AN UNTIMELY REMINISCENCE.
In spite of nursing and a very strong
constitution, Bressant’s recovery was slow.
The fact was, his mind was restless and disturbed,
and produced a fever in his blood. Large and
powerful as he was, his physical was largely dependent
on his mental well-being, as must always be the case
with persons well organized throughout. He would
never have been so muscular and healthy had his life
not been an undisturbed and self-complacent one.
These questions of the heart and emotions were not
salutary to his body, however beneficial otherwise.
At the same time, no one is quite
himself who is ill, and doubtless Bressant would have
escaped many of his difficulties, and solved others
with comparatively little trouble, if his faculties
had not been untuned by illness. While he was
more open to the influx of all these novel ideas and
problems, he was less able to deal with and dispose
of them. So the professor, while encouraged by
the observation of his apparent progress in the direction
of human feeling and emotional warmth, was concerned
to find him falling off in recuperative power.
Sophie was largely to blame for it.
Bressant was getting to depend too much upon her society.
He brightened when she came in, and was gloomy when
she went out. He liked to talk and argue with
her; to dash waves of logic, impetuous but subtle,
against the rock of her pure intuitions and steady
consistency. He was careful not to go too far;
though, indeed, she usually had the best of the encounter.
Of course his knowledge and trained faculties far
surpassed Sophie’s simple acquirements and modest
learning; but she had a marvelous penetration in seeing
a fallacy, even when she knew not how to expose it;
and she mercilessly pricked many of the conceited
bubbles of his understanding.
Doubtless she would have noticed the
too prominent position which she had come to occupy
in the invalid’s horizon, had not her eyes, so
clear to see every thing else, been blinded by the
fact that he, also, was grown to be of altogether
too much importance to her. She never for a moment
imagined that any thing but an abstract and ideal scheme
for benefiting Bressant was actuating her in her intercourse
with him. She proposed to educate him in pure
beliefs and true aspirations; to show him that there
was more in life than can be mathematically proved.
But that she could derive other than an immaterial
and impersonal enjoyment from it oh, no!
This was quixotic and unpractical,
if nothing worse. What other means of imparting
spiritual knowledge could a young girl like Sophie
have, than to exhibit to her pupil the structure and
workings of her own soul? But this could not
be done with impunity; neither was Bressant a cup,
to be emptied and then refilled with a purer substance.
Young men and women with exalted and ideal views about
each other, cannot do better than to keep out of one
another’s way. Unless they are prepared
to mingle a great deal of what is earthly with their
dreams, they will be apt, sooner or later, to have
a rude awakening.
The conceit of her ideal crusade against
Bressant’s shortcomings blinded Sophie to what
she could not otherwise have helped seeing that
she enjoyed his companionship for its own immediate
sake. She had, perhaps, more direct and simple
strength of character than he; but he made up in other
ways for the lack of it. Besides, he had not taken
measures to obstruct the natural keenness of his vision,
and therefore saw, with comparative clearness, how
the land lay; an immense advantage over Sophie, of
course. But when he came to analyzing and classifying
what he saw, he found his intelligence at fault.
That little episode with Cornelia was the only bit
of experience he had to fall back upon; and that was
more of a puzzle than an assistance to him.
Matters went on thus for about six
weeks, at which time Bressant was still confined to
his room, although decidedly convalescent. It
had seemed to him for some time past that a crisis
would soon be reached in his relations with Sophie,
but what the upshot of it would be he could not conjecture.
He only felt that at present something was concealed that
there were explanations and confessions to be made,
which would have the effect of putting his young nurse
and himself upon more open and intimate terms.
He looked forward to this culmination with impatience,
and yet with anxiety. One morning, when they had
been reading Spenser’s “Faerie Queene,”
Cornelia’s weekly letter was brought in, and
subsequently the conversation turned upon her.
“I used to think she was much
more beautiful than you,” remarked Bressant,
thoughtfully, twisting and turning the palm-leaf fan
he held in his hands. “I don’t think,
now, that I knew what beauty was,” he added,
concentrating his straight eyebrows upon Sophie, in
a scrutinizing look.
“No one could be more beautiful
than Neelie,” said Sophie, with gentle emphasis.
“What has made you change your opinion?”
As she spoke, she closed the book on her lap, and
leaned her cheek upon her hand. Some of the sunshine
fell upon her white dress, but left her face in shadow.
It struck Bressant, however, that the clear morning
light which filled the room emanated from her eyes
rather than from the sunshine.
“I don’t know that I have
changed my opinion,” said he, looking down again
at the fan; “I learn new things every day, that’s
all. Do you ever think about yourself?”
“I suppose I do, sometimes;
nobody can help being conscious of themselves once
in a while.”
“About what you are, compared with other people,
I mean.”
“There’s nothing peculiar
about me; still, I may be different, in some ways,
from other people,” answered Sophie, with simplicity.
“I can judge better about that
than you; there was some use in deafness, and being
alone, and thinking only of fame, and such things.”
“What use?” asked Sophie,
leaning forward, with interest, for he had never spoken
about his former life before.
“The same way that a man who
never drinks has a more delicate sense of taste than
a drunkard,” returned Bressant, apparently pleased
with his simile. “I’ve seen so little
of women, that I can taste you more correctly than
if I had seen a great many. Understand?”
Sophie did not answer, being somewhat
thrown out by this new way of looking at the matter.
There seemed to be some reason in it, too.
“If I’d associated with
other people, I shouldn’t have been sensitive
enough to recognize you when we met; no one except
me can know you or feel you,” continued he,
following out his idea.
Sophie began to feel a vague misgiving.
What did this mean? What was going to be the
end of it? Ought she to allow it to go on?
And yet most likely it meant nothing; it
was only one of his queer fancies that he was elaborating.
There did not seem to be any thing suspicious in his
manner.
“It wasn’t easy even for
me,” he resumed, throwing another glance at
her; she sat with her eyes cast down, so that he could
observe her with impunity. “It would have
been impossible unless you had helped me to it.
You have taught me yourself, even more than I have
studied you.”
Sophie started, and a look of terror,
bewilderment, and passionate repudiation, lightened
in her eyes. How dared he how could
he, say that? how so falsely misrepresent her actions,
and misinterpret her purposes? Her mind went
staggering back over the past, seeking for means of
self-justification and defense. She had only meant
to benefit him to amplify and soften his
character to inspire him with more ideal
views and aims; and to do this she had what?
Sophie paused, and shuddered. Could it, after
all, be true? Had she, forgetful of maidenly modesty
and reserve, opened to this man’s eyes her secret
soul? invited him into the privacy of her heart, to
criticise and handle it? invited him! brought
forward, and pressed upon his notice, the thoughts
and impulses which she should scarcely have whispered
even to herself? Had she done this?
“You have taught me that there
is no one like you in the world,” said Bressant.
His voice sounded strangely to her, coming across such
an abyss of shame, remorse, and dismay. Did he
know the bitter satire his words conveyed? Sophie’s
face was hidden in her hands. She dared not think
what might come next.
“Is it nothing to you to know
that you are more to me than any thing else?”
demanded he, and his tone was becoming husky and unsteady.
The passion that had been smouldering within him so
long, unsuspected in its intensity even by himself,
was now beginning to be-stir itself, and shoot forth
jets of flame. “Why have you let yourself
be with me why have you made yourself necessary
to me if I was nothing to you?”
Sophie, in the extreme depths of her
degradation and abasement, became all at once quiet
and composed. She lifted her face, pale, and smitten
with suffering, from her hands, and, folding them in
her lap, looked at Bressant calmly, because she understood
herself at last, and felt that the time for hiding
her head in shame had gone by.
“You have not been nothing
to me,” said she, “though I didn’t
know it before, or, rather, I would not.
I had an idea that I was leading you up to higher
things, as an angel might, and all the time I was making
use of God’s truth and recommendation, as it
were, to gratify and shield my own selfishness and ”
here her voice sank, and her lips quivered, and grew
dry, but she waited, and struggled, and finally went
on “and immodesty. I don’t
know why I should tell you this except that
I’ve told you every thing else, and this may
save you from some of the wrong the rest has done
you. But the most of it must remain irreparable.”
A long sigh quivered up from Sophie’s heart,
and quivered down again, like a pebble sinking through
the water. Such a sigh, in a woman, is the sign
of what can scarcely come twice in a lifetime.
“I don’t understand any
thing about that; I don’t want to!” exclaimed
Bressant, with an impetuous gesture. “What
you’ve done seems to have been better than what
you meant to do, at any rate. You’ve made
yourself every thing to me. Say that I am as
much to you, and what more do we need? Say it!
say it!” and, in the vehemence of his appeal,
the sick man half raised himself from his bed.
“I cannot! I cannot!”
said Sophie, in a low, penetrating voice of suffering.
“If you were the lowest of all men, I could not.
I came to you in the guise of an angel, and what I
have done, what woman is there that would not blush
at it? It may not be too late to save you ”
“Stop!” cried Bressant,
with an accent of hoarse, masculine command, such
as she could not gainsay. “It is too late! I
will not be saved! Look in my eyes, Sophie Valeyon,
and tell me the name of what you see there!”
Her sad, gray eyes, stern to herself,
but tender and soft to him, as a cloud ready to melt
in rain-drops, met his, which were alight with all
the fire that an aroused and passionate spirit could
kindle in them. She saw what she had never beheld
before indeed, but the meaning of which no woman ever
yet mistook. It was her work the assurance
of her disgrace the offspring of her self-seeking
and unwomanly behavior; and yet, as she looked, the
blood rose gradually to her pale cheeks, and stained
them with a deeper and yet deeper spot of red; her
glance caught a spark from his, and her fragile and
drooping figure seemed to dilate and grow stately,
as if inspired by some burst of glorious music.
Bressant, in the mid-whirl and heat of his emotion,
fell back upon the pillow, whence he had partly raised
himself, trembling from head to foot.
“Is it love?” he said,
in a smothered tone that was scarcely more than a
whisper. He was beaten down and overawed by the
might and grandeur of the passion which, growing in
his own breast, had become a giant that swayed and
swept all things before it.
“Yes love!”
said Sophie, in a voice like the soft ring of a silver
trumpet. Her heart was steadied and strengthened
by what mastered him. “Love it
is above every thing else. It has brought me down
so low perhaps, through God’s mercy,
it is the path by which I may rise again. You
will guide me, dear?”
And, with a gesture of divine humility,
she put her hand in his, and looked down, with the
smile brightening mistily in her eyes.
At that moment recalled,
perhaps, by a chance similarity in position, gesture,
or expression came over him, like a sudden
chill and darkness, the memory of his last interview
with Cornelia.