“Then
lock thee fast
Alone within thy chamber, there fall down
On both thy knees, and grovel on the ground:
Cry to thy heart: wash every word
thou utter’st
In tears (and if’t be possible)
of blood:
Beg Heaven to cleanse the leprosy.”
FORD’S PLAYS.
Armstrong, upon the departure of Holden,
sat moodily pondering what had been told him.
Were his emotions those of pleasure or of pain?
At first, the former. The natural goodness of
his disposition made him instinctively rejoice in
the happiness of his friend. For a few moments,
he forgot himself, and, as long as the forgetfulness
lasted, was happy in the participation of the other’s
hopes. But this frame of mind was only momentary.
We have seen how an answer of Holden was sufficient
to restore his gloom. Thoughts chased each other
in wild confusion, over which he had no control, which
he reproached himself for admitting which
he would have excluded, if he could. The connection
between him and the Solitary was one of mutual misfortune.
Sorrow was the ligament that united them. For
years had he known Holden, but it was only within
a short time, namely, since an awakened conscience
(so he judged, himself) had revealed to him his own
hideousness, that he had been attracted to the Solitary.
Should Holden recover his son, should his heart expand
once more to admit worldly joys, would it not be closed
to him? As he once felt indifference towards
Holden, so would not Holden, by a change of circumstances,
by the awakening of new desires and new hopes, by the
occupancy of emotions the more delightful because
fresh and for so long unexperienced, stand to him
in other and colder relations? These reflections
were not clear, distinct, sharply defined. They
drove through his mind, ragged and torn, like storm-clouds
chased by the tempest.
There were two beings struggling with
one another in him the one striving to
encourage the noble feelings of his nature, and drive
away whatever was inconsistent with truth and reason the
other whispering doubt, and selfishness, and despair.
He rose and paced, with rapid steps, the room.
“Has it come to this?”
he said to himself, as if wondering at his condition.
“Am I become incapable of participating in the
happiness of others? Am I a festering mass of
selfishness? O! once it was not so. I will
resist these thoughts which come from the bottomless
pit. They shall not master me. They are
the temptations of the Evil One. But can I resist
them? Have I not grieved away the spirit?
Is there place for repentance? Am I not like
Esau, who sought it in vain with many tears?
If he was refused the grace of God, why not I?
Why not I, that I may go to my own place? Already
I feel and know my destiny. I feel it in the
terrible looking for of judgment. I feel it in
that I do not love my neighbor. If I did, would
I not sympathize in his happiness? Would this
wretched self for ever interpose? I never knew
myself before. I now know the unutterable vileness
of my heart. I would hide it from Thee, my God.
I would hide it from Thy holy angels from
myself.”
That day, Mr. Armstrong stirred not
from the house, as long as the sun remained above
the horizon. The golden sunshine deepened his
mental gloom. Nor to his eyes was it golden.
It was a coppery, unnatural light. It looked
poisonous. It seemed as if the young leaves of
spring ought to wither in its glare.
He heard the laugh of a man in the
street, and started as if he had been stung.
It sounded like the mockery of a fiend. Was the
laugh directed at him? He started, and ran to
the window, with a feeling of anger, to see who it
was that was triumphing over his misery. He looked
up and down the street, but could see no one.
The disappointment still further irritated him.
Was he to be refused the poor satisfaction of knowing
who had wounded him? Was the assassin to be permitted
to stab him in the back? Was he not to be allowed
to defend himself? He returned and resumed his
seat, trembling all over. Faith’s canary
bird was singing, at the top of its voice. Armstrong
turned and looked at it. The little thing, with
fluttering wings and elevated head, and moving a foot,
as if beating time, poured out a torrent of melody.
The sounds, its actions, grated on his feelings.
He rose and removed it into another room.
He folded his arms, his head fell
upon his chest, and he shut his eyes to exclude the
light. “I am out of harmony with all creation,”
he said. “I am fit for a place where no
bird ever sings. This is the evidence of my doom.
Only the blessed can be in harmony with God’s
works. Heaven is harmony the music
of his laws. Evil is discord myself
am discord.”
Faith had still some influence over
him, though even at her entrance he started “like
a guilty thing surprised.” Her presence
was a charm to abate the violence of the hurricane.
He could not resist the gentle tones of her voice,
and at the spell his calmed spirit trembled into comparative
repose. Armstrong acknowledged it to himself as
an augury of good.
I cannot be wholly evil, he thought,
if the approach of a pure angel gives me pleasure.
The touch of Ithuriel’s spear reveals deformity
where it exists; in me it discloses beauty.
With her he could talk over the ordinary
affairs of the day with calmness, though it is singular,
considering the perfect confidence between them, that
he never adverted to the communication of Holden,
notwithstanding he knew it would possess the highest
interest for her. It betrays, perhaps, the weakened
and diseased condition of a mind, wincing like an
inflamed limb at the apprehension of a touch.
As the father listened and looked
at his child, he felt transported into a region whither
the demons could not come. They could not endure
her purity; they could not abide her brightness.
Her influence was a barrier mightier than the wall
that encircled Paradise, and over which no evil thing
could leap. He therefore kept her by him as much
as possible. He manifested uneasiness when she
was away. His consolation and hope was Faith.
As the Roman prisoner drank life from the pure fountains
to which he had given life, so Armstrong drew strength
from the angelic spirit his own had kindled.
Yet was his daughter unconscious of
the whole influence she exerted, nor had she even
a distant apprehension of the chaos of his mind.
How would she have been startled could she have beheld
the seething cauldron! But into that, only the
Eye that surveys all things could look.
Thus several days passed by.
An ordinary observer would have noticed no change
in Armstrong, except that his appetite diminished,
and he seemed restless. Doctor Elmer and Faith
both remarked these symptoms, but they did not alarm
the former, though they grieved the latter. Accustomed
to repose unlimited confidence in the medical skill
of the physician, and too modest to have an opinion
adverse to that of another older than herself, and
in a department wherewith he was familiar, and she
had no knowledge except what was colored by filial
fears and affection, and, perhaps, distorted by them
out of its reasonable proportions, Faith went on from
day to day, hoping that a favorable change would take
place, and that she should have the happiness of seeing
her dear father restored to his former cheerfulness.
It is painful to follow the sad moods
of a noble mind, conscious of its aberrations, and
yet unable to control them. We have not the power
of analysis capable of tracing it through all its windings,
and exhibiting it naked to the view, and if we had,
might shrink from the task, as from one inflicting
unnecessary pain, both on the writer and the reader.
It is our object only so far to sketch the state of
Armstrong’s mind, as to make his conduct intelligible.
His restlessness has been alluded
to. He found himself unable to sleep as formerly.
Long after retiring to rest he would lie wide awake,
vainly courting the gentle influence that seemed to
shun him the more it was wooed. The rays of the
morning sun would sometimes stream into the window
before sleep had visited his eyelids, and he would
rise haggard, and weary, and desponding. And
if he did sink into slumber, it was not always into
forgetfulness, but into a confused mist of dreams,
more harassing than even his waking thoughts.
The difficulty of obtaining sleep had lately induced
a habit of reading late into the night, and not unfrequently
even into the morning hours. Long after his daughter
had sought her chamber, and when she supposed he was
in bed, he was seated in his solitary room, trying
to fasten his attention on a book, and to produce
the condition favorable to repose. The darkness
of his mind sought congenial gloom. If he opened
the sacred volume, he turned not to the gracious promises
of reconciliation and pardon, and the softened theology
of the New Testament, or to those visions of a future
state of beatitude, which occasionally light up the
sombre pages of the Old, as if the gates of Paradise
were for a moment opened, to let out a radiance on
a darkness that would else be too disheartening and
distracting; but to the wailings of the prophets and
denunciations of punishment. These he fastened
on with a fatal tenacity, and by a perverted ingenuity,
in some way or other connected with himself, and made
applicable to his own circumstances. Naught could
pass through his imagination or memory, but, by some
diabolical alchemy, was stripped of its sanative and
healthful properties, and converted into harm.
“Young’s Night Thoughts”
was a book that possessed peculiar attractions.
For hours would he hang over its distressful pages,
and many were the leaves blotted by his tears.
Yet those tears relieved him not. Still, from
time to time, would he recur to the book, as if tempted
by a fascination he could not resist, striving to find,
if possible, in the wretchedness of another, a lower
deep than his own. Especially in the solemn hours
of the night, when the silence was so profound, he
could fancy he heard the flickering of the candles,
he read the book. Then hanging upon image after
image of those deploring strains, and appropriating
all their melancholy, intensified through the lens
of his own dark imagination, he would sink from one
depth of wretchedness to another, till he seemed lost
away, where no ray of light could ever penetrate,
or plummet sound.
He had been reading one night late,
until as if unable to endure the images of woe it
conjured up, he pushed the book away from him.
The night was dark and stormy, and the rain pouring
in torrents. He walked to the window and looked
out. He could see nothing, except as the landscape
was revealed for an instant by a flash of lightning.
He could hear nothing, except the peals of thunder
rolling through the valleys. He took a candle,
and walked cautiously to the door of Faith’s
chamber, to see if she were asleep. The door was
ajar, for the purpose of ventilation, and, shading
the light with his hand, Armstrong could see the face
of his sleeping daughter without waking her.
She lay in the profound slumber of health and youth,
undisturbed by the noise of the thunder, as one conscious
of a protecting Providence. Her left hand was
under her cheek, the black hair combed back, and collected
under the snowy cap. Her breathing was scarcely
perceptible, but soft and quiet as an infant’s.
An expression of happiness rested on her features,
and the color was a little kindled in her cheek, looking
brighter in contrast with the linen sheet.
“She sleeps,” he thought,
“as if there were no sin and misery in the world.
And why should she not? What has she to do with
them? Were my spiritual eyes opened, I should
see the protecting angels in shining garments around
her bed, unless my approach has driven them away.
Heaven takes care of its own. So I could sleep
once. Will the time come when she, too, shall
be so guilty she cannot sleep? Almighty God forbid!
Better she were in her grave. They are fortunate
who die young. They are taken from the evil to
come. The heart ceases to beat before it becomes
so hard it cannot repent. Were she to die to-night
her salvation would be assured. What infinite
gain! The murderer could inflict no injury, but
would confer a benefit.”
Why did he start? Why did he
shudder all over? Why did he hastily turn round,
and shut the door, and hasten to his own room, locking
it after him? Why was it he took something from
his pocket, and, opening the window, threw it violently
into the dark? But a moment Armstrong remained
in his room. Blowing out the candles, and noiselessly
descending the stairs, he as quietly opened and shut
the front door, and stood in the open air.
The storm was at its height.
The rain poured with such violence that in the flashes
of lightning he could see the large drops leap from
the ground. But he felt not that he was wet to
the skin. He minded not that he had left the
house without a hat, and that the water was running
in streams from his head to the earth. With a
rapid pace, approaching running, he fled through the
streets, until he reached the grave-yard. Without
a ray to guide him, through a darkness that might
be felt, he found his way to a grave, it was his wife’s.
He threw himself prostrate on his face, and lay motionless.
When Armstrong raised himself from
the ground the storm had ceased, the clouds had left
the sky, and the stars were shining brilliantly.
He gazed around, then looked up into the blue vault.
What were those innumerable shining points? Were
they worlds, as the learned have said? Were they
inhabited by beings like himself, doomed to sin and
suffer? Did they suffer, more or less? Could
the errors of a few years be expiated by sufferings
of ages, as countless as the grains of sand on the
seashore? He struck the palm of his hand violently
on his forehead; he threw out his arm, as if in defiance,
toward heaven, and groaned aloud. It seemed as
though from every heaped-up grave that groan was echoed,
and called to him like an invitation to join the hosts
of darkness. He started, and looked again at the
gruel sky. But no voice of comfort was breathed
thence. The silver stars were now sparks of an
universal conflagration. With a gesture of despair,
he left the city of the dead.
Silence and darkness still shrouded
the house of Mr. Armstrong on his return. He
closed the door quietly after him, and, cautiously
as he had descended, ascended the stairs, which, in
spite of all his precaution, creaked under his feet.
The sounds sent a thrill of alarm through him as though
he feared discovery. It was as if he were returning
from some guilty enterprise. Without striking
a light, he threw off his soaked garments, and got
into bed. Strange, perhaps, to say, he soon fell
into a sleep, deeper and more refreshing than any
he had for a long time enjoyed. It may be that
the excitement of his system was worked off by rapid
motion, and exposure to the night air and rain, or
that nature, unable longer to endure it, sunk beneath
the tension. It was not until a late hour he arose,
when he found breakfast awaiting him. After the
usual greetings, Faith said:
“Here is your penknife, father,
which Felix found lying on the path this morning.
You must have lost it from your pocket.”
Mr. Armstrong took the knife, without
reply, and, when unobserved, dropped it into the fire.