MY NEW WORLD
Few are the fragments left of follies
past;
For worthless things are transient. Those
that last
Have in them germs of an eternal spirit,
And out of good their permanence inherit.
Bowring.
Nor they unblest,
Who underneath the world’s bright vest
With sackcloth tame their aching breast,
The sharp-edged cross in jewels hide.
Keble.
From eighteen to twenty-four a
long step; and it covers the ground that is generally
the brightest and gayest in a woman’s life, and
the most decisive. With me it was, in a certain
sense, bright and gay; but the deciding events of
my life seemed to have been crowded into the year,
the story of which has just been told. Of the
six years that came after, there is not much to tell.
My character went on forming itself, no doubt, and
interiorly I was growing in one direction or the other;
but in external matters, there is not much of interest.
I had “no end of money,”
so it seemed to me, and to a good many other people,
I should think, from the way that they paid me court.
I don’t see why it did not turn my head, except
that I was what they call religious, and dreadfully
afraid of doing wrong. I was not my own mistress
exactly, either, for I had some one to direct my conscience,
though that was the only direction that I ever had.
I had not the smallest restriction as to money from
Richard (to whom the estate was left in trust); and
it had been found much to exceed his expectations,
or those of anybody else.
I had the whole world before me, where
to go and what to choose; not very much stability
of character, and the greatest ignorance; a considerable
share of good looks, and the love of pleasure inseparable
from youth and health; absolutely no authority, and
any amount of flattery and temptation. I think
it must be agreed, it was a happy thing for me that
I was brought under the influence of Sister Madeline,
and that through her I was made to feel most afraid
of sin, and of myself; and that the life within, the
growth in grace, and the keeping clear my conscience,
was made to appear of more consequence than the life
without, that was so full of pleasures and of snares.
I often think now of the obedience
with which I would give up a party, stay at home alone,
and read a good book, because I had been advised to
do it, or because it was a certain day; of the simplicity
with which I would pat away a novel, when its interest
was at the height, because it was the hour for me
to read something different, or because it was Friday,
or because I was to learn to give up doing what I wanted
to.
These things, trivial in themselves,
and never bound upon my conscience, only offered as
advice, had the effect of breaking up the constant
influence of the world, giving me a little time for
thought, and opportunity for self-denial. I cannot
help thinking such things are very useful for young
persons, and particularly those who have only ordinary
force and resolution. At least, I think they were
made a means of security to me. I was so in earnest
to do right, that I often thought, in terror for myself,
in the midst of alluring pleasures and delights, it
was a pity they had not let me be a Sister when I wanted
to at first. (I really think I had more vocation
than they thought: I could have given up,
to the end of life, without a murmur, if that is what
is necessary.) As to the people who wanted to marry
me, I did not care for any of them, and seemed to
have much less coquetry than of old. They simply
did not interest me, (of course, in a few years, I
had outgrown the love that I had supposed to be so
immortal.) It was very pleasant to be always attended
to, and to have more constant homage than any other
young woman whom I saw. But as to liking particularly
any of the men themselves, it never occurred to me
to think of it.
I was placed by my fortunate circumstances
rather above the intrigue, and detraction, and heart-burning,
that attends the social struggle for life in ordinary
cases. If I were envied, I did not know it, and
I had small reason to envy anybody else, being quite
the queen.
I enjoyed above measure, the bright
and pleasant things that I had at my command:
the sunny rooms of my pretty house: the driving,
the sailing, the dancing: all that charms a healthy
young taste, and is innocent. I took journeys,
with the ecstasy of youth and of good health.
I never shall forget the pleasure of certain days
and skies, and the enjoyment that I had in nature.
In society, I had a little more weariness, as I grew
older, and found a certain want of interest, as was
inevitable. Society isn’t all made up of
clever people, and even clever people get to be tiresome
in the course of time. But at twenty-four I was
by no means blase, only more addicted to books
and journeys, and less enthusiastic about parties
and croquet, though these I could enjoy a little yet.
I had a pretty house (and re-furnished
it very often, which always gave me pleasure).
I had no care, for Richard had arranged that I should
have a very excellent sort of person for duenna, who
had a good deal of tact, and didn’t bore me,
and was shrewd enough to make things very smooth.
I liked her very much, though I think now she was
something of a hypocrite. But she had enough
principle to make things very respectable, and I never
took her for a friend. We had very pretty little
dinners, and little evenings when anybody wanted them,
though the house wasn’t very large. My
duenna (by name Throckmorton) liked journeys as well
as I did, and never objected to going anywhere.
Altogether we were very comfortable.
The people whom I had known in that
first year of my social existence, had drifted away
from me a good deal in this new life. Sophie I
could not help meeting sometimes, for she was still
a gay woman, but I naturally belonged to a younger
set, and did not go very long into general society.
We still disliked each other with the cordiality of
our first acquaintance, but I was very sorry for it,
and had a great many repentances about it after
every meeting. Kilian I met a good deal, but
we rather avoided each other, at short range, though
exceedingly good friends to the general observation.
Mary Leighton I seldom saw; no doubt
she was consumed with envy when she heard of me, for
they were poor, and not able to keep up with gay life
as would have pleased her. She still maintained
her intimacy with Kilian, for he had not the resolution
to break off a flirtation of which, I was sure, he
must be very tired.
Henrietta had married very well, two
years after I saw her at R , and
was the staid, placid matron that she was always meant
to be.
Charlotte Benson was the clever woman
still: a little stronger-minded, and no less
good-looking than of old, and no more. People
were beginning to say that she would not marry, though
she was only twenty-six. She did not go much
to parties, and was not in my set. She affected
art and lectures, and excursions to mountains, and
campings-out, and unconventionalities, and no
doubt had a good time in her way. But it was
not my way: and so we seldom met. When we
did, she did not show much more respect for me than
of old, which always had the effect of making me feel
angry.
And as for Richard, we could not have
been much further apart, if he had lived “in
England and I at Rotterdam.” For a year,
while he was settling up the estate, he was closely
in the city. I did not see him more than once
or twice, all business being transacted through his
lawyer, and the clerk of whom he had spoken to me.
After the business matters of the estate were all
in order, he went away, intending, I believe, to stay
a year or two. But he came back before many months
were over, and settled down into the routine of business
life, which now seemed to have become necessary to
him.
Travel was only a weariness to him
in his state of mind; and work, and city-life, seemed
the panacea. He did not live with Sophie, but
took apartments, which he furnished plainly; and seemed
settling down, according to his brother, into much
of the sort of life that Uncle Leonard had led so
many years in Varick-street.
Sophie still went to R ,
and I often heard of the pleasant parties there in
summer. But Richard seldom went, and seemed to
have lost his interest in the place, though I have
no doubt he spent more money on it than before.
I heard of many improvements every year.
And Richard was now a man of wealth,
so much so that people talked about him; and the newspapers
said, in talking about real-estate, or investments,
or institutions of charity “When such
men as Richard Vandermarck allow their names to appear,
we may be sure,” etc., etc. He
was now the head of the firm, and one of the first
business men of the city. He seemed a great deal
older than he was; thirty-seven is young to occupy
the place he held.
Such a parti could not be let
alone entirely. His course was certainly discouraging,
and it needs tough hopes to live on nothing. But
stranger things had happened; more obdurate men had
yielded; and unappropriated loveliness hoped on.
The story of an early attachment was afloat in connection
with his name. I don’t know whether I was
made to play a part in it or not.
I saw him, perhaps, twice a year,
not oftener. His manner was always, to me, peculiarly
grave and kind; to every one, practical and unpretending.
I had many letters from him, particularly when I was
away on journeys. He seemed always to want to
know exactly where I was, and to feel a care of me,
though his letters never went beyond business matters,
and advice about things I did not understand.
As my guardian, he could not have
done less, nor was it necessary that he should do
more; still I often wished it would occur to him to
come and see me oftener, and give me an opportunity
of showing him how much I had improved, and how different
I had become. I had the greatest respect for
his opinion; and he had grown, unconsciously to myself,
to be a sort of oracle with me, and a sort of hero,
too.
I was apt to compare other men with
him, and they fell very far short of his measure in
my eyes. That may have been because I saw him
much too seldom, and the other men much too often.