will begin. The picture
was painted long ago, my child; you were not born then.”
“Not born?” cried little Pierre.
“Not born,” said his aunt.
“Well, go on, aunt; but don’t
tell me again that once upon a time I was not little
Pierre at all, and yet my father was alive. Go
on, aunt, do, do!”
“Why, how nervous you are getting,
my child; Be patient; I am very old, Pierre;
and old people never like to be hurried.”
“Now, my own dear Aunt Dorothea,
do forgive me this once, and go on with your story.”
“When your poor father was quite
a young man, my child, and was on one of his long
autumnal visits to his friends in this city, he was
rather intimate at times with a cousin of his, Ralph
Winwood, who was about his own age, a fine
youth he was, too, Pierre.”
“I never saw him, aunt; pray,
where is he now?” interrupted Pierre; “does
he live in the country, now, as mother and I do?”
“Yes, my child; but a far-away,
beautiful country, I hope; he’s in
heaven, I trust.”
“Dead,” sighed little Pierre “go
on, aunt.”
“Now, cousin Ralph had a great
love for painting, my child; and he spent many hours
in a room, hung all round with pictures and portraits;
and there he had his easel and brushes; and much liked
to paint his friends, and hang their faces on his
walls; so that when all alone by himself, he yet had
plenty of company, who always wore their best expressions
to him, and never once ruffled him, by ever getting
cross or ill-natured, little Pierre. Often, he
had besought your father to sit to him; saying, that
his silent circle of friends would never be complete,
till your father consented to join them. But in
those days, my child, your father was always in motion.
It was hard for me to get him to stand still, while
I tied his cravat; for he never came to any one but
me for that. So he was always putting off, and
putting off cousin Ralph. ’Some other time,
cousin; not to-day; to-morrow, perhaps; or
next week;’ and so, at last cousin
Ralph began to despair. But I’ll catch
him yet, cried sly cousin Ralph. So now he said
nothing more to your father about the matter of painting
him; but every pleasant morning kept his easel and
brushes and every thing in readiness; so as to be ready
the first moment your father should chance to drop
in upon him from his long strolls; for it was now
and then your father’s wont to pay flying little
visits to cousin Ralph in his painting-room. But,
my child, you may draw back the curtain now it’s
getting very dim here, seems to me.”
“Well, I thought so all along,
aunt,” said little Pierre, obeying; “but
didn’t you say the light hurt your eyes.”
“But it does not now, little Pierre.”
“Well, well; go on, go on, aunt;
you can’t think how interested I am,”
said little Pierre, drawing his stool close up to the
quilted satin hem of his good Aunt Dorothea’s
dress.
“I will, my child. But
first let me tell you, that about this time there
arrived in the port, a cabin-full of French emigrants
of quality; poor people, Pierre, who were
forced to fly from their native land, because of the
cruel, blood-shedding times there. But you have
read all that in the little history I gave you, a
good while ago.”
“I know all about it; the
French Revolution,” said little Pierre.
“What a famous little scholar
you are, my dear child,” said Aunt
Dorothea, faintly smiling “among those
poor, but noble emigrants, there was a beautiful young
girl, whose sad fate afterward made a great noise
in the city, and made many eyes to weep, but in vain,
for she never was heard of any more.”
“How? how? aunt; I
don’t understand; did she disappear
then, aunt?”
“I was a little before my story,
child. Yes, she did disappear, and never was
heard of again; but that was afterward, some time afterward,
my child. I am very sure it was; I could take
my oath of that, Pierre.”
“Why, dear aunt,” said
little Pierre, “how earnestly you talk after
what? your voice is getting very strange; do now; don’t
talk that way; you frighten me so, aunt.”
“Perhaps it is this bad cold
I have to-day; it makes my voice a little hoarse,
I fear, Pierre. But I will try and not talk so
hoarsely again. Well, my child, some time before
this beautiful young lady disappeared, indeed it was
only shortly after the poor emigrants landed, your
father made her acquaintance; and with many other
humane gentlemen of the city, provided for the wants
of the strangers, for they were very poor indeed,
having been stripped of every thing, save a little
trifling jewelry, which could not go very far.
At last, the friends of your father endeavored to
dissuade him from visiting these people so much; they
were fearful that as the young lady was so very beautiful,
and a little inclined to be intriguing so
some said your father might be tempted to
marry her; which would not have been a wise thing in
him; for though the young lady might have been very
beautiful, and good-hearted, yet no one on this side
the water certainly knew her history; and she was a
foreigner; and would not have made so suitable and
excellent a match for your father as your dear mother
afterward did, my child. But, for myself, I who
always knew your father very well in all his intentions,
and he was very confidential with me, too I,
for my part, never credited that he would do so unwise
a thing as marry the strange young lady. At any
rate, he at last discontinued his visits to the emigrants;
and it was after this that the young lady disappeared.
Some said that she must have voluntarily but secretly
returned into her own country; and others declared
that she must have been kidnapped by French emissaries;
for, after her disappearance, rumor began to hint that
she was of the noblest birth, and some ways allied
to the royal family; and then, again, there were some
who shook their heads darkly, and muttered of drownings,
and other dark things; which one always hears hinted
when people disappear, and no one can find them.
But though your father and many other gentlemen moved
heaven and earth to find trace of her, yet, as I said
before, my child, she never re-appeared.”
“The poor French lady!”
sighed little Pierre. “Aunt, I’m afraid
she was murdered.”
“Poor lady, there is no telling,”
said his aunt. “But listen, for I am coming
to the picture again. Now, at the time your father
was so often visiting the emigrants, my child, cousin
Ralph was one of those who a little fancied that your
father was courting her; but cousin Ralph being a
quiet young man, and a scholar, not well acquainted
with what is wise, or what is foolish in the great
world; cousin Ralph would not have been at all mortified
had your father really wedded with the refugee young
lady. So vainly thinking, as I told you, that
your father was courting her, he fancied it would
be a very fine thing if he could paint your father
as her wooer; that is, paint him just after his coming
from his daily visits to the emigrants. So he
watched his chance; every thing being ready in his
painting-room, as I told you before; and one morning,
sure enough, in dropt your father from his walk.
But before he came into the room, cousin Ralph had
spied him from the window; and when your father entered,
cousin Ralph had the sitting-chair ready drawn out,
back of his easel, but still fronting toward him, and
pretended to be very busy painting. He said to
your father ’Glad to see you, cousin
Pierre; I am just about something here; sit right down
there now, and tell me the news; and I’ll sally
out with you presently. And tell us something
of the emigrants, cousin Pierre,’ he slyly added wishing,
you see, to get your father’s thoughts running
that supposed wooing way, so that he might catch some
sort of corresponding expression you see, little Pierre.”
“I don’t know that I precisely
understand, aunt; but go on, I am so interested; do
go on, dear aunt.”
“Well, by many little cunning
shifts and contrivances, cousin Ralph kept your father
there sitting, and sitting in the chair, rattling and
rattling away, and so self-forgetful too, that he never
heeded that all the while sly cousin Ralph was painting
and painting just as fast as ever he could; and only
making believe laugh at your father’s wit; in
short, cousin Ralph was stealing his portrait, my child.”
“Not stealing it, I hope,”
said Pierre, “that would be very wicked.”
“Well, then, we won’t
call it stealing, since I am sure that cousin Ralph
kept your father all the time off from him, and so,
could not have possibly picked his pocket, though
indeed, he slyly picked his portrait, so to speak.
And if indeed it was stealing, or any thing of that
sort; yet seeing how much comfort that portrait has
been to me, Pierre, and how much it will yet be to
you, I hope; I think we must very heartily forgive
cousin Ralph, for what he then did.”
“Yes, I think we must indeed,”
chimed in little Pierre, now eagerly eying the very
portrait in question, which hung over the mantle.
“Well, by catching your father
two or three times more in that way, cousin Ralph
at last finished the painting; and when it was all
framed, and every way completed, he would have surprised
your father by hanging it boldly up in his room among
his other portraits, had not your father one morning
suddenly come to him while, indeed, the
very picture itself was placed face down on a table
and cousin Ralph fixing the cord to it came
to him, and frightened cousin Ralph by quietly saying,
that now that he thought of it, it seemed to him that
cousin Ralph had been playing tricks with him; but
he hoped it was not so. ‘What do you mean?’
said cousin Ralph, a little flurried. ’You
have not been hanging my portrait up here, have you,
cousin Ralph?’ said your father, glancing along
the walls. ’I’m glad I don’t
see it. It is my whim, cousin Ralph, and
perhaps it is a very silly one, but if you
have been lately painting my portrait, I want you
to destroy it; at any rate, don’t show it to
any one, keep it out of sight. What’s that
you have there, cousin Ralph?’
“Cousin Ralph was now more and
more fluttered; not knowing what to make as
indeed, to this day, I don’t completely myself of
your father’s strange manner. But he rallied,
and said ’This, cousin Pierre, is
a secret portrait I have here; you must be aware that
we portrait-painters are sometimes called upon to
paint such. I, therefore, can not show it to
you, or tell you any thing about it.’
“‘Have you been painting
my portrait or not, cousin Ralph?’ said your
father, very suddenly and pointedly.
“‘I have painted nothing
that looks as you there look,’ said cousin Ralph,
evasively, observing in your father’s face a
fierce-like expression, which he had never seen there
before. And more than that, your father could
not get from him.”
“And what then?” said little Pierre.
“Why not much, my child; only
your father never so much as caught one glimpse of
that picture; indeed, never knew for certain, whether
there was such a painting in the world. Cousin
Ralph secretly gave it to me, knowing how tenderly
I loved your father; making me solemnly promise never
to expose it anywhere where your father could ever
see it, or any way hear of it. This promise I
faithfully kept; and it was only after your dear father’s
death, that I hung it in my chamber. There, Pierre,
you now have the story of the chair-portrait.”
“And a very strange one it is,”
said Pierre “and so interesting, I
shall never forget it, aunt.”
“I hope you never will, my child.
Now ring the bell, and we will have a little fruit-cake,
and I will take a glass of wine, Pierre; do
you hear, my child? the bell ring
it. Why, what do you do standing there, Pierre?”
“Why didn’t papa
want to have cousin Ralph paint his picture, aunt?”
“How these children’s
minds do run!” exclaimed old aunt Dorothea staring
at little Pierre in amazement “That
indeed is more than I can tell you, little Pierre.
But cousin Ralph had a foolish fancy about it.
He used to tell me, that being in your father’s
room some few days after the last scene I described,
he noticed there a very wonderful work on Physiognomy,
as they call it, in which the strangest and shadowiest
rules were laid down for detecting people’s innermost
secrets by studying their faces. And so, foolish
cousin Ralph always flattered himself, that the reason
your father did not want his portrait taken was, because
he was secretly in love with the French young lady,
and did not want his secret published in a portrait;
since the wonderful work on Physiognomy had, as it
were, indirectly warned him against running that risk.
But cousin Ralph being such a retired and solitary
sort of a youth, he always had such curious whimsies
about things. For my part, I don’t believe
your father ever had any such ridiculous ideas on the
subject. To be sure, I myself can not tell you
why he did not want his picture taken; but
when you get to be as old as I am, little Pierre, you
will find that every one, even the best of us, at times,
is apt to act very queerly and unaccountably; indeed
some things we do, we can not entirely explain the
reason of, even to ourselves, little Pierre. But
you will know all about these strange matters by and
by.”
“I hope I shall, aunt,”
said little Pierre “But, dear aunt,
I thought Marten was to bring in some fruit-cake?”
“Ring the bell for him, then, my child.”
“Oh! I forgot,” said little Pierre,
doing her bidding.
By-and-by, while the aunt was sipping
her wine; and the boy eating his cake, and both their
eyes were fixed on the portrait in question; little
Pierre, pushing his stool nearer the picture exclaimed “Now,
aunt, did papa really look exactly like that?
Did you ever see him in that same buff vest, and huge-figured
neckcloth? I remember the seal and key, pretty
well; and it was only a week ago that I saw mamma take
them out of a little locked drawer in her wardrobe but
I don’t remember the queer whiskers; nor the
buff vest; nor the huge white-figured neckcloth; did
you ever see papa in that very neckcloth, aunt?”
“My child, it was I that chose
the stuff for that neckcloth; yes, and hemmed it for
him, and worked P. G. in one corner; but that aint
in the picture. It is an excellent likeness,
my child, neckcloth and all; as he looked at that
time. Why, little Pierre, sometimes I sit here
all alone by myself, gazing, and gazing, and gazing
at that face, till I begin to think your father is
looking at me, and smiling at me, and nodding at me,
and saying Dorothea! Dorothea!”
“How strange,” said little
Pierre, “I think it begins to look at me now,
aunt. Hark! aunt, it’s so silent all round
in this old-fashioned room, that I think I hear a
little jingling in the picture, as if the watch-seal
was striking against the key Hark! aunt.”
“Bless me, don’t talk so strangely, my
child.”
“I heard mamma say once but
she did not say so to me that, for her
part, she did not like aunt Dorothea’s picture;
it was not a good likeness, so she said. Why
don’t mamma like the picture, aunt?”
“My child, you ask very queer
questions. If your mamma don’t like the
picture, it is for a very plain reason. She has
a much larger and finer one at home, which she had
painted for herself; yes, and paid I don’t know
how many hundred dollars for it; and that, too, is
an excellent likeness, that must be the reason,
little Pierre.”
And thus the old aunt and the little
child ran on; each thinking the other very strange;
and both thinking the picture still stranger; and
the face in the picture still looked at them frankly,
and cheerfully, as if there was nothing kept concealed;
and yet again, a little ambiguously and mockingly,
as if slyly winking to some other picture, to mark
what a very foolish old sister, and what a very silly
little son, were growing so monstrously grave and
speculative about a huge white-figured neckcloth,
a buff vest, and a very gentleman-like and amiable
countenance.
And so, after this scene, as usual,
one by one, the fleet years ran on; till the little
child Pierre had grown up to be the tall Master Pierre,
and could call the picture his own; and now, in the
privacy of his own little closet, could stand, or
lean, or sit before it all day long, if he pleased,
and keep thinking, and thinking, and thinking, and
thinking, till by-and-by all thoughts were blurred,
and at last there were no thoughts at all.
Before the picture was sent to him,
in his fifteenth year, it had been only through the
inadvertence of his mother, or rather through a casual
passing into a parlor by Pierre, that he had any way
learned that his mother did not approve of the picture.
Because, as then Pierre was still young, and the picture
was the picture of his father, and the cherished property
of a most excellent, and dearly-beloved, affectionate
aunt; therefore the mother, with an intuitive delicacy,
had refrained from knowingly expressing her peculiar
opinion in the presence of little Pierre. And
this judicious, though half-unconscious delicacy in
the mother, had been perhaps somewhat singularly answered
by a like nicety of sentiment in the child; for children
of a naturally refined organization, and a gentle
nurture, sometimes possess a wonderful, and often
undreamed of, daintiness of propriety, and thoughtfulness,
and forbearance, in matters esteemed a little subtile
even by their elders, and self-elected betters.
The little Pierre never disclosed to his mother that
he had, through another person, become aware of her
thoughts concerning Aunt Dorothea’s portrait;
he seemed to possess an intuitive knowledge of the
circumstance, that from the difference of their relationship
to his father, and for other minute reasons, he could
in some things, with the greater propriety, be more
inquisitive concerning him, with his aunt, than with
his mother, especially touching the matter of the
chair-portrait. And Aunt Dorothea’s reasons
accounting for his mother’s distaste, long continued
satisfactory, or at least not unsufficiently explanatory.
And when the portrait arrived at the
Meadows, it so chanced that his mother was abroad;
and so Pierre silently hung it up in his closet; and
when after a day or two his mother returned, he said
nothing to her about its arrival, being still strangely
alive to that certain mild mystery which invested
it, and whose sacredness now he was fearful of violating,
by provoking any discussion with his mother about Aunt
Dorothea’s gift, or by permitting himself to
be improperly curious concerning the reasons of his
mother’s private and self-reserved opinions
of it. But the first time and it was
not long after the arrival of the portrait that
he knew of his mother’s having entered his closet;
then, when he next saw her, he was prepared to hear
what she should voluntarily say about the late addition
to its embellishments; but as she omitted all mention
of any thing of that sort, he unobtrusively scanned
her countenance, to mark whether any little clouding
emotion might be discoverable there. But he could
discern none. And as all genuine delicacies are
by their nature accumulative; therefore this reverential,
mutual, but only tacit forbearance of the mother and
son, ever after continued uninvaded. And it was
another sweet, and sanctified, and sanctifying bond
between them. For, whatever some lovers may sometimes
say, love does not always abhor a secret, as nature
is said to abhor a vacuum. Love is built upon
secrets, as lovely Venice upon invisible and incorruptible
piles in the sea. Love’s secrets, being
mysteries, ever pertain to the transcendent and the
infinite; and so they are as airy bridges, by which
our further shadows pass over into the regions of
the golden mists and exhalations; whence all poetical,
lovely thoughts are engendered, and drop into us,
as though pearls should drop from rainbows.
As time went on, the chasteness and
pure virginity of this mutual reservation, only served
to dress the portrait in sweeter, because still more
mysterious attractions; and to fling, as it were, fresh
fennel and rosemary around the revered memory of the
father. Though, indeed, as previously recounted,
Pierre now and then loved to present to himself for
some fanciful solution the penultimate secret of the
portrait, in so far, as that involved his mother’s
distaste; yet the cunning analysis in which such a
mental procedure would involve him, never voluntarily
transgressed that sacred limit, where his mother’s
peculiar repugnance began to shade off into ambiguous
considerations, touching any unknown possibilities
in the character and early life of the original.
Not, that he had altogether forbidden his fancy to
range in such fields of speculation; but all such
imaginings must be contributory to that pure, exalted
idea of his father, which, in his soul, was based upon
the known acknowledged facts of his father’s
life.
V.
If, when the mind roams up and down
in the ever-elastic regions of evanescent invention,
any definite form or feature can be assigned to the
multitudinous shapes it creates out of the incessant
dissolvings of its own prior creations; then might
we here attempt to hold and define the least shadowy
of those reasons, which about the period of adolescence
we now treat of, more frequently occurred to Pierre,
whenever he essayed to account for his mother’s
remarkable distaste for the portrait. Yet will
we venture one sketch.
Yes sometimes dimly thought
Pierre who knows but cousin Ralph, after
all, may have been not so very far from the truth,
when he surmised that at one time my father did indeed
cherish some passing emotion for the beautiful young
Frenchwoman. And this portrait being painted at
that precise time, and indeed with the precise purpose
of perpetuating some shadowy testification of the
fact in the countenance of the original: therefore,
its expression is not congenial, is not familiar, is
not altogether agreeable to my mother: because,
not only did my father’s features never look
so to her (since it was afterward that she first became
acquainted with him), but also, that certain womanliness
of women; that thing I should perhaps call a tender
jealousy, a fastidious vanity, in any other lady,
enables her to perceive that the glance of the face
in the portrait, is not, in some nameless way, dedicated
to herself, but to some other and unknown object;
and therefore, is she impatient of it, and it is repelling
to her; for she must naturally be intolerant of any
imputed reminiscence in my father, which is not in
some way connected with her own recollections of him.
Whereas, the larger and more expansive
portrait in the great drawing-room, taken in the prime
of life; during the best and rosiest days of their
wedded union; at the particular desire of my mother;
and by a celebrated artist of her own election, and
costumed after her own taste; and on all hands considered
to be, by those who know, a singularly happy likeness
at the period; a belief spiritually reinforced by
my own dim infantile remembrances; for all these reasons,
this drawing-room portrait possesses an inestimable
charm to her; there, she indeed beholds her husband
as he had really appeared to her; she does not vacantly
gaze upon an unfamiliar phantom called up from the
distant, and, to her, well-nigh fabulous days of my
father’s bachelor life. But in that other
portrait, she sees rehearsed to her fond eyes, the
latter tales and legends of his devoted wedded love.
Yes, I think now that I plainly see it must be so.
And yet, ever new conceits come vaporing up in me,
as I look on the strange chair-portrait: which,
though so very much more unfamiliar to me, than it
can possibly be to my mother, still sometimes seems
to say Pierre, believe not the drawing-room
painting; that is not thy father; or, at least, is
not all of thy father. Consider in thy
mind, Pierre, whether we two paintings may not make
only one. Faithful wives are ever over-fond to
a certain imaginary image of their husbands; and faithful
widows are ever over-reverential to a certain imagined
ghost of that same imagined image, Pierre. Look
again, I am thy father as he more truly was.
In mature life, the world overlays and varnishes us,
Pierre; the thousand proprieties and polished finenesses
and grimaces intervene, Pierre; then, we, as it were,
abdicate ourselves, and take unto us another self,
Pierre; in youth we are, Pierre, but in age
we seem. Look again. I am thy real
father, so much the more truly, as thou thinkest thou
recognizest me not, Pierre. To their young children,
fathers are not wont to unfold themselves entirely,
Pierre. There are a thousand and one odd little
youthful peccadilloes, that we think we may as well
not divulge to them, Pierre. Consider this strange,
ambiguous smile, Pierre; more narrowly regard this
mouth. Behold, what is this too ardent and, as
it were, unchastened light in these eyes, Pierre?
I am thy father, boy. There was once a certain,
oh, but too lovely young Frenchwoman, Pierre.
Youth is hot, and temptation strong, Pierre; and in
the minutest moment momentous things are irrevocably
done, Pierre; and Time sweeps on, and the thing is
not always carried down by its stream, but may be left
stranded on its bank; away beyond, in the young, green
countries, Pierre. Look again. Doth thy
mother dislike me for naught? Consider. Do
not all her spontaneous, loving impressions, ever
strive to magnify, and spiritualize, and deify, her
husband’s memory, Pierre? Then why doth
she cast despite upon me; and never speak to thee
of me; and why dost thou thyself keep silence before
her, Pierre? Consider. Is there no little
mystery here? Probe a little, Pierre. Never
fear, never fear. No matter for thy father now.
Look, do I not smile? yes, and with an unchangeable
smile; and thus have I unchangeably smiled for many
long years gone by, Pierre. Oh, it is a permanent
smile! Thus I smiled to cousin Ralph; and thus
in thy dear old Aunt Dorothea’s parlor, Pierre;
and just so, I smile here to thee, and even thus in
thy father’s later life, when his body may have
been in grief, still hidden away in Aunt
Dorothea’s secretary I thus smiled
as before; and just so I’d smile were I now
hung up in the deepest dungeon of the Spanish Inquisition,
Pierre; though suspended in outer darkness, still
would I smile with this smile, though then not a soul
should be near. Consider; for a smile is the
chosen vehicle for all ambiguities, Pierre. When
we would deceive, we smile; when we are hatching any
nice little artifice, Pierre; only just a little gratifying
our own sweet little appetites, Pierre; then watch
us, and out comes the odd little smile. Once upon
a time, there was a lovely young Frenchwoman, Pierre.
Have you carefully, and analytically, and psychologically,
and metaphysically, considered her belongings and
surroundings, and all her incidentals, Pierre?
Oh, a strange sort of story, that, thy dear old Aunt
Dorothea once told thee, Pierre. I once knew
a credulous old soul, Pierre. Probe, probe a little see there
seems one little crack there, Pierre a wedge,
a wedge. Something ever comes of all persistent
inquiry; we are not so continually curious for nothing,
Pierre; not for nothing, do we so intrigue and become
wily diplomatists, and glozers with our own minds,
Pierre; and afraid of following the Indian trail from
the open plain into the dark thickets, Pierre; but
enough; a word to the wise.
Thus sometimes in the mystical, outer
quietude of the long country nights; either when the
hushed mansion was banked round by the thick-fallen
December snows, or banked round by the immovable white
August moonlight; in the haunted repose of a wide story,
tenanted only by himself; and sentineling his own
little closet; and standing guard, as it were, before
the mystical tent of the picture; and ever watching
the strangely concealed lights of the meanings that
so mysteriously moved to and fro within; thus sometimes
stood Pierre before the portrait of his father, unconsciously
throwing himself open to all those ineffable hints
and ambiguities, and undefined half-suggestions, which
now and then people the soul’s atmosphere, as
thickly as in a soft, steady snow-storm, the snow-flakes
people the air. Yet as often starting from these
reveries and trances, Pierre would regain the assured
element of consciously bidden and self-propelled thought;
and then in a moment the air all cleared, not a snow-flake
descended, and Pierre, upbraiding himself for his
self-indulgent infatuation, would promise never again
to fall into a midnight revery before the chair-portrait
of his father. Nor did the streams of these reveries
seem to leave any conscious sediment in his mind;
they were so light and so rapid, that they rolled
their own alluvial along; and seemed to leave all Pierre’s
thought-channels as clean and dry as though never any
alluvial stream had rolled there at all.
And so still in his sober, cherishing
memories, his father’s beatification remained
untouched; and all the strangeness of the portrait
only served to invest his idea with a fine, legendary
romance; the essence whereof was that very mystery,
which at other times was so subtly and evilly significant.
But now, now! Isabel’s
letter read: swift as the first light that slides
from the sun, Pierre saw all preceding ambiguities,
all mysteries ripped open as if with a keen sword,
and forth trooped thickening phantoms of an infinite
gloom. Now his remotest infantile reminiscences the
wandering mind of his father the empty hand,
and the ashen the strange story of Aunt
Dorothea the mystical midnight suggestions
of the portrait itself; and, above all, his mother’s
intuitive aversion, all, all overwhelmed him with reciprocal
testimonies.
And now, by irresistible intuitions,
all that had been inexplicably mysterious to him in
the portrait, and all that had been inexplicably familiar
in the face, most magically these now coincided; the
merriness of the one not inharmonious with the mournfulness
of the other, but by some ineffable correlativeness,
they reciprocally identified each other, and, as it
were, melted into each other, and thus interpenetratingly
uniting, presented lineaments of an added supernaturalness.
On all sides, the physical world of
solid objects now slidingly displaced itself from
around him, and he floated into an ether of visions;
and, starting to his feet with clenched hands and outstaring
eyes at the transfixed face in the air, he ejaculated
that wonderful verse from Dante, descriptive of the
two mutually absorbing shapes in the Inferno:
“Ah!
how dost thou change,
Agnello! See! thou art
not double now,
Nor only one!”