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IX
Hollingsworth, Zenobia, Priscilla
IT IS NOT,
I
apprehend, a healthy kind of mental
occupation, to devote ourselves too exclusively to
the study of individual men and women. If the
person under examination be one's self, the result
is pretty certain to be diseased action of the
heart, almost before we can snatch a second
glance. Or, if we take the freedom to put a
friend under our microscope, we thereby insulate
him from many of his true relations, magnify his
peculiarities, inevitably tear him into parts,
and, of course, patch him very clumsily together
again. What wonder, then, should we be frightened
by the aspect of a monster, which, after
all--though we can point to every feature of his
deformity in the real personage--may be said to
have been created mainly by ourselves!
Thus, as
my conscience has often whispered me, I
did Hollingsworth a great wrong by prying into his
character, and am perhaps doing him as great a
one, at this moment, by putting faith in the
discoveries which I seemed to make. But I could
not help it. Had I loved him less, I might have
used him better. He--and Zenobia and Priscilla,
both for their own sakes and as connected with
him--were separated from the rest of the
Community, to my imagination, and stood forth as
the indices of a problem which it was my business
to solve. Other associates had a portion of my
time; other matters amused me; passing occurrences
carried me along with them, while they lasted.
But here was the vortex of my meditations around
which they revolved, and whitherward they too
continually tended. In the midst of cheerful
society, I had often a feeling of loneliness. For
it was impossible not to be sensible, that, while
these three characters figured so largely on my
private theatre, I--though probably reckoned as a
friend by all--was at best but a secondary or
tertiary personage with either of them.
I loved
Hollingsworth, as has already been enough
expressed. But it impressed me, more and more,
that there was a stern and dreadful peculiarity in
this man, such as could not prove otherwise than
pernicious to the happiness of those who should be
drawn into too intimate a connection with him. He
was not altogether human. There was something
else in Hollingsworth, besides flesh and blood,
and sympathies and affections, and celestial
spirit.
This is
always true of those men who have
surrendered themselves to an over-ruling purpose.
It does not so much impel them from without, nor
even operate as a motive power within, but grows
incorporate with all that they think and feel, and
finally converts them into little else save that
one principle. When such begins to be the
predicament, it is not cowardice, but wisdom, to
avoid these victims. They have no heart, no
sympathy, no reason, no conscience. They will
keep no friend, unless he make himself the mirror
of their purpose; they will smite and slay you,
and trample your dead corpse under foot, all the
more readily, if you take the first step with
them, and cannot take the second, and the third,
and every other step of their terribly straight
path. They have an idol, to which they consecrate
themselves high-priest, and deem it holy work to
offer sacrifices of whatever is most precious, and
never once seem to suspect--so cunning has the
Devil been with them--that this false deity, in
whose iron features, immitigable to all the rest
of mankind, they see only benignity and love, is
but a spectrum of the very priest hlmself,
projected upon the surrounding darkness. And the
higher and purer the original object, and the more
unselfishly it may have been taken up, the
slighter is the probability that they can be led
to recognize the process, by which godlike
benevolence has been debased into all-devouring
egotism.
Of course,
I am perfectly aware that the above
statement is exaggerated, in the attempt to make
it adequate. Professed philanthropists have gone
far; but no originally good man, I presume, ever
went quite so far as this. Let the reader abate
whatever he deems fit. The paragraph may remain,
however, both for its truth and its exaggeration,
as strongly expressive of the tendencies which
were really operative in Hollingsworth, and as
exemplifying the kind of error into which my mode
of observation was calculated to lead me. The
issue was, that, in solitude, I often shuddered at
my friend. In my recollection of his dark and
impressive countenance, the features grew more
sternly prominent than the reality, duskier in
their depth and shadow, and more lurid in their
light; the frown, that had merely flitted across
his brow, seemed to have contorted it with an
adamantine wrinkle. On meeting him again, I was
often filled with remorse, when his deep eyes
beamed kindly upon me, as with the glow of a
household fire that was burning in a cave.--"He is
a man, after all!" thought I--"his Maker's own
truest image, a philanthropic man! not that steel
engine of the Devil's contrivance, a
philanthropist!"--But, in my wood-walks, and in my
silent chamber, the dark face frowned at me again.
When a
young girl comes within the sphere of such
a man, she is as perilously situated as the maiden
whom, in the old classical myths, the people used
to expose to a dragon. If I had any duty
whatever, in reference to Hollingsworth, it was,
to endeavor to save Priscilla from that kind of
personal worship which her sex is generally prone
to lavish upon saints and heroes. It often
requires but one smile, out of the hero's eyes
into the girl's or woman's heart, to transform
this devotion, from a sentiment of the highest
approval and confidence, into passionate love.
Now, Hollingsworth smiled much upon Priscilla;
more than upon any other person. If she thought
him beautiful, it was no wonder. I often thought
him so, with the expression of tender, human care,
and gentlest sympathy, which she alone seemed to
have power to call out upon his features.
Zenobia, I suspect, would have given her eyes,
bright as they were, for such a look; it was the
least that our poor Priscilla could do, to give
her heart for a great many of them. There was the
more danger of this, inasmuch as the footing, on
which we all associated at Blithedale, was widely
different from that of conventional society.
While inclining us to the soft affections of the
Golden Age, it seemed to authorize any individual,
of either sex, to fall in love with any other,
regardless of what would elsewhere be judged
suitable and prudent. Accordingly, the tender
passion was very rife among us, in various degrees
of mildness or virulence, but mostly passing away
with the state of things that had given it origin.
This was all well enough; but, for a girl like
Priscilla, and a woman like Zenobia, to jostle one
another in their love of a man like Hollingsworth,
was likely to be no child's play.
Had I
been as cold-hearted as I sometimes thought
myself, nothing would have interested me more than
to witness the play of passions that must thus
have been evolved. But, in honest truth, I would
really have gone far to save Priscilla, at least,
from the catastrophe in which such a drama would
be apt to terminate.
Priscilla had
now grown to be a very pretty girl,
and still kept budding and blossoming, and daily
putting on some new charm, which you no sooner
became sensible of, than you thought it worth all
that she had previously possessed. So unformed,
vague, and without substance, as she had come to
us, it seemed as if we could see Nature shaping
out a woman before our very eyes, and yet had only
a more reverential sense of the mystery of a
woman's soul and frame. Yesterday, her cheek was
pale; to-day, it had a bloom. Priscilla's smile,
like a baby's first one, was a wondrous novelty.
Her imperfections and short-comings affected me
with a kind of playful pathos, which was as
absolutely bewitching a sensation as ever I
experienced. After she had been a month or two at
Blithedale, her animal spirits waxed high, and
kept her pretty constantly in a state of bubble
and ferment, impelling her to far more bodily
activity than she had yet strength to endure. She
was very fond of playing with the other girls,
out-of-doors. There is hardly another sight in
the world so pretty, as that of a company of young
girls, almost women grown, at play, and so giving
themselves up to their airy impulse that their
tiptoes barely touch the ground.
Girls are
incomparably wilder and more
effervescent than boys, more untameable, and
regardless of rule and limit, with an
ever-shifting variety, breaking continually into
new modes of fun, yet with a harmonious propriety
through all. Their steps, their voices, appear
free as the wind, but keep consonance with a
strain of music, inaudible to us. Young men and
boys, on the other hand, play according to
recognized law, old, traditionary games,
permitting no caprioles of fancy, but with scope
enough for the outbreak of savage instincts. For,
young or old, in play or in earnest, man is prone
to be a brute.
Especially is
it delightful to see a vigorous
young girl run a race, with her head thrown back,
her limbs moving more friskily than they need, and
an air between that of a bird and a young colt.
But Priscilla's peculiar charm, in a foot-race,
was the weakness and irregularity with which she
ran. Growing up without exercise, except to her
poor little fingers, she had never yet acquired
the perfect use of her legs. Setting buoyantly
forth, therefore, as if no rival less swift than
Atalanta could compete with her, she ran
faulteringly, and often tumbled on the grass.
Such an incident--though it seems too slight to
think of--was a thing to laugh at, but which
brought the water into one's eyes, and lingered in
the memory after far greater joys and sorrows were
swept out of it, as antiquated trash. Priscilla's
life, as I beheld it, was full of trifles that
affected me in just this way.
When she
had come to be quite at home among us, I
used to fancy that Priscilla played more pranks,
and perpetrated more mischief, than any other girl
in the Community. For example, I once heard Silas
Foster, in a very gruff voice, threatening to
rivet three horse-shoes round Priscilla's neck and
chain her to a post, because she, with some other
young people, had clambered upon a load of hay and
caused it to slide off the cart. How she made her
peace, I never knew; but very soon afterwards, I
saw old Silas, with his brawny hands round
Priscilla's waist, swinging her to-and-fro and
finally depositing her on one of the oxen, to take
her first lesson in riding. She met with terrible
mishaps in her efforts to milk a cow; she let the
poultry into the garden; she generally spoilt
whatever part of the dinner she took in charge;
she broke crockery; she dropt our biggest pitcher
into the well; and--except with her needle, and
those little wooden instruments for
purse-making--was as unserviceable a member of
society as any young lady in the land. There was
no other sort of efficiency about her. Yet
everybody was kind to Priscilla; everybody loved
her, and laughed at her, to her face, and did not
laugh, behind her back; everybody would have given
her half of his last crust, or the bigger share of
his plum-cake. These were pretty certain
indications that we were all conscious of a
pleasant weakness in the girl, and considered her
not quite able to look after her own interests, or
fight her battle with the world. And
Hollingsworth--perhaps because he had been the
means of introducing Priscilla to her new
abode--appeared to recognize her as his own
especial charge.
Her simple,
careless, childish flow of spirits
often made me sad. She seemed to me like a
butterfly, at play in a flickering bit of
sunshine, and mistaking it for a broad and eternal
summer. We sometimes hold mirth to a stricter
accountability than sorrow; it must show good
cause, or the echo of its laughter comes back
drearily. Priscilla's gaiety, moreover, was of a
nature that showed me how delicate an instrument
she was, and what fragile harp-strings were her
nerves. As they made sweet music at the airiest
touch, it would require but a stronger one to
burst them all asunder. Absurd as it might be, I
tried to reason with her, and persuade her not to
be so joyous, thinking that, if she would draw
less lavishly upon her fund of happiness, it would
last the longer. I remember doing so, one summer
evening, when we tired laborers sat looking on,
like Goldsmith's old folks under the village
thorn-tree, while the young people were at their
sports.
"What is
the use or sense of being so very gay?" I
said to Priscilla, while she was taking breath
after a great frolic. "I love to see a sufficient
cause for everything; and I can see none for this.
Pray tell me, now, what kind of a world you
imagine this to be, which you are so merry in?"
"I never
think about it at all," answered
Priscilla, laughing. "But this I am sure of--that
it is a world where everybody is kind to me, and
where I love everybody. My heart keeps dancing
within me; and all the foolish things, which you
see me do, are only the motions of my heart. How
can I be dismal, if my heart will not let me?"
"Have you
nothing dismal to remember?" I
suggested. "If not, then, indeed, you are very
fortunate!"
"Ah!" said
Priscilla, slowly.
And then
came that unintelligible gesture, when
she seemed to be listening to a distant voice.
"For my
part," I continued, beneficently seeking
to overshadow her with my own sombre humor, "my
past life has been a tiresome one enough; yet I
would rather look backward ten times, than forward
once. For, little as we know of our life to come,
we may be very sure, for one thing, that the good
we aim at will not be attained. People never do
get just the good they seek. If it come at all,
it is something else, which they never dreamed of,
and did not particularly want. Then, again, we
may rest certain that our friends of to-day will
not be our friends of a few years hence; but, if
we keep one of them, it will be at the expense of
the others--and, most probably, we shall keep
none. To be sure, there are more to be had! But
who cares about making a new set of friends, even
should they be better than those around us?"
"Not I!"
said Priscilla. "I will live and die
with these!"
"Well; but
let the future go!" resumed I. "As for
the present moment, if we could look into the
hearts where we wish to be most valued, what
should you expect to see? One's own likeness, in
the innermost, holiest niche? Ah, I don't know!
It may not be there at all. It may be a dusty
image, thrust aside into a corner, and by-and-by
to be flung out-of-doors, where any foot may
trample upon it. If not to-day, then tomorrow!
And so, Priscilla, I do not see much wisdom in
being so very merry in this kind of a world!"
It had
taken me nearly seven years of worldly
life, to hive up the bitter honey which I here
offered to Priscilla. And she rejected it!
"I don't
believe one word of what you say!" she
replied, laughing anew. "You made me sad, for a
minute, by talking about the past. But the past
never comes back again. Do we dream the same
dream twice? There is nothing else that I am
afraid of."
So away
she ran, and fell down on the green grass,
as it was often her luck to do, but got up again
without any harm.
"Priscilla, Priscilla!"
cried Hollingsworth, who
was sitting on the door-step. "You had better not
run any more to-night. You will weary yourself
too much. And do not sit down out of doors; for
there is a heavy dew beginning to fall!"
At his
first word, she went and sat down under the
porch, at Hollingsworth's feet, entirely contented
and happy. What charm was there, in his rude
massiveness, that so attracted and soothed this
shadowlike girl? It appeared to me--who have
always been curious in such matters--that
Priscilla's vague and seemingly causeless flow of
felicitous feeling was that with which love
blesses inexperienced hearts, before they begin to
suspect what is going on within them. It
transports them to the seventh heaven; and if you
ask what brought them thither, they neither can
tell nor care to learn, but cherish an ecstatic
faith that there they shall abide forever.
Zenobia was in the door-way, not far from
Hollingsworth. She gazed at Priscilla, in a very
singular way. Indeed, it was a sight worth gazing
at, and a beautiful sight too, as the fair girl
sat at the feet of that dark, powerful figure.
Her air, while perfectly modest, delicate, and
virginlike, denoted her as swayed by
Hollingsworth, attracted to him, and unconsciously
seeking to rest upon his strength. I could not
turn away my own eyes, but hoped that nobody, save
Zenobia and myself, were witnessing this picture.
It is before me now, with the evening twilight a
little deepened by the dusk of memory.
"Come hither,
Priscilla!" said Zenobia. "I have
something to say to you!"
She spoke
in little more than a whisper. But it
is strange how expressive of moods a whisper may
often be. Priscilla felt at once that something
had gone wrong.
"Are you
angry with me?" she asked, rising slowly
and standing before Zenobia in a drooping
attitude. "What have I done? I hope you are not
angry!"
"No, no,
Priscilla!" said Hollingsworth, smiling.
"I will answer for it, she is not. You are the
one little person in the world, with whom nobody
can be angry!"
"Angry with
you, child? What a silly idea!"
exclaimed Zenobia, laughing. "No, indeed! But,
my dear Priscilla, you are getting to be so very
pretty that you absolutely need a duenna; and as I
am older than you, and have had my own little
experience of life, and think myself exceedingly
sage, I intend to fill the place of a maiden-aunt.
Every day, I shall give you a lecture, a
quarter-of-an-hour in length, on the morals,
manners, and proprieties of social life. When our
pastoral shall be quite played out, Priscilla, my
worldly wisdom may stand you in good stead!"
"I am
afraid you are angry with me," repeated
Priscilla, sadly; for, while she seemed as
impressible as wax, the girl often showed a
persistency in her own ideas, as stubborn as it
was gentle.
"Dear me,
what can I say to the child!" cried
Zenobia, in a tone of humorous vexation. "Well,
well; since you insist on my being angry, come to
my room, this moment, and let me beat you!"
Zenobia bade
Hollingsworth good night very
sweetly, and nodded to me with a smile. But, just
as she turned aside with Priscilla into the
dimness of the porch, I caught another glance at
her countenance. It would have made the fortune
of a tragic actress, could she have borrowed it
for the moment when she fumbles in her bosom for
the concealed dagger, or the exceedingly sharp
bodkin, or mingles the ratsbane in her lover's
bowl of wine, or her rival's cup of tea. Not that
I in the least anticipated any such catastrophe;
it being a remarkable truth, that custom has in no
one point a greater sway than over our modes of
wreaking our wild passions. And, besides, had we
been in Italy, instead of New England, it was
hardly yet a crisis for the dagger or the bowl.
It often
amazed me, however, that Hollingsworth
should show himself so recklessly tender towards
Priscilla, and never once seem to think of the
effect which it might have upon her heart. But
the man, as I have endeavored to explain, was
thrown completely off his moral balance, and quite
bewildered as to his personal relations, by his
great excrescence of a philanthropic scheme. I
used to see, or fancy, indications that he was not
altogether obtuse to Zenobia's influence as a
woman. No doubt, however, he had a still more
exquisite enjoyment of Priscilla's silent sympathy
with his purposes, so unalloyed with criticism,
and therefore more grateful than any intellectual
approbation, which always involves a possible
reserve of latent censure. A man--poet, prophet,
or whatever he may be--readily persuades himself
of his right to all the worship that is
voluntarily tendered. In requital of so rich
benefits as he was to confer upon mankind, it
would have been hard to deny Hollingsworth the
simple solace of a young girl's heart, which he
held in his hand, and smelled to, like a rosebud.
But what if, while pressing out its fragrance, he
should crush the tender rosebud in his grasp!
As for
Zenobia, I saw no occasion to give myself
any trouble. With her native strength, and her
experience of the world, she could not be supposed
to need any help of mine. Nevertheless, I was
really generous enough to feel some little
interest likewise for Zenobia. With all her
faults, (which might have been a great many,
besides the abundance that I knew of,) she
possessed noble traits, and a heart which must at
least have been valuable while new. And she
seemed ready to fling it away, as uncalculatingly
as Priscilla herself. I could not but suspect,
that, if merely at play with Hollingsworth, she
was sporting with a power which she did not fully
estimate. Or, if in earnest, it might chance,
between Zenobia's passionate force and his dark,
self-delusive egotism, to turn out such earnest as
would develop itself in some sufficiently tragic
catastrophe, though the dagger and the bowl should
go for nothing in it.
Meantime, the
gossip of the Community set them
down as a pair of lovers. They took walks
together, and were not seldom encountered in the
wood-paths; Hollingsworth deeply discoursing, in
tones solemn and sternly pathetic. Zenobia, with
a rich glow on her cheeks, and her eyes softened
from their ordinary brightness, looked so
beautiful, that, had her companion been ten times
a philanthropist, it seemed impossible but that
one glance should melt him back into a man.
Oftener than anywhere else, they went to a certain
point on the slope of a pasture, commanding nearly
the whole of our own domain, besides a view of the
river and an airy prospect of many distant hills.
The bond of our Community was such, that the
members had the privilege of building cottages for
their own residence, within our precincts, thus
laying a hearthstone and fencing in a home,
private and peculiar, to all desirable extent;
while yet the inhabitants should continue to share
the advantages of an associated life. It was
inferred, that Hollingsworth and Zenobia intended
to rear their dwelling on this favorite spot.
I mentioned
these rumors to Hollingsworth in a
playful way.
"Had you
consulted me," I went on to observe, "I
should have recommended a site further to the
left, just a little withdrawn into the wood, with
two or three peeps at the prospect, among the
trees. You will be in the shady vale of years,
long before you can raise any better kind of shade
around your cottage, if you build it on this bare
slope."
"But I
offer my edifice as a spectacle to the
world," said Hollingsworth, "that it may take
example and build many another like it. Therefore
I mean to set it on the open hill-side."
Twist these
words how I might, they offered no
very satisfactory import. It seemed hardly
probable that Hollingsworth should care about
educating the public taste in the department of
cottage-architecture, desirable as such
improvement certainly was.
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